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A70945 Christ all and in all. Or, several significant similitudes by which the Lord Jesus Christ is described in the holy Scriptures Being the substance of many sermons preached by that faithful and useful servant of Christ Mr. Ralph Robinson, late pastor at Mary Wolnoth London. Which were appointed by the reverend author on his death-bed (if his brethren should think fit) to be published. Robinson, Ralph, 1614-1655. 1656 (1656) Wing R1705; ESTC R223720 320,677 592

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stinking They defile all that comes neer them whatsoever they meddle with whatsoever toucheth them is defiled by them 2. They that are spiritually dead have no use of any of their spiritual senses The soul hath senses as well as the body but he that is dead cannot use any of these They cannot heare they cannot see they cannot taste they cannot smell they cannot feele they cannot heare Christs voice in the Gospel they cannot see the glory of Christ nor of grace they cannot feel the heavy weight of sinne they cannot taste the sweet and delicate pleasures of Jesus Christ they cannot smell the fragrancy of Christs sweet ointments They have no pleasure in those things that are most plesant in themselves and most desirable to such as are spiritually alive They are to all spiritual things and all spiritual things are to them as if they were not 3. This spiritual death if it be not removed is a certaine forerunner of eternal Death Blessed and happy is he that hath part in the first resurrection of him the second death shall have no power Rev. 20 6. but he that continues still in this spiritual death shall for ever be under the power of the second death the eternal death And this is the state of all such as want Jesus Christ Use 2. That that spiritual life which is in the soul of a beleever shall never totally and finally die It may be at deaths door it may be ready to die so it was with the Church of Sardis Rev. 3. 2. A Christian may be in regard of his spiritual life as a tree in the depth of winter no difference to all outward appearance between him and a dead plant but it is impossible that the spiritual life shall utterly be extinguished because Jesus Christ who is our spiritual life lives for ever Your life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3. 3. hid as in a root for safety and security Because I live ye shall live also John 14. 19. while the root liveth the plant cannot die while the fountaine runneth the streames cannot cease while the olive-trees convey their oyle through the pipes into the lamp the lamp cannot go out A living Christian may grow very weak but he cannot die Jesus Christ must cease to live before the life of grace in a Saint do utterly perish while the cause continueth the effect will Use 3. That there is a true spiritual union between Iesus Christ and a beleever This is one of the great mysteries of the Gospel that Christ and a beleever should be made one it s set out by many examples as of root and branches Iohn 15. init head and members Eph. 5. 3. foundation-stone and the superstructory stones Eph. 2. 20. meat and eaters Iohn 6 56. husband and wife Eph. 5. 32. This very doctrine makes it good He could not be our life if he were not united to us and we to him 'T is by vertue of our union with him that we come to draw life from him As the soul and body are united so are Christ and a beleever the whole mystical body is called by his name 1 Cor. 12. 12. so also is Christ speaking of the Church Use 4. Deadnesse of Spirit want of spiritual Activity is very inexcusable in a beleever The ground of this inference is very cleare Jesus Christ is his life Christ hath life enough in him and he is willing enough to communicate more and more of this spiritual life If the fountaine of this life were a meer creature something might be said for thy deadnesse and coldnesse but now seeing Jesus Christ is thy life thy deadnesse is inexcusable in thy self and it is also dishonourable to Christ The life and greennesse of the branches is an honour to the root by which they live Spiritual greennesse and fruitfulnesse is in a beleever an honour to Jesus Christ who is his life Psal 92. 12 13 14 15. The righteous shall flourish as a Palm-tree c. To shew that the Lord is upright c. The fulnesse of Christ is manifested by the fruitfulnesse of a Christian Use 5. It is the duty of a Christian to live comfortably on this Doctrine It affords very much comfort 1. Against the weaknesse of this life in our selves What Christian is there but finds this life very weak in him at some times well when it is weakest in thee it is then strong in Jesus Christ And God looks upon thy spiritual life not only as it is in thee but as it is in Christ 2. Against the fear of the wanting of the Ordinances of life 'T is a great losse to lose the Ordinances Lev. 26. 31. Well though thou lose these yet thou doest not lose thy life These are but the pipes Christ is the Olive-tree These are but the chanels Christ is the fountaine Man liveth not by bread alone but by the word of blessing Thy soul liveth by Christ not by Ordinances They are but the instrumental cause Christ is the efficient 3. Against the feare of Satans workings to destroy this spiritual life 'T is his great designe to take away this spiritual life He labours to stifle it by sinne he stirs up his instruments to remove the Ordinances Well he cannot prevaile He must destroy Christ before he can destroy our life He must either wither the root or he cannot kill the branches Use 6. Let beleevers be careful to carry themselves towards Christ as he who is their life 1. Acknowledge him the Authour of your life 2. Go to him when you want life 3. Strengthen your union with him Eph. 4. 15. 4. Live to him who is your life Rom. 14. 8. Use 7. It should invite all to lay hold on Christ All men are dead by nature There 's no other way to live a spiritual life If Christ be not thy life of grace he will never be thy life of glory COL 3. 4. When Christ our life shall appear then III. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. June 1. 1651. shall we also appeare with him in glory I Have handled the first Proposition as it relates to the life of grace viz. that Jesus Christ is a beleevers spiritual life I shall now consider of it as it refers to the life of glory and so summe it up into this conclusion viz. Doct. Jesus Christ is the eternal life of every beleever Christ is the everlasting life of all those that are eternally saved As he is their life of grace so he is also their life of glory He is often called in Scripture not only a Saviour but Salvation The salvation of God Luk. 3. 6. An horn of salvation Luk. 1. 69. And all because he is the salvation of all the Elect. I must here put in that Caution which I did before viz. That the Father and Holy Ghost are not to be excluded they are our life as well as Christ The Spirit and the Father are Saviours as well as the Sonne Opera Trinitatis ad
extra sunt indivis● Prophets Act. 10. 43. Apostles 1 John 5. 11. Christ himself Joh. 14. 16. do all bear witnesse to this truth That Jesus Christ is life eternal to every true beleever In what respect Christ is our life of glory I shall shew in the following particulars viz. 1. In regard of merit and acquisition Jesus Christ is the procurer of this life of glory Heaven is called a purchased Redemption or Possession Epb. 1●4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jesus Christ is the purchaser of this possession and his blood is the price of the purchase As he hath by his death purchased the Elect so hath he also by his blood purchased this life for those redeemed ones 1 John 4. 9. in this was manifested the love of God towards us because he sent his only begotten Sonne into the world that we might live through him Had not Jesus Christ shed his blood no sinner had ever tasted of this life eternal Eternal life is the free gift of God and yet it is merited by Christ Christ who is the price and meritorious cause of life is the free gift of Gods grace and therefore our salvation is both free and ye● merited 2. He is our life efficaciously Though salvation be purchased for the Elect yet must the Elect of God be fitted and prepared for this salvation before they can be put into the possession of it The Apostle speaks of making the soule meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The best of men are unfit for salvation as well as unworthy of salvation Though heaven be prepared for them yet cannot they enter into heaven till they be prepared This fitnesse or preparedness stands in the changing of our nature by the working of grace in the heart and in the merciful acceptation of God covering our infirmities and reckoning our weak endeavours for perfect obedience Natura mentis humanae quantumvis perfect a naturalibus donis absque gratiâ non est susceptibilis gloriae Parisiens lib. de v●rt cap. 11. The Apostle tells us that a man must be wrought for glory 2 Cor. 5. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Elect of God come into the world rough and unpolished filthy and defiled as well as others and they are not fit for this life till they be refined and polished Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 15. 50. Except a man be borne againe he cannot see the Kingdome of heaven Aquinas saith well Gratia haec divina eò infunditur electis ut peragant actiones ordinatas in finem vitae aeternae Now Jesus Christ doth fit and work the Elect for this glory He doth by his Spirit change their nature he doth by his grace renew the spirit of their minde he doth set up his own image in their soules and by working grace fit them for the enjoyment of that life of glory which he hath purchased 3. He is our life He is the fountaine of our eternal glory 1 John 5. 11. This is the record that God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in his Sonne 'T is in him as in the head as in the root as in the fountain or spring All our glory is laid up in Jesus Christ as in a publick treasury Iesus Christ and all beleevers make up one mystical body of which he is the head and they the members therefore is their glory laid up in him 4. Jesus Christ is our life in regard of preparation As he doth prepare us for heaven so doth he prepare heaven for us This is attributed to his Ascension Iohn 14. 2 3. I go to prepare a place for you Not as if the place of glory were not created till the Ascension of Christ There were many souls in heaven glorified before Christ did corporally ascend thither Abel Abraham Isaac Iacob and the Prophets the meaning of it is onely thus much that Iesus Christ did not ascend only for himself to dwell in glory alone but he ascended for our sakes in our stead and place to possesse the purchased inheritance for us and to keep it for us till we actually come to be possessed of it our selves 'T is by way of allusion to the practices of great Kings who send their harbingers before them to make ready for them against their coming Iesus Christ is pleased to stile himself so in reference to the Elect. And therefore the Apostle calls him our forerunner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and tells us that he is entred into the vaile for us Heb. 6. 20. and hence it is that we are said to sit down together with Christ in heavenly places Eph. 2. 6. 5. He is our life as the way to life He calls himself the way Iohn 14. 16. No man comes to the Father but by Christ This is that new and living way which the Apostle mentions Heb. 10. 19 20. 'T is through the vaile of Christs flesh that we enter into the Holy of Holies Iacob in his vision at Bethel saw a ladder which reached from heaven to earth Gen. 28. 12. upon this ladder the Angels of God ascended and descended This ladder is Iesus Christ so he tells us himselfe Iohn 1. 51. hereafter ye shall see heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Sonne of man He hath not only shewed us the way to heaven by his example but he is the way himself in which we go to God 6. He is our life in regard of distribution and communication As he hath purchased life for us and keeps possession of it for us so he it is that shall put us into possession of it when we come to enjoy it I will come againe and receive you unto my self Iohn 14. 3. The Apostle speaks of this in 2 Tim. 4 8. There is laid up for me a Crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me in that day 'T is to be understood of Christ he that hath purchased the Crown for us will in that day visibly set it upon our head Come ye blessed of my Father receive the Kingdome c. Matthew 25. latter end 7. He is our life formally Iesus Christ is the matter of eternal life Our eternal life and glory stands in the full enjoyment of Iesus Christ in heaven The seeing of God the enjoyment of Christ is our very glory Rev. 22. 3 4. The Throne of God and of the lamb shall be in it and his servants shall serve him and they shall see his Face and his Name shall be in their foreheads The glory of heaven is called the eating of the tree of life Rev. 2. 7. Iesus Christ is the tree of life the enjoyment of him is the souls glory Iob therefore reckons up all his eternal glory by this very thing I know that my Redeemer liveth c. I shall behold him not with anothers but with these very eyes Full and perfect ● immediate
communion with Christ that is the life the glory of the other world Vid. Rev. 7. 17. the lamb which is in the middest of the Throne shall feed them and shall lead them unto living fountaines of waters The whole felicity of glorified Saints is held out in those expressions The Uses of this Point Use 1. Away then with the Doctrine of eternal life by the merit of good works If Iesus Christ be our life then cannot the merit of our works be our life or the cause of it either in part or in whole Christ and works are opposites as to this businesse of salvation The affirming of Christ is the denial of works and the affirming of works is the denial of Christ Act. 4. 11 12. This is the stone which was set at nought of you builders c. neither is salvation in any other for there is no other name given under heaven c. And the truth is all the things required to make a work meritorious are wanting in the best of our good works A meritorious work must be 1. Nostrum So are none of our good works Eph. 2. 10. 2. Perfectum So are not our works Our wine is mixed with water We halt upon our best legs Isa 64 6. Remember Lord my good deeds and spare me was Nehemiahs prayer ch 13. 22. we never did any thing we should do perfectly not any one thing Our most sublimated thoughts are full of the dregges of earthly mindednesse our best words are too scanty and light c. 3. It must be indebitum A man cannot purchase your land by paying an old debt All our obedience to God is an old debt which we owe upon another score Remember that Parable Luk. 17. 9. Doth he thank that servant because he did that which was commended I tell you no. That which will not deserve thanks cannot merit heaven We are fallen into an erroneous age mans will is cried up much High Arminianisme is within a few dayes journey of this piece of Popery 'T is time to give antidotes when such deadly poyson is scattered and drunk in by many injudicious Christians Let Papists make works their life let Arminians make free-will their life but let us make Christ our life He that will not live by Christ solely shall die for ever without Christ I shall conclude this with that of the Apostle Gal. 5. 4. Christ is become of none effect to you whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from grace Use 2. The cer●ainty of the salvation of beleevers They shall so certainly be saved that Scripture speaks of their salvation as of a thing already done 1 Cor. 1. 18. the Preaching of the crosse is unto us that are saved the power of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is reported as a thing in facto and not in fier● Eph. 2. 5. By grace ye are saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 30. Whom he justified them he also glorified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He writes as if they were already in glory All this to shew the certainty of their salvation This depends on many things upon this in the text for one If Christ be their life they shall live He that will keep them out of heaven must first pluck Iesus Christ out of heaven because I live ye shall live also John 14. 19. if the Sonne make you free ye shall be free indeed if the Sonne be your life ye shall live and that for ever in despight of devil in despight of corruption he is able to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 7. 25. Use 3. Let this provoke all men to get an interest in Christ There 's nothing but eternal death without him He that hath the Sonne hath life he that hath not the Sonne hath not life but the wrath of God abideth on him 1 Iohn 5. 12. There 's no way to glory but by him Deceive not your selves cling to him lay fast hold on him and on him alone Other foundation can no man lay then that which is laid already even Iesus Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. We hope we have an interest in Christ Well He that hath a good assurance that Christ is his for life must have these three things else he deceives himself 1. He must be a true beleever in Christ vid. Ioh. 3. 36. He that beleeveth on the Sonne hath everlasting life he that beleeveth not the Son shall not see life c. 2. He must be an obedient subject to Christ Though we exclude obedience from the cause of salvation yet we do make it a qualification of the person that shall be saved Christ is the Author of eternal life unto them that obey him Heb. 5. 9. Christ will be King where-ever he is Saviour 3. He must live the life of grace Christ is the Author of spiritual life before he be the Author of life eternal We must live in Christ before we live with Christ Christ must live in us before we live with him Christ in you the hope of glory Col. 1. 27. if Christ be not in you a fountain of grace he will never be yours for glory 4. You that have Christ for life eternal carry your selves as those that beleeve this truth 1. Despaire not No sinne disparageth Christ so much as despair there is more ground of hope and confidence in Christ then there can be of distrust in our selves The sacrifice is sufficient for the guilt Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 2. 6. a ransome a full ransome 2. Let salvation be so much the more precious to you for his sake who is the Author of it 3. Attribute your salvation to Christ onely 4. Live to Christ 5. The greatnesse of Gods love to the Elect. He gave Christ to be their life to die for them Rom. 5. 8. 6. Live with Christ here as much as you can 7. The greatnesse of mans misery he could not be saved without Christ COL 3. 4. When Christ our life shall appear then IV. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. June 8. 1651. shall we also appeare with him in glory I Have handled the first Proposition that Jesus Christ is a beleevers life both in regard of the life of grace and of the life of glory I proceed to the second viz. Doct. Jesus Christ who is a beleevers life shall certainly appear There will be a manifest appearance of Jesus Christ The Scripture makes mention of a threefold appearance of Christ 1. A bodily appearance in the flesh Thus Iesus Christ appeared in his Nativity when in the fulnesse of time he took our nature in the womb of the Virgin Mary Of this the Apostle speaks 1 Tim. 3. 16. God manifested in the flesh Old Simeon in his song rejoyceth for this Luk. 2. 30. Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes have seen thy Venit ad homines salvation Venit ad homines 2. A spiritual appearance of Christ in
that long sickness how unlike himself was he he had no actual repentance till Nathan came to him with a message from God and quickned him Sinne quencheth the Spirit in Godly men as the water quencheth the fire Sinne takes off the edge of the soul deads the appetite and affection to the things of God It locks up the heart that it cannot act as it was wont to do 2 Sicknesse begets torment and anguish in the body When sicknesse is in extremity in the body how doth a man cry out of paine head and heart and every part is under torment What restlesse tossings are men under when diseases are violent heare how Job complaines Chap. 30. 16 17 18 Sinne is a Creator of torment and painfulnesse in the soule Felix his sinne made him tremble Acts 24. 25. Cains sinne put his spirit into such anguish that he cries out My punishment is greater then I can beare Gen. 4. 13 14. Judas his sinne did bring such despairing torment upon his soule that he takes away his life to end his misery Matth. 27. init And even Gods own people when they fall into this spiritual disease they are pained at the very heart till by pardon and remission they have obtained a healing from God How full of paine was Davids spirit by reason of his sinne He was as a man upon the rack for a long time if he did ever recover his former serenity Vid. Psalme 6. per totum Psalme 38. per tot Many of the deare children of God do by sinne fill their hearts with such anguish that they are never without much smart to the day of their death 3 Sicknesse doth bring uncomelinesse The most beautiful body in the world if pining sicknesses continue long upon it becomes like a garment that is moth-eaten the eyes sink the colour is lost the skin is shriveld the bones stick out c. Job observes this Chap. 16. 8. Thou hast filled me with wrinkles which is a witnesse against me and my lea●nesse rising up in me beareth witnesse to my face Sicknesse makes streight bodies how down beautiful faces look ghastly well-coloured cheeks look pale and oftentimes the more beautiful sicknesse findes us the more uncomely doth it leave us Sicknesse turnes youth into old age vid. Lam. 3. 4. My flesh and my skin hath he made old Sickness dries up the spirits Prov. 17. 22. A merry heart doth good like a medicine a broken spirit dries up the bones Sin takes away the comelinesse of the soule The first sinful sicknesse that ever entered into the world hath turned the soules and bodies of all mankinde into deformity and uglinesse Could we see the picture of Adams soule in the state of innocency and compare it with the soules that are diseased with sinne we would wonder at the sad change Sinne is a very deformed thing it turned Angels of light into ugly devils Those who were never healed by regeneration and remission of the disease of sin what deformed souls have they they have not one spot of beauty upon them Psal 14. 3. They are altogether become stinking A dead carrion a putrefied carcasse is as beautiful and as sweet an obj●ct as a sinfully-diseased soul Yea even Gods own children by falling into sinne though but in one or two particular acts do lose much of their beauty They do not look with that grace they did before Every act of sin casts a dark thick shadow upon the soul As deep wounds leave skars upon the body so sinful acts leave some skarres of infamy upon the soul A Saint doth not look like the same man he was before he fell into sin 4 Sicknesse brings death Dorcas was sick and died Act. 9. 37. Long sicknesses if they be not removed will bring the strongest body to the dust of death Sicknesse is indeed Anteambulo mortis the forerunner of death The sick-bed is the direct way to the dark bed the grave Sinne doth bring death to the soule One disease of sinne if it be not healed by Christs bloud will certainly bring the soule to eternal death Rom. 6. 23. it hath brought many to hell and it will certainly bring all others to the same condition that live and die in it unhealed He that dies in his sinne shall die for ever II. For the nature of this sicknesse 'T is a more dreadfull sicknesse then any other sicknesse I shall set it out in a few particulars 1. It seizeth upon the most noble part of man All other sicknesses do infest the body onely but sinne is a disease in the soul Those sicknesses are most painful and most mortal which seize upon the vitals and inward parts A disease that feeds upon the spirits doth soone drink up the natural moisture and is not so easily cured Sinne is a disease that doth immediately reach the spirits 'T is the sicknesse of the heart O Jerusalem wash thy heart from wickednesse that thou mayest be saved Jer. 4. 14. The Apostle it 's true speaks of the filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. Some sins are onely acted by the brutish fleshly and sensitive part others rest in the spirit as pride vain-glory envy c. yet notwithstanding even those filthinesses of the flesh have their chief seat and residence in the heart according to that of our Saviour Matth. 15. 19. Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts c. All sinne is spiritual wickednesse in regard of the fountaine and root of it As grace is seated in the heart so also is sin Ier. 4. 18. This is thy wickednesse because it is bitter because it reacheth unto thine heart 2. Sinne is a sicknesse which God never made All bodily diseases are the handy work of God He created Plagues Feavers Consumptions c. Amos 3. 6. But sinne is a sicknesse of which God never was the Author 'T is true God sometimes punisheth sinne by sinne not by creating sinne but by suffering a sinful creature to fill up his sinne by withdrawing denying his grace which onely can preserve from sin 3. Sinne is a sicknesse which separates between God and men No other disease can divide between God and the soule Hezekiahs plague Asa's gout Iobs sores none of all these did make any division between God and them Some sicknesses do separate between the husband and the wife the father and the childe at least in regard of actual communion though not in regard of affection but no bodily sicknesse divides between God and men But sinne doth separate between God and the soule Esay 59. 2. It makes God stand at a distance from his own children to hide his face from them and to deale with them as with enemies 4. Sinne is the cause of all other sicknesses All bodily diseases come from this disease Hast thou not procured this thy unto self Thine own doings shall correct thee c. Jer. 2. 19. A distempered soul is the true cause of a distempered body Sinne was the first
's very like the Pharisee spake no more then what was true for they were generally men very inoffensive as to all such things For the discovering of this false foundation I shall lay down foure things viz. 1. 'T is a very great mercy to be freed from these scandalous sinnes If God have preserved you from these visible diseases that you have none of these botches of Egypt upon you it is to be acknowledged as a very great blessing The Pharisee did not amisse in blessing God that he was no Extortioner if he had done it upon a right ground if he had not gone on to censure the Publican he had not been blamed but commended for it David blesses God for preserving him from the sinne of murther upon Abigails perswasion Vid. 1 Samuel 25. 32 33. And there is very great reason for it For 1 Hereby we are delivered from much anguish and torment of conscience These scandalous sinnes as they do in an extraordinary manner waste the conscience so they do lay a foundation of much horrour and trouble in the soul every sinne creates much torment but these great abominations create exceeding much What horrour did Davids Adultery and Murther cast into his spirit Though God pardoned them both to him yet he was filled with anguish a long time after vid. Ps 6. Ps 38. Ps 50. 1. Now t is a great mercy when God prevents any anguish 2. Hereby we are delivered from being hurtful examples to other men Grosse scandalous offences are very prejudicial to others The hearts of those that are good are grieved and such as are wicked are caused to stumble oftentimes to their eternal ruine Davids sin gave great occasion of sin to others Now it 's a great mercy when God keeps a person from being an instrument of hurt to others especially of hurt to their soules 2. Such as expect salvation must keep themselves from such wickednesses Vid. 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. Heaven is not a place of common receipt for good and bad 'T is not like your ordinary Innes which lodge all kinde of passengers without difference such Lepers so living and dying must expect to go to another place Rev. 22. 15. Without shall be dogs c. 3. 'T is possible for a person to be free from these abominations and yet to be mortally sick of spiritual diseases Every sick man hath not the plague A man may die of a consumption as well as of a Fever A person may be in a damnable state that never committed murther or uncleannesse 1. The Pharisee was free from all these impieties and yet deadly sick in his soule Luke 18. 11. Paul when he was a Pharisee saith that he was blamelesse concerning all such enormities Phil. 3. 6. and yet at that time sick even unto death so he in Mat. 32. 11. so the five Virgins Mat. 25. 1. Those in 2 Pet. 2. 18 20. A natural conscience may keep men from such enormities The penalty of humane Lawes may preser●● 〈…〉 these great wickednesses Civil education may preserve a man from falling into these wickednesses A desire to keep our reputation in the world with men with whom we converse may keep us from these high impieties Meer restraint may do this 2. If freedome from these offences were enough to proclaime men to be spiritually whole then no hypocrite should be sick A man must be free from all these sinnes before he be advanced into the hypocrites forme Now we know that every hypocrite is spiritually and mortally sick Yea the Scripture tells us that hell is prepared for the hypocrites other sinners are said to have their portion with the hypocrites Mat. 2● 51. The hypocrite is of all sinners the special proprietor of Hell and yet he is free from all these offences 3. It 's possible for one that hath no saving grace in his heart to be free from these offences Though every one that hath grace will abandon these sins yet every one that is free from these sins hath not grace The instances mentioned before will prove this But every one that wants saving grace is under the rage of spiritual sicknesses Yea he that is without true grace is not onely sick in sinne but dead in sin Eph. 2. 1. and yet those that are dead in sin may be free from these wickednesses 4. Although many be free from the actual commission of these sinnes yet they have the roots of these sinnes in their hearts Every sinne is in that bundle of sinne which we call original There is pride and murther and theft c Now the pollution of nature if it be not healed by justifying grace and pardoning mercy and sanctifying grace is enough to make the soule sick and that unto death Yea indeed the great sicknesse of the soul lies there There lies the strength of sinne and the heat of sinne David when he bewailes his murther goes to that as the root of it Psalme 51. 5. All a mans actual sinnes be they never so grosse might soone be healed if that were but healed This is the fountaine of blood This is the law of sin here is the devils magazine 5. Though thou art free from th●se foule sins yet thou mayest have some secret idol or other set up in thy heart Now the least sin a vaine thought is a mortal sicknesse in it selfe and if it be not healed will prove a soul-destroying sicknesse The Papists have devised a distinction of sinnes venial and sinnes mortal That there are some sinnes that in their own nature do not make a man liable to eternal death but onely to temporal chastisement so Bellarmine teaches The Scripture knows no such distinction nor can we allow it All sinnes are venial to true repentance except that one sinne against the holy Ghost He that commits that shall never be forgiven But there is no sin venial in its own nature the least is a mortal sicknesse and deserves eternal death So saith the Scripture Gal. 3. 10. Rom. 6. ult the Apostle speaks of all sinne that is opposed to legal righteousnesse and there is no sinne so small but it is a breach of the Law of God For of every idle word that a man shall speak he shall give an account at the day of judgement Mat. 12. 36. What is lesse then an idle word and yet that doth in its own nature deserve wrath By all these things it appeares that a man may be spiritually 〈…〉 thief nor drunkard c. 4. Yet may a person gather evideners of grace from his acting against sinne in some cases David argues so Ps 18. 23. And therefore for the winding up of this point I shall lay down some Rules whereby a person may know whether his acting against sinne be from a principle of saving grace or meerly from common restraint 1. He that forbears sinne from a principle of true grace doth act from the Authority and declaration of anaked truth When the immediate declaration of Gods Will in his Word
communication of the Divine nature to them cause them to become the servants of righteousnesse Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 6. 18. Being made free from sinne ye became the servants of righteousnesse This is the work of Sanctification Of this the Apostle speaks Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himselfe for us that he might purifie us unto himselfe c. Christ takes off the yoke of sinne and puts on the neck the yoke of grace This the Apostle fully expresses Rom. 8. 2. The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death 3 The condemnation of sinne The wages of sinne is damnation Rom. 6. ult Jesus Christ is a horne of salvation to his 〈…〉 for he hath 〈◊〉 the wine 〈…〉 anger and suffered the 〈…〉 their sinnes for them Of 〈…〉 speaks in 1 Pet. ● 2● Who his 〈…〉 sinnes in his body c. And the 〈…〉 affirms Rom. 8. 1. That there i● 〈…〉 to them that are in Christ Jesus Thus in respect of sinne Christ is a horne of salvation 2. In respect of Satan Satan is a sworne adversary to the Elect. He goeth about continually like a roaring lion seeking how he may devoure them 1 Pet. 5. 8. There are three things in respect whereof Christ is salvation to them from Satan 1. The Dominion of Satan The Elect are by nature as well as others the bondslaves of Satan Eph. 2. 2. they are his servants by nature and by their own voluntary sinfulnesse they have enslaved themselves to his bondage more Of this the Apostle speaks 2 Tim. 2. 26. Now Jesus Christ is salvation to the Elect from this estate He doth at the conversion of the Elect cut the cords and unloose the chaines by which the devil holds them fast in bondage Of this our Saviour speaks Luke 11. 21. By his death he did triumph over him Col. 2. 15. and at the moment of our conversion he doth actually put us into the possession of this victory Acts 26. 18. He doth then turn us from the power of Satan unto God 2. The temptations of Satan Satan as he tempted Christ the Head of which we reade Mat. 4. 1 2 3. so doth he not cease to assault and tempt all his members The more visible Christs image is in any person the more violently doth the devil assault him The Apostle speaks of this as in many other places so fully in Eph. 6. 12. Now in this respect Christ is salvation to them He stands by them that these temptations may not prevaile over them He interposeth himself between them and the teeth of this roaring lion that he may not have his will on them Of this our Saviour speaks Luk. 22. 31 32. 3. The accusations of Satan The devil is called in Scripture The accuser of the brethren Rev. 12. 10. and he is a diligent creature at this work for he accuseth them day and night before the Lord. There are many imperfections and weaknesses in the children of God they do too often step aside out of Gods way we have too many sad instances of the truth of this in Scripture which I need not name The Devil takes occasion from these to accuse us not onely to men but to God He that turnes every stone to hurry us into sinne doth when he hath overcome us represent all to God against us in the ugliest shape he can that he may hinder mercy from us Yes he is so malicious that when he can have nothing visibly to lay to our charge he will pretend something as we see in the case of Job Chap. 1. 9 c. Ch. 2. 4 c. Christ now is a horne of salvation to us in this respect He stands continually pleading for us at Gods right hand as soone as Satan puts in a Bill Christ puts in an answer and so doth cast out and nullifie all his Accusations Thus is he salvation to them in respect of Satan 3. In respect of ●●n 〈…〉 by men both in the●● 〈…〉 spiritual estate 1. In their outward 〈◊〉 Men 〈…〉 against them they 〈…〉 because they 〈…〉 image they have so much of the 〈…〉 Because I have chosen you out of the 〈◊〉 therefore doth the world hate you John 15. 19. The great ones of the world they rise up often against them and vex them c. Now Christ is salvation to them in this regard Sometimes breaking the hornes that devoure them Sometimes melting the hearts of their devourers making their enemies their friends Sometimes removing them from them that would break them alwayes delivering them from the evil and hurt of the attempts made against them turning them for their greater and best good He makes their vinegar better then their wine Of this the Apostle was confident in his own case Phil. 1. 19. This shall turne to my salvation through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Christ is a horne even of temporal salvation to the Elect in this regard He makes your troubles as good friends to you as your comforts He makes your worst conditions work together for your best good 2. In your spiritual estate Christ is salvation to you from men in two respects First In regard of the corruptions of the world Wicked men give wicked examples and by the example of one wicked man others are corrupted Now albeit the Godly are sometimes infected in regard of some particular acts yet are they saved from the general corruptions of wicked men amongst whom they live Jesus Christ keeps them from soyling themselves as others do This is that which is recorded of the Angel of the Church of Pergamus Rev. 2. 1● and of those few in Sardis chap. 3. 4. Th●s was Noah saved in that corrupt age in which he lived Gen. 7. 1. Secondly ●n regard of the evil counsels of men Wicked men are of the same minde with the devil their father They are daily tempting inticing alluring and perswading the godly to walk with them in their wayes Joseph was tempted by his Mistresse Gen. 39. 7. This is put in amongst the Catalogue of the sufferings of the old Martyrs that they were tempted Heb. 11. 37. Christ the great Counsellor of his Church saved all these from yielding to such temptations Though they are sometimes ensnared yet they are againe brought off by Christ from those ensnarements and Christ gives them power afterward the more to resist them and to abhor them II. Positively Christ is salvation 1. In respect of grace 2. In respect of glory Jesus Christ is eternal salvation unto the Elect. All that salvation which hath been mentioned before is in reference to this which is the upshot of all He therefore saves them from sinne from the devil from men that he may bring them to this eternal happinesse He is called in Scripture eternal life 1 John 5. 20. The Authour of eternal salvation Heb. 5. 9. The salvation of Israel Psal 53. 6. The Captaine of our salvation Heb.