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B20902 Mensalia sacra, or, Meditations on the Lord's Supper wherein the nature of the holy sacrament is explain'd and the most weighty cases of conscience about it are resolv'd / by the reverend Mr. Francis Crow, late minister of the Gospel at Clare in Suffolk ; to which is prefixt a brief account of the author's life and death. Crow, Francis, d. 1692. 1693 (1693) Wing C7365 75,143 146

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earth bears or we are capable of in the flesh If there had been a more proper and better way we are bound to believe our Lord would have left it with us And since this is a token left with us to remember us of his dearest love in dying for us and washing us in his own blood let us receive and celebrate it with the liveliest affections and the heartiest acceptation we are capable of Still considering with our selves that tho' it be good to be here where much more of Christ is to be seen to day than many places of the earth can afford yet that it 's far better to be in heaven where the vail of our mortality shall be rent and the vail of this infirm flesh of ours shall be made spiritual and glorious the shadows of Sacraments fly away and the glass of all Gospel ordinances be removed as useless even the pitcher be broken at the fountain and the great Riddle of our salvation fairly un●olded to us all clouds and vapours of sin and darkness dispelled and patience and prayers and o edience we l rewarded And in a word where a more immediate and princely presence of Christ shall be intimately and constantly enjoyed without any o●lowing fears of parting Now the hope and assurance of all this we come to seal Trifle not with so sacred a thing but set your heart to the receiving of your Lord here with all his sanctifying quickning and comforting vertue which our sinful sinking souls need so much Now for this end he meets us here to day 4. Here is the staff of bread and wine that maketh glad the heart of man The Communion both of the body and blood of our Lord ●hrist Lo here is both a peace offering for you and an offer of peace to you under heavens broad Seal How many burdened and weary souls have unloaded at this port O let not weakness so much deterr as wants drive us hither for sense of wants and weakness and unworthiness and wrath all fit for him who hath all fulness strength worth and merit and who bare the wrath of God for them that flee to him for refuge And think it not enough to make your appearance here without some fitness for so solemn an action It is not so incongruous to sport and laugh at your Father's Funeral as to sit here restless and unconcerned at the commemoration of our blessed Lords death yea bloody death and bitter passion Shall we see the head wounded here and the members have no feeling That we see the bread broken which represents the breaking of Christs precious body for us and have no broken hearts Yea shall we be called to Contemplate the wrath of his provoked Father pour'd into his Cup and drinking the dregs thereof and crying out under the weight of our Sins which brake the very rock of our Salvation and made the Stones of the Temple to rend in sunder Was his Body broken to let out his Blood And shall not our Souls be broken to let in ☞ Look well to three things if you would be worthy Communicants viz. To have Grace ere you come to exercise Grace here and to increase it by coming Now for you that have Grace but it runs low and is not lively as you would have it to entertain your Lord withal Know there is smoaking Grace as well as flaming Grace and Christ will not quench the smoaking flax and what if he suffer thy Graces to keep low to day that thy Heart may be lowly for it ☞ But for them that are at high water and Spring-tide let him that standeth take heed lest he fall Sensible Enjoyments are but slippery things here Man in his best estate in this Life is altogether vanity but while the Lord allows them on us let us be careful to improve them well ☞ But what if all within lies still and an heavy heart stir not yet for all that is said Then look unto him that can remove Mountains and raise the dead The warm breathings of Heaven must be fetch'd in by believing Prayer Song 4. ult And when thou hast called on thy Soul to awake and work and yet nothing within thy rebellious Soul will obey then call on him whom Seas and Winds obey When we cannot fetch Life into our dead Souls then remember the Prince of Life quickens whom he will ☞ 5. A sight of sin and a sight of Christ who suffer'd for it are our fittest Objects at such a time and in the sufferings of Christ we see most of sin's evil The death of all the creatures under the Law for man's sin was nothing to the death of Christ for it As God looks on Believers through a dying Christ and loves them so let us look on sin through a dying Christ and hate it Thy sin is indeed the Object of God's hatred but thy misery that comes by it will God pity and so pardon sin and shew thee mercy if thou canst hate thy sin and in token of thy hatred of it flee far from it and cry to God mightily for grace and strength against it And if a poor soul hath been labouring last night and this morning for a more humbling sight of sin than yet hath been granted him he must never think to see sin so exceeding sinful as in seeing Christ a sacrifice for sin and if it had not been for our sin all the other enemies would never have slain the Lord of Glory And when the worst of sin is in Christ's sufferings for it we must not only make use of Christ as a Glass to see sin in but as a Physician too to cure it And when he hath shewed us our sin we must not go to King Jareb with our wounds but the same hand which broke us must bind us up And be your sins what they will if you can penitently and believingly plead pardon in the mediation of a broken Redeemer there will be found Balm enough to cure and Blood enough to wash yea drown them all in the depths of divine mercy tho we must not sin that grace may abound and go and sin to make work for the Blood of Christ and go about prophanely to pose his mercy for tho the Blood of Christ for fulness and efficacy be a Sea yet for tenderness it 's a Sea of Glass and mingled with fire to burn up our Lusts We come either to God as a Physician or a Judge for either we bring Souls full of sores to be cured or full of sins to be damned To meet with Christ and not to part with sin is sad and dreadful as Christ came into the world to destroy sin so should we come now to Christ for the same end O the sin of our natures that old man the ill habits the strong lusts the ill haunts our hearts have got venture to set Christ against them all to day We cannot speak good of Christ but ill of sin too How sad to see the
mind for as Christ is now bodily in heaven so will he not be spiritually and sacramentally in any but a heavenly mind the doors must be list up before the King come in 10. Look on Christ your Passover Sacrificed for you and be humbled 1. That you were worthy to dye 2. That you live by the death ●f another 3. That your sin should Crucisy the Lord of ●●ory What a humbling sight is it to ●ee Christ thy Sacrifice fall before the Altar and laid upon it and burn yea consumed by the Fire of God's wrath for thee O sigh and say alas Was not this for my sake should not I have lyen there suffering and satisfying for ever if he had not interposed and bore my Burden Shall he sweat and bleed for me and I not grieve for him But t● make the remembrance of Christ's Death for me the more affectionate consider first it was the Death of the humblest and worthiest person that ever appeared on the Earth the Son of God the Lord of Glory the eternal God the Heir of all things on Earth was never his like Secondly He was no greater than Good the innocent and spotless Lamb of God that Holy thing who knew no sin and yet he suffered Death In his Life was no spot and in his Death was no complaint or murmuring This Noble and Just One died for us was our ransom and attonement He who knew no sin made sin i. e. a sacrifice for ours our sin imputed to him who had none of his own our sorrows made his and by his stripes we are healed We live by his Death Gal. 2.20 He is taken and ●●e ●●ape If ye seek me let these ●o their way le●●●n ●e●●r he charged on mine Elect My s●●ep I lay down my life for tho they b● under a ●●aw condemnation for breaking of it yet let them be ac●●●●d for my ●eeping of i● par●oned on my account and all their scores reck●ned for with me Look on the blessed Surety of the Covenant and be hold him obeying and dying for us For albeit the Law be not now a Covenant Believers are under yet the meaning is not that perfect Obedience is not required even of believers but not being sound in them it 's performed by our Surety the Second Adam for the exchange is only of the person not of the righteousness Thus was laid on him the Iniquities of us all and if it had been laid on us it had sunk us for ever But that love that deliver'd him up was unparallell'd Whatever Satan Sin Conscience or the Law charge upon you shew you here the Lord's Death 11. Every Sacrament is a Certificate of Christ's Death and hereby we tell the world we believe our Lord was cut off out of the Land of the Living Now to shew forth this death are we come hither he would not have his Death forgotten but to remember it as we often do without lively affections is next door to a total forgetting of it Without an affectionate remembrance of the death of Christ and a Soul inflamed with love to our Ransomer we partake not of his body we may be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord when we put forth polluted hands to take it and take all with unbroken is hearts And indeed the sweet of the Pas●ver is lost for want of the bitter herbs of godly sorrow for sin that slew the Lord of Glory Now let the remembrance of our Lord here not only affect us but change us into another temper and disposition to be his and for him to conform to him to carry a way better thoughts of him to live a life of remembring of him to give him alone the Glory of so wonderful a work as our Redemption by his death to love him that hath so loved us and to hate sin that so offended his Father and crucified him If we weep not over him we have no fellowship with his sufferings if we wash not here we have no part in him if we carry not away a better remembrance of him we come here but to mock him if we prefer the World to him we shew our selves unworthy of him and if we can go away and live in our sin we do but seal our own damnation by coming hither What is it to undertake a Pilgrimage to Jerusalem and to weep a tear over the holy Grave but to return with a new heart and another life is the business And to affect you further with this Representation by his accursed but blessed death to us he seals the Testament and confirms a great Legacy to us that he may not only keep the condemned from going to prison but settle a Revenue on the poor and needy and make them rich for ever and set them w●th Princes even with the Princes of his people that had nothing but rags and poverty and now he lives for ever to see his Legacies bestowed 12. The Gospel-Proclamation is Christ's Invitation Whosoever is a thirst let him come Desires are the Soul's hunger after Christ they are the best sawce they add a sweetness to the bread of life A man that ●ath lost his stomach and can taste no sweetness in the choicest food is not fit to sit at this Feast who hath no desires after Vnion and Communion with Christ. He that is the desire of all Nations will be sought after and found of all that do desire him Not to desire him is to despise him Is 53.2 3. and to hide our face from him Will he disclose his Secrets to them who hide their face from him If we desire him not we shall never enjoy him The same thing that is the Saints desire now will be his satisfaction for ever Let us not think a desire of Christ a light thing In the Gospel a poor man's hunger is his blessing Mat. 5.6 in the world it is his misery God accepts of our appetite as much as if we pay'd ready money for his Graces and their hunger is instea● o● a price Is 55.1 There was never Soul miscarried with longing after Grace O blessed hunger that ends always in fuln●s● The woo●e ife of Christian is but a holy desire saith Austin And the soul desires Christ absent but t●ese desires are raised in the Soul by Christ present We burn with a desire to settle our selves but mistake the way and build Castles in the air but the Sum of ●anctified desires is unutterable groans for the ●ull application of good things promised and eager thir●ting for a larger communication and before Christ hath per●ected his Grac● in the Desires of the Soul it will find it self so inflamed with them that if Hell should stand between its Beloved and it he would wi●lingly pass through its very flames to embrace his dear Redeemer And seeing it is to him we come to seal his Covenant by Soul-resignation let the matter admit of no dispute or de●ay but be dispatched with all haste and speed Ps
I who have sate so long at the Table of Devils by feeding my Lusts and serving Satan should be advanced to feast it with the Lord of Glory Even I who deserved the lowest place in Hell should here be sate in the highest place on Earth Let the thoughts of such wonderful love lead you into his Banqueting-house and suffer your Souls to be overcome with this Banner of his love that unparallell'd love that loved you and washed you in his own blood Again consider it is the Supper of the Lord he setteth us down unto This is that we eat and drink even our Lord's Last Supper on Earth This was the parting-Cup after which he was not to drink till he drunk it new in the Kingdom of God For preciousness Cleopatra's Cup was nothing to this tho filled with dissolved Pearls O the love that lay at the bottom to sweeten this Cup to us tho the bitterest to him that ever was put to the head of any Mortal and the more Gall and Wormwood to him the more Love and Good Will to us for whom he drank it This Last Supper on Earth is a Emblem of an after-Supper in Heaven And truly that large and long sumptuous Supper of the Lamb 's preparing above may make a Saint sit down satisfied with a short Dinner on Earth Let the Heirs of Glory never grumble at a dish of green herbs the poorest and meanest Morsel wi●h a Cup of cold water since the finest of the Wheat and Honey out of the Rock are too low expressions of thy Heavenly Commons a coming And for what our blessed Lord allows you here you have it with the heartiest welcome Christ sayeth to none of you Eat and drink and his heart is not with you That you are forbid to eat of for it 's the ●●e●d of him that hath an evil eye Prov. 23.6 7. But this you are commanded to eat we offer it in his Name take it in obedience and believe a blessing 47. My sighing come before my eating says Job So must ours do●●w before we can comfortably eat and drink here many a sigh and groan the body of death will cost us many a sad heart for sin Sigh saith the Lord to the Prophet to the breaking of thy Loins 1. That thou shouldst have been so unhappy as to have hand in cutting off the Messiah and slaying this Lamb of God that thy sins nailed him to the Cross and pierced his si●e yea his hands and his feet wounding the Son of God even to death with thy sins 2. That his Love hath been neglected so long and so much that the offers of his redeeming Grace hath met with so little hearty entertainment that his sufferings for our sins have been so faintly resented that we have carried so strangely to him that was so deeply concerned for us 3. That he hath had so little honour by us for whom he hath made so rich a purchase that we have laid out our selves so sparingly for him that spared not to pour out his blood for us yea that we should ever prove treacherous to him that was so true to our Interest 4. That now we can love him no more when his Banner of Love is so fairly displaved over us in this Ordinance of his own Sup●er this Feast of fat things Oh that such choice entertainment should meet with so sorry welcome and such dull affections That our ordinary food should more refresh us than this heavenly Manna That we can meet our suffering Lord with so little remorse for sin and so little delight in his Love But tho grief preceed and go before yet let Joy take its own place and enter his Courts with praise Let transports of heavenly joy fill our redeemed souls that ever the glad tidings of the great salvation sounded in our ears that ever we heard of that great gift of God Jesus Christ and that he hath been at any time recommended to our heart with power that the holy Trinity hath so well contrived our Redemption in that ancient Covenant wherein the Father gave his Elect to Christ to be redeemed and the Son most readily undertook the Work and went through all its steps with such heroick and hearty resolution and good acceptation Rejoice O righteous ones that the Father laid help upon one so mighty able to answer all his demands and to pay our debts Rejoice that Heaven sent to the Earth by so sure a hand and hath made with us so sure and well-ordered a Covenant in all things we can be concerned in for life and Godliness that the Gates of Paradise which our sins shut are now so open unto us that sinners through their High Priest in Heaven have so free and bold access to this exalted Throne of grace but alas for our bruitish stupidity and unbelief that have carnal minds much more taken with a vain World and empty dying comforts than with all the Treasures of Grace and Mansions of Glory 48. This Feast of fat things here presented who can feed upon it Do we know the entertainment of this Table Here is represented the singular and wonderful love of a dying Saviour The great Mystery that Angels desire to look into The Lamb of God Sacrificed for sinners Can we behold it with dry eyes and dead hearts Qu. What impressions should it make upon us and leaves us under Ans 1. I 'll never give sin a good look again thro the grace of God that cost my loving Lord Jesus so dear 2. I 'll despise the love of creatures never lay it in the ballance with Christs Whether they smile or frown I 'll be little affected For her 's a love puts all love down A love who can comprehend in It 's matchless adventures and transcendent exceedings 3. My love should be a constant careful study of some answerable returns of love again 4. I 'll never like my self again Farther than I may be serviceable and suitable to this loving Lord that bled for me My members shall all be servants of righteousness unto Holiness my soul shall ever magnify the Lord my thoughts shall be captivated unto him I shall know no Friends nor Enemies but his My prayers shall be to him My Joy and my delight shall be in him My faith shall firmly rest in his righteousness and satsfaction my patience shall be imployed to bear his Cross my heart shall stand ever open to his Calls The zeal of his house shall eat me up My life shall be a transcript of his Laws and my death a desired dissolution to be with him In a word the Covenant I now renew with him at his own holy table I am willing should be laid against me for Conviction Accusation and humiliation in all my departings from him But knowing that without him I am nothing and can do nothing all my expectation is from him and amidst my best purposes sensible of my sin and weakness I do with holy David say O Lord when wilt
desires of sin obeyed and the commands of Christ slighted and yet these are the most common sights we see on earth O! what pride self conceit passion prejudice revenge wor●dlynes spiritual sloath and slumbering about salvations work is there among us These we oppose not as the enemies of our souls who thinks that a sweet lust is the poison of his soul the disgrace of our nature the cause of our unhappiness bereaves us of true delight subjects us to Vanity and Satan tyranny and Gods wrath We hide and smother sins deformity and damnableness under the mask of pleasing and pitying our selves O might Christ prevail this day with our hearts to perswade us to be up and doing even acquitting our selves li●e men in this matter to assault our corruptions like them who are really allarmed from heaven against our mortal enemies O that ye would resolve to give your selves no rest till you be rid of them Except not against this counsel by saying that they stick too fast and are too good friends and the work too hard and they too strong I answer all hell can put in against mortifying of lusts with this one word viz. Where eternal salvation is concerned there is no excuse to be taken Rom. 8.12 It were better to pluck out your ey s yea bowels than spare your sins and perish Be not affraid of hurting your self by parting with sin no no could we fall upon our sins and cutt them off O what free lives might we live what noble Lords and brave conquerours were we And for their strength fear it not Go forth against them in the faith of this Lord you see crucified for them and invites you to partake of the life purchased by the death this ordinance calls us to remember It ill becomes us to complain of the strength of this enemy that Christ hath overcome All sin's strength consists in our cowardice Fight and ye shall overcome conquer and ye shall be crowned 6. If we eat of the sacrifice let us have faith that we may partake of the Altar and have Christ in it We may say to you in this sacrament as Philip to the Eunuch in the other if thou believest with all thine heart thou mayest Act. 8.37 At all times we have need of faith for we must live and walk by faith but in no step more need than in this John 6.56 We cannot eat his flesh unless we dwell in him now Christ dwelleth in our hearts by faith Eph. 3.17 Faith is the eye to discern the Lords body here the hand to receive him the mouth to feed on him We do neither see receive nor feed here without Faith Now it 's an easier matter to look with a bodily eye on bread and wine than to behold the slain lamb of God bruised for us The world think it easy to believe who never had a true sight of their sins nor sense of Gods wrath nor were ever sifted or shaken by Satans temptations nor troubled with terrours of Conscience nor acquainted with natural weakness and Christian infirmities and our own insufficiency for so much as a right or good thought of God Is it easy for a proud heart to deny it self in the point of salvation And wholly to take a Righteousness from Christ heartily submitting to a Gospel salvation in saith and patience Is it easy to see Christs humiliation and look for exaltation out of it and to look for pleasure by his pain Riches by his poverty strength by his weakness and life by his death and a blessing by his curse There is a kind of bastard faith is easy to come by you 'll find every where too much of it but the Faith of Gods elect peculiar to them even the spirit of Faith which purifieth the heart and worketh by love and maketh the soul live is not so common Now 1. this faith is never without heart humiliation for sin even a looking on him whom we have pierced with a tender sense of the dishonour and wounding of him by our Rebellions and Unbelief O! here the soul sees its baseness and weeps that so blessed a Redeemer should bleed for the sins of such a wretch and be still so insensible of this love 2 And then it wonders at infinit mercy and mourns more misery and mercy pierce the soul and make it even exceed in tenderness and tears to think of abuseing such inestimable treasures of grace 3. And it wonders at the glorious freedom of love that it should chuse such objects and this even confounds a sinful soul and makes it with a holy shame lye down in the dust and open its mouth no more Ezek 16.63 4. It renounceth carnal reason and a rebellious will and now gives up all to him who hath won its heart and payed its Ransom and therefore it 's called the obedience of faith 5. It abandons a vain world and tramples on all its glory Psal 119.96 6. And now resolves to trust in Christ for all other things since it sees a sufficiency in him for saving its soul 1 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 8.32 Luk. 12.32 7 I am affraid some come hither to seal a Covenant who never knew to make or keep a Covenant Isa 19.21 Even to enter into a perpetual Covenant with Christ to be wholly and unreservedly devoted and resigned to him in love and obedience and who have taken him to be all that the Father have given him to be to the souls of his E●ect i. e. Not only to be a high priest to ransom their ●ouls from sin in hell and to appear for them before God in heaven but likewise for their great prophet to ●each them the w●●le will of God and a King to conquer their lusts even a leader and commander to the people in all the ways of his revealed will Now whosoever comes hither short of this at best the seal is but set to a blanck and so stands them in no stead for they receive not Christ and carry none of his benefits with them yea it 's well if it seal not their damnation And I 'm likewise affraid of another sort that may come hither who formerly might have covenanted with Christ but for want of a lively and well exercised faith grow blind and see not astar off and have forgotten that they were purged from their old sins and so turn formal and customary And readily such Consuetudinaries who follow the drove can give little other account of their coming but that it 's the way other good people go in and it they should not come they might be missed by good neighbours and how could they keep up a name to live if they cast themselves out of good company It 's to be feared many such things are with us But if so such may eat and drink Judgment to themselves temporal Judgments in stead of spiritual enemies For such things many were weak some sick and others fallen asleep in the Church of Corinth 1. Cor. 11.30 And if such
119.60 as all spiritual purposes are to be manag'd but yet le● it be done with greatest seriousness and fulness of consent it being a bargain never to be broken a covenant never to be forgotten and doing a thing never to be undone again If the desires after Christ you make this Covenant with be true they will make worldly desires in a good measure dye and run low Sometimes you desire a thing so that all other things are so little they scarce come into your thoughts for that same thing you love so ●uch Such a desire had Christ to redeem us that even Sufferings were desirable in order to its accomplishment I have a baptism to be baptized with and how am I straitned till it be accomplished 13 ●o seal our covenant are we come even that C●venant he ma●e with his Christ the everlasting Covenant the sure and ord●red Covenant wherein lies all our salvation hereafter and all our consolation here O let our hearts be carried out according to the loving kindness of the Lord shewed in it Consider all the mercies of this Covenant and labour to taste in every one of them that the Lord is gracious This is the Salt of the Covenant without which our Mor●el will be unsavoury There is something in the Covenant better than Salvation better than Heaven and that is the Lord our Righteousness and Jehovah our God He is not ashamed to be called our God let not us be a shame but a praise to him To have him for your God is to have all in God for your good and O then let all that is in you be for God Christ is here sending us by the hands of his Commissionated Officers the Cluster of Grapes as the first fruits of the Land of promise and commanding you to take and eat the Bread of Life He is reaching unto the thirsty Soul the fruit of the Vine turning it Sacramentally into his Blood bidding you drink it in remembrance of him till he come and feasting you with his fullest Love and satisfying you with the pleasure and presence of his glory Great and glorious things are so●nd here under the plainest dress that the eye of faith may be most exercised The glory of their Ordinances under the Law was a stumbling block to them for they rested in the Cabbinet and over-looked the Jewels The meanness of our Ordinances are so to us for we look not for the Treasure in earthen Vessels The Types were rich and our Memorials poor they had finer Spectacles we better Eyes If their Tree had more shadow ours hath more fruit Christ in commanding us to do this in remembrance of him builds a Monument of himself before he dies plain and simple to the eye but firm and lasting to continue till he come again and all that is said of him in the Gospel is here to be seen in this Sacrament Here may we see him dying and paying our Ransom the Lamb of God lying bound on the Altar heated with his Father's wrath On the Table we have a fair prospect of the Cross with the sacrifice of the Son of God set before us And let us say Lord if thou remember our sins we will remember thy Christ For in remembring his death we must by all means mind that as our sins slew him so his death conquers sin and expiates guilt and this is the food of the sacrifice that our souls must live upon And if this be rightly apprehended you see the great benefit by Christ here represented confirmed and participated And it 's easy to perceive how far they forsake their own mercies that for the sake of sin come not up to the terms of the covenant I● ye think good give me my price it not forbear Any that come hither thinking to ●old ●ast their sins receive not Christ in the ●acrament but Satan recei●es them as he did Ju●as after he had received the Sop Such be all these who come not hither to repent of sin but to c●ver it 14. When we look into our Bibles we f●nd the Death and sufferings of Christ represented here a far greater matter than many make of it bearing so great a part in the ●criptures and making so great a figure there ●or we find the sufferings and satisfaction of Christ the chief thing manifested by the Spirit of God to the Prophets together with the Glory that should follow thereupon to him and his redeemed ones 1 Pet. 1.11 which shews us their prime study was taken up in this And this was likewise the end of all the discoveries of sin and threatnings of God's wrath in the Law even to point out the necessi●y of his s●tisfaction Rom. 10 4. And lastly the very substance and sign●●●●●m of all Type● a●d s●cr●fices was but to point out the suffering● of Christ and the glorious effects thereof He● 20.1 Now no hing we hear of his S●ff●rings in the World or see thereof in Sacraments makes any saving impression up●n us till thereby si● b●comes exceeding si●f●l and Christ exceeding pr●cious among the many things we have seen in the World and works we have done wh●n shall we begin to see sin in its own colour● viz. To s●e it the only thing that bre●ks the Law and so dishonoureth the Law giver Crucified Christ Grieves the Spirit gratifies S●●an debaseth human nature d●stracts the world and damos Souls And yet for all this men cannot hat● s●n beca●s● it 's o●r ●o k Hel 4.10 O monstrou● sinful s●lfish●ess that f●r all the inconceivabl● ev●l in sin yet cannot hate it because it 's ours wh●n ●o t●●t we should hate it more than all th● 〈…〉 the whole wo●ld Now this due sense of S●n 〈…〉 ex●lt Christ and make him ●●●●●ous who is the ●●●ha and Omega ●n the bus●●●ss of Rel●gi●n without him you c●n do nothing and lok for nothing It'● by h●s ●tre●g●h 〈◊〉 mu●t w●●k and by his Righteous●ess you mu●t be ●cc●pted Isa 45.24 For indeed we cannot for sin ●hink of any mercy till God turn our eye on Christ in whom he is g●acious And the end of all we see Christ to be for ●s is to oblige us to love and obedience We have new representations of the favour of God and grace of Christ daily in these Ordinances that our obedience may be new our hearts and liv●s ●●larged and consecrated to the service of such a Saviour who hath Redeemed us with the blood we come here to commemorate I● Faith ●ake these things real to our minds we shall be affected now and reformed hereafter If unbelief reign and we abide under its Power we shall be dead still and worldly as we were But look to him for a share of Heavenly Grace to ●xc●te our minds a●d thoughts to a Holy Ze●l and higher ●ctings than we are usually acquainted with in the lower regions of our converse 15. Having given up our names to Christ in Covenant we are obliged often to renew it to shew the ●●●c●rit● of our heart
when his Enemies like Lions roaring upon him he as a Lamb opened not his Mouth When you are afflicted remember your Lord and learn Patience 3 And how willingly and chearfully did he undergo all It was written of him I will delight ●o do thy will O God! and that in the work of our Redemption as a Sacrifice for us as appears from Psal 40 6 7 8. with what wonderful desire did our Blessed Lord run this race that was set before him enduring the Cross and despising the shame for the Joy that was set before him and this Joy was to save us from Perishing O! that he should more rejoice in our sufferings than we in his Salvation 4. Remember these sufferings were all expiatory for our Sin otherwi●e all our remembrances would want Life For our transgressions was he wounded and the chastisement of our peace was laid on him 5. Rem●mber who it was that suffered all this for us Who but the Lord of Glory descending from his Throne of Glory and debasing himself to the meanest condition imaginable O! see what a Throne he stepped from into the lowest posture of sinful likeness to become our surety and make satisfaction to justice 6. Remember the Love that lay at the bottom of all for nothing but Divine Love and i●created Kindness could take us up and wash us in his preciou● Blood when we lay polluted in our Blood and Go●e Remember th●● I 〈◊〉 more than ●●●●e Q● How sh●●l C●rist's Death be remembr●d ●●s 1. ●●nit ntly with broken b●eedin● Hearts for th sins that P●er●●d h●● 2. Sinc●r●ly a●● reall n●t 〈◊〉 ●●●ward appearance ●nl● by 〈◊〉 at his Table Many 〈…〉 to him 〈◊〉 that want true 〈…〉 him 3. Affectionately and heartily with bo●●ls s●●ring tow●●ds your suff●ring Saviour and glor●fied ●●tercess●r 4. Most joyfully glorying in nothing but in the Cross of Christ b● which we are reconciled to God and mortified to the world 5. Most thankfully with a praiseful ●rame of heart Ps 72.15 6. Maintain it with some constancy Be remembrin● Christ not on●y till you come hither again but until the Lord come again to fetch you to himself 3● As the Lord will more liberally let out his Love in this Ordinance to the broken hearted believer than in any other so must the abuser of it by a common carnal frame look for Christ's avenging himself more severely for this abuse than any other F●r saith Bernard In hoc sacro non solum aliqua gratia sed ille in quo omnis gratia One of Gods greatest grounds of Controversy with his own I am apt to think is unworthy and unsuitable sitting down with the Lord at this Table The Papists have the Ordinance unsuitable to Institution and all as we have Communicants unsuitable to the Ordinance Wherefore instead of coming hither to meet the Lord it 's to be feared the Lord ma● meet some with that ●●●rtling question Friend how cam●st thou in hither not having the Wedding Garment which may either strike the sinner with astonishing silence or if C●nscience speak its own language put to this tr●mbling answer H●w came I hither Wretch that I am I came rushing unduly upon so sacred a service compassing thy Altar with unwashen hands and an unbroken heart I was bold to come without any self-examination humiliation or pre-meditation of what is before me I came hither with no more remorse for sin nor serious thoughts of Christ than I use to have at a common Table I came as careless and unconcerned about Christ or my own heart as if it had been the Table of an Idol that could neither see nor understand I came as I use to do about other business with a worldly carnal covetous proud and sensual heart Then bind him hand and foot and throw him into utter darkness will be his Doom and all such impudent bold comers who discern not the Lord's body and have no fitness for this spiritual Banquet For the hipocrite that looks no higher than to have a Name to live hath the Serpents curse even in Sacraments and best duties not Christ but dust does he eat Little do many think what account they have to give of eating and drinking at the Table of the Lord. Under the Law Exod 12.4 every man according to his eating was to make his account for the Lamb so much more under the Gospel at Christ's holy Table every soul shall account according to his eating how with what frame and fruit he did eat there There is a greater reckoning on this score than many dream of It may be said of many eaters here as of those eaters in Gen. 41.21 when the Lean Kine had eaten up the Fat ones it could not be known they had eaten them being still so ill-favoured as at the beginning Alas can it be seen a while hence by the most discerning eye that we did eat this day with Christ 32. Gen. 24 33. And there was meat set before Abraham 's Servant but he said I will not eat till I have told mine errand So hath God set meat before you here but I think you are all willing to forbear till I have spoken my word as it is in the Hebrew there And now all your eyes should be upwards that the great Master of the Feast should direct a right word unto you even a word upon the Wheels The word I have to speak at present is that precious saying of our blessed Saviour concerning himself Joh. 6.35 I am the bread of life O to understand and believe this word That the bread of God is he that cometh down from heaven and gi●eth life unto the world v. 33. Now the Manna Israel had was a Type of our heavenly bread which they gathered not when it first fell and they wist not what it was until Moses told them It was the bread of God given them from heaven and then they gathered ●xod 16.15 17. So will no m●● care to meddle with Christ till they knew him to be bread to their souls given them from heaven for eternal Life And every man gathered the Manna according to his eating v. 18. nothing over or under So indeed there is nothing here but for ●our eating all is lost you feed not on your time your pains this bread this wine the truths you hear the things you see the preparatians both you and we make is all lost it there be no feeding on this bread of Life The whole Apparatus Action is lost and all that belongs to it which comes not up to feeding and refreshing viz. if Graces be not quickned Corruptions weakned hearts warmed minds enlightned wills renewed life reformed souls sanctified and sin pardoned But while you hear of eating Christ's flesh and drinking his blood and making food of Christ in this Ordinance we must abhor the gross and literal understanding of this with Capernaits of Old and Papists of late contrary to Christ's true meaning and his own interpretation of believing in him
against prevailing Iniquities and predominant Corruptions that your jea ous Lord and Husband may give Idols a deadly blow at such a time 4. For the 〈◊〉 ●pirit of Jesus to make Graces lively that 〈◊〉 ●pikn●rd may send sorth the smell thereof and the Spices slow out 5. For growing in all grace that Gods own work in the heart may be s●t forward by our waiting on Christ in his so precious appointment 6. That he would suspend quarrels yea ●●move the ground of all by forgiving grace and send away poor penitents comforted with a sealed sen●e of it in their own bosomes 7. For further manifestations of God's Love and clearer F●●●dences of an heavenly Interest 8. For a more fruitful Life of Godliness to the praise of the g●ory of his grace 9 For Families and Relations that it might please the Lord to bring ours h●me to Christ make them his by grace and build them up to glory 10. For poor Zion that he would pity her desolations heal her breaches plead her cause pardon her sins help her to improve her mercies and prepare her y●t for greater deliverances from Evil when ●er gr●cious God shall see good to grant them 11. That God would pity the ●●rk corners of the Ear●● and open the Eyes of bold and blind sinners among us Q. What he the Resolutions this solemn occasion should pu●●●● pon● 1 To love Christ ●●re 〈◊〉 ●●tly 2. To remember him more frequently 〈◊〉 we 〈…〉 to remember him here th●● we may forget him when gone 3 To perform all duties more spiritually 4. To watch our hearts more narrowly 5. To walk more tenderly 6. To follow him more sully 7. To renounce and deny self more freely 8 To trust in Christ more intirely 9. To take his part more boldly 10. And to keep Covenants more faithfully 38. Here have we the most amazing Instance of love that ever was given in the world and when you have travell'd the Vniverse over to seek for Love here lies the richest and rarest manifestations of Love that God gave his Son and Christ gave himself This is the heighth depth length and breadth of the love of God that passeth knowledge So great a ransom so rich a purchase so great a one become so low to set thee on high make himself so poor to enrich thee empty himself to fill thee and to do all this yea God to lay out his All on such unworthy and undeserving ones others love for some worth or good quality but God loved us when lying in our blood Now what ●an we do less for all this but make heart returns of love again Love being the very heart of the new creature and he that hath most love hath most grace and 〈◊〉 the best Christian And to provoke your love to this Beloved you may assure your selves 〈◊〉 he would never have died for you if he had not loved the meanest of you better than the highest Angel in Heaven can love him And besides if you can but love him his love will breed you more delight and hear● ravishing pleasure than all the love of creatu●es can Read but that Song of Love between Christ and his Spouse and see the unparallell'd delights of divine love between Christ and his Church Well if you love him keep his Commandments be careful to please him be tender of his honour deny your selves for his sake account all loss to win Christ thirsting after his communion longing to be perfectly free from sin that grieves his good Spirit and keeping your selves in the love of God looking or the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life No such motive to love God as studying his love to us and surely he must love us that sent his Son from his bosom to fetch us thither But why should a little love of creatures affect us so much and the great 〈◊〉 God affect us so little A●● Meerly b●●●us ●e are ●●ore ●●esh than spirit and have al●● 〈◊〉 s●ns● then faith Weak faith makes 〈◊〉 impressions of all spiritual things 〈◊〉 faith and better rooting would make ●●●●●●ions ●a● more ●●●●y Pet. 1.8 Now if we love Christ we will prize the ●●ast token of his ●●ve before all 〈…〉 can give us ●nd will thi● 〈…〉 sight of him 39. It s recorded of the Qu●●● of ●beba that when she had seen the sitting of Solomon 's Servants there was no more spirit in her 1 King 10. How much more may this sight of our sitting confound and amaze us That Christs sinful servants should be set with himself at his Table considering 1. That he hath not a higher board on Earth than we sit at now and the Lord himself speak of stting with us Soag 1 12 Rev. 3.20 2 That tho it becometh ●s to stand when the King sitteth yet this glorious King came not to be ministred unto but to minister to us to gird himself as a Servant and mash the feet of his poor disciples 3. Wonder that we who deserved to lye in Hell should sit so high here 4. And the greatest wonder of all is that we should be fed at the King's Table with his own flesh allude to Job 31.31 Job 6. Shepherds use to eat the flesh of their flocks but here the good Shepherd gave his life for his sheep and feeds them with his flesh and blood And wonder also that we sit at peace a midst so many enemies that envies our feeding but it 's of the Lords great power ●nd bounty both that he prepares us a Table in this Waldern●ss and fills our cup in the presence of our enemies Now at this sacred so ●emnity is represented unto us the weightiest things of our Soul-concerns viz. Our sins and Christs sufferings we offending and he punished for our offences something in his Sufferings answering to our sin we a life of sinning and he a life of suffering we a load o● sin and he of suffering as our sin was God's provocation so is his suffering Gods satisfaction He was taken and we se●●ree his death was our release Josh 20.6 there was no release nor returning in safety for the Man-slayer till the death of the High-Priest We have been light-hearted in suning but our Surcty groaning and heavy even unto death for our sin We contracted the debt and he taid the score sor us Now charge your Souls with Love Repentance Faith and Obedience with love to so friendly an ●nde●taker who valued nothing whatever it cost him if he might but ransom thy soul and set thee ●●ee● 〈◊〉 p●nt● ance for those bloody ●●●s that ma●● him sweat and weep Faith in that blood that made so perfect satisfaction and is so ●ull of Vertue to purge thy pe●ssured and guilty soul And Obedien●e even a w●●le Life of graceful Obedience to him that hath redeemed thy soul from H●●● 40 The upper end of this Holy Table of the Lord is to get hearess●● Chrish at the K●s own Elbow when he 〈◊〉 t●●●●●t his Table Q
Wherefore comes the Diseas●d to the Physiti●n but for health and ●ase 6 And wherefore comes the oppressed Subject to the King but for Relief against his Enemies I come for help against a hard heart I come for Power against a strong Lust a mighty Goliah that threatens the Life of my Soul 7. I am weary and heavy laden with sin and therefore I come for rest and Peace My sins are my greatest Burden my ignorance sloath ●nd slowness earthlyness and lukewarmness the indwelling body of Death pains my Heart and the guilt of Sin stings my Conscience and I come for purging and pacifying by Christ 8. I come for mutual Communication of Love-tokens to give and take I would have my Faith Confirmed my Love more Fervent my Heart more Enlarged more weaned from Earth and more set upon Heavenly Glory I come to condole with Zion and put in for Songs of Deliverance and for restoring of a decayed work of God among us that the right Arm of the Lord may put on strength and encounter his Enemies on their high places that Christ may be great in these Nations and the reproach of his People he may take away and prosper his Gospel in Conquering sinners and converting the Elect. Q. In what Posture or Condition must we come to Christ A. 1. In a praiseful posture must we come to meet our Redeemer We begin the new Song here that will never be ended in Heaven 2. As Subjects to pay our homage to our Prince Psal 45.11 He is the Lord and Worship him 3. As Servants to receive their Masters Orders and Commands Psal 123.2 Lord what wilt thou have me to do 4. As Schollars to their Masters to be taught 5. As Children to their Father for a blessing 6. As Beggars for an Alms poor and needy but think upon me 7. As Pa●ien●s to a Physitian for Health and Cure Like a Mal●●● 〈◊〉 ●ath pleagu●y sores needs a Physi●●● a 〈…〉 as ●●ll as a Pardon 52. If the quest●●● 〈◊〉 asked what doest thou here or how camest 〈◊〉 hith●r A. The Master calleth come Q. But h●●r kno●●● 〈…〉 ●●lleth thee A. 1. I. have exa●●ed 〈◊〉 my self and 〈◊〉 ●re allowed to co●● 2●ly 〈…〉 ●●eth his Call saying behold I come a●to thee 〈…〉 in my Heart th●t I am the ●erson called 〈…〉 from the call Whosoever will let him c●me and drink of the Water of Life freely First A great latitude in 〈…〉 ●●●soever and why may not I be one among so ma●y 〈◊〉 But 2ly whosoever will I find he hath made me one of his Willing ones my Heart is here and I never went to eat and drink for my outward man more willingly 3dly I am called to drink and truly I find my Soul a thirst and wants its refreshing ●ere 4thly It 's ●●ater of Life that is offered and it 's the same my Soul c●mes for that I may have life and have it more abundantly And 5thly I am called to take it freely and so do I take it as the sweetest gift of m● dear Redeemer witho●t any plea of my own righteousness But yet tho call'd let thy soul say He that calls must carry me too for no man can come except the Father draw O! be looking up for Divine drawing for heart● will faint and draw back if Christ draw not ●ear Our S●v●●ur said to Peter come but if he that called him had not bore him up he had sunk for all his call Learn to look to Christ for all without him we can do nothing Law not the great stress on thy coming hither but on Christ's coming to thee in the Ordinance for it 's our Lords own presence which is the master-wheel of all spiritual M●tions I will come in that made the Feast Rev. 3.20 ●●eme●ber John 11.28 when Martha told her Sister Mary f●●retly the Master is come she arose quickly and came unto him All our inward motions to him depend upon his coming first unto us and therefore le● your heart be saying Come Lord Jesus come quickly until the day break and the shadows flee away We read of a deferred Christian after much sad So●l exercise crying out he is come he is come Q. How may we know he is come A. 1. How did Elizabeth know that Mary brought Christ in her Womb when she came to see her but by some inward unusual em●●ions thy heart will not be without its own transporting extasies of love and wonder saving with Eliz●●●th Whence is it that the Lord of Glory should come and 〈◊〉 k on me and will not fail to ●●ave i●superable ties upon thy ●●art to entertain his fell ●ship and attend his service 53. Concerning the Jews hearing of John our Saviour asked What went you out for to see and else where to enquiring Disciples come and see You have been hearing but now come and see That will be the sense in Heaven that will be most sa●●●fied when we shall see him as he is There a Glorified Christ and here a Cru●●●●●d one Here you ma● s●e the true Is●● laid on the bl●●k and the bloody knife at his throat H●re is the Sca●●●●● over whose Hea● Is●ael confessed thei● 〈◊〉 ●●nt into th● Wil●●●ness carring our sin in●o a l●n● of forgerfuln●ss ●●●e you s●e the Church of God purchased which 〈◊〉 own 〈◊〉 Here your sacrifi●●d 〈◊〉 surety payi●● your de●t 〈◊〉 ●ou must have been paying to all ●●●nity and 〈…〉 d●ne paying Here is the most high Go● 〈…〉 to ●●ke our blows our Heave● 〈…〉 of his H●●●our Healing by his Wounding 〈…〉 the ●nowle●g of sin shining forth in God's Holiness and h●●r●d of 〈◊〉 For all the threatnings of the Law and 〈◊〉 of th●m on others could never preach it fo●th ●s exce●●ing of them on Christ hath done And here new you see the treasure hid in the field Let none 〈◊〉 this 〈◊〉 because brought in earthen Vessels This offers injury to Divine Wisdom and Goodn●●s who condescends to make such familiar r●pres●●ra●ions of our Redemption adapted to our infi●●●es here on earth who cannot conceive heavenly things but in an earthl● manner and the meaning is that the excellency may be of God and not of man Learn O Believer to glory in nothing but in the Cross of Christ whatever else we glory in will be our shame another day and why should we glory in any thing so much as in that whereby God h●th his greatest glory John 13.31 God's Glory and our happiness center in a Crucified Christ Q. What benefit have we by the Cross of Christ A. 1. Without it we must ●ave 〈◊〉 all that he suffered for us 2. ●o mercy for u● bu● th●●● 〈◊〉 Christ's merit our surety was 〈…〉 of strict iustice that we man● be 〈◊〉 w●th on 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 3. Christ being ●ast i●●o the F●●●●ce of 〈◊〉 W●●th ●●●ched the 〈◊〉 ●●●mas th● type being can in●o t●e raging Sea 〈◊〉 the stor●● he made his Soul an Offering for sin No ma●●● 〈◊〉 me d●●● be if
ver 7. But still God has all along put a remarkable difference betwixt these And some by being diligent to accomplish themselves for their Master's Work are thereby render'd much more capable of doing him service than others are And such a one certainly was he He has left but few Equals I think scarce any Superiors This Pains taking of his he would hardly be perswaded to intermit even when the crasie infirm state of his body which began to give place to the impetuous Assaults of Old Age seem'd to require it at his hands But was resolv'd Taper like to give the greatest blaze at his Departure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dictum Solonis Senesco non Segnesco Hoelus Anglus That Good Old way he had so long walkt in with a most inexpressible satisfaction he would not now leave tho he was going to a place where all knowledge comes by Intuition The Object of his Studies I must confess was always Noble and Excellent 'T was not a Trivial Frothy Book tho adorn'd with never so many ga●dy Trappings of Rhetorick and Language that could induce him to spend a quarter of an hour about it No it must be somewhat truly masculine and edifying that he judg'd worth his consideration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Metaph lib. 11. cap. 1. Nevertheless what he had acquir'd with so great expence of Time and Spirits he as freely communicated to young inquisitive Learners imitating therein the glorious Jehovah one of whose Attributes is Omniscience and whose great delight is to convey Knowledge and Happiness to his poor creatures And this I mention not only to illustrate his Excellent Disposition but also in testimony of my own Gratitude Ingenuum est fateri per quos profecerimus Plin. having often had the Happiness to partake of such Advantages Yet did not that vast variety of Learning he had made himself Master of cause him in the least to neglect his Theological Studies as it did with Funcius that celebrated Chronologer who might have liv'd longer as a Divine but dy'd a Prince's Counsellour Disce meo Exemplo mandato munere fungi Fuge sen pestem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But he still strenuously apply'd himself to the Work of the Ministry as his chief business using the others only as a by-work 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vir bonus cito fieri nec intelligi potest Nam ille alter tanquam fortaste Phoenix in anno quingentesimo nascitur Senec. To sum up his Character in one word He was a Laborious Student a Great Scholar an Able Minister a Kind Husband a Tender Father a Faithful Friend a Good Master a Vseful Neighbour and which crowns all a Real Christian The Distemper that depriv'd the Church of so great a Light and us of a vigilant Pastor was the Stone He had often been troubled with it before but God's Blessing upon the Physician 's Art had as often given him ease But now his decreed time was come and his Divine Master would no longer spare him out of his Heavenly Kingdom Both his Ureters were stopt which of course impeded Nature in her regular motions Yet can it not be said that any heard him using unbecoming Language or charging God foolishly His patience was very extraordinary Licet pereat Saeculum nihil moror si lucrifaciam patientiam Cyp. de Patien and no less exemplary As he found his End drawing nigh he addrest himself to leave this World with the same serenity and composure of mind as he had many times done upon going a Journey from home Mors iis solum terribilis est quorum cum vita extinguuntur omnia Cic. taking a solemn leave of such of his Congregation as came to pay their last respects to him Soon after this selecting some particular Friends to tarry with his mournful and disconsolate Widow and to behold the last act of his Life Et nunc quasi jàm mundo senescente Rerum atque Hominum decrementa sunt Aul. Gel. Noct. Artic. lib. 3. cap. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex Poedag lib. 2. cap. 1. p. 104. he without any great Conflict or Agony surrendred up his Spirit into the hands of his faithful Creator He is now enter'd into that blessed place of Rest and glory where he shall never know Sin or Sorrow more and where all Tears will be wiped from his Eyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Muns ex Rabin in Thalamo Justorum I can hardly with any Moderation reflect upon the greatness of our loss but am ready to use the Language of Basilius Amberbachius when he heard of the Death of the incomparable The odorus Zuingerus Piget me vivere post tanrum Virum ●ujus magna suit Doctrina sed exigua si cum Pietate conferatur Melchior Adam Vit. Germ. Medic. p. 304. It grieves me says he to live after so extraordinary a man whose Learning was very great yet but small if compar'd with his Piety When Elijah was translated Elisha cryed out My Father my Father the Chariot of Israel and the Horsemen thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 currus Israel 2 Reg. 2. cap. 12. v. That is as the Chaldee Paraphrast expounds it Tu qui plus Juvabas Israelem precibus quam Currus falcati Equites Vattab in loc Thou who more helpedst Israel with thy Prayers than all the Chariots or Warlike Supplies that she had belonging to her The Righteous are taken away from the evil to come And their Death is a sad presage of approaching Calamities Astrologers say Quum Luminaria patiuntur Eclipsm m●lum omen est mundo Gassendi Astron When the Lummaries are eclips d it fore bodes mischief to the World God has been pleased to call many of his Servants the Prophets out of our Land within this few years Oh! that we would learn Righteousness then his Judgments are walking abroad upon the Earth Possidonius in the Life of St. Augustine● tells us that he was remov'd by Death when the Goths and Vandals had just begun t● besle●e Hippo. Thus of good King Josiah 't is said that he should be gathered to his Grave in peace and not see all the evil that God would bring upon Jerusalem Hidelburgh could never be taken so long as Paraeus the Palladium of the place was a ive May the Death of Mr. Crow and divers other Godly Ministers that are lately snatcht to Glory a●raken us all to a timely Repentance that so Destruction may not be our rort on Let us all be endeavouring to live the Life of these righteous men that our Latter End may be like theirs Sic mihi contingat vivere sicquè mori MENSALIA SACRA OR Sacramental Exhortations and Preparations 1. THAT we may not stumble on the Threshold and miss the Mark it wi l be needful to understand the proper Ends of this Ordinance of the Lord's Last Supper which are 1. To commemorate Christ's Death till he come again 2. To
be a solemn renewing of the holy Covenant first enter'd into by Baptism consenting to the Covenant we are there to renew 3. To be a living means to exercise and encrease Grace by representing the evil of sin and the infinite love of God in Christ 4. For a solemn profession of our Faith love and Obedience 5. For a sign and means of Vnity and Communion of Saints Christ hath appointed their consecrated representations to be in the eye of the Church in their manner and measure to supply the room of his bodily presence while he is in heaven The table in the tabernacle Exod. 25.23 24. May represent this Table of the Lord overlaid with pure gold and a crown of Gold round about it because of Holiness becoming it and a King sitting at it At this table should we be asking our own Souls what our thoughts are of Christ and what we have for him that it may be no idle visit you make or fruitless view you take of him but let your requests and great askings be ready on the string for more grace to your selves or true grace to your Relations what is upon your hearts for your Soul child yoke-fellow or son the Church of God Make sure you have grace before you come if you can I say if you can for every worthy communicant cannot profess himself certain of his sincerity but so far as he can discern by observing of his own heart he is truely willing to have Christ and his benefits on the terms that they are offered i. e. To take Christ in all his offices as King to rule him as Prophet to teach him and as Priest to pardon and save him And next we must be careful to exercise grace given They who have no grace can act none and therefore mustly by and sit idle here gazing on an unknown Christ And if any be here who know themselves to be ungodly ones I think they had best rise and run from their own damnation Some feed without fear or remorse for sin yea perhaps resolve to keep up some lust they know of To what end is this ordinance for you It 's a day of Darkness and no Light 2. The great voice of this Ordinance is Behold me Behold me We are called here to look on a pierced Lord Jesus And what shall we see in him See the maker of all things bowed down under the burden of our sins and weight of Gods wrath Look on him whom you have pierced and mourn Look on his wounds and weep Look on his Love and wonder Look on his satisfactions and Believe Look on his Victory and rejoyce Look on his purchase and contemn your earthly interests Here is the best and brightest glass in all the world God gives us to behold his son in and we may come as near him here as any ordinance can bring us When you look on the Elements stay not there till you ascend and see him who is invisible When by faith you come to see him whom your Soul loveth prostrate thy sinfull Soul with a holy wondering that sinfull dust and ashes may draw so near Study to get the fixed eye on him as loath to take it off being so well pleased with his beauty and worth Learn to think the less of other objects after you have seen the Lord. As Mahometans put out their eyes some of them after they have beheld Mahomets tomb that they may never defile their eyes with an other sight after so goodly and glorious a one The name of the Lord being so eminently engraven on all we are about should strike a dread and holy reverence on all our hearts the day the table the supper we are at are all the Lords but what if we be not the people of the Lord truly if we be not he bids us not welcome and what if we be here and the Lord not with us Then we had far better be else where But how may we know if we have him present even his sweet society and blessed company It 's his table we sit at and that is no small honour for he is a ●ing and that is not all he will sit with us him●elf and give us his own company and we may know it by this when the King s●tteth at his table my spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof Song 1.12 Whence Obs 1. Believers w●ll observe what others doe not viz. When Christ is at the table and when not and it will be empty to them when he is absent 2. That Christs own presence must be depended upon both for sensible comfort to believers and for reviving their graces and making them lively It 's the exalted K●ng o● glory 's own presence that makes his own grace in our hearts livel● and savoury It 's our keeping near him and his condescending to keep near us makes all his gracious work in us to bud and blossom 3. O the great condescention of God to sinful mortals that when he was invisible by reason of that infinite distance between the divine nature and ours he made himself to be seen in the flesh and now by his ascention having made his flesh also invisible by reason of the vast distance between his place and ours he hath made his flesh in a mystical sence even to be seen and tasted in the sacrament O if he hath humbled himself thus far unto our senses let us not by an odious ingratitude humble him lower even under our feet and trample on this precious blood of the Covenant by rushing on this so solemn and sacred a thing with a careless and unprepared frame taking no pains to get a broken and holy heart to intertain him with To take this sacrament into an earthly dirty heart is to take this heavenly bread and throw it into the dirt O do's any of you think to come hither and take these holy mysteries into your covetous proud lustful unrenewed hearts It 's plainly to resolve upon laying up his richest treasures in a noisom Sink and what an indignity is this Christ is in heaven himself and will not enter into any but an heavenly heart here And he who exposeth himself so much to the view of your senses calleth you to Spiritualise your earthly senses let that mouth that cateth at this table never speak vanity nor lies that hand which is reached out to receive him be no more a right hand of falshood or injury to any these eyes which look on your Lord here be no more gazing on Vanity or forbidden objects But to raise your hearts above beggarly Elements which you see this day with eyes of flesh consider this ordinance signifies and seales Christ and his Covenant with all his rich promises of grace and glory The body of our blesed Lord is really in heaven for he is risen and ascended but his body is as truely sacramentally here as really in heaven making the most clear representation of his death and solemn commemoration of it that the