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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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see him thereon triumphing spoyling Principalities breaking down partitions reconciling God and man Coloss 2.14 yea man and man both Jew and Gentile into one body upon his Crosse Ephes 2.15 slaying hatred and procuring perfect peace Secondly seeing it is clear in the text that Christ dyed not for his own sins it is clear that he dyed for the sins of his elect unto whom this vertue of his death must be applied and this two waies 1 To their Humiliation 2 To their Consolation Both of them grounded hereupon that Christ was thus Crucified for thee without which application the knowledge of Christ crucified excelleth not that in the Devils themselves For the former if Christ dyed for thee then wast thou the cause of his death thou crucifyedst him thou art as faulty and blame-worthy for his death as ever was Judas Pilate the Jewes or the Souldiers thy sins were the Nails and the Spear and thy self wast one of them that peirced him Christs humiliation must humble Christians and how it doth so which consideration seriously thought of will be forceable to cast down the proud conceits of those for whom Christ must be thus humbled and cannot but bring bitterness of spirit to him that truly conceiveth that himself deserved that death which Christ not deserving indured for him yea and to have been held under the wrath of God for all eternity if Christ had not freed him urge this point upon thy Conscience to bring thy self to the bewayling of thy sins Oh it was my pride that stript Christ stark naked it was the sin of my soul that made his soul heavie unto the death my corruptions were the cords that bound him my malice my contempt of God my ignorance my woful courses were the thorns and nails that wounded him he all this while standing in my room and stead Thus is it prophecied of beleevers in the New Testament that when the Spi●it of grace shall be poured upon them Zach. 12.10 they shall look on him whom they have peirced and lament for him that is by faith they shall look to Christ whom by sin they have peirced and th●s shall bee an effectu●l means to lead them further in●o the practice of repentance Thus Peter when he would bring down the stiffness of the Jews told them that they crucified the Lord of glory Acts 2.37 which when they heard they were pricked in their hearts and said Men and brethren what shall we doe to be saved Popish Preachers so handle this matter as to stir up compassion towards Christ hatred of the Jews and Judas and the Souldiers but wee must labour by it to come to the hatred of our own sins or else wee shall come behind the Jewes themselves For the latter If Christ was thus crucified for thee then also bee thou of good comfort for many things were nailed on the Cross with him even all thy Inditement all thy sin original and actual the Curse Hell and Death it self dyed with him if thou beest a beleever the same nails which were driven into his hands and feet were driven into thy sins so as thou maist look upon the Cross as the Israelites did upon the Brazen Serpent and thereby be cured of all the sting of sin and deadly sickness of thy soul Christ his abasement is the advancement of every Christian thou maist behold his ignominy as thy glorious robe his arraignment thy absolution his binding thy freedome his abasement thy advancement his nakedness the cover of thy shame his death thy life and his Fathers forsaking of him an assurance that thou shalt never be forsaken Only this knowledge of Christ crucified in special for thee is it that can settle the Conscience in peace when thou knowest and beleevest that all thy personal and particular sins were hung on the Cross with Christ and that hee in thy room suffered for them that which in Gods acceptation was as much as if in thine own person thou hadst borne the Curse of the Law for all eternity The most content themselves generally to know that Christ dyed for Sinners but never care to know what this particular application meaneth The Popish doctrin also is an open adversary to this most comfortable perswasion of justifying faith but it behooveth him that would have the right use of this Doctrine never to be at rest till he can come to say with the holy Apostle who loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2.20 and with Thomas after hee had seen the impressions of the Wounds in his hands and side my Lord and my God Thirdly seeing that of the two main things in this death 1 Merit 2 The efficacy none shall have his part in the former that hath not in the latter our care must be if we would find life in this death of Christ never to be at rest until we find the fruit and effect thereof in some sort in our selves The most powerful fruits of it are reduced to two Heads the former is an ingrafting of us into the similitude of his death for he dyed that we after a sort should dye with him The latter is a framing in us the quality of his life for therefore he dyed for us that we should live unto him both of these are required to the right knowledge of Christ crucified joyned Ephes 4.24 and enjoyned him that would know Christ as the truth is in Christ called the casting off of the old man and the putting on of the new What it is to bee planted into the similitude of the death of Christ the Apostle sheweth namely when our old man is crucified with him Rom. 6.6 but when is that done the next words answer when the body of sin is destroyed that is not when sin is restrained or some sins cut off but when original sin that is the old man is killed in all the parts and members of sin when men hate abhorre and groan under their corruptions yea even their smallest and sweetest sins this is a fruit of Christs death and noted to be in all those that are Christs when it is said that they crucifie the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 Quest But how are these lusts crucified by the death of Christ How Christ his c●ucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians Ans Not only by that deadly blow which Christ hath given them by his death but also by setting often before thine eyes this death of his especially in the time of temptation For example being tempted to impatiency in sustaining wrongs look upon Christ on the Cross what sharp things he suffered the thorns the nayls the spear and all this while as a sheep dumb before his shearer in motions to pride look to Christ on the Cross thus farre humbled for thy sins if to revenge behold Christ on the Cross praying and dying for his deadly enemies if to oppresse the poor and innocent see Christ on the Crosse suffering his bloud to be sucked out for those whose bloud thou
are given him out of the world Joh. 17.19 and this is no small benefit seeing no part in the prayer of Christ no part in his death he will not endure death for him for whom he will not vouchsafe to pray 4 Consolation in affliction strength in temptations and assured comfort in life and death are the sweet fruits arising from remission of sin For 1 Although afflictions entred with death into the world by sin and in their nature are testimonies of Gods wrath yet sin being remitted they proceed no further from God as a just Judge revenging sin but from a merciful Father either for trial of us and our graces or for chastisement to keep us from perishing with the world to make us hate sin the more to draw us nearer him in invocation and prayer to force our affections out of this present world to fray others from sin by our example to conform us to the image of his Son and to shew his mighty power in our weaknesse by turning them to our best And thus from the former consideration ariseth to the beleever even in darknesse a great light Satans temptations foyled by this assurance 2 From hence obtaineth the beleever notable strength and sence against the fiery darts of Satans temptations For Satan urgeth the poor sinner sundry ways as 1 By the multitude and vilenesse of his sins with which his conscience telleth him he is covered and thence inferreth that because the wages of every sin is death and because he hath deserved eternal death he must needs perish he can expect no other But now can the beleever stop his mouth and say I grant Satan all thy premises no sinner is worthy of or can expect salvation in or by himself or so long as he continueth in sin but my sins are remitted by means of Christs satisfaction and though in my self I am worthy to perish yet in Christ I have a worthinesse to bring me to salvation I continue not in my sinful estate but am drawn out of the guiltinesse the filthinesse the service the love and liking of my sins through the grace wherein I stand and therefore thy consequent is false I fear it not being so forcelesse 2 From the Justice of God who cannot but reject whatsoever and whosoever is not fully conformable to his righteousnesse but here the beleeving heart is quieted in that through remission of sins the Justice of God is fully satisfied though not by the person offending yet in his pledge and surety Jesus Christ who being just dyed for the un●ust that we might be the righteousnesse of God in him And hence the justice of God is a matter of most comfort to the poor sinner in that this righteousnesse cannot suffer him to demand satisfaction twice for one and the same sin for this directly fighteth with justice and equity And if Satan be still instant and say But what shall anothers righteousnesse avail thee if thy self bee not a keeper of the Law for the soul that sinneth that soul shall dye the beleeving heart will readily answer That although the Law require proper and personal obedience yet the Gospel translateth it to the person of ou● Surety who being God and man not only paid the whole debt but performed all righteousnesse absolutely fulfilling the whole Law whence it is that his obedience is called the fulfilling of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth Rom. 10.4 and himself was made under the Law that hee might redeem from it those that were under it Gal. 4.4 And whereas the Tempter will alleadge But for all thy righteousnesse thou hast innumerable sins original and actual which the Lord hateth and every day addest to the huge heap of them The heart which holdeth this article of remission of sins abideth undaunted for though it feel a body of sin dwelling with it yet is it not reigning sin it is not sin at quiet but daily battail is maintained against it it is sin weakned and in daily consumption and therefore shall never be laid to the charge of him that is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Jesus Christ for the law of the spirit of life which was in Jesus Christ hath freed me though not from all molestation and presence yet from the Law that is the service and slavery of sin and of death vers 2. But numbers will he say who make account to partake in the death and righteousnesse of Christ are damned and have no benefit by it and numbers have revolted and fallen away and why maist not thou to which the beleever will readily answer that those that were thus plucked up were never of the Fathers planting only infidels and unbeleevers have fallen away and withered for want of rooting and moysture but I beleeve the remission of sins not by any ungrounded perswasion but with a sound lasting and unfayling faith resting it self wholly upon Christ so as I am perswaded neither death nor life can separate me from his love the work of whose spirit maketh me bold to call upon God as my tender Father and produceth the fruits of true faith and conversion into my whole life whereby I know as infallibly the truth of my faith as I know the presence of the Sun by his light or of Fire by his heat Finally he that hath begun to make mee good will make mee also persevere in goodness 3 This assurance of remission of sins yeeldeth most assured comfort in life The sound comfort of this article and in death the goodnesse of Pauls conscience was his comfort when hee stood at the barre Acts 23.1 and 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing even the testimony of our conscience and in the agony of death this is the Christians comfort that his sin being remitted the sting of death is gone the locks of this strong Sampson wherein his great strength say are clipped off and hee is disarmed of his weapons which are our own sins So as a Christian may challenge him into the field and say O death where is thy sting which because he is bereaved of when he intendeth to kill he cureth when hee doth his worst which is to separate soul and body he can sever neither from Christ nay rather he sendeth the member of Christ and setteth him nearer to his head which is best of all The third point propounded Three lets which hinder men from seeking so precious a grace is to consider of the Le●s which hinder men from seeking the assurance of the remission of their sins which is indeed their true happinesse if they could so esteem of it some of which I will set down 1 An erroneous judgement that no man can attain certainly to beleeve the pardon of his sins for the common Protestant is a very Papist in this opinion who hold that to doubt of this point is a vertue and to beleeve it is presumption because no man can certainly know
reprove and convert sinners yet by ordinary office hee was no Prophet neither did he prophecy But what is this to those mental reservations Are you a Priest Garnet No saith hee meaning not a Priest of Apollo or Jupiter Were not you in England at such a time No not as the Sun in the firmament or as a King in a Kingdome A strange madness that men professing knowledge and zeal should so dally with lies and oaths which tricks of theirs were they justifiable and sound wee should have little use of Magistracy or tribunals especiall where matters are determined by mens oathes hee were a very block that would suffer any thing to bee fastened upon him The murderer might swear hee never slew man namely with the jaw-bone of an Ass as Sampson did The Drunkard might swear hee drunk never a drop if hee can inwardly conceive of water or aqua coelestis or the Poets nectar or what hee can feign The Adultress might swear shee was never toucht if shee can inwardly conceive of any creature as of a Bull or a Swan as the Poets feign of Pas●ph●● and Lada And were it lawful to dally with God and mens Consciences after this manner wee could pay them home in their own kinde for suppose a man were in their Inquision and were asked if the Pope were Supream over all Kings if a man were disposed to equivocate hee might say and swear yea reserving his secret meaning not by right but onely in his own proud and ambitious desire and thus delude them II. In matters of practice you shall have no sinner but he hath a Scripture reached to him to lye safe under in the holding of his sin but robbed and turned out of the right sense The Atheist that cares for no Scripture yet hath one text for himself Eccl. 7.18 Bee not just overmuch nor overwise and so hee hath enough to cast off all care of knowledge and conscience The Image-munget hath a Text to let nothing bee lost hee hath a good use for his Images if they cannot serve to worship they may serve for ornament The Swearer hath a Text in Jeremy Thou shalt swear in truth righteousnesse and judgement therefore hee will swear so long as hee sweareth nothing but that which is true The Sabbath-breaker hath his Text The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath The Murderer and Adulterer think themselves safe seeing they finde David in both these sins and yet commended of God The Drunkard hath his lesson Drink no longer water but a little wine for thy stomack and often infirmities sake The Covetous person knows that hee that provides not for his family is worse than an Infidel which through many mens wickednesse is a ground of much covetousnesse The lazy Protestant hath his Text Wee are saved by grace and justified by the blood of Christ freely what can his works do what need they The idle person hath his Text Care not for to morrow let to morrow care for it self The Usurer hath his plain place Matth. 25.27 That I might have received mine own with Usury The Theef hath the Theef on the Cross repenting at the last The carnal Gospeller cares not what sin he venture on because where sin hath abounded there grace hath abounded much more The careless Libertine is predestinated to life or death do what hee can and do what hee list hee cannot change Gods Decree and so he will do what hee list The obdurate and hardned sinner saith At what time soever a sinner repents God will put all his sins out of his remembrance and therefore hee will not repent till hee bee dying Lastly the unjust person hee hath his rule in the unjust Steward who was commended by Christ who was indeed commended for his providence not for his injustice In all these thou mayest hold this for a good rule It is the Devils divinity to confirm thy self in any sin by whatsoever thou hearest or readest in Gods book all which in Gods meaning is direct and the only preservative against all sin NOw wee are to consider this comfortable Scripture in the holy use of it not as wee have it wrested and mangled by Satan but as wee find it set down by the Holy Ghost Psalm 91.11 For hee shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy waies They shall bear thee in their hands that thou hurt not thy foot against a stone In which words the godly are secured and assured of safety in danger not onely because the Lord himself is become their refuge and protection as in the words going before but in that to his own fatherly care and providence hee hath added a guard of Angels to whose care also hee hath committed the Godly Wherein for explication wee will note these particulars 1 What is the ministery of the Angels namely to bee the godly mans keepers 2 Who sealeth their Commission He hath given them charge 3 The limitation of it In all thy waies 4 The manner They shall bear thee up in their hands 5 The end lest thou dash thy foot against a stone Which is a borrowed speech taken from Mothers or Nurses who lead or carry their tender children in their hands that they stumble and fall not to hurt or endanger themselves The word Angel is a name not of nature for so they bee spirits but of office ministring spirits to God to Jesus Christ and to Gods Elect His Angels that is the good and Elect Angels called his 1 By Creation for they had not being of themselves 2 By more immediate ministery they assist him and stand before his face whereas the wicked Angels are cast down from Heaven from enjoying his presence 3 By grace of perseverance for they fell not from their estate as the wicked Angels did and are now confirmed by Christ that they cannot fall and hence is Christ called the Head of men and Angels in whom all things in heaven and earth consist Coloss 1. v. 17. that is are preserved sustained and governed whether visible or invisible and consequently a mediator of the Angels in respect of special grace of confirmation by which they inseparably adhere to God although in respect of that mediation which is restrained to redemption the Angels have no need of it Charge This charge is not a general Commandement over the Church in general but a special charge over every godly man over thee And the charge is directed to many Angels to keep one man for the word affords us more comfort than that Popish and ungrounded conceit of every mans having his particular Angel Quest Why doth God give this charge to the Angels or why doth he use their Ministery Answ Not for any necessity for hee by his word and beck doth sustain Heaven and Earth and without them can keep his own but out of his good will to us hee declares his love and care of us who hath so abundantly provided for our safety and
could ever do and therefore was to bee indued with such power as no other creature could bee capable of Hence hee proveth himself to bee from God Joh. 15.24 If I do not such workes as no other man ever did beleeve mee not Where hee speaks of his Miracles which in respect of the manner and multitude never man did the like in his own name nor so many To which adde those great works of raising himself by his own power from the dead Rom. 1.4 Of satisfying Gods justice for mans sin a work above the reach of men and Angels Of meriting eternal life for all the elect which must bee an action of him that is more than a Creature Of applying his merit to which end hee must rise from death ascend and make intercession Of sending his Spirit Of begetting faith and preserving his people in grace received Of leading them through Death and the Dust into his own Glory These are such things as all power of meer creatures is too weak for All the Angels in Heaven cannot do the least of them All the Devils in Hell cannot hinder them And hence Christ is stiled the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah Michael the mighty God King of glory c. Vse 1. This may bee a terror to all Christ enemies for such is his power as shall make them all his footstool Do wee provoke him are wee stronger than hee 1 Cor. 10.21 Psal 2.9 those that will not bee subject to the rod of his mouth shall bee crushed with a rod of Iron Therefore take heed of being an enemy to Christ or his Word or Servants else thou shalt bee revenged even in that wherein thou sinnest with the breath of his lips hee shall slay the wicked one word of Christ one lie shall turn them all into Hell Is the power of Jesus Christ such in his base and low estate as all the Devils in Hell are not able to resist it but if hee speak the word they give place how desperately do wicked men go on in sin as if they were able to make their part good against him Joh. 18 6. when Christ but said I am he presently his apprehenders fell to the ground Rev. 17.14 they shall fight against the Lamb but the Lamb shall overcome Vse 2. This is comfort also to the godly in that Christ as Mediatour in our flesh is armed with power above all our enemies so as nothing shall hinder our salvation Not Satan for the Prince of this World is cast out hee may have us in the Mountain or on the Pinacle but hee cannot cast us down Not sin Christ hath powerfully triumphed against it on the Cross hath fully satisfied for it and perfectly applied that satisfaction to the forgivenesse of sins Not death Christ hath powerfully foiled him in his own Den and trampled on him saying O death I will bee thy death Not Temptation Christ sits in Heaven as a merciful High Priest tempted once as wee are that hee might bee able to succour them that are tempted Not corporal enemies Hee by his power ruleth in the midst of his enemies Laban shall not speak a rough word nor Esau hurt Jacob nor Saul hit David for hee orders the thing otherwise Not the grave for wee have the assurance of a glorious resurrection by the working of his mighty power whereby hee is able to subdue all things Phil. 3.21 Not hell it self Rev. 1.18 I have the keys of Hell and of Death In one word not any thing present nor to come nothing shall separate between Christ and us none shall pluck us out of his hands for hee hath purchased for us and maintaineth a mighty salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 Vse 3. This teacheth us to submit our selves to this power of Christ or else wee are worse than sensless Creatures who all obey him yea than the Devils themselves who did obey him And then is a man submitted to it when is eyes are opened to see what is the exceeding greatness of his power in himself beleeving as the Apostle prayeth Eph. 1.19 Therefore labour to find Christs saving power in thy soul Quest How may I find it in my self Answ 1 If thou canst finde the work of faith in thee a work of great power a supernatural work beyond yea against the strength of nature What a work of omnipotence is it to raise the dead yet greater power is here to bring in this life of God into him that is dead in trespasses and sins resisting his own raising for so the Apostle implyeth in that place Col. 2.12 2 If thou canst finde in thee the work of sanctification which is a work of great power 2 Pet. 1.3 according to his Divine power he worketh grace and glory This second creation of a man goes far beyond his first in power There was nothing to begin with no more is here no life of God till God call the things that are not as though they were but there was a bare privation here is a resistance and rebellion stiff necks and hearts of adamant Hence regeneration is called a creation and the regenerate new creatures But a difficult work which God works not alone but God and man made one person and not of nothing for nothing as the former but of worse than nothing and for a price even the precious blood of the Son of God Labour to find this change in thy self by faith and holiness Christ did never more manifest his power than by raising himself from the dead and thou canst not have a surer argument of Christs power prevailing in thy soul than by getting daily out of the grave of sin and moving according to the life of God So soon as Christ had called Lazarus out of his grave hee bad loose him and let him go and if thou findest the bands of death thine own sins loosed forsaking thy own evil waies it is a sign that Christ by a powerful word hath quickened thee Therefore put on S. Pauls minde Phil. 3.10 who counted all things dung to know the vertue of Christ his death 3 A mighty work of power in Christ is to gather his Church out of all peoples and nations and to bring them within one roof though they were never so dispersed and alienated from one another and to knit them by faith to himself the head by love one to another and by his own discipline to conform them to his own government It never cost all the Monarchs in the World so much strength and power to settle their Kingdomes and people in peace under them Doest thou then finde thy self brought into the number of Gods people Doest thou love them entirely for Gods image and goodness Art thou serviceable to every member and that in the Head Here is a power put forth that hath reconciled the Woolf and the Lamb Isa 11.6 7 the Child and the Cockatrice But it thou carest not for Christs Ordinances and discipline his Laws are too strict thou must have more
rather than over-ruled by power it laies by all dialogue dispute murmuring and desire of dispensation 3 In the measure of doing it will indeavour in all the Commandements and all duties no man so wicked but hee can do many things as Herod but hee cannot yield to all 4 In continuance and conclusion of that hee doth it holdeth on in doing things purely for a good end for Gods glory and not by fits and starts but perseveres to the end and the crown of the work In all which a wicked man comes short for whatsoever is forced or feigned must bee heavily entered on and more heavily ended besides whatsoever is from such an one is joyned with reigning sin which hales and tugs him backward and toils him out before hee bee half way in any good work 3 How often doth the Lord reject the sacrifice of the wicked their oblations their fasts their prayers their temporary yea miraculous Faith their almes and charity yea their confessing and Preaching of Christ as in the last judgement all which had they been fruits of sound grace they had been acceptable But God looks not so much to the matter of the work as the person working the manner of working and the end of the action Vse 1. Well as Satan goes away when hee can stay no longer and so his obedience is forced so doth sin from most men when they can keep it no longer and so that which seemeth obedience in them it is no better than the Devils obedience in this place Vse 1. Many refrain many sins for fear of Hell and the curse of God they dare not hold their sin any longer whereas they are as much in love with it as before as Moses his Parents kept him so long as they durst before they exposed him to the waters so dearly love men the children of their own corruption What thank is it for a Robber or Felon to leave robbing and stealing for fear of hanging If there were no Law nor Magistrate hee would to his own calling again because hee is no changeling So what thank is it for a man to avoid sin because of damnation here is no fear of God but fear of evil no love of God but self-love And yet this is the restraint of most men whom Conscience no whit bridleth Why do men abstain from open wronging of men by Robbing Stealing Murthering they will say for Conscience But then the same Conscience would keep them from all secret deceit lying and cousenage and then the same conscience would keep them from all other sins also as swearing drinking dicing carding gaming pride wantonness and the rest A good conscience in one thing is a good conscience in all 2 The like is the obedience of many sinners that are still in league with their sins Many filthy unclean whoremongers and harlots have left their sin but it is because it hath lest them they have broken their strength and either age or diseases in their bodies hinder them oh now they will pretend Conscience But they can as filthily speak and as merrily remember their mad pranks as ever they acted them they want onely a body no minde will or affection to commit over the same things again Many Prodigals have left their sin because their wealth hath left them and poverty feeds upon them Many quarrellers and swaggerers have left off such furious courses why perhaps they have gotten some maim or mischief or perhaps they fear whether they can do so again safely or no and this is all the conscience that hath calmed and quieted them but what obedience is this Is that an obedience to God for a Dicer or Gamester to forbear play or rather as it is his theeving when he wants mony to stake 3 In Gods service what makes men come to Church to hear and Pray Every man saith Conscience Yea but good Conscience works powerfully upon the Will what then means the unwillingnesse of men and heavinesse who are so far from apprehending their week-occasions as if they ask their own hearts they must tell them that on the Sabbaths of God were it not for fear of law and shame of men both which are often forgotten they would not come at all Here is obedience much like the Devils because they are of the Devils teaching The like of many servants and Childrens obedience whose comming to Church to hear their duty is meerly forced by the compulsion of Masters and Parents and hath as little comfort in it as the Devils obedience 4 The like is to bee said of late Repentance at the time of death when the sinner hath held his sin so long as hee can then hee would bee rid of it Indeed his sin leaves him but not the curse of it but hee is so far from leaving it as were hee to live over his daies again hee would put as much life into his sin as ever before Late repentance is seldome true ever suspicious Why do many rich men never do good while they live but live as unprofitable and hurtful as swine till they come to the knife but then when death is binding them they will give somewhat to good uses to the Poor for a Sermon c. Why what moves them Conscience they say But it is an accusing Conscience crying out against their oppression usury wrong cruelty and deceit and now this wicked Conscience would stop its own mouth by offering to God some trifle of that hee hath robbed For were it a good conscience why doth hee not leave some part of his wealth for God before it wholly leave him Were it a free-will-offering why comes it so late why doth hee not good while hee hath time Gal. 6.10 Surely God likes a living Christian for any man will bee a Christian dying Neither is it thank-worthy to give that which a man cannot keep And commonly such gifts do more good to others than the giver himself Which is not spoken to hinder men from doing good at their deaths but to provoke them to do good before that time And yet better late than never Let us examine all our obedience by this ground and bee sure that it differ from the obedience of Devils and wicked men And that by these rules 1 God loves truth in the inward parts and refuseth all that obedience which follows not sanctification of the Spirit duties without must flow from graces within Examine now thy inward change wee are his new creatures created to good works joyn that in thy actions which the Devil divorced the inner man with the outward the subjection of the soul with the obedience of the body 2 Examine thy love in thy obedience that because the love of God constrains thee thou doest what hee commands and whether thou preferrest the Commandement of God which is ever-joyned with his glory above all the World and thy obedience above thy profit credit case pleasure mens favour or dis-favour whether thou canst obey God against all these This was
domestical and familiar converse with him all the while he lived in the execution of his office they might be furnished to this testimony Hence is it that John saith We saw his glory namely in his Doctrin and Works and the things which we have heard and seen declare wee unto you Many worthy points concerning this witnesse of the Apostles were here to be delivered but that I referre them all to the forty one and forty two verses where we shall as fitly and more fully handle the same And now proceed to the matter witnessed namely the Priestly Office of Christ in these words Whom they slew hanging him upon a tree wherein are to be considered 1 The Person that was put to death whom 2 The persons that put him to death they slew namely of Judea and Jerusalem 3 The kind and manner of his death slew hanging him on a tree 4 The use of Christ his Crucifying First the person that was put to death was Jesus Christ whom wee have heard to be Lord of all anoynted with the Holy Ghost and power to work most powerful Miracles who went about doing good and never harm with whom God so was as he never was with any Creature before nor ever shall bee hereafter who subdued mightily the very Devils themselves with one word for all this he was killed and slain How the Lord of life cou●d be subdued under death Quest But how could the Lord of life be subdued of death yea hee that did only good and was without all sin which is the mother of death Ans Christ the Mediator must be considered in his two Natures 1 The God-head 2 The Man-hood and in that he dyed it was according to his Man-hood so Peter saith he dyed according unto his flesh 1 Pet. 3.18 for his body was dead being separated from his soul and his soul suffered the sorrows of death But yet we must conceive that he suffered not in such a Man-hood as was a naked and bare flesh such as ours but such as was inseparably united and knit to the God-head and therefore the Apostle saith that God shed his bloud that is not the God-head but such a person as is both God and Man Secondly although he had no personal sin to bring him to death yet had he sin imputed unto him even the sins of his whole Church which he willingly took upon himself so as God reckoned with him not for the sins of one man but of all his Church and esteemed him as a captain sinner till the price was paid and men reckoned him among sinners and esteemed him an arch-malefactor Why wicked men prevail against Christ who had vanquished the Devils themselves Quest But doth not this crosse the power of Christ immediatly before mentioned whereby he controlled the Devils themselves that wicked men should thus farre prevail against him Ans No but it argueth a voluntary laying down of his power for the time of his suffering for at his apprehension hee could have commanded twelve Legions of Angels but that the Scriptures must be fulfilled yea and this laying aside of his power was the most powerful work that ever he wrought by which he more foyled and broke the Devils power and forces in men than ever by any shewing himself the true Sampson who more mightily prevailed against his enemies in his death than in all his life Hence note 1 How Christs righteousness is witnessed hee went ●●●ut doing good and yet he is slain and teacheth that Christ himself deserved not death but he endured it for some other that had deserved it and indeed Christ dyed for us and in our stead that we should not dye How it standeth with Gods justice to punish the innocent and let the guilty goe free Object But how could he being innocent suffer for us sinners or how standeth it with equity that God should punish the innocent and let the guilty goe free Ans We must consider Christ in his death not as a Debtor but as a Surety or Pledge between God and us who hath undertaken our whole debt and therefore hee suffereth not as guilty in himself but in the room of us that were guilty now it standeth with the course of Justice to lay the Debtors action upon the Surety being 1 Willing 2 Able to pay the debt as Christ was Secondly we may gather hence the hainousness● and odiousnesse of our sins it was no trifle nor a matter of small desert that the Lord of glory the only Son of God yea God himself must shed his bloud for and yet what a small reckoning is made of soul and open sins Thirdly take notice also of the love of God who to free us would lay the chastisement of our peace upon his do●● Son that so his justice might be satisfied Object But how could his Justice bee satisfied who was infinitely offended with such a finite and short death as Christs was The justice of God doth more appear in Christ his P●ssi●n than if all the world had been damned Ans By reason of the dignity of the person who suffered being God as well as Man that suffering was in value eternal though not in duration or continuance Lastly we have here the two Natures of Christ lively set before us the one most powerful and glorious in mighty Miracles which forced Legions of Devils to fly before it the other beaten down with wrongs and injuries even to the death it self and it was meet that the Apostle intending to prove Christ to bee the true Messias should mention both these natures which are absolutely necessary to the Mediatour the Humanity that it might suffer death and so satisfy in the same nature that had sinned and the Deity to overcome in suffering so to apply that satisfaction unto beleevers Secondly The persons that put Christ to death were the Jews they of Judea and Jerusalem Object But the Jews had no power to put him to death How the Jews are said to put Christ to death though they had no power to do it the Scepter was gone from them and if the Scribes and Pharisees had had the power in their hands they would never have suffered him alive so long Besides the Judge who was Pontius Pilate was the Romane Emperours Deputy the Souldiers his Executioners were of the Romane band the manner of Death also not Jewish but Romane why is it then said that the Jews slew him and no mention made of the Romanes by whose authority hee was put to death Answ The Jews are justly charged with it because they were the chief causes and abettors in all that violence which the Romans used against him They made way to this sentence and went as far as they could they apprehended him they mocked him they charged him with blasphemy they raised false witness against him they beat him spate in his face they hood-winkt him and bad him prophecy who smote him finally they delivered him to the Romane
of God which is the curse of the Law and not onely Ceremonially and typically as they were This the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal. 3.13 that Christ was not onely dead but made a curse for us his reason is because hee dyed on a tree and therefore are wee admonished Phil. 2.8 to consider not only that Christ was obedient unto the death but to the death of the Cross for any other death had not so much concerned us Fourthly This death which so much concerned all the Church of the Jews and Gentiles must not bee obscure and therefore the Lord would not have Christ to dye in a tumult or in secret but most conspicuously and apparently at Jerusalem the great City of the Jews but tributary to the Romans as it were upon the Theatre of the World at a solemn feast when all the Males out of all quarters must appear before the Lord upon a Cross high erected that all might see him and on the Cross himself proclaimed King of the Jewes in three several Langages the Latine Greek and Hebrew that all sorts of men might come to the knowledge of it and further because in his death standeth our life hee must bee thus lifted up that all men might see him certainly dead and that he dyed not in shew and appearance only but in deed and in truth really and perfectly for which cause also our Apostle doubleth his affirmation they slew him and hanged him on a tree which most necessary ground of Faith and Religion Satan hath mightily by many Hereticks sought to overthrow the Turks at this day are held off from the faith in this Messiah by that Diabolical suggestion that not Christ himself but Simon the Cyrenian was miraculously crucified in his stead And therefore because the assurance of the death it self assureth us more fully of all the fruits and benefits of it the Scripture is careful so pregnantly to confirm it as that it cannot be denied not only that he was in the sight of a number of thousands dead on the Crosse but by his three days burial by the peircing of his side out of which came water and bloud by which was manifest that the very Call of his heart was peirced by the confession of his very enemies who would beleeve nothing but their own sences and lastly by the fact of the Souldiers who whereas they hastened the death of the Theeves by breaking their leggs they broke not his because the text saith they saw that he was dead already The fourth point is the use of Christs Crucifying First in Christ on the Crosse take a full view of the cursednesse and execration of sin and consequently of thine own wretchednesse both in regard of thy wicked nature and cursed practices every sin being so loathsome and odious in the eyes of God as the least could never be put away but by such an ignominious death of the Son of God himself If thou lookest at sin in thy self or in thy sufferings yea or in the sufferings of the damned in Hell it will seem but a slight thing but behold God comming down from Heaven and him that thought it no robbery to bee equal to his Father in glory taking flesh in that flesh abasing himself to the death of the Crosse on that Crosse sustaining the whole wrath of his Father and so becoming accursed for it and thou shalt see it in the native face of it And indeed this one consideration setteth a more ugly face upon sin than the Law possibly can for that sheweth our sins to bee a knife to stab our selves withall The most ugly visage of sin that can be but this to be the very spear that went to Christs heart which is the most odious apprehension in the world all the sin that ever was committed on the earth could not bring a man so low suppose one man had committed them all as the least sin of the elect brought the Son of God seeing he that falleth lowest falleth but from one degree in earth to another but Christ falleth from the glory of Heaven into the very sorrows of Hell whosoever thou art then that makest light account of sin and pleadest that God is merciful look a little in this glasse wherein behold Gods Justice and sins desert in the Fathers just indignation against his wel-beloved Son whom nothing but the cursed death of his only Son in whom he professed himself well pleased could appease Secondly seeing all the knowledge of Christ profitable to salvation is of Christ crucified let us desire to know nothing in comparison but Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 seeing such a great Apostle as Paul was desired to know nothing else Now to come to the distinct knowledge of it we must consider these three points 1 The vertue and power of this death in it self 2 The application of it unto our selves 3 The fruits which must appear in us by such application For the first Look upon this death of the Son of God not as of another dead man neither think or speak of it as of the death of another ordinary felon executed but as of a death which slew all the sins of all the beleevers in the world and as a destroyer of all destroyers a death wherein was more power than in all the lives of all Angels and Men that ever were or shall bee More power in Christs death than in the lives of all men and Angels yea such a death as hath life in it quickning all the deaths of all that have benefit by it Here we have a mighty Sampson bearing away the gates of his enemies by death killing death by suffering his Fathers wrath overcoming it by entring into the Grave opening it for all beleevers by his Bloud shedding upon the Crosse reconciling all things Col. 1.20 never was there such an active suffering of any man which tormented and crucified the Devils themselves when the Devils instruments were tormenting and crucifying him it is peerlesse and unmatchable no Martyr ever thus suffered though Popish doctrin would match as Corrivals some of their Saints sufferings with it the most faithful Martyrs suffered but dissolution of soul and body but Christ besides suffered the whole Wrath of God due to mans sin they suffered in way of Christian duty and service but he to make a sacrifice of expiation of sin they having their sins removed and taken off from them but he bare all theirs and all beleevers sins in his body upon the tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Howsoever therefore Humane wisdom stumbleth at this death of Christ yet must we by the eye of faith labour to espy glory in ignominy esteem of the Crosse as an honourable Chariot and rejoyce in a triumph made as the Jews scoff by an hanged man thus shall we see the foolishness of God wiser than man and the weakness of God stronger than man thus also shall we imitate the holy men of God who looking back to the Cross of Christ could
sheep but the most are goat some are in communion with him as the s●i●ns set and growing in the root but the most are out of fellowship with him and are no otherwise knit unto him than a sciens tyed to a tree by a thred I mean by the slender thred of outward profession Now as the Head onely imparteth of the life sence motion protection light and comfort which it hath to the members of its own body and no other even so the Head of this Mystical body quickneth moveth protecteth inlightneth graceth saveth onely such as are in true communion with him for these sheep onely hee giveth his life for these he rose again for these hee spoiled principalities and powers for these he slew hatred yea not for these onely but in these also and in these onely As for all the rest hee prayeth not for the world namely the wicked of the world hee dyed much lesse for them his death killed none of their sins but they are left in their sins and unto the reign and damnation of their sins without all benefit either of the death of Christ or of his resurrection When wee lay then that Christ killed sin wee must bee understood according to the Scriptures onely for and in true Beleevers who only can receive of his fulnesse The latter distinction concerneth sin wherein wee must consider two things 1 the guilt 2 The corruption of it In beleevers the whole guilt of sin is abolished by Christ though not the whole corruption The whole guilt of sin is wholly and at once abolished to all beleevers by means of Christ his Death and Resurrection but not the whole corruption which while they dwel in the body will dwell with them yet so as they neith●r live in it not it scarcely live in them For the former the Apostle asketh this Question Rom 6.2 How can wee that are dead to sin live in it and hence it is that such as are in communion with Christ are not onely said to bee dead but buried also with Christ and consequently they leave their sins in his grave even as Christ himself left them there where if they bee left there will bee a ●●tting and consuming of them away that they will bee every day less than other even as it is with the body that lyeth in the grave and those which remain yet unmortified they will bee even as dead ca●kases All the motions of sin in the ●●ct 〈◊〉 only in letting the life of it go loathsome and stinking which above all things the godly desire to bee covered Now how impossible is it that these should be the practices of such as live in sin Nay I say more that all the corruption of sin left in the godly can scarcely bee said to live in them I grant indeed some moving and stirring of it in them but it is such a motion as is in a beast which hath the throat cut it strugleth and striveth in letting life go but the beast is killed and the unclean issues of sin in the godly which indeed are many are like such issues which come from a dead man and are a very parting from them rather than any argument of the life of sin or of any delight in them This is that which the Apostle aimeth at Rom. 6.7 Hee that is dead is freed from sin as the Theef once hanged stealeth no more so sin once dead and executed in Christ liveth no more in state or strength the sinews of this gyant are cut and what strength of motion can bee in it In a word it is in Beleevers but dying sin sin destroyed the whole Host of sin is discomfited though some straglers of the Army wander here and there as Rebels in another mans dominions The second Enemy is Death which entered into the World by sin The second enemy is death and went over all men in that all men had sinned and standeth in full force and state by sin wheresoever it reigneth Now Christ by removing the cause hath also removed the effect for sin being slain death is also swallowed up in victory he hath made his word good O death I will be thy death who although he bee the last enemy that shall bee fully destroyed yet hath hee disarmed him taken away his dart and sting from him and so spoiled him as hee hath left him nothing to harm the elect withall The third Enemy is Hell the gates of which was set wide open by sin for The third Hell In the day thou sinnest thou shalt dye the death namely the second death as well as the former But Jesus Christ by descending into Hell and suffering the sorrows of the second death loosed the same from himself and all such as shall beleeve in his name unto the worlds end Rev. 1.18 I was dead but am alive for evermore Amen and I have the keys of Hell and Death which phrase seemeth to bee borrowed from great Commanders and Conquerours who having won and entered any City presently have the keyes delivered unto them in token of that regiment and authority which now of right belongeth unto them and plainly importeth that howsoever Christ was once dead yet by his death hee hath vanquished Hell and Death and so hath obtained full power and command over them both The fourth Enemy is Satan the arch enemy of mankinde most malitious The fourth Satan being a man-slayer from the beginning and most powerful being the Prince yea the God of this world yet hath the victorious Lyon of the tribe of Judah put to flight this roaring Lyon whose rage and malice made him bold to set upon the Son of God himself that so hee might work his own ruine and overthrow How Christ avoided his sundry fierce assaults and temptations in the wilderness broke his power and forces by his powerful dis-possessing and casting him out of men and women trod upon his neck by the power of his death and resurrection wee might at large out of the Evangelists shew but that wee have spent some time already in this argument so as now the gates of Hell can never prevail against the Faith of the godly the seed of the Woman hath broken the Serpents head the strong man is cast out by a stronger than hee the spoiler is spoyled and lead in triumph by him that appeared for this end to destroy the works of the Devil who hath this Tyrant also in chains reserved for the blacknesse of darkness for ever The last enemy but not the least in strength is the World The fifth the world Satans servant and armour-bearer which by all the power and policy it could use could not keep Christ down in the grave but hee rose again notwithstanding all the opposition of it this is that our Saviour professeth of himself a little before his death Bee of good comfort for I have overcome the world Joh. 16.33 As if hee had said trouble not your hearts although
you have all the strength and malice of the wicked world against you all which shall bee no more able to prejudice your salvation or hinder your glory than mine own who have overcome it so as you fight against a Conquered Enemy By all this that hath been said that of the Apostle appeareth to bee true that hee hath subdued all things unto himself and hath put all his enemies under his feet that none nor all of them can separate us from God or Christ or our salvation purchased and preserved for us by him How all these enemies are not only soyled but after a sort made friendly unto us Now wee are to see in the next place that Christ by his resurrection hath not onely spoyled these enemies for us but that hee hath made them all after a sort friendly unto us that whereas they desire still indeed and seem to wound us they do nothing else but heal us 1 For sin that now serveth to humble Gods Children and keep them low in their own eyes as also provoketh them to walk awfully in regard of God and watchfully over their hearts and lives still groaning to God under their daily infirmities By this means out of the eater commeth meat as was said in Sampsons riddle Judg. 14.14 2 Death is not now to Gods Children as it was to Christ joyned with a sence of Gods anger against it or paying a debt to the Justice of God for it were against the rule of Gods Justice to require the payment of the same debt twice but wherein they have a sweet sense of Gods Fatherly love wherein sin is perfectly to bee abolished whereby way and entrance is made unto life everlasting where wee shall bee with God and Jesus Christ which is best of all The Saints of God in these regards have rather desired than feared it for what man having been tossed a long time upon a dangerous Sea would fear the Haven or who being wearied with the Travels of the day would fear to go to his rest at night 3 Sence of Hell keepeth in us an hatred of sin and a longing after Heaven yea how beneficial the terrors of Conscience are to Gods Children were too long here to discourse The speech is as true as common the way to heaven lyeth by hell gates 4 The Devil maketh us fly to God our help and rely upon his strength yea when men by no other means will bee drawn God setteth the Devil in their necks to drag them to Heaven as a grave Divine speaketh 5 All the evils in the world work to the best to them that love God and hasten them to the fruition of the victory obtained by Christ they wean them from the World and the love of it And whereas they are as prone to pitch their Tabernacles here below as others God useth these as means to keep his from being of the World even while they are in it They conform them to Jesus Christ their head and train them in the imitation of him both in patience and obedience Now how could any of these parcels of Gods curse against the sin of man or mans cursed sin it self bring to any such sweet and profitable fruits but by the over-ruling power of Jesus Christ who bringeth life out of death light out of darkness and who onely can make his own wise out of a rank poyson to suck most sweet and sovereign preservatives which who doth not hee never as yet knew the benefit of Christ his resurrection Christ by his resurrection not only removed evils but procured all our good as appeareth by three instances The second sort of blessings procured to the Church by Christ his resurrection is the fruition of good things which it putteth us in possession of even in this life by giving us our first fruits and a sweet taste but up-heapeth our measure after this life when our Harvest commeth and wee admitted to feed fully at the Supper of the Lamb. The benefits which I will mention are three First We are confirmed hereby in the whole truth of all our Religion the main foundation of which laid by all the Prophets and Apostles is that Jesus Christ the Son of Mary was the Son of God the true Messiah perfect God and perfect man and so indeed hee was such a one as hee was foretold to bee one that was to dye and yet saw no corruption one who must make his soul an offering for sin and yet must survive to see his seed and prolong his daies one that had power to lay down his Life 1 Pet. 3.18 and power to take it up again In a word one that was put to death concerning the flesh but was quickned in the spirit that is by vertue of his Deity raising that flesh up again Let all the Jews and Atheists in the earth despise the indignity of his death we with the Angels will admire the glory of his resurrection II. The second benefit is that hence wee are assured that our 1 Justification 2 Sanctification 3 Perfect salvation is not only obtained but applyed unto us 1 For our Justification before God by means of Christ his resurrection hee brought in to us an everlasting righteousnesse in that hee not only bare our burden upon himself but bare it away from us for what is his resurrection else but his actual absolution from our sins which were imputed unto him and for which hee subjected himself unto the death Whence wee grow up in full assurance that the whole price is not onely paid to the uttermost on Christs part but that the satisfaction is accepted also on his Fathers whose justice would never have absolved him if all the Bills and Writings which were to bee laid against us had not been fastned to the Cross and so cancelled and fully discharged so as now wee may with the Apostle hold out a flagge of defiance and challenge our righteousness for who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It is God that justifieth who shall condemn it is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen again Rom. 8.34 And the same Apostle thirsting after that Righteousnesse which is by Faith in him counteth all things loss and dung save onely to know him and the vertue of his resurrection Phil. 3.10 2 From this Resurrection of Christ issueth our sanctification which is our first resurrection or raising of our souls from the death of sin because in every reconciliation-making must bee two conditions 1 A forgetting upon satisfaction of all old wrongs and injuries 2 A binding from future offences the former Christ effecteth by his death the latter by his resurrection into the which whosoever are grafted they cannot hence-forth serve sin Rom. 6.5 6. but being risen with Christ they seek the things which are above Colos 3.1 where Christ sitteth they cease further by sin to offend as such who are begotten to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from
in prison and at length they see there was no heavenly husbandry in all this Thirdly In confessing our sin and pleading guilty Prov. 20.13 this is the covenant that whereas he that hideth his sin shall not prosper he that confesseth shall finde mercy Psal 32.4 I said I will confesse mine iniquity and thou forgavest me the punishment of my sin Job 31.33 It is too neer joyned to our natures to hide our sin with Adam and conceal it in our bosome or else to sum up all in a word without special grief for any special sin and herein they think they have peace which is but unfeelingnesse But those that belong to God he bringeth them to found humiliation he maketh them sick in smiting them and setteth their sins in order before them like a bill of parcels to the breaking of their hearts and the utter acknowledgement of themselves to be miserable bankcrupts For this purpose he maketh their own Consciences also to be judges of their actions pronouncing sentence of guiltinesse and death against themselves As David Against thee against thee have I sinned and again I am the man and again I have done very foolishly but these s●eep what have they d●ne The penitent Thief thus judgeth himself we are righteously here To conclude this point he was never truly humbled nor ●ver aright judged himself that is more ashamed to confesse than to commit sin Fourthly After pleading guilty in pleading for pardon as for life and death and as the poor Malefactor condemned to dye c●ys for mercy and all his hope and longing is for a pardon even so this is noted to bee the practi●e of the Church Hos 14.2 3. Oh Israel return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take unto you words and turn to the Lord and say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously And which of the Saints have not placed all their happinesse in the pardon of sin or have not preferred the shining of Gods countenan●e upon them above all the outward happinesse that the earth affordeth Now in the seeking and suing for pardon because God will not hear him that regardeth wickednesse in his heart for wicked Esau shall finde no repentance nor favour with tears therefore thou must forth-with cease to doe evil as being ashamed of it and learn to doe well lay Laws upon thy self be more severe against thy self in the things wherein thou hast displeased thy God watch diligently over those corruptions which have most foyled thee this is the way both to make and preserve thy peace Bring thy self then with fear and trembling before Gods righteous Judgement accuse thy self and bewayl thy sins bee not ashamed to confesse but to commit them again be so farre from purposing any wickednesse in thy heart as rather thou bee strongly armed with full purp●se against it And thus remembring thy sins God will forget them thus wi●●ing them deep in thine own books God will blot them out of his Thus if thou hide them not but cast them out of thy heart and life he will hide them for ever and cast them utterly out of his sight so that if thou canst thus judge thy self afore-hand thou shalt never be judged of the Lord. Vers 43. To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe Apostle Peter although he hath sufficiently proved whatsoever he hath form●rly delivered concerning the Doctrin and Miracles Life and Death Resurrection and Ascension and the coming of Christ again unto Judgement yet as though no proof could be too much or as if he could not satisfie himself in enforcing this holy doctrin and binding it upon the consciences of his Hearers he shutteth up his Sermon in this verse with another assured testim●ny above all exception drawn from all the Prophets who all consent and conspire with the Apostles in all their doctrin concerning him the sum and main end of all which is that through beleeving in his name the elect should receive remission of sins which is the sum and effect of this verse Where first may be asked Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies concerning Christ Reasons why doth the Apostle induce so many testimonies one in the ne●k of another In the answer whereof we shall see that none of them are needlesse or superfluous For 1 All the points of Christian religion are above and against corrupt nature as appeareth in the Heathen wh● still esteemed the preaching of Christ foolishnesse 2 Corin. 2.23 and in the Athenians who when they heard Paul preaching of the Judgement Day and Christs Resurrection from the dead they mocked him Acts 17.32 The hardened Jews at this day on whom the Wrath of God is 〈◊〉 me to the uttermost doe the like and well it were for many if professed Christians in the midst of such a light made more reckoning of our painful preaching of Christ who teach the same points than some of the former which were they so slight matters as most account them what need they be so enforced We are therefore hence fitly enformed both to make more high account of such great Mysteries which the Spirit of God is so careful t● commend unto us as also to bewayl the infidelity of our hearts that need so much working upon them to entertain such necessary truths as these be 2 Because although he was an Apostle yet would he shew his care that in all his Sermon he taught nothing of his own which the Prophets had not formerly taught Which teacheth all Ministers much more to beware lest in any of their Sermons they broach such doctrin or bring in such stuff of which they cannot prove the Prophets and Apostles to bee Patrons and Publishers For this was the commandement of the Apostles that wee teach no other doctrin 1 Tim. 1.3 neither contrary nor diverse from it no private opinions which are the causes of Schisms and Heresies nor vain conceits or jangling which breed questions but no godly edifying 3 It was not only their precept but practise also as Act. 26.22 Paul spake no other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should bee the first that should rise from the dead Nay the Lord of the holy Apostles Jesus Christ himself preached no other Doctrin of whom it is said Luk. 24.27 that be began at Moses and all the Prophets and interpreted unto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him shall the Son of God who might have made every word hee spake Scripture tye himself to the Scriptures and make them the ground of all his Sermons and shall not weak men who cannot without error depart an hair breadth from them be careful to contain all their doctrin within the limits of them especially seeing nothing else bindeth the conscience of the hearer 3 The Apostle knew
it must bee the life of faith which the just must live by If to the Church to joyn himself to that he must himself be first of the houshold of faith Gal. 6.10 Nay more if to Christ himself if he carry not faith with him he is after a sort disabled from doing him any good As he could doe no great works in Capernaum because of their unbelief Mar. 6. only thy faith in the Son of God is the beginning and a●complishment of thy happiness Adde hereunto that it nor only removeth discomfort but bringeth with it all the sound joy and comfort of our lives whence it is that Christian joy is called joy of faith Philip. 1.25 and all the Sons of faithful Abraham tread in their Fathers steps who saw the day of Christ and rejoyced Joh. 8.56 because God hath not only reserved mercy for us but by the faith which his Spirit worketh in our hearts hee letteth us know yea and taste what he hath done for us so as hence have we peace with God and with our own hearts boldnesse in prayer and not patience only but joy in sorrow thus give a man once faith and sin flieth before him bands of temptations are discomfited afflictions dismay him not death and deadly things are disarmed unto him faith hath gotten and holdeth Christ his victory his strength his life yea whilest he walketh in a thousand deaths the faith of his heart hath filled his soule with that heavenly and spiritual joy which all the world cannot give neither can it take away Lastly By this worthy grace of Faith wee are not onely brought into thee grace by which wee stand Rom. 5 2 Col. 2.12 receive increase of it through the communion of Christ his Death and Resurrection as also the inhabitation of the Spirit in our hearts but also wee are fitted unto our glory for Faith assureth every beleever of his salvation 2 Thess 2.13 and every beleever is kept by the power of God through Faith unto salvation which is prepared to be shewed in the last time 1 Pet. 1.5 Thirdly A beleever may know hee hath faith by soul marks or notes Seeing that this is so special a grace of God bestowed but on a few it is worth inquiry by what touch-stone a man may know the s●undness of his Faith and that it is much more precious than Gold And therefore that a man may not bee deceived in a matter of such moment as this is the Scriptures have furnished us with such marks and notes as such who will use diligence in laying their Faith thereunto shall certainly know the truth or unsoundness of it for else why should wee bee commanded to prove our selves whether wee bee in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13.5 unlesse the beleever know that hee doth beleeve Again who bee they that know not that Christ is in them but Reprobates and can Christ live in any man● and hee not know it at one time or other and bee able to say with Paul I live not henceforth but Christ liveth in mee and I know whom I have beleeved 2 Tim. 1.12 Which if any say Paul might know being an Apostle and having a Revelation which ordinary men have not the same Apostle answereth it 1 Cor. 2.12 when hee joyneth with himself all beleevers wee have not received the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that wee might know the things that are given us of God Now whosoever have received this spirit want not this revelation who if hee reveal unto us any thing that is given us of God then would hee not neglect the greatest gift that 〈◊〉 given us even Christ himself and life eternal through his name The first mark of sound Faith is the seat and dwelling of it and 〈…〉 an humbled soul that longeth and almost fainteth for Gods mercy i● 〈◊〉 that not feeling Faith can bitterly complain for want of it that striveth against doubting because God hath commanded to beleeve that endeavoureth to assent to the promise touching forgiveness of sin with purpose to sin no more this holy seed is fown in no other ground but this The second Mark are the essential properties of sound Faith II The essenti●l properties of it and they are three in number 1 It is most pliable to the Word of which it is begotten the Jayler as soon as hee was converted would but know of the Apostles what hee might do it will except against nothing that the word enjoyneth it will pick no quarrels but with Abraham riseth early to obey God when if hee had reasoned with flesh and blood hee could have excepted many things which all the wisdome of flesh could never have answered This is that the Apostle ascribeth unto it that it establi●heth the whole Law Rom. 4.19 yea the whole Word of God the Law and Gospel by provoking to cheerful indeavour in the obedience of them both 2 Sound Faith being a subsistence 〈…〉 it inableth a man to stand under a great burden and not bee crusht Psal 46.2 Therefore we will not fear though the earth bee moved Job will not let his hold go if the Lord should smite off his hand yea if hee kill him hee will trust still it resteth upon Gods arm and truth in all estates in Life and Death whereas every cross puff of winde of temptation or affliction unsetleth yea and sinketh the unbeleever 3 It being a subsistence of things not seen it careth not how little it see the less it seeth the more it beleeveth and the less it seeth of men and means the more it seeth of God It seeth an Almighty promiser who can do what hee will It seeth him that is true of his word who cannot lye 2 Cor 6.18 and who cannot but do what hee hath said It seeth a merciful and loving Saviour whose eyes are upon them that trust in his mercy Psal 33.18 and seeing these it seeth enough Besides it estrangeth the heart from the World which it seeth and seeketh an unseen Country Heb. 11.13 15. Abraham Isaac and Jacob acknowledged themselves rather strangers in this W●r●d t●an Inhabitants and that they came into it rather to see it and go through it than dwell or set up their rest in it It weaneth the heart from the things below as the woman at the well once meeting with Christ shee forgeteth her water-pot What careth Zacheus for half his goods yea ●r all when Christ once becommeth his ghost and bringeth salvation to his ●●use And on the contrary it sendeth up the heart to those treasures which the eye of flesh cannot see but are reserved to the seekets of the Country where they ar● And these are the three worthy properties whereby the naturalnesse and soundness of it may bee discerned of such as are willing to try the same III. The honourable attendants and companions of it four The third mark or note of true justifying Faith is by the attendants and companions of
judgement and punishment of that sin but that now at this present time hee would bee pleased to appease his great anger so justly conceived and desist from that great judgement of the utter destroying of them threatned v. 12. as may appear both by the arguments used by him as by that hee expresly noteth the manner of this fo●giveness vers 19. as thou hast forgiven this people even from Egypt till now and forgive them even according as thou hast spoken v. 17. but how the Lord had after they came out of Egypt forgiven them appeareth Exod. 32.35 when they had made a calf and the Lord wished Moses to let him alone that hee might consume them yet by Moses intercession the Lord did not consume them but plagued them with a great plague and destruction and yet the holy man prayeth hee would forgive them as hee had done from Egypt till now And what was it the Lord had said which Moses taketh hold on namely in verse 34. of that 32. of Exod. Go now bring the people unto the place which I commanded thee behold mine Angel shall go before thee but yet in the day of my v sitation I will visit their sin upon them So as this place rightly interpreted yeeldeth no patronage to any such Popish and wicked collection Further for the second objection That death remaineth though the sin be pardone Though death remain after sin is pardoned both the fault and pun shment is removed I Answer it remaineth not as any satisfaction to the justice of God to beleevers nor as a punishment of sin to such as have their sins remitted but it hath lost his sting which is the guilt of sin and is become a remedy rather than a punishment physick rather than poyson an end of their misery and an entrance into a better life So as it still abideth firm against all such detestable devises of Popery that remission of sins carrieth with it the removal of all the guilt and punishment of sinne to such as have their parts in the same And it is lastly to bee observed in this description that I say the guilt and punishment of all sin is taken away for if any bee not remitted they bee either greater sins or lesser to remit the lesser and not the greater what were wee the better how could our salvation bee effected or perfected how could grace bee every way grace or do wee pray for remission of lesser and not of greater also seeing our selves must forgive our Brethren not only lesser offences but even the greatest A●ain to remit the greater and retain the lesser were to say that the Lord is either not s● able or so willing to forgive lesser sins as greater Shall a ma● frankly forgive a debt of thousands of pounds and will he not forgive also to the same party a few pence The Popish Church confidently avouch A bundle of P●p sh blasphemies that many sins need no remission as concupiscence which they say is not prop rly a sin albeit indeed it is the mother sin of all And all the heap of their venial sins which they say are not against but besides the commandement because they are not attended unto or deliberately done with full consent o● reason because they cannot hinder the hab●● of vertue but the act of it and that a very little nor turn us from our end but hinder so much as it is our progress unto it and because they though themselves displease God yet they make not God displeased with the party committing them for they can stand with grace and have not properly and simply the reason and respect of sin or offence therefore are they not to bee punished with eternal but only temporary punishment These need not the blood of Christ nor Grace nor confession in particular nor abs●lution nor any new habit of charity but these are easily wiped away with a little holy water or any meritorious work or by the Sacraments received or by general Confession or by a small humiliation as knocking the brest fasting almes the Lords Prayer an ave Maria or by entring into a consecrated Church or by a Bishops blessing or if all these help but a little presently after death they are all consumed in the fire of purgatory Oh horrible blasphemies derogatory to the blood of Christ which purgeth us from all sin and to the truth of the Scriptures which teach us that when wee had nothing to pay our Master forgave us our whole debt Matth. 18.32 But I have followed them too far were it not that the discovery of their impieties may bring some profit to su●h as are not so well acquainted or exer●ised in their writings Thus much of the description of this Grace The second thing propounded is what it is to receive remission of sinnes which because it implyeth a gift or oblation therefore we must know that pardon of sin is offered generally to all in the word of grace publikely preached and conferred unto beleevers not onely in the beginning of their conversion but through their whole life Now to receive this remission How remission of sin is received is when a capable that is a contrite heart by Faith which is an hand taking in receiveth Christ and all his benefits among which remission of sins is the chief Preached and published in the Gospel And this it doth on this manner 1 Upon a touch of sin and sence that without this gracious pardon there is nothing b●● 〈◊〉 p●rdition the heart beaten down beginneth seriously to meditate of the promise of m rcy in Christ and of the means of deliverance from this woful estate 2 It desireth to beleeve and wisheth that mercy to belong to it self it sendeth groans to God it hopeth for pardon and weakly applyeth the general promises of grace 3 After such desires and groans of the heart the Lord most gratiously answereth by his Spirit and by little and little settleth and quieteth the heart perswading it that Christ himself and consequently reconciliation with God doth indeed belong unto him so as he resteth in that assurance Thus the Lord will not only give us mercy but letteth us know that he doth so that our joy and peace and boldness in him might be more full Thirdly the persons receiving this remission are all beleevers Whosoever beleeve in his name whose faith intitles them to the main promise of life and all other depending thereupon Beleeve in the name of Christ why they must beleeve in his name For 1 There is no other name to be saved by In him alone is the matter of our salvation seeing remission is obtained by his bloud Ephes 1.7 2 Hee alone is God and man both which natures are necessary to our Surety by the former he hath power by the latter a right to us not only more general of propriety as the Father and Holy Ghost also have but more special of propinquity being our brother and first-born of our
Family the next of our Kindred and therefore of right belongeth to him to recover our weak estate as was figured in that Law Levit. 25.25 If thy brother be impoverished and sell his possession then his redeemer shall come even his near kinsman and buy out that which his brother sold 3 He only was deputed of God to derive life and grace into us as the head into the members and therefore most meet it is that whosoever would suck and draw of his fulnesse should beleeve in his name Now from these words we learn two instructions 1 What is the chief thing which every Christian must strive to obtain while hee liveth in his world namely remission of sins 2 What a his estate and condition that hath attained it The chief duty of every Christian while he is in this world For the first it is grounded in the text because howsoever rem●ssion of sins is here only named yet in it are included all the other gracious mercies of God not only all deliverances and freedom from the evils and punishments that attend upon sin but even all our redemption and salvation with the means of it and blessings accompanying the same And indeed this is the sum or epitome of all Gods mercy in which the Lord crowneth his Saints with compassion a mercy which reacheth up to heaven and draweth them out of the most miserable thing in all the world which is to lye under the curse and danger of sin and consequently under the endlesse displeasure of the Almighty Which point being even as the one thing necessary to be known and attained I will stand a little longer upon it hoping to spend my time well in setting down these five points 1 The necessity of remission of sins 2 The benefits of it 3 The Letters of it 4 The helpes to it 5 The companions of it by which as by so many notes we may know we have it and so we will adde the use of the whole doctrin 1 Necessity of remission of sins in three points First the necessity of it will appear if wee consider 1 The multitude and abundance of our sins which are to bee remitted being for number as our hairs and as the sand of the Sea which is numberlesse which cannot bee other seeing we drink in sin as the Fish doth water Job 15.16 that is incessantly for the Fish ceasing to drink in water ceaseth to live neither can we cease to sin till we cease to live Nay seeing our very best actions hold no correspondence with the Law of God and in strict justice are no better than so many sins this consideration exceedingly multiplieth our sins in that not only in fayling in but in doing of our duties wee sin incessantly against our God 2 If we look upon the danger of sin we shall better see the necessity of remission It is a filthy Leprosie which infecteth the body and soul the thoughts speeches and actions it maketh a man a loathsome creature in the eyes of God it maketh God our enemy who is the fountain of life and whose lightsome countenance is better than life yea it maketh God depart from his Creature and destroy the works of his own fingers it layeth the sinner open and naked to all the wrath of God to all the Curses of the Law in this life and in the life to come It setteth him as a butt against whom the Lord in anger shooteth out of his quiver all the arrows of his displeasure It is the only thing which unremitted maketh the sinner absolutely unhappy and every way most accursed Neither doth the whole heap of sin only make the sinner so miserable but any one sin even the least unpardoned would for ever hold the sinner under perdition And more all the men that ever were or shall be in the world were never able to rise from under the burthen of one sin if it were imputed unto them and yet the most of the world see no part of this danger of sin and therefore no such necessity of the remission of it 3 Consider thy own insufficiency if thou hadst the strength and power of all men and Angels to satisfie for the least sin and if we cannot satisfie for any what remaineth but a fearful perdition from the Lord and from the glory of his power if all be not remitted In one word the sinner who hath not got his discharge sealed is without all safety in his life all sound comfort in his death and at the Judgement Day shall have the sentence of everlasting torment with the Devil and his Angels awarded him before men and Angels The second point is the benefits issuing from it and these are Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 1 Peace of conscience an immediat fruit of our justification by faith and reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God and it was ordinary with our Saviour to joyn them together as Luk 7.47 Thy sins are forgiven thee goe in peace This benefit the most know not what it meaneth but he that hath the feeling of the wrath of God against his sin and seeth nothing but an angry face of God burning like a consuming fire hee that is so straitned as hee can think no other thing but that the Lord in his just judgement hath cast him quite away this man as of all other torments that can be suffered in the world he lyeth under the greatest so nothing in the earth can content or comfort him but only the sence and perswasion of Gods favour Now the conditions of peace with his God are the most joyful tidings in all the world as is the unexpected news of a Pardon to a Malefactor ready to execution for high Treason against his Prince 2 The right and possession also of life everlasting For if wee bee estated unto life eternal by our justification and righteousnesse before God then are we so also by remission of sins because these two are confounded in the Scriptures and are the same Whence it is that the Apostle Rom. 4.7 being to prove the point of justification of a sinner before God without the works of the Law citeth the text Psal 32.1 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered And further If our whole redemption put us in possession of everlasting happinesse so doth also remission of sin seeing the Apostle in sundry places confoundeth these two and expoundeth one by the other Ephes 1.7 By whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgivenesse of our sins Col. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his bloud that is the forgivenesse of sins And it must needs follow that if they who are justified and sanctified are also glorified then they have attained the beginnings of their glory who have attained remission of sins 3 The benefit of Christs intercession which meriteth all our good for hee prayeth not for the world but those that
Christ who 361 Comfort of the godly who meet with strange entertainment in the world where they are strangers 293 Comfort that Christ is stronger than all 327 Common Protestant beleeveth not the Article of free remission of sins 414 Communication in sin sundry waies but all to be avoided 330 Companions of remission of sins 412 Consent of the Church to any Doctrin to be required and received with five several cautions 389 Conditions of reconciliation two 347 Consideration of the last Judgement a ground of the godlies patience 379 Consolations from Christs Resurrection 348 Co●solation of Gods children that their Saviour shall be their Judge 376 Consolation issuing from pardon of sinne 409 Cros● of Chri●t an honourable chariot of our triumph 334 Crosses some more smart and durable why 357 D DAnger of sin 406 Davids sin and punishment both forgiven though the child must dye 404 Death of Christ after a special manner infamous 332 Death of Christ hath more power in it than all the lives of Men and Angels 334 Death of Christ a destroyer of death and all destroyers 342 Death though it remain after sin is pardoned both the fault and punishment 〈◊〉 notwithstanding removed 333 Degrees of blessedness 415 Devil not cast out but by Christs power 324 Differences between Christian and worldly peace 265 Differences between Christs annointing and all other 308 Differences between Christs miracles and miracles of the Prophets and Apostles 313 Difference between the miracles of the Prophets and Apostles and those wonders wrought by Satan in three things 314 Difference between the life of the natural and regenerate man in matters both civil and religious 349 Difference between Civil and Ecclesiastical power 363 Difference between the kingdome of Christ and Antichrist 364 Divinity of Scripture proved 298 E ENemies even spiritual not only foyled by Christ but made after a sort friendly 345 Essential properties of Faith three 395 Evangelists all large in the Article of Christ his resurrection Why. 339 Every thing must bee esteemed in the measure and degree of the goodness of it 410 Examination of heavenly life 352 F FAith what it is 391 Faith is not of all reas 391 Faith never lost reas four 392 Faith commendeth every thing 394 Faith of most not rightly qualified 399 Faith seateth it self in an humbled soul 395 Faith in the resurrection an hard point 366 Faithful are seasonably remembred of God at least on the third day 357 Fame of Christ begun in Galilee why 303 And why after Johns preaching 305 Fear of God what and wherein it consisteth 288 Fearers of God must bee accepted of us 293 Few men see the necessity of preaching why 372 Five deadly enemies foyled by Christ 1 Sin 2 Death 3 Hell 4 The Devil 5 The World 344 Five excellent fruits of saving faith 393 Five sorts of men all boast of faith and yet all of them want it 399 Freedom by Christ 302 Fruits of faith four 397 Fruits of Christs death reduced to two heads 335 Force of consent in doctrin wherein it standeth 390 G. GAlilee of the Gentiles why so called 304 Glory of the last Judgement described 378 Glory of God in his children turned into shame 416 God no accepter of persons why 284 Gods providence over-ruleth every special event with the special circumstances 306 God was with Christ how and how with his servants 322 Gods wisdome and power most seen in chusing the most weak things 364 God only properly forgiveth sins why 402 God forgiveth sins not only properly but perfectly that is both the guilt and punishment 4●7 Godly must enquire of the truth of Doctrin delivered by the Scriptures 363 Godly enter not into the judgement how 377 Godly must lift up their heads in expectation of the day of their redemption 383 Godly who have all hard sentences passe against them shall have justice at the last day 379 Godly must addresse themselves to the Judgement Day two ways 384 Godly life must not bee shunned for the crosses that attend it 411 Graces in the soul of Christ after his resurrection were incomprehensible by all Creatures but in respect of God finite as the soul it self is 343 Guilt of sin is wholly abolished in beleevers although not the whole corruption of it 344 H. HAppinesse how it standeth in remission of sins 415 Hearers how to know they have heard aright 374 Heavenly life discerned by the notes of it 349 Helps to attain the grace of remission of sins 411 Hope is Faiths hand-ma●d 396 How the Lord of life could be subdued of death 328 How God can be just in punishing Christ an innocent and letting the guilty go free ibid. ●ow an infinite Justice could bee satisfied by so short a death ibid. How the jews are said to put Christ to death seeing they had no power to doe it 329 How Christs crucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians 335 How Christ can bee said to rise ag●●n seeing neither his Deity nor the soul of his Humanity did 337 How Christ is said to rise seeing God the Father and the Holy Ghost are said also to raise him 339 How Christ hath slain our sin which yet is so stirring in the best 344 How beleevers may know they are risen with Christ 349 How the Apostles were furnished to their witnesse 361 How Christ could eat and drink after he rose again seeing he rose not to natural life 365 How preaching could bee Christs ordinance being so long before his incarnation 367 How Christ is ordained Judge seeing the Father and the Holy Ghost judge as well as he 375 How Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father 375 Humiliation of Christ must humble Christians and h●w 334 I IEsus of Nazaret why so called 306 In Gods udgement wee must stand naked 288 In all spiritual captivity hasten to Christ 324 In cases of sor●ery what to do ibid. In all divine things wee must lean on a sure ground 302 In reading the Prophets wee must still be led to Christ. 390 Ingratitude of the Jews most extream 330 Joshua in many things a singular type of Christ. 333 Judging of our selves standeth in four things 385 L LAw of perfect righteousnesse is the charter of heaven 351 Life of Faith wherein 393 Lets which hinder men from seeking the remission of their sins 409 Love of God expressed in three things 397 Love of men wherein chiefly descerned ibid Love and thankfulnesse to God attendeth the remission of sins 413 Lowest degrees of murther condemned as murther 329 M MAgistrates must not accept of persons 286 Mallice of the wicked against the godly never wanteth matter to w●rk upon 331 Many men bodily possessed by the Devil in Christs time above all other times before or since why 308 Manner of Christs resurrection in three things 34● Map of humane frai ty in Peter 283 Means by which quick and dead shall bee presented before the last judgement 377 Means to increase the stock of Faith 398 Men
indure not their lusts to be pricked in the ministery and much less crucified 336 Minister must bee careful to remove what may hinder his Doctrin 284 Ministers must expect Gods calling as Christ did 307 Ministers must urge themselves to diligent preaching why 371 Miracles of Christ had a threefold use 313 Motion of sin in the regenerate is in letting the life of it go 344 Motives to the practise of Righteousnesse 292. N NEcessity of preaching evinced by sundry reasons 369 Necessity of remission of sins in three points ibid. Neither the person nor any of the offices of Christ could suffer him long to abide under the power of death 340 New miracles not needful to confirm old doctrin 316 No less in to sin by others as by our selues 329. No need of a dumb or blind ministery 371 No man can avoid the last ●udgement unless his power be above Christs 377 No man can bee too precise seeing the judgement shall bee so precise and strict 383 None capable of Christs office because none is so annointed as he 309 No peace by Moses 295 O OBjections against preaching answered 374 Objections against special faith answered 409 One way only to salvation 299 Opening the mouth what it meaneth 282 Open the eyes to see the happinesse of the Saints 416 Offences are of sundry sorts 402 Ordina●y Ministers must be beleeved as Apostles while they teach things heard and seen by the Apostles 363 Ordinary Pastors now called by Christ though hee bee now in heaven 368 Outward things cannot bring into Gods acceptance 287 P PAttern of special grace in Peter 284 Peace wha by it usually meant 294 Peace by Christ with God man creatures how ibid. Peace wanting how to obtain it 296 Peace of conscience floweth from remission of sin 407 Person what it meaneth 284 Phrase of quick and dead what is meaneth 377 Plain preaching of Christ wherein it standeth 373 Popery a novelty 298 Popery turneth the doctrin of Christ crucified into crucifixes 336 Popish doctrin tea●heth not true faith to this day 392 Popish doctrin assenteth not to the article of free remission of sins 413 Preaching the ordinance of Christ 367 Preaching of Christ wherein it standeth 373 Priviledge of a Godly man what it is 292 Promises of God all accomplished in due season 355 Prophetical office of Christ. 312 Publike persons must give accounts for themselves and others in the judgement day 381 Q QUalities of ●hrists raised body are not divine properties they beautify but not deify it 343 R REasons against seeking to witches 325 Reasons why it was necessary Christ should rise again 340 Reasons why God delayeth to answer his children 356 Reasons why Christ must so manifest his resurrection 358 Reasons why the Apostles were specially commanded to teach the doctrin of the last judgement 374 Reasons to grow up in the strength of faith 401 Religion what and wherein it standeth 288 Remembrance of judgement to come a notable means to further godliness 374 Remission of sins what 402 Remission of sins how received 413 Resurrection of Christ not only removeth evils but procureth all our good as in five instances 346 Right and pos●ession of eternal life issueth from remission of sins 407 Righteousnesse of the Judge and last judgement described 379 S SAlvation assured beleevers from Christs resurrection 347 Saints in Heaven wholly called from three things and the Saints in earth in part from the same 350 Saints in heaven enjoy five things which the Saints in earth do also in part 351 Satans tyranny over the souls of men more fearful than that hee exerciseth over their bodies 319 Scriptures ascribe that often to the instruments which belongeth to God the principal efficient why 400 Sermons which plainest teach Christ are the best 373 Sin set out in the most ugly visage of it 333 Sins carries never so secretly shall come into a clear light 38● Sins compared to debts 403 Sor●ery of sundry kinds condemned 324 Spiritual possession very common proved at large by sundry instances 321 Strictnesse of the last judgement laid open 380 Sure grounds that God loveth a man 411 T TEmptations of sundry sorts foiled by holding the Article of remission of sins 408 Tender affection to forgive our brethren a good sign that God hath forgiven us 413 The tyranny of Satan over those whom hee bodily possesseth discovered five waies 318 The touchstone of tryal of our words and deeds is the word of God 380 Three actions of faith helping forward the free confession of it 398 Thoughts must be judged of as well as our works 382 To beleeve in the name of Christ what 406 Two things especially hinder the care of the la t judgement 384 Truth of faith as much to bee laboured for as salvation it self 400 V. VErtue of Christs death applyed two waies 334 Unbeleevers damned already how and why 400 Unregenerate men have all the mad properties of mad or possessed persons proved 320 Use of Christs crucifying at large 333 W WHy God suffereth the devil to possesse the bodies of men in all ages four reas 317 Why God suffereth the Devil so to tyrannize abuse and torture them whom he possesseth reas four 319 Why God permitteth a power of curing to them of whom we may not seek cure 326 Why the wicked prevail against Christ who had prevailed against the Devils themselves 328 Why Christ was rather to bee hanged on a tree than to dye by any other kinde of death reas four 331 Why Christ must dye in Jerusalem the theatre of the world 332 Why Christ would still vail his glory after his resurrection 343 Why Christ rose no sooner nor would defer his ri●ing again no longer than the third day 353 Why Christ would not shew himself to all the people after that he rose aga●n 362 Why Christ chose such mean men for his witnesses 363 Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies together concerning Christ 387 Whosoever would have his works words abide the tryal of the last day must try them before hand 380 Wicked men shall bee judged by him against whom all their villanies have been committed 376 Wicked men already judged five waies 377 Wisdome of God in every thing to be subscribed unto 360 Witches and all seekers to them condemned 325 Witnesses of Christs resurrection of sundry sorts 360 Witnesse of the Apostles to be beleeved as infallible 359 Word preached what use it hath both to the unconverted and converted 369 Word preached opposed by the Devil and all wicked ones and therefore is from God 370 Working righteousness what and wherein 190 The manner of it in four things 191 CIRCUMSPECT VVALKING DESCRIBING Several Rules As so many STEPS in the vvay of VVISDOM BY Thomas Taylor D. D. Preacher of Gods VVord at Aldermanbury London GALAT. 6 16. As many as walk according to this Rule Peace shall be upon them and Mercy and upon the Israel of God LONDON Printed for A. K. and R. I. and are to
as any chaff and as easily destroyed as any stubble that it is not consumed But 1 This fire is not kindled against the bush cut of the sparks of Gods wrath Heb. 12.29 Heb. 12.10 and indignation which is indeed a consuming fire but of his Fatherly affection and love not for the hurt of the bush but for the profit of it not to destroy the persons but the sin for the persons sake Wee have indeed kindled and blown up our selves a violent and devouring fire Heb. 10.27 which God might send into our bones Lam. 1.13 Psal 83.14 Lam. 3.22 to burn us up as fire burneth the forrest and as the flames set the mountains on fire But the mercy of God is as water to quench this fire for else would it burn to the bottome of Hell and instead of a Furnace of fury which melteth away his enemies Ezek. 22.22 he setteth up in Zion Isa 27.9 a furnace of favour only to melt the metal consume away the dross and refine his chosen ones to become vessels of honour 2 Because the fuel of the consuming fire of Gods wrath are slaves not sons those wicked brambles Ezek. 15.7 which if they escape one fire saith the Prophet they fall into another which shall consume them but not this bush which is only made brighter and better by the flame but not blacker not worser The chaff and stubble must feed the fire of wrath never to come forth more but the pure metal is cast into the furnace to come forth so much the purer as it hath been the longer tryed Exod. 3.2 3 Because the Angel of God is in the bush This Angel was Jesus Christ the Lord of the holy Angels and the great Angel of the Covenant For Moses saith expresly of this vision ver 4. The Lord appeared unto Moses and God called unto him out of the middest of the bush and S. Luke recording the same vision Act. 7.31 2. greeing with Exod. 3.6 after that hee had called him an Angel bringeth him in saying I am the Lord of Abraham c. This same presence of the Son of God was noted the cause why the three children in that furious furnace of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.25 being cast in bound walked loose in the midst of the flames why not they but their bands were burnt and why not an hair of their cloaths vers 27. and much lesse of their heads were touched no nor smelt of the fire Isa 43.2 Behold the bush burned but not consumed because the King saw four men walking loose having cast in but three bound and they have no hurt for the form of the fourth is like the Son of God Because God is in the midst of it saith David of the Church it shall not bee moved No● potentia urendi sublata ab ig●e sed operatio tantum ut Dan. 3 for God shall help it very early How partly 1 by restraining the natural force of the fire 2 partly by obfirming and strengthening the bush against it 3 partly by watching it that it spread not too far for himself as it were sits by the fire to tend it 4 partly by slaking and cooling it when it groweth too hot lest the heat smite the bush as the worm did Jonas his gourd By these means Jonab 4.7 the bush in the flame becometh like the Gem Amiantus Amiantus g●●●a ig●● non absumitur sed lucidi●● ac ●urior redditur Dub. Chytr●●s Isa 53.3 which is not consumed by fire but becomes brighter and purer than before This most holy and comfortable truth is fully assured unto us in the person of our Lord and Head as well as in the body who in the daies of his flesh was 1 A bush most able to peirce and wound his enemies in himself most desplicable and base in all outward appearances and in this bush God dwelt not in any visible sign of his presence but as never in any before essentially and bodily 2 A bush in the fire partly of Gods wrath Col. 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa 53.10 Matth. 26.38 Mat. 27.46 Lam. 1.14 True first in the head and then in the members in inward passion and suffering in his soul the sorrows of the second death which made him cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me into which flame had the bush of the Church been cast it had been utterly consumed Partly of mans wrath in outward passion and misery such as whereof hee complained that no sorrow was ever matchable to his And partly of Satans wrath in most fiery and furious temptation the which hellish fire was renewed and blown up against him in most violent sort three several times as in the Treatise following we shall by Gods grace discover 3 A bush in the fire not consumed but came forth of the hotest Furnace that ever was kindled more bright and glorious than the Sun in his strength For easy it was with him to convince his temporal adversaries by the mighty raising of himself from the dead through his own Divine power Rom. 1.4 when hee had overcome the wrath of God his Father and not difficult for him that had in his life overcome Satans Temptations and in the wilderness spoiled him of his power and weapons in part Col. 2.15 upon the cross by his death openly and perfectly to destroy his Forces and as on a glorious Chariot to triumph over him This bush burnt but not consumed As he is the end of all the Scriptures so also of the exposition of them in whom and for whose glory I have published this Exposition at the importunate request of some Friends Notwithstanding many discouragements that was on the one hand and sundry godly lights in our own tongue opening the same Scripture on the other Mr. Udal Mr. Perkins Mr. Dike 2 Sam. 23.13 The truth is magnified in the mouth of many witnesses and a poor man may give in as true an evidence as a rich If I may hold Benajahs place in the Church of God and stand for God among the thirties and the many of his Worthies it shall well content me although I attain not unto the first three What ever this labour is I have presumed to dedicate it unto you noble Sir as a testimony of my true and unfeigned affection and duty 1 Because God hath made you a worthy instrument in this place which as well by your authority and care as through your godly affection and countenance of good men and causes hath a long time enjoyed much comfort assistance and refreshing 2 Your sound love to the truth hath invited this truth to run under your patronage 3 As he which hath been once friendly bid welcome will boldly come again so your good entertainment of this doctrin in the delivery of it assures it you will now bid it as welcome to your eye as it was to your ears at the first offer of it
G 1 Grow up daily in the practice of every commandement and in the faith of every promise of God seeing God would have the planted in his house thrive Ps 92.13.14 well liking and more fruitful in their age he that is not best at last may fear whether ever he were good 1 Cor. 10.32 Rom. 14.13 2 Give no offence justly unto any man whether within or without for woe to them by whom offences come 3 Grieve for nothing in the world so much as for your own sins Rom. 7.18 19 24 and in them for nothing so much as for offending so loving a God and that not only in committing of evil but also in omitting of good H 1 Cor. 11.31 1 Humble your self for your sins that the Lord may raise you up for he that judgeth himself aright shall never be judged of the Lord 2 Honour all men in their places 1 Pet. 2.17 but no man so much for his greatness as for his goodness Act. 10.35 and thus shall you imitate the Lord himself who accepteth not persons but in every Nation accepteth him that feareth him 3 Have special care to avoid the sins which you have found your self most inclined unto and which have in times past most prevailed for sin is loath to be said nay and Satan seeketh re-entry I 1 Justifye Gods wisdome in all his proceedings concerning your self and others his Power in sustaining his Providence in maintaining his Justice in punishing his Love in correcting his Bounty in promising his Faithfulness in performing his Grace in giving his Mercy in taking away and in every thing say from the heart Job 1.21 Blessed be the Name of the Lord. 2 In every company receive some good and do some also to your power leave no ill savour behind you neither do hurt by speech silence countenance or example in your praises be discreet in saluting courteous in admonishing brotherly and wise in moving and entertaining speech or conference 3 It is fearful to sin Psal 51.3 Ephes 4.26 but much more to lye in it and therefore registerall your sins daily bewail them at fit times pray for pardon of them and strength against them contemn none as counting it little because Gods law hath condemned it and Christ hath dyed for it or else must you eternally K 1 Know God in Christ Job 17.3 which is life everlasting kiss the Son of God lest he be angry Psa 2.12 and know your self to be a beleever and that Christ is in you and you in him 2 Keep as your vows with God Psa 15.4 so your lawful promises with men for faith and truth must kiss each other in Christian conversation 3 Keep out wandring and worldly thoughts as much as possible may bee prov 4.23 narrowly watching your heart for such as you suffer that to bee such will be your words deeds and whole conversation L 1 Love all things for Gods sake and God onely for his own and look you make him your friend whosoever be your enemy for it this you shall do if as an obedient child you live in the eye of your heavenly father 2 Look upon the lives and behaviours of the wicked to avoid them of the godly to imitate them upon the Life and Death of them both as also your own not far off to make you loathe this world long after the life to come Luk 21.34 Rom 13 13. Deut. 28.58 Mat. 7.12 3 Let your meat apparel recreation be lawful needful and moderate M 1 Make not mention of God or any word or work of his but with fear and reverence nor of any man but with love and carefulness using his name as you would have him to use yours 2 Mark other mens profiting in religion to provoke your self their slips to make your self more wary their risings to be thankful to God for them 3 Meditate often upon the four last things 1 Death 2 Judgement 3 Heaven 4 Hell N 1 Never make shew of more holiness outwardly than inwardly you have in your heart which God seeth in which hee desireth truth Rom. 12 nor please your self with your unprofitableness unfitness or unwillingness to good 2 No man is owner but steward of that he hath you must therefore impart of the blessings you have to those that stand in need wisely heartily and in due season 1 Cor. 11.28 Rom. 12.12 3 Note your own special corruptions whether they grow stronger or weaker and how your self can resist them and if any assault you more strongly pray and make the matter known to God The best way for a woman solicited to folly to bee rid of the Tempter is to tell her Husband O Prov. 27.2 10.19 1 Often speak to the praise of God never of your self For other things because many words want not iniquity speak as few as you can or rather none than unprofitable ●am 1.19 2 Open not your mouth to speak of other mens infirmities Psal 15 especially behind them nor before them without grief and sorrow 3 Of every idle word account must be given Mat. 12 36 and much more of every wicked word and therefore let your speech be gracious poudred with salt Col. 4. ● and tending to edification P 1 Praise the Lord for every new benefit bestowed 1 Thes ● 18 and then by it promote his glory the Churches good and your own salvation esteeming of graces given as spurres to godliness and pledges of eternal life 2 Prevent anger before it kindle Eccl. 7. ● Prov. 14 17 it is wisdome to quench the least sparkle of fire before it begin to flame Consider 1 the original of anger being pride or self-love 2 The cursed fruits by giving place to the Devil 3 Gods patience 4 Gods image in your brother 5 Your own weakness in the same kind 6 The wrong is not remedied by revenge but inlarged nor the wrong-door amended but imitated 3 Prepare your self for death 1 Cor. 1 56 and pull out his ●●ing by 1 Bewailing sins past 2 Turning to God in time to come 3 Purposing a new life None can dye ill that hath had a care to live well Perswade your self if you live well you shall dye well but if you dye well doubt not but you shall do better Q 1 Quiet your heart Psal 39 ● and be still under the correcting hand of God because 1 He doth it 2 For your best 3 Hee will moderate it 4 Supply strength 5 Seasonably deliver out of it 2 Question not whether others should do you good or you them first Mat. 5. ● Rom. 1.20 it is praise-worthy to bee first in well-doing and if you do good to your enemies your reward is with God 3 Quench not the Spirit 1 Thes 19 not suffer any good motion arising in your heart to pass away but feed it by reading meditation prayer and practice R 1 Read daily something of
should eat they should dye and yet hee labours to make them doubt of that truth which both hee and they knew too well This was ever his practice Reasons 1 Because of his great malice to God who hath every way set himself to confirm his word that his own truth might shine in his word to all the world Therefore hee hath outwardly confirmed it by many powerful and glorious miracles such as the Devil could never make shew of as raising the dead the standing and going back of the Sun the division and standing of the Sea and rivers and the bearing of a Virgin and inwardly his holy Spirit perswades testifies confirms and sealeth up the Word in the hearts of Gods Children 1 John 2.20 2 Cor. 2. Now to make God a lyar and to shew himself most contrary to the Holy Spirit hee contradicts and opposeth stormeth and rageth 2 Hee hateth the word of God because it is the greatest enemy to his Kingdome every way resembling God the author and carrying his image It is light and no marvel if the Prince of darknesse resist it it discovers his subtilties and fenceth the Christian against his policies it discerneth spirits that let him come as an Angel of light hee shall bee uncased As hee prevaileth in darkness so hee worketh in impurity now here the word resembling God himself crosseth him it is pure in it self and a purifyer as Christ saith Yee are clean by my word Further his chief power being in the Sons of disobedience and in the hearts of infidels here also the word clips his wings being the word of faith and John 17.20 Christ prayed not onely for his disciples but for all those that should beleeve in him by their word In a word seeing hee exerciseth his chief power in the sons of perdition who are given him to rule at his will here the word is his enemy because it converteth sinners and saveth soules called therefore a word of salvation 3 He opposed Gods word through the malice he beareth Gods children for hee ever opposeth true professors casts them into prison and would never let them have a good day in the world if hee might have his will and follows them with temptations and with outward afflictions But this is the sword of Gods mouth and the sword of the Spirit by which they cut thorow his temptations and make them forceless it is that which comforts them and sustains them in their troubles and directs them happily to heaven so as no way he can have his will of them 4 It stands him in hand to oppose Gods word for his long experience hath taught him that so long as men hold to the word they bee safe enough under Gods protection and hee could never win his Captain-sinners to such high attempts in sin were it not that hee had first shaken the truth of Gods word out of their hearts How could hee have brought Pharaoh to such obstinacy against God and his people as to say Who is the Lord and I will not let Israel goe but that he had brought the word in Moses and Aarons mouth into contempt further than the sting of the miracles forced him When Saul had once cast off the Word of the Lord Satan lead him as in a chain to hunt David to throw a dart at Jonathan to seek to the Witch against whom himself had enacted a severe law The like of Ahab Herod Nero Domitian c. 5 The Word of God is the sentence and rule of righteousness which condemneth Satan and therefore no marvel if he cannot endure it and wish it false and love it no better than the bill of his own condemnation and death eternal Vse It is a note of a man foyled by the temptation of Satan and of a devillish spirit to call Gods Word into question either to deny it as false or doubt of it as uncertain either of which if Satan can perswade unto he hath his wish for he knows they are no subjects to God that will not acknowledge his Scepter but doubt of the rod of his mouth he can easily blind-fold them and lead them whither he will that deny the light hee can easily vanquish them and lead them captive to all sin if he can get them to cast away their weapons Yet what a number of men hath the Devil thus farre prevailed with in this violent kind of temptation Some call in question whether the Scripture be the Word of God or no swarms of Atheists and Machevillians that hold the Word but an human devise and policy which is to open a door to all carnal and brutish Epicurism and to confound man and beast together Others doubt not of all but of some Books and others not of some Books but of some places of the holy Scripture But we see that Satan would have Christ but to deny or doubt of one sentence and what Eves calling into question of one speech of God brought on all our necks all we her posterity feel And it is in our natures when God speaks plainly against that sin we make ifs and pervadventures at it and so turn it off As for example 1 Our Saviour teacheth plainly that whosoever are of God hear his Word and his sheep hear his voyce Either men must beleeve it or deny it and yet how few can we perswade conscionably to hear the VVord all who must plainly either make the voyce of Christ false or themselves none of Gods none of Christs sheep for not hearing it 2 Our Saviour saith expresly He that heareth you heareth me Luk. 10.16 and that God speaks in the mouthes of his Ministers 2 Cor. 5.20 and that they have an heavenly treasure in earthen vessels But how few are of this mind never did any Heathens so despise the voyce of their Priests and the answer of their Oracles as Christians in general despise our voyce in which God and Christ profess they speak 3 Christ plainly saith this word is the immortal seed of our new birth the sincere milk to nourish the soul the bread of life heavenly food But who beleeve him for generally men have no appetite no desire to it and can well be content to let their souls languish in grace and be starved to death And whereas they would goe as farre or farther into other Countries as Jacob and his Sons into Aegypt when there was no Corn in Canaan to supply their bodies with food this they will not stirre out of their doors for VVell take heed of calling Divine truths into question No Divine truth to be called into question for three reasons stand not in them upon thy reason and understanding which are but low and shallow suspect them in things thou canst not reach rather than the truth of Scripture and make good use of these rules 1 In the rising of any such temptation know that Satan seeks advantage against thee and would bring thee into the same condemnation with himself by the same sin and
to Hell and made him actually know and confess he was the Son of God but he would not for sundry reasons Christians must overcome adversaries rather by patience than by power 1 To teach us that as he did we must rather overcome Satan by humility and patience than by power as Christ obtained his full victory not by majesty but by abasement and passion 2 To teach us that when wee suffer indignity and wrong of evil men as Christ here of the evil one wee should rather turn our selves to Doctrin and convincing them by the Word than to revenge so did Christ 3 That we might hence know the power of the VVord of God a part of our spiritual armour even the sword of the Spirit put into our hands by God to foyl and vanquish him by for the whole Combate of Christ was exemplary nay hee sustains here our person and wields our weapon for us 4 Christs humility and meekness was now a fitter weapon than power and glory in two respects 1 To the greater vexation of the adversary who thought himself so strong and cunning as no flesh was ever yet able to resist him only he knew God had him in chains but now he is foyled by the seed of the VVoman by the wisdome and weakness of Christ as man and not by his Divine power as God 2 Christs meekness lets him goe on and pass thorough all his temptations to his greater and utter overthrow and silence for if Christ by his Divine power had cut him short at the first hee would have said that God fearing his weakness would not suffer him to be tempted or not to abide in temptation Now his mouth is shut Christ the Son of man foyls him 5 To comfort us 1 By shewing us that there is something else besides Divine power to overcome all hellish and Satanical power withall for else wee that want divine power and are weaker than water could have small comfort but now wee see Satan may bee overcome of weak men by the means that Christ used as fasting prayer and the Word of God 2 By perswading us that if Christ in his humility and abasement could encounter and foil Satan much more can hee now help us being in his glory and exaltation If hee can rescue us out of the mouth of the roaring Lyon when himself is as a Lamb before the shearer much more when hee shall shew himself the mighty Lyon of the Tribe of Judah Hence note that Doct. Christ cut not Satan here so short as hee did sundry wicked men nay Christ not so rough with Satan as with some wicked men nor as with some of his dear Disciples Reasons as hee did some of his beloved Disciples Peter how sharply was he checkt for disswading Christ from Jerusalem and Joh. 21.21 when hee asked curiously concerning John what hee should do Christ said What is that to thee so he might have said to Satan what is that to thee whether I be the Son of God or no but hee doth not 1 Not because hee loves his Disciples and Gods Children worse than Satan but because the Devil and wicked ones must bee let go on to the height of impiety as Satan here and Judas how patiently did Christ bear him all the while yea at his apprehension calling him friend they go on to confusion without check or bands almost in their life and death But he will take up his children in the beginning they must not bee let run too far as good Parents reclaim their children timely 2 God declares his power in taking the wicked at the height as Pharaoh Rom. 9.17 For this cause have I stirred thee up that I might shew my power in thee and that my Name might bee declared to all the world if Pharaoh had been taken at the first the Lord had never had such glory of his overthrow 3 The Lord hereby declares his long patience to vessels of wrath Rom. 9.22 all which bountifulnesse and patience because they abuse and are not lead to repentance by it they are excuseless and condemned justly as having heaped coals of wrath on their own heads Who could so long have indured Pharaoh but patience it self 4 The Lord hereby declares the riches of his glory upon vessels of mercy whom hee hath prepared to glory Rom. 9.23 for as hee hath prepared them that is decreed to glorify them so hee daily prepares them to glorious uses as wee do our vessels by rubbing and scouring separating corruption from them and the rust of sin by his rough handling them judging them in the world not to condemn them with the world Use 1. If the Lord bee not so quick with thee in his corrections as with others thou hadst need bee the quicker with thy self to judge thy self The greatest judgement of all not to be judged at all and see what estate thou standest in that thou bee not in the upper stairs and room of sin Take heed of thy self when God lets thee alone to thy self The greattest judgement of all is not to bee judged at all When a man hath cast off his Son and lets him run his own riotous waies as careless what becomes of him it is a certain sign hee shall never injoy his Land so is it with God and the sinner pacing on without controul in his sin Vse 2. If Christ bee thus meek and patient with Satan himself and God use so great patience to vessels of wrath this commendeth unto us the grace of meeknesse towards our brethren much more 1 This is the Commandement of our Saviour who was a special School-master of meeknesse Learn of mee for I am lowly and meek Hee was herein testified to bee the Son of God because the Spirit descended on him in the likeness of a meek and harmless Dove and thus wee must testify our selves the Sons and children of God by the lighting of the same Spirit of meekness upon us Gal. 6.2 2 A meek spirit is much set by of God and preserveth peace with men by soft answers and readiness to forgive and pass by offences Vse 3. This reproves men of a fiery and furious disposition men as meek as rough Esau right Ismaels their hand is against every man and every mans hand against them like Lamech who if hee bee provoked will revenge a word with a blow a scoff with a stab But others let them alone offend them not you shall have them meek enough tractable enough but move such a one but a little by a word or the least neglect as may bee Oh he is presently as meek as David at Nabals churlish answer hee will kill and slay even all presently in his hot blood But is this Christian meekness to bee so boisterous like a suddain wind which thy self scarce knows whence it is or whither it tends no but a brutish meekness for even the beasts will scarce stir unprovoked nay wee say the Devil is good so long as hee is pleased
many and mighty powerful miracles which were signs from heaven shewing that hee was from heaven And yet for all this they beleeved not So Matth. 27.42 the High Priests Scribes and Pharisees said If hee bee the King of the Jews let him come down from the Cross and woe will beleeve him No doubt Christ could but bee would not not onely because it was an hour of darknesse but because hee know they would never have beleeved him Psal 22 2● 23. I will declare thy name to my brethren to the seed of Jacob to Israel Reasons 1 This practice of Christ is answerable to his precept Matth. 7.6 Cast not holy things to doggs nor pearls before swine By holy things and pearls are meant the things of Gods Kingdom Christ and his merits c. so called both to shew the excellency of them in themselves being above all pearls Prov. 3.14 as also our duty to prize and lock them up in our hearts and keep them as we doe our pearls safely in our memories By Doggs and Hoggs are meant malicious and obstinate enemies convicted of enmity against Gods Word of whose amendment there is little hope every man naturally is an enemy to God and his Word and so a dogg and a swine as Christ called the Heathens and Gentiles It is not lawful to take the children bread and cast it to doggs Now to such as these we must preach and offer the Sacraments yea Christ offered himself and came to call sinnets but when his Word and Miracles were rejected and himself evil intreated as among the Pharisees then saith Christ Let them alone they are blind leaders of the blind 2 Christ shews himself unto none but such as he loveth and love him Joh. 14.11 and this was the ground of Judas his speech Lord what is the cause that thou wilt shew thy self to us and not to the world the world sees him not for none seeth him but to whom he sheweth himself and he sheweth himself to none but such as love him and none love him but such as love his word and keep it vers 23. 3 This was one cause why Christ spake so many things in Parables that such as would be blind might not see and such as would not make a right use of his holy doctrin might not understand Matth. 13.13 For many that heard them let them goe without further question in a careless manner whereas the Disciples of Christ inquired of him his meaning and one learned of another and so that which for the difficulty drave others away became in this manner of teaching much more easie and familiar yea much more perspicuous and clear than any other 4 Never could extraordinary means convert such as beleeved not the word the ordinary means and therefore Christ never or seldome gratified the Scribes and Pharisees with Miracles or extraordinary means because they resisted his Doctrin Person and Works or if any wicked men saw any of his mighty VVorks and Miracles they saw not himself in them as Pharaoh what a number of Miracles saw he yet he was never the better he would not acknowledge God nor his servants and in the Wilderness they who saw Miracles every day and moment yet not beleeving the VVord of God in them were never the better the arm of the Lord was not made bare unto them Vse 1 Ignorant persons that know not Christ nor desire to know him are in a woful estate being such as Christ counts unworthy to reveal himself unto and therefore he either keeps the means from them or leaves them without grace to make an holy use of them Numbers of men to whom Christ never revealeth himself Vse 2. In worse case are they that have the means and yet no tast of them no reformation by them their covetousness their pride their drunkenness and uncleaneness will not be left as many that come to Church to hear the VVord and receive the Sacraments and yet are no better than Doggs and Swine and altogether unreformed in their lives and courses Some draw the VVord of God into question and would be taught by Angels or Miracles as Satan here but Christ will not make himself known to them no more than to him so saith Abraham to Dives in Hell when he denied his request They have Moses and the Prophets if they will not beleeve them neither would they beleeve if one should rise from the dead Some are resolved to live as they list let the Preachers say what they can whereas he that is in Christ to whom he reveals himself is a new Creature for Christ speaks to the heart not to the ear only Others say they are decreed to life or death and therefore doe what they can they cannot change Gods mind and hence never goe about to change themselves But had Christ shewed himself to these he would have directed them to the means of saving knowledge namely to the Scriptures which testifie of him Joh. 5.29 and to faith which unites to him and to the fruits of faith which testifie the truth of it to his glory and their comfort Others will be saved by saith alone and by a profession of the Gospel and so neglect the works which justifie it and the power of godliness whereas if Christ in the Ministry had revealed himself to such he had quickned their faith and not left it as a Carkass for faith without works is dead Others poor simple people will be saved by mercy alone and never labour for knowledge faith or true feeling of their own estate and care not how sin abound that mercy may abound much more But had Christ met with them hee would let them see their misery in the causes and effects and teach them to hunger after mercy in the means and having obtained it to goe and sin no more lest a worse thing follow Others disclaiming the doctrin of mortification and self-denial therefore dislike the VVord as too straight a Doctrin stripping them of their pleasures and profits and hence some hold on in their lusts some return with the Swine to their wallowing in the mire they cannot dye to sin they cannot live without laughter mirth and sports Whereas had Christ revealed himself unto them he would have taught them that his yoke is an easier yoke than the yoke of sin Three properties of such as to whom Christ will make himself known and that there is no sound comfort but in mortified affections and actions Vse 3. VVhosoever would have Christ reveal himself fully unto him must labour to be thus qualified 1 He must be humble for he teacheth the humble in his ways Psal 25.9 but the proud hee sends empty away as rain makes vallies fruitful but falls off the mountains which are therefore barren 2 He must long and desire to meet Christ in his Ordinances for Christ is the scope of the VVord and Sacraments therefore desire to know nothing but Christ Crucified goe to the tents of Shepheards where
goes to the Physician and pines away for all that 2 Chron. 16.12 4 Money 4 Money is a good means to provide necessaries for the sustenance of mans life and therefore men labour and take much pains for it But both labour is in vain except the Lord build the house Psal 127.1 and thou shalt earn money and put it in a broken bagge or a secret rust shall consume it Hagg. 1.6 5 Strength 5 Strength is for the warre and a good means for the defence of life and right but strength alone is weakness Psal 20. An horse is a vain thing in battel and therefore David goes against Goliah not with a sword or a bow but in the name of the Lord that was his strength 6 Counsel 6 Counsel and policy is for a State both in peace and warre wee see how soon Rehoboam ran through ten parts of his Kingdom by the bad counsel of the young men But yet there is no counsel nor policy that can prevail against the Lord. Many are the devices of mans heart but the counsel of the Lord shall stand The counsel of Achitophel which was like unto an Oracle of God was turned into folly Reasons 1 The means themselves are without life and in a very short time rot away of themselves or if they be living things as Sheep Oxen Beasts Birds and Fishes they must lose their lives before they can come to be helps of ours how can they then give life or keep life in us by themselves being dead The death of the Creatures sheweth that our life is not from them but from something else 2 God hath prescribed means of life and tied us unto them but not himself he is able to doe whatsoever he will and his providence is of equal extent and latitude with his power which cannot be restrained to means these being finite that infinite And hence it is that means are ordinarily necessary but not absolutely seeing God in his absolute power can feed us with stones as well as raise men out of stones 3 If means alone could sustain a man how comes it that the same wholsome meat that feedeth some should poyson others How comes it that men using means as men in a Consumption eat as much as others and yet pine away and are famished that men labour and toyl and get money and yet thrive not but their state is in a Consumption still How comes it that they who are best fed as great Personages are less lively and healthful Poor day-labourers who fare hard and coarse laugh at rich men for maintaining Physicians and yet are still sick poor mens Children thrive better and look fairer with Daniel and his fellows feeding only of coarse pulse than many that fare daintily with the Kings Children See wee not the Fathers before the Floud living some seven hundred some eight hundred some nine hundred years and above of greater strength and stature by farre and they carried near a thousand years upon their backs more lightly than we can carry half an hundred and yet they lived upon herbs only we have also flesh and fish of all sorts with the best and most exquisite Cookery so that if our Lives were pinned upon the means only where they lived near a thousand years wee should by our means live many thousands 4 God is the God of life it is hee that continues our lives and not the means and all means are in his hand to be either blessed or blown upon at his pleasure What can an Hammer or Saw doe without the Artificers hand no more can the means which in Gods hand are as a Tool in the Work-mans whose hand can doe many things without tools but they nothing without his hand 5 What means that Petition which every man must daily use for daily bread even he that hath the most but because he may have bread and want that in bread which may doe him good and help Vse 1. Learn hence how to conceive of means aright Means not to be set above their own place namely as things not to be trusted to because by one blast of God they may become unprofitable and unsuccesseful especially when men are loath to raise their thoughts beyond them Asa his Physick shall not help him because hee trusts in the Physicians Israel shall dye of that flesh wherein they thought their life was And it is just with God that when the means step up into his place and men ascribe that vertue unto them which only Gods blessing addeth unto them he deprives men either of the means or of the right and comfortable use of them And were not the means too too much magnified and set above their own place men would not so spend their days in carking cares for them with such instance and neglect of all things else as if they were ever to live by bread only not so wise as the Fool and Churle in the Parable who when he had goods enough for many years would have his soul take his rest but these men having bread and means enough for many ages are as restless and insatiable as ever before their life stands in seeking and holding abundance Use 2. Let us learn to trust God without the means which the worldling cannot doe In plenty in health when the barns be full and the chests ready to break with treasures the most earthly churl can bee content and praise God for all but in poverty and sickness his heart lets him down as though God is not as able and willing to help in one estate as in another But now faith were it present would most shew it self it is a dead faith that withdraws it self from the living God and sets it self on dead things Use 3. Learn we to moderate our care for the things of this present life as such who value them according to their right estimate without which a superiour vertue can do us no good for what is food apparrel and the like but base things without Gods blessing which men of thousands enjoy abundantly and yet by a secret curse either upon the wicked getting or holding them want the comfort that many poor men have whose portion is but a mite to the others superfluity And what is the reason that men bury themselves alive in the graves of their lustings and earthliness but that they falsly conceive of the means and place them above their worth or work What saith the worldling is it not my living and must I not look to that I tell thee no it is not thy living unless thou livest by bread alone or hast that animam triticiam that wheaten-soul of the rich man in the Gospel who thought hee must now live many years because he had wheat enough Obj. But you speak as though we were to expect Miracles for our maintenance or to cast off our Callings to neglect the means and live by the Word of God Ans 1. Miracles are ceased and yet if God
proceedeth out of the mouth of God it is rather a death than a life his bread becomes poyson and as Rats-bane in his bowels because he hath it without a promise and without blessing Obj. I see no such thing Ans Many poysons are long a working but the end of such is death and the more slowly they work the more slily and certainly they kill And if the Lord doe not invert the order he hath set in nature by cursing the particular creatures be sure he hath in his justice reserved a curse for the unjust person and he shall not avoyd it This doctrin specially applied laies hold upon sundry sorts of men who live contrary to the word They are these I. Such as live out of lawful callings which are one part of the word of God that we should get our living in the sweat of our browes and so long as we are in our way we have his word we shall bee provided for And the word proceeding out of the mouth of God is that he that will not labour must not eat because he eats not his own and such as will not live after this word by Gods word they ought not to live because they are idle and unprofitable burdens of the earth who 1 abuse Gods providence who ties the ends and means together 2 infringe that good order which God hath established for the avoiding of confusion in Church or Common-wealth namely that every man should serve God in the service of man in some warrantable and profitable civil calling 3 As hee is no better than an Infidel that depends only on means seeing man lives by every word of God so he that in a lawful course of life provides not for his family is worse than an infidel Of this sort are our knots of companions of drinking and gaming company and wandring rouges and beggers I knit them together because they are all of a strain and either are Beggers or shall be These commonly come not to Church to hear their duties and therefore they must bee taught by correction and discipline of those that are the executioners of justice II. Such as think they live well enough and yet it is by deceiving others by stealing oppression extortion lying swearing and falshood in buying and selling and why say they may not a man help and shift for himself But consider 1 What a poor help it is when a man will use unlawful means and to shift out of one evil by another Hee doth as the Prophet speaks avoid a Lyon and a Bear meets him Pilate would keep his place by unlawful means the delivering of Christ to bee crucified but besides that hee brought innocent blood upon himself hee lost his place and flew himself 2 Consider That if Gods Word of blessing go not with the means his word of curse doth and so the Prophet Zachary saith that the curse entereth into the house of the swearer and of the theef chap. 5. v. 4. and this curse shall remain in the midst of his house and consume the very timber and stones This curse often scatters ill-gotten goods as fast as they were ever hastily gathered if not in his own daies yet in some unthrifty heir after him 3 Consider how God crosseth the vain conceit of unjust persons they think all that is any way gotten to bee gain and profit but the word is Prov. 10.2 that treasures of wickednesse profit nothing they cannot help a man from the hand of God nay when the evil day comes they are gone and leave a man alone to grapple with death and judgement and turn a man naked to the sentence of condemnation for his wicked getting and holding of them III. Another sort of men who live not by the Word of God Vel minimu● fructus ex pecunia pe●cip● non potest sine Dei offensione proximi inju● 2. Calv. Epist 226. but against it are Usurers who pull themselves out of all lawful callings and set up a trade for the publike evil and their own private good which were there nothing else against it proves it not to bee of Gods devising for every calling of Gods devising is helpful to men in general but the Spirit of God hath given this a name from biting and hurting But wee have the Scripture most expresly against it whether it bee manifest as is a contract for gain as for ten pound to pay eleven at the years end or covert whereby men find devices which they call mysteries to defeat the laws and seem to contract and either not to lend or not for gain The word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God saith Exod. 22. v. 25. If thou lend money to my people with thee thou shalt not be an Usurer thou shalt not oppress him Mark how usury and oppression is all one And Deut. 23.19 Thou shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother the usury of money meat or any thing that may bee lent But the Usurer that will live by his money and not by Gods word saith Yea but of the Gentiles they might though not of a brother To which I say that now the partition wall is taken away and neither Jew nor Gentile remains all are our brethren in Christ and therefore of no man must usury bee expected unless thou beest worse than a Jew Let the Usurer answer this if he can Again those Gentiles were of those nations of the Canaanites Ab hoc usuram e●ig● quem non sit crimen occultic Amb. which they were commanded to destroy and usury was as teeth given them and allowed by God to eat them up withall Seest thou a man whom thou mayest lawfully kill take use of him but not of thy brother Object I will not take usury of the poor but of the rich Answ But the text is Thou shalt not take usury of thy brother bee he poor or rich though the rich bee better able to suffer wrong yet thou art not by any word enabled to offer it The word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God saith Psal 15.5 Hee that giveth not his mony to usury shall dwell in the Lords Tabernacle and rest on his holy hill and Ezek. 18.17 Hee that hath not received usury and increase c. wherein it is plain without all tricks that either to give out or take in usury excludes out of heaven Object Hee means to oppresse a man with usury Answ Every usury is oppression and every Usurer fears not God Levit. 25.36 Thou shalt not take usury but fear the Lord. Object But that Law was judicial not moral Answ That is false for our Saviour renewed in it the Gospel Luke 6.35 Lend freely looking for nothing again Therefore it is moral Besides that usury is condemned amongst the great transgressions of the Moral law Ezek. 18.13 Object Wee may do as we would bee dealt by and it is charity so to lend as another may benefit himself Answ No man in need would borrow but freely
the best Others see no likelihood of doing any great good and so either draw back from their calling Jer. 20.9 or else heavily and uncheerfully go on But wee must renew our strength and courage and know that our labour shall not bee lost Isa 49.4.5 4 In holinesse which 1 sanctifies our callings by the word and prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 2 Subordinateth all earthly and special things to the general and heavenly things of the Christian Calling yea it makes us express our spiritual calling in the use of the Civil it will make a man sometime for religion sake hear the word in the six daies unless some other necessary occasion come between ever preferring the more necessary businesse 3 It keepeth in the heart 1 a love to God aiming at the preferring of his glory above all it suffers not a man to esteem his calling a preferment of himself or a reward of his service past but a means of advancing Gods glory in further service 2 A love of men who partake in the benefit of our labours with whom we must exercise charity justice meekness c. The second rule concerneth our wealth and maintenance namely not to content our selves that wee can live by such or such means unless wee can say Gods Word doth warrant mee that this is my meat my drink my apparrel my money my house my land c. Quest When can a man say this Answ 1 When a man having nothing of his own nor right to any thing becomes a beleever ingrafted into Christ and so owner of that bee hath A man may have warrant and title from man that his house and land is his and hee is a robber that shall defeat him of it But all men and Angels cannot give mee a possession and true title before the living God but only his Son who is Lord and heir of all First know thy self a member of Christ and then his right is thine 2 When the manner of getting them is lawful and that is First When it is just when a man hath used no indirect means but they are either lawfully descended or else by faithful and painful walking in an honest calling God hath added them as a blessing of a mans labour Secondly When it is moderate and retired when a man so provideth for earth as hee especially storeth up for heaven first seeking Gods Kingdome and the one thing necessary without covetousnesse and the love of this life nay accounting all things dung in comparison of Christ Thirdly When the manner of using them is warrantable that a man shews himself a good steward in the holy dispensing of them using them as furtherances of piety as pledges of love towards men and as testimonies of sobriety in himself and every way making them servants to his christian calling Prov. 3.9 Honour the Lord with thy riches 4 When his affection is indifferent both in the having and holding of them that a man may say These be mine I am not theirs I have them they have not me I am their Master to command them they command not me And why should we not draw our affections from them seeing 1 The wicked are as rich yea richer in these things than the best at the best they make not their Masters better 2 They bee no inheritance they bee but moveables changing their Master as the giver will and while we have them they are but lent us 3 We are but Stewards we sit not in our own but have a large account to make yea we are very Pilgrims and Travellers and shall goe lightlier and less loaden 4 Wee must not measure or tye God unto them nor esteem of his love by them Thus a man may use the mercies of God with comfort for his necessity and for his delight in the days of his pilgrimage thus may he dispose them to his heirs as the right owners with hope of Gods blessing to stand with them nothing of which can be expected in goods ill gotten or spent to which nothing but Gods curse is intayled The third rule concerneth our health and sustenance namely that it is far better to want means than to procure them by any other means than that which proceedeth out of the mouth of God Yet numbers will maintain their lives health and estate not by Gods word but directly against it for example they that seek to Witches and Sorcerers for health or goods lost or stollen or upon any other occasion whatsoever Whereas the word proceeding out of the mouth of God Levit. 18.10 is this Let there bee none sound among you that useth Witchcraft or is a regarder of times or a Sorcerer Charmer Sooth-sayers or that counselleth with spirits Obj. But Gods Word and Ordinance is with them to doe us good and much good they doe which none else can doe Ans God hath a two-fold word 1 Of Blessing 2 Of Judgement the former proceedeth out of the mouth of God who is goodness it self the latter sometimes hee permitteth to proceed out of the mouth of the Devil giving him power to work lying wonders that the seekers of him might beleeve in him to their final destruction Thus the Devil who can doe nothing against Gods word doth what he doth by Gods word spoken in Judgement and Justice Whence I conclude 1 It were better for a man to want cure than have the Devil his Physician better for a man to want health of his body than procure it with the death of his soul Better had it been for the Israelites to have wanted Quails than procuring them by murmuring to be choaked with them Better for a man to want the world than winne it with the loss of his soul Better had it been for Ahab to have wanted Naboths Vineyard than to lose the whole Kingdom for it Better for Judas to have wanted the thirty pence than to hang himself for them for Ananias and Saphira to have wanted the third part of their possession than to dye for it Rule 2. Better it were to want the means of health and maintenance than not to use them according to the word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God as food apparel physick health and life it self Had it not been better that Asa had wanted Physick than be struck with death because he trusted in Physitians Better had it been for Gehazi to have gone in raggs than to apparel himself by lying and deceit which apparelled himself and all his posterity with Leprosie Whether was the state of Lazarus that dyed for want of means or of Dives better that sared deliciously every day Less have men to answer for who have no meat to strengthen nature than those that have abundance which they pervert to strengthen themselves in sin sacrificing their strength to the service of the Devil and to their lusts Wee our selves know numbers in all corners who were better continually to be bed-ridd and sick or maimed than to abuse their health and lives in such
alledge Scripture hee saith nothing against it but was silent he replies not and much less rails on him as a phantastical or precise person But reprove the Swearer the Drunkard the Gamester the unjust courses of men in their trades Sabbath-breaking in Masters or Servants and do it out of the Scripture as Christ did wee shall have the same measure that hee had returned from the Scribes and Pharisees who railed out-right on him He is too precise and severe wee can do nothing for him or What hath hee to do with our Government or Trades or He might finde other things to speak of Thus if Paul speak against Diana or whatsoever the craft-masters live by all the City is in an uproar against him It seems men are loath in their callings to meddle with the word of God or the directions of it else wee should have to deal with them It were too much to sit down silent and go on in sinne against the Word but to resist the word in termes or to rail upon the Preachers thereof goes one step beyond the Devil Vse 4. Take knowledge of the secret working of the Devil against the light and truth in such as spurn against it They cannot abide that truth and innocency should acquit it self but though they see nothing but meekness patience and innocency yet will side against it as though they had the greatest advantage and occasion What is the cause that men will take part with most abject and base persons and bring the curse on themselves in condemning the innocent and justifying the wicked in their horrible riots and misbehaviour but the hatred they carry against goodnesse Why did the Jews band themselves for Barrabas and seek to acquit him Was it because there was any cause of love in him knew they him not to bee a murtherer and a Rebel Yes It was hatred of Christ that made them stick to him and why hated they Christ but because he was the light Some there bee of that Jewish generation lest to whom if Christ be weighed with Barrabas he will seem too light Barrabas shall carry the credit and defence from him Not him but Barrabas Into the holy City We come to the second circumstance in the preparation to this second assault which is the place that Satan chuseth set down 1 In general the holy City 2 In special a pinacle of the Temple What holy City this was Luke expresseth chap. 4.9 He brought him to Jerusalem here called the holy City Jerusalem is called the holy City not because of any holiness in the place for no place as a place is more holy than other It is true that wee read in Scripture of holy ground as Exod. 3.5 Mount Horeb where Moses stood is called holy ground and Moses must put off his shooes But this was no inherent holiness in the place only for the present the presence of God appearing after a special manner makes a special holiness to bee ascribed unto it Neither is it called holy in respect of the people and Inhabitants for the faithful City was long before this become an Harlot Isa 1.21 and Christ not long after this Combate cryeth out against Jerusalem That shee had killed the Prophets and slain such as were sent unto her and proclaimeth a speedy desolation against her But it was so called 1 Because God had made choyce of this City to put his name there 2 Chron. 7.12 I have chosen this place for my self Hence was it called the City of God and Gods holy Mountain Dan. 9.16 and the holy Hill of Sion because God had chosen it and sanctified it for himself wherein himself kept residence and made it eminent above all the places of the earth 2 Because of the holy things which were there established even all the holy worship of God it was not lawful for the Jewes to sacrifice or eat the Passeover any where but in Jerusalem There was the Temple built on mount Moriah wherein I. There was the Sanctum seculare the utter Court of the Jews and Salomons porch which did rise up by fourteen stairs wherein Christ preached often and Peter healed the lame man Acts 3.3 and probably where Peter converted three thousand souls at one Sermon In this porch was the great brazen Altar for whole Burnt-offerings on which Altar the fire which at Aarons first offering in the Wilderness fell from Heaven Levit 9 2● 24. was to be kept perpetually before the Lord the which when Aarons sons neglected and offered with strange fire they were burnt with fire before the Lord. In this Court was the great brasen Sea wherein the Priests washed themselves and the Beasts to be offered on that Altar especially their feet because they were to minister bare-foot before the Lord. Both of them holy representations of Christ the former of his Sacrifice who gave himself for a whole Burnt-offering the latter the fruit of it he being the Laver of the Church by whose bloud we are washed from the guilt and power of sin II. There was the inner Court which was called the Sanctum or the Sanctuary or the Court of the Priests whence the Jewes were barred There was here 1 The Altar of Incense for sweet perfume wherein the Priests were evening and morning to burn the holy Incense before the Lord as a sweet-smelling savour unto God and no strange incense might be offered thereon Exod. 30.9 While Zachary stood at the right side of this Altar offering incense to God the Angel Gabriel stood and fore-told the birth of John Baptist This was an holy type of Christ who offered himself on the altar of the Cross a sacrifice of sweet smell to God his Father and through whom God savoureth a sweet smell from all our duties 2 In this Court was the golden Candlestick with seven Lamps and seven Lights which were ●ed with most pure holy oyl night and day to lighten the whole inner Court And this was an holy type of Christ the light of the world enlightening all his elect with spiritual and heavenly light 3 In this Court was that golden Table on which the holy Shew-bread was ever to stand even twelve Loaves which were to be made of the purest flower of Wheat and were to bee renewed every Sabbath the old Loaves converted to the Priests use a holy type of Christ in whom alone the Church and every member setting themselves continually before God are nourished and preserved unto eternal life 4 In this Court was that costly and precious Veil of blew silk and purple and scarlet and fine twined Linnen made of broydered work with Cherubims the use of which was to separate the Sanctum from the Holy of Holies this veil at the death of Christ was rent from the top to the bottom A notable representation of the flesh of Christ which hid his Divinity but being rent asunder by his passion on the Cross the way to Heaven was laid open unto us III. There in the Temple
the extream corruption of his nature who is pleased with desire of hurt and mischief hating God and his Image with deadly and perpetual hatred a Murtherer from the beginning Joh. 8. that is the first Murtherer and the author of murther clean opposed to God who is the first goodness and author of all goodness life in himself and in his creature It cannot be shewed that ever God erected any good or excellent thing in the Church or Common-wealth but Satan out of the abundance of his wickedness did one way or other seek even in the beginning of it the corruption or destruction of it He presently destroyed Gods Image in our first Parents presently corrupted Gods worship in Cain and in the rest of the posterity of the Fathers before the floud till all flesh had corrupted their ways When God had given his Law and set up his pure VVorship he presently cast his people down within forty days before the Call and after before other Idols of the Nations which was their destruction So soon as ever Christ was called to his Office he must either cast himself down from the pinacle or cast himself down to worship Satan as we shall see in the next temptation And as a Serpent never vents any thing but poyson so Satan never speaks in other language but the issue and effect is Cast thy self down From this corruption of his nature he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wicked one and hee that can fill his agent with wickedness as Elimas was called the Childe of the Devil Quod efficit tale Illud ipsum est magis tale because hee was full of subtilty and mischief Acts 13.10 must needs be full himself Vse 1. Seeing then Satans whole drift is to cast us down note what a wonderful mercy of God it is that we stand and are upheld especially such as stand upon higher pinacles and places than other against whom hee redoubleth his forces Yee stand by grace saith the Apostle It is not the goodness of nature yea if it were cloathed with innocency that can support us no if it were Angelical It is the grace and strength of our invincible Captain that we are not every moment cast down to Hell seeing there wants neither skill nor malice nor diligence in our adversary no nor advantage or inclination in our selves Let us therefore acknowledge that by the grace of God we are that we are and say with the Apostle 1 Tim. 1.12 I thank God which hath made me strong Use 2. We must learn from this incessant industry of the Devil to cast us down to be so much the more watchful against him Quest How shall I doe this Ans By observing these rules Rules 1 Take heed thou suffer him not to lead thee to a Pinacle for although our Lord and Saviour being filled with the Spirit and lead by the Spirit gave him leave to set him on the Pinacle yet must not thou follow him thither who art not so fenced or furnished For hee never sets any on a Pinacle but as Christ here to cast him down And then the Devil sets the man on a Pinacle when by wicked or base Arts a man riseth to wealth or honour or any publick place in the Church or Common-wealth he will willingly lend his help and hand thus to exalt and set up men but as the Hang-man helps the Thief up the Ladder to turn him off with a break-neck Haman was advanced to great honour but was it not to his greater ruine and downfall Did not he help up Herod by pride and ambition almost above the Pinacle when he spake Oh it was the voyce of God and not of a man But was it not to cast him down lower than all his people to bee presently eaten with Lice He sends up Nebuchadnezzar to the pinacle of his Palace and that was great Babel which hee had built for the honour not of God but of his Kingdom and by the might not of God but of his own power But the issue was to be cast down among beasts and not a sit companion for Princes or his people till he knew who the Lord was From Princes to Counsellers Achitophel was on an high Pinacle when his counsel was accepted as an Oracle of God but the end was that when it was despised he should cast himself down and hang himself From them to their inferiours but rich and great David saw the wicked man in great prosperity on an high Pinacle strong spreading like a green Bay-tree but suddenly he was cast down and he could not find where hee had been Psal 37.35 The like of the rich man in the Parable Thou fool this night shall they fetch thy soul c. From these to great Church-men Judas was set in the Apostleship Satan finding him there cast him down to Hell he went to his place so woeful a spectacle as beseemed the sonne of perdition and the betrayer and murderer of the just and innocent Son of God How many examples of men have wee who out of pride and ambition flattery and corruption have advanced themselves into chief places and as the times called on them against their consciences were cast down into horrible practices against the Church and after into woful outward misery as Cardinal Poole Gardiner Bonner and the like Compare their lives with their deaths Others raising themselves by multiplying chopping and engrossing of Livings have been cast down from their gifts their reputation their profiting of the Church from their sobriety and civility and some from the outward Wealth they so lay about them for so eagerly and dyed Beggers Lucri bonus est odor ex te Qualibet Juvenal Other ordinary men are raised by Satan to a great state of wealth as Usurers Oppressors and unjust persons that think all savour of gain sweet though it be never so filthy on Gods Sabbaths out of Labourers lives and bellies But Satan hath cast them down already into the Curse of God and only the execution of the sentence awaiteth them Others stand upon the pinacle of Pride and Satan sets every man upon this pinacle if he can as knowing that pride goeth before a fall Did not he suggest to our first Parents that they should be as Gods if they are the forbidden fruit that by lifting them up in their own conceit he might cast them down from their happiness It was the same suggestion which he would here fasten upon the Son of God If thou wilt here cast thy self down all Jerusalem must needs confess thee to be the true and undoubted Son of God and honour thee accordingly Rule 2 Vse the means to bee established in grace seeing all Satans labour is to cast us down from the grace of God 2 Tim. 2.1 My son bee strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus Train thy self to humility for God gives grace to the humble and ever humbles his children that hee may exalt them Waters
good purposes and practices Which is the rather to bee learned because wee have that within us which will make us easily daunted in good things as Peter himself after hee had been long with Christ was so daunted with the voice of a Damosel as hee easily forsware 〈◊〉 Master All Satans instance in evil it to bring us from instance in good against whom wee must every way fortify our selves First In the subdoing of any sin or corruption how will nature recoyl how stirring will Satan bee to keep his holds how many baits and objects will hee present unto thee how many fears and losses and crosses as rubs will hee cast in thy way and all to drive thee from the field against thy sin But now is a time to make use of this Doctrin Are wicked men so constant to the Devil at his instance and must not I bee constant for God at the instance of his blessed Spirit I will hold out by Gods grace and if I be foiled once and again as the Israelites in a good cause against Benjamin I will renew the battel the third time I shall at length carry away the victory this sin is one of Satans band like the captain and I will not bee driven out of the field by such a Craven that will flye if hee bee resisted Secondly The graces of God are as so many precious jewels locked up in the closet of a godly heart the Devil is instant to rob and bereave us of these wee must bee as hardly perswaded to give up these as to bee spoiled of our earthly treasure and riches 1 Our faith were a sweet morsel to Satan but wee must resist him stedfast in the faith Job will hold his faith in spight of the Devil let him lose his goods his health his friends his children hee will hold his faith and professe if the Lord kill him too hee will still trust in his mercy 2 Hee would steal away our love of the Saints and with it the life of our faith and therefore hee sets before us many infirmities of theirs and suspitions of our own and some fear from others but notwithstanding out delight must bee in the Saints that excel in vertue Jonathan will not bee beaten off the love to David though in all outward respects hee had little causes onely because hee saw God was with him 3 Hee layeth siedge to our sobriety and temperance and layeth many baits but Joseph will not yeeld to the many assaults of his Mistris 4 He would make us weary of prayer which is our strength and i● God delay he tells us he hears us not we lose our labour But wee must wrastle by prayer as Jacob till we obtain and as the woman of Canaan begge once and again till Christ hear us if he call us doggs so as wee cannot sit at table let us beg the crums as whelps that ●all under the table 5 He would make us weary of our profession is uncessant in setting the malice of the world upon us yea great ones multitudes and all But the Disciples by no whips mo●ks threats or persecutions could be daunted but rejoyced in them and went on more cheerfully 6 He would have us weary of well-doing and beginning in the Spirit to end in the flesh But as Nehemiah in building the Temple and wall said to his crafty Counsellers Should such a one as I flie so let every Christian say Should I lose all my labour and that crown of life that is promised to all them that are faithful to death No I will not doe it The Devil took him up into an exceeding high mountain In this third temptation we are to consider two things 1 The assault 2 The repulse In the assault two things 1 The preparation 2 The dart it self In the preparation 1 The place 2 The sight represented The dart consists of 1 A profer All these will I give thee 2 A condition If thou wilt fall down and worship me 3 A reason for they are mine and to whomsoever I will I give them First of the place and in it 1 what place it was 2 how Christ came thither 3 why Satan chose that place I. The place was the top of an exceeding high mountain What this mountain was we cannot define and the Scripture being silent in it wee may bee sure it is no Article of faith Some think it was mount Ararat on which the Ark of Noah stood in the floud the highest mountain in the world But without all reason for that was in Armenia another part of the world Gen. 8.4 And there were a number of great Hills round about Jerusalem fit enough for this purpose As 1 There was mount Moriah where Abraham offered to sacrifize his Son Isaac where Salomon built his Temple and wherein Christ stood in the former temptation But the text is plain hee was carried from thence into an higher mountain by farre 2 There was mount Ghi●n 1 King 1.33 34 where Zadok and Nathan at Davids appointment anoynted Salomon King But this was too low 3 There was a mountain over against Jerusalem called mons offensionis the mountain of scandal where Salomon in his age deceived by outlandish wives built an high place for Chemosh and Molec the abominations of the children of Ammon and Moab 1 King 11.7 which high places so hard it is to thrust down superstition once set up continued standing three hundred sixty three years and were destroyed by Josiah 4 There was mount Calvary where Christ suffered but that was not so high as this mount spoken of 5 There was mount Olive● a famous mountain about six furlongs from Jerusalem here David wept flying before his Son Absolom here Christ often watched and prayed and wept over Jerusalem for it was so high as that from the top of it as Josephus reports one might discern all the streets of Jerusalem and see afarre off to the dead sea 6 There was mount Sion higher than all these which was called the Mountain of the Lord for those that have written concerning this City know that the foundation of it is among the holy Mountains and among them all mount Sion was farre the highest and therefore David made a Fort there called the City of David 7 There were besides these without Jerusalem mount Nebo from the top of which Moses stood and beheld all the Land of Canaan and was commanded to dye This is generally held to be the Mount to which Christ was carried and so could I think were it not that it was quite without Palestina and not in the Land of Canaan for Moses only there did see the good Land but must not enter into it 8 There were within Palestina besides these mount Basan and mount Hermon very high Hills in comparison of which Sion is said to bee a little Hill Psalm 42.6 and 68.16 Now it is very probable that this temptation was upon one of these Hills but we must not bee curious to determine
the Lord sometimes for a time leaveth his own Children into the hand of Satan so as he may tempt them and prevail over them to the committing of fearful sins as we see in David and Peter which sins often blind and harden them and damp their conscience that for a time they see no displeasure of God but lye secure and impenitent as David well-nigh a year But all this desertion of God was to a certain measure at length the cloud was gone the mist dispersed the light returned Satan resisted and forced to fly away And this is the ground of that prayer of David and the Saints Lord forsake me not over-long not fearing that the Lord would quite take away his grace from him as the violent Lutherans teach but that hee should not with-draw his second grace over-farre or over-much Which prayer is grounded on a promise of God by vertue whereof wee may conclude that the battel of Beleevers is not for the over-throw but the exercise of their faith Vse 2. This should stir up the Christian to cheerful resistance which is the condition of Satans flight Obj. Alas he is a spirit I am flesh which is great advantage He is a legion I am but one man he can oppress me with number He is a principality as strong as a roaring Lion I am a weak Worm Hee is subtile as a Serpent I am foolish and unwise Hee is cruel and fierce how can I have any heart to resist him Answ 1. There is in every Christian a Spirit stronger than hee Joh. 4.4 2 There be more with us than with him 2 Chron. 32.7 fear him not Satan potens omnipotens Christus Callidus serpent sapiens Christus sapientia 3 He is mighty but what can a strong man being disarmed doe 4 He is subtile but in our Lord are treasures of wisdom and he is made wisdome to us of God 1 Cor. 1.30 5 Hee is cruel but what hurt can a Lion doe being in Chains or a Grate Secondly in thy resistance strive lawfully How Two ways 1 By good means 2 In a good manner First the means of resisting the Devil must not be such as are of the Devils own devising as Crosses Reliques Holy-water Exorcisms nor seeking to Witches and Sorcerers which is to cast out the Devil by Beelzebub but by means appointed by our Captain who was best acquainted with this warre as 1 The Word of God the holy Scriptures by which Christ made the Devil fly and so must we 1 Joh. 2.14 I write unto you young men because yee are strong and the word of God abideth in you and yee have overcome the Devil which plainly sheweth that not by Spells and Charms of Scripture but by the abiding of it in the heart to rule and order the life Satan is overcome Satan is subtile but the word giveth wisdome to the simple which overcomes his subtilty 2 Faith in Gods promises 1 Pet. 5.9 whom resist stedfast in the faith Christ here sets himself stedfastly in the word of his Father and so conquers the Devil The victory that overcomes the world is by faith to lean on the promises of God Faith keeps in sight Christ our victorious Captain and sets the crown of life in our eye which is laid up for them that are faithful to the death 3 Prayer joyned with fasting and watching Christ entring this combate armed himself with fasting watching and prayer for many days together David when Goliah drew near took a stone out of his scrip and smote him in the fore-head that he fell down This stone that overthrows the hellish Goliah is prayer While Moses hands are lifted up all the Armies of the Amalekites fly before Israel And St. James in his Epistle tells us that if wee would resist the Devil we must draw near God chap. 4. vers 8. and never doe wee draw nearer God than in effectual and fervent prayer Let the Disciples use any means without this the Devil will not fly whereof if they ask the reason Christ tells them the Devil is not cast out but by fasting and prayer 4 The practice of true godliness and resolution against all unrighteousness Righteousness is called a brest-plate Ephes 6.14 which is not only that imputed righteousness of Christ but that inherent righteousness of our selves which is the study and endeavour in a godly life and the Apostle James among other directions in resisting the Devil chap. 4. vers 8. giveth this for one Cleanse your hearts yee sinners and purge your hearts yee wavering minded and the reason is good seeing by every sin and lust being nourished Satan is let in and the yeelding to any corruption is to give him so much ground in stead of beating him out of our borders He that is in a fight abstaineth from whatsoever would hinder him 1 Cor. 9. and therefore from sin which presseth down and hangeth fast on Let us meditate on that Law Deut. 23.9 When thou goest out against thine enemies to fight abstain from every evil thing For this weakens us and turns God against us and drives his good Angels from us 5 Gods Spirit Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might our own strength will easily be turned against us our own counsels cannot but cast us down God resisteth the proud and assisteth the humble As therefore Moses said to Israel at the red sea being naked and weak not knowing what to doe so may we in this case Stand still fear not behold the salvation of the Lord Grieve not the Spirit nor quench his motions who is the Spirit of power of wisdome of fortitude and counsel of strength and direction and goe forth in the boldness of that Spirit as Jer. 20.11 The Lord is with me like a mighty gyant therefore mine enemies shall be overthrown and shall not prevail but shall be mightily confounded Secondly the good manner of resisting the Devil that hee may fly is this 1 Resist the first temptation and break the Serpents head dash the heads of Babylons brood against the stones Wise men will not let the enemy come near the walls or the gates much less into the Market-place It is a great advantage to give the foyl at the first on-set Give no place to the Devil give sin no room in thy heart or if Satan inwardly suggest any there close it up let it dye and never come out as a man that hath a Serpent in a vessel stops it up and there it dyes 2 Resist the least evil motion contemn not the least temptation for Satan can tell how by one grain of poyson to kill the soul and by one dead fly to corrupt a whole box of oyntment The weakest man yea or woman is strong enough to kill a sleepy Sisera The weakest temptation is too strong for a careless and secure adversary Eve should have resisted Satan in an apple and Lots wife in a look No sin is so light and venial that is not worth resistance
liberty than hee affords if thy affections be rough and stirring against Gods children thou hast not yet subjected thy self to Christ 4 A mighty work of power in Christ was that he was able to soyl temptations and stand out against all hellish powers so that the Devil found nothing in him Now findest thou the power and strength of Christ in the spiritual combate Doest thou chase Satan afore thee and the whole band of his temptations Wouldest thou refuse a whole world rather than sin against God or gratifie Satan and thy self with the least displeasure of him All the power of Christ was set against sin and Satans Kingdom And if thou hast part in this power of Christ it abolisheth sin in thee and strengthneth thee with full resolution against all sin 5 A mighty work of Christs power is to enrich his children with all necessary graces tending to salvation and to lead them into the fruition of their eternal inheritance It cost Joshua some labour before he could bring Israel into the good Land that abounded with good things it cost our JOSHUA more Findest thou this fruit of Christs power that thy face is set towards Heaven and is it with thee as with those that entred into that good Land who tasted of the fruits aforehand Hast thou received the first fruits of the Spirit Doest thou grow in grace Doest thou with patience expect the promises and begin the heavenly life already Hast thou hope joy love of God zeal for God constancy in the truth for these are purchased by this power of Christ Then here is a creating vertue put forth a fruit of Christs mighty power magnifie this grace of God and hope for the accomplishment and finishing of the same work by the same power the which shall preserve thee to salvation 6 A mighty work of Christs power was the perfect fulfilling of the Law Whether doest thou partake in this power art thou perfect in the way sincerely obeying God in all his Commandements Doest thou subject thy self to the Law as the rule of thy Law Doest thou aym at the perfection thereof Christ loved his Father with all his heart and his Neighbour as himself yea above himself and if this power of Christ prevail with thee this will bee the scope and aym of all thy actions For though the obedience of the Law bee not necessary to Justification yet it is requisite to Sanctification 7 Another work of Christs power was that it set him free from all corruption and infirmities which hee undertook for us without sin Labour to finde this power of Christ in thy soul daily freeing thee from the corruption of thy sin and daily infirmities If the Son set you free you are free indeed not only the reign of sin is thrust down but the corruption of sin is lessned David desired the Lord to give him again his free Spirit Psal 51.10 11. he well knew that where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty that is not only a redemption from Damnation by our justification but from corruption and vain conversation by our sanctification 8 Christs power was mighty in ruling and ordering his own powers and faculties his understanding was able to see God perfectly his will only just right and wise never bowing from the will of his Father Not my will but thy will be done His memory could never forget any good thing but he retained his whole duty ever before him His affections were ordered according to right judgement His appetite never exceeded the bounds of sobriety and moderation His speech was gracious his actions all exemplary no spot in him from top to toe And this same power of Christ is in some measure manifest in all his members this power enlightneth the minds of beleevers formerly blind to see God in part and perswadeth the will and boweth it to obey Gods will which before was captivated to the will of the Devil it inspireth godly desires and gracious resolutions and strengthens the memory to retain good things being before as rimy as a five it guideth and altereth the affections making the beleever to love good things and good men and whatsoever sets forward Gods glory and to hate zealously the contrary Christs power in the soul orders the appetite to sobriety in the seasonable and thankful use of outward mercies makes a man speak the language of Canaan and his whole course savour of Christ Whence it is plainly concluded that ignorant persons malicious persons Libertines intemperate Drunkards Gluttons filthy talkers Swearers loose in their behaviour open enemies to this power of Jesus Christ not submitting themselves to the rod of his mouth shall bee laid under his rod of iron Use 4. This teacheth us to goe on fearlesly in good duties seeing this power of Christ is with us and for us He is of power to protect us against enemies and dangers Of power to strengthen us in our duties when we are weak and feeble he will perfect his power in our weakness 2 Cor. 12.8 Of power to make us invincible in our sufferings Phil. 4.13 I can doe all things through him that inableth me Of power to reward our least labour of love undertaken for him Of power to answer our prayers and to doe abundantly above all we ask or think Of power to perform all his gracious promises which shall be made good to us in due time Of power to supply us with all good means in his service hee can give wealth and make the latter end better as he did to Job the Divine power giveth all things pertaining to life and godliness 2 Pet. 1.3 Of power in death it self to keep that which wee commit unto him till the last day Of power to rebuke Diseases and command Death and after death to raise our bodies to eternal life being cloathed with corruption and wrapped with deaths garments 1 Cor. 6.14 God hath raised up the Lord Jesus and shall raise us also by his power Vse 5. Lastly this doctrin assureth us of our perseverance in grace begun Christ by his power lays such fast hold on us no seducer is able to deceive the elect nor pluck them out of his hands for the weakness of God is stronger than men 1 Cor. 1.25 and when we cannot comprehend him so fast as wee would he comprehends us and preserves us by his power to salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 Neither doth this Doctrin maintain any security but the security of faith which is ever attended with the fear of God and fear to sinne The Second thing in the victory of our Saviour is the manner of Satans leaving him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith St. Matthew St. Luke more plainly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which implies a bodily departure and sensible as we have formerly shewed his presence to be Quest What kind of departure was this it seems to be a willing and voluntary subjection to Christ he bids him depart and he is gone Ans Indeed it seems obedience
Abrahams love to God in so difficult a Commandement as the killing of his Son But Satan here went away not for love of God but for fear and being forced 3 Examine thy manner of obeying whether it bee a willing and ready obedience If I do it willingly saith the Apostle I have a reward and Rom. 6.17 Yee have obeyed from the heart or heartily And such obedience 1 Repineth not as giving God any thing too much though the dearest things of all 2 Deviseth no excuses as Saul when hee did but half the commandement pretended sacrifice and the peoples instance 3 Seeketh no delaies I made haste and delayed not to keep thy righteous judgements Psal 1 19. 4 Doest thou obey in all the Commandements 1 The commandement of faith in the Gospel as well as the actual obedience of the Law for one is as acceptable as the other 2 Obeyest thou the Commandement as well of doing good as of abstaining from evil for the Devil here abstains from this evil of tempting Christ but can never do any good hee joines not these Commandements in his practice as Gods Spirit doth in his precept Isa 1.16 17. 3 Makest thou conscience of the least commandement as well as of the greatest for all of them have a stamp of God upon them makest thou conscience of small oaths vain words roving thoughts 4 Doest thou obey constantly for love is strong as death and much water cannot quench it But alass much obedience is like that of Davids false friends Psal 18.44 45. strangers shall bee in subjection to me but they shall shrink away For a season Luk. 4.13 III. The THIRD point followeth to bee considered namely how long Satan left our Lord not for ever after but for a while and surely he stayed away but a little while For if wee look into the holy story wee shall see the whole life of Christ almost to bee a continual temptation and how Satan from time to time partly by himself and partly by his Ministers assayled him This we shall see how sundry waies Satan molested him and tempted him 1 in his ministery 2 his life 3 his death 1 In his ministery hee was tempted both in his Doctrin and Miracles For his Doctrin the Scribes and Pharisees often sought to catch advantages against him as in the case of the Bill of divorce Mat. 19.1 and of the woman taken in adultery Joh. 8. which by Moses Law should bee stoned but Master what sayest thou The Sadduces also tempted him in the case of the woman that had seven Husbands whose shee should bee in the resurrection Matth. 22.23 And the Lawyer concerning the great Commandement of the Law vers 35. As for his Miracles the seal of that Doctrin they tell him to his face that he cast out Devils by Beelzebub Mat. 9.34 1.2.24 2 In his life and civil Obedience The Pharisees take Counsel together how they might entangle him in his talk about paying tribute to Caesar Matth. 22.15 And when hee ate meat in Matthews house Matth. 9.11 they asked why hee did eat meat with Publicans and sinners and therefore hee was one of them Simon the Pharisee seeing Mary Magdalen annointing Jesus his feet with pretious ointment and washing them with tears and wiping them with her hairs said Surely if this man were a Prophet hee would know that this woman is a sinner and not let her meddle with him How often did they murmure at him and lye in wait for him and take up stones to stone him and rail upon him with most despightful words calling him Beelzebub a Samaritan a glutton a loose companion running up and down with noted sinners in all which Satan was the chief agent 3 But above all other temptations those were most fierce and furious with which hee was afflicted torn and tormented about the time of his passion and on the Cross For then as himself witnesseth the Prince of the World came upon him with all his train Joh. 14.30 hee came in himself and whole Legions of wicked Angels with him as the Apostle plainly implyeth Coloss 2.15 Hee spoiled Principalities and Powers and triumphed over them on the Cross Now or never Satan must win the field this is the last act Christ was never so beset with misery Satan never had him at such an advantage before now Gods whole wrath is upon him and now the Devil and his Angels set upon him so sore that in his Agony in the Garden hee sweats drops of water and blood and on the Cross hee cries out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Those were more secret temptations of Satan and his instruments but let us see with what hellish darts they pierced him openly upon the Cross not to speak of those which hee endured all the time hee was in examination condemnation and leading to execution For 1 They hang him between two theeves as an arch-rebel and of all sinners the greatest and dart against him the same temptation with that in all this History that hee was not the Son of God If thou be the Son of God come down from the cross certainly God would not let his Son hang there but thou art a deluder an arch-seducer of the people 2 They tempted him with fear of death Matth. 27.42 hee saved others himself hee cannot save this is a wise Saviour indeed hee cannot escape death in whose hands hee is sure enough and even overcome already of death and yet hee will bee a Saviour 3 They tempted him with utter rejection from God as the most damned reprobate that ever was Hee trusted in God now let him deliver him if he will have him but hee can neither deliver himself nor God will have none of him hee abhors him and will cast him presently to Hell These and a number of the like was our Saviour molested and tempted withall secretly and openly even then when the wrath of his Father seised upon him So as truely the Evangelist might say that Satan left him but for a season Doct. Christian life is but an entercourse of quiet and trouble sometime Satan leaves Christ but hee comes again and renews his temptation so it is with the members who have much war but some peace many troubles but some breathing-time This truth wee will a while discover both in the state of the whole Church of God from time to time as also in some particular members thereof What a night seemed to oppress the Church in the cradle when wicked Cain slew righteous Abel so as all religion and true worship seemed to bee destroyed in all Adams posterity having onely Cain left But shortly after God gave Adam a Seth in whom the Church was restored and preserved and pure religion propagated In Henochs time how was the worship of God prophaned when the Sons of God married the daughters of men which was the cause of the flood but afterward it was restored by Noah and Sem and by him continued to Abraham Now
the time of his infirmity needing a breathing time and a refreshing by which hee knows what wee weaklings have need of and is become a merciful High Priest to give us some rest in the midst of our conflicts which else would bruise and break us 2 Hee goeth but for a season because of his invincible malice who cannot afford us a good hours rest if hee may have leave to disturb us because hee maliceth our Lord and Saviour with an inveterate and deadly malice so that although hee bee in himself out of his reach yet hee still continues to tempt him being in heaven in his members upon earth This deadly malice in his nature our Saviour noteth in Matth. 12.44 The unclean spirit when hee is cast out seeks to re-enter and return again and where hee findes a fit house hee brings in seven Devils worse than himself Hee is diligent to watch our mischief and if hee cannot prevail at one time hee will assay another 3 God sees it good to stir us out of our security who are ready to expose our selves to temptation especially after we have out-stood a temptation and never are wee easier made a prey for Satan than when the pride of heart tickles us and so wee grow secure because wee have out-grown some temptation If our estate of corruption did not necessarily require changes and a●mies of sorrows wee should find the Lord not delighted in afflicting the sons of men but hee sees how prone wee are to surfeit of fulness and as a field of Corn the rancker it is the easier it is laid down with every storm and violent wind of temptation and therefore hee changeth hurtful prosperity with wholsome though bitter potions of afflictions and like a good Physician prescribes us a thin dyet and abstinence after our surfeit and excess 2 God sees these changes good for us to season and stir up our prayers In affliction wee can seek the Lord diligently Isa 26.16 Oh Lord in trouble they have visited thee they poured out a prayer when thy chastening was upon them Hee knows his Church is never so fitly disposed to fervency and efficacy in prayer as when the cross is on her shoulders whereas in her peace shee is sleepy cold negligent roving and remiss in her seeking after Christ Psal 55.19 3 God sees these changes good for us to lift us up from this evil world for were our prosperity not interrupted wee would dote too much upon the World and would wish no other Heaven than this upon earth for if wee bee so hardly and heavily gotten out of so miserable a World as is full of sorrows and heart-griefs how hardly or rather impossibly should wee get out of an unchangeable earthly happiness though to injoy our heavenly inheritance 4 God sees it good for us to bring these changes into our estate and to entermixe with afflictions comforts and breathings to help our patience and perseverance for else all our sorrows would exceed our strength if they were without intermission The Lord will not have us swallowed up of sorrow and therefore doth so temper and blend our estate as wee bee not quite tyred out with the instance of our skirmishes and conflicts but after our skirmishes retires us for a while where we may breath and refresh our selves and recover our strength and fitness for further service whensoever our great commander shall imploy us 5 God sees these changes good for us that by them wee might prize his mercies to praise the giver doth not the night make the day more delightful would wee so prize and praise God for health if it were not sweetned with sicknesse plenty is endeared by want and an honey-comb hath no sweetness to a full stomack whereas hee that hath been pinched with penury and need knows what a benefit abundance is 4 God for his own great glory brings these changes into our estate thereby manifesting 1 His Wisdome in upholding his Church by contrari●s which fight one against another as the frame of the World standing on four contrary Elements 2 His power that bringeth to the grave and back again 1 Sam. 2.6 that supporteth his Children to stand under so great burdens without fainting thereby magnifying his omnipotent power in such weakness 3 His goodness in suffering his children to bee afflicted on every side but not drowned in the waves of them to bee persecuted but not forsaken to bee cast down but not to perish yea to bee killed but not overcome 2 Cor. 12.9 and 4.7 Nay his goodness is such as turneth all these changes to good bringing good out of evil sweet out of four life out of death and his own order out of earthly confusions 4 His glory in the strange and miraculous deliverance of his Church in its most desperate estate and in the powerful overthrow of his enemies And of all the persecutions of his Church it may be said as of Lazarus his sickness It is not to death but that God may bee glorified Vse 1. Then let us not dream of so stable a peace in our Church and Land as mens security every where hath seemed to lay hold of looking at the peaceable disposition of our gracious King at his hopeful Successor at our union among our selves at our league with all other Nations at the continuance and undisturbed estate and liberty of the Gospel for these sixty years For 1. God seeth not good to give any Church on earth an unchangeable estate that is the Churches expectation in Heaven 2 Our peace hath brought in a general security prophaneness intolerable pride of all fashions and colours beside modest and white a deluge of drunkenness daily drowning the brains and souls of thousands a weariness of this Mannah a dangerous Apostasie from the first beginnings of the Gospel and a falling back of many great ones into the professed Idolatry of Antichrist and in the most a contempt of religion yea and of a formal profession that denies the power and life of godliness Adde to these execrable swearing unpunished soul adulteries unrevenged or slightly punished the Sabbaths of God horribly and generally violated and prophaned by games and practices unlawful upon any day And now will God continue a peace to so unthankful a people that doe put it to no other use than to arm themselves against God and fight against his grace and glory 3 Consider how God dealt with his own people they had as long peace under David and Salomon as wise and excellent a King as ever was being an eminent type of Christ yet we see what long ease and peace brought him to which was the overthrow of his Kingdom and the renting of ten parts of twelve from him to his servant he was a King of peace as his name imported had posterity had made a league with all neighbour-nations yet God being provoked brings a woeful change on him and his Land So may it be to us 4 Consider how God hath threatned us of
late years to bring in woful changes to remove the Gospel and give away our Kingdom Liberties Freeholds and lives to strangers Remember that admirable year of eighty eight and that no less admirable threatning and deliverance in one thousand six hundred and five forget not the raging and devouring plague in which there was no peace or safety to him that went in and out Remember the furious fire in many great places of the Land burning up whole Towns and Villages the general diseases and distempers in mens bodies which have been as universal as our provocation hath been the change of our seasons the breaking out of waters drowning the earth the infection of the air many barbarous Conspiracies against the life of so innocent and merciful a King and the hot contentions of many brethren in our own Church All which are remarkable signs of Gods displeasure if not fore-runners of a lamentable change But he that considereth how all these things are forgotten and worn away unprofitably without all wholsome use or reformation cannot but think that the Lord if timely repentance hinder not will take some other course and so speak as hee will be heard for the truth never fayls which you have heard at large one Judgement is ever a fore runner of another unless repentance cuts them off O that God would put it in the hearts of high and low to seek the continuance of our happy peace in our seasonable seeking of God by repentance and not seeking still to provoke him by wilful impenitency Vse 2. Let us not expect an end of temptation and trial while we are here below seeing Satan goes away in respect of temptation and molestation but for a season If Satan be gone he will return yea although he cannot prevail he will not cease to be an enemy and the longer our peace hath been let us think our change the nearer None of Gods children but the Devil is sometimes departed from them but the experience of them all shews that he never stayed long away from any of them and therefore let us be wise although God● goodness have kept him a great while from us not thereby to grow secure but as fore-casting his coming again aim our selves for him 1 N●t mistaking our present estate which is a pilgrimage and not a paradise of ease and pleasure 2 Considering that evils fore-seen lose a great part of their bitterness and they are so much the weaker against us as we are stronger by our providence and fore-sight of them 3 Neither may we think much that after one or two or three assaults Satan hath not done with us but comes again as he did against our Lord for wee servants are not better than our Master nor better than our fellow-servants who have been often assaulted as David first to Adultery and after that to Murder and after that to pride in numbring the people and after that Satan came again and again And Paul was often bulleted by Satan yea after hee had prayed thrice he got no release but a promise of sufficient grace 4 Neither may we conceive it strange that after some sleighter temptations we should be urged with fouler for Satan commonly keeps his strongest till the last as hee did to our Lord. Many say never were any so foulely tempted not so often as they their flesh trembles and their hair stands an end to think what foul temptations Satan suggesteth with great instance But can there bee a fouler temptation than to worship the Devil himself yet the Son of God was tempted to it Therefore resist as he did and the sin is not thine but Satans who shall bee damned but thou shalt be saved in the day of the Lord. Satan still cometh with more malice and worst at last contrary unto God who is best at last Vse 3. In that Christian life is mixed with peace and trouble learn wee not to fix both our eyes upon any present prosperity nor use it as a perpetuity but hold it as a moveable which passeth and moveth from one to another We have now a sweet sense of God but this may be over-cast he may hide himself and we be troubled we may now have the joy of our faith and presently our souls be clouded with unbelief distrust and dreggs of infidelity All Gods graces are still in sight often soyled by their contraries And for temporal things our health is conflicted with sickness our good name wounded with disgraces and defamations our friends mortal and were they not so yet mutable often becoming our greatest enemies our wealth winged and leaves us when we have most need of comfort our life it self commutable with death which is the turning of us out of all that wee loved dearest excepting God himself Let us therefore fix our eyes upon those eternal good things and that eternal peace and that Kingdom which cannot bee shaken For the things which are seen are temporal but the things not seen are eternal And then whatsoever I lose it is but a moveable my inheritance is sale and sure Vse 4. Hence wee may see how like wicked men are unto their father the Devil in their courses Satan seems to goe from them but it is but for a season and so do their sins but for a season by a counterfeit repentance As we may see in two or three instances 1 Some upon some good motions and exhortations by Gods Word and Spirit are stru●k with some sense of their estate their conscience is checked and they resolve to take a new course and perhaps enter upon it as the Devil were quite gone But he comes again he went but for a season and sets them as deep in their usury deceit gaming and wicked fellowship as ever before the dogge returns to his vomit and the sow to her wallowing in the mire the evil sp●rit that seemed to be gone is returned and hath brought with him seven worse Devils because he found his house fit for him 2 Some about the time of receiving the Communion are very devout will make a shew of religion of prayer of repentance of charity and love they will not swear much that day perhaps not play but read and it may bee sing Psalmes A man would think for so doe they that the Devil is quite gone But it is but for a season their righteousness is but as a morning dew their unrighteousness returns and they become as disordered in their courses as malicious in their lives the next day as ever they were before A fearful case that with Judas they receive the sop and the Devil withall 3 Others in the time of sickness are very penitent will confess all promise amendment plead for pardon crave good prayers and vow to God if hee restore them to become new men and women and now the Devil they hope is quite gone But no sooner their sickness breaks but the Devil comes again and brings all their former sins back again and they are well contented
which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord
of peace wee are by this Doctrin directed to the best and onely means to come by it namely to make our peace first with God through Jesus Christ and then if the Conscience sting or accuse and terrify look upon this brazen Serpent and that wound shall bee cured Some being wounded in spirit use means to forget their grief now the musick merry company with sundry sports must bee called in all which enlarge the wound but are far from working any cure the only Physician in this case is Jesus Christ he calleth Come to mee all that are heavy laden and I will ease you onely in him canst thou finde refreshing for thy weary soul Doest thou perceive God frowning against thy sin there is no way f●r thee but to get him to behold thee in the face of his annointed Psal 84.9 no merits no works no good intentions no gifts can clear his countenance to make it shine upon thee onely hee is well pleased in his Christ and with such as ●e b●holdeth in him and no other If men bee at oddes with thee the next way to bee at one with them is not by raging and storming against them to drive thy self further from God but to draw neer unto him in Christ ●y whom reconcile thy self unto him and then as thine own minde shall bee more composed unto peace and love so will hee also make thine enemies thy friends if hee see it good at the least restrain them so as they shall not hurt thee For if hee pitch a Covenant for us with the brute beasts of the field that they shall not hurt us much more will hee shelter us from the malice of men bee they never so brutish and unreasonable So much of this peace by Jesus Christ Now in the second place Christ was preached to Israel two waies wee are to consider the Preaching of it to the children of Israel Where two things are to bee explained 1 How Christ was preached unto the Israelites 2 Why hee was so preached unto them Concerning the former Christ was Preached to Israel two waies 1 by the word or promise 2 by deed or type For the first the main promise of all concerning this truth was that which after it was by Gods own mouth once delivered unto Adam in Paradise The seed of the woman shall bruise c. was so often repeated to Abraham Isaac and Jacob In thy seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed Gen. 12.3 The same promise in substance Moses maketh to the whole people of the Jews Deut. 18.15 Also all the Prophets saith Peter from Samuel and thenceforth so many as have spoken have likewise foretold the same thing Act. 3.24 and in this regard the Jews are called the Children of the Prophets and of the Covenant which God made to the Fathers where the very same Promise made to Abraham is repeated vers 25. And the Apostle Paul is as express Gal. 3.8 The Scripture foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles through faith preached before the Gospel to Abraham saying in thee that is in thy seed shall all the Gentiles be blessed Again Christ was by deed or type preached our peace in the whole Levitical Priesthood for all that Ceremonial Worship all their Sacrifices Oblations Altars yea their Temple Ark and Propitiatory resembled and pointed at Christ our peace and yet further their very Kings and Kingdome their Priests and Prophets all of them not obscurely resembled Jesus Christ and preached him our peace who as a King delivered his subjects from all the former bondage of forein power and by his merit and triumph wrought out their peace As a Priest sacrificed himself and offered unto his Father a sweet smelling sacrifice of peace for them and as a Prophet fully delivered from his Father the whole Doctrin of peace and reconciliation Both these waies was Christ preached to the Israelites whereof for brevities sake we will for the present forbear further discourse The Second thing to bee explained is Christ was preached 〈◊〉 Israel 1 b● why was Christ preached our peace to the Children of Israel first and why was that Doctrin renewed to them from time to time by the hand and ministery of the Prophets Answ For three reasons 1 Because they were that seed and certain family of whom the Messiah should descend and arise for which cause they were to observe an accurate distinction of the tribes according to that Ordinance and Government which God had established amongst them that they might not bee deceived in his person when hee should in fulness of time appear 2 Because God had chosen them to bee a peculiar people hee set them up above all nations not onely in many other prerogatives but in this which was the chief of all had they seen it that the Oracles of God were committed unto them Rom. 3.2 Hee gave his Laws to Jacob his Covenants to Israel hee dealt not so with every Nation Psal 147.30 The Apostle Paul when hee had reckoned a number of the Jews advancements above the Gentiles such as were their Adoption Covenant Promises Fathers hee shutteth up all with the chief of all in these words of whom concerning the flesh Christ came Rom. 9.5 Now as that was the first that hee came of them so this is the next that hee came unto them alone first in the promises and types then in his person and appearance then in his Doctrin and miracles performed in his own person adde hereto that hee came to them in his life and death and lastly hee came first and alone to them in the Ministry and Miracles of his Holy Apostles who must not go into the way of the Gentiles nor turn themselves to other Nations till the Jews by despising that Grace offered had made themselves unworthy of life everlasting the lost sheep of the house of Israel must first bee sought up and therefore as Paul said it was necessary that the word of God should first bee spoken unto them Act. 13.46 3 That both Jew and Gentile might know that Christ came not by hap or chance or on the suddain so as his comming might not bee observed but that hee came for the time and for the manner according to the Promises and predictions of old of which our Apostle is willing in these words to imply the accomplishment Divinity of Scripture proved Observ 1. Whence wee may note 1 The Divinity of Scripture which foretelleth beforehand things which are to come to pass many hundreths yea some thousands of years after The thing that foretelleth things properly to come which have no existence in any cause or sign must needs bee of God Satan indeed can guess at some events but which have some grounds in nature or experience or can foretell a thing to come which God hath revealed to him or himself is made an executioner of as in Saul but to foretell a thing or event meerly to come is proper to God Whence it
your sanctification Colos 1.10 filled with the knowledge of his will and wa●k worthy of the Lord c. thou must not only speak for but live to the credit of thy Master in thy speech actions attire eating drinking and whatsoever else carry thy self like a Christian else thou discreditest thy Masters house and dishonourest himself Were not hee a notable Traytor that being sworn of the Kings guard and professing all service to the King should instead of the Kings armes and coat wear the enemies so the thing it self speaketh against him who professeth Christ his Lord and yet never appears or sheweth himself in the street or abroad but in Satans livery his swearing his covetousness his filthiness his lying his whole life lead in all intemperance bewrayeth to whom hee hath given himself to obey 3 It is his will also that wee obey as well in suffering as in doing his pleasure and the reason is plain he is my Lord I am but a servant if he please to buffet and blow mee I must with all meekness submit my self yea and more be thankful for his government 2 Sam. 15.26 If hee say I have no delight in thee let him do whatsoever seemeth good in his eyes 1 Sam. 3.18 When the Lord had threatned heavy things against Heli his whole house hee answered It is the Lord let him do whatsoever seemeth good in his eyes I was dumb and opened not my mouth saith David because thou LORD didst is Psal 39.9 Thus must wee obey Christ as a Lord giving up our bodies and souls unto him by living unto him and dying unto him and this is the Apostles ground wee are the Lords Rom. 14.7 and therefore none of us liveth unto himself and none of us dyeth unto himself but living and dying wee are the Lords otherwise what a trifling and mockery were it onely to yield him a title of Lord or Master and deny him his service Why call yee mee Master Master and do not the things I speak Luk. 6.46 All which if it bee true how few shall finde Christ a Saviour for how few make him their Lord few there are that esteem this well-beloved above other well-beloveds not a few are ashamed of him and his profession many white-livered souldiers are daunted with Peter at the speeches of silly and simple persons most men never look to the hands of this Lord to acknowledge either receit of Talents or return of accounts fewest of all obey him in faith who yet are overcarried with presumption of his favour or in true sanctification though they can pretend it or in patience if they could get out of his hands if it were by flying to the Devil for help Well if Christ have no more but a title of a Lord from thee thou shalt have but a title of salvation from him and not the thing it self and if a name that thou livest content thee when thou art but dead the time commeth that when thou commest to seek thy name among the number that are saved by him thou shalt finde thy name left out of that role and set in the number of those that shall dye in their sins Christ being our Lord no other Lord can lay 〈◊〉 unto us Secondly if Christ bee the Lord of all Then have wee obtained much freedome by him both from all spiritual bondage and all that tyranny which those hard Lords Sin Death Hell Satan exercised over us our Lord hath paved the uttermost farthing and wrought a glorious redemption for us and hee having thus set us free wee are free indeed both from the guilt the punishment and service of sin Wee are free also from all Papal bondage for wee have but one Lord in Heaven who can save and destroy to whom simple obedience belongeth and to whom the Conscience is only subject The man of sin indeed would bee Lord of all and maketh laws to bind conscience where God hath left it free but as the Scriptures acknowledge but one Lord no more do wee and say more that wee cannot serve two Masters commanding such contrary things Wee are also hence freed from the fear of all earthly Tyrants if wee belong to this Lord for if hee stand with us who can bee against us Matth. 10.28 Fear not them which can kill the body onely but him who can cast both body and soul into Hell The true fear of him will eat out all those false fears of men Observ 3 Thirdly If Christ be Lord of all Then wee and all beleevers are fellow servants All beleevers are fellow servants to this Lord. and therefore ought to live and love together making no dissention or schism in our Masters house which is the Apostles reason Eph. 4.4 perswading the Ephesians to keep the Unity of faith because there is one Lord. This shall bee done if all of us who profess Christ could learn to deny our selves to follow his will not our own or other commanders yea to follow his blessed example learning daily of him to bee humble and meek patient and tender-hearted one to another forbearing and forgiving offenders hard to exasperate and easy to bee intreated And these things should wee rather strive in that according to the Apostles precept the same minde might bee in us which was in Jesus Christ Phil. 2.5 Vers 37 Yee know the word which came through all Judea beginning in Galilee after the Baptism which John Preached THE holy Apostle here beginneth the confirmation of that which hee had formerly spoken that Christ is the Messias and Lord of all to prove which hee beginneth orderly with the History of his life and death of which even these Gentiles could not bee ignorant therefore hee saith yee know the word Where if it be asked how they should come to know the doctrin of the Gospel seeing the Apostles were not yet turned to the Gentiles and Peter was now sent extraordinarily to teach them concerning Christ which had been in vain if they knew the word before we must observe Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by the word here is not meant the word preached as in the former verse but as the word is different in the original so also is the signification and betokeneth rather a thing done than a word uttered as Matth. 18.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word or fact be confirmed Luke 2.15 Let us goo to Bethlem and see this word that is this thing which the Lord hath brought to passe The plain sence then is this Yee know the word that is the same of Christ which was quickly dispersed through all Judea in the mouthes of common men Which fame that they should not mistake him or themselves he describeth 1 By the place where it arose beginning in Galilee 2 By the time when it most prevailed after the Baptism which John preached which some expound thus After the Baptism of Christ by
may be said to bee anointed two ways Christus totus vel Christus mysticus either properly in his own person as considered in himself or figuratively by the use of Scripture as he is the head of his Church which joyned unto him maketh up whole Christ as the Fathers call him or mystical Christ Thus Paul calleth Christ united with the Church by the name of Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 we must therefore help on the perfection of this latter seeing he is already perfect in the former Every Christian must be a King To this purpose every man must become a King for so he is if hee partake of Christs anointing in being ever in the field in combate against sin in taking up arms against Satans hellish power in getting daily dominion over his own rebellious flesh and wicked lusts For if thou beest a Christian thou hast ten thousand rebels to encounter and as many strong temptations and lusts which thou must stand out to victory and here faith must be thy victory which grace is attained by this anointing But oh the misery of infinite numbers every where meer Bond-men and captive Caytiffs to Satans suggestions and held down under the power and tyranny of their own lusts in whom there is no resistance no fight never a stroak they strike against their own sins the strong man is gone away with all very cowards against the Devil nay couragious Champions for him and yet will be called Christians no no there is never a drop of Christian bloud in such this anointing as yet never came near them here is no spirit no power but such as ruleth in the world And a Priest Rom. 6 13 Again thou that wilt be a Christian must be a Priest to offer up thy self soul and body an acceptable sacrifice of sweet smell unto the Lord to offer up thy prayers and praises the calves of thy lips these are the odours of the Saints Revel 5.8 to offer up thy sins to bee sacrificed and slain by the knife and sword of the Spirit in the Ministery of the word to offer the sacrifices of almes and mercy with which sacrifices God is well pleased to offer the sacrifice of a broken and contrite heart which the Lord despiseth not and lastly to offer if need require thy life and deerest bloud for Christ and his profession But how many titular Christians be there who indeed are no better than Belzebubs Priests who offer their souls their bodies their sences themselves wholly to the service of the Devil in sin and unrighteousnesse for prayer and praise they curse swear and blaspheme most remorselesly fierce and hard-hearted in themselves and unto others and so farre from this anoynting as many of the Heathens who never heard of Christ would be ashamed of them and wonder what kind of God that Christ should bee by whom they will bee called And a Prophet Lastly thou must be a Prophet thou must have the knowledge of God in thy self thou must hold it out and impart it unto others within thy family and without for to this thou art anoynted as also to hold out Christ in a constant profession which tyeth every man to know and acknowledge the truth of God that he may be able to propagate it to others but especially Ministers Magistrates Parents and Masters whose special calling besides the general fastneth this duty upon them These are the chief things to which others might be added wherein every Christian ought to testifie himself anoynted by Christs anoynting that he communicateth as well in his graces as in his name and that he hath received some good measure of that oyl of grace which was poured out upon him without measure for as in the head the God-head dwelleth bodily so in every member 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though not the God-head it self yet a Divine nature is apparent 2 Pet. 1.4 Now this godly nature is nothing else but those excellent renewed qualities and precious gifts which the Holy Ghost bestoweth upon the regenerate by means of this anoynting and is opposed to natural lust and corruption in the same verse Who went about doing good Now we come to Christs execution of his Office according to his former calling and furnishing For no sooner receiveth he gifts and calling from his Father but he manifesteth and putteth forth the same in most painful preaching and most powerful working of Miracles which hee did not for a brunt or by starts and fits but he went aboue doing good By which words is noted his diligence in absolving and finishing his course within his vocation and calling not seeking herein himself nor the praise or applause of men nor the Kingdoms of this world but denying himself and glory spent his whole life in doing good unto others suffering himself to bee subdued under a most shameful and cursed death that hee might bring others to life who were as yet his enemies and lying in the shadow of death Wherein he propounded himself a worthy pattern and example of imitation unto all such as have received gifts Note and calling unto any office in Church or Common-wealth who are not to hide in a Napkin those talents but bring them forth and traffick with them and that not for their private as seeking themselves but for the common good and not for a start or brunt but thus to finish their course holding out in well-doing unto the end Thus if we shall doe we shall be conformable unto Jesus Christ acceptable to God our Father profitable to our brethren here on earth and shall treasure to our selves an excellent weight of glory in heaven But how many bee there who having received many talents and charge to traffick with them bury their gifts and forget their charge against whom the fearful sentence is not only passed but half executed already his talent is taken from the sloathful servant there now remaineth nothing but the binding of him and casting him into hell And would this were not too true not in many Ministers only but even in numbers of private Christians who have had both gifts and calling to teach and pray in their families but have wilfully lost them for want of the careful use of them Now more specially this going about of Christ doing good standeth in two things The former in curing the deadly diseases of mens souls by most holy and saving doctrin revealing his Fathers whole will and teaching the things of the Kingdom not coldly as the Scribes but in most powerful manner so as his very enemies were forced to say Never man spake as this man doth The latter in curing the bodies of men also by most powerful Miracles one kind whereof which was most eminent namely the healing of Demoniaks is put for all the rest in the words following by both which means he shewed himself a merciful Saviour and the chief Physician both of soul and body and in one word the very healing God Of both which
God having in Justice put them under his power Now although Christ did most powerfully spoyl Satan of his dominion which he had in the souls of men this being the of his power but possessed and disposed by him and ruled at his will and pleasure For First who would think him possessed that can fall down on his knees make a solemn profession and confession of Jesus Christ that he is the Son of God and the most high Mark 5.7 and make loud prayers unto him as acknowledging him to be the Lord of glory and yet all these are the speeches and behaviours of a man possessed not with one or two but with a Legion of Devils Luke 8.28 What doe the Devils honour Christ who fear nothing more than that he should be honoured and hate nothing so much as he No but all this confession and worship was by constraint partly because they knew him a Prince and a Judge whose power they could not resist and partly they flatter him to obtain more gentle entreaty at his hands than they deserved so many a man professeth Christ but you shall observe at least he may himself that many foul spirits breath in him for although hee know Christ as the Devils did yet he obeyeth him not he would fain resist him if he were strong enough to make his part good against him which because he cannot doe he will give him fair words and call him Lord and Master he will pray to him in sickness or distress but it is but to get out of his hands and keep his wonted hold still If the power of Christs word come near him he can begin to accuse Christ and Christian profession of unpeaceableness and tormenting him before the time for what time would please these that Christ should come unto them he can ask Christ and his Ministers what they have to doe with him and Christ shall be blamed because he cannot be at peace for him if he would let him alone all should be well and quiet but the Ministery and Discipline are intollerable let Christ preach and he will preach him too so it be such a Gospel as bringeth no repentance or amendment of life to himself but he may remain where he was even in the Graves already lodged with death When hee cannot doe the greater mischief that he would he would doe the lesser if hee can if he cannot hinder the Ministery he can deprave it wherein as in all the rest he shews himself at the command of that wicked spirit who when he could no longer torment the man would drown the swine Secondly although the Devil might be forced through the power of Christ to acknowledge him the holy one of God so as themselves might continue Devils still yet who would think him guided by any other than a good Spirit of God that should extol the servants of Christ their persons their Ministery their doctrin for would any conceive that the Father of Lyes would praise the truth and yet mark what a large testimony the Devil himself in the Maid gave of Paul and Silas These men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation and this she did many days A t s 16.17 Why did not the Devil know that they were the greatest enemies he had upon earth Yes he did but he must sometimes transform himself into an Angel of Light he must colour all his Lyes with some truth which is undeniable hee can lay all his falshoods upon appearance of truth as his eldest Son Mahomet enlarged the praises of Christ and his Disciples to overthrow Christian religion withall he hath his fetch to make men beleeve there is an agreement between Christ and his Apostles and himself or that they needed his testimony who therefore put him to silence and would receive no commendation from him but for praises returned sharp rebukes Even so many men can praise good men and Ministers before their faces whom they know to bee deadly enemies to their vices not for love of their vertues but lest they should use them and can call them honest men to try if by that they can hinder them from doing the duty of honest men as the Devils called Paul and Silas the Servants of God lest they should shew themselves so by dispossessing them Besides they would seem herein to bee better than they are and therefore will honour the Gospel and bringers with their mouths whereas in their hearts they cannot abide that the doctrin of it should bee in sincerity either published or practised the name of Christianity and of the Gospel pleaseth them well enough so as the power and fruit of it come not neer them But as the Devil had no sooner praised the Servants of God but presently hee changed his coppy and never left persecuting them till hee had cast them into prison got them soundly beaten set fast in the stocks and after sent out of the City even so many who now commend the person and doctrin of the Servants of God presently shewing what spirit guideth them can accuse them to bee mutinous and seditious troublers of their City and State and raise up the whole City and stir up the wrath of the Magistrates against them that so under pretence of the W●rd or Law or Peace or Order the true Ministers of God shall bee wrongfully condemned and cast out Thirdly Who would think that hee could be haunted with a wicked spirit that can see his sin 1 Sam. 24.17 18. confess it with tears and indignation against himself openly justify the righteousness of Gods children and yet in the example of Saul wee see that a soul possessed of Satan may do all this For as it is in bodily possession though the Devils desire is incessantly to hurt and vex the poor creatures yet by Gods over-ruling power hee is forced to give them some respite and though hardly yet sometimes departeth from them and not alwaies but sometimes casts them into the fire and sometimes into the water Luk. 9. So is it in spiritual possession the Lord for the common good bridleth often the rage of the Devil in his instruments that they cannot alwaies exercise it as they would but they have their fits sometimes that is some strong lusts which Satan watcheth and putteth himself into as Judas his Covetousness invited the Devil to enter into him and also sometimes again they have their good moods and seem to bee come to themselves but long stay they not here but in a moment are changed and cast into their fits again Thus in a good mood Saul could confess his wickedness and Davids innocency and lift up his voice and weep and David was now his good Son and who but hee but presently the good spirit went and the evil spirit came upon him and hee became more tyrannous and furious than ever before even so some there are who seem to have remorse of conscience for sin they will confess their
they doe whence have they being so simple and illiterate persons their skill but from the Devil or Diabolical tradition And who made the Devil thy Physician who if he should minister nothing but Natural things thou mightest not accept them from him 3 This remedy is worse and more desperate than the disease because Gods curse followeth it who in his Law hath commanded that whosoever goe a whoring after such should be stoned with stones and if any turn after such he will set his face against them to cut them off Levit. 20.6 And according to this threatning he hath executed visible Judgements against it even against Kings themselves who think themselves most free to doe their pleasure as 1 Chronicles 10.13 14. Saul dyed for his transgression that hee committed against the Lord even against the word of the Lord which hee kept not and in that he sought and asked counsel of a familiar spirit therefore the Lord slew him and turned the Kingdome to David Asa never came oft his bed for this sin 2 King 1.16 and more not only Kings but whole Nations were cast out before his people for this sin and not only they but even his own people were cast among the Nations when they followed these waies of theirs Isa 2.6 Better w●●t therefore to dye of a disease in the hand than be recovered by the hand of ●●e Devil 4 Mark how the Devil hath circumvented such a party 1 He hath robbed him of his faith in God because he maketh haste 2 Of his fealty and subjection to God because he either denieth Gods government or the equity of it 3 He hath got in him what he desired to win from Christ but could not namely to take up another means of safety than God had appointed 4 He having thus set up himself for such a mans God hee maketh him commit execrable Idolatry in ascribing to the Devil himself that which is proper to God and Jesus Christ First a power of healing which the Devil hath not further than God permitteth him to the just blinding of the sinner Secondly a faith and perswasion in that power that it shall be available to him which is nothing else but a secret confederacy and league with the Devil without which nothing can be done This the Lord implyeth in the bounding of his Laws as Lev. 19.31 Ye shall not seek c. for I am your Lord as if he had said you ought to depend upon me and not upon the enemy of Mankind Levit. 20.6 Yee shall not goe a whoring but be holy as if he had said have nothing to doe with such an impure spirit if you would bee an holy people Why God permitteth a power of curing to them of whom we may not seek cure Quest But if God would not have them to help why doth hee give them such power of curing of fore-telling things to come and revealing hidden things Ans 1. The power of curing is from Satan God justly permitting him to the further deluding of unbeleevers 2 Neither doth the Wizzard fore-tell things to come but the Devil by them such things as he by the quickness of his spiritual nature seeth present in the causes or which God permitteth himself to be the worker of and casie it is for him to discover the Thief which himself tempted to steal 3 The Lord permitteth all this not that we should trust him or use him but to try whether we will depart from our God the case here is the same with that of the false Prophet who must not bee beleeved when hee fore-telleth things that come to pass Why then may some say doth God suffer them to fore-tell such things The text answereth The Lord thy God tempteth thee whether thou wilt cleave unto him or no Deut. 13.3 Let all such persons as have sought to them consider betime how they have broken Covenant with God betaken themselves to Satans help broken prison to their greater punishment and made stones bread let these bewayl the sin and renounce it never was Saul in so fearful a case as when he run unto the Witch by his own confession God was departed from him Let no man lessen this sin or dare to defend such limbs of the Devil under titles of good wise or cunning persons seeing these cursed blessers draw Towns and Countries after them into their own damnation Let none think it a slight matter to counsel others to this sin and remember that by the Law of God they ought to dye that seek to thrust people from their God and drive them to the Devil a farre greater sin is this than that which the Lord maketh capital Fourthly here we have also strong consolation The comfort of the Church is that Christ is stronger than all that Christ is stronger than the Devil 1 Joh. 4.4 stronger is he that is in us than he that is in the world look how strong the Father is so strong is the Son Joh. 10.29 and therefore his strength is as farre above Satans as the Creators is above the Creatures Hence we are sure none can take us out of his hands not the World Be of good comfort I have overcome the world not the Devil The Prince of this world is cast out not sin not death both which are cast into the Lake not temptation nor persecution for by Christ we are more than conquerours All these may molest us but cannot hurt us they may make warre upon us but we may pluck up our hearts seeing we fight against conquered enemies and are through his strength that hath loved us sure of victory before wee strike a blow Let not us forget the consolation in that although our enemies may nible at our heels yet the seed of the Woman hath broken their heads for us Vers 39. And we are witnesses of all things which he did in the Land of Judea and in Jerusalem whom they slew hanging him on a tree THe Apostle having witnessed of such facts of Christ as testified him the great Prophet of his Church affirmeth in these words of himself and the rest of the Apostles that they were witnesses not only of the things formerly u●●●ed but of all things else not only which Christ did in Judea and Jerusalem but also which hee suffered among them and so descendeth to lay down his Priestly Office in this verse and his Kingly Office in the next That the Apostles were such witnesses of all things which Christ did and suffered in Judea and Jerusalem will appear to him that considereth that it was one of Christs first actions in his Offices after his Baptism to call his Disciples who presently left all and followed him to the end that they might be oculate witnesses of his mighty works of his life of his death and resurrection and that they may be ear-witnesses of all the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth to which purpose he took them after a sort into his Family that by their
governour accuse him with matter of death falsly witnesse it against him moved the people to ask Barabbas and cry Crucify him they are content that his blood bee upon them and their children as it is at this day and this is that which Pilate in his own defence said unto Christ Joh. 18.35 Am I a Jew Thine own Country-men and High Priests delivered thee unto mee as if hee had said I bear thee no hatred or displeasure I am no Jew who best know what thou hast done being a Jew also but thine own nation deeply accuse thee unto mee Whence may be noted sundry instructions First That the lower degrees of murther such as are envy hatred Lowest degrees of Murther condemned and uncharitable proceedings are esteemed murther it self before God for the Jews slew Christ in that they delivered him of envy to the Romans to bee slain The Law of God which condemneth the least injury against the person of our Neighbour doth it in these words Thou shalt not kill The Apostle John speaketh of a mental murther He that hateth his brother is a man-slayer 1 Joh. 3.15 hee hath secretly in his heart slain him already And yet how openly do men testify the malice of their hearts so far as they dare by cursed reviling and murthering speeches that they may shew themselves Murtherers with witness but alas little know they what they do for if the least and lowest degrees of provoking and rancorous speeches as to call the brother fool deserve to be punished with Hell fire Matth. 5.22 what deserve those venemous and spightful speeches which numbers without all conscience accustome their Tongues unto let such consider that the Apostle rangeth Raylers in the rank with Adulterers Buggerers and such beastly persons as shal● never enter into the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.20 Others there are even a generation of rough Ishmaels men of a word and a blow whose fists are against every man who instead of seeking peace and pursuing it devise how to quarrel and contend they care not with whom and this is counted courage and man-hood but is indeed a satanical practice and an high degree of Murther which for the most part endeth in the highest to the destruction of others with themselves Secondly Note that it is no less sin to sin by instruments As great a sin to sin by others as by our selves than by our own hands the Jews were as deep if not deeper in this sin as the Romans Calaphas the High Priest was as far in it as Pilate that read the sentence the one gave wicked Counsel the other followed it the receiver partaketh as deep in the sin and punishment as the Theef himself Ahab murthered not Naboth but because hee consented to Jezabel giveth her his ring and concealeth her wicked intent therefore the Lord asketh him if hee had killed and gotten possession 1 King 21.9 as for Jezabel there was another reckoning for her behind David slew not Vriah with his own hands but writing to Joab to put him in the forlorn hope and recoyle back from him that hee might bee smitten by the enemy and dye therefore the Lord asked him wherefore hast thou killed Vriah with the sword 2 Sam. 11.15 12.9 Communication in sin ●undry waies This teacheth us to take heed of setting sinners a work or any way of casting in our lot with them either by 1 Commanding 2 Counselling 3 Countenancing 4 Provoking 5 Flattering 6 Silence 7 Winking at as Ely 8 Defending any sin or sinner for accessories are before God as principals which is the rather to bee considered of because men willingly deceive themselves in this behalf Many Masters will not work themselves upon the Sabbath day but their servants must for them in whom they sin as heinously as if they set their own hands to work for they ought by Gods Law to see that their servants nay their beasts rest on the Sabbath as well as themselves Many Parents may hence also see their great sin who themselves perhaps will not Swear Lye Drink to drunkenness but all these and worse they do in their children over whom they watch not whom they correct not not use good means to reclaim them Many men will not themselves revile or persecute Gods children but can well enough bear it in others without much offence to themselves or defence of the other even when they have a calling often to do it Paul so soon as hee was converted accused himself for keeping the garments of those that stoned Stephen And the truth of grace would make them listen to the Counsel which Pilates wife gave her Husband have nothing to do with that just m●● have no hand no tongue no ear no foot to stir against Christ in his members if thou doest not mean one day dearly to buy it Horrible ingratitude of the Jews noted Thirdly Note The extream wickedness and unthankfulnesse of the Jews whose sin is here aggravated in that they persecute to the death a just and innocent man one that was sent unto them by God that came unto them as unto his own among whom hee had performed all his great works had given sight to their blind healed their sick dis-possessed their Devils raised their dead and all this most freely and cheerfully and yet such was their ingratitude that when hee came to his own his own received him not this chief corner-stone was refused of the builders this chief shepheard was smitten even in the house of his friends Adde hereunto that they persecute such a worthy and the Lord of all with such indignity and despight as they not onely reckoned him among sinners but preferred a Murtherer before the just and holy one of God and wherefore what had the righteous man done which of them could accuse him of sin or might not hee have taken his enemies book up●● his shoulder and have bound it as a crown unto him Job 31.35 yes verily The Apostle hath told us in the words before what Christ had done hee had gone about and spent all his life in doing good unto the Jews but they returned him evil for good to the grief of his soul and therefore as David lamenteth the death of Abner How dyed Abner his hands were not bound nor his feet chained but as a man falleth before wicked men so did hee fall 2 Sam. 3.35 that is Abner was a valiant and worthy man and so would have acquitted himself if hee could have met his enemy face to face and had not been wickedly and trecherously slain by Joab even so Christ continued a worthy person although according to the Counsel of God hee fell before wicked men through malice and envy and as David amplified both the sin and the punishment of such a wretch as so cowardly slew Abner when hee said know yee not that this day a great Prince is fallen in Israel even so the sin of the Jews was hereby heightned that a great Prince fell
in Jerusalem and the severity of Gods judgement lyeth heavily upon them till this day in that both a mighty God and innocent man was with all extremity of rage and fury pursued even unto the death Fourthly note in these Jews The malice of the wicked against Christ and his members is never without matter to work upon what an imbred malice there is in wicked men against Christ and his Members for it is never without matter to work upon if it cannot accuse justly of evil it can unjustly condemn for doing good this Christ sheweth Joh. 10.32 Many good works have I done for which of them do yee stone mee They answer him no but they stone him for Blasphemy so something shall bee pretended as Blasphemy Treason Mutiny faction or some such thing and a form of Law shall bee followed nothing in the world is more easy than to finde out a Law to put Christ to death by for that is the conclusion of all wicked Laws Christ and his members must dye by them but whatsoever bee pretended against them it maketh much for the glory of God the patience of his Saints and the just overthrow of his enemies that whatsoever the godly suffer at the hands of the wicked it is for most part causles in themselves and consequently unjust in the other Let such as professe the Lord Jesus take notice hereof and content themselves if they finde return of evil for good it was their Lords case and the servant can look for no better entertainment than his Lord findeth Let us not bee weary of well-doing although it breed us hatred of the World as knowing that the same spirit of malice is gone out into the world and doth breath in numbers that follow the way of Cain who slew his brother because his works were good as all those titles of reproach cast upon Gods Children lowdly convince as that they are Church-gadders holy Brethren too nice and precise persons the which and the like tearms if a man sing but a Psalm in his Family hee cannot avoid well needs must Christians suffer let their care bee to suffer onely as Christians and for well-doing for it is no shame to suffer as a Christian 1 Pet. 3.17 and seeing it is the will of God that they must suffer it is better saith the Apostle to suffer for well-doing than as evil doers 1 Pet. 4.16 many receiving indignities from men will say if I had deserved such and such things it would never have grieved mee but Christians must be in a contrary note it would grieve mee if I had deserved such things as I suffer at the hands of men but I rejoyce in that I have not deserved them The third point is the manner and kinde of Christs death in these words and hanged him on a Tree Quest Why was Christ rather to dye on the Cross than by any other kinde of death Answ Some say that because mankind was foyled in the first Adam Why Christ was rather to dye on the Cross then by any other death by means of a Tree it was meet it should bee restored by the second Adam upon a tree which although it be but inconsequent yet this the Scripture affirmeth that Christ on the Cross as upon a glorious Chariot of Triumph rescued his Church foyled the Devil spoiled Principalities and Powers and made an absolute conquest against all the enemies of mans salvation Col. 2.14 and that it was meet hee should thus do by this manner of death wee want not stronger reasons out of the Scriptures As First This was the counsel of God Act. 2.23 for the Jews did nothing against him but by the determinate counsel and fore-knowledge of God which Counsel of God over-ruled the matter and brought it to this pass strangely for the High Priests had accused Christ with blasphemy had produced witnesses against him in that cause yea had his own confession that hee was the Son of God which they took for blasphemy yet for this could they not put him to this kinde of death seeing the blasphemer by the Law of God must bee stoned not crucified and so had Christ been if the power of death had been in the hands of the Jews as not long before it was but the providence of God over-ruleth the matter so as hee must bee brought before the Romane Governour and a new action of treasonable affecting the Kingdome bee laid against him whence it was that Pilate asked if hee were the King of the Jewe and hee answered yea upon which answer hee was condemned to the most cruel death that was in use among the Romanes for of those three kindes of death burning heading and crucifying this last was the most severe and shameful Christ reputed an arch-Traytor in his life and death to which the chief malefactors were sentenced and that Christ was executed as an Arch-traytor the inscription on the Cross containing the crime for which he was condemned plainly sheweth Jesus of Nazaret the King of the Jews that no man could look upon or read that writing but hee should presently conceive Christ a malefactor in the highest kind of treason and rebellion Secondly This kinde of death was anciently prefigured as also fore-prophesied it was prefigured by Isaac laid bound upon the wood and the other sacrifices which all were laid on the wood to bee consumed by fire by the lifting up of the shoulder of the peace offering Levit. 7.30 by the shaking of the breast of the same to and fro which as some say signifieth the spreading of our Saviours hands upon the Cross but especially by the lifting up of the brasen serpent in the wildernesse which as Christ saith shadowed his own lifting up upon the cross Joh. 3.14 Again this kind of death was also fore-prophesied Psal 22.16 they peirced or digged my hands and feet it was also foretold by himself Mat. 20.19 They shall deliver him to the Gentiles and they shall mock him and scourge him and crucify him and that it was necessary that this word of Christ should bee fulfilled see Joh. 18.32 Thirdly This kinde of death carried with it a more special infamy than any other as at this day wee count hanging a dogs death that is an infamous kinde of death because it was especially execrable by the Law which accursed every one which was hanged on a tree not that this death by any Law of nature or in it self was more accursed than burning or pressing nor by the Sword for then neither the Thief on the Cross could bee saved nor any of our fellons thus executed whereas the scripture in the one and our own experience in the other speak the contrary but it was onely accursed by the Ceremonial law of Moses so that every Malefactor of the Jews that was hanged was in the Ceremony accursed and was the type of Christ the substance of all Ceremonies who on the Cross was really and truely accursed sustaining the whole wrath
and 3 In their several offices one to another as to send and to bee sent these three are one in nature and essence one in power and will and one in the act of producing all such actions as without themselves any of them is said to perform Secondly Although here is no contrariety yet here is an order in the working or administration of the person to bee observed for the Father as the first efficient in order raiseth Christ as man by the Son as a second efficient in order and by the Holy Ghost as a third For as it is in all the matter of creation so is it in all the works of redemption they are ascribed unto the Father especially not because they agree not unto the other two persons but because hee after a peculiar manner worketh them namely by the Son and by the Holy Ghost but they not by him but from him and so neither this or any other such place where it is ascribed to the Father to raise his Son Jesus must bee conceived either as making Christ as the Son inferiour in power to his Father or as excluding his own mighty power in raising himself for they shew onely the order of the persons but make no inequality in essence or power or will or working Thirdly where the Son is said to bee raised of the Father it must not bee understood of the person of the Son but in respect of his nature assumed that is his humanity Whence observe that as the former point shewed that Christ was a true man because hee was in the state of the dead whence hee was raised so this consideration sheweth him to bee a true and glorious God and notably concludeth that which the Apostle aimeth at who would hence prove him to bee Lord of all in that by his own power hee raised himself from death and so mightily declared himself the Son of God Rom. 1.4 Ubi resurrectio non passive sed active accipitur cum sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deitatis Christs Deity cle●red by his glorious resurrection and Lord of all blessed for ever This is it which maketh him the fit object of our Faith and if hee had not expressed himself as well a true and perfect God as a true and entire man wee ought not to have beleeved in him wee beleeve not then as the Jews scoffingly say in a crucified God but in a God raising and exalting to glory by his own omnipotent power an assumed humane nature even then when it lay under the curse of all the sins that ever have or shall bee committed by the true members of the Church the which thing no power of man or Angel nor any created nature could ever turn hand unto could ever have stood under and much sess have swum out with conquest and victory neither indeed had he himself if there had remained the least sin of any the elect to have been accounted for wee need then no other sign to be given us to prove his Deity but this sign of Jonas and when the Jews demanded a sign why hee took such authority upon him hee gave them no other but sent them hither destroy this Temple and I will rear it on three daies Joh. 2.18 19 c. It was necessary that Christ should rise again reasons The third point is the raising it self wherein three points are to bee opened 1 The necessity of Christs rising 2 The manner 3 The fruit or ends of it First it was necessary that Christ should rise again in three respects 1 For the accomplishment of things fore-appointed and foretold it was from all eternity decreed and appointed by God and therefore it behoved Christ to rise from the dead the third day Luke 24.46 and it was impossible that he should be held down of death Act. 2.24 Again the Scriptures must necessarily bee fulfilled all which beat upon these two points 1 His sufferings Luk. 24.26 2 the glory that should follow 1 Pet. 1.11 And more specially all those predictions and types of his resurrection inforced this necessity Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not leave my soul in grave which our Apostle proveth cannot bee meant of David whose body saw corruption but that David spake concerning him Isa 53.10 when hee shall make his soul an offering for sin hee shall see his seed and prolong his daies Besides his own prediction of his resurrection must either bee fulfilled or hee could not have been the onely true Prophet of his Church for himself had said that the Jews should slay him and crucify him but the third day shall hee rise again Matth. 20.17 and this the High Priests and Pharisees remembred well when they came to Pilate and said Sir wee remember that this deceiver while hee was alive said within three daies I will rise command therefore that the sepulchre bee made sure c. Adde hereunto that all the predictions of his ascension of his triumph and of the last judgement depended hereupon Further the types which fore-shadowed his resurrection must not bee frustrate but answered in the truth of them as that of Jsaac bound upon the wood but yet reserved alive whom his Father received from the dead after a sort of Sampson escaping the revenge and malice of his enemies by carrying away the gates wherein hee seemed fast shut of the two goats one slain for sin the other a scape-goat shadowing Christ both slain for sin and yet escaping Levit. 16.5 of the two sparrows the one killed the other let flye and the most express of all that of Jonah which Christ himself mentioneth Matth. 12.39 and most properly applyeth to this very purpose Neither the person of Christ nor any of his Offices could suffer him to abide long under death 2 It was necessary in respect of himself whether wee consider the excellency of his person or of his office For his Person hee was by nature the eternal Son of God the Lord of Life and Glory and by no better means could hee bee discerned to bee this true and natural Son of God or the resurrection and life than by raising himself from death to life by his most glorious power Hence it was that himself a little before his death prayed in these words Father glorify thy Son Joh. 17.1 As for his Office as hee was set out by his Father to bee a perpetual Mediatour between God and the Church so was hee to bee an everlasting King of Glory Not his kingly of whose Kingdome there must bee no end Luke 1.33 according to that Prophecy of Daniel 7.27 The Kingdome of the most High is an everlasting Kingdom And according to the oath of the Lord recorded Psal 89.36 I have sworn once by my Holinesse that I will not fail David his seed shall endure for ever and his Throne as the Sun before mee hee shall bee established for evermore as the Moon and as a faithful witnesse in the Heaven Selah 2 He must be also a
Preist for ever after the order Not his Priestly Office not after the order of Levi or Aaron but of Mel●hisedeck without beginning or end of daies and this also the Lord had sworn unto his Son and could not repent that hee should bee a Priest for ever Psal 110.4 wherein the Priest-hood of Christ is advanced above all the Priests that ever were who having received their Office in time in time also ceased their office with their life but Christ his Priesthood was not limit●ed in any time but was every way eternal They were many who succeeded one another because they were not suffered to indure by death Heb. 7.23 But this man because hee endureth for ever hath no successor but an everlasting Priesthood They were made Priests after the Law of the carnal Commandement but hee after the power of the endless life vers 16. that is hee was not made a Priest by the Law namely Ceremonial which established for a time dying and vanishing things signified by the name of flesh but hee was made by the efficacy of the Word and oath of his Father which gave him endless life and perpetual duration so as neither death it self n●● the grave could hold any dominion over him when they seemed to have clasped him fast in their bands which yet were powerfull enough to have held down any or all other men in the world besides himself and the Apostle to the Hebrews giveth a double reason why he must necessarily out-live death it self The former because hee must not onely make a perpetual oblation that need no repetition but also hee must live ever to make intercession Heb. 7.25 and that perpetually without which the Apostle implyeth that he had not perfectly saved his people This is most clearly proved Rom. 8.34 It is Christ who dyed yea or rather which is risen again who is also at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for us and Heb. 9.24 Christ is entered into the very Heaven to appear now in the sight of God for us which appearance of his in Heaven with his Merits hath the force of the most effectual prayer that ever was The latter is By dying Christ offereth and by rising hee applyeth his sacrifice to the conscience of beleevers that hee may not onely make one offering for sin as those Priests did many but that hee may alwaies live to apply it as they did not and see that his people have the benefit of it not onely before God for the appeasing of his wrath but also for the purging of their consciences from dead works to serve the living God as the same Apostle noteth Heb. 9.14 and in the last place to bestow upon every beleever the spirit of faith whereby they may apprehend and apply his sacrifice to their own salvation Neither doth it any whit impeach the eternity of Christs Priest-hood because four thousand years almost of the world were passed before hee suffered for howsoever the execution of it was not all those ages after the beginning of the World yet the vertue efficacy and benefit of it reached to the first Beleever that ever was in the World Adam himself whose faith in this seed of the woman saved him Abraham also saw his day and rejoyced and the Holy Ghost feareth not to call him the Lamb slain from the beginning of the World Rev. 13.8 namely 1 In Gods Council and Decree 2 In the vertue and efficacy of his Sacrifice 3 In regard of Gods acceptation of it for Beleevers 4 In the types and shadows of it whereof the Ceremonial Law was full And much less doth that hinder it from being eternal in that after the day of judgement it shall cease when we shall stand no more in need of Priests or Saviours for howsoever the execution of this office shall then cease yet the vertue and efficacy of it shall last for ever and ever 3 Hee must bee also the perpetual Prophet of his Church Nor his Prophetical the unchangeable Doctor of his Church and the Apostle of our profession who must constantly send his Spirit to lead us into all truth raise up Teachers and hold them in his right hand for the gathering of the Saints untill wee all meet in the unity of Faith and knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man and unto the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ Eph. 4.13 so as it is cleared that no part of his Offices could admit that hee should abide under death and therefore necessarily in this second respect must rise again Thirdly It was necessary hee should rise again because hee was so to dye as that thereby hee must overcome yea and destroy death which hee had not done if hee had lain conquered of death still in the grave yea more hee must so dye as that hee must give eternal life to his sheep Joh. 10.28 and by his death merit it put and hold them in possession of it for ever all signified in the phrases following they shall never perish neither shall any take them out of my hands which could never have been accomplished it himself had perished and had been left in the hands and house of death But hence hath hee brought his Church strong consolation in that being risen from the dead hee hath fully overcome death satisfied for every sin of every Beleever and risen from under all that weight of sin and death which would have oppressed us for ever yea even himself if hee had left one of our sins that beleeve in his name unsatisfied for Out of this that hath been spoken cometh to bee answered that objection That seeing Christ by his death paid the price of sin unto God what need we more of him we can be but acquitted and discharged Ans The providing of the most soveraign Plaster is not enough to work a Cure but the apply●ng of it also Neither was it sufficient for Christ to perform the former part of his Priest-hood namely satisfaction for sin if he had not added the latter thereto which is the application of it This latter maketh the former ours and comfortable unto us And both these the Apostle affirmeth of Christ Rom. 4.25 Christ was delivered to death for our sins and is risen again for our justification where by justification is meant by a Metonimy the application of justice II. The second point propounded to bee considered of in the rising of Christ is the manner of it which will appear in three things the 1 Concerning his Soul the 2 his Body the 3 his whole Humanity standing of both First the Soul of Christ which on the Crosse was separated from the body commended into the hands of his Father and translated that same day into Paradise was by the mighty power of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost brought back into his dead body lying in the grave quickned it and made it a living body moving and sensible in it self and unto others Secondly
the dead 1 Pet. 1.3 and for this cause our Saviour was careful after his departure hence to send out his Spirit in more plentiful and abundant manner than before that hee might continually inspire his people with ardent desires after the beginnings of that life eternal unto which Christ himself is risen who then manifest themselves members of such an advanced head when this new life manifesteth it self in them Thirdly our perfect salvation is also hence fully assured us for if our Lord Jesus hath soyled all the powers of Hell Death and Darkness in himself when hee was yet dead how much more doth hee it for us his members being now alive if hee could drive back and disperse all spiritual enmitles even when hee was in Hell it self after a sort how much more now being ascended far above all moveable and aspectible Heavens Eph. 4.10 for wee must not behold the victory and triumph of Christ What or who sh●ll separate us from the love of God seeing it is Christ that is dead or rather risen from the dead as performed onely in and for himself but as the ground and pledge of the victory and conquest of all the Beleevers in the World Look upon this Son of David prostrating the great Goliah of Hell for all the Israel of God casting out the strong man not only out of his but of our possessions that he might take us up for his own use spoyling him of his kingdome and weapons for us yea and in us And hence as out of a well of consolation wee shall draw this comfort to our selves that look as the gates of Hell could not prevail against him our head no more shall they ever be able to prevail against us his members although they never so fiercely and forcibly assayl us And it spiritual enmities shall not be able to cut us short of our Salvation much less shall temporal dangers for by vertue of this resurrection also even in the most troublesome deeps when the waves of sorrows overtake one another and go over our souls when with Jonas we are ready to say We are cast from the face of the Lord Jonah 2.4 even then we have hope to rise out of such evils and because out head is above in short time comfortably to swim out Adde hereunto that death itself nor the grave shall stand between us and home for this rising of Christ is both the cause and confirmation that we shall rise again If the head bee risen so shall also the members if Christ the first fruits of them that sleep be raised so shall also the whole bulk and body of beleevers if we beleeve that Christ is risen from the dead even so them which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him 1 Thess 4.14 and if the same spirit which raised Jesus from the dead dwell in us then he that raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken our mortal bodies Rom. 8.11 for Christ hath not redeemed the soul alone from death but the body also else had this second Adam been interiour to the first if not able to save by his rising all that which was lost by the fall of the former Oh how would this meditation well digested sweeten the remembrance of death and the grave when a Christian shall consider that look how it was with Christ when his soul and body were separated yet both of them were united to the Deity which brought them together again even so I am taught by the Scriptures that when my soul and body shall bee separated yet shall neither of them be sundred from Christ my head but he will reunite them like loving friends that they may participate in his own glory How would this meditation bring the soul not only to be content but to desire to bee dissolved and bee with Christ accounting that the best of all Phil. 1.23 III. The third benefit befalling us by the resurrection of Christ i● that because Christ is risen we know it shall not only goe well with us but with all the Church of God the prosperity of which so many as would prosper must rejoyce in for hence it is that Christ calleth a Church out of the world which after a sort riseth even out ot his own grave hence is it that being ascended on high he gave gifts to men for the gathering and preserving of his Church hence is it that the Church shall alwaies have the light of the Gospel Pastors Teachers and the Ministry till we all meet to a perfect man hence is it that this Church shall bee defended from Wolves and Tyrants seeing ●one is stronger than he nor able to pluck any ot his sheep out of his hands Let the Church be pressed it shall never be suppressed Let the Kings of the earth band themselves and forces against it the Lord hath set his Son upon his holy Mountain and he shall crush them like a Potters vessel Let Hereticks and Antich●ist send armies of Locusts Jesuites and seducing vagrants to waste the Church and bereave it of the truth and light leading to life they shall only seduce such as whose names are not written in the Book of life and of the Lamb for seeing Christ is risen so long as hee who can dye no more liveth he will preserve his darling he will send out the Stars that are in his right hand for her relief who like Davids Worhies shall break through the Hosts of the enemie and bring the pure waters of the Well of Life as we are for ever thankfully to acknowledge in those worthy restorers of our religion Lastly let flouds of persecution rise and swell so as this Dove of Christ cannot find rest fo the sole of her foot one means or other Christ will use for her help for he will either send her into the Wildernesse or the earth shall help the Woman and drink in the waters that they shall not hunt her or he will provide for her one of the chambers of his providence as he did for Joash against the rage of Athaliah wherein she shall be safe till the Storm bee blown over These are the principal benefits procured us by Christs resurrection which belong not unto all but only to such as are risen with him Quest How shall we know that we are risen with Christ How to know that we are risen with Christ that they mat assuredly belong unto us Ans The Apostle setteth himself to resolve this question Col. 3.1 where he maketh the seeking of things above where Christ is and infallible mark of our rising with him for as when Christ was risen he minded not things below any more but all his course was a preparation to his ascension to which all things tended so now if thou be risen with him Heaven will be in thine eye and thine affections are ascended thither where Christ is if Christ were on earth thou mightest fix thy soul and senses here on earth and yet be a Christian
that are in it through lust whether dost thou contemn and avoid vile and graceless persons dost thou rejoyce in the fellowship with God and communion of his Saints spendest thou thy daies in the constant praise and worship of God framest thou thy life according to the Word of God the rule of all Righteousness enjoyest thou all things in God and God in all things prizest thou thy present estate above all the World and yet longest thou for the perfecting of thy happiness saying Come Lord Jesus Come quickly this is to converse in Heaven while thou art on earth and to seek the things above where Jesus Christ sitteth Which if it bee then how few have their conversation there or are risen with Christ How few are set free from the power of sin witnesseth the general reign of it every where How many mind onely earthly things how many minde them principally How do most men swim with the stream drinking in the corruptions of the World most insatiably as the fish doth water How do sinners combine themselves against God to run to all excess of riot How unpleasant and unwelcome a voice is it to call men to delight in God and his Children How heavy are they to the parts of his Worship comming unto them as if they went to some punishment How are mens Lusts become their Laws instead of the perfect Rule and Law of God every man almost living as Israel when there was no King among them How do men rest in the means of their warfare with-drawing their hearts from the author of it How few prize the life of Christianity how many scorn it in themselves and others How many wish in their hearts there were no other life to come and that they rather had good assurance of this which is present and instead of wishing and waiting tremble at the mention of Christ his comming again Yet most of these men professors of Christ all of them baptized into his name and all of them will bee reputed as good Christians as the best But all this forenamed course hath no savour or rellish of Heaven all that take it up minde nothing but earthly things and the end of it without timely repentance will be damnation Phil. 2.19 IV. The fourth general point is the time of Christs resurrection set down in the Text to bee the third day To understand which wee must know that Christ lay not in the grave three whole natural days each of them standing of twenty four hours for then hee should have lain seventy two hours and have risen also on the fourth day whereas hee lay not in the Grave above thirty nine hours and rize on the third But the Scripture useth a grace or form of speech Synechdoche whereby two parts of daies are called by the whole and three daies put for the time which passed in three several daies every day having his night belonging unto him The first day of the three saith Augustine is to bee reckoned by his latter part in which Christ was dead and buried not passing three hours of the four and twenty yet so as both the night before when the Jews day begun and the most of that day was spent in taking examining whipping misusing condemning and executing him The second day is to bee accounted wholly and perfect from the evening of the day before the Passeover to the evening of the Sabbath following standing of full four and twenty hours The third day is to bee accounted from the former part of it beginning at the evening of the Jewish Sabbath for Christ lay all night neer twelve hours in the grave and rose in the morning betime about the midst of that natural day standing of four and twenty hours And thus is Christ truely said to have risen the third day Now that Christ should rise the third day and no sooner nor later these reasons shew Why Christ would rise no sooner than the third day 1 Hee must rise the third day according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15.4 For they had foretold this to bee the particular time Hos 6.2 After two daies he will revive us and in the third day hee will raise us up namely in his own person for wee also were raised with him as wee have seen The Scriptures had also further figured this distinct time in the type of Jonas who having lain three daies and three nights in the belly of the Whale was the third day cast on the dry land as our Saviour himself while hee was yet alive expounded of himself Matth. 12.40 As Jonas was in the belly of the Whale three daies and three nights so shall the Son of Man bee three daies and three nights in the heart of the earth 2 It pleased him not to rise sooner hee would not presently come down from the Cross nor revive himself before hee was buried nor rise presently after hee was laid down as hee easily could because hee would manifest that hee was truely dead as also because hee would lead his Church into some suspence therefore hee rose not till the case seemed desperate Luke 24.21 Wee trusted that it had been hee that should have delivered Israel and as touching all these things this is the third day that they were done Again hee would no longer defer his rising Why he would no longer defer his rising 1 Lest hee should utterly have endangered the faith of the Disciples which in that short time was sore shaken as not onely the former example but the heavinesse of the Disciples themselves to beleeve the news of it and wilfulness of Thomas plainly bewraveth 2 Because upon this event and keeping touch in this very circumstance of time hee had laid all the credit of his Person Ministry Doctrin Miracles Life and Death For when they come to ask him a sign to prove himself the Messiah hee referreth them to this event after his death that when they had destroyed the Temple of his body if hee did raise it either after or before the third day or did not on that day raise it they should never take him for the Messiah And of this very circumstance Angels and men had taken notice from his own mouth Luke 24.7 when the women came to the Sepulchre to seek Christ after he was newly risen the Angels told them he was risen he was not there and further wisheth them to remember what he had said to them while he was with them that the third day he must rise again nay not only his friends but his very enemies had got this by the end and therefore came to Pilate saying Sir we remember that this Deceiver said that he would rise the third day let us take such order that the last error become not worse than the first 3 The blessed body of Christ was not to enter into the least or lowest degree of corruption and therefore he would lye no longer in the house of corruption Quest But how could his body
be preserved so long seeing Lazarus his body and our bodies in that time enter into many degrees of it Ans Christ was indeed balmed and sweetned with Odours but all this could not have preserved him if his soul and body had not now been ●aced from sin the mother of corruption Obj. But he had sin imputed unto him Ans Yea but he had overcome all that and slain it on the Crosse for had he not destroyed it himself had been destroyed by it and subdued for ever under the corruption of it In all which regards that is verified which himself being risen affirmed Luke 24.46 Thus it is written and th●● it beh●eveth Christ to suffer and to rise again from the dead the third day Other things the Evangelists observe in this circumstance as that it was the first day of the week that is the first day wherein hee had created the Heavens and the Earth and wherein he would create now a new Heaven and a new Earth and as before he had set up a marvellous frame of the world but sin●e exceedingly shaken and defaced by sin he would now restore the world again and repair the ruines of it by abolishing sin as formerly he had filled Heaven and earth with the glory of his power in Creation so would he now fill them with the glory of his power in Redemption which is a second creation Hence is it that that day is now converted into the Christian Sabbath and called the Lords Day Revel 1.10 or if you will Sunday but not as the Heathen Christ rose early and what we learn thence in honour of the Sun but as Christians in honour of the Sun of righteousnesse Again the Gospel noteth that this our glorious Son ●●s● about Sun rising early in the morning or a little before it Matth. 28.1 To shew unto us 1 The power of his God-head who could while his body was dead perform the promise which he had made alive even in the instant of which hee had spoken 2 The impotency of his enemies who although they watched him f●●l●●● him up laid an heavie stone upon him were every way cautelous to keep him d●wn till the third day was past and he not stealing away secretly in the d●●d time of the night but ●ose with noyse and warning even in the morning ye● could they no more stay him than they could the Sun from rising and running his course 3 The benefit which the world of beleevers obtain by his rising again set down by the Evangelist Luke 1.78 Through the tender mercy of our God the day-spring from an high hath visited us 79. To give light to them that s●● in darknesse and to guide our feet into the way of peace The Chronologers further observe that this was the day wherein Moses led the Israelites through the Sea wherein all the troops of Pharaoh and his Host were drowned Even to our Lord Jesus this third day led all the Israel of God out of the spiritual Aegypt of blindnesse and filthinesse but gloriously triumphed over all the bands of Satan Sin and Death all which were sunk like a stone into the bottomless pit of Hell Other observations concerning this day might be inserted out of Authors which because I see no sound ground for them out of the Scriptures I will omit them that I may now come to the lessons which out of this circumstance we may draw for our further instruction First we learn hence All the promises of God are accomplished in their du● season that all the promises of God shall be in due season accomplished whatsoever may seeme to come between them and us For seeing Christ being dead both could and did perform his promise to his Church will not hee much more being alive and in his glory doe it The Israelites had a promise of a good Land they must in the mean time suffer much oppression in Aegypt for the space of four hundred and thirty years together but the self-same night Exod. 12.41 when the term was expired they went out against the heart and yet at the entreaty of Pharaoh and his people In like sort Joseph had a Dream that the Sun and Moon and the twelve Starrs should worship him in the mean time he must be cast into the Pit and Dungeon where hee can see neither Sun Moon nor Starre many days and years passed wherein he saw nothing but the clean contrary and yet in the due season of it this dream was accomplished And the reason is because 1 God is true of his word he cannot lye nor repent and 2 He is able to fulfill whatsoever passeth from his mouth for shall any thing be hard or impossible to God or shall any power or death or the grave it self falsifie it Lean thy self then upon this truth of God hast thou a promise of outward or inward peace health wealth or any other good thing which thy heart can wish hold this promise fast in the midst of thy heart wait for the accomplishment of it it shall not fail thee so farre as thy Father seeth good for thee if it be delayed and deferred even this also shall turn to thy best Hast thou a promise of life everlasting hold it by the faith of thy soul as the aym and end of all thy faith and religion for all the miseries of this present life shall not be able to defeat thee of it Hast thou the promise of the resurrection of the body after death stick to this Article of thy faith also nothing could hinder the rising of thy head no more can let but the members shall be where the head is not the grave not fire not water not the bellies of beasts or fishes but they shall give up their dead and further the accomplishment of the word of their Creator The second observation is The L●●● denieth n t to help his children although he delay them till his own due time be come that as the Lord of life raised not his Son as soon as he was dead but he must lye in the grave two days yea and the third also till his case seemed desperate to the Disciples themselves even so may the members of Christ lye long in the graves of their misery yea so long as their case seemeth desperate and all that while the Lord not only deferreth but seemeth to deny their help and utterly to neglect them Abraham had the promise of a Son by Sarah he looked every year for him ten twenty years together nay till the thirtieth year till it was not with Sarah as with childing-women in so much as she laught when she heard it the case in nature was desperate who would have thought but that God had forgotten his promise which Abraham himself in all that time if God had not shoared up his faith might have forgotten but though long first yet at length the Lord found out a time fit enough to bring his word to passe David in like
seeing God doth not extraordinarily save men where the ordinary means are afforded or offered the neglect of this means is to despite great salvation and to make themselves unworthy of life eternal And from the evidence of truth I avouch against every soul that turneth his ear from hearing the word preached that hee despiseth the pardon of the King of Heaven hee refuseth life and salvation offered hee chooseth death and forsaketh his own mercy Joh. 10.27 hee is no sheep of Christ for then would hee hear his voice Joh. 8.47 and if hee were born of God hee would hear the words of God Secondly The object of this Ordinance or what wee must Preach Christ the matter of our preaching and that is Christ The scope of the whole Scripture is Christ and it is wholly resolved into him The Law that is a School-master to Christ for by convincing of sin and making the sinner exceeding sinful it leadeth him forth of himself to seek salvation in Christ The Gospel preacheth nothing but Christ and him crucified for sin 1 Cor. 2. Wee preach Christ the power of God and the wisdome of God Hence is called the Gospel of Jesus Christ Mark 1.1 and the word of Christ Col. 3. not onely because it is from him being God a● an ●●h●●ent cause and preached by him as the chief Teacher of his Church but also for the material cause which is Christ The Apostle Paul calleth it the word of Truth n●t onely for the truth of it but because it publisheth that eternal Truth Jesus Christ as also the word of the cross not onely because the cross ordinarily attendeth the faithful preaching and profession of it but because the matter of it is Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2. Quest What is it to preach Christ Answ It standeth in two things To preach Christ wherein it stande h 1 In plain manner to preach the docttrin of Christ concerning his Person his Natures his Offices and the execution of them from his incarnation to his ascension 2 In powerful manner so to apply this Doctrin to every hearer that every one may feel a change to follow both in his heart and life For to teach onely the History of Christ his Doctrin his Miracles his Life his Death is not the full teaching of Christ for thus the unbeleeving Jews know Christ and the Infidel Turks can easily come to this knowledge of him But to reach Christ as the truth is in Christ is to apply every particular to the heart of a sinner that hee may bee framed to conversion and repentance which is the most difficult labour of the Ministery and most to bee striven in Many Teachers who can choose hard Texts and make learned discourses and shew much dexterity of wit reading and humane literature have not thus learned Christ themselves not can after such a lively manner teach him to others And pitty it is to see that whereas so great an Apostle as Paul who wanted not Arts Tongues and humane Learning desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified among the Corinths themselves it should bee the study of many men to shew the knowledge of any thing rather than of Christ and how they may paint out themselves rather than Christ in their Preaching Is not the end of preaching to make Disciples of Christ Mat. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was it instituted to please the ear or to prick and pence the heart Let the Minister therefore strive to ransack the hearts of men with whom hee is to deal that discovering their secret things they may fall down and say God is in him indeed Let him think hee hath spoken the word of Christ when hee hath both taught him and led his hearers unto him And this will not bee done but by the plainnesse of words and evidence of the Spirit It is thought a reproach to preach a plain Sermon whereas indeed that is the best Sermon which teacheth Christ most plainly 1 By true interpretation of Scripture 2 By wholesome savory and proper Doctrin gathered thence 3 By sound application of that Doctrin for the information of mens judgements and reformation of their lives where Christ crucified is thus held out there need no wooden Images nor Pictures nor the real sacrifice of the abominable Mass to put men in mind of him 2 Hearers may hence learn to judge of themselves whether they have heard aright or no. And then have you heard well when you not onely know that which you did not before but when you beleeve more love more hope more and are more changed than before When you find our Sermons as the glass wherein you see and discern the true estate of your souls when you are cast into the form of this Doctrin when your Lusts stoop and yeeld to this Scepter of Christ without this no knowledge is saving but all our preaching and your hearing tendeth to damnation if yee know these things blessed are yee if yee do them Joh. 13.17 The Apostles commanded in special to teach the doctrin of the last judgement Reasons The third point is what is the particular Doctrin which the Apostles and wee in them are so straitly enjoyned to preach and that is the Article of Christs comming again to judge the quick and the dead And surely it is not without reason that our Saviour should wish them to insist in this doctrin above others 1 Because this being the last work of Christ remaining to be done after his ascension it could not be so easily beleeved as those things which were ●●re●●y done and accomplished being still in fresh memory and so much the less deniable by how much they were still fixed even in the sences of all those who were eye-witnesses of the same And therefore hee would have his Apostles careful to help the weakness of mens faith in the expectation of his return to judgement by much and often beating upon it as a point that needeth more instance and perswasion than such as being past and so sensibly confirmed by many hundreds and thousands as they were are far more easily apprehended and beleeved 2 The Scriptures teach that the remembrance of this judgement to come is a notable means to quicken the godly in their duty to work in them a reverent fear and shake out security which breedeth hardness of heart therefore did the Apostle Paul considering the terrors of the Lord 2 Cor. 5.11 provoke both himself and others unto their Duty and no marvail seeing the children of God have even at the consideration of more particular judgements been stricken with the fear of the Almighty The Prophet Habakkuk when hee heard but of judgements to come saith That his belly trembled his lips shook and rottennesse entered into his bones Habak 3.16 And David being a noble King hath these words my flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgements Psal 119.120 A special example whereof wee have in that famous
that this was a convincing argument if he could perswade his hearers that hee did deliver nothing but prophetical Doctrine for all men Jews and Gentiles were easily perswaded that Moses and the Prophets spake directly from God yea and the most blinded and wilful Jews at this day profess that if wee can prove Christ the Messiah from Moses and the Prophets they will beleeve in him so as in great wisdome did the Apostle adde this testimony to all the former knowing that that is the onely sound ground of teaching when men can bee perswaded that what they hear is uttered from the mouth of God as by this testimony his hearers were Now in the verse we have three thing to consider of 1 The generality of this testimony That all the Prophets bear witnesse unto him 2 The scope and end of their witness that men might beleeve in his Name 3 The fruit of this beleef that beleevers might receive remission of sin A proof that all the Prophets witness unto Christ For the first wee will by a brief induction make it appear that all the Prophets bare witness unto Christ and then gather some observations from it To begin with Moses who by Christ his own confession writ of him Joh. 5.46 In Genesis the first thing after the creation and fall is the main promise that the seed of the woman should break the Serpents head Exodus setteth out Christ our Passeover Leviticus in all those sacrifices pointeth out Christ our Sacrifice Numbers setteth before our eyes Christ our brasen Serpent lifted up upon the Cross Deuteronomy describeth Christ our chief Prophet whom whosoever will not hear he must dye the death Deut. 8.18 19. Act. 3.21 Joshuah beareth his name and most lively resembleth him in slaying the enemies of Gods people and bringing them into the promised land The Judges were all Saviours and types of him The book of Ruth sheweth he family whence hee sprung Samuel Kings and Chronicles his Genealogy and the very persons of whom hee descended especially David and Solomon both eminent types of him Ezrah and Nehemiah built the second Temple into which hee was to enter and so to become the glory of it as both Haggai and Malachy foretold Job knew that his Redeemer lived and that he should see him at last on the earth David in the Psalms acknowledged that the stone which the builders refused was become the chief stone of the corner and expresseth the peircing of his hands and feet Solomon in the Proverbs describeth his wisdome and eternity In the Canticles his contract and espousals with the Church Isay is called the Evangelical Prophet than whom no Evangelist could more lively express his Person his Doctrin his Life Death Burial Resurrection and Ascension that hee rather seemed to write an History of something past than a Prophecy of things to come Jeremy plainly stileth him the Lord of Righteousnesse Jer. 23. Ezekiel in all his dark shadows figureth out the government of Christ from point to point Daniel reckoneth the very year and time when the Messiah shall be slain at the end of whose seventy weeks Christ was put to death The small Prophets testify of him also with as joint consent 1 Malachy mentioneth with him his forerunner John Baptist 2 Micha describeth the place of his birth Micah 5.2 And thou Bethlem of Ephrata art little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall hee come forth that shall be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from the beginning and from everlasting 3 Zachary nameth the place of his education which was Nazaret Zach. 6.12 There must hee grow that must build the Temple of the Lord. 4 Haggai prophecyeth of his comming into his Temple and purging it 5 Nahum wisheth Judah to behold on the mountains the feet of him that declareth and publisheth peace Nahum 1.15 which tydings none can bring but through Jesus Christ the prince of peace 6 Obadiah promiseth to Judah and Jerusalem such Saviours as should advance and set up the Kingdome of the Messiah Obad. v. 21. and so the Kingdome shall bee the Lords that is Christs who shall reign in his Church for ever and of whose Kingdome there shall bee no end 7 Jonas in his own person preached his Death Burial and Resurrection in that hee was swallowed of the Whale and lay three daies in the belly of it and in the third day was cast alive on dry Land 8 Hosea recordeth his triumph and victory over death Hos 13.14 O death I will bee thy death O Grave I will bee thy destruction 9 Habakkuk the sending out of his blessed Gospel into all the World by his Apostles so as all the earth should bee filled with the knowledge of God as the Waters cover the Sea 10 Joel foretelleth of his ascension and the pouring out of his Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 11 Amos of the calling of the Gentiles a fruit of that ascension which hee calleth the ●●sing of the Tabernacle of David Amos 9.11 as James notably applyeth it Act. 15.16 12 Zephany shadoweth his second coming to judgement and sheweth what a fearful and terrible day it shall bee to all the wicked of the earth Thus have wee shortly seen all the Prophets witnessing unto the doctrine taught in this Sermon by our holy Apostle And that the chief aim and drift of all these Master builders was to lay this the main foundation of all our Religion that Jesus Christ the Son of Mary was the Son of God the true Messias the Lord of all and the onely Saviour and Redeemer of the World First note hence Consent of the Church to any doctrin to be received with these cautions what is the true consent which all Teachers must aim at in the delivery of any Doctrin unto the people of God namely the consent of the Prophets and Apostles it forceth not a Doctrin to bee Orthodox or Ancient for a man to say all the Fathers are of this mind which is the Popish cry for all their Heresies but to this Doctrin give all the Prophets and all the Apostles witnesse and therefore it is sound and perswasive Yet wee refuse not but challenge to the Doctrin which wee teach the consent of the ancient Church but with these cautions 1 With the Primitive and Apostolical Churches which as they were most ancient so were they the purest 2 With the Churches which were after them five or six hundred years so far forth as they consented in doctrin and discipline with the former for many Popish errors are ancient and the Apostle telleth us that Antichrist begun to work in a mystery even in their daies And some of the Fathers were carried into some superstitions and errors and so not espying the mystery helped up Antichrist whom they intended to hold down 3 The Holy Ghost hath revealed every Doctrin necessary to salvation more holily more clearly and more eloquently than all the Fathers put together who if they had
any true wisdome had it from the Scriptures to which wee must still hold our selves both as the ground as also the judge of consent 4 If any Father or Fathers shall by a common error by word or writing condemn any point of our doctrin without the authority of the Scriptures we will willingly dissent neither do wee give credence to any Doctrin because the Fathers have taught it but because that which they teach is founded in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 5 Wee cannot hold consent to bee a note of the true Church unless it be in the true doctrin and therefore wee justly blame sundry of the learned Papists who make unity a note of the Church but make no mention of verity at all for the strong man may hold all at peace and unity whilest Paul and Barnabas having the truth may bee at oddes between themselves On which conditions as wee are able to justify our whole Religion by antiquity and consent of the most ancient Churches and Fathers so also hath it been and may bee made as clear as the light that the Doctrin of the Church of Rome wherein they dissent from us is a stranger and novelty never known to the Prophets and Apostles nor the purest Churches after them neither had it ever that which they brag of the consent of the ancient Fathers neither do they consent in it among themselves The force of consent wherein it sta●deth Secondly Note hence what is the force and work of consent of the Church in Doctrin it is not to work Faith for that is in the next words tyed to the word and witness of the Prophets and Apostles which is called the word of Faith because it is by Gods Ordinance a means to work that Faith by which it self is beleeved but to move the heart and prepare the way to Faith For it cannot bee that any spiritual grace such as faith is can bee wrought by any but super-natural means of which kind no outward ●estimony if it come backed with the voice of all the Churches in the world can bee for all this is but an humane witness simply and in it self consider●● If they say the Churches testimony is a Divine testimony I answer so far as it carrieth with it the agreement of the Scriptures and Holy Ghost speaking therein it may bee said to witnesse a Divine truth And thus in no other respect can the voice of the Church bee called a divine testimony than the preaching and writing of some other teacher in the Church who delivereth nothing but what is agreeable to the Scriptures From this ground it followeth that the doctrin of the Church of Rome is wicked and derogatory to the Glory and Majesty of the Scriptures in that they stifly after conviction avouch and maintain that the authority of the Scriptures depend upon the testimony of the Church some of them blasphemously saying that they have no more credit than Esops Fables further than the Church giveth it unto them which is to say that God must not bee beleeved for himself and as if the Kings word should have no credit or command but from his guard In reading the prophets thou must be led still nearer unto Christ 3 Hence note That in our reading of the Prophets wee must still bee led further unto Christ for as all the Scriptures so the writings of the Prophets were reserved for this purpose and set apart by God to bee the ordinary outward stay and foundation of the faith of the Church And if our Lord Jesus himself whilest hee was yet in the flesh present with his Disciples did for the confirmation of their Faith in his Doctrin Life Death and Resurrection interpret unto them the writings of the Prophets how much more need have we now in his bodily absence to read with diligence these same writings to help us forward being so wavering and staggering in our faith and the attendent graces of it And hereunto answereth that commandement Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures namely Moses and the Prophets that is do not onely procure these writings to your selves nor onely read perfunctorily but diligently and studiously search to finde out the chief scope and matter contained therein which lyeth not in the crust or shell but within in the very bowels of them and this kernel himself in the next words sheweth to bee himself and life eternal through him And why must wee thus search the Scriptures of the Prophets himself rendereth the reason the very ground of our exhortation because they testify of mee This is the natural scope of them to bring men to the acknowledgement of the persons offices and benefits of Christ Thou losest all thy labour in searching the Scriptures if thou searchest any thing but Christ if thou hast not and holdest him not in thine eye if thou givest over searching before thou hast met with him and then thou hast met with him in the Scriptures not when thou Historically knowest something of him which thou didst not know before nor when thou art able to discourse or di●pute of deep points of Divinity but when thou commest unto him as the context sheweth when by the quickening of thy faith and repentance thou layest faster hold upon him for life everlasting Alas how few searchers of the Scriptures thus search them to say nothing of them who search them not at all but cast them aside as refuse waters of whom wee may renew the woful complaint of Christ against the Jews who when hee had exhotted them to search the Scriptures presently addeth But ye will not come to me that ye might have life Joh. 5.40 The second point is The scope of all the Prophets witnesse and this is to bring men to beleeve in the name of the Son of God which is by faith to receive Christ as hee hath described and propounded himself in the Word and Promises of the Gospel For although the Apostle might sooner have said that whosoever beleeve in him yet hee useth this phrase rather of beleeving in his Name thereby secretly to refer us unto the word of the Prophets and Apostles which testify of no other name to bee saved by but onely the name of the Lord Jesus For our better clearing of this point wee will consider 1 What this saith is 2 The benefit of it 3 The marks and signs of it 4 The use First What this Faith is It is a supernatural gift whereby every beleever apprehendeth and applyeth unto himself Christ and all his merits unto salvation Faith what it is I say it is a gift nay the Scripture saith that it is the gift of God Phil. 1.29 and it is given you to beleeve as also to suffer And that it is supernatural all the commandements wee have to beleeve plainly evince for were it natural we should need no commandement to do it Further it is such a gift Opera naturalia non indigent p●aecepto as whereby wee
things are by communication the more increased for wee read not of any man that laid out his Tallent but to increase and as the light of the Sun is never a whit impaired by communicating it self to the whole world or as hee that lighteth one candle of another dimisheth not in either but increaseth the light so is it in the light of the Sun of Righteousnesse much more and in the kindling of these heavenly sparkles whose property is to diffuse themselves as fire and the further they spread the greater and brighter is the flame 3 The third fruit or effect of Faith is an undaunted confession of it Rom. 10.10 With the heart wee beleeve to justification and with the mouth we confesse to salvation For where faith is in the heart it will bee also in the mouth The spirit of Faith and the speech of Faith are undivided as 2 Cor. 4.13 And because wee have the same spirit of Faith according to that which was written I beleeved and therefore I spake even so wee beleeve and therefore also wee speak Now there bee three actions of Faith which help forward this free confession 1 It maketh a man bold in a good cause Act. 5.29 Peter being full of faith with a bold spirit told the Council that had the power of Life and Death in their hands and himself in their power wee ought rather to obey God than you 2 Faith keepeth a man in a preparedness to suffer by leading him along in the denial of himself and hereof wee have a notable example in Paul Act. 21.13 who professed how ready hee was not onely to bee bound but to dye also at Jerusalem if God called him thereunto 3 It worketh joy yea much rejoycing in the heart in the suffering for Christ and a good cause Rom. 5.3 after the Apostle had laid down the justification of faith as a ground hee saith that wee then rejoyce in tribulation and that they did so indeed is plain Act. 5.41 They departed from the Council rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for his name hence could they sing Psalm● at mid-night in the dungeon and fetters and hence could the Martyrs imbrace the fire kiss the stake and testify such joy in the flames as all men might acknowledge the truth of the speech of our Saviour Your joy shall no man take away from you no Tyrant no tormentor nor any kind of torment The fourth and last fruit or work of faith is that wheresoever sound faith is it is most diligent in preserving yea and increasing of it self The most covetous man is not more complaining nor gathering than the beleever who is ever complaining of want of Faith or of the weaknesse of it Mar. 9.24 and knowing the want of it to bee so dangerous and hurtful as without which hee wanteth Christ himself as also that the weaknesse of it depriveth him of much comfort and many goods things for a man of weak estate must needs want many rich commoditys and sweet comforts which the wealthy enjoy in abundance Therefore hee useth all good means to increase his stock as 1 Hee is much in hearing reading and meditating in the word because he knoweth Means to increase the stock of faith faith commeth by hearing and every thing is preserved and nourished by that whereof it is begotten 2 Hee is much in godly talk and Christian conference by which as the fire by the bellows so is the grace of God blown and stirred up in him 3 Because hee seeth how without prayer both his own but especially Christs his faith is as ready to fail as Peters was Luk. 22.32 hee is much in prayer and with the Father of the Childe cryeth with tears often Lord I beleeve help my unbeleef Mark 9.24 and with the Disciples Lord increase our Faith Luke 17.5 And these are the marks by which the soundness and currence of Faith as by a touchstone may bee tryed and distinguished from all that false and counterfeit Faith which is so stiring in the World and wherby most men are lamentably deceived The use of this Doctrin is 1 To stir up men to examine and by these notes to prove themselves whether they are in the Faith or no to try their faith of what kinde it is least in the end they find that they have leaned upon a staffe of reed By which examination I fear it will bee too evidently seen that these are the last daies wherein the Sonne of man shall come and scarcely find faith upon the face of the earth Sure it is that the common faith of men is neither thus 1 Founded 2 Nor qualified The most common faith of men is not thus qualified 3 Nor attended 4 Nor thus fruitful as will briefly appear in the particulars First Every man saith he hath Faith but whence had hee it it was never begotten by the Word he never cared for that that was ever as a sixt finger and superfluity unto him It was never founded in repentance nor dwelleth with Humility for most men never saw change in themselves they have loved God and beleeved in Christ ever since they can remember It was never cherished with the duties of prayer and invocation they could never pray in all their lives except after the Minister or by set forms but the spirit of prayer never dwelt there It was never conflicted with unbeleef they wonder what that should bee or that any man should not ever beleeve so as indeed here is no character of the faith of the Elect and nothing all this while but a voice and very carkase of Faith 2 Others say they beleeve and brag of a saving faith in Christ but they feed a bare fancy for they could never beleeve God for lesser things they want the faith of Gods providence even for meat and drink which is apparent in that they can use wicked and unwarrantable means for them their strong faith they brag of waiteth not for Gods provision but will shift for it self by hook and by crook it holdeth not the heart to patient bearing of the Cross but flingeth out in distempers it putteth not forth in inferiour businesses to give directions to the particular actions of life and therefore seeing this faith faileth in lesser and smaller things how can it bee sound in the greatest of all 3 Others boast of a sound faith which were it so it would lay hold upon the promise and beleeve for themselves and their seed but this it doth not for many who for themselves would rest in the providence of God upon the good and warrantable m●●●s will yet indanger themselves for their children And hence is it that many who have lived conscionably in single estate have remitted much of their care and fear in their married condition and come short of their former uprightnesse and why is this else but that they conceive not the Lord to bee all sufficient for them and theirs Gen. 17.1 4 Others there
〈◊〉 elder 〈…〉 wee can carry away the blessing and 〈◊〉 text teacheth ●s 〈…〉 of ●●ns standeth n t in the doing of any thing but in the rec●●●●ng of 〈◊〉 the hands of Christ by so many as be●eeve in his name All diligence must be given to 〈…〉 p●●d 〈◊〉 sin 〈◊〉 to our selves Vse 2. I● this so wort●y a grace of so excellent use and sw●etnesse thr●ugh the wh●le life then it standeth every man in hand 〈◊〉 lab●u● and ●ive all d●ligence to make sure unto himself the pardon of his 〈…〉 But lam●●table it is to 〈◊〉 the general care● sn●sse of men in a matt●● 〈…〉 and consequ●n●● as this is An● surely it will prov● t●● 〈…〉 the world that whereas the whole lives of men are th●ug●t too 〈◊〉 and all their ●ime t●o li●●● to be eaten up in worldly cares which br●ak their sleep their strength and often their brains yea and th●ir v●ry 〈◊〉 ●nly the last day of all and their dying-day is scarcely devoted to this 〈◊〉 of seeking remissi n of sin and the way to life everlasting See wee 〈…〉 h●w busy and ● rnest m st men are in the infin●te incumbrances of the world whilest this one thing is the only thing neglected May wee not observe how sure m●n devis● by learned counsel at their great charge to make to themselves their Deed● Leases Bonds and other instruments and assurances of the things of this life who in all their lives scarce ever dreamed of this assurance Oh how wilfully herein doe men forsake their own mercy how carelesly doe they cast out of their hands the only comfort of their life and death Whosoever therefore thou art that hast hitherto despised so great salvation that hast set light by Gods gracious invitings to repentance and that hast frowardly rejected his kindest offers of mercy now at length begin to take up shame in thy face and sorrow into thy heart in earnest accuse the security of thy soul the deadnesse of thy spirit the hardnesse of thy heart the unthankfulnesse of thy whole life say with thy self Ah my folly that have neglected my mercy so long alas how have I hated instruction how unkindly have I dealt with so loving and patient a God I see now that it is high time to look to the main businesse of my life to make up my peace with God to get my pardon sealed I will live me to the Throne of Grace I will henceforth lay hold of eternal life I see now that there is one thing necessary and that is the good part which I will chuse and which shall never bee taken from me Now we come to the second point propounded which is the last of this worthy Sermon namely what is the condition of every one that hath attained this excellent grace of remission of sins Whosoever hath attained remission of his sins is an happy man and that is to bee a blessed and happy man for such a one hath part in Christ and with him of forgivenesse of sins in which David Psal 32.1 placeth blessednesse Quest But how can this man be a blessed man seeing hee is compassed with a body of sin and death and subject unto infinite afflictions than whom no man is in this life more miserable no sort of men more perplexed inwardly with sence of sin none more outwardly disgraced for well-doing Answ There be three degrees of blessednesse 1 In this life Degrees of blessednesse when God bringeth his children into the kingdom of grace and giveth them his Son and with him their whole justification and sanctification in part 2 The second degree is in the end of this life when God brings the souls of the faithful to Heaven and their bodies to the earth safely to be kept until the last day 3 The third in and after the Day of Judgement when he bringeth both soul and body into the glory prepared for the elect Of this last which is happinesse by way of eminency the two former are certain fore-runners and hee that hath attained the first hath also assurance of the last and must needs bee a blessed man not only in time to come but even for the present whether wee respect his outward estate or inward For his outward estate Gods blessing never faileth him but affordeth him all good things and that in due season and in due measure his riches are often not great but ever precious and his little shall nourish him and make him as well liking as the water and pulse did the Jewish children in Chaldea The same providence which watcheth to supply all his good keepeth him from all evil it pitcheth the Angels round about him to guard his life let him be persecuted he is not forsaken his losses become his gain his sickness is his phisick his heart is cheared even in trouble which maketh that part of his life comfortable his soul is bound up in the bundle of life with God death shall not come before hee can bid it heartily welcome yea let violent death come it shall not be to him deadly slain he may be but not overcome victory attendeth him and blessednesse every where abideth him But all this is the least part of his blessednesse for if we look yet a little more inwardly into him we shall see the boundlesse extent of his happinesse farre more large whether we respect the spiritual misery hee hath escaped or else the spiritual good which with the pardon of his sins hee hath attained for on the one hand he hath escaped the heavie wrath of God due to sin and so is discharged of an infinite debt healed of a most deadly poyson and pardoned from a fearful sentence of eternal death and perdition ready to bee executed upon him and on the other hee hath obtained a plentiful redemption hee hath purchased the pearl received Christ with his merits and graces such as are Wisdome Faith Hope whence issue our peace and joy of heart which is Heaven before heaven for in these stand the Kingdome of God and the comfort of a good conscience which is a continual feast By all which it appeareth that hee is no small gainer that hath got his part in Gods mercy reaching to the remission of his sins Open thine eyes and see the happiness of the Saints Vse 1 Wee are here admonished to open our eyes that wee may more clearly see and grow in love with the felicity of the Saints which the most see not because 1 It is inward the glory of the Spouse is like her Head and Husbands glory shee is all glorious within 2 Because of their infirmities and frailties which wicked eyes altogether gaze upon 3 Because of their Afflictions wherewith they are continually exercised If the Tower of Siloam fall on any of them they are thenceforth greater sinners than all other men holy Job because hee was afflicted cannot avoid the note of an Hypocrite even among his own Friends and Visiters And no
marvail if the members look thus black when the Sun looketh upon them seeing their Head Christ himself was rejected because they saw and judged him to bee plagued and smitten of God Isa 53.4 But wee must look beyond all these as the Lord himself doth who in his judgement goeth beyond the out-side and pronounceth sentence according to the grace which himself worketh within Let us imitate our Lord Jesus who notwithstanding all the infirmities yea and deformities of his Church pronounceth of her that shee is all fair and no spot is in her not because there are none but because all are covered and none are reckoned and imputed unto her yea let us remember that the pure and holy Spirit of God is contented notwithstanding much blackness to take up his lodging in those hearts where hee findeth reigning sin dispossessed Now how far are they from the mind and judgement of this blessed Father Son and Spirit who have nimble eyes to spy out every infirmity of Gods Children to blaze them nay rather than they will not accuse and slander them can of themselves coin raise up and impute unto them that whereof they are most innocent Assuredly these are of neer kindred to the Devil who is the accuser of the brethren The glory of God in his children turned into shame And surely were Christ on earth again even this most innocent Lamb of God should not want accusers wherein are so many of Cains constitution who hate their brethren because their works are good and so many Sons of men who seek to turn the glory of God in his Children into shame Alas religion is at a low ebbe already and not so reckoned of as it should bee by the forwardest and yet so malitious is the Devil in his instruments as unless this smoaking flax also bee quenched wee can see nor hear of any hope or treaty of peace the beauty of Gods people goeth disgraced under titles of niceness preciseness purity holy brotherhood and the like To go ordinarily to Sermons is to bee a Sermon-munger not to swear is the next way for a man not to bee trusted and except a man bee as black and deformed as either the Devil is or can make him by Drinking Swearing Gaming Sabbath-breaking and casting off all care of Civil Honesty as well as godliness hee may sit alone well enough hee hath a great many Neighbours that care but a little for his company What can make it more evidently appear that numbers there are in this age who never knew and without Gods infinite mercy in their timely conversion are never like to know what the blessednesse of remission of sin meaneth neither in others nor yet in themselves Vse 2. Let no man bee discouraged in the pure waies of God but walk on without weariness or faintness A strong motive to hold on in well-doing seeing that whatsoever the blinde world may deem to the contrary thou who art a beleever in the name of Christ hast blessedness between thy hands for thy sins are remitted thou must go in peace And this happinesse by the grace wherein thou standest is surer than that of nature which Adam had in his innocency that was lost because it was in his own keeping this is seated in the unchangeable favour of God by whose mighty power thou shalt bee preserved to the full fruition of it Get faith in thy heart and thou shalt dea●ly behold thy happiness if all the World should set it self to make thee miserable Get faith into thy soul and thou shalt think him only happy whom God so esteemeth although it be the misery of the world to place happiness only in misery Get assurance of faith to clasp the sure promise and word of God and thou shalt possess in misery felicity in sorrow joy in trouble peace in nothing all things and in death it self life eternal An Alphabetical Table to lead the Reader more easily unto the things contained in this Exposition A. A Basement of Christ is the Christians advancement 335 A bundle of Popish blasphemies 405 Account must bee given to God of all things done by us and received of us 381 Administration of Judgement laid upon the Son for sundry reasons 375 Afflictions though lingring no sign of Gods hatred 356 Agreement of the life of the Saints upon earth with the life of the Saints in Heaven 350 All diligence must be given to make our pardon of sin sure unto our selves 414 Anointing of three sorts of persons what it signified 308 Antiquity of the Gospel and of our religion 298 Apostles peculiar witnesses of Christ and why 362 A proof by induction that all the Prophets bear witnesse unto Christ 388 Attendants and companions of faith four 396 A strong motive to hold on in wel-doing 417 B BAptisme often put for doctrin 303 Beleevers are fellow servants under one Lord. 302 Beleevers may know they have faith by four marks 395 Beleevers may and must know the pardon of their own sins 409 Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 407 Better to goe to Heaven alone than to Hell with company 411 C. CAre of Christians must bee to suffer as Christians 331 Care must be had of our receits and expences because we must bee countable for them 383 Chief duty of every Christian whilst hee is in this world 406 Children of God delayed often but not denied in their suits 355 Christ acknowledged our Lord by four practises 301 Christ already come proved 307 Christ his life not monastical 315 Christ preached to the Israelites two ways 297 Christ first preached to the children of Israel for three reasons ibid. Christ Lord of all two ways 299 Christ both a Lord and a Servant how 300 Christ is not a Jesus but to whom he is a Lord. ibid. Christ no sooner received gifts and calling but did good with them for our example 311 Christ seasonably preached after Johns Baptisme that is Johns doctrin of repentance 305 Christ proved the only Messiah because he was Jesus of Nazareth 306 Christ his Deity proved by his glorious resurrection 339 Christ by dying offereth and by rising applyeth his one only sacrifice 341 Christ went about doing good two way 311 Christ sent of his Father and came 〈◊〉 before he was sent 3●7 Christ his righteousnesse notably witnessed 328 Christ his two natures lively set out ibid. Christ reputed an arch-traytor in his life and death 332 Christ submitted to the l●west estate of death reas five 337 Christ the Lamb slain from the beginning how 341 Christ hath powerfully trodden Satan under his feet and under our feet how 323 Christ rose early in the morning and what we learn thence 354 Christ in respect of himself needeth not any witnesses and yet hee useth them 362 Christ must bee the matter of all our preaching 373 Christians must partake of Christs annointing 309 Christians must become Kings Priests and Prophets 310 Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 316 Chosen witnesses of
Christian Circumspection Heb. 12.13 Make right steps unto your feet as good runners who not onely speed themselves in the way but are wary to keep the right way which they know is the shortest and so carefully observe every step and every advantage CHAP. III. Of the next Words of the Apostle further explaining Circumspect Walking Not as unwise but as wise THe Apostle here expoundeth what he meaneth by circumspect walking namely a wise ordering of a mans self according to the rules of Christian Prudence For wisdom is two-fold either Worldly and Carnal or else Heavenly and Spiritual This distinction is the Holy Ghosts own in Jam. 3.15 17. where both of them are at large described True wisdom what it is Our Text speaketh of spiritual and heavenly wisdom which is such a gift of God as both directeth and effecteth or causeth a man to do that which is acceptable and pleasing unto God Wherein it is much distinguished from humane wisdom which is meerly contemplative knowledge but this is an active knowledge giving rules and guidance in practice and action Eccles 10.10 The excellency to direct a thing is wisdom As a Coach-man in a Coach so spiritual wisdom in the heart orders the whole motion of a Christian in all his ways They are wisest men that walk most strictly The connexion implies that those be the wisest men that walk most exactly Prov. 14.8 The wisdom of the prudent is to understand his way Deut. 4.6 Keep them and do them for this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the people Onely this is a wise people and understanding Prov. 23.19 O thou my Son hear and be wise and guide thy heart in the way CHAP. IV. Proving strict walking to be the wisest walking 1. HE that is but a little acquainted with the Scriptures shall easily observe that he who walks most strictly according to Gods word is led by Gods wisdom which makes him discern between good and evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist and so walketh at a certain by a most right and constant rule and direction so as you shall find him square and stable of good judgement and sound resolution in the things he is about He is the wisest man that followes the wisest guide But what man is he that feareth the Lord that is walketh exactly Him will the Lord teach the way that he shall chuse Psal 25.12 Whereas it is a just punishment of carelesness to wander as vagrants and unsetled persons in the way of Religion and grounds of Christianity and to be tossed and tumbled every way with the waves of inconstancy and doubtfulness in every thing for want of sound information and judgement in the wayes of God and needs must such be as wavering in their practice as in their judgement 2. He is the wisest man that being to journey takes the safest shortest cleannest and most lightsome way But so doth he that walks more strictly and circumspe●●ly he onely walks safely because he walks sincerely whereas in declining Gods ways but a little there can be nothing but fears without and terrors within and danger on every side which nothing but uprightness can fence out So who can deny but God himself hath described the rightest and so the shortest way to heaven which is the way over which he holds his own light And howsoever many aspersions and foul things be cast upon it yet this is the onely clean way of holiness and innocency that leadeth to the Holy of Holies into which no unclean persn or thing can enter 3. He is the wisest man whose words and actions being scanned most narrowly will abide the trial But thus must needs his words and actions be found that is most exact and stands most strictly to the word So David saith Then shall I not be confounded when I have respect to all thy Commandements Psal 119.6 and Job 31.35 The Almighty will witness for me though mine enemies write a Book against me Let the enemies of Grace slander reproach and traduce for a time the ways of Gods righteous servants He will make their righteousness break out as the light Psalm 37.5 time shal shew they were not so overshot as the world deemed For standing straitly to the word they may truly say with Jeremy Lord If I be deceived thou and thy word hath deceived me 4. He is the wisest man that best acquits himself in al estates but he that walks precisely according to the directions of the word shall most handsomly demean himself in all estates If God give prosperity to a wicked man it drowns him Prov. 1.32 Ease slayeth the foolish but this man useth it warily without pride or insolency 1 Cor. 7.31 he is taught to use the world weanedly as not using it If he be in adversity which sinks the sinner this man bears it without impatience or murmuring Phil. 4.12 yea he makes himself a great gainer by it Gods word fits him for every estate he can want and abound he is for peace or war for sickness or health for life or death no evil tidings can make him afraid As a wise man lace hath rule and power over his affections and is free from unruly passions 5. He is the wisest man that taketh the best course for his own preferment But so doth he that walketh most exactly 1 Tim. 6.6 Godliness is the greatest gain This man is ever in the way of preferment he stands still in the presence of God lives continually in his eye by constant honouring of him he is comming into place of great honour and great honour is comming upon him He hath wealth and riches and is still storing up as one covetous for heaven is ever encreasing in grace and glory 6. He is the wisest man that can give others the best and wisest counsel But who is so well able to give advise as he that is best acquainted with the ways of God If experienced counsel be the best who so fit as he Who hath tasted how good God is who so able as he whom God hath stored with wisdom 1 Pet. 2.3 such as hath winded him out of many troubles such as brought into his hands so rich a stock and revenue of grace and made him a pattern and example of piety and vertue to many others Such as charge strict walking of silliness and folly do it with greater folly Which if it be so then we might take occasion to reprove such as charge Gods people with simplicity and foolishness and condemn them of much madness in that they go in a way unknown uncouth and contrary to the world They cannot walk in the dirty path of sinful pleasures nor by the crooked rule of carnal policie nor make the fashion of the world the measure of their conformity Luke 13.34 but are content to walk in the straight way unto eternal life which the foolish world counts foolishness and a simple
That God is to bee loved above all and that for himself being the chief good This is the scope of the whole first Table the first and the great Commandement Mark 12.33 To love God with all the heart all the understanding all the soul and all the strength is more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices as the Scribe conf●ssed whereupon the Text infers hee answered 〈…〉 cordate discreetly wisely and that in Christs Judgement This is wisdome to give God the first place first thoughts first service chief praise and precedency for of him and through him Rom. 11.36 and from him are all things 2 An●ther chief point of spiritual wisdome in the things of God is 2 Purchase Christ above all gain to purchase Christ and Remission of sins above all things in the World The sound Christian is that wise Merchant that sells all to buy the Pearl that is Christ and his Righteousness that wise builder that lays Christ a sure foundation in his heart Hee is of the number of those Wise Virgins that will bee sure what ever they lack to furnish themselves of Oyl in their Lamps to meet their Bridegroom Wisdome will procure the best commodities and chief gain which is Christ both in life and death Phil. 1. ●1 Paul was a wise Merchant who esteemed all things as dross and dung in comparison of Christ So were the Disciples saying Master wee have left all and followed thee John 6.63 So were the Martyrs whom the world accounted simple fools in following Christ with the loss of life and all Happy is that soul and filled with sound and saving Wisdome that comes to Christ with this resolution Master thou hast the words of eternal life and whither shall I go 3. Let us prefer in our election and choise things of higher nature 3 Chuse best things first before things of inferiour for wisdome keeps a method by which it ever subordinateth lower things to higher This rule our Saviour prescribeth Matth. 6.33 First seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousness and then the things of this life First provide for heaven and then for earth By which rule of wisdome 1 All profits and pleasures must give place to piety for all is but pidling gain to godliness 2 By this rule of wisdome the special calling and trade of life must give place to the general calling which is the trade of Christianity 3 By this rule a Christian must chuse to bee rich in God and good works rather than in the world which because the Rich man in the Gospel neglected hee is called fool for his labour Luke 12.10 4 By this rule we must with David Psalm 4. more affect one glimpse of Gods favour and countenance than all Corn Wine and Oyl that is the most necessary and delightful profits in the World 5 By this rule wee must make more account of pardon of sins looked up in our breasts than of the whole treasury of a Kingdome in our chests 6 By this rule wee must esteem a grain of grace above a million of gold And 7 a poor godly man above a wicked Prince Eccles 4.13 Better is a wise Child than an old foolish King which will not be admonished 4 Fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole duty of man 4 Fear God keep his Commandements Eccles 12.13 This is to apply our hearts to Wisdome to set our hearts to keep Gods commandements and do them This is our Wisdome Deut. 4.5 Who is a wise man among you indued with knowledge Let him by good conversation shew his works in meekness of wisdome Jam. 5.13 A Wise man will attend the mouth of the King and will fear the danger of the Law So a wise Christian will walk in the Law of the Lord Psalm 119.1 and will bee sure to keep him to this rule and warrant contained in the word of God Gal. 6.16 And as a Wise man is careful to keep his Assurances and Evidences for the certainty of his Lands and earthly Livelihoods and is loath to forfeit any of them by failing in any of the conditions So it is the Wisdome of a godly man to keep the word safely in his heart which assureth him of his estate in heaven and which hee is loath to forfeit by failing in the conditions and clauses of it CHAP. VIII Containing Rules of Wisdome concerning the Inner man and first of the Mind Thoughts and Will BEing to entreat of the Rules of Wisdome concerning man and the things of man good order requireth that wee b●gin with such as concern first Ones self And secondly others They which concern a mans self respect either the inner man of the outward The inner man in five particulars 1 In his Mind 2 Thoughts 3 Will. 4 Conscience And 5 Affections Rules for the Minde 1 To inlighten it For the Minde these rules of wisdome are necessary to bee remembred 1 To furnish it with necessary profitable and humble knowledge The wise mans eyes are in his head Eccles 2.14 This is a wisdome to sobriety Rom. 12.13 where also the Apostle condemneth curiosity and conceitedness which wastes our time and brings infinite idle questions wherein men presume above that which is meet The Prophet David professed hee medled not with things too high for him Psalm 131.1 1 Cor. 2.2 And the Apostle Paul desired after his conversion to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified As for humbleness in knowledge Solomon saith The way of a Fool is right in his own eyes Prov. 1● 15 and A wise man in his own conceit is more hopeless than a Fool Prov. 26.12 16. Our rule therefore must bee to grow up in wisdome and as wee grow in knowledge so to grow in humility for the more sound knowledge a man attains the more shall hee see in himself to humble him 2 To deck 2 To deck and adorn the minde with humility holiness modesty shamefastness c. 1 Pet. 3.4 5. and Col. 3.12 As the Elect of God put o● tender mercy kindness humbleness and meekness but above all things put on love verse 14. Rules for the Thoughts The second sort of Rules concerns a mans Thoughts The general is in Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for it is slippery and deceitful more than necessary to watch and suspect it and to set time apart to check and reclaim it But for the better keeping of thy thoughts in order think on these particulars 1 Give God the first thoughts 1 Give God thy fi●st thoughts that hee may hold the chief part in thy heart and this will sweetly rell●sh th● heart and by estranging it from worldly impediments fit it and keep it in preparedness for all good occasions Psa 108.1 2 3. David prepares his heart and will awake early to praise the Lord The way to walk safely and comfortably all the day is first to reform that which is
within 2 Examine them whence they come and whither they go 2 Examine thy thoughts whence they come and whither they go and what they do in thee By which means thou shalt banish a number of idle and wandring thoughts which like roaving vagrants being worth nothing come ●ver to steal something either time or grace and so shalt thou make and keep room for better And do this betime because the first motions of sinful thoughts defile a man This rule is in 2 Cor. 10.5 to draw weapons against every strong imagination that is exalted against the knowledge of Christ 3 If thy thoughts concern the world pull them back keep them from the world 3 Pull them from the world save as much as needs must for the moderate maintaining of thy self and thine lest heavenly thoughts be drowned and hindred 1 Tim. 6.9 The reason is because our hearts being earthly do presently conceive a sweetness in earthly things and are presently distracted from the love of the Creator to the love of the creature Now spiritual wisdome requireth that wee diminish the love of the creature that wee may increase our love of the Creator But if they will run upon the world then turn the course of them a little to consider the vanity and misery of this evil world the painted vizor of the pleasures of it the uncertainty of life the deceitfulness of riches how they bee not ours what evils and incumbrances wee have received from the world what fools they have made us in treasuring on earth whose home and expectation is in heaven 4 If thy thoughts concern thy self or others thy brethren If they concern thy self or others see they be humble labour to think better of others than thy self for thou seest no such thing in them as in thy self Phil. 2.3 Let every one esteem better of another than of himself Yea the more thou seemest to excel others in gifts the more humble labour to bee An hard rule and difficult to bee practised and therefore it is often commended to us as Rom. 12.16 Make your selves equal to them of the lower sort and elsewhere For this purpose conceive not onely what thou hast received but what thou wantest and what good things thou art without and then with Paul say thou hast not yet attained to perfection Phil. 3.12 5 If they concern sin be sure it be to ha●e it 5 If thy thoughts concern any sin bee sure it bee to hate and renounce to bewail and mourn for it in thy self or others For there is a sliness and subtilty in sin which while wee think of it easily gaineth some tickling and consent which at least hindreth that thorow-hatred that wee ought to maintain against it The third rule for the inner man concerneth the Will namely Rules for the will that our care must bee there bee but one will between God and us for so hath the Lord taught us to pray Thy Will bee done Concurrence of our wil with Gods will 1 Revealing 2 Determining 3 Prescribing 1 Wherein soever God hath revealed his will to us in that wee must rest 2 Whatsoever his will determineth of us that wee must account holie and just whether with us or against us 3 Whatsoever his will prescribeth to us whether obedience to the Law or faith of the Gospel wee must hold our selves fast bound in conscience unto it let it seem never so cross to us or contrary to his Law as Abraha● ●●id in offering his son 4 Whatsoever his will disposeth to us 4 Disposing prosperity or adversity sickness or health life or death or whatsoever else all is from a most wise hand disposing every thing for the good and salvation of his Elect and so should bee entertained Thus Eli said 1 Sam. 3.18 Isa 39.8 It is the Lord let him do what is good in his eyes And Hezekiah The word of the Lord is good even when it threatned the overthrow of his house and Kingdome So David Psal 39.9 I held my tongue and said nothing because thou Lord didst it And Job The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh Chap. 1. v. 11. blessed be the name of the Lord. CHAP. IX Rules for the Conscience THe fourth sort of rules for the inner man concerns the conscience Rules for the conscience 1 Beware of a blinde conscience Joh. 16.2 1 Beware of doing any thing with a blinde Conscience A blinde man swallowes many a gnat and a blinde conscience swalloweth any sin This is a wicked conscience to which no sin so great shall come but a man shall think hee doth God good service in it as Christ speaks of them that would slay his Disciples Why do Heathens persecute Christians and Papists pursue Protestants even to death but out of blinde zeal and conscience that they root out a false Religion And whatsoever a man doth by an erroneous and seduced conscience is sin The rule of conscience to Heathens being the Law of nature and to the Church the Law written even the whole word of God as a pillar of cloud and fire to direct it in all the way to Heaven Therefore let the Word of God dwell plentiously in you in all Wisdom● Col. 3.16 2 Do nothing with a doubting conscience Conscientia nobis anima Tertul. 2 Do nothing with a doubtful conscience for whatsoever is done with a scrupulous conscience is sin and is not onely an offence of God but of the conscience too which is as a little God within us for it is not of faith nor obedience to the known will of God Rom. 14. ult Hee that doubteth is condemned because his action is not of faith Therefore verse 5. hee saith Let every man bee fully perswaded in his minde 3 Get a good conscience above all things 3 Labour to get a good conscience above all things Act. 23.1 I have endeavoured in all good Conscience till this day A pure conscience by nature hath no man but made pure by the blood of Christ sprinkled upon it by faith in that hee hath obtained full remission of sin and by his blood also merited the Spirit of Sanctification by which the conscience of the beleever is daily cleansed 4 Aim 〈◊〉 a pure conscience 4 Labour to get a pure conscience in all things A man by observing many things may get himself good credit but a good conscience must bee in all the things of God Joh. 1● 28 The Pharisies might not go into Pilates Judgement Hall lest they should bee polluted and yet at the same time they could dispence with their conscience to crucifie the Son of God a sin defiling Heaven and earth whiles the Sun was ashamed and the earth trembled at it The Papists may not eat flesh in Lent their consciences will not suffer them but to kill Kings and blow up Parliament-Houses their consciences give them good leave Many Protestants will not steal kill commit the act of adultery but
but seeing he who is thy head is in Heaven thou that art a member of him must be there also And as Christ while hee continued upon earth after his resurrection lived a kind of supernatural and heavenly life so if thou be risen with him thou livest not the life of nature but hast begun the life of grace and an heavenly conversation Quest But how shall I know whether I live by this heavenly life or no Heavenly life disce●n●d by two notes Ans There be two special notes to discern this truth by the former is the dissimilitude and opposition which it hath with the life of sinful natural men upon earth the latter is the similitude and agreement it hath with the life of Saints and glorified men in heaven Concerning the former ● In the matters of this life the Natural man will follow and pursue things which tend to a sensual and natural life he will beat his brains for gold and silver meat and cloth goods and lands for himself and his as for Heaven he will have nothing to doe there till he be dead and for the way thither hee cateth not to know it till he be dying at the soonest But the Spiritual man hee coveteth after Spiritual things the power of Christs Spirit where it is present will lift up his heart be it never so heavie to seek the Kingdom and the righteousnesse or it and hee seeketh after the wisdome of God as for gold and treasures he accounteth of the graces of faith love hope humility and the fear of the Lord above all pearls and precious things he provideth for himself and his the food that perisheth not and thinketh h●mself warmly and comely arrayed when he hath put on the Lord Jesus Christ as knowing that only the garment of his righteousnesse can fence him from all the injury of wind and weather The Natural man doth not more seriously listen after great purchases of Lands and Fields as he doth cast with himself to purchase the pearl hid in the field for which he will sell himself as we say into his shirt nay and further how own self liberty life and if he had any thing dearer than that The Spiritual man as for the things of this life if he have them not hee wanteth not his portion If he have them his care is that they have not him or become his portion If riches increase he setteth not his heart upon them If they decrease his heart faileth not with them In abundance he carrieth himself warily and weanedly In want cheerfully and contentedly The things hee hath he useth as not using them the things hee hath not hee knoweth he hath no good use of them or else he should have them And thus as the Natural man bestirreth himself and all his motion tendeth to the bettering of his outward estate at home so contrarily doth an heavenly-minded man accounting himself from home while he is here in the body bend his chief care to settle his estate at home in heaven and all his trading and converse in this strange Country tendeth to the enriching of him in his own Country Further if we look to the Natural mans course in the matter of his religion we shall see as great difference between them For it is clear 2 In the matters of religion that whereas matters of religion are a burthen to the one they are the joy of the other The one as heavie to pray to hear to read and meditate on the Word and of his own estate as a Bear to the stake if Law of shame or some such by-respect moved him not if were all one to him to bee on his Horse-back as in the Church the other would account his life tedious were it not for these meetings of God and his people in the assemblies and those sweet refreshments they bring back from thence The one if he pray sometimes in publick hee maketh little conscience of private prayer in his family and so of other private duties to which God and a good conscience would bind him as straight as to the former The other walketh wisely and religiously in the midst of his house and preserveth the worship of God at home and maketh his house a little Church and house of God The one maketh little or no conscience of such sins as either in comparison of other or in his own corrupt conceit are smaller sins such as are inferior oathes idlenesse gaming sins of omission idle words of hurtful unclean or wandring thoughts words he thinketh to be but wind if he mean no hurt and if he mean hurt but doe none thoughts are free As for the sins of the time he will not be so undiscreet as to swim against the stream hee is here violently carried without resistance into a gulf of known evils and all is well he doth but as others doe and it were worse for him if hee did not The other maketh conscience of all sin lesser sins and secret sins hee can hate all even those which he cannot avoyd hee hateth the evil that himself doth and willingly will not displease God though all men bee therefore offended with him To conclude this point the one seeketh to appprove himself unto man the other to approve his heart to God because he knoweth he made it and knoweth what is in it And this shall serve for a tast of the opposite disposition between Natural and Spiritual life Agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in Heaven in two things II. The second note to discern this heavenly life by is the similitude or agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heaven For the life of the Saints in Heaven must be a counterpane of the beleevers upon earth to which they must be daily framed in sundry regards 1 In respect of the things they are called from 2 In respect of the things they are called unto 1 The Saints in Heaven are called from three things 1 The world it self 2 The corruptions that are in the world through lust 3 The company of the wicked of the world Even so must beleevers in the world in their degree and measure carry themselves as those that are chosen out of the world and such as are bought from the earth Rev. 14.3 medling no more wich earthly things than needs must enjoying them so as they joy no more in them than in things which are not their own but borrowed only for a time using them so as they abuse them not because they are to be countable for them abiding in them earthly businesse and callings What the Saints are called from in three things so as they be never earthly minded in one word so desiring pursuing having holding and parting from the profits of this life as those to whom God hath shewed better things than any below yea and esteeming of their present life it self so indifferently as that they can account the day of their
death better than the day wherein they were born 2 As the Saints in Heaven being delivered out of the prison of the body have all the bolts and chains of their corruption struck off so the godly who have their parts in the first resurrection have after a sort changed their lives and put on a Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 they have bid farewell to the follies of their former times yea renounce and as farre as frailty will permit loathe their sins saying unto them as Ephraim to his rejected Idols get you hence what have I to doe with you they that were of the Synagogue of Satan are now in the Temple with true beleevers Thus is it said of the hundred forty four thousand that were bought from the earth that were not defiled with women but were virgins that is sanctified in part and washed from their filthiness and will have no more fellowship in the unfruitful works of darkness wherein sometimes they were chief actors 3 The Saints in heaven never joyn with the wicked of the world any more that being verified which Moses spake to the Israelites concerning the Egyptians The enemies whom your eyes have seen this day you shall never see more even to the faithful hate the company of the wicked with whom they can neither do good nor take any whereas before their calling they were mixt with them and ran with them to the same excess of riot Now their fellowship is dissolved they are no more Companions with them the light of the one admitteth no communion with the others darkness and that they are often forced to dwell in Mesech with them it is the woe and grief of their hearts Another part of this agreement What the Saints are called unto in five things standeth in the things to which the Saints are called which are sundry As 1 Look as their chief happiness standeth in the beholding of the face of God and seeing him as he is together with their rejoycing in his blessed communion and that most sweet fellowship they have one with another even so the chief blessednesse of the Saints in earth is their fellowship with God and Christ though it bee not so immediate as the former They see his back parts indeed rather than his face and rejoyce after a sort in his face but afar off and as in a glass of the Word and Sacraments not face to face nor in that brightness wherein they shall behold him when they are at home with him at his right hand but yet what they want in the thing they want not in desire to be where hee is that they may see his glory so as they may be satisfied with the fulnesse of it that they may so see him as they may bee like him that they may drink not of the streams but of the well of life and see light in his light And because loving him that begat they cannot but love him that is begotten the next happiness to the former do the godly justly esteem the communion of Saints placing under God their chief delight in such as excel in vertue Secondly as the heavenly life of the Saints is spent in the perfect praise of God wherein they imploy their eternity keeping in the presence of the Throne of God a perpetual Sabbath and serving him day and night Rev. 11.17 7.15 even so beleevers indeavour in their measure that the same mind bee in them which was in Jesus Christ who thought it as his meat and drink to do the will of his heavenly Father they bring free-will-offerings they esteem one day better in his Courts than a thousand besides and account these persons blessed that may dwell in his house because they ever praise him Not that much rebellion and corruption of nature doth not often dead and dul even the most sanctified but yet something they get forward and delight in the progress they make to the chearful praise and worship of God And this they do not by fits and starts but imitate that heavenly life in the continual indeavour to make the pleasing of God their principal delight and the chief thing that most soliciteth them Thirdly as the Saints in Heaven live according to the Law of perfect righteousness which is the Law and charter of Heaven and have obtained perfect sanctification so Beleevers on earth set the same Law before them to rule and direct every particular action by and begin the self same obedience they begin to weigh all they give out or take in by the weights of the sanctuary which God hath sealed as just they follow the Lamb whither-soever he goeth before them whether by voice or example Fourthly as the Saints in heaven enjoy God for the means of all their lives Rev. 22.3 5. for hee is their Temple their light their Tree of Life their Crystal river c. evenso the Saints in the World though they live by means and must not look to reap without sowing as once it was 2 Kin. 19.29 yet injoy they God above all means and acknowledge that hee is their life and the length of their daies that they live not by bread alone but by every word proceeding out of the mouth of God that it is hee that giveth them power to get substance and blesseth their children with increase that hee which cloatheth the Lillies and feedeth the Sparrows will cloathe and feed them yea and more that before they shall want that which is good for them it all means should fail hee would sustain them without means by Miracle that his Promise cannot fail them when the Indian Mines shall come to nought that his word is means enough which commandeth the Rock and it giveth water and the Winds and they blow Quails before his Host shall perish Fiftly as the Saints in Heaven would not for all the world forgo their Happiness for one day and yet are they not now so fully happy but that they still wait and long for further perfection of their glory saying Lord how long Holy and Just Rev. 6.10 so the godly would not for all the world be separated from their estate in Christ A cloud of Martyrs in all ages manifes●ed that all the World the sweet of it nor the sour the flattery of it nor the tyranny could draw the godly from the fruition of their priviledges in Christ And yet dwell they not in these first fruits but wait still for the perfecting of this their redemption Hence the Apostle describeth them by their inseparable property 2 Cor. 5.2 Rom. 8.23 which is to love the appearing of Jesus Christ 2 Tim. 4.8 These notes laid together Examination of a mans self by the former notes will give witness with or against a man whether his conversation bee heavenly and consequently whether hee partake of all the former benefits of Christs resurrection Examine thy self by them Whether art thou called out of the World in thy affection whether art thou actually separated from the corruptions