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A73031 Certain godly and learned sermons, preached by that worthy seruant of Christ M. Ed. Philips in S. Sauiors in Southwarke: vpon the whole foure first chapters of Matthew, Luc. 11. vers. 24. 25. 26. Rom. 8. the whole, 1. Thess. 5. 19. Tit. 2. 11. 12. Iames 2. from the 20. to the 26. and 1. Ioh. 3. 9. 10. And were taken by the pen of H. Yeluerton of Grayes Inne Gentleman Philips, Edward.; Yelverton, Henry, Sir, 1566-1629. 1607 (1607) STC 19854; ESTC S114640 484,245 625

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escape And this doth set foorth the loue of God the fulnesse of it and the depth of it being not to be comprehended of all the hearts of men ioyned in one though euery one of them were wiser then Salomon but is onely to be reuerenced and adored of all Further in this deliuering vp of the Sonne of God to death we may obserue a reconciliation of two extremes infinit iustice and infinite mercy both which the Lord performed in this action Infinite iustice in that the Lord will be paid all his debt for rather then he will be vnsatisfied the bloud of Christ shall paie all for what dishonour had it beene for the King of heauen to haue suffered the Serpent to haue so insulted vpon his Maiestie and wretched man to haue so rebelliously defaced his image and so presumptuously charged him with malice and enuie yet to haue set him scotfree If the Lord had borne these indignities at our hands it had too much blemished the power of his iustice and therfore he could take no lesse satisfaction then a sacrifice of bloud and that this bloud must issue streame out of the veines of the hart of Christ hath shewed him to haue set an infinite price valuation vpon his iustice yet hath the Lord withal heerein set foorth his most perfect infinite and endlesse mercy that though he would not forgiue the debt yet he paid himselfe for God did suffer and this is such a thing as no mortall man in the same action is able to shew forth We reade of one Zaledicus king of the Locrenses that went about such a matter who making a law that who so defloured a woman should lose both his eies it fell out his owne sonne was the first that brake it whereupon the king would haue had the law executed vpon him prefering the loue of iustice before the loue of nature but what by the obtestation and intreatie of his nobles instant vpon him and what through feare of tumult and insurrection threatned if he would not dispence with the law in this yoong Prince who was of great expectation for his towardlinesse and in great fauour with the people for his vertue at last the king resolued to satisfie the law and yet to shew mercy to his sonne and therefore whereas the law was that such an offendour should lose both his eies he caused one of his sons to be put out and one of his owne shewing mercy in putting out one of his owne and iustice in putting out one of his sonnes but this was not perfect for then in mercy hee should haue put out both his owne eies or in iustice both his sonnes And no maruell for how can flesh and bloud imagine to reach the wisedome of God when our vnderstandings are but as the stubble carried to and fro with the winde and we our selues but as dust ashes that cannot reach the depth and dignitie of so glorious a Prince Now for the second point for whom this Sonne of God was giuen vp it is said for all that is for all beleeuers for so Christ expounds himself Ioh. 17.20 And therfore execrable is the opinion of Andreas a Lutheran who holds that God deliuered vp his Son for an vniuersall saluation meaning thereby to saue all if all will be saued for they that will not beleeue saith he condemne themselues But we say the purpose of God was not that Christ should die effectually for all for first he neuer died for those he neuer prayed for and Iohn 17.9 he prayed not for the world Secondly if Gods purpose had bin to haue giuen him to death for all without exception then how is it that some are already damned others haue no faith and shal be damned here after either his purpose being to saue them is frustrate and void or else God cannot do it and so something should resist the power of God which is blasphemie to thinke If God had such a purpose and after seeing the incredulitie of man he should change his minde then the execution of his will should depend vpon the incertaintie and instabilitie of the euen which doth derogate much from the al sufficiencie of God and therefore we say that hee was crucified for none but for such as haue their garments dipped in the bloud of the Lambe but for such as haue their faith burning like a lampe but for such whose workes proceed from an vndefiled heart and whose praiers through Christ his helpe ascend to the euerliuing God Further consider in these words He deliuered him vp to death that this very phrase and maner of speech is attributed to Iudas who is called Traditor a deliuerer vp or a traitor How shall we then determine of this Shall we challenge God to be euill because he deliuered him vp or excuse Iudas because he executeth that which God had purposed God forbid for neither is God to be accused that Iudas wrought with him in the same action nor Iudas to bee excused for deliuering him vp according to Gods purpose Your wicked hands saith Peter Act. 2.23 haue crucified him whom God in his determinate counsell had deliuered vp Why then shall Iudas be blamed being but the instrument Because as Iudas did it it was most wicked he doing it by the instigation of the diuell his heart being possessed with couetousnesse and blinded with infidelitie yet was it good in respect of the end whereto God had ordaine it though as it proceeded from his poisoned heart it was most execrable for alwaies the action of the instrument beareth the name or is denominated from the affection of the instrument and therefore Iudas betraying his Master for thirtie peeces of siluer it was a most damnable sinne in him and the turning of it to the saluation of the faithfull was onely the worke of God It may be said God did appoint Iudas to doe it for nothing is done but by his appointment how then can Iudas be blamed We answer this by a double comparison or similitude the soule giueth power to a lame limme or member of the bodie to mooue and to stirre yet may not the power of the soule be blamed for the lamenesse of the limme for the lamenesse thereof doth not enter into the soule neither proceedeth from the soule but from the bodie though the soule be the cause of the motion Euen so the Lord moued Iudas to the action but the imperfection and sinne in the action proceeded not from the Lord but from the diuell that had corrupted his heart And no more then the brightnesse and heate of the Sunne can be said to be the cause of the stench of the ca●kas or the corruption thereof can reach to defile the Sunne no more can the holinesse of God excuse in any action the wickednesse of man or the wickednesse of man defile his holinesse The incestuous wickednesse of Absolon the mischieuous purpose of Achitophel 1. Sa. 16.21.22 Gen. 37.27 the hatred of Iosephs
prescribed and with that alacrity and resolution that we ought euen as Abraham did heere to the sacrificing of his sonne Secondly in this example obserue that if Abraham could for beare to command his naturall loue of a father to a child at the Lords commandement how much more shall wee bee vnexcusable that cannot command our selues from vncleannesse of the flesh and such like sinnes but will keepe our sinnes as tenderly and as long as wee keepe our liues and yet will bee counted the children of Abraham But wee must answer our selues as Christ did the Pharisees Ioh. 8.44 and as Saint Iohn did answer those to whom he wrot 1. Iohn 3.7 that we doe but flatter our selues with the name when wee are in truth the children of the diuell for hee that doth righteousnesse is righteous and if Abraham resigned vp the lawfulnesse of the tender affection of a father at the Lords commandement much more must wee resigne vp our affections and discourses in vnlawfull matters Further obserue that it is not enough for vs to deny our vnlawfull pleasures and appetites but wee must euen forbeare things lawfull if the Lord command it If hee call vs foorth to triall for the Gospels sake Mat. 4.20 we must with Peter and Andrew leaue our nets that is our calling and forsake our wiues that is our comforts Mark 9.47 and our selues euen to pull out our right eyes if they be any impediments to vs in the progression of faith and a good conscience and if there be any repugnancy that we cannot enioy our wiues and glorifie God we must not regard them in respect of God for if we doe the Lords mouth hath spoken it we shall neuer be saued Let vs therefore take heed how wee build for if our foundation be of stubble the day of affliction will soone consume it and wee shall be as blowne bladders emptied with the least pricke of any triall and as brasse that yeeldeth an hideous sound vnder the hammer but if we ground vpon that golden foundation of faith then in our afflictions shall we be as gold which is more agreeable in the sound and more pliable in the stroke and we lying betweene the anuill of death and the hammer of the Lords hand shall shew our selues in patience to possesse our soules euen like Abraham who without grudging did execute the Lords ambassage though most repugnant to nature and to the promise made Againe obserue as this matter of triall in Abraham turned in the end to a comfortable issue euen so shall it fare with vs in our afflictions and temptations and if we wil sacrifice vp our honor our affections our Isaac that is our laughter the ramme only shall die for it that is our cares our troubles our afflictions and our vexations shall be wiped away This is agreeable to that Mat. 10. Yee shall for my names sake forsake what you honour most and loue best and then followeth If any man doe this I will giue him in this life an hundred fold more that is more ioy more resolution and peace of conscience and more comfort in this base and low estate then he should haue had in an hundred fathers or an hundred wiues not regarding the quantitie but the blessing of God in the comfortable enioying of them This offereth singular consolation to those that suffer for the crosse of Christ that the thrones of this life shall onely be sacrificed and our soules and consciences shall rest secure filled with greater ioy in the end and issue of our troubles then euer wee were before And as the world saith that he is rich that is contented euen so we say that he is safe that resteth in the Lords hands And if we stretch foorth all our powers to embrace Christ then is he gone as a harbinger to prouide a place for vs in heauen Ioh. 14.3 and he that saueth our soules wee may well trust him with our bodies Further obserue that he offered vp his sonne and yet he did it not wherein we learne that the purpose of a mans heart being fully resolued to do a thing it is in the Lords eies as if he did it though he doe it not for therefore is Isaac said to be offred vp because he was so in the purpose of Abrahams heart which the Lord accepted as an execution of the thing it selfe And this holdeth both in vertues and in vices for if a man be called before the iudgement seate as an heretike in any time whatsoeuer and being called thus to triall offereth to seale his opinion with his blood and matters going further doth not relent what is this man in the light of God if his religion bee true but a Martyr though his life be after pardoned Not that euery resolution is taken of God as if it were performed for Peter was caried with a vehement precipitation and presumptuous conceit of his owne strength when he said Master though all men forsake thee yet will not I Iohn 13.37 but I will lay downe my life for thy sake and yet afterward vpon a small occasion he denied him But if a man stand in the day of his examination and triall and shrinke not but is ready to sacrifice his life for the defence of God his truth as Abraham was ready to haue sacrificed his sonne then because in the triall he did not relent but euen in this time did purpose it it shall be taken of God euen as this worke of Abraham done though not done and his life lost though he escaped with his life In like manner falleth it out in sinnes for if thy heart be full of a dultery and yet because shee that should bee thy harlot dallied too long with thee or else occasion did not fit thee wherby thou art kept from the act it selfe yet art thou a whoremonger in the sight of God Mat. 5.28 The like may be said of other sinnes for though Saul threw not a stone at Stephen but onely kept the clothes of them that did it yet is he Act. 8.1 inrolled in the booke of God as one that consented to his death Vers 22. Seest thou not that the faith wrought with his works and through the works was the faith made perfect 23. And the Seripture was fulfilled which saith Abraham beleened God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse and hee was called the friend of God 24. Ye see then how that of workes a man is iustified and not of faith onely This is the third part namely the amplifying of this example in the 22. and 23. verses together with the conclusion in the 24. verse Heereupon the Papists take occasion to say that not faith alone but faith together with workes worketh our iustification Whereunto we answer that there be some things wherein faith worketh alone and some things wherein it worketh together with workes Faith worketh alone with God it hath wings and flies to heauen it dealeth onely betweene God and Christ
shall want the Rauens shall feed him yea hee will make the wicked an instrument to prouide for his chosen as Zedekiah to command that Ieremy be fed in the prison as long as there is any bread in the City Ier. 37.21 which ought to teach vs not to compasse any thing vnlawfully or to dig vs cisternes out of the policy of the flesh but to relie vpon the Lord who can and will send vs reliefe from the vttermost parts of the earth and when we least looke for it and when it shall be most welcome as he did heere to the mother of Iesus For the sixt generall circumstance namely for the oracle giuen these Wise-men to goe home another way learne first how the Lord disappoints the purposes of tyrants and wicked men which bend their bowes whet their swords and make their arrowes keene to pierce the sides of the godly Psal 7.14 that it fals out they are but concerued with vanity and trauell of iniquity and bring foorth a lie For when Herod meant to haue glutted his bloudy minde vpon the report of these Wise-men then are they of the Lord sent another way And when Act. 23.12 the Iewes had bound themselues with a curse that they would neither eate nor drinke till they had killed Paul then the Lord sent into the heart of the chiefe Captaine so to intrench him about with souldiers as he was kept safe from their fury So when Senaherib the King of Ashur had thought to haue swallowed vp Ierusalem Esay 36.33 then the Lord said and performed it that he should not so much as shoot an arrow nor cast a mount against it Thus doeth the Lord alwaies preuent the dangers intended against his children Psal 91.5.6 that neither the plague that flies by day nor the pestilence that walkes by night nor the snare of the hunter can once intrap them but his eares are open euen to the praiers of Ionas c. 2.2 to deliuer him out of the Whales belly and his eies are so bent vpon Daniel c. 6.22 as the Lions haue no power to hurt him but he is as a shadow against the parching heat and as a shield against the blustering cold which may inco●●age vs still to lay hands vpon him as our succour to behold him as our deliuerer to flie to him as our comforter to waite vpon him as our guide and to commit our soules vnto him as vnto the best keeper Secondly heere learne by the not returning of these Wisemen to Herod according as they were commanded that an oath or a vow taken and made against the bond of charity and tending to the hurt of our brother is not to be performed but being vndertaken vpon weakenesse is to be discharged vpon conscience and therefore rash was the vow of Iphtah Iudg. 11.31 to promise to the Lord without limitation a sacrifice of that he should first meet when he came home For though the Apostle Heb. 11.32 commendeth him for his worthy enterprise in deliuering the people yet by this rash vow and wicked performance of the same his victory was much defaced For we must make no haste with our mouthes to pronounce any thing but set a watch before our lippes that they may hedge in our tongues from speaking euill of our brethren and yet if we hap to slip in this wee must keepe in our hands from executing what vnaduisedly we vttered For first we are so farre from being bound to derect them when their liues or bodies are sought for as wee are to counsell them to hide them as Eliah 1. Kings 17.3 was counselled of the Lord to hide himselfe So did Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.42 make his fathers fury knowen to Dauid that hee might hide himselfe and therfore cursed be the Ziphims 1. Sam. 23.20 that promised Saul to deliuer Dauid into his hands and cursed be Irrijah Ier. 37.13 that staid Ieremy and brought him to the Princes as a fugitiue when hee was going to the land of Beniamin Secondly if they cannot hide themselues wee must doe it for them So did Obadiah 1. Kin. 18.13 in the court of Ahab hide a hundred Prophets from the cruelty of Iesabel So did Rahab Iosh 2.1 in great zeale to God and loue to his seruants hide the spies with the danger of her owne life So did the Disciples Act. 9.21 let downe Paul in a basket when his life was sought for by the Inquisition Thirdly if they be apprehended we must be so farre from accusing them as we must countenance and defend them to our powers So did Ebedmelech Ier. 38.9 when he came to the King in the gate and told him Ieremy had wrong to be imprisoned and so did Ionathan 1. Sam 20.32 defend Dauid against his owne father for it is not the commandement of a King that ought to make vs giue vp the sonnes of God into their hands nay the Lord himselfe in this place teacheth vs otherwise that would not suffer these Wise-men to obey Herod wherby the babe might haue beene exposed to his butchery Lastly in the departure of these Wise-men obserue that God both in the beginning and in the end will blesse all courses and actions enterprised and done in his feare and in a holy obedience as he did blesse and prosper the iourney of these Wise-men giuing them both a direction which way to come to Ierusalem and which way to goe from Bethlem which must make vs if we expect any blessed successe of that we vndertake not to begin but with the warrant of a good conscience nor to proceed but with a reuerent and resolute obedience as to the commandement of God and as aiming at the aduancement and promotion of his glory and the furtherance of his seruice MATH chap. 2. vers 13 14 15. verse 13 After their departure behold the Angell of the Lord appeareth to Ioseph in a dreame saying Arise and take the babe and his mother and flie into Aegypt and be there till I bring thee word for Herod will seeke the babe to kill him verse 14 So he arose and tooke the babe and his mother by night and departed into Aegypt verse 15 And was there vnto the death of Herod that the might bee fulfilled which is spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Aegypt haue I called my Sonne THE Euangelist as before hee shewed the glorious and blessed beginnings of our Sauiours birth who though borne in basenesse had testimony giuen him of his maiesty by the starre in heauen and in earth by the Wise-men of Persia so now he setteth downe a matter of great discomfort that this same babe euen from his cradle should begin to bee crucified in himselfe and his members Wherein generally there be three points set downe first the commandement of the Angell secondly the obedience of Ioseph thirdly the fulfilling of a prophesie In the commandement consider first the circumstance of the time that it was after the departure of the Wise-men how long after is not
the euerlasting curse of God for so are we all by nature in which nature of ours he representing vs became vile before his father in respect of vs. But now for the punishment of sinne vpon him that was not imaginarie but true and sensible both in soule and body so extreame as in anguish of spirit he was driuen to crie My God my God why hast thou forsaken me yea the death he endured was in it owne kind accursed as it is written Deut. 21.23 Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree yea looke what miseries what wants what dangers he did vndergoe and taste of from his birth to his ascension into heauen the same he suffered and slept in onely for vs which cleareth the iustice of God that a righteous man should smart for vs sinners because we are in him and he in vs which I vrge the more that we may see the great price the sonne of God paied for our redemption to stirre vs vp to a better and deeper consideration of it he being the only shepheard that euer gaue his life for his sheepe the only lambe which being vnspotted in himselfe did euer take vpon him the scabbes and vlcers of the whole flocke the onely man full of sorrowes and experience of infirmities whom the world iudged as plagued smitten of God and humbled yet was it onely for our iniquities that the chastisement of our peace might be vpon him Therfore as Esay 53.11 let him see the trauell of his soule that is the fruit of his labour and the efficacy of his death in the saluation of vs his people For the other profit it is also double as first we are made partakers of his graces secondly of the glorie for his graces And this standeth also with the iustice of God that he being in vs and we in him God must needs with him giue vs all things also Now the graces we taste of by this coniunction are twofold first by imputation which is his satisfaction for our sinnes we being starke bankerupts able to pay nothing and the benefit of his obedience we being rebellious bastards able to fulfill nothing secondly in our selues but drawen and deriued from Christ the fountaine as the change of our affections reforming of our iudgements renuing of our minds mortification a sanctified life and these graces did farre more abound in Christ then euer they did in Adam in his integrity for he was flesh made ●●t after the image of God wheras this flesh Christ had the God head dwelling in him bodily as Col. 1.18 had in all things the preheminence that we might tast of the fulnes of his graces as far as is fit And for the second much is the glory for his graces namly eternall life of this hee hath also made vs partakers ye as if he had no other errand to heauen he saith Io. 14.32 I go to prepare a place for you in my fathers house Therfore let vs not say in our hearts that is let vs not doubt but assure our selues that as Christ is ascended so shall we and it is no presumption to beleeue that the Lord for his Sonnes sake will saue thee for he hath first giuen thee his word and promise He that beleeueth and repenteth shall be saued so as if thou canst apply repentance to thy selfe thou maiest challenge him on his word and secondly thou hast his oath hee sware to Abraham that his seed through his faith should be blessed and this hath Christ sworne againe A men Amen he that beleeueth is already translated from death to life shewing the certainty of it by the maner of speech as if it were already done and if thou wilt relie vpon neither of the former he hath thirdly left thee a pawne that is his spirit to guide and conduct thee in the right way that though thy selfe connot be in heauen as yet yet thy affections may be in the bosome of Christ and that thy faith in his resurrection may assure thee of thy incorruption and thy comfort in his sitting at the right hand of God may rebound backe vpon thy owne soule in being an vndoubted testimony of thy exaltation and aduancement heereafter for where Christ is there by reason of this coniunction betweene thee and him thou must needs be also Hence ariseth a most comfortable instruction for an afflicted conscience for Sathan will lay a whole scrowle of particular sins before thee charge thee that there be many omitted wherein thou hast offended that corruption is so worne into thy bones and lieth so low at the heart as it cannot be taken forth but must needs rankle to damnation and that thy sinnes are in their number so many and in their weight so heauy as there can be no case nor satisfaction for them Thou must confesse thou art indeed in thy selfe a worme vnworthy to creepe vpon the earth but in Christ as bold and strong as a lion yea if thou canst appropriate the sufferings of Christ to thy selfe in particular as the Gosp●● propounds them generally thou maiest answer that by the ●●rity of his birth the obedience of his life and the bitternesse of his death he hath clensed thee from thy sinne wherein thou wert conceiued made vp the breach of thy rebellion and ransomed thee from the cruelty of that second death whereinto thou wert plunged by thine actuall pollution this thou knowest because thou art one with him and he with thee True indeed sathan will confesse that Christ took our flesh vpon him as himself said in the Gospell that he was come before his time to torment him but yet he will suggest that Christ being but one his satisfaction can be but for one and he will tell thee in this truely that the sinnes of all men are infinite and the wrath of God for them is infinite for which the satisfaction of Christ must bee as infinite which saith he cannot be To which answer that as by the first Adam all men are made sinners so by the second Adam which is Christ all that beleeue are made righteous and as Adam can damne all that shall be damned for all in him did eate of the forbidden fruit so Christ can saue all that shall be saued for all in him are brought againe into the Paradise of God Reu. 2.7 In Rom. 5.14 and 1. Cor. 15.22 Adam is said to be a figure of Christ wherein they agree in this that as Adam gaue as much as he had to his posterity so doth Christ proportionably giue that he hath to those that be his Adam gaue sinne and death Christ giueth life and grace And they disagree in three respects first we receaue sin from Adam by nature but we receaue not the graces of Christ and life eternall by nature but by imputation and by grace only and not by imitation for we cannot imitate Christ in euery thing secondly by Adam came only originall sinne not actuall but Christ hath satisfied for both
sinnefull flesh wherein we are to beleeue that Christ is the naturall sonne of God and the sonne of Dauid but not naturall for he was not begotten of man his seed being vncleane but he was conceaued of the holy ghost and so became man like vnto vs sinne excepted therefore it is heere said in the similitude of sinnefull flesh not in sinnefull flesh and in this similitude he was both in the sight of men and of God in the sight of men for all the while he was on earth he was seene to be subiect to the miseries of sinnefull flesh both in his life and death to hunger for he was oft so to pouerty for he had not whereon to lay his head to persecution for he fled and withdrew himselfe from much violence intended against him to griefe for he wept and sighed for the death of Lazarus and the destruction of Hierusalem to slanders for they vpbraided him that he wrought by the power of the diuel to temptations for he was carried by the Spirit into the desert for that purpose to accusation by false witnesses to colour the sentence of death against him to scourgings to scoffings to reuilings to the crosse to death it selfe all which was seene to men by some that grieued at it by most that iested and reioyced at it He was also seene in this similitude by God himselfe for though he was deliuered and tossed as it were from pillar to post from Annas to Caiaphas from Caiaphas to Pilate from Pilate to the Souldiers from the Souldiers to the Citie from the city to the Iudgement seat from thence to the inferiour officers to be beaten with reeds from thence to the gibbet though all cried by the perswasion of the high priests Crucifie him doubling it in the aire with a most damnable echo yet was all this done as Peter saith Act. 2.23 by the determinate counsell of God the heauens hauing decreed that the earth should open as it were to swallow him because he represented our persons more liuelie then Iacob did the person of Efau Gen. 27.21 so as for the time he was heauily crushed with the weight of Gods indignation which appeared by the conflict he had with the wrath of God sweating droppes of blood by the basenesse deiection he felt in himselfe crying out that hee was forsaken an 〈…〉 doth proue he was in the similitude of sinnefull flesh in the sight of his father and that it was necessary it should be so being man to satisfie for man and God to get the conquest of death hell and condemnation For the fourth which is the purpose he was sent for It was to abolish sinne and to condemne sinne in the flesh speaking metaphorically or in a borrowed speech meaning heereby that there was great pleading in heauen before the seat of God betweene Christ and the diuell the seed of the woman and the serpent the diuell challenging of vs to be his first because in our first parents we gaue more faith credit to him then to God for when God had wrapt vp condemnation in the forbidden fruit we thought it to be the hidden treasure of diuine knowledge when he had sweetned his inhibition of this one tree with the free vse and liberty of all the rest as if we should starue for meat our appetite must be enflamed to this aboue the rest and when he had enioyned a law vpon our fingers as not to touch it then doe we through the strength of suggestion prefix our eies on no other marke then to gaze on it thereby to insnare our hands to snatch at it Secondly whereas Adam had his birth and creation in innocency which was but a particular allegation for him yet we that are his posterity haue our beginning from corruption as if in our generation we vowed a course of vncleanenesse and doe performe this vow by plunging the whole man into the lake as it were of impiety and therefore in our liues resembling his likenesse by walking in the workes of darkenesse he impudently would haue faced out the matter as if heauen had beene but the hall of iustice fit for the maiesty of God to sit there and not for vs to abide there longer then while sentence is in giuing But when Christ against this had truly alleaged the eternity of his generation in respect of his God-head the cleannesse of his conception in respect of his man-hood how in this person of ours he was euer sanctified in this flesh of ours had vanquished the fierce temptations of the diuell and how we in our owne persons by the water of the holy ghost are daily washed when by this hard pleading of Christ on our side we were by the sentence of God vnshakled as prisoners vniustly detained and had our absolution written in our foreheads that the damned might see it to their discomfort then the sonne of God hauing by this his trauell o●ened the insearchable riches of his fathers mercy toward vs he condemned sinne in this flesh and purged as it were euery veine of the hidden filthinesse lay in it and made vs members of his body So as from hence learne to measure the benefit thou hast by Christ that he is no further sent to thee then he hath destroied sinne in thee for if thou settest vp a seat for profanenesse in thy heart sowing thy fruit to the flesh and liuing to thy selfe then as 2. Cor. 5.15 Christ died not for thee and he was sent to die that by his death thou mightest liue to him beware therefore thou doest not examine thy selfe too slightly in this matter for it was easier for the Lord to create a new heauen and a new earth then to raise thee from the dead and to abolish sinne in thee which kept thee vnder the dominion of death hee hauing no resistance in the one and in the other hauing the rebellion of thy nature to hinder him so as thou must not measure the death of sinne in thee by the auoiding of grosse sinnes which the sunne hates to shine vpon but euen by thy practise and delight in smaller sinnes for if these doe keepe their course in running priuatly through thy life as the bloud doth in runnig secretly through thy veins it keepes out the spirit which should raise thee from the old Adam to the new from rebellion to obedience from darknesse to light from hell to heauen Striue therefore as in thy ignorance to please the flesh so by thy knowledge to content the spirit that as pride pleased the flesh so humblenesse of heart may please the spirit and that for the assurance of Christ to be thine thou maist doe euery thing contrary to that thou didest before after the example of Domitian the Emperour who was answered if hee would gouerne vprightly he must doe contrary to that the gouernours had done before who ruled with crueltie and tyrannie ROM chap. 8. vers 4. verse 4 That that righteousnesse of the law might
whereto they tend the contrarie courses are a bad or a good life the contrarie ends a bad or a blessed end expressed in these two words they shall liue they shall die What it is to walke after the flesh appeareth Ephes 2.3 to be to follow the course of the world in fulfilling the lusts of the flesh as to be as scoffing as Ishmael as prophane as Esau Gen. 25.34 Exod. 4.21 2. Tim. 4.10 as hard hearted as Ph●●ach and as couetous as Demas that shooke off Paul to embrace the world And what it is to mortifie the deeds of the flesh is set downe Galath 5.24 to crucifie the affections and lusts thereof not vtterly to abolish the very life of sin and to strike it dead at the roote for that is the patterne of perfection we follow after the gole we run at and the victorie we striue for but he that ceaseth from performing and gratifiing his flesh in the desires thereof though there remaines some tang of corruption that man may truely be said to mortifie his flesh And therefore vnderstand a difference betweene sinne in the reprobate and in the elect by a naturall proportion as there is great difference between him that hath a strong body impotent in no part but liuely to performe all the actions of this life and him that liueth but hath receiued his deaths wound or is sicke of a pi●●●●●onsumption so in the wicked sinne liueth a ful life and hath his full swinge to seeke after all maner of euill and increaseth daily without any declination at all rising early and resting late to fulfill the pleasures of the flesh but in the godly sinne liueth droupingly and languishingly alwaies holding downe the head for howsoeuer the elect doe fall by infirmitie yet the principall purpose of their heart is to follow Christ euen in his afflictions and so it is in them onely a benummed sinne For the contrary ends which are set downe in two words they shall die they shall liue it is not to bee vnderstood of any naturall separation which is common to all in death but of an vtter separation after death from Gods presence to be tormented in hell and so of life for to liue in this place is meant to bee saued and to enter into the rest of God Whereupon obserue that speaking properly the wicked neuer liue nor the godlie neuer die that is die the death of deaths as Christ speaketh Iohn 8.51 They shall neuer see death for when our breath shall leaue our bodies and wee fall asleepe we shall behold the Lords armes stretched forth to embrace vs and the heauens open to receiue vs so as this kind of death is but an enlargement after a long imprisonment and a landing at our owne country after our tedious trauell and troublesome pilgrimage in the sea of this world which life in the godly is begun heere by our enioying of Christ enlarged in death when our soules shall liue a more blessed life and perfected at the last day when wee shall haue absolute ioy without diminution in eternity Euen so is the death of the wicked begun heere in their impenitency in sinne increased when they are in part tormented after this life and then made a liuing death when at the last they are throwen from God for euer If ye liue after the flesh c. In these words the Apostle is precise for workes and why because it cannot be otherwise but that we walking as ordinary men and after the custome of the world must needs be damned First take for a ground that which is vers 8. of this chapter They that are in the flesh cannot please God which he proueth by matching of contraries for they that are in the flesh sauor the things of the ●●●as they that be in the spirit sauour the things of the spirit and that sauour of the flesh is death He yeeldeth a reason why because the wisedome of the flesh is enmity to God not an enemy to God for then there might be a reconciliation but the Apostle speaketh in the abstract quality enmity as a vitious man may become vertuous and wee of enemies are made friends with God but vice can neuer becom vertue nor enmity amity The like speech is vsed of God himselfe in his curse of the Serpent Genes 3.15 I will set enmity betweene thee and the woman that is such hatred and debate as shall neuer be appeased Now why this flesh is enmity with God he giueth a reason because it is not subiect to the law of God as the spirit is neither can be as the spirit cannot but be for wee must walke in all the commandements of the Lord without exception though not with perfection euen as it is said 1. Iohn 3.6 They that are of God cannot sinne that is deliberately continue in any sinne Now who they bee that are in the flesh we must learne by the contrarie that is they that are not in the spirit as vers 9. of this chapter Ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit and who is not in the spirit he that is not led by the spirit of Christ And who is he He that walketh not according to that spirit that is if he liue in the spirit a life inuisible hee must shew it by the effect of visible motions and he that walketh according to the conuersation of the flesh doth it not And this appeareth Gal. 5.24 All that are Christs haue crucified the affections of the flesh and who are said to doe this 1. Pet. 4.1.2 they that suffer in the flesh and who so suffereth in the flesh ceaseth from sinne so as to come backe againe the same way we went if thou hast not ceased from sinne thou hast not suffered in the flesh if thou hast not suffered in the flesh thou hast not crucified the flesh if thou hast not crucified the flesh thou hast walked in the flesh if thou hast walked in the flesh thou hast not beene led by the spirit if thou hast not been led by the spirit thou hast not the spirit if thou hast not the spirit thou art in the flesh that is drenched and drowned in the flesh for it is one thing to haue flesh in thee and another thing for thee to be in the flesh for all haue flesh in them that i● infirmities but to be in the flesh is to be in Simon Magus case in the gaule of bitternesse Act. 8.23 and in the bond of iniquitie and in Eylmas case Act. 13.10 full of subtilty and mischiefe the child of the diuell and an enemy of all righteousnesse and if thou art in the flesh thou art alreadie in condemnation Now I little doubt but euery wicked man desireth to be saued but they indeuour it not no otherwise then Balaam did Nu. 23.10 who could wish to die the death of the righteous but neuer indeauoured to liue their life Further to proue the precise necessitie of mortification looke 1. Iohn 3.7 Let no
by the Masse that most execrable idoll and say it is sworne out of the country Can a man thinke himselfe rich that is indebted to all the world and hath nothing wherewithall to pay them And can such men that bee very beasts and without sense before God esteeme themselues vertuous and religious because they are onely highly praised of men They see not their owne estate because they haue not examined themselues according to the former rule When a man hath swept his chamber he thinkes all is cleane but when the Sunne commeth it sheweth many a mote hee could not before spie out so if the spirit would once shine into these mens consciences they should see not onely motes but most deformed and enormous sinnes in their hearts And how friuolous is it to stand vpon mans witnesse without religion which pierceth and looketh into the soule For otherwise he that thinketh himselfe in best health carieth his deaths wound in his bosome The basest gold is better then the purest led and the greatest imperfections of Gods children better then the highest vertues of the wicked and neuer shall they bee exalted that haue not before beene humbled The law is a hammer not onely to bruise the conscience but to breake it into powder which if it be not done wee shall neuer haue the spirit of adoption to seize vpon vs. The law commands but giueth no power to obey and is as if we should say to a beggar Buy such a mannor when he hath neuer a penny to helpe himselfe nor yet we giue him any money to do it euen so purchase heauen with thy works saith the law and yet knowes we are spoiled of all abilitie and doth not enable vs to doe such workes all one as if we should say to one hold vp the heauens with thy finger and yet giue him no strength to do it or as if we should say to the blind see it is comfortable and to the deafe heare it is profitable and yet giue them no meanes whereby they should doe these So the law is but a dead letter and hath but a dolefull and dreadfull sound vntill the spirit come and arme vs with power and abilitie to performe what the law requireth Lastly where it is said Luk. 15.21 Ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage againe obserue that all that are conuerted and with the lost sonne are come home againe haue beene once brought to a terrour and fright of conscience which hath beene after a diuers measure for the Lord keepes some longer in the schoole of the law then he doth others according as hee findeth their hearts and dispositions inclinable to stoope and to be humbled or else for example sake as seemeth best to the Lord. But yet euery one of Gods chidren must come to this that is Act. 2.37 being moued and pricked in conscience to say and crie out What shal I doe to be saued I see my debt where shall I get surety I perceiue my nakednesse where shall I be couered I am fallen how shall I be recouered And being touched in their hearts if they fall not into that exclamation then as it is said of Ely his sonnes 1. Sam. 2.25 they obeyed not because the Lord would slay them so for these men to be baked in their sinnes and to see their destruction and not to shunne it and by this meanes to despaire finally is the iust iudgement of God that he may be auenged of their great hypocrisie for mercy offered and refused or set light by doubleth the punishment Euen as in this nation by the blessed preaching of the Gospell Sathan is cast out in the generall profession of the Land if now he labour to creepe in againe by hypocrisie and make vs thinke religion to rest in shewes and consist in ceremonies growing more leane and ilfauoured after we haue deuoured so many yeeres of store and plentie in preaching the word we doe erre in our hearts and do arme our enemie against vs who at his reentrance will bring seuen spirits worse then he did before Luk. 11.25 and will so fortifie his habitation with hypocrisie and other great and monstrous sinnes as there shall be more profannesse in this nation then euer there was before But ye haue receiued the spirit of adoption In this the Apostle proueth that we are the Sonnes of God because we are so adopted in the euerlasting grace of his blessed Sonne And to proue we haue this spirit he doth it by the contrary thus we are deliuered from the spirit of feare and redeemed into such a Christian liberty as we now loue God not for feare but feare him for his loue In this there are two parts to be considered first what this spirit of adoption is secondly the inseparable effect that followeth it namely an assured confidence to come boldly before the Lord euen as children before their parents to craue pardon for our sinnes For the first this spirit is the holy Ghost assuring vs by the word of grace that is the Gospell that the Lord hath auowed vs for his children in that one and best beloued Sonne of his Christ Iesus so that no extremities of this life nor sorrowes of death nor sinne it selfe shall be able to ouer whelme vs. Therefore it is said in the Scriptures that the holy Ghost setteth a seale vpon the heart of his elect Ephes 1.13 and writeth a deed in their consciences which is but a draught of that originall deed which is in heauen in the booke of the Lords gouernment And this is sealed vnto vs by the finger of the spirit to free it from the forgery of Sathan and by this euidence we make our title to the kingdome of heauen ● Cor. 5.5 Also it is called an earnest penie because as in contracts by giuing a penie in earnest the partie is obliged and bound to pay the rest so this being as it were the first fruites of the spirit the Lord doth assure vs that as verily as we haue receiued thus much in hand in this vale of misery so this shall bee a pawne and pledge vnto vs that he will giue vs the rest in the fu●●e●●● 〈◊〉 is glory vnder which assurance we rest and lie down in hope with ioy vnspeakeable And as the first fruits in the law made the whole crop holy so this sparke of the Lords grace being kindled and set on fire in vs doth embolden vs to an expectation of the full enioying of our whole Lord Christ Iesus This testimony oft times is very weake especially when Sathan doth sift and winnow vs as he did Peter Luk. 17.5 so as we had need to pray with the disciples Lord encrease our faith Yet as a prisoner in a darke dungeon seeing but the Sunne at a little grate doth know and beleeue that the Sunne shineth vpon the whole earth so though we be shackled and imprisoned in this flesh as in a dungeon that we are not able to
proportion betweene the head and the members for wee shall bee carried vp into the highest heauens and wee shall stand before the throne viewing the glorious face of God and hauing the fruition of his blessed presence The greatnesse of this glorie howbe●● it needeth rather meditation then explication yet something shall bee spoken of it that the vaile may bee taken from our eies that wee may sound and faddome in some sort the bottome of Christ his ●ole in his glorie which of our selues we cannot doe no more then the Iewes could into the ministery of Moses This place fitteth with that 2. Cor. 4.17 Our light affliction which is but for a moment bringeth vnto vs an euerlasting excellent weight of glory Where consider two things first that betweene these afflictions and that glory there is no comparison in the greatnesse it shall be a weight excellently excellent as the word signifieth whereas afflictions are but for a an houre Secondly the glory shall be more durable in respect of eternity whereas the other are but in this life onely For the first consider it in two degrees first the particular ioy euery child and man of God shall haue in his death and dissolution secondly the exceeding glory he shall be filled with when all things shall be perfect and God shall be all in all The first of these hath two parts first it containeth an absolute immunity and freedome from all infirmities of body and soule according as it is said All teares shall be wiped away for the body shall be free from labour care and such like and the soule shall be free from the suggestions of Sathan by couetousnesse and other corruptions wherewith the best and choisest of Gods seruants in this life are wonderfully assaulted Secondly the bodie sleeping in the earth the soule shall be absolutly sanctified from sinne and liue in the fauour of God so as there shall be added vnto vs a present entrance into the Lords ioy which none can comprehend but they that feele it Luk. 23.43 This in the Scripture is called the entrance into the Paradise of the Lord and Paul 2. Cor. 5.8 desireth to remoue out of the body that in his soule he might be with the Lord Iesus who resteth in such a place as hath in it whatsoeuer may moue either admiration or may giue contentation and is described Reuel 21.4 to be destitute of sorrow crying and paine and to haue the foundation of the wals thereof garnished with all manner of precious stones and to be lightned onely with the glory of God needing neither Sunne nor Moone It is also called Abrahams bosome Luk. 16.22 Ioh. 14.2 Reuel 19.9 the presence with the Lambe the gathering of vs into the companie of innumerable Angels and the mansion house of our Father The second degree of this glory is at the restitution of all things which the Apostle heere speaking of verf. 21. calleth the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God This standeth in two parts first in the resurrection of our bodies when they shall be made incorruptible and glorions and shall neede no naturall prouision nor maintenance for they shall shine as the Sunne and the Sunne shall then be seauentimes brighter then it is The second is that God shall be all in all that is the whole God-head shall immediatly raigne and the humanity of Christ shall more manifestly be subiected which is to the greater glory of it that his god head shall be so great for then there shall be no more office of Christ Iesus to procure any more good to his children but the benefit of the former shall continue for euer for then his enemies shall be all put downe and then the Sonne she ll resigne vp his kingdome to his Father that is all enemies being vanquished and that one enemy Death being abolished he shall raigne no more not that God raigneth not now for he raigneth in the person of his Sonne as Mediator but then his office shall end and he shall raigne onely as God For these are but the daies that the Lord Iesus doth woo vs and maketh loue to vs Reu. 19.7 but then shall the marriage be solemnized and for the better setting foorth of this with all magnificence and greatest state all creatures shal be restored that they may serue and attend at the celebrating of this feast Now for the second part that is the comparison of the glorie and afflictions in respect of continuance we see that no affliction lasteth but for the present but this glory is eternall Gods loue toward vs eternall before the world to predestinate vs eternall after the world to glorifie vs that as the first had no beginning so the last shall haue no end So as wee may consider of two eternities though to speake properly there is but one the first before the creation thesecond after the worlds dissolution Now betweene these two there is a certaine time for the world and a thousand yeeres in respect of eternity is but as one day nay as Moses saith Psal 90.4 A thousand yeeres are but as yesterday that is past 2. Pet. 3.8 So as counting the world fiue thousand yeeres it is but as the length of fiue daies past and of these fiue thousand yeeres what are fourescore which is a great age for any man to liue to and a farre greater time then euer any man was afflicted in It is not much more then a moment no way an hower and therefore these afflictions are no way comparable to the eternity of that glory wee shall haue heereafter not so much as a drop of water to the whole Sea or one graine to all the sand And yet we speake now as if a man should neuer but be afflicted euen from his cradle to his death liuing the full age of a man which neuer befell any In Esay 54.8 is shewed what seuenty yeeres be and by the accompt of the spirit of God himselfe they be but as the least minute for the Lord there saith For a moment in mine anger I hid my face from thee but with euerlasting mercy haue I had compassion on thee and this moment was seuenty yeeres for so long were the Iewes in captiuity I●● 25.12 So as affliction by this reckoning during the whole yeeres and life of man is but a moment and a great part of this moment is past before we can be said to suffer affliction for it is but a confused kind of paine that children sustaine and againe there was neuer any affliction so great but there was some either intermission or remission either the tormenter was wearied or the whip was wasted or they that were tormented died Now if the glory after our induring of these afflictions should last but so many millions of yeeres as there be starres in the heauens there might yet be some more and easier and equall comparison betweene them because at the last this glory should haue an end but it farre
onely satisfied the wrath of God That it commeth from the loue of God appeareth by the example of Dauid to whom when the Lord had sent Nathan the Prophet to tell him his sinne was pardoned 2. Sam. 7.15 yet withall part of his message was that the sword should neuer depart from his house which fell out in his daughter Thamar that was rauished and in his sonne Absolon that was desperatly hanged and in the child begotten in adultery that presently died And this was only to awake him out of that securitie Sathan had cast him into for it is certaine where the Lord smites not there the Lord loues not and therefore 1. Sam. 2.25 it is said that because the Lord had a purpose to slay the sonnes of Eli therefore they obeyed not the mild voice of admonition vsed by their father Now for those afflictions that be sent as preuentions of sinne as pouertie ignominie restraint of libertie shutting vp the wombe and such like they also turne to the best in Gods children for many do let themselues bloud before they be sicke for feare of sicknesse and the superfluous spreads of a vine are cut off that it may bring foorth better fruite And thus doth the Lord mint and diet his children lest by riches they should grow proud by fame become insolent by libertie wax wanton and kicke against the Lord when they be full and lest by hauing children they should make idols of them to cocker them vp to damnation the Lord scanteth them in these blessings Looke vpon Dauid who confesseth he had gained much by affliction See what difference there was euen in Nabuchadnezzar before hee was pulled out of his seate and after he had fed with beasts before in his prosperitie the strength of his hand and the power of his maiestie had built Babel Dan. 3. and 4. but after he had bene cooled in the wild forrest then he lifted vp his eyes to heauen and praysed and honoured him that liueth for euer Such is the stomacke of flesh and bloud that it will breake out into many insolencies against God against his church and children vnlesse he cut as it were out teather short that we haue but litle roome to feed in and therefore in great mercie he suffereth vs oft times to want lest we should was proud with abundance and changeth our oyle of gladnesse into a countenance of heauinesse because we could not before tell how to vse our mirth Secondly consider how those afflictions turne to our good which are sent for the exercises of Gods graces in vs namely beerein to trie how farre wee loue God whether wee loue him when hee dealeth with vs roughly aswell as when hee dealeth mildly and liberally with vs and this is called the fierie triall wherein we shall not be consumed like drosse but refined like gold And this affection appeared in Iob when he cried Iob. 13.15 O Lord though thou kill me yet will I loue thee for many times the Lord sendeth his arrowes against vs and the venime of his wrath lieth for a time in our bones and hee setteth vs vp as markes to shoote at vnto whom if we willingly submit our selues the power and danger of his shafts shall be appeased before they hit vs and the poison of his indignation shall be cleansed away before it rankle in vs. Gen. 22.2 Thus fared it with Abraham whom the Lord did not simply afflict for his sinne but for the triall of his faith and feruencie of his zeale toward God to see whether hee loued Isaac the sonne of the promise better then God the Father of the promise And behold to the comfort of the children of Abraham in a resolution of three dayes iourney he fainted not to execute the Lords commaundement trusting the Lord with his owne saluation for hee knew if his sonne Isaac should haue been sacrificed himselfe should haue been damned whose obedience when it was thus thoroughly tried the Lord saith Since thou hast done this I will make thee the father of the faithfull which was a confirmation of the promise was made before But there is another speciall kind of affliction that searcheth more narrowly the corners of our hearts and trieth more fully our obedience and loue toward God namely when the Lord vouchsafeth vs that honor to suffer for the crosse of Christ In this hee exerciseth our cold prayers and varnisheth our rustie hope and stirreth vp our dull meditations to thinke how precious in the sight of God is the bloud of his Saints when they die not onely in their holinesse Psal 116.15 but are put to death euen for their holinesse And therefore Christ giueth this counsell Luk. 6.22.23 When ye are hated of men and persecuted for righteousnes then reioyce and be glad or as the Greeke word signifieth skippe at that day like fat calues because our reward is great in heauen So as these afflictions that leade to death further and hasten vs toward the life to come and euen for this life they turne to our good as Mat. 10.29 He that forsaketh father or wife or riches for my names sake I will giue him an hundred fold more in this life that is in that base estate and condition of persecution wherein he standeth for the profession of my name I will giue him an hundred times more comfort more contentation and more peace of conscience then he should haue had in an hundred wiues of such as were neuer so deare vnto him in an hundred fathers of such as were neuer so kind vnto him and more perfect ioy then he should haue had in all the treasures of the world be they neuer supleasing and precious vnto him So as obserue though the Lord promiseth not a requitall of thy losse in quantitie and in number yet he doth it in the good will and blessing of God wihch is the spec●all qualitie that maketh such things wee enioy permanent and comfortable vnto vs. This Dauid had found in his owne experience Psal 127.1 and therefore teacheth vs to know that except the Lord doe builde the house in vaine doe the workmen bestow their labour and vnlesse hee keepe the citie as good set open the gates for the watch without him do nothing Witnesse the prison doores that flew open and the chaines wherewith Peter was fettered that flew off when the Iaylor had done the best he could Act. 12.10 And this is that Amos laboureth to perswade the people in his Prophesie that let the spring be neuer so forward Amos 4.6 nor the bread which is our food neuer so sauorie if the Lorde doe but blow vpon it it cannot nourish vs. So Paul saith 1. Tim. 4.12 that godlinesse hath euer the promises of this life that is religious prosperity the hand of blessing from aboue and it hath the promises of the life to come that is to bee translated from this dimme light of Gods fauour which we finde here into the full
when hee said Mine eies gush out teares because men dishonour thee O Lord and in another place he protesteth that he doth hate them with a perfect hatred that loue not the Lord and againe that no notorious and incorrigible sinner should dwell with him Now fiftly as wee must hate Gods enemies so must we loue his friends as 1. Ioh. 3.14 it is said We are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren Mat. 25.34 and Christ setteth downe a plentifull reward for a cup of cold water giuen to a distressed brother Now who these brethren bee Christ setteth downe to be such as do the will of his father so as it is not the affinitie in the flesh but the bond of the spirit that must vnite vs. And on the other side we must hate none in respect of his creation but in respect he peruerteth the vse of his creation for they beare the image of God which is louely but they deface and scratch it out to their owne damnation So as wee must hate not virum sed vitium the wickednesse of the man and not the wicked as he is a man Sixtly our loue of God must draw vs into the field for defence of his Maiestie for by this shall the master know his seruant loueth him if hee cannot digest to heare him euill spoken of yea by this shall it be knowne whether our way be to Canaan or no if we aske where it lieth in the wildernesse and if our bloud rise to heare Ierusalem euill spoken of and to heare the Lord who is the keeper of that citie reuiled and blasphemed Such were the spirits of Eliakim Shebnah and Ioan 2. King 18.37 that they rent their clothes when they heard Rabshakeh raile vpon the liuing God and Ezechiah when he heard it was grieued at it and spread himselfe before the Lord to call for a holy reuenge of that furie And so must euery true harted Christian esteeme the name and credit of God farre more tender then his owne and learne of Moses to be milde in ouerlooking an iniurie done to our selues Num. 12.3 Exod. 32.19 but to be iealous and zealous in recompencing seuen fold to them that teare in peeces the glorious name of the Lord Iesus Now we of that hath gone before must inferre the contrarie that is as all things worke for saluation to them that loue God so all things worke for damnation to them that hate him All which may be drawne and reduced into these two things first those that concerne this life secondly those that concerne the life to come and these may bee reduced into these foure First the graces of Gods spirit so much as they receiue of it is onely to make them vnexcusable for they shall surely perish though they be in the blade neere to ripenesse the reason is because when the holy Ghost hath giuen them as it were a purge to worke vpon them setting before them good and euill they not as weake stomached but as curst hearted doe cast it vp againe like beastly dogges Secondly the doctrine of saluation which hath this singular vertue to bruise and mollifie the flintie heart onely hardeneth theirs and maketh them rage like the dragon for Christ Iesus is but a rocke of offence vnto them preaching is but foolishnesse and the word a fauour of death vnto them and in the Sacraments they doe but crucifie Christ againe Thirdly the benefites of this life doe make them drunke that they can not see their miserie for in their fulnesse they doe neigh like horses and in their hearts they say there is no God they eate and drinke and rise vp to play making their life but as a May-game Fourthly the miseries of this life though therewith they bee sometime mollified as Esau was when be lost the blessing yet this is but like the iron put into the fire and so softned for a time but being taken out is made by that more hard then before Now for the reason why afflictions turne to the best to such as loue God it is because by his eternall purpose they are called to be saued so as the cause why God ordained some to the inheritance of his glorie was onely his purpose and pleasure that it should be so for Christ as Mediator is not the first cause of saluation For the Scripture saith So God loued the world Ioh. 3.16 that he gaue his Sonne whereby is euident and apparent that hee first loued it before he gaue his Sonne for first Gods purpose was to saue some this in time he executeth by creating man and woman in such estate as they might fall by their owne will hee nothing inforcing it nor compelling them thereunto Now when they were fallen then was there need of a reconciliation and now God bethinkes him of a Mediator so as in the order of causes the attonement which is in Christ must be after the fall for the foresight of the good or euill in a man is no cause for God either to saue or to damne any so as no man can determine the cause why God loued Iacob and hated Esau to be because of the goodnesse of the one and the wickednesse of the other and yet it is true that Esau was damned because hee was euill but why he was appointed to damnation rather then Iacob no cause can bee giuen but the Lords eternall and inuiolable purpose For otherwise Paul would neuer haue cried out Rom. 9.20 against the reason of man that he should not pleade with God who hath the power to forme the vessell after what fashion he pleaseth for if the foresight of good or euill had been the cause it had beene easily sounded and the Apostle would soone haue set it downe Hereupon we must gather an argument that saluation is meerely of mercie for whatsoeuer is the cause of the cause is the cause of the thing caused as the Sunne is the cause of the fruitfulnesse of the earth and God is the cause of the Sunne therefore God is the cause of the fruitfulnesse of the earth so through the righteousnesse of Christ we are all saued but Christ is made righteous meerely of the Lord therefore of the Lord we are all saued But this is to be vnderstood of God as of the first cause not as of the neerest cause So that to conclude this point euery man may giue a reason of his saluation namely because he is beloued in Christ but why hee was apappointed to be beloued in Christ no man is able to assigne or set downe a reason but wee must all bow in humilitie and resort onely to the purpose of God heere spoken of by the Apostle ROM chap. 8. vers 29. verse 29 For those which he knew before he also predestinate to bee made like to the image of his Sonne that he might be the first borne among many brethren THe Apostle heere proceedeth to proue that all things euen afflictions worke for the best to
the beholding of the very face of God and there shall bee no markes set to keepe vs from the mount where the Lord dweleth Reu. 21.12 as there was Exod. 19.12 but as Paul speaketh 1. Corinth ●3 12 we shall then see him face to face and know him as wee ●re knowen of him and see him as God all in all that is ●ee shall behold the glory of God not standing vpon the veile of the flesh of Christ for then all mediation and intercession shall cease and this is part of that Christ praied for a litle before his death Iohn 17.24 that we might see that glory he had before the world was made for then we shall see Christ-God and the whole Godhead immediately raigning yet in Christ the Sonne of man and in vs but so as we shall no more leane and relie vpon the praiers of Christ for then he shall raigne no more as the Sonne of man in the midst of his enemies for this gouernement shall cease death which is the last enemy being then abolished and he then shall raigne ouer them vanquished as God Howbeit the fruit and benefit of this his mediation shall indure for euer and the subiection of his humane nature shall then more appeare because of the glory of his Godhead which shall then be seene fully euen such and the same as he had before eternitie yet shall this saluation more increase the glory of his humanity when we shall vnderstand and see it to bee personally vnited to the sonne of God who with God the Father and the holy Ghost shall be all in all Now the fruition and possession of this glory shal worke three effects in vs first it shall breed in vs an infinite loue toward God secondly an infinite ioy in God thirdly an infinite praise to God Infinitely shall we loue him that hath aduanced as to such honour as is endles and to such fellowship as is matchlesse our hearts shall be filled with ioy yet not able to comprehend or expresse it Mat. 25.23 therefore it is said Enter thou into thy masters ioy for this ioy is too great to enter into thee and besides the ioy we shall haue in our owne saluation we shall conceiue as great ioie for the saluation of others which is called ioy celestiall and we shall haue yet more ioy then before to see the Godhead so glorious the Lambe aduanced in our flesh and to be one person with God And this is aboue all ioies because we shal loue Christ far aboue our selues for the zeale of Gods glory shall euen eat vs vp and it shall be so great in vs as it cannot be so great for our owne saluation and then out of this loue and ioy as out of two fountaines ioyned in one shall spring and arise such continuall praise to God for this glory that we shal vncessantly sing to God in the Temple which is God himselfe so as we shall praise God in God and this shall be as the Prophet Esay saith from new Moone to new Moone and from Sabbath to Sabbath that is for euer for this loue of God is from eternitie in respect of our predestination and to eternitie in respect of our glorification and this is that we sigh and grone for and for which while wee are in the flesh absent from God wee continually pray for ROM chap. 8. vers 31.32 verse 31 What shall we say then to these things If God be on our side who can be against vs verse 32 Who spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also THe Apostle before set downe that God the Father by his eternall purpose hath foreacknowledged vs and foreloued vs with an euerlasting loue in his Sonne and not vs onely but all those that to the end of the world shall loue him and manifest and shew foorth this their loue by a sincere worship and religious care to keepe his commandements and how that the Lord as he hath ordained vs and them to the same glory so at the fulnesse of time by the dispensation of his wisdome by his spirit he doth call them by the instrument of his word by the same loue doth iustifie vs in his Sonne and will glorisie vs with himselfe Now he being ouercome with the thought and meditation of these things breaketh foorth into a woonder and admiration that seeing it is thus that the Lord hath taken it vpon him neuer to leaue vs till he hath aduanced vs to heauenly places euen the seat of the Lord Iesus what shall we say The answer is giuen with the question this we must say that since he is our God as appeareth by that which went before then is it impossible wee being thus backed and hauing the Lord our bulwarke that any creature can bee of that force or be so against vs no not the diuell in hell with all his power can hinder vs from the fruition of this glorie In the other words who spared not his Sonne c. there is a further consolation set downe vnto vs to make the heape of comfort greater that since the Lord gaue as it were iudgement against his owne Son and set him foorth to a shamefull death for vs and this when we were his enemies and strangers from the life of God how can it bee he should now denie vs any thing to further our saluation being made friends with him and reconciled to him thorow his Sonne This doctrine needeth rather deepe meditation then large explication for who doth not assume to himselfe sufficiently to vnderstand it being but thus much in effect that since God in his euerlasting purpose hath thus manifested his glorie and mercie and hath ordained the end which is his glorie in our saluation and to bring it that it may come to this end hath subordinated and set downe certaine causes as calling and iustifying it is impossible any thing should hinder our saluation If God he on our side Heereupon wee must not thinke that if God be on our side we shall haue no enemies for because God loueth vs therefore we haue the more enemies and therefore wee are persecuted and subiect to the hatred of the world as Christ himselfe expresseth Ioh. 17.14 The world hateth them because saith he they are like me So as in this place the Apostle doth not meane that we should expect any immunitie and exemption on from the e●mitie and malice of men but that wee hauing this heauenly securitie and assured certaintie of the Lords protection neither Angell nor man nor diuell nor torment shall be able to ouer come vs. For this is that Paul speaketh of All things are by Christ Col. 1.16 through Christ and for Christ that is all things are created by him all things are preserued through 〈◊〉 maintained for his glorie so that our saluation being alwaies ioyned with his glorie neither shall men breath nor the diuell
a candle then had Obadiah hid an hundred of the Lords Prophets in a caue 1. King 18.4 that neuer bowed their knees to Baal Iob. 5.22 For the Lord doth but laugh at the policies of the wicked and he in his time will discouer their shame to their faces and lift vp the heads of his seruants aboue all the tyrants of the world Now for the meanes whereby wee obtaine this victory obserue that it is by a spirituall power of the holy Ghost enabling vs to so great a worke for such is our ambition to be great men as if Demas find no preferment by the Gospell 2. Tim. 4.10 he will nothing esteeme of Pauls company Such is our desire to be rich as if we gaine by our seruants that worke with the Diuell we had rather they should be possessed still then we would lose our gaine which we may see Act. 16.19 where Paul and Silas were haled before the Magistrates onely for casting out the spirit of diuination in the maide that got her masters great aduantage by diuining Yea such and so vehement are our naturall and earthly affections and so great our greedinesse to enioy the pleasures of our life that the mariage of a wife or the triall of a yoke of oxen shall keepe vs from Christ Mat. 22.5 Luk. 14.19.20 So that it must be a greater power then the faculty or abilitie of a man for if naturally we are not able to abide the snuffe of a candle much lesse to burne in the fire Why then so many examples as we see patiently induring death for the testimony of the truth of God so many testimonies haue wee of the Lords power to enable weake vessels to hold such scalding liquer For many through presumption of their owne strength haue apostated and Peter was well neare it notwithstanding his bragge that he would not leaue his master to the death if Christ his eie had not pierced his soule to repentance for his former denials Luk. 22.61 Dauid 1. Sam. 17.45.46 confesseth that it was not in his strength to contend with Goliah neither did he come to him with sword or with speare but in the name of the God of Israel who would close him into his hands And this in truth must be our paterne and our praise in these temptations and afflictions to flie out of our selues and to run to the wings of the Lord Iesus whose grace onely is sufficient for vs and whose power is made perfect in our weakenesse for where the flesh carieth a confidence in it selfe there is no roome for the spirit for the spirit helpeth onely those that be infirme and Christ is onely a Physition for a sicke sinner Mark 2.17 Now as wee are conquerors through him that loueth vs so let vs labour that Christ may thinke his loue well bestowed his bloud well spent and his victory for vs well gained by our loue of him againe that it may be as hot as the flame that whole flouds of waters may not quench it and so strong as neither terrors in persecution nor pleasures in life nor the anguish of death may make vs forsake our ankor Christ Iesus but that wee may hold our confidence in a hope sure and stedfast which shall at the last giue vs entrance into the veile whither Christ our forerunner is for vs entred in Heb. 6.29 ROM chap. 8. vers 38 39. verse 38 For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Augels nor Principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come verse 39 Nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. HEere the Apostle setteth downe a conclusion full of all consolation proceeding from a diuine and heauenly resolution and christian magnan unity extended and offered by the Apostle in the person of all the faithfull wherein he doth couragiously challenge and exultantly triumph ouerall creatures being assured that nothing that euer was created could finally separate him from that loue wherewith the Lord had loued him in Christ This conclusion standeth on two parts first in the enumeration or reckoning vp of some particulars which if any thing could seuer vs from the Lord it were likely to bee some of these he named Secondly because the Apostle could not insist in the induction or bringing in of particulars he vseth a generall comprehension of all things that nothing might bee excepted in these words nor any other creature the things reckoned vp are nine which be either one contrary to another or else diuers from other For death that cannot separate vs from God for though it be most terrible to the flesh to see his prefixed end yet this is so farre vnable to seuer vs as nothing hath greater power to ioyne vs to God through the death of him that ouercame death which appeareth likewise by this that euen the wicked though they loue not to liue the life of the righteous because it is tedious through afflictions yet they can wish with Balaam Num. 23. vers 10. that their last end may be like theirs who alwaies resigne vp their soules in rest vnto the Lord. And though some wicked may make a peaceable end whereby Satan hardeneth others to thinke they are beloued of the Lord because they depart like the light of a candle and some of the elect die troublesomely whereby Satan maketh his instruments to condemne the generation of the godly yet in their inward man they doe not onely patiently expect but deepely sigh for the day of their dissolution that being vncloathed of this corruption they may be crowned with the Lords glorie for they that haue receiued the earnest of the spirit the pledge of their inheritance and the first fruits of the Lords loue and vnto whom he hath sealed and assured pardon of their sinne they do know they haue cause to expect the reuelation and shew of their happinesse being heere tossed with sundrie waues of perplexed miseries and being sure there to arriue from a tempestuous voyage to a most blessed hauen And it is ioyfull to a Christian to bee deliuered from this careful life wherein euery day is the messenger of fresh sorrowes and wherein hee findeth his corruption so burdensome so as though Paul was taken vp into the third heauen 2. Cor. 12.4 yet hee cried Who shall deliuer me from this body of sinne For heere wee know our selues to be scarce worth the ground we go on we are so worne with care and so ground with affliction but then we shall enter into the presence of God and dwell with him perpetually To be short many haue beene so rauished with this ioy which wee see but as in a mist as they haue not onely giuen vp themselues to naturall death but euen suffered violent death embracing it as chearefully as the souldier that comes after his valour shewed to be made a knight or as the King that goeth to his
him in spirit and in truth Now if any be so audacious and bold to aske why God was so sharp in smiting his creatures for the sinne of man Answere first with S. Paul Rom. 9.20 O man who art thou darest plead with God and call him to an account for his doings his secrets are too high for thee and his wayes past finding our Secondly if the creatures had not been punished with man and that he by his particular sin had not procured a generall curse then could not man in his weaknesse haue made any vse of the creatures in their innocencie vnlesse they had fallen with him for they had not been subiect to vanitie to haue been slaine and deuoured of men if in themselues they had not been accursed Thirdly God did not punish them in respect of themselues but in respect of vs for we know the children are punished for the reason of their parents not for any fault committed in their persons but for that the parents haue so highly transgressed the Princes lawes for by this he hath forfeited to the King what should haue descended to his children and this we thinke no hard part in an earthly Prince vnlesse it be in the case of Ahab who tooke the eschete of Naboths vineyard by a false plotted accusation of a supposed blasphemie against God and the King 1. Kings 21.13 then must we needs thinke that the King of heauen who cannot but giue righteous iudgement hath not dealt hardly in punishing and subduing the creatures to this subiection Adam hauing in his creation the rule giuen vnto him ouer them as a father hath ouer his child howbeit the Lord in this gaue no principall or set blow to them but only stroke them as it were through the sides of man that after that fall we might be punished euen oft times in the vse of them If any aske againe why God should thus proceed in making our wound the wider by punishing vs in his creatures since before the curse pronounced on them Gen. 3.15 the Lord had pardoned the guiltinesse of the sinne by the promised seed of the woman Answere This was the wisedome of the Lord in two respects first in respect of his elect secondly in respect of the reprobate for in regard of the elect they are not punishments for sinne the bloud of the womans feed hauing by vertue of Gods promise washed away the guilt of it but because there is yet a remnant of corruption there being much filth Iohn 13.10 hanging on our feet therefore they are as chastisements to increase the measure of our sanctification and the labour in purging and keeping our selues cleane by repentance and a holy life but now to the reprobate they are tokens and forerunners of Gods iustice and of the sword of vengeance which they shall feele heereafter among the damned so that when wee see the heauens made brasse aboue vs and the earth yron beneath vs the one withholding the raine the other not yeelding her fruits but suffring it to die in her wombe this is to vs but a chastisement for some passions vnsubdued or for some sinnes vnrepented of but it is a scourge and reuenge vpon the reprobate mingling his reioycing with repining and his store with grudging that the want of that he seekes may be as a fretting canker in his soule to fill vp the greater measure of his sinne verifying those speeches of Iob Chap. 8.14 His trust shall be as the house of the spider and Chap. 11.20 his hope shall be sorrow of mind For as for them that loue the Lord he vseth foure speciall remedies to make them fit for heauen first his spirit to guide them secondly his word to instruct them thirdly his chastisements to reclaime them fourthly death it selfe to end them and therefore when he correcteth vs in his creatures it is to see whether he can recouer vs as it were by the sight of another beaten before vs making them vnfruitfull that we might remember the want of our owne works mustering oft times the clouds together as if raine should fall yet staying it in the brest of the aire to put vs in mind of the hardnesse of our hearts and of the drinesse of our eyes that doe not weepe sufficientlie for our owne sinnes nor abundantly for the sinnes and abominations of the land it being as wee read Ezech. 9.4 an vndoubted marke of election set by the finger of God in the fore heads of his Saints to mourne and crie for the corruption and crueltie that is in a citie Againe we hauing formerly noted the seueritie of Gods iustice against sinne that we might auoid it so on the contrary we are to obserue his exceeding rich mercy both to the elect and to the reprobate that heereby we may be prouoked to follow him 〈◊〉 to what straites soeuer he shall cast vs his mercy to his chosen 〈◊〉 ●●eth in this that though he hath laid such a curse vpon his 〈◊〉 ●atures whereas they may lay the curse on vs as the cause and 〈◊〉 they knew their owne strength would deuour vs the Lord in ●oue to vs and in power to them hiding it from them yet doth he force them to serue vs the vse of them all being sanctified and restored to vs in Christ and we being through him made owners and possessors of them for as Adam after his fall being secluded from the tree of life was thereby excluded from all the meanes that might maintaine life so Christ hauing by our vnion with him brought vs againe into the paradise of God where that rree groweth we are thereby endowed and inriched with all the creatures both in heauen and earth these being for his sake waiters and artendants on vs yea the very little ones that be elect as Christ saith Matth. 18.10 haue their Angels in heauen to defend them and as Dauid faith Psal 34.8 The Angell of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him Now his mercy to the reprobate is manifested in this that hee by his especiall hand and Commandement doth binde and restraine the creatures from rebelling against them for the heauens would fall vpon the whoremonger if God by his power did not chaine them vp the Sunne that shineth would scorch and burne the Vsurer if his force were not bridled by the finger of God the waters from aboue would fall like a sea vpon the blasphemer if they were not shut in by the patience of God yea all lewd profane and wicked persons should be melted by the heat stifled by the aire swallowed by the earth deuoured by the beasts choaked by their bread and euery creature would be auenged on them for the subiection brought vpon them if God by his prouidence did not restraine them for if they might haue their own wil they would surely do it Who is it saith God Ioh. 38.8 that hath shut vp the sea with doores that her proud waues cannot passe oner but I It is the Lord Iob. 39.12