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A77498 The drinking of the bitter cup: or, The hardest lesson in Christ's school, learned and taught by himself, passive obedience. Wherein, besides divers doctrinall truths of great importance, many practicall directions are held forth, for the teaching of Christians how to submit to their heavenly father in suffering his will, both in life and death, patiently, obediently, willingly. / As it was lately presented to the church of God at Great Yarmouth, by John Brinsley, minister of the Gospel there. Brinsley, John, 1600-1665. 1660 (1660) Wing B4713; Thomason E1838_1; ESTC R210133 201,893 311

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The Action which is The Giving of this Cup The Cup which my Father hath given me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So it was Doct. it was God the Father which gave this Cup to his Son Christ God the Father gave this Cup to his Sonne gave his Son to dye Mark it Here is the chief and principal Doctrine that this former part of the Text affords us God the Father gave this Cup to his Son Christ Which in effect and for substance speaketh one and the same thing with that of the Apostle Rom. 8.32 God spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all So was it in the Type Abraham offered up his Son By Faith Abraham when he was tryed offered up Isaac and he that received the Promises offered up his only begotten Son so the Apostle to the Hebrewes hath it Heb. 11.17 And St. James the like Was not Abraham our Father justified by works when be had offered up Isaac his Son upon the Altar Jam. 2.21 This did he intentionally in affection and resolution binding his Son and laying him upon the Altar stretching forth his hand with the sacrificing Knife to slay him as the story sets it forth Gen. 22.9 10. Which in Gods acceptation was all one as if he had done what he purposed and intended to doe And so was it in the truth of that Type God the Father offers up his Son his only begotten Son Jesus Christ offers him up upon the Altar of the Crosse Where as the Prophet Isai describeth his Passion Isa 53.10 It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin c. Thus did God the Father give this bitter Cup to his Son giving him to suffer and die that painfull shamefull accursed death of the Crosse Obj. Obj. But was this the Fathers act How is Christ said to give himself here to remove a stone which lyeth in my way to meet with an obvious Objection Did God the Father give this Cup to his Son give him to the death how then is Christ said to give and offer up himself So we finde it frequently elsewhere expressed He gave himself for us that he might redeem us Tit. 2.14 Who gave himself for our sins that he might redeem us from this present evil world Gal. 1.4 Who through the eternal Spirit offered up himself Heb. 7.27 He poured out his soul unto death Isa 53.12 So runs the phrase of Scripture ordinarily speaking of the Death and Passion of Christ as his own voluntary act I lay down my life for my Sheep Joh. 10.15 Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life vers 17. And again as it followeth No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down c. vers 18. How then is this here attributed to the Father that he should give this Cup to him A. Answ 1 To this the Answer is obvious 1. Christ as God co-working with his Father If we look at Christ as God the Son of God here that trite but true Maxim will be of use Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa All the external works and actions of the Trinity such acts as they do out of themselves for or upon the Creature they are common to all the three Persons so as they may be indifferently referred and attributed to all or any of them Such was the work of Creation the joynt work of all the three Persons Father Son and Holy Ghost and so attributed sometimes to one sometimes to another And such was this work of ●ed●mption however undertaken by one yet it was designed by all the three Persons being done by the mutual consent and agreement of all Father Son and Holy Ghost all concurring in the design though not in the execution of it What Christ as Mediator suffered he did it by the joynt consent of all the three Persons And therefore is it sometimes attributed to one sometimes to another Sometimes to the Father and sometimes to the Son who as they are one God so they have one will and one work The Son can do nothing of himself saith our Saviour but what he seeth the Father doe For what things soever the Father doth these also doth the Son likewise Joh. 5.19 Thus did Christ the Son not only imitate his Father doing works like unto his but Cooperate with him doing the same works And hence is it that the same Action is attributed sometimes to the one and sometimes to the other Thus we here finde the giving of Christ to the Death which yet was his own act attributed by him to God his Father he being the first worker in respect of Order and manner of working The Gup which my Father hath given me But secondly look upon Christ as Man A. 2 or rather as Mediator as God and Man As Mediator subservient to him so we shall finde him subservient to his Father readily doing his will Lo I come to do thy will O God Heb. 10.7 9. And as doing so suffering it Which he did in obedience unto him He humbled himself and became obedient to the death Phil. 2.8 And thus as his Father gave the Cup so he drank it so giving himself to the Death Even as it is not without ground conceived concerning the Type forementioned Abrahams offering of his Son Isaac This was Abrahams act and yet so as his Son concurred in it and that more then as a meer Patient being obedient to his Father at his command carrying of the Wood yielding himself to be bound and layd upon the Altar all which he did willingly So was it with our blessed Saviour Being acquainted with his Fathers will he yields himself to be bound which he was first in the Garden as we have it in the verse after the Text. and then by Caiaphas as we finde it Mar. 15.1 bears his Crosse submits unto the Death Thus the Father gave his Son and yet the Son gave himself But not to insist upon this Q. Explic. What God the Father did in and about the passion of his Son The way being thus cleared now come we by way of Explication to make enquiry what God the Father did in and about the Passion of his Son that he is here said to give the Cup to him The resolving of this Question will clear up this great and usetull truth A. This concurrence consisting in divers particulars The Action and concurrence of God the Father in and about the Death and Passion of his Son it consisteth in divers particulars Take we notice of five or six of them 1. He was privy to it he foresaw it he foreknew it He foresaw it This he did from Eternity So he doth all his Works Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the World Act. 15.18 Whatsoever God bringeth to passe in time it is
way and the Lord hath layed upon him the iniquity of us all vers 6. For the transgression of my people was he stricken vers 8. Thus did he suffer not for his own sake but ours Christ hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust 1 Pet. 3.18 Having taken upon him the sins of the World he was now made sin who knew no sin a sinner by Imputation And being so God giveth this Cup unto him as standing in the room of his Elect requiring satisfaction to his Justice from him Q. Q. 2 2. But why was this Cup given only to him why not to any other but him Why only to him A. A. For this take a threefold Reason 1. No other was able to drink it but he It is our Saviours speech to the Sons of Zebedee Matth. 20 2● No other able to drink it Are ye able to drink of the Cup that I shall drink of So it is others may taste of this Cup sip of it but none to drink it Not this Cup. Mihi hic calix datus est noa alteri nemo enim ad hoc sufficit praeter unum me Ferus in Text. As for the Cup of castigatory afflictions Gods own people may and often doe drink deep of it So did those two sons of Zebedee to whom he there speaketh James and John whom he tells in the next verse Ye shall indeed drink of my Cup vers 23. this accordingly they did the one of them James being Martyred Act. 12.1 the other John after many sufferings banished Rev. 1.9 But for the Cup of satisfactory punishment which properly was Christs Cup none could drink that without perishing by it but himself none but he who was more then Man God as well as Man 2. As none other was able to drink it None else needed to drink it so none else needed to drink it his sufferings being sufficient sufficient for all Men and all sins He is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world 1 Joh. 2.2 of all Believers in all Ages and Nations whether Jewes or Gentiles The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin c. 1. v. 7. of that Epistle from Originall sin Actuall sin He gave himself to redeem us from all iniquity Tit. 2.14 Now this one Cup which was given to Christ being such a Pan-pharmacon such an all-sufficient remedy there needed not a second of the same kinde to be given to any besides him 3. This Cup was given only to him that he might have all the honour of this great work That he might have all the honour of this work the work of Mans Redemption I have tiodden the Wine-presse alone and of the people there was none with me saith the Lord speaking of the destroying of his and his Churches enemies which he would do by himself alone Isa 63 3. And so did Christ in his Passion of which the greatest part of Expositors though not so rightly understand that Text he there trod the Wine-presse of his fathers wrath and he did it alone having no creature whether Man or Angel for his Coadjutor And this he did that all the glory of this great work the work of Redemption might redound unto him Which accordingly we finde acknowledged by that Quire of Angels and Elders in that Song of theirs Rev. 5. Thou art worthy c. for thou hast redeemed us unto God by thy blood v. 9. And again Worthy is the Lamb that was slayn to receive power and riches and wisedome and strength and honour and glory and blessing v. 12. Thus have I dispatched the Doctrinall part of this other important truth touching the subject of this Passion wherein I have showen you to whom it was that God the Father gave this Cup viz. to the Person of his Son Christ who suffered in and according to his Humane nature having the Godhead concurring with it And why he gave it to him and not to any other besides him That which now remains of this is Application Which let it be directed these four wayes Applic. By way of Information Terror Comfort Instruction 1. Vse 1 By way of Information Did God thus give this Cup to his Son Information give him to suffer in this manner Here again reflect we upon what was touched upon before the strictnesse of Gods Justice the greatnesse of his love both wonderfully appearing in this dispensation The strictnesse of Gods justice 1. The strictnesse of his justice in punishing of sin which he would not spare in his own Son Jesus Christ had not offended his Father in his own Person as I have shewen you he had no sin of his own whether Originall or Actuall yet taking upon him the sins of others and so become a sinner by way of Imputation God his Father will not spare him but causeth him to seel the smart of it If ever sinner might have hoped to have met with a favourable connivence surely he that was only made sin in such a way especially being a Person so nearly related to and dearly beloved of the Father might But we see how far God was from indulging of sin in him He prepareth a bitter Cup for him and giveth it to him causing him to drink it bruising him and putting him to grief powring out a full Viall of his wrath and indignation upon him The most exemplary and signall piece of Justice that ever was The drowning of the World with water the destroying of Sodome and Gomorrah by fire the plagueing of Egypt and the like they were remarkable demonstrations of divine justice But none like to this Gods not sparing his own Son but giving him to the death Such is his Justice so strict so impartiall that he will not spare sin in what subject soever he meeteth with it The reason whereof is because he hateth sin as sin Now à quatenus ad omnes c. say the Schools he who loveth or hateth a thing for it self loveth or hateth it wherever he findes it And thus God hateth sin It being contrary to his nature he hateth it for it self and therefore wherever he findes it he will not spare it Such is the strictnesse of his Justice 2. Behold the greatnesse of his love his love to his Elect people The greatness of his Love to his Elect. which he expressed in giving this Cup to his Son for their sakes This Cup was their due the desert of their sins The soul that sinneth it shall dye yet here God was pleased to finde out a Surety and to lay their iniquities upon him even upon his own Son not sparing him that he might spare them delivering him unto death that he might deliver them from death Never was there such a declaration of love as this When Abraham had layed his Son upon the Altar ready to sacrifice him in obedience to Gods command from hence the Lord concludes the truth and sincerity
Apostle himself who tells his Corinthians 2 Cor. 1.8 that by the trouble which hapned to him in Asia he was pressed out of measure beyond strength 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And so falleth it out sometimes with other of the Saints There is a great disproportion betwixt their burden and their strength the one great the other small Now how shall a Christian be able to bear up in such a case so to fortifie and strengthen his spirit as that he may not faint in the day of Adversity A. A great and difficult work I confesse A. Some soveraign Cordials prescribed yet through the help of Grace attainable To help you therein let me prescribe unto you some Soveraign Cordials some spiritual Consolations which may be and being taken into the soul will be very usefull for this purpose for the supporting and bearing up the spirit under whatever affliction this poor life of ours upon earth is subject to These Consolations are many as also our Afflictions are I shall single out some of the choisest Which I shall desire you carefully to lay up Happily at the present you may have no great need of them but how soon you may you know not And therefore lay them up in the Closet of your hearts They are not like the Apothecaries Drugs some of which being long kept lose their vertue The day may come when some one of them may requite all your care and pains In the First place then look at Afflictions themselves Direct 1 Lo●k at Afflictions themselves wherein consider The Israelites in the Wildernesse were cured of the stinging of the Serpents by looking upon the Serpent And so may a Christian by looking upon Afflictions strengthen his heart against them The Hony of the Bee is a medicine for the Sting Afflictions though never so bitter yet will afford somewhat that may serve to allay that bitternesse In them cast we an eye upon 4 or 5 particulars which may be usefull this way The Quality Quantity Continuance Commonnesse Issue of them 1. Consid 1 The Quality of them Here we shall finde that in themselves they are a Curse The Quality of them as qualified by Christ Such are all Afflictions all fruits and consequents of sin and punishments of it every one being an Appendix to that first Curse The day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death surely die Gen. 2.17 that is be subject to manifold evils as in soul so in body tending to death to the destruction of both But by through Christ their nature is now altered the Curse is taken away That was one and the chief of those Ingredients which was put into this Cup which was given to Christ to drink and which he did drink upon the Crosse He being there made subject to that accursed death that he might free us from the Curse of death and of all its retinue Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 So that what the Apostle saith of Death it self 1 Cor. 15.55 O Death where is thy sting We may say the same of whatever afflictions and crosses can befall the children of God upon earth their Sting is gone Surely the bitternesse of death is past saith Agag having as he thought armed himself against the fear of it which is the greatest part of Deaths bitternesse 1 Sam. 15.32 And the like may all true Believers say concerning all their Afflictions and sufferings The bitternesse of them is past as to them the Curse being taken away from them by Christ which is indeed the chief part of their bitternesse Even as Moses altered the quality of those waters of Marah took away the bitternesse of them by casting into them that Tree which the Lord had shewed him so hath Christ taken away the bitternesse of all the waters of Affliction by the Tree of his Crosse to which he was designed by his Father The bitternesse of Afflictions as I said was the Curse going along with them they being in themselves all tokens of wrath But now that bitternesse that Curse is taken away So as to true Believers they are no longer tokens of wrath but rather Love-tokens Whom the Lord loveth he correcteth Prov. 3.12 chasteneth Heb. 12.6 Yea Pledges of Adoption So it there followeth Heb. 12.6 7. He scourgeth every Son whom he receiveth If ye endure chastenings God dealeth with you as with Sons Not to know what Chastisements mean it is no good sign If ye be without Chastisement whereof all all Gods children are partakers then are ye bastards and not sons so it there followeth v. 8. For God to exercise his Children with afflictions it is a sign that he owns them for his Children and a demonstration of his fatherly love to them and care of them Thus do these Cups which Gods people drink of they come from the hand of a Father not of a Judge being to them not satisfactory but castigatory punishments Not properly punishments but Chastisements Not tokens of wrath but Love-tokens A usefull and comfortable meditation for the soul of a Believer to feed upon in the midst of whatever distresse What is it that maketh these Cups so bitter unto the soul Why when it looketh upon them as they are in themselves as Cups of divine wrath and fury Now no wonder if it shake and tremble at the drinking of them So long as a man apprehends these Arrowes which he feeleth to stick fast in him to be poysoned Arrowes shot at him by the hand of a revenging God now no wonder if the soul have no peace no quiet But look upon them as they are changed and altered by Christ having the Curse taken away and as they are tokens and pledges of Adoption which being sanctified they certainly are the soul being perswaded of this this will be as a soveraign Cordial to it to keep it from fainting Q. Q. Yea but you will say how shall a man know this How Chastisements may be known from Punishments that they are so to him that they are only Chastisements and not Punishments and that they are tokens of love and pledges of Adoption When as they are tokens of wrath to some how shall I know that they are not so to me A. A. To this I have in part hinted an Answere already Take it a little more fully yet briefly 1. How do you drink this Cup how doe ye suffer these afflictions Doe you quietly patiently By the manner of suffering them contentedly submit to the hand of God in them If so now hear what the Apostle saith to you in that Text even now cited Heb. 12.7 If ye indure chastning God dealeth with you as with Sons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not if you suffer afflictions for so do the worst of men But if ye endure chastening receive Afflictions from the hands of God as Chastisements kissing the Rod humbling your selves under the hand of God as dutifull Children under
is free from his Master so Job describes the state of the dead Job 3.17 18 19. Thus doth God our heavenly Father make use of this as his Handkerchief to wipe away all tears from the eyes of his Children as we have it Rev. 7. last After death there shall be to them no more death nor crying neither shall there be any more pain as that other Text hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ae chylus Rev. 21.4 Death lets out the Christian as it doth all men from the sense and fear of all temporall Evils 2. Yea it freeth him from what is far worse from Spiritual Evils Spirituall giving a Quietus est as to the Body so to the Soul Freeing him 1. From Sin He that is dead is freed from sin Rom. From sin 6.7 So it is indeed with a mortified soul a regenerate person that is spiritually dead dead to sin which the Apostle there chiefly aymeth at he is freed from it viz. from the guilt and power of it But this is but a partiall freedome which is compleated and perfected in and by naturall death by which the Believer obtaineth a perfect freedome Being hereby so freed from sin as in this life he cannot be Freed from the committing of it From the inbeing of it From the beholding of it From the committing of it 1. From the committing of it which while he is here he is not cannot be However as the Apostle hath it in the verse there foregoing Rom. 6.6 the old man being crucified with Christ the Body of sin is so far destroyed that henceforth the regenerate person doth not serve sin he having thus suffered in the flesh ceaseth from sin as St. Peter hath it 1 Pet. 4.1 Corruption being in measure mortified he doth not now sin as before he did so as to make a custome and practise of it yet through weaknesse he doth commit some acts of sin and that daily There is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not Eccl. 7.20 But Death giveth the Believer a perfect discharge so as thenceforth he sinneth no more He that hath entred into his rest saith the Apostle he also hath ceased from his own works as God did from his Heb. 4.10 God upon the seventh day kept a Sabbath resting from his works of Creation such as he had wrought upon the six dayes before So doth the Believer in death he entereth into his rest that Eternall Sabbatisme where he ceaseth from his own works such works as he here wrought in the flesh specially from the works of the flesh sinfull works Opera nostra vocantur labores curas vocationis nostrae tùm opera carnis noturae vitiosae peccatae quae vere sunt nestra quia â nobis fiunt nec probantur Dec c. Pareus Com. ad loc which as Pareus there noteth upon it may most properly be called a mans own works inasmuch as he doth them of himself without any approbation or allowance from God From these works the Godly man after death wholly ceaseth Which the wicked man doth not who being in Hell ceaseth not to blaspheme God Like as the followers of the Beast are said to doe upon the powring out of the Vials They blasphemed the God of heaven because of their pains c. Rev. 16.9 11 21. so doe the damned in hell because of their torments they blaspheme God and commit other sins such as that their state is capable of Which whether they be formally and properly sins in them not lying under a Law as here they did I shall not dispute but Materially I am sure they are being the same sinfull acts which here they committed But from such acts shall the believer now cease so as never more to commit any sin Noe nor yet to be in any possibility of committing it Such a state doth death bring Gods Children to a state in this respect far more happy then that wherein our first Parents were in Paradise There they were free from sin but not from a possibility of sinning which the event shewed But Gods Saints by death are freed from this being hereby put into an impeccable state and so confirmed as that they shall never more have any will or inclination to that which is evill Thus are they freed from the acting the Committing of sin 2. From the inbeing of it And so Secondly from the Inbeing the Indwelling of it So it is that the best of Saints while they are here they have sin dwelling in them It is no more I that do it saith Paul but sin that dwelleth in me Rom. 7.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereby meaning Innolita illa pridem peccandi consuetndo Grot. Annot. ad loc not that Habit and Custome of sin which is in an unregenerate person as Grotius expounds it but that Naturall Corruption which still cleaveth to the Regenerate This he found still dwelling in him And so it will in the most sanctyfied soul upon earth And there dwelling it will also be warring seeming sometimes to Conquer So also that Apostle there out of his own experience complaines v. 23. I find another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind and bringing me into Captivity to the Law of sin which is in my members Such a conflict there is and will be in the best of Saints Corruption striving against Grace Yea and sometimes prevailing against it Even as a strong tide carrieth the ship against the stroke of the Rowers Which cannot but create a great deal of trouble to the Soul So it did to that blessed Apostle who upon this account looked upon himself as a miserable man crying out in the next verse verse 24. O wretched man that I am who shal deliver me from the Body of this death That Body of sin as he elswere calleth it Rom. 6.6 which he found living in him was to him a Body of death making his life miserable to him So would it be to a Child-bearing woman to have the Child lye dead within her rotting and putrifying in her womb whereof notwithstanding all indeavours used she cannot be delivered Or to a living man to be tyed to a dead karkesse Even so is it with a regenerate person whilest he is here the living and the dead are tyed together Grace and Gorruption And so tyed together as nothing can part them but death Like as it was with that fretting leprosie of which we read Lev. 14.45 which having eaten into the Wals there was no cure for it but by pulling down the house Even so is it with this Leprosie of sin having seized upon the soul and eaten into all the powers and faculties of Soul and Body there is no way to be freed from it but by death And this will do it The house being pulled down the Leprosie ceased And so doth sin in death The dissolution of the Body is the Absolution of the Soul freeing it from this
peace Luk. 2.29 And the like do we in a spirituall sense receive we the Lord Jesus being held forth unto us in the promise of the Gospell and take hold upon him clasping and imbracing him in the armes of our faith receiving him as our Saviour and Lord. As our Saviour believing on him for the pardon and remission of all our sins As our Lord yielding up our selves to be guided and governed by him by his word and Spirit Which whilest we do now shall we have no just cause to fear this Enemy which is by this Captain of our Salvation conquered and disarmed so as now it cannot hurt any of those that are his O then let every of us make sure our interest in him Upon which depends all our hope and comfort both in life and death Christ being once ours now we may hear the Apostle telling us that all things are ours 1 Cor. 3.21 All things among which he reckons Life and Death with things present and things to come All ours so is Life even temporall life so as it shall be continued to us whilest it is expedient And so is Death which when it comes shall not be hurtful but advantagious and beneficial To me to live is Christ and to dye is gain Phil. 1.21 So are things present the concernments of this present life as Crosses so Comforts both serving for our good And things to come Eternal glory and happinesse Which whilest a Christian is assured of why should not he be as willing to dye as live 3. Only in the third place look out also for the seal of the Spirit Look out for the seal of the Spirit Thus are Assurances made among men by setting seals to writings to bonds and bils and other conveyances And such Assurance labour we for to get the promises sealed unto us and that by this seal the seal of the Spirit which the Apostle calleth the earnest of our inheritance Eph. 1.13 14. An earnest confirms the bargain and assures the payment of the whole summe And so doth the earnest of the Spirit as he elswhere calleth it 2 Cor. 1.22 the work of Regeneration and Sanctification begun in the soul this is as Gods seal which confirmeth his promises to his people and giveth them assurance of their heavenly inheritance Which being assured off what should make them unwilling to depart hence when God calleth for them Having now another house to receive them when they are turned out of this and that infinitely better as the Apostle telleth them 2 Cor. 5.1 We know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building not made with hands eternal in the heavens Now what man would be unwilling to leave a poor ruinous Cottage which he holdeth only at the pleasure of the Land-lord being subject to be turned out of it every day when as he may have posession of a Royal palace whereof also he shal have the fee-simple estate And such is that heavenly house that celestial glory and happinesse which Christ having purchased for those that are his is gone before to take posession of and to prepare for them I go to prepare a place for you Joh. 14.2 it infinitely excelleth all earthly glory far more then the most princely palace doth the meanest cottage O labour we but to make sure this our Inheritance in that other world this will make us not unwilling to leave this Here is a first Direction Seek after Assurance that we have an interest in God and Jesus Christ and so a right to eternal life And being thus assured of Life Dir. 2 now Prepare for death Prepare for death by dying daily So did the blessed Apostle who tels his Corinthians that he dyed daily 1 Cor. 15.31 I protest by your rejoycing which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord I dye daily Apprehending death continually hanging over his head he was daily preparing for it And the like do we that we may be willing to dye once when God calleth us to it dye daily Q. But how shall we do this A. Take the answer in three or four particulars 1. Dye daily to sin This the Apostle telleth us Christ once did for us To sin In that he dyed he dyed unto sin once Rom. 6.10 This he did not for himself for he knew no sin but for us for the expiating of our sins the taking away the guilt of them And what he did once doe we daily daily dye to sin for the taking away the power of it in our selves A work which will not be done at once as that of our Saviour was True the Apostle speaking of believers saith they are dead to sin Rom. 6.2.11 in as much as they are not now under the power of it as sometimes they were But this is but an imperfect work not done at once Though sin hath received its mortal wound in them yet it is stil alive Though they be dead to it yet it liveth in them And therefore they must make this their daily their continual work to be dying to it mortifying the body of sin that it may dye before them The life of sin is the life of death So long as a man liveth in any one sin he will never be willing to dye And therefore set we upon the mortification of all our sinful Lusts Specially our beloved Lusts those which have been most near and dear to us most strong and prevalent in us Never resting until we find our hearts brought to an utter abhorrence and detestation of them and of all other sinful waies and courses so as we can say with the Psalmist that we hate every false way Psa 119.104 Thus Sin being dead death will not be so terrible As we get ground of the one we shal get strength against the other Secondly Dye daily to the world To the world So did the Apostle who telleth us of himself that he was crucified to the world and the world to him Gal. 6.14 He had as little affection to the world as the world had to him he was dead to that and that to him And it is the counsel which he giveth to others 1 Cor. 7.31 that they should so use this world as not abusing it Not doting upon any thing here below whether riches o● pleasures or honours Not setting the heart upon them If riches increase set not your hearts upon them Psal 62.10 And so for the rest Not being inordinately affected with any contentments which this world can afford but looking overly upon them so using them as if they used them not So run those foregoing directions of the Apostle there 1 Cor. 7.29 30. This I say brethren the time is short It remaineth that both they that have wives be as though they had none and they that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not And this let every of us strive to
known to him before time And so was this work the work of Redemption wrought by the sufferings of Christ it was foreseen foreknown by God from Eternity This none will question 2. Foreseeing of this before it was done he also permitted it to be done Foreseeing whatever should be done to his Son Christ by Satan and his Instruments he gave way to it permit●ing Satan to enter into Judas and Judas to betray his Master and the Officers to apprehend him and carry him away and Pilate and the rest to sit in judgement and passe sentence upon him and to execute that sentence All which he could have hindered if he had pleased Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to my Father and he shall presently give me more then twelve Legions of Angels saith our Saviour to Peter Math. 26.53 God the Father wanted no power to have hindered all that was done to his Son but he permitted it Thus far Bellarmine and the whole Church of Rome will go along with us But we must not stay here The phrase in the Text imports more Gods giving this Cup to his Son imports more then a bare provision or permission And therefore here leaving them passe we on 3. In the third place God as he foresaw and permitted this so he willed it He willed it Bradward contrà Pelagianos lib. 1. cap. 33. So he doth whatever he permits So Bradwardine rightly determins it Respectu cujuscunque est Dei permissio est ejus volitio actualis Whatever God permits to be done he also actually willeth that it should be done And so he did the Death and Passion of his Son So much we may learn from those words of our Saviour Math. 26.39 where praying that if it were possible this Cup might passe from him he subjoyns Neverthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt God did not only permit his Son to dye but he willed his death Upon which account it is that the Prophet Isai there saith It pleased the Lord to bruise him Isa 53.10 Dominus volu●t It was his will his pleasure that he should suffer what he did having in his secret Counsell decreed and determined it from eternity For this expresse is that known Text Idem est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et 1 Pet. 1 2. nam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his libris Decretum soepe significat Grot. Anno● in loc Act. 2.23 which informs us that Christ was delivered by the determinate counsell and foreknowledge of God That is by his decree for so are we to understand the word knowledge there not barely of a simple prescience a foresight but of a determinate and absolute decree So we finde the word elsewhere used as 1 Pet. 1 2. where Believers are said to be elect according to the foreknowledge of God that is according to his Decree And so was Christ delivered according to the foreknowledge the determinate Counsel of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God in his eternal Counsell and Purpose had decreed that his Son should suffer and dye Upon which account among some other he is said to be the Lamb slayn from the foundation of the World Rev. 13.8 He was so in Gods Decree who had determined that he should dye The Circumstances of Christs death all determined by his Father And determining the thing he determined also all the circumstances concerning it As what kinde of death he should dye even that accursed death upon the Crosse So much our Saviour intimated to Nicodemus Joh. 3.14 where he tells him that As Moses lift up the Serpent in the Wildernesse even so must the Son of man be lifted up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oportet exaltari must be lifted up so Patris decreto as Grotius there rightly according to the Decree of God the Father lifted upon the tree of the Crosse And the like to the Jewes cap. 12. of the same Gospel vers 32. where speaking in the same language he tells them that If he were lift up from the earth he would draw all men unto him This he said saith the next verse signifying what death he should die viz. the death of the Crosse And so also the Time when he should dye which till it was come his enemies could not lay hands on him As yet no man layed hands on him saith that Text Joh. 8.20 for his hour was not yet come the time appointed by his Father for him to suffer in And as the time so the place So much he declared to his Disciples Math. 16 21. where he tells them that he must goe to Jerusalem Neque enim hic aut de praefinito Dei consilio aut de utilitate rei agitur sed res futura nudè praedicitur Grot. Annot. in loc and suffer many things of the Elders and be killed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where I know not any just ground why Grotius should refuse to expound the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he did in that former Text Oportet eum ire He must go thither It was not a thing left to his own liberty or choice but being determined by his Father it was now necessary necessitate decreti divini in regard of Gods Decree which was immutable as Pareus expounds it Haecerat aetrrni Patris voluntas immutabilis Pareus Com. in loc And the like we may say for the Persons who should be Actors in this Tragedy and what part every of them should act what they should do Never a circumstance but was predetermined by God So that one Text sets it forth most fully Act. 4.27 28. Of a truth saith Peter against thine holy Childe Jesus whom thou hast anoynted both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel were gathered together to doe whatsoever thy hand and thy Counsell had determined before to be done Thus did God the Father as I said appoint and order all the severall Ingredients every grain that was to be put into this Cup decreeing and determining whatever his Son was to suffer 4. He revealed his will concerning it And fourthly having thus in his secret Counsell decreed this his suffering he also revealed it making known his will concerning his Son that he should suffer and die This he had done by Types and Figures As that of Abrahams offering his Son his only Son in whom all the Nations of the earth should be blessed of which I spake before So also in and by all those bloody Sacrifices under the Law all which were shadowes of what was to come representing the death of Jesus Christ who was to be offered up a true Propitiatory Sacrifice for the sins of the World But more clearly by Prophesies divers of which we meet with in the Old Testament Among which that of the Prophet Isai is most clear Isa 53. where he describeth the Death and Passion of Christ rather like an Evangelist then a Prophet as if he had been a Spectator of it And so other of the
Prophets they foretold what things Jesus was to suffer As St. Peter sets it forth Act. 3.18 These things saith he which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his Prophets that Christ should suffer he hath also fulfilled Thus God reveal●d what before he had decreed Which our Saviour taking notice of he here speaks of his Passion after this manner Non loquitur dubitativè fortasse Pater ●●c vult sed assertativè Calicem quem dedit Ferus Com. in Text. calling it the Cup which his Father had given him Being fully acquainted with his Fathers will he speaks of what he was to suffer non dubitativè sed assertivè as Ferus notes upon it not as a thing doubtfull but certain The Cup which my Father hath given me 5. Yet further God having thus decreed and made known his purpose concerning his Son He delivereth him up he also delivereth him into the hands of those who were to execute that his decree Who was delivered for our offences saith the Apostle speaking of Christ Rom. 4. vers last 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 delivered unto death by God his Father as that other forecited Text explains it Rom. 8.32 He spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all This he did when by his all-disposing providence he brought him into the Garden where the Officers should come to apprehend him and so delivered him into their hands and into the hands of other his enemies 6. And lastly having delivered him into their hands he also impowred them for the doing of what they did to him So our Saviour upon his Arraignment tells Pilate Joh. 19.11 Thou couldest have no power against me at all except it were given thee from above That Authority which Pilate had to sit in Judgement and passe sentence upon him and so that power which others had to execute that sentence they had it from above from God In all these they were but Instruments made use of by him in the mean time it was he that had the main stroke in the work he being the chief and principal agent Thus you see how God did concur in the death and Passion of this his Son He not only was privy to it and permitted it but he decreed and determined it and every circumstance in it making known his will concerning it delivering him into the hands of his enemies and giving them power to execute what he had decreed So as putting all these together well may we conclude what our Saviour there asserts concerning this Cup that it was given him by his Father But was it so Quest From hence now arise two Queries two scruples Two questions of great importance calling for satisfaction before we proceed any further If God the Father did thus give this Cup to his Son Christ why then 1. How did the Jewes sin in putting him to death And secondly if they did sin How then is Ged free from being the Author of that sin or from partaking in it Two Questions of great importance I shall endeavour to give a full solution to both To begin with the first Q. 1 If God thus gave this Cup to his Son How the Jewes finned in executing of what God had thus decreed so concurred in this his Passion as we have heard how did the Jewes sin in putting him to death Quaeritur si Pater dedit Christo hunc calicem quid pe●caverunt Judaei qui cum Christo dederunt intulerunt propinaverunt Carthus Enar. in Text. When as they were but Instruments onely reaching this Cup to him God himself being the principal Agent how were they culpable To this let me return a threefold Answer Answ 1 They were voluntary Instruments 1. Distinguishing of Instruments which are of two sorts Meerly Instrumentall or Ministerial Meer Instruments are such as have no activity nor efficacy in themselves for the doing of any thing further than as they are acted by another Such is the Axe in the hand of the Carpenter and the Sword in the hand of the Souldier But such were not the Jewes they were not meer but Ministerial Instruments voluntary Agents doing what herein they did not by any coaction or constraint but freely willingly Impii dum peccant non sunt propr●è Instrumenta Dei mota sc● sine interno principio motus sed metaphoricè ita sc mota ut liberè moveant semetipsa D. Ames Bellarm. Enerv. t. 4. c. 2. Hominis voluntas est quodammodo Dei Instrumentum non purum merum sed liberum Alvartz Disput 68.5 Such an Instrument is man in the hands of God Being a reasonable creature indued with understanding and will what he doth he doth it freely there being no violence in any thing offered to his will True it is the will of man also is Gods Instrument but such an Instrument not a meer but a Ministerial a free and voluntary Instrument Being moved it moveth of it self not being subject to coaction or compulsion Voluntas si cogeretur desinit esse voluntas If the will could be compelled it should cease to be a will it ever acteth freely And so did the Jewes in putting the Lord of life to death they were not meer Instruments but voluntary Agents and so cannot be excusable in what they did 2. The Jewes were culpable in acting of that which God had decreed and determined Answ 2 inafmuch as they had no warrant They had no warrant for what they did no rule for what they did Nay they went against the rule What is the Rule by which all the actions of men ought to be squared Why Gods secret will no warrant for man it is the Revealed will of God As for his secret will that is his own rule not Mans. Secret things belong unto the Lord but revealed things to us and to our children Deut. 29.29 Obj. Why Obj. but was not this will of God revealed to them Whether this will of God was revealed to the Jewes that Christ should die Caiaphas the High-priest by a Prophetical Spirit tells it them that it was expedient for them that one man should die for the people Joh. 11.50 so prophesying that Jesus should die for that Nation and not for that Nation only but that he might gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad as it there followeth vers 51 52. A. Yet had they no word of command to put him to death But suppose they had understood this which yet Caiaphas himself did not This spake he not of himself saith that 51. vers God only made use of his Tongue to utter an Oracle which he knew not the true sense and mystery of yet could not this have been an excuse for them inasmuch as they had no direction no word of command from God to put their hands to this work This it is which is mans warrant for all his actions without which actions which in themselves seem to
off from it For this a threefold Reason may be assigned Answ This he did upon a threefold ground 1. Reas 1 The first and principal whereof is that which we meet with in the Text. His obedience to his Father His Father had given this Cup to him to drink and therefore he will drink it The Cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it God his Father had decreed willed that he should suffer and dye and this his will he had made known unto him And therefore in obedience to his command he thus willingly yieldeth hereunto I lay down my life of my self saith he but wherefore Why This Commandement I have received from my Father so himself there giveth the Reason of it Joh. 10.18 Even as Isaac herein a type of him in obedience to his Father yields himself to be bound and layed upon the Wood to be sacrificed Gen. 22. which he did willingly without the least reluctancy or resistance that we read of So did the Lord Jesus in obedience to his Father he willingly yielded up himself to the death He humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Phil. 2.8 Such an absolute and universal complyance there was betwixt Christ and his Father What his Father willed that he willed So himself declares it Joh. 5.30 I seek not mine own will but the will of him that sent me And again in the Chapter following v. 38. I came down from heaven not to do mine own will but the will of him that sent me Thus did he as God perfectly comply with the will of his Father Being one God with him there was but one will betwixt them What the Father willed the Son willed And as Man he was in every thing subordinate to him Not doing his own will I seek not myne own will As Man if it had been consistent with the will of God his Father he could have wished that this Cup might have passed from him which he doth Matth. 26.39 Father if it be possible let this Cup passe from me There was the will of his humane i●firmity Nature being desirous to preserve it self which it might doe without sin But this will he submits and resolves into the will of his Father Neverthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt so he there limits his desire And again vers 42. O my Father if this Cup may not passe from me except I drink it thy will be done Thus was there a perfect conformity of his will as God and subordination as Man to the will of his Father And from hence flowed this willing submission of his in drinking of this Cup. This he did in obedience to his Father Which I shall God willing make some Application of hereafter for the present passing it by 2. Reas 2 As herein he had an eye to his Father willing this so also to his Elect people needing it His good wil to his Elect people Their redemption their salvation depended upon it As for what he had already done in his Active Obedience in fulfilling the Law this alone could have been no wayes available unto them The Justice of God required further satisfaction even the suffering of death This was that which the Law had threatned In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye saith the Lord to Adam Gen. 2.17 thou shalt die the death be subject and bound over unto death not only temporall but eternall And under this sentence do all the Sons of Adam by nature lye being bound over unto death not only in their Bodies but in their Souls bound over unto eternall death Now this Law must be satisfied before the Elect of God could be redeemed And how should this be without shedding of blood Without shedding of blood there is no Remission Heb. 9.22 And upon this account again it was that our blessed Saviour was so willing to drink this Cup to subject himself to this accursed death not only to a naturall but to that which was equivalent to an eternall death to suffer the wrath of God due unto the sins of the World that so he might free his Elect people from that Curse Which he did out of an unspeakable love to them This it was that induced God the Father to give this Gup to his Son God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son c. Joh. 3.16 And this it was which also induced him so willingly to drink it in this way to give himself for them Who loved me and gave himself for me saith Paul Gal. 2.20 Christ hath loved us and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God Eph. 5.2 Christ loved his Church and gave himself for it v. 25. This it was which next to the will of God his Father put him forward upon this service with such resolution and willingnesse even that ardent affection which he bare to his Elect people This will love doe The power of intense Love It beareth all things as the Apostle saith of it 1 Cor. 13.7 Where it is intense it will make a heavy burden light Jacob loving Rachel he served a Seven-years Apprentiship for her And saith the Text they seemed to him but a few dayes for the love he had to her Gen. 29.20 And thus would men serve their God did they but love him as they ought though it were for many years their service would not be tedious unto them So was it here with our blessed Saviour Loving his Elect people with such an intense affection as he did he thinks nothing too much that either he could doe or suffer for them Applic. Where before we passe any further Applic. This Love of Christ to be admited make we a stand a little suffering our thoughts to be taken up with an holy Contemplation and high admiration of this matchlesse love which our blessed Saviour doth herein expresse in shewing himself so willing to drink this Cup. A Bitter Cup So he had found it already Yet behold he not only submits to the drinking of it but will not indure that it should be taken from his mouth till he had drunk it off The Cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it As if he had thirsted after it no lesse then a thirsty man doth after a Cup of drink to quench his thirst withall Thus was he carryed on to this his Passion with an earnest desire Even as he was to the drinking of that mystical Cup concerning which he tells his Disciples Luk. 22.15 With desire I have desired that is Earnestly desired to eat this Passeover with you before I suffer meaning the Sacrament of the Lords Supper so was he to the drinking of this metaphoricall Cup whereof that was a forerunner and a sign his Death and Passion this was a thing which he was carryed to with the like earnest desire This is that which he tells his Disciples Luk. 12.50 I have a
which fall not a few Reduce them into three ranks Such as despise the Judgements of the Lord Such as murmure at them Such as faint under them All which are far from this disposition which here we meet with in our blessed Saviour To speak a word to each of them severally 1. Sort 1 Some there are who despise the Judgements of the Lord Despisers of Gods Judgements As the Israelites are charged to have done by the Judgements of his mouth his word Ezek. 20.13 They have despised my Judgements So doe they by the Judgements of his hand Of which 4 sorts his works of Judgement they despise them sleight them under which head come divers 1 Such as put this Cup far from them So did they of whom the Prophet Amos speaketh Such as put this Cup far from them 6.3 They put far away the evil day In the midst of their other Cups whilest they were drinking Wine in Boles as the 6 vers there hath it quaffing and carousing drinking by measure without measure as Drinkers of Healths as they abusively call them use to do this Cup was far removed out of their sight Whilest they were rioting and revelling feasting and sporting they little thought of the day of Calamity which was then coming upon them And so is it with many In the time of Prosperity whilest they have the sweet Cup at their mouths they never think of that bitter Cup which sooner or later they may nay must drink of Never think of the day of Adversity the day of Affliction the day of Death And so they go on securely in their sins promising to themselves security that they shall not feel of the Judgments of God So was it as with literall Isa 47.8 so with Mysticall Babylon Rev. 18.7 She saith in her heart I sit a Queen and am no Widow and shall see no sorrow Being in a prosperous and flourishing condition she promiseth to her self that she should never see a change But mark what follows in the next Verse Therefore shall her plagues come in one day death and mourning and famine and she shall be utterly burnt with fire c. See here what it is that all secure sinners may expect such as putting this Cup the Judgments of God far from them go on in their sinfull provocations certainly God hath a Bitter Cup for them which sooner or later they shall drink and that it may be sooner then they are aware of Expresse to this purpose is that known Text which I wish all of this rank may take notice of Deut. 29.19 20. Where the Lord telleth his people Israel that if there should be amongst them a root that beareth Gall and Wormwood any wicked and ungodly person whose sins are as distastefull unto God as the bitterest Gall or Wormwood are unto man And it come to passe saith the Text when he heareth the words of this Curse that he blesse himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of myne heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst one sin to another then mark what follows The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoke like fire against that man The Cup of Gods wrath is not nearer to any than those who thus put it far from them 2. And others there are not much unlike them Such as will not see it when it cometh towards them who when this bitter Cup is coming towards them yet they shut their eyes against it so as seeing they will not see it Such the Prophet Isai speaketh of Isa 26.11 Lord saith he when thy hand is lifted up they will not see Notwithstanding God was at work wonderfully declaring and manifesting his power as in working miraculous deliverances for his people so in executing strange and remarkable Judgements upon his and their enemies yet they shut their eyes against it not regarding what he did Even so deal many When Gods hand is lifted up and his Judgements are abroad in the earth this Cup is walking to and fro on every side of them yet they shut their eyes against it will not take notice of it so as to be at all affected with it Though it be coming towards them yet they hope it shall not come at them so was it with those Edomites whom I spake of before Though the Cup of Gods fury went round among the Nations so as all their Neighbours had drunk of it yet they hoped they should not do the like Even so is it with many secure sinners In the midst of common calamities they promise to themselves immunity and freedome that this Cup shall passe by them So did the Jewes of old though the Lord sent his Prophets to them one after another every one with a Cup in his hand as the Prophet Jeremy there saith of himself in that Text forecited Jer. 25. a Cup of wrath and fury which they held forth unto them threatning them with the Judgements of God yet few of them gave credit to what they said But what saith the Lord to them for this You may read it as often elsewhere so Amos 9.10 All the sinners of my people shall die by the Sword which say the evil shall not overtake nor prevent us The Sinners of my people presumptuous sinners such as the greatest part of them were though God had threatned his Judgements against that Nation yet they neither feared nor cared for them they would believe no more then they felt still they flattered themselves that the Judgements threatned either should not come or not come at them they should do well enough Now as for such the Lord there tells them what they should expect they should be sure to dye by the Sword whoever escaped his Judgements they should not And the like let all secure sinners look for Such as make a Covenant with death and with Hell they are at an agreement as the Prophet Isai sets forth the security of the Rulers of Israel Isa 28.15 saying in their hearts as it there followeth when the overflowing scourge shall passe through it shall not come unto us Thus do they as he goeth on make lyes their refuge and under falshood do they hide themselves But let all such make account that this Covenant of theirs shall be disanulled So the Lord there threatens it against those Rulers vers 18. Your Covenant with death shall be disanulled and your agreement with Hell shall not stand when the overflowing scourge shall passe through then ye shall be trodden down by it Secure sinners shall not escape the Judgements of God They who when his hand is lifted up will not see they shall see and feel So the Prophet there threatneth them in that Text even now cited Isa 26.11 Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see but they shall see and be ashamed yea the fire of thine enemies shall devour them The fire of thine enemies the fierce
all is gone Hope the Christians sheat-anchor This is the sheate anchor which Christ is to ride by in whatever stormes or stresses come down upon him It is the Apostles own similitude in that known text Heb 6.19 Which Hope we have as an Anchor of the soul both sure and steadfast If the Anchor be let slip or come home the Ship is exposed to the hazard of Rocks and Shelves from which before she was safe And so is the Soul of a Christian if once his Hope his Faith and confidence in God through Jesus Christ faile now it is in eminent danger which before it was not And therefore having once cast this Auchor within the vaile fixed our faith in heaven now whatever stormes come down upon the outward or inward man upon Body or soul still ride by it holding fast this our confidence and hope unto the end as the Apostle minds us once and again Heb. 3.6.14 Thus however the Lord pleaseth to deal with us let us only turn unto him and then hope in him Even as the Ship in a stress turns to the Anchor and rides by it So do we in these soul-stresses Turn to the Lord and trust in him That is the advise which the Prophet Hosea giveth to the people of the Jewes when God had a Controversie with them and was turned enemy to them Hos 12.6 Turn thou to thy God saith he Keep Mercy and Judgment and wait on thy God continually Fide deo tuo wait on him by faith trusting in him And so let it be said to the distressed soul that labours under this saddest of tryals Only turn thou to thy God indeavouring to walk closesly with him and then wait upon him trust in him That is Davids counsell which out of his own experience he giveth to others Psal 27.13.14 I had fainted saith he unless I had believed to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the Land of the living Wait on the Lord be of good courage and he shall strengthen thy heart wait I say on the Lord Many and sweet are the promises which God hath made to those who thus wait They that wait upon the Lord saith the Prophet Isai Shall renew their strength through a secret supply of the spirit of grace the inward man shall be strengthened they shall mount up with wings as Eagles their souls being carried up aloft above all difficulties and discouragements they shall run and not be wearied they shall walk and not faint Noe such way to keep the soul from fainting as this to wait upon God in all Estates Which who so do the same Prophet speaks them blessed Blessed are they that wait for him Isai 30.18 Whilest they wait for their God he waiteth that he may be gratious unto them as the former part of that verse hath it only expecting a seasonable time to shew himself unto them in a way of mercy And therefore to close up this Direction however the Lord please to deal with us though he seeme to withdraw himself from us yet with patience wait for him by faith resting upon the word of promise staying our souls upon him That is the advice which the same Prophet holdeth forth in that obvious but excellent Text Isai 50.10 Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servant that walketh in darknesse and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay himself upon his God And this let the Lords people doe such as unfeignedly fear God yeilding obedience to his word as in all other distresses so in this let them trust in the name of the Lord and stay themselves upon their God by faith resting upon him that so their souls may be kept from fainting Thus much for the former of these tryals Soul-suffering Passe we to the second The suffering of death This is the other Ingredient which we find in the bottome of this Cup The Suffering of death the last Act in this Tragedie the last thing that Christ was to suffer his pouring forth his soul unto death A bitter potion The bitterness of death is past saith Agag 1 Sam. 15.32 The fear of death which of all other things he looked upon as most bitter More bitter then death saith the Preacher of the wherish woman Eccles 7.26 Intimating death of all things which can befall the outward man to be the bitterest And yet see with what Patience with what Resolution our blessed Saviour here submits hereunto This was the Gup which his Father had given him He had appointed him to dye to dye that painfull shamefull accursed death upon the Crosse And this our Saviour was privy to having before acquainted his Disciples with it Mat. 20.18.19 Yet see how he submitteth to the will of his Father herein as Obediently he was obedient to the death Phil. 2.8 So willingly The Cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it And herein again let all his Disciples follow his steps Which Christians are to do Patiently and willingly shewing themselves in like manner Obedient to and in death submitting to the will of their heavenly Father in drinking this Cup. when he shall give it them and that not only Patiently but Willingly A great and a difficult work my brethren A work above the strength of nature A work passing the strength of Nature which of it self is not able to look this enemy in the face noe more then the Isralites were Goliah who when he shewed himself and made that challenge of a single combate to whomsoever should dare to incounter him it is said that when Saul and all Israel heard those words of the Philistine they were dismayed and greatly afraid 1 Sam. 17.11 And again v. 24. And all the men of Israel when they saw the man fled from him and were sore afraid Such an enemy is death being as Bildad calleth it The King of terrours Job 18.14 So it is to flesh and bloud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Philosopher saith of it of all terribles the most terrible And great Reason for it being so unconquerable an enemy that never was there any that encountred with it but have beene overcome by it save only this our David the Lord Jesus And how shall nature ever work the heart to such a resolution to embrace that which is so destructive to it self Nature cannot do it Noe Ye● above an ordinary measure of g●race nor yet an ordinary measure of grace How have some of the stourest cedars in Lebanon been shaken with this gust Some of the most eminent Saints of God how have their hearts even fainted when they have seen this Cup comming towards them David a man after Gods own heart then whom none more daring in battell yet in his cold bloud he tels us of the sorrows and terrours of death which took hold upon him The sorrows of death compassed me about Psa 18.4 The sorrows of Hell of the
grave compassed me about v. 5 My heart is sore pained within me and the terrours of death are fallen upon me Psal 55.4 And so Psal 116.3 This it was that rung those tears from Hezekiahs eyes Isai 38. Though a holy man one who as he appeareth to God in it v. 2 of that Chapter had walked before him in truth with a perfect heart and had done that which was good in his sight Yet when the Prophet commeth and presenteth this Cup to him bringing to him that message from the Lord that he must die and not live Now saith the storie Hezekiah turned his face to the wall as not daring to look this enemy in the face and he prayed unto the Lord v. 2. Yea as the next verse hath it he wept sore And himself tels us v. 14. that he chattered like a crane or swallow So unwelcome were those tidings unto him And St Paul though inferiour to none in holy courage and resolution which he shewed when he told the Disciples weeping about him that he was ready not only to be bound but to dye at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus Act. 21.13 Yet being as he thought arrested by this serjeant having as he saith received in himself the sentence of death he declares to his Corinthians that he was pressed out of measure above strength 2 Cor. 1.8.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 above the strength of nature yea even above the strength of that grace which he had which at the present he being suddainly surprized was hardly able to bear up his spirit under the apprehension of that eminent danger wherein he was And if Cedars be thus pressed how shall shrubs look to bear up head Should God now send the like message to any of us my Brethren as there he did to Hezekiah bidding us Set thine House in order for thou shalt dye and not live Or should we here see such an hand writing upon the wal as Belshezar once did giving us to take notice that our daies are numbred and our course finished put the question now to our own hearts what entertainment we could give to such a message such tidings Are there not some of us who would with Hezekiah turn away our face and weep at it as sore as ever he did Nay would it not fare with some of us as there it did with Belshazar of whom the story tels us that when he saw that hand-writing though he understood not what it meant yet his guilty conscience suggesting that it portended no good to him his countenance was changed and his thoughts troubled him so that the joints of his loines were loosed and his knees smote one against the other Dan. 5.6 How few are there of us that would so receive the Messengers of such tidings as our blessed Saviour doth here these Messengers which were sent to apprehend him so submitting to the will of God herein as he did But yet know we this to be our Duty Yet a Christians Duty a Lesson which our Lord and Master by his own example hath taught us And being so let every of us apply our selves to the learning and taking of it forth that we may thus submit to the drinking of this Cup when ever God shall give it unto us Which sooner or later he will do how soon we know not Q. And possible to be done I but you may say is this a thing possible to be done to bring the heart to such a willing submission hereunto A. Though not by Nature To this I answer as before that to flesh and bloud it is not possible Nature seeking the preservation of it self cannot readily and willingly imbrace that which is the destruction of it self Especially if the eye of the Soul shall be opened to see death as it is and to see the Consequents of it to look upon it as an inlet into a future Estate That which maketh meere naturall men sometimes so willing to dye is because they are blinded with mishapprehensions of it they look upon it as a period to their troubles as an end of all misery Whereas did they apprehend it as an inlet to Eternity yea to an Eternity of misery which to them it is as an entry into that dark dungeon where they shall be kept in those everlasting chaines under darknesse to the judgment of the great day it is not possible that they should look upon it or think of it without horrour and astonishment Yet by grace But to Grace this is possible This being one of those ends wherefore Christ dyed that through death he might deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject unto bondage as the Apostle tels us Heb. 2.15 Such is the condition of all the Sons of men by nature being continually subject unto death they are in bondage through the fear of it But this priviledge Christ hath by his death obtained for his Elect that through grace through faith in him they may be freed and delivered from this bondage this fear Though not from the Naturall yet from the slavish fear of it As for the Naturall fear of it that our blessed Saviour himself was not free from noe more are the best of Saints Not thus to fear death what is it but Hominem exuere to put off humanity But for the servile slavish fear of it that through grace believers may be freed from Yea so freed from it as to receive and embrace death readily and willingly This we find some of the Saints to have done Lord now lettest thou thy Servant depart in peace saith old Simeon Luk. 2.29 I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ saith Paul Phil. 1.23 In this we groan desiring earnestly to be cloathed upon with our house which is from Heaven saith the same Apostle of himself and other believers 2 Cor. 5.2 And again v. 8. We are confident I say and willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord. So then this is a thing possible for Christians to attain unto to be willing to dye when God calleth them to it Some and many have attained it and others may if they be not wanting to themselves Nay A shame to Christians not to be willing to dye it is a shame unto those who professing themselves Christians doe not in some measure attain hereunto 1. In as much Frist as this is contrary to their professions Being contrary to their profession Being Christians they profess themselves strangers and pilgrims on the earth as the Fathers of old time are said to have done Heb. 11.13 Now as it there followeth v. 14. They which say such things declare plainly that they seek a Countrey that they desire a better Country that is an heavenly as the 16 verse explaines it Such is the Christians profession Now then for them to be unwilling to passe through this Jordan to take possession of this their heavenly Canaan it
must needs reflect upon their profession What doth the Christian profess which he doth to look upon this World as a troublesome and tempestuous Sea and upon Heaven as his harbour which he is continually bending his course to and shall he yet be unwilling to leave the one and put in for the other when providence cals him to it Such practise doth not answer the Christians Profession 2. A disparagement to Gods Religion Neither is it a small disparagement to Gods Religion What shall Pagans and Heathens who have nothing but false principles to ground their resolution upon viz. that there is no life after death or some airye fances as that by dying in an honourable cause for their Country or the like they shall merit eternall honour to themselves so living when they are dead or some vain dreames such as those Poeticall fictions of the Elysian fields or of Mahomets Paradise an imaginary happiness after death shall these I say upon such grounds be able to incounter this Enemy to look death in the face nay to make a mock and a scorn of it as some of them have done And shall Christians tremble at the thoughts of it What a dishonour is this to Gods Religion As also unto Jesus Christ the Captain of their salvation whose Souldiers they professe themselves to be Which taking notice of let all those who professe themselves the Disciples of Christ labour to work their hearts to such a well grounded Resolution that they may be not unwilling to lay down their body and yeild up their Soules when God shall call for them Q I but you will say how shall a Christian attain hereunto Q. How shall a Christian attain hereunto It is a thing indeed to be much desired that the heart might be thus setled and stablished against the fear of death I but how shall it be brought to this frame this temper thus to look this last enemy in the face with such an unapalled countenance thus to drink this bitter Cup as our blessed Saviour here did with such Resolution such Willingnesse A. A point of great importance A. being of a general an universal concernment Helps prescrib●d well worthy of my paines in speaking and your attention in hearing Were it so that the heart of a Christian were once brought to such a frame that he might stand upon such tearms with death as not to be afraid of it how happy should he be both in life and in death Life would be sweet to him and death would not be bitter To help you therefore and my self therein give me leave to present unto you some brief directions which may be usefull in this way Of these we may meet with many there being no one there more copious then this I shall only gleane as Ruth is said to have done among the sheaves which others have gathered taking up some of those handfuls which they have let fall selecting some which are obvious and usefull These for the help of your memories I shall as in the former point reduce to those two heads of Contemplation By way of contemplation and Practise and Practise Begin with the former 1. Contemplation Where we shall find many useful truths Contemplations which being wrought upon the heart Seriously pondered and considered may serve as so many Antidotes for the preventing or expelling of that slavish and inordinate fear which hinders this resolution Of these some are Morall others Divine 1. Morall Morall or Naturall Considerations such as Sense and Reason hold forth Of this kind are those two obvious ones touching the Commonness of death and the Inevitablenesse of it 1. The Commonnesse of it This is a Common Cup which all our Fore-Fathers have drunk of Death a common Cup. A suffering which daily experience tels us that all sorts and conditions of persons are alike subject unto Be they young or old rich or poore Prince or Peasant Wise or simple How dieth the Wiseman Even as the fool Eccle. 2.16 In this no difference Do not all go to one place Eccles 6.6 And shal we see such crouds going before us and yet be afraid to follow after them Have those who have been before us gone off from the stage of this world to make room for us And shall we be unwilling to do the like for those that are to come after us 2. The Inevitablenesse unavoidablenesse of it Al must drink of it As this is a common Cup so all must drink it As all sorts so all individuals every particular person What man is he that liveth and shall not see death and shall he deliver his Soul from the hand of the grave Psa 89.48 I know that thou wilt bring me to death and to the house appointed for all living Job 30.23 Now as the Moralist reasoneth Stultum est timere quod vitari non potest A vain and foolish thing it is to fear what we cannot shun Whereunto may be added two other of the like kind viz. The Vanity and Misery of Life 3. The Vanity of this life there being nothing upon earth that can give any true contentment to the Soul Vanity of Vanities saith the Preacher The Vanity of life Vanity of Vanities all is Vanity that is the Tekel which the wisest of men out of his own experience sets upon the world and all things in it Eccl. 1.2 He had tryed all things as he there telleth us what ever might promise any contentment but he could never find what he sought for But the contrary So he informs us verse 14. I have seen all the works that are done under the Sun and behold all is vanity and vexation of Spirit Not only not giving any true contentment but creating a great deal of trouble and disquietment to the Soul which is inordinately addicted to them or afflicted with them So as there is nothing which this life affords which being weighed in a right ballance should make a man so in love with it as not to be willing to part with it 4. Nay there is enough in it to wean the soul from it The misery of it viz. the misery of it This Job renders as a Reason why he himself was not desirous to live but rather to dye I am made saith he to possesse months of Vanity and wearisome nights are appointed to me Job 7.3 He found not only no delight and contentment in his condition but a great deal of trouble and misery which made him even weary of his life And the like troubles in some kind or other are all men here subject to Man is born to trouble as the sparks flye upward saith Eliphaz Job 5.7 Man that is born of a woman is of few dayes and full of trouble saith Job Job 14.1 Few and evill have the dayes of the years of my life been saith the Patriarch Jacob Gen. 47.9 Few in comparison with many of his fore-fathers and evill in regard of the manifold
crosses which he met with And the like more or less must every one make account to meet with upon earth even a succession of troubles like waves of the Sea where depth calleth unto deep one Crosse following upon the neck of another So as the more daies the more sorrows All which serve to wean the heart from this world as the infant is from the brest by laying bitter things upon it 2. Divine But I shall not any longer insist upon these or any other Arguments of the like nature The Resolution of a Christian must be built upon better grounds then these If God shall please to open the eyes of a naturall man to see death as it is it is not any or all of these or whatever other Arguments Reason can suggest that will bear up the soul against the terrors of it They must be Cordials of a higher extraction that will strengthen the heart in this last conflict divine Considerations such as the word holdeth forth Of these take a few among many 1. In the First place Look upon God who hath appointed and determined Let our eye be upon God our Father whose Cup this is So was our Saviours here The Cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it And so must theirs who would drink this Cup as he did submit unto the stroke of death patiently and willingly they must see God in the ordering and disposing of it looking upon it as his appointment Which it is he having 1. Appointed that men shall die It is appointed to men once to die Heb. 9.27 Appointed viz. That men shall dye by God who as he is the Lord of life so he is the appointer of death Having passed a generall law for it Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt return Gen. 3. Which Law also he executeth upon particular persons bringing them to death I know that thou wilt bring me to death and to the house appointed for all living Job 30 23. So it is however secondary Causes concur in bringing men to their Graves yet God himself hath the principall stroke in it Death being his Messenger sent by him He hath appointed that men shall dye Which taking notice of look we upon it as our duty to submit hereunto when he calleth us to it 2. As he hath appointed that men shall dye so when they shall dye The time when Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth viz. how long he shall-live Job 7.1 His dayes are determined the number of his Moneths are with thee thou hast appointed his bounds that he cannot passe Job 14.5 So certain are Gods decrees concerning the time of mans life that he cannot go beyond the term limited the Year the Moneth the Day the Hour set down Father the hour is come saith our Saviour speaking of the time appointed for his suffering of death Joh. 17.1 3. As the time so the place As the time when so the place where The place where that is also determined by God Goe up into Mount Nebo and die there saith the Lord to Moses Deut. 32.50 Our Saviour must goe up to Jerusalem and there suffer many things and be killed so he tells his Disciples Matth. 16.21 4. And appointing the time and place he also appointeth the manner The manner how how men shall dye what kinde of death whether naturall or violent So it was determined concerning our Saviour that he should die upon the Crosse be crucified which he acquaints his Disciples with Math. 20.19 And so concerning Peter to whom our Saviour foretells by what death he should glorifie God Joh. 21.19 And so is it determined concerning every of the sons of men as when and where so how they shall dye None of these are left to Chance and Fortune Time place manner all appointed by God Which being seriously considered and believed it will be of great use to bring the heart to a quiet and willing submission to the will of God in suffering what he hath so appointed Thus look at God In the Second place look we upon Jesus Christ Look upon Jesus the Captain of our Salvation as the Apostle calleth him Heb. 2.10 Where behold we him 1. Drinking of this Cup before us Suffering death And shall not we then pledge him Shall the Captain goe before and shall not the Souldiers follow after Malus miles qui Imperatorem gemens sequitur He is but an ill Souldier that weeps when he is to march after his Generall Shall our Joshua go before us over this Jordan and shall not we go after him It was a good Resolution in that man that Scribe had he held to it who said to our Saviour Master I will follow thee whithersoever thou goest Mat. 8.19 Such should be the Resolution of every Christian to follow Christ when he cals him to go after him though it be to Mount Calvary or Golgotha the place of a skull as both those words signifie and the latter of them is expounded Joh. 19 17. and Mat. 27.33 the Caemeterie or Church-yard as we call it 2. And whilest we behold him suffering of death behold we also the issues of this his suffering Conquering it as St James saith of Job Ye have heard of the patience of Job and have seen the end of the Lord Jam. 5.11 What Issue God was pleased to give him which was very joyfull and comfortable So here looking upon Christ submitting to his Father in suffering of death behold we the end of the Lord the issue of this his suffering which was victorious and glorious Victorious Even as David cut off the head of the Philistine with his own sword so did this our David by dying he conquered death which he manifested in his Resurrection Where he brake the bands of death rising again by his own power and so became the first born from the dead as the Apostle calleth him Col. 1.18 Now the first born openeth the womb for those that come after him And so hath Christ opened the grave for all true believers so as it shall be no more able to hold them then it was him Thus was the issue of this his conflict with this his last enemy victorious And as victorious so Glorious we see Jesus who was made a little lower then the Angels for or through 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour He. 2.9 In this way he entred into his glory Luk. 24.26 Through this dark entry he went into his heavenly palace And so shall they who do herein follow his steps being obedient as he was Obedient to the death 3. Look we upon death it self But here look upon it in Look upon death it self Not in the glass of the Lawe but gospell and through a right glass Not that of the Law but of the Gospell The glasse of the Lawe presents the face of it as ghastly and terrible holding it forth as a
Curse which in it own nature it is being the issue and wages of sin and the very Gate of Hell But look we upon it in the glasse of the Gospell that we shall find representing it unto the believer under another shape as being much changed and alterd by Christ Newe names put upon Death Whereupon it puts new names upon it Calling it sometimes a sleep Our friend Lazarus sleepeth Joh. 11.11 Them which sleep in Jesus 1 Thes 4.14 Such is the grave to the true believer Not a Prison but a Bed sor the Body to rest in for a time They shall rest in their beds Isai 57.2 Elsewhere we find it called a Departure Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace saith old Simeon Luke Vid-Leigh Critica Sa●ra 2.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dimitti● thou loosest dismiss●st me lettest me out of Prison So the Syriack there renders the word Now thou openest the Prison And so we find it properly used Act 5.40 Where it is said that the Councell let the Apostles goe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. out of prison Such is this life to the believer noe better then a Prison death is his dismission A like word is that which we find used by the Apostle Phil. 1.23 Where expressing his willingnesse to dye I desire saith he to be dissolved or to depart as the new translation hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to return home So the same word is used in his proper sense Luk 12.36 Where servants are said to wait for their Lord till he return to his home 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Such is this World to gods people a strange Country where they live as strangers and pilgrims being from home Ad remigrationem Beza Now death is to them a Remigratio as Beza there renders the word a removing a returning to their own Country their home The Soul leaving the Body where it lodged for a time returns to God that gave it Eccles 12.7 Elsewhere the same Apostle calls it the dissolving of a Tabernacle If our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved 2 Cor. 5.1 Not destroyed So is a house when it is pulled down the materials of it being so broken as they can never be put together again But not so a Tabernacle or Tent where the parts are only taken asunder for a time but afterwards put together and set up in another place Such is death only a dissolution of the parts whereof man is composed a severing of the soul and Body for a time which shall afterwards be reunited And so St Peter making use of the same Allusion he calleth it a putting off or laying down of a Tabernacle 2 Pet. 1.14 Knowing that shortly I must put off this my Tabernacle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depositio tabernaculi mei as the vulgar Latine renders it properly The laying down of my Tabernacle is at hand Such is the Body to the Soul like a Tent to him that carrieth it about with him a burden which being layed down he is eased And so is the Soul by the deposition the laying down of the Body in death Which in the next verse that Apostle there sets forth under another name calling it his Exodus after my decease v. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My Exodus A word with the sound whereof you have been well acquainted it being the Title given to the second book of Moses which is so called from the departure of the Israelites out of Egypt which is there fully described Such an Exodus is death to the believer a Translation of him from an Egypt an house of bondage into the Celestial Canaan the glorious liberty of the Sons of God Thus hath death now new names put upon it The Gospell representing it after another manner with another face then the Law holdeth it forth And well may it have new names The nature of death changed by Christ when as the Nature of it is so changed and altered as by Christ it is Who hath taken away the maliguity of it that which was hurtfull in it Having pulled the sting out of this Serpent O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory so the Apostle triumpheth over this conquered Enemy 1 Cor. 15.55 Bot the sting and strength of it are now gone The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law but thanks be to God who hath given us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ so the Apostle there goeth on This hath Christ done for all that are in him having made satisfaction for sin and fulfilled the Law So as now though death may threaten as the Serpent having lost the sting may hiss yet it cannot hurt And why then should we fear a conquered enemy Which is not only disarmed but lyeth as it were dead before us l●ke that Philistine when his head was off In Christi morte mors obiit In Christs death Death died Being thereby abolished as the Apostle hath it 2 Tim. 1.10 Who hath abolished death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made it of none effect So is naturall death the fear and sting of it being taken away it is now as a shadow without a substance Thus is Death now qualified by Christ as to all true Believers Which being seriously considered will be of speciall use to free them from the inordinate fear of it and make them not unwilling to submit to God in the suffering of it To passe on In the Fourth place thus looking upon death Look beyond Death look beyond it Even as the timorous Passenger in ferrying over a River where the water is rough by fixing his eye on the bank of the other side settles his brain which otherwise might be troubled thus let the timorous Christian whose nature inclines him to fear death look beyond it look to the issues the fruits and consequents of it Here taking notice of two things The Evils which it freeth the Believer from and the Good which it bringeth him to Considering 1 1. The Evils which it freeth him from Which are of two sorts The Evils which it freeth the Believer from Temporall and Spirituall 1. Temporall which I have touched upon already Such are bodily Infirmities sicknesses Temporall some of them very dolorous and painfull and such are losses and Crosses in Estate with Reproaches and Ignominies and many Vexations and Disquietments with wearisome labours and Imployments All these is the life of a Christian here infested with this world being to him as I said a troublesome Sea But Death is the Havens mouth which letteth him into a quiet Harbour where he is at rest from all these Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord c. that they may rest from their labours Rev. 14.13 There the wicked cease from troubling and there the weary be at rest There the Prisone●s rest together they hear not the voice of the Oppressor The small and great are there and there the servant
the promises and assurances which we meet with in Scripture to this purpose The Lord preserveth the strangers he relieveth the fatherless and Widows Psal 146.9 A father of the Fatherless and a Judg of the Widow is God in his holy habitation Psal 68.5 Leave thy Fatherless children I will preserve them alive and let thy Widows trust in me Jer. 49.11 In thee the fatherless findeth Mercy Hos 14.3 Thus when Father and Mother forsake their Children as in death they do now as David speaketh it of himself Psal 27.10 The Lord taketh them up exercising a speciall providence over such This will he doe being left a God in Covenant with them And therefore no just ground why this consideration should so far prevaile with any that are in Covenant with God as to make them unwilling to dye upon this account which too often they are In this obey God and then trust in him As for that other part of this Allegation p●rting with friends and the loss of their society Friends upon earth not to be compared with those in heaven it cannot sway much Alas what are thy friends upon earth which thou art to leave in comparison of thy friends in heaven whom thou art to go to viz God and Jesus Christ his blessed Saints and Angels with whom thou shalt now have an everlasting Communion Besides thy friends and thou are not by this means for ever parted It is but for a time a little time Though thou shalt not return to them as David said of his Childe 2 Sam. 12.23 yet they shall come to thee meeting where you shall never part But saith another I am not unwilling to dye upon any such account Obj. 3 Dying without issue to continue the name but rather the contrary I have no issue to leave behind me which might succeed in my place inherit my estate or continue my name This was the thing which was conceived to have wrought so upon that good King Hezekiah that made the message which the Prophet brought him concerning his death so unwelcome unto him so as he wept when he heard it of which we heard before this he did as having yet no issue to succeede him to bear his name and sit upon his throne after him And the like consideration oft times after the like manner worketh upon others But was not this also the case of our blessed Saviour here A. The case of our blessed Saviour When as he was now to leave the world being a single person he had no issue of his Body none to succeed him to bear his name his naturall name after him True indeed as for his spiritual name he left enough to bear that viz. his Apostles and Ministers whose office it is to bear the name of Christ as he tels Ananias that Paul should doe Act. 9.15 By preaching and publishing of his Gospell But as for his natu●al name that dyed with him he leaving neither Child nor yet Brother to succeed him Yet was this consideration of no avail with him Notwithstanding this he knew that his name should be continued upon earth and withall that he should have a better name in heaven even that name above every name as it is called The good name of Gods Saints living when they are dead Phil. 2.9 And the like may all Gods Saints assure themselves of Having by their Godly and examplary life and conversation got them a good name whilest they were alive that shall be to them a precious ointment as the Preacher makes the comparison Eccl. 7.1 preserving and perfuming their memories when they are dead Such is the name of Jesus Christ Thy name is as ointment poured forth saith the Spouse of her well-beloved Cant. 1.3 And such shall the names of his Saints be When the name of the wicked shall rot rot above ground as their bodies do under it they having left nothing but a stinking savour behind them the memory of the just shal be blessed Prov. 10.7 But however They have in heaven a name better then of Sons and Daughters though they be forgotten upon earth yet they shall have a name in Heaven Yea and that a name above every name above whatever name upon earth A name better then of Sons and Daughters an everlasting name that shall not be cut off as the Lord promiseth his people Isai 56.5 As for the name of Sons and Daughters a name by issue continued it often faileth seldome lasteth to many generations But the name of Gods people is an everlasting name being a name written in heaven As for those names which are written in the earth which the names of worldlings are they are written in the dust and so shall perish But so shall not the names of Gods Saints which are written in heaven written in the book of life Having then assurance of such a name let not them be over ambitious of any other I but saith another Obj. I am not unwilling to dye but I would not dye yet And why not yet Why Being in the flower of age as yet I am in the flower of my age having lived but a little while upon earth so as to me death seemeth untimely A. A. T●e case of our Saviour And was it not thus also with thy blessed Saviour was not he cut off in the flower of his age about the thirty third or thirty fourth year of his life And yet doth not he look upon his death as untimely now that the hour appointed by his Father was come Though thy time be not come yet if Gods be do not think it untimely I Obj. 5 But I might live to do God a great deal of service upon earth Desire of doing more service to God and upon that account I desire a longer date of daies And might not thy Saviour have done so too A. Yet when his Father calleth him from his work So might Christ have done he is not unwilling to leave off Repl Repl. I but he knew that his work was done I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do He knew that his work was finished saith he Joh. 17.4 And upon that account was he so willing to be gone But so cannot I say A. A. But this thou maiest say If God calleth thee hence So is ours when God calleth us from it the work which he hath given thee to do is finished though not the work which thou wouldest do to him And therefore be not averse to his call He who setteth thee to do his work knoweth how long it is fit for thee to be at it And if he cal thee off by that time thou hast wrought a few houres in his vineyard and giveth thee thy peny thou hast no cause to repine at it or be unwilling with it I Obj. 6 but saith another I know not how bitter how painfull The bitterness of Death my death may be As for death it self considering the miseries
do to bring and keep our hearts in such a temper as that we may not be inordinately affected with any thing here below whether Crosses or Comforts Not but that a Christian may be affected with both He may both Weep and Rejoyce and that upon the account of temporal concernments But see that it be not in an inordinate manner And so may he buy and sell seek and indeavour to get an estate in the world to purchase and possess houses and lands But take we heed we do not make them our chief possession It is a good distinction which Augustine maketh use of betwixt Vti and Frui Vsing and injoying Which let all of us learn that so we may not be guilty of what he chargeth as a great impiety viz. Vti fruendis or frui utendis only to make use of what we ought to injoy or to injoy what we ought only to make use of As only to make use of heaven and heavenly things by thinking or speaking of them sometime which we ought to make our injoyment or to make the things of this world our injoyment which we ought only to make use of and that so using them as if we used them not Thus labour we so take of our hearts that they may sit loose to the world Which till a man do he will never be willing to leave it Surely this is it which maketh the men of this world so unwilling to hear of death much more to see it their hearts are glewed and fastned to the world to the profits or pleasures or honours of it Some thing or other there is to which they are wedded And no wonder then that this Apparatour Death which brings to them a Bil of divorce should be so unwelcome a messenger Get we our hearts then weaned and taken of from all these so as we may leave this world before it leaveth us leave it in Affection before we leave it in Person Which having done death will not be unwelcome Q. But how shall we get our hearts thus weaned from the world Q. How to get the heart weaned from the world A. Briefly 1. By a serious consideration of the vanity of it even all things upon earth The mutability uncertainty with the vacuity and emptinesse of them A. 1 Consider the vanity of earth how they are such things as a man can have to assurance of injoying them and whilest injoyed cannot afford any true contentment to the soul but oftimes breeding wormes in it cares and fears vexations and disquietments All which the wisest of men by his own experience found as he sets it forth at large in that his Book of Retractions Ecclesiastes 2. Consider the transcendency of those Riches The happinesse of heaven Honours and Pleasures which are to be found in that other world in Heaven Which being put into the ballance against these of this world doe infinitely outweigh them Those being as the Apostle calleth them Heb. 10.34 A better and an induring substance whereas these are only vain and vanishing shadows Look we rightly seriously and steadfastly upon the one our eies will be so dazled with the splendor and brightnesse of them that they will never after be much taken with the glimmering of the other 3. Have no unnecessary society or familiarity with the men of this world the worlds minions and Favourites men who mind nothing but earthly things But associate and acquaint our selves with such as are in their affections got above the earth and have learned to contemn and make light of all things in it 4. Single out the particulars which our hearts are most taken with and fastest linked to and make it our daily work to wean our soules from them But I hasten towards a conclusion Thus dye to the world daily And thirdly Dye daily as to the Death of nature Which do we Dye daily the death of nature 1. By inuring our selves to a quiet and patient bearing and suffering of lighter afflictions and Crosses Submitting to lesser Crosses which are as petty deaths Every of which is a kind of petty death all of them deaths retinue forerunners of it and making way for it Now inure we our selves to a quiet submission to the will of God in drinking of these lesser Cups in suffering of these lesser tryals with patience and holy contentation this will make us the more ready and willing to submit to this last stroak when it cometh to suffer death it self The new Cart in the Fable which never bare any burden before it made a noise at the first load whereas the old one having been accustomed thereunto was silent The soul which never inurd it self to bear the Crosse to suffer lighter Afflictions with patience in obedience to God will hardly be brought quietly to submit to his will in this last act It is good saith the Church for a man that he bare the yoke in his youth he sitteth alone and keepeth silence because he hath born it upon him Lam. 3.27 By being inured to the patient bearing of lighter afflictions he quietly submits to greater when they come and so to death it self 2. Seriously and frequently meditate of death And Secondly often acting this part with our selves in private before we come to do it upon the publike stage Dying daily by a frequent and serious meditation of death Setting it continually before our eyes often thinking of our latter end Which is a great piece of true Christian wisdome O that they were wise that they understood this that they would consider their latter end saith the Lord of his people Israel Deut. 32.29 Consider that we must dye And here do not put far off from us this evil day Do not look upon death as they do who look through the Optick glass at the wrong end whereby things near at hand seem at a great distance from them Do not thus look upon death as a thing afar of but near hand A practise of great use as to other ends so to make death familiar and consepuently not so dreadful It is the forgetfulnesse of death saith one that maketh life sinful and death terrible And therefore as he had his deaths head every meal set upon his Table and the guize of mourners is to wear them in their rings so do we often set death before us frequently and seriously thinking of it And looking upon it as near hand so living every day as if it were our last day Continually standing upon our gard waiting all the dayes of our appointed time till our change shall come as Job saith he would doe Job 14.14 By this meanes having been made account of and looked for before it comes it will not be so terrible when it cometh Thus prepare for death by dying daily And then in the third place work while our day lasteth Dir. 3 Work whilest our day lasteth So did our blessed Saviour I must work the works of him that sent me while
it is day Joh. 9.4 And the like do we whilest the day of life lasteth be we working the works of God that so we may have finished our work before the night of death cometh The labourer having wrought hard in the day and finished his work this maketh the night welcome to him and his rest sweet and comfortable And so will the night of death be to the soul that hath been working for God it will now be to it a quiet rest This made our blessed Saviour so willing now to dye he had finished his Fathers work I have glorified thee on earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do Joh. 17.4 And this made the Apostle so confident as not to fear his departure when he apprehended it at hand I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith 2 Tim 4.7 He had been faithful to his Lord and M●ster in doing the work which he had committed unto him And thence he concludes that he should now receive his Crown that Crown of righteousnesse as he there cals it an ample reward which the righteous God would give him for all his service Whereupon he is not unwilling to think of his departure O that every of us may indeavour thus to approve our selves to God and Jesus Christ thus to work his work whilest our day lasteth Then when the evening of death cometh we shall be sure to have our Peny Which being assured of it will make us not unwilling to go to receive it 4. Be frequent in casting up our accounts Dir. 4 Be frequent in casting up our accounts betwixt God and our souls The day of death is the reckoning day wherein every one must give up his account unto God Give an account of thy Stewardship for thou mayest be no longer Steward saith the Master ' in the parable to his Servant Luk. 16.2 In this life we are all Gods Stewards being betrusted by him with many Talents which we are to improve for him And hereof at the day of death we must give an account to him O that the thought of that day may not be terible to us make up our account aforehand And this do we often They who are frequent in casting up their accounts are not unwilling to be called to a general reckoning which they who have bin remiss careless herein would be Surely this is one thing which maketh men so unwilling to hear of death when it cometh they have then all their accounts to cast up Take heed it be not so with us Be we strict and constant observers of our own hearts and lives Often calling our selves to an account making it our daily work Every night reflecting upon the day past call we to mind according to that trite direction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. wherein we have transgressed what evil we have committed what good we have done or left undone So making even betwixt God and our souls by suing forth our discharge in the name and upon the account of Jesus Christ This exercise being conscientiously performed it will be of speciall use to make this great reckoning day not unwelcome to us when it shall come 5. Dir. 5 That we may not be unwilling to depart hence Lay up a stock in heaven and to leave this world send somewhat afore us into that other world Laying up a stock in heaven 1. A stock for our selves That is our Saviours counsel For our selves a flock of good works Matth. 6.2 Laye up for your selves treasures in Heaven This do we by doing of good works as works of Piety so of Charity Sell that you have and give almes provide for your selves bags which wax not old a treasure in the heavens that faileth not saith that parallel Text Luk. 12 33. A man that hath his chief estate in another Country which he hath made over by bils of exchange or put into the banck there he will not be unwilling upon a just occasion to follow it Now such are acts of charity and mercy being done for Gods sake they are as so many bils of exchange made over for heaven a stock put into the banck where he who hath so put it out shal at his coming thither receive it again with abundant increase He that hath pity on the poor lendeth to the Lord and that which he hath given he will pay him again Prov. 19.17 O that rich men to whom God hath given abundance of this worlds goods and whose care it is to make the best improvement of what they have would but take this Course thus to make themselves friends of their Mammon as our Saviour adviseth them Luk. 16.9 that so when they fail when they dye they may receive them into everlasting habitations This would make them not so unwilling to dye as for the most part they are and that upon this account because they must leave what they have in this world and have no stock layed up in another 2. For others a stock of prayers And thus laying up a stock in heaven for our selves do the like also for others laying up a Stock a Stock of prayer for them Which whilest we do for all Gods people whom we leave behind us do it in a special manner for our near and dear Relations So did our heavenly pattern here The Lord Jesus whom in the Chapter before the text we find upon his knees putting up a devout prayer unto God his Father as for his Church in general so for his Apostles in speciall I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me Joh. 17.9 And the like let them do who are to leave near and dear Relations behind them Wives Husbands Children kinred friends lay up a stock of prayers for them in Heaven whereof they may reap the benefit when themselves have left them This will make them the lesse unwilling to leave those whom they have thus provided for In the sixth place Dir. 6 having thus laid up our best treasure in heaven Set the house in order now set we our houses in order upon earth That is the Counsel and charge which the Lord giveth to Hezekiah when he sent him those tidings that he must dye he bids him set his house in order Isai 38.2 Set thine house in order for thou must dye and not live A thing of great use as in reference to the living who shal be left behind so also to him who is to depart hence who having thus setled his temporal concernments in this world will be more ready for his removal into another when God shall call him to it And therefore let not this be neglected by those who have ought to dispose of Let them be careful to make their Wills and Testaments before hand So also did this our heavenly pattern the Lord Jesus who at his last Supper having ordered other things before he then finished his Will and Testament setting his Seal to it Of such use was that Sacrament then and there instituted the Sacrament of the Lords Supper being as a seal set by Christ to his Testament for the confirming of all his former grants and assuring of whatever he had promised Now what he did as to Spirituals let those who would be ready to dye when God will have them doe as to Temporals Setling them aforehand Not putting off this work as too many do to the death bed which as it is attended with many other inconveniences so it often proves no small disquietment to the spirit of the dying person making him loath to leave this world in so unsetled a condition as through this his former neglect in reference to his own relations and concernments he is like to do Set thy house in order Which being done Dir. 7 now in the last place to close up all what remains but to commit the Soul unto God Commit the soul to God Which that we may do quietly and comfortably in death as our blessed Saviour did who breathed out his Soul in those words Father into thy hands I commend my spirit Luk. 23.46 do we it before do it in Life So did David Psal 31.4 Into thy hands I commit my spirit So did the Apostle who making a confession of his faith to his Son Timothy 2 Tim 1.12 there tels him I know saith he whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that day His precious soul this was his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Depositum that which he had committed to the custody of God and Jesus Christ And the like do we that we may be willing to depart hence as he was commit we our souls unto God aforehand Which do we first by Faith believing on him which the Apostle there saith he did casting our selves into the armes of his free grace and mercy through Jesus Christ Then by obedience committing the keeping of our souls unto him in well doing as unto a faithful Creatour as St. Peter exhorts 1 Pet. 4. last indevouring carefully and conscientiously to walk before him in all wel-pleasing all the daies of our life So doing now as we shall have comfort in life so when death cometh we shall have no cause to be afraid of it And thus have I now through a gracious assistance preached this doctrine unto you which I look upon as the hardest lesson in Christs school Now what remaineth but that we all beg it of our great Lord Master that he would so effectually teach it us that as occasion is we may practise what we have heard shewing our selves conformable to this our heavenly Pattern as in his Active so in his Passive Obedience being obedient to our heavenly Father as in doing so in suffering his Will even Obedient to death For which let us now pray FINIS