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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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deserved but which is the comfort of us miserable sinners she looks at what he suffers and in how woful and wretched a case he is Her Plea was thus What Lord hast thou made all Men in vain wilt thou now destroy him for whom thou madest the World shall the housholder be cast out and thrown into prison and there remain till he hath paid the utmost Farthing shall all the Men and Women in the World from first to last be damned for ever and ever alas What profit is in their Blood What will it avail to crowd Men and Devils together in Hell-flames Will not those Devils the grand Enemies of God rejoyce at this And what then will become of thy great Name on Earth Is not this thy Name The Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions and Sins What will the Lord undo his Name Will the Lord cast off for ever And will he be favourable no more Is his Mercy clean gone for ever Will he be no more entreated hath God forgotten to be gracious Hath he in Anger shut up his tender Bowels With these and such like holy whisperings or mutterings did Mercy enter into Gods bowels and make them yern and melt again into compassions But 2. Truth must be heard as well as Mercy and she layes in matter of exception and her Plea was thus What is God but his Word Now this was thy word to Adam In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death and this was thy word to all the Sons of Adam 〈◊〉 17. 〈◊〉 8.10 the soul that sinneth that soul shall die And God may not falsifie his word his word is truth falsifie truth That may not be all men are liars but God is true even truth it self This Plea of Truth is seconded by Righteousness and thus she bespeaks God shall not the Judge of all the world do right Thou hast declared thy self over and over to be just and righteous 〈◊〉 15. 〈◊〉 19.13 〈◊〉 6.5 7. 〈◊〉 ●5 17 O Lord God of Israel thou art righteous Righteous art thou O Lord and upright are thy Judgments Thou art righteous O Lord which art and wast and shall be Even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy Judgments Yea the Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works and wherein consists this righteousness but in rendring to every one according to his due And what is the sinners due 〈◊〉 ● 23 but Death The wages of sin is Death What shall not those sinners die the Death That were as before to make Truth false so here to do Right Wrong These were the Controversies at that time so that Peace could not tell how to speak a prevailing word amongst them nay the controversie grew so high that they made it their own cases what shall become of me said Mercy if God spare not sinners and what shall become of me said Justice if God do spare sinners what shall become of me said Mercy If God will shew no mercy And what shall become of me said Justice if God will do no Justice why alas perish said Mercy if thou wilt not pity if man die I die also and I perish said Justice if thou wilt have mercy surely I die if man die not To this it came and in these terms brake up the Assembly and away they went one from another Truth went to Heaven and was a Stranger upon Earth Righteousness went with her and would not so much as look down from Heaven Mercy she staid below still for where should Mercy be if not with the miserable As for Peace she went between both to see if she could make them meet again in better terms in the mean while our Salvation lies a bleeding the Plea hangs and we stand as Prisoners at the Bar and know not what shall become of us for though two be for us yet two are against us as strong and more stiff than they so that much depends upon this meeting for either they must be at peace between themselves or they cannot be at peace with us nor can we be at peace with God Many means were made before Christs time for a blessed meeting but it would not be Sacrifice and Burnt-Offering thou wouldst not have Heb. 10.5 these means were not prevalent enough to cause a meeting Where stuck it you will say Surely it was not long of Mercy she was easie to be intreated she looked up to Heaven but Righteousness would not look down and indeed here was the business Righteousness must and will have satisfaction or else Righteousness should not be Righteous either some satisfaction for sin must be given to God or she will never meet more better all men in the World were damned than that the Righteousness of God should be Unrighteous And this now puts on the great transaction of our Saviours Birth Well then our Saviour is born and this birth occasions a gracious meeting of the Attributes such an attractive is this Birth this Bud of Christ that all meet there indeed they cannot otherwise but meet in him in whom all blessed Attributes of God do meet It is Christ is Mercy and Christ is Truth and Christ is Righteousness and Christ is Peace 1. Christ is Mercy thus Zacharias prophesied Luke 1.78 That through the tender Mercy of our God the day-spring or Branch from on high hath visited us And God the Father of Christ is called the Father of mercies as if Mercy were his Son who had no other Son but his dearly boloved Son in whom he is well pleased 2 Cor. 1.3 John 14.6 2. Christ is Truth I am the Way and the Truth and the Life That Truth in whom is accomplished whatsoever was prefigured of the Messiah God shall send forth his Mercy and his Truth Psal 57.3 Psal 64.7 Exod. 34.6 Deut. 32.4 Psal 86.15 John 1.14 17. Jer. 23.6 Mal. 4.2 1 Car. 1.30 Heb. 7.2 Isa 9.6 Eph. 2.14 2 Thes 3.16 And O prepare Mercy and Truth And this is his Name the Lord the Lord abundant in Goodness and Truth He is a God of Truth saith Moses plenteous in Mercy and Truth saith David full of Grace and Truth saith John for the Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ He is Truth by Name and Truth by Nature and Truth by Office 3. Christ is Righteousness This is his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness And unto you that fear my Name shall the Son of Righteousness arise with healing under his Wings And Christ of God is made unto us Wisdom Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption And according to his Type Melchisedech this was his Style King of Righteousness 4. Christ is Peace This is his Name wherewith he is called wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the everlasting Father the Prince of Peace And Christ
is that of Paul I now rejoyce in my sufferings for you Col. 1.24 and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church One would wonder how Paul should fill up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ were Christ's suffeings imperfect and much Paul add to them no surely for by one offering Christ hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified I shall not insist on many Commentaries Heb. 10.14 I suppose this is the genuine sense and meaning of the Spirit Now rejoyce I in my sufferings for you whereby I fulfil the measure of those tribulations which remain yet to be endured of Christ in his mystical body which I do for the bodies sake not to satisfie for it but to confirm it or strengthen it by my example in the Gospel of Christ The sufferings of Christ are either personal or general his personal sufferings were those he endured in his own body as Mediator which once for ever he finished his general sufferings are those which he endures in his mystical body which is the Church as he is a Member with the rest and these are the sufferings Paul speaks of and which Paul fills up But wherein is the conformity betwixt our sufferings and the sufferings of Christ I answer 1. Negatively 2. Positively 1. Negatively our sufferings have no conformity with Christ in these two things 1. Not in the Office of Christ's sufferings for his were meritorious and satisfactory ours only ministerial and for edification 2. Not in the weight and measure of Christ's sufferings for his were bitter heavy and woful such as would have pressed any other Creature as low as Hell and have swallowed him up for ever but ours are but in comparison light and tollerable There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man 1 Cor. 10.13 for God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able 2. Positively our sufferings must have conformity with Christ 1. In the cause of them Christ's sufferings were instrumentally from Satan and wicked men we must look to suffer by the enemies of Christ if we have any share in Christ the enemy continues still Gen. 3.15 I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed This was primarily meant betwixt the Devil and Christ but if we conform to Christ we must expect the very same conditions 2. In the manner of undergoing them we must suffer with a proportion of that humility and patience and love and meekness and obedience which Christ shewed in his very sufferings 3. In respect of the issue of them we must look upon Christ's issue and expect it to be ours Ought not Christ to have suffered these things Luke 24.26 Rom. 8.17 2 Tit. 2.12 and so enter into Glory And if so be that we suffer with Christ we shall be glorified together with Christ If we suffer with him we shall also reign with him By reason of this conformity we have that communion and association with Christ in all these particulars as 1. We have Christ's strength to bear sufferings 2. His Victories to overcome sufferings 3. His Intercession to preserve us from falling away in sufferings 4. His Compassion to moderate and proportion our sufferings to the measure of strength which he hath given us 5. His Spirit to draw in the same yoke with us and to hold us under all sufferings that we sink not 6. His Graces to be more glorious by our sufferings as a Torch when it is shaken shines the brighter 7. His Crown to reward our sufferings when we shall have tasted our measure of them For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory O my Soul study this conformity and be content with thy portion yea comfort thy self in this condition of sufferings must we not drink of our Saviour's Cup what not of our Master 's own Cup We read of Godfrey of Bullein that he would not be crowned in Jerusalem with a Crown of Gold where Christ was crowned with a Crown of Thorns because he would not have such a great disproportion betwixt him and Christ and we read of Origin that when Alexander Severus the Emperor sent for him to Rome and that he might take his choice whether he would ride thither on a Mule or in a Chariot that he refused them both saying he was less than his Master Christ of whom he never read that he rode but once O the sufferings Christ endured he was called a Wine-bibber a Samaritane a Devil he was pursued entrapped snared 2 Tim. 3.12 slain And surely they that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution Never wonder that thou art hated of men or persecuted of men why I tell thee if Christ himself were now amongst us in the form and fashion of a servant in that very condition that sometimes he was and should convince men of their wickedness as searchingly as sometimes he did I verily think he would be the most hated man in all the world It 's plain enough what carnal men would do by these very doings of the carnal Jews 3. We must conform to Christ in his death carrying in us a resemblance and representation of his death But what death is this I answer in a word a death unto sin so the Apostle Rom. 6.10 11. Rom. 6.5 in that he died unto sin likewise reckon ye your selves to be dead indeed unto sin There is a likeness betwixt Christ's death and our death in this respect we are planted together in the likeness of his death True Mortification carries a similitude a likeness a resemblance of the death of Christ As for instance See Mr. Brinsley at large mystical implantation John 10.17 18 Psal 100.3 1. Christ's death was a voluntary death I lay down my life that I may take it again no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again not all men on earth nor all Devils in Hell could have enforced Christ's death if he had not pleased his death was a voluntary death a spontaneous act so is our mortification Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power many may leave their sins against their wills but this is not true mortification it bears not in it the likeness of Christ's death for he died willingly it may be thou hast a clamorous Conscience which continually dogs thee and therefore thou leavest thy sin thus Judas came in with his thirty pieces of silver Mat. 27.5 and cast them down in the Temple at the High Priest's feet but no thanks to Judas for they were too hot for him to hold or it may be there is some penalty of the Law or some temporal judgment that
in holiness and righteousness all the dayes of our life surely this is the end for which we are delivered out of the hands of our enemies sin death and hell Eph. 5.8 Ye were sometimes da ●n●ss during your abode in the grave of sin but now being risen ye are light in the Lord walk therefore as children of light Walk i.e. bestir your selves in the works of God Arise shine for thy light is come and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee When God doth let the Sun of Righteousness arise Isa 60.1 it is fit we should be about the business of our souls We see that the night is dedicated to rest and therefore God that doth order all things sweetly he draws a curtain of darkness about us as which is friendly to rest like a Nurse that when she will have her little one sleep she casts a cloath over the face and hides the light every way but when this natural Sun ariseth then men go out to their work so must we though in the darkness of the night we shorted in sin yet now we must bestir our selves seeing the Sun of the spiritual world is risen over us And yet when all is done let us not think that our vivification in this life will be wholly perfect as it is with our mortification in the best it is but an imperfect work so it is with our vivification it is only gradual and never perfected till grace be swallowed up of glory Only let us ever be in the use of the means and let us endeavour a further renovation of the new man adding one grace to another To faith vertue to vertue knowledge to knowledge temperance to temperance patience 2 Pet. 1 5 6. Rom. 7.1 to patience godliness c. till we perfect holiness in the fear of God till we shine with those Saints in glory at perfect day Thus far we have Looked on Jesus as our Jesus in his resurrection and during the time of his abode on earth Our next work is to Look on Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation in his ascension into Heaven and in his session at God's right hand and in his mission of the holy Spirit LOOKING UNTO JESUS In his Ascension Session and Mission of his Spirit The Eight Book PART VIII CHAP. I. Heb. 12.2 Looking unto Jesus who is set down at the right hand of the Throne of God SECT I. Of Christ's Ascension and of the manner how THUS far we have traced Jesus in his actings for us untill the day in which he was taken up Acts 1.2 That which immediately follows is his Ascension Session at God's right hand and Mission of his holy Spirit in prosecution of which as in the former I shall first lay down the object and secondly direct you how to look upon it The object is threefold 1. He ascended into Heaven 2. He sate down at Gods right hand 3. He sent down the holy Ghost 1. For the Ascension of Christ this was a glorious design and contains in it a great part of the salvation of our souls In prosecution of this I shall shew first that he ascended 2. How he ascended 3. Whither he ascended 4. Why he ascended 1. That he ascended 1. The types prefigure it Then said the Lord to me Ezek. 44.2 3. this gate shall be shut it shall not be opened it is for the Prince the Prince he shall sit in it to eat bread before the Lord he shall enter by the way of the porch of that gate and shall go out by the way of the same As the gate of the Holy of Holies was shut against every man but the High Priest so was that gate of Heaven shut against all so that none could enter in by their own vertue and efficacy but only our Prince and great high Priest the Lord Jesus Christ indeed he hath opened it for us and entred into it in our place and stead Whither the fore-runner is for us entred even Jesus made an high Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech 2. The Prophets forsaw it Heb. 6.20 Dan. 7.13 14. I saw in the night visions and behold one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven and came to the ancient of dayes Mark 16.19 Luke 24.31 and they brought him near before him and there was given him dominion and glory and a Kingdom 3. The Evangelists relate it He was received up into heaven He was carried up into heaven 4. The eleven witness it For while they beheld he was taken up Acts 1.9 Acts 1.10 11. and a cloud received him out of their sight 5. The holy Angels speak it For while they looked steadfastly toward heaven as he went up behold two men stood by them in white apparel which also said ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into heaven this same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven Eph. 4.8 10. 1 Pet. 3.22 6. The blessed Apostles in their several Epistles ratifie and confirm it When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men he that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens Who is gone into heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him 2. How he ascended The manner of his Ascension is discovered in these particulars 1. Luke 24.51 He ascended blessing his Apostles While he blessed them he was parted from them and carried up into heaven It is some comfort to Christ's Ministers that though the world hate them Christ doth bless them yea he parted with them in a way of blessing as Jacob leaving the world blessed his Sons so Christ leaving the world blessed his Apostles and all the faithful Ministers of Christ unto the end of the world Some add that in these Apostles not only Ministers but all the elect to the end of the world are blessed The Apostles were then considered as common persons receiving this blessing for all us and so those words uttered at the same time are usually interpreted Mat. 28.20 Lo I am with you alway even to the end of the world This was the last thing that Christ did on earth to shew that by his death he had red●emed us from the curse of the Law Eph. 1.3 and that now going to heaven he is able to bless us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places Acts 1.19 2. He ascended visibly in the view of the Apostles while they beheld he was taken up he was not suddenly snatched from them as Elija was nor secretly and privily taken away as Enoch was but in the presence of them all both his Apostles and Disciples he ascended up into Heaven but why not in the view of all the Jews that so they might know that he was risen again and
all the World what a thing will this be when Christ shall pass a sentence of death on others and speak words of life unto thee when thou shalt see him frowning upon the world and oh those frowns will break the heart and shalt behold him smiling in the fulness of his love upon thy self that Christ at such a time should be delighting-thee with all the imbraces of love and with this sweet invitation to Heaven Come thou blessed inherite the Kingdom it were enough to a spirit a soul half dead the very meditation of this must needs be sweet 6. Consider Christ and the Saints Judging the rest of the world no sooner are the Saints sentenced but Christ turns to the wicked and bids them go into everlasting fire in which sentence the Saints shall joyn with Christ himself Do ye not know that the Saints shall judge the World 1 Cor. 6.2 when the Saints appear it is not only by a Summons but with commission not only to be judged but to judge not only shall they stand at Christs right hand but they shall sit down on the Throne of the Son of God to judge the wicked Angels and the World O the torment O the vexation of wicked men and Devils when they shall see those very men whom they scorned oppressed persecuted to be now advanced not onely to glory but to be their judges it is as if some Noble man had wronged some Poor man and that the King should therefore deliver the Noble man into the power of the poor man Psal 112.10 to take his own revenge Surely The ungodly shall see this and be grieved he shall gnash with his teeth for indignation and melt away but on the contrary Psal 58.10 The righteous shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance he shall wash his foot-steps in the blood of the ungodly O my soul dost thou believe this truth and art thou confident that thou shalt sit with Christ on his very Throne to judge the World why then be joyfull in afflictions exercise thou patience in the censures and judgments of the World know thou for thy comfort that there is a turn and time of judging and therefore say 1 Cor. 4. ● With me it is a small matter that I should be judged of you or of man's Judgment as the original hath it of man's day Is it not enough to command patience if God's day be at hand when I shall judge my unjust judges hark what the Apostle saith Jam. 5.7 8 9. Be patient Brethren unto the coming of the Lord behold the Husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience for it untill he receive the early and latter rain be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh behold the judge standeth before the door Come exercise patience let the World be judging if they will needs slander reproach and persecute thy soul they had better abuse any judge on earth than thee though thou art the poorest weakest meanest of God's Saints upon the earth they will know one day that they have abused their own judge in abusing thee And therefore be thou quiet silent patient Say as David let him alone and let him curse yea let him judge for the Lord hath bidden him it may be the Lord will look on mine affliction and will requite good for his Judging this day this is his day but the day of the Lord is my day and then shall I sit with Christ on his Throne to judge the World Oh the sweet that I may suck from this hony-comb of Christ and his Saints judging the World 7. Consider Christ and his Saints going up into Heaven No sooner hath he done his work with the World and sent them away but then he shall conduct all his flock like a faithful shepherd to their fold then shall he go with all his troops following him into Heaven Hath not Christ said so If I go away I will come again John 14.3 and receive you unto my self that where I am there you may be also O those songs of joy and shouts of praise that will fill the World at that day And thus as they go along Heaven opens unto them and they enter in what welcomes they have there is past my telling if we may imagine and guess O the welcome that Christ will give Come my spouse and come my dear come all my Saints here be those Mansions that I went before to prepare and make ready for you here be those everlasting habitations wherein you and I will dwell together here is your Fathers house the building of the wall is all of Jasper Rev. 21 18. and the worst piece of it is all of pure Gold like unto clear Glass why this is your home your house made without hands here you and I will spend our time eternity it self in joying enjoying and beholding of each other And as thus Christ salutes them so will the Angels those Created Citizens of Heaven salute them too for if joy be in Heaven at the conversion of one sinner what joy will there be at the glorification of all these Saints what welcome entertainment will the Angels give to these new guests at their first enterance into Heaven O my soul if thou art one of them that shalt have this welcome what wilt thou say when thou art admitted in thither if weeping were in Heaven wouldst thou not weep for joy sure these things are no fictions of man's brain but truths and realities and as they are true and real so they are exceeding full of joy all the excellencies of this World are but a dream in comparison of them even the Sun in its brightness is but darkness to this glory that shall then be seen Come think over these things and be so enlarged in thy thoughts that before they go thou mayest feel the sweet and taste of this goodness of the Lord. 8. Consider all the several transactions that will follow in Heaven then will Christ present all his elect to God his Father then will he give in all his commissions which he hath received from his Father Then will the Son himself be subject to the Father that God may be all in all I cannot stay to enlarge on these Onely remember though God may be all in all that excludes not Christ for he also is All in all to all his Saints even to all eternity Immediate visions and fruitions of Christ as God is the very top of Heavens joy Christ is all and in all Christ is the center of Heavens happiness Christ is the well-spring that fills the capacities of Saints and Angels Christ is the object of happiness it self there is as much happiness in Christ as happiness is what ever belongs to glory is in Christ In him dwels all the fulness whatever excellency is in Heaven it is in Christ not onely in perfection but connexion for all those
is arising and shining in our Horizon more and more clearly that great design of Gods love to our souls is manifested in every Sermon on every Sabbath is not this Gospel-preaching what is the Gospel but the Treasure of Gods love in Christ opened to us Oh it is a pleasant work in this respect to be a Minister of the Gospel to be alwayes searching into the Treasures of love and to make them known to poor souls for the gaining of them unto God 2. Here is your Happiness Christ hath not erected any standing Sanctuary or City of refuge for men to fly to for their Salvation but he hath appointed Ambassadors to carry this Treasure unto mens houses where he invites them and entreats them and requires them and commands them and compels them to come in Oh the unsearchable riches of Christ 1. In respect of the Messengers 2. In respect of their Message 1. In respect of the Messengers they were first Apostles now Ministers poor Earthen Vessels Had Christ himself come in his glorified body attended with his Angels it might in some measure have represented his Majesty but alas how would this have dazled your weakness or if Christ had made use of his Angels as he did at his birth to preach his Gospel had they continually come in state and proclaimed Salvation to the Sons of men this would have shewed more glory but alas how unsuitable had this been to your weak conditions here then is the riches of his grace that earthen vessels should carry this treasure that salvation should come out of the mouths of sinful creatures that hearts should be broken souls should believe life should be infused by the ministerial breath of a weak worthless man 2 Cor. 4.7 We have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us Gods power is more Honoured this way than if an Angel had come in person it may be in that Case a sinners Conversion would have been attributed to the power and Efficacy of the Angel but to prevent this and to preserve the glory of his power and grace Christ takes the Treasure and he puts it into Earthen Vessels it is in the Original vessels of shell as precious Pearls are found in Shells so the Pearl is the Gospel and the Shell or Mother of Pearl are the Apostles and Pastors it is true they are Vessels of small price and subject to many knocks and falls yet in them is the most excellent Treasures of the Wisdom of God and of the Gospel of Christ And it is in them on purpose that the excellency may reflect on God and not on them 2. In respect of the Message O the unsearchable riches of Christ What is the message of these men what is the Treasure they bring but the Blood of Christ the Promises of the Gospel the Word of Grace I might sum up all in one word They bring unto men an invitation from heaven to heaven Observe it Christians the Gospel is a message the Lord sends his Son up and down carries him from place to place he is set forth before mens eyes he comes and stands and calls and Knocks at their doors and beseecheth them to be reconciled O the free grace of God! O that mercy pardon preferment eternal life and Salvation should go a begging and suing for acceptance O the love of sin and madness of folly in wicked men to Trample on such Pearls and to neglect so great Salvation when it is tendered unto them O what a heavy charge will it be for men at the last day to have the mercy of God the humility of Christ the entreaties of the Spirit the proclamations of pardon the approaches of Salvation the dayes the years the ages of peace the Ministry of the Word the Book of God the great Mistery of Godliness to rise up in judgment and to testifie against their souls O the condescentions of Christ who are ye that the Lord should send after you what need hath God of you suppose you should go on in the wayes of death and perish everlastingly what shall God lose by it Christ might say If you will go on go on and perish if you love sin so well take your pleasure in it and be damned evermore Ah no saith the mercy of God and the mercy of Christ before that be message after message Isa 28.10 Precept upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little This was the design of Christs chusing his Apostles Go ye into all the world Mark 16.15 and preach the Gospel unto every Creature that poor sinners may turn from sin and be saved SECT III. Of Christ's Reception of sinners 2. FOr Christ's Reception of sinners I cannot limit this only to one year of Christ's Ministry but I shall only mention it this year Now this will appear 1. In the Doctrine of Christ 2. In the Practise of Christ 1. In his Doctrine Christ layes it down expresly Mat. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are Heavy laden and I will give you rest It is no more but come and welcome The Gospel shuts none out of Heaven but those that by unbelief lock the door against their own souls Again All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me John 6.37 and him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out here is laid down the full intent and purpose of God and Christ to pardon and receive sinners the Father is willing and the Son is willing 1. The Father is willing This is the Fathers will which hath sent me John 6.39 that of all which he hath given me I should lose none the Father is engaged in that first he sent Christ on that errand to receive sinners Secondly in that he gave unto Christ all that he would have to be saved by Christ with a charge to lose none Sinners were given to Christ by his Father as so many Jewels to look to and to save 2. The Son is willing for he that cometh unto me saith Christ I will in no wise cast out Christ is so willing to receive sinners as that he sets all his doors open he keeps open house and he casts out none that will but come in and why so John 6.38 For I came down from heaven not to do mine own will but the will of him that sent me 1. I came down from Heaven it was a great journey from heaven to earth and this great journey I undertook for no other purpose but to save sinners Great actions as one sayes well must needs have great ends now this was the greatest thing that ever was done Luke 19.10 that the Son of God should come down from Heaven and what was the end but the Reception and Salvation of sinners For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost had
Psal 2.11 Psal 112.1 spiritual rejoycing may consist with trembling And blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that delighteth greatly in his Commandments the fear of God may consist with these spiritual delights in the Commandments of God 3. If it be spir●●ual pleasantness it is our strength The joy of the Lord is our strength saith Nehemiah Nehem. 8.10 nothing animates souls more in duties than joy doth it carries on the soul more fully it is as oyl that causeth the wheels of Christian practise to go on more freely we may be naturally pleasant and then coming to spiritual duties our hearts are dead but if out pleasantness be spiritual our hearts will be strengthened in the wayes of God 4. If it be a spiritual pleasantness it will bear up the heart in want of all outward pleasantness Although the Fig-Tree shall not Blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines Heb. 3.17 18. the labour of the Olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalls yes I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation When all is dark abroad in the World the soul in this frame will rejoyce in God alone on the contrary the soul that hath only a natural pleasantness of Spirit when affliction comes it is all amort and down I appeal to you that have the most delightful spirits when you have friends and means and all you like you are jocund and merry but when affliction comes how quickly are your spirits down surely your pleasantness is not spiritual for if so it would bear up your hearts joyful in affliction And now again the Passover a Feast of the Jews was nigh John 6.4 our English Annotations on these words can tell us that this seems to be * So Aretius and others the third Passover after Christ's baptisme And therefore here I conclude the third year of Christ's Ministry there is but one year more before Christs death to which now I come and to some passages therein most observable in reference to our Souls salvation CHAP. IV. SECT I. Of the fourth Year of Christ's Ministry and generally of his Actings in that Year THis was the last year of Christ's ministry in which were thousands of passages The Evangelist John relates more of Christ this year than in all the former and if I studied not brevity we might dwell more on his actings for us this year than hitherto we have done from the beginning of his ministry Now it was that he was tranfigured now it was that he instituted that Sacrament called the Lords Supper now it was that after supper he made his farewell Sermon rarely mixt of sadness and joyes and studed with mysteries as with Emeralds now it was that after Sermon he blessed his Disciples and prayed for them and then having sung an Hymn he went out into the Mount of Olives where in a Garden he began his sufferings On these passages I had thought to have enlarged but I see the Book swells under my hands and now that I am drawing near Christ's sufferings I shall only touch one point which hitherto I have pretermitted and is the most comprehensive of any passage I can touch Many Questions are about the Holiness or Righteousn●ss or Obedience of Christ As whether it belong to us And whether it be the matter of our justification And whether Christ was bound to observe the law of works as a Mediator or only as a meer man And whether we are not justified by the passive Righteousness of Christ only and seeing now we are discovering Christs actings in reference to our souls salvation we cannot pass this main business whereof much relates to Christ's life as well as to his conception or birth or death or sufferings SECT II. Of the distinctions or several divisions of Christ's Righteousness FOr the better understanding of Christ's Righteousness we usually distinguish that Christ's Righteousness is either that righteousness inherent in him or performed by him the righteousness performed by him is either his fulfilling the Commandments or his satisfying the curse of the Law The same distinction is given by others in these terms Christ's Righteousness is either his original conformity or his active and passive obedience unto the Law his original conformity is that gracious inherent disposition in Christ from the first instant of his conception whereby he was habitually conformable to the Law and this original righteousness answered for our original unrighteousness his active obedience is his doing of legal obedience unto the command and his passive obedience is his suffering of punishment due unto us for our sins I shall yet a little further enlarge this distinction of the righteousness of Christ and give it in thus viz. The righteousness of Christ is either negative if I may so speak or positive by the negative I understand the absence of all sins and vices forbidden in the Law by the positive I mean both a presence of all vertues and duties required to the perfect fulfilling of the Law as also a voluntary suffering of the penalty to satisfie the commination and curse of the Law 1. The negative righteousness is that which we call the innocency of Christ we read often in Scriptures that he was both blameless and spotless 1. Blameless free in himself from all imputation of sin to this purpose Christ challenged the Jews Which of you convinceth me of sin John 8.46 In all his life he was unblameable and unreproveable and therefore now towards the end of his life he asks the people with whom he had conversed Which of you convinceth me of sin 1 Pet. 1.19 Heb. 7.26 Spotless free from all infection of sin Peter calls him a Lamb without blemish and without spot and Paul an high Priest Holy Harmless and Vndefiled 2 Pet. 2.22 one who never did evil nor spake evil he did no sin saith the Apostle neither was guile found in his mouth one who never offended so much as in thought but was absolutely and in all respects 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 4.15 with out all sin 2. The positive Righteousness of Christ is twofold his perfect fulfilling of all things commanded and his perfect satisfying of the punishment threatned The former is the holiness of Christ this also is twofold the holiness of his nature and the holiness of his life and conversation the former is that we call his habitual Righteousness the latter is that we call his actual obedience And thus much of the distinction of the Righteousness of Christ SECT III. Of the Holiness of Christ's Nature NOw in the first place for the holiness of his Nature the Psalmist tells us Thou art fairer than the Children of men and grace is poured into thy lips Psal 45.2 Which is all one with that description of Christ by the Spouse My beloved is white and
ruddy Cant. 5.10 the chiefest of ten thousands As in the fairest beauty there is a mixture of these two colours white and ruddy so in Christ there is a gracious mixture and compound of all the graces of the Spirit there is in him a sweet temper of gentleness purity righteousness meekness humility and what not In him are hid all the treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge Col. 2.3 and I may add of all other gifts and graces not a grace but it was in Christ and that in an higher way than in any Saint in the World and therefore he is called fairer than all the children of men Observe There was more habitual grace in Christ than ever was or is or shall be in all the Elect whether Angels or Men. He received the Spirit out of measure there was in him as much as possibly could be in a creature and more than in all other creatures whatsoever As the Sun is the Prince of Stars as the Husband is the head of the Wife as a Lion is the King of the Beasts so is this Sun of Righteousness this Head of the Church this Lion of the Tribe of Judah the chiefest of ten thousands if we look at any thing in Heaven or Earth that we observe as eminently fair by that is the Lord Jesus in respect of his inward beauty set forth in Scriptures he is the Sun of Righteousness the bright Morning-Star the Light of the World the Tree of Life the Lilly and the Rose fairer than all the Flowers of the Field than all the precious Stones of the Earth than all the Lights in the Firmament than all the Saints and Angels in Heaven You will say What 's all this to us Certainly much every way the Apostle tells you That the Law of the Spirit of Life which is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 hath freed me from the Law of sin of Death let us enquire into these words the law of the Spirit of life the Spirit of life is here put for life as else where After three dayes an half Rev. 11.11 the Spirit of life coming from God shall enter into them Now life is that whereby a thing acteth and moveth it self and it is the cause and beginning of action and motion and this Spirit of life or life it self being here applied to Christ it is that in Christ which is the beginning and cause of all his holy actions and what was that but his Original holiness or the holiness of his humane Nature But why is the holiness of Christs nature called the Spirit of life I answer 1. Because it was infused into his manhood by the Spirit of God The holy Ghost shall come upon thee therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee Luke 1.35 shall be called the Son of God 2. Because it is a most exact and absolute and perfect holiness the Scripture-phrase setting out things in perfection or fulness usually adds the word Spirit unto them as the spirit of pride the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of error so then the meaning of the Spirit of life is all one with the most absolute and most perfect purity and holiness of the nature of Christ It is briefly as if the Apostle had said the law of the Spirit of life or the power of the most absolute and perfect holiness of the nature of Christ hath freed me from the law of sin and death hath acquitted me from the power of my sinful nature and from the power of death due to me in respect of my sinful and corrupt nature We might draw from hence this conclusion that The benefit of Christ's habitual righteousness infused at his first conception is imputed to believers to their justification As the obedience of his life and the merit of his death so the Holyness infused at his very conception hath its influence into our justification it is by the obedience of his life that we are accounted actually holy and by the purity of his conception or habitual grace that we are accounted personally holy But I must not stay here Thus much of the Holiness of Christ's Nature SECT IV. Of the Holiness of Christ's Life Rom. 5.19 2. FOr the holiness of Christs life the Apostle tells us that by the obedience of one many shall be made righteous here 's the obedience of Christ and its influence on us 1. The obedience of Christ is that whereby he continued in all things written in the book of the Law to do them Matth. 5.17 John 8.29 Acts 3.14 Observe Christ's life was a visible commentary on Gods Law For proof Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets saith Christ but to fulfil them And the Father hath not left me alone saith Christ for I do alwayes those things that please him Hence Christ in Scripture is called Holy and Just and the Holy One Acts 2.27 The most Holy Dan. 9.24 by his actual holiness Christ fulfilled in act every branch of the Law of God he walked in all the Commandments of God he performed perfectly both in thought word and deed whatsoever the Law of the Lord required I do not cannot limit this obedience of Christ to this last year of his Ministry for his whole life was a perpetual course of obedience he was obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even until his death and yet because we read most of his holy actings this year and that this was the year wherein both his active and passive obedience did most eminently shine and break forth the year wherein he drew up all the dispersions of his precepts and cast them into actions as into sums total therefore now I handle it and I shall make it out by the passages following only in this one year As 1. Now he discovered his charity in feeding the hungry as at once five thousand men with five Loaves and two Fishes John 6.9 10 11. John 6.9 10 11. and at another time four thousand men with seven Loaves and a few small Fishes Matth. 15.32 Matth. 15.32 2. Now he discovered his self-denial and contempt of the World in flying the offers of a Kingdom when the people were convinc'd that he was the Messiah from that miracle of feeding five thousand men with five Loaves presently they would needs make him a King but he that left his Fathers Kingdom for us he fled from the offers of a Crown and Kingdom from them John 6.15 as from an enemy When Jesus perceived that they would come and take him by force to make him a King he departed again into a Mountain himself alone 3. Now he discovered his mercy in healing the Womans Daughter that had an unclean spirit Mar. 7.26 27. the Woman was a Greek a Syrophenician by Nation and in that respect Christ called her a Dog and yet Christ gave her the desire of her soul O the
from him O let this be thy wisdom to think much of Christ so as to provoke thee to the imitation of Christ then shalt thou learn to contemn the world to do good to all to injure no man to suffer wrong patiently yea to pray for all those that despightfully use thee and persecute thee then shalt thou learn to condescend to the weak to condole sinners cases to embrace the penitent to obey Superiours to minister to all then shalt thou learn to avoid all boasting bragging scandal immoderate eating and drinking in a word all sin Then shalt thou learn to bear about in thy body the dying of our Lord Jesus Christ that the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in thy body So the Apostle For we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh 2 Corinth 4.10 11. Why this is to follow Christ's steps he descended from heaven to earth for thy sake do thou trample on earthly things Seek after the Kingdom of God and his righteousness for thy own sake though the world be sweet yet Christ is sweeter though the world prove bitter yet Christ sustained the bitterness of it for thee and now he speaks to thee as he did to Peter Andrew James and John Come follow me O do not faint in the way lest thou lose thy place in thy Country that Kingdom of glory Thus far we have looked on Jesus as our Jesus in his life during the whole time of his Ministry our next work is to look on Jesus carrying on the great work of man's salvation during the time of his suffering and dying on the cross until his resurrection from the dead LOOKING UNTO JESUS In His Death The Sixth Book PART III. CHAP. I. Lam. 1.12 Is it nothing to you all ye that pass by behold and see Heb. 12.3 Consider him who hath endured such contradiction of sinners against him SECT I. Of the day of Christ's Sufferings divided into parts and hours THe Son of Righteousness that arose with healing we shall now see go down in a ruddy Cloud And in this Piece as in the former we must first lay down the Object and then direct you to look upon it The Object is Jesus carrying on the work of mans Salvation during the time of his Sufferings now in all the transactions of this life we shall observe them as they were carried on successively in those few hours of his Passion and death As this work of mans salvation was great so we cannot but observe how every piece of it was carried on in its due time even from eternity to eternity The very time of Christ's passage depended not on the will of man for his enemies sought many a time before to slay him as Herod in his Infancy Matth. 2.16 The Jews in his riper age when sometimes they took up stones to stone him John 8.59 and sometimes they would have broke his neck from an hill Luke 4.29 but his time was not then come We read of the Paschal Lamb that it was to be slain on the fourteenth day of the first Moneth called Abib or Nisan Exod. 12.2 ● at the full of the Moon in the evening or between the evenings some think this Moneth answers to our March others to our April I shall not be too curious in the Inquisition for I think it not worth the while only this I cannot but observe that the same day that the Lamb must be slain must our Paschal Lamb begin his sufferings and as then it was full Moon so it notes unto us the fulness of time which now was come and as it was in such a Month as when light prevails against darkness and every thing revives and springs so Christ by his sufferings was to chase away our darkness and death and to bring in light and life and a blessed spring of Grace and Glory and as it was to be slain in the evening or between the evening so must Christ the true Paschal Lamb be sacrificed about the very same hour that the Mystical Lamb was slain to understand which we must know that the Jews distinguished their Artificial day into four parts from six to nine from nine to twelve from twelve to three from three to eight this last part was counted the Evening of the Day and the next three hours the Evening of the Night now in this last part of the Day used the Paschal Lamb to be slain and after it was slain some time was taken up to dress it whole for Supper so Christ at the fourth part of the day at their nineth hour that is at our three of the Clock in the afternoon between the Evenings Mat. 27.50 with a loud voice yielded up the Ghost For the whole time of these last and extream sufferings of Christ I shall reduce them to somewhat less than one natural day or if we may take the whole day before us consisting of twenty four hours and begin with the Evening according to the beginning of natural dayes from the Creation as it is said Gen. 1.5 the evening and the morning made the first day In this revolution of time I shall observe these several passages As. 1. About six in the Evening Christ celebrated and eat the Passover with his Disciples at which time he instituted the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and this continued till the eighth hour 2. About Eight in the Evening he washed his Disciples feet and then leaning on the Table he pointed out Judas that should betray him and this continued until the nineth hour 3. About Nine in the Evening the second Watch in the night Judas that Traytor went from the Disciples and in the mean time Christ made that spiritual Sermon and afterwards that spiritual Prayer recited only by John John 14 15 16 17 chapt and this together with a Psalm they sung continued at least until the tenth hour Thus far we proceeded before we had done with the Life of Christ That which concerns his Passion follows immediately upon this and upon that only I shall take notice in my following Discourse This Passion of Christ I shall divide between the night and day 1. For the night and his sufferings therein we may observe these periods or thereabouts As 1. From ten to twelve he goes over the Brook Cedron to the Garden of Gethsemani where he prayed earnestly and sweat water and blood 2. From twelve till three he is betrayed and by the souldiers and other Officers he is bound and brought to Jerusalem and carried into the house of Annas who was one of the chief Priests 3. From three till six they led him from Annas to Caiaphas when he and all the Priests of Jerusalem sate upon Jesus Christ and there it was that Peter denied Christ and at last the whole Sanhedrim of the Jews gave their consent to Christ's Condemnation 2. The Night thus dispatcht at six
wicked hands have crucified and slain the enemies of Christ though they broke Commands yet they fulfilled Decrees Acts 4.27 28. Against thy holy Child Jesus whom thou hast anoynted both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and people of Israel were gathered together for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy councel determined before to be done The Story of Christ's sufferings was long since taken up and resolved on in the Councils of Heaven and now in the way the only begotten Son which lay in the bosom of his Father reveals this story he tells his Disciples It is written it is written I will smite the shepherd and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered 2. The Disciples hearing this discovery of the shepherd being smitten and the sheep being scattered they are amazed what shall Christ die and shall we like cowards run away and leave him alone in the combat Peter who seems boldest he speaks first Though all men shall be offended because of thee yet will I never be offended O rash presumption It appears in these particulars 1. Peter prefers himself before the rest as if all the other Disciples had been weak and he only strong though all should be offended yet will not I. 2. Peter contradicts Christ's great discovery of his Fathers great design from all eternity with a few bragging words q. d. what though Zechary hath said it and God hath decreed it yet on my part I will never do it Though I should die with thee I will not deny thee 3. Peter in his boast never mentions God's help or God's assistance whereas in relation to future promises and future purposes the Apostles Rule is Jam. 4.15 ye ought to say if the Lord will we shall live and do this and that So Peter should have said by God's assistance I will not be offended by the Lord's help I will not deny thee if the Lord will I will do this and that I will live with thee and die with thee rather than I will deny thee but we find no such word in all the Story and therefore Christ takes him off his bottoms in the first place Mat. 26.35 Verily I say unto thee Peter that this night before the Cock crow twice thou shalt deny me thrice Oh no saith Peter he will not go off his presumptuous confidence though I should die with thee I will not deny thee likewise also said all his Disciples But I must not dwell on these passages 3. His dolorous passage over the Brook succeeds He went forth with his Disciples over the Brook Cedron I never read of this Brook Cedron but some way or other it points at the sufferings of our Saviour I shall instance in some places 1. When David fled from Absolom out of Jerusalem it is said that all the Country wept with a loud voice 2 Sam. 15.23 and all the people passed over the King also himself passed over the Brook Cedron towards the way of the wilderness In this story we find David passing over this Brook Cedron with bare head and bare feet and he and all his men weeping as they went up by the Ascent of Mount Olivet I cannot think but in this King David was a type of King Jesus Christ as another David with his Souldiers or Disciples goes out of Jerusalem bare-head and bare-foot as this type seems to speak what weeping was in the way I cannot tell but probably sadness was in the hearts both of him and his Disciples whose conference was of flying suffering dying the most grievous death that ever was all the difference that I find betwixt the type and antitype in this passage is in that David fled from the face of Absolom but Christ goes out of Jerusalem not to flie from Judas or the Jews but rather to commit himself into their hands 1 Kin. 2.36 37 2. When Solomon confined Shimei to his House in Jerusalem saying Dwell there and go not forth thence any whither for it shall be that on the day thou goest out and passest over the Brook Cedron thou shalt know for certain that thou shalt surely die Now two of the servants of Shimei running away from him he follows after them and passing over this Brook Cedron it became his death why here was a type of Jesus Christ we were those fugitive servants that run away from God and to fetch us home Jesus goes over the brook Cedron rather than he will lose his servants he will lose his life All the difference that I find betwixt Shimei and Christ in this is in that Shimei was but a wicked man and yet he died an honourable death not for his servants but for his own transgression but Christ being a just man so Pilate's wife sent her Husband word Have thou nothing to do with that just man he died a most ignominious shameful death even the death of the Cross and that not for himself but for us Isa 53.5 He was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities 3. When the good Kings Hezekiah and Asa and Josiah purged the City and the Temple of Idolatry they burnt the cursed things at the Brook Kidron and cast them therein And Asa cut down the Idol 2 King 23.6 2 Chr. 29.16 and he brought out the Grove from the House of the Lord without Jerusalem unto the Brook Kidron and burnt it at the Brook Kidron and the Priests went into the inner part of the house of the Lord to cleanse it and brought all the uncleanness that they found in the Temple of the Lord into the Court of the house of the Lord and the Levites took it to carry it out abroad into the Brook Kidron and they arose and took away the Altars that were in Jerusalem and all the Altars for Incense took they away 2 Chr. 20.14 and cast them into the Brook Kidron or Cedron All these note unto us that the Brook was as it were the sink of the Temple into which all the purgamenta and uncleannesses of Gods house and all the accursed things were to be cast and here again was a type of Christ upon him was cast all the filths of our sins that as a River or Fountain he might cleanse us from them in this respect he is said to be made sin for us who knew no sin 2 Cor. 5.21 that we might be made the righteousness of God in him he was made sin for us and a curse for us that so he might swallow up Sin and Death and might be destruction of Hell and all I cannot pass over this passage of the Brook without some Use or Application to our selves 1. It informs Methinks this Valley and this Brook of Cedron is a right representation of a Christians Life Jesus went forth with his Disciples over the Brook Cedron Vse What is our life if we are Christ's but a passage through a vale of tears and over a Brook of several afflictions Many are
took him and commanded him to be bound with two Chains And that this might be their dealing with Christ Judas by his counsel seems to speak hold him fast take him and lead him away safely q. d. make him sure that he escape not out of your hands he hath deceived you often and therefore Chain him with an Iron Chain that will be sure to hold I cannot pass this without some word to our selves Vse Christ undergoes this restraint that all sorts of persecution might be sanctified to us by his susception Again Christ was faster bound with his cords of Love than with Iron fetters his love was strong as death it overcame him who is invincible and bound him who is omnipotent the Jews cords were but the Symboles and Figures but the dear love the tender bowels of Jesus Christ were the Morals and things signified Again Christ was bound that we might be free the Cords of Christ were so full of virtue that they loosed the Chains of our sins and tied the hands of Gods Justice which were stretched out against us for our sins Again he was bound for us that so he might bind us to himself I drew them with cords of a man with bands of Love Hos 11.4 A strange thing it was to see the King bound for the Thieves offence but such was Christ's Love that he might draw sinful mankind to the Love of him again Lastly one good Lesson we may learn from wicked Judas take him and lead him away safely hold him fast Come Christians here 's good counsel from a Judas like another Caiaphas he Prophesies he knows not what take him and lead him away and hold him fast It is of necessity that those which spiritually seek after Christ should take him by Faith and hold him fast by Love I will rise now saith the Spouse I will seek him whom my soul loveth and anon I found him whom my soul loveth I held him Cant. 3.2 4. and would not let him go until I had brought him into my Mothers House into the Chambers of her that conceived me We must arise out of the bed of sin we must seek Christ in the use of Ordinances and there if we find him we must take him lay hold on him by the hands of Faith and not let him go but lead him safely until we have brought him into our Mothers House into the Assemblies of his people or if you will until we have brought him into our souls where he may sup with us and we with him 4. For his leading to Annas John John 18.13 records it that they led him to Annas first for he was Father-in-law to Caiaphas who was the high Priest that same year 1. They led him away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it refers to the place whence they led him the Garden was the terminus a quo there they apprehended him and bound him and thence they led him away but the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is something more than meerly abduco sometimes it signifies abigo to drive away whether by force or fraud somtimes rapio ad suplicium ad judicandum to snatch away either to punishment or to judgment It is said † Ecce trahebatur passis Prionidia virgo crinibus Virg. Aen. 1. they drew him away by the hairs of the head and that they led him in uncouth wayes and through the Brook Cedron in which the ruder Souldiers plunged him and passed upon him all the affronts and rudeness which an insolent and cruel multitude could think of So that now again was the fulfilling of the Prophesie He shall drink of the Brook in the way Psal 110.7 I dare not deliver these things as certain truths only this I affirm that they led him snatcht him haled him from the Garden back again to Jerusalem over the Brook and Valley called Cedron 2. They led him first to Annas why thither is a question the cognizance of the cause belonged not properly to Annas but to Caiaphas all that can be said for Annas is that he was chief of the Sanhedrim and Father-in-law to Caiaphas and to the High Priest the next year following Oh when I think of Jesus thus led away to Annas first when I think of him partly going and partly haled forwards and forced to hasten his Grave-pace Vse when I think of him thrown into or plunged in the Waters of the Brook and so forced to drink of the Brook Cedron in the way when I think of him presented by a deal of Souldiers and rude Catch-poles to this mercenary Annas and withal think that I had an hand as deep as any other in these acts my heart must either break or I must proclaim it an heart of flint and not of flesh Come Christians let us lay our hands upon our hearts and cry Oh my Pride and Oh my Covetousness and Oh my Malice and Revenge Oh my Vnbelief and Oh my Vnthankfulness and Oh my Vncharitableness to the needy members of Christ Jesus why these were the rout these were they that led and dragg'd and drew Jesus as it were by the hair of his head these were they that took hold of the chain and pulled him forwards and shewed him in triumph to this bloody Annas nay these were the Judas Jews Annas and all Oh that ever I should lodge within me such an heart that should lodge in it such sins such betrayers such murderers of Jesus Christ But I must remember my self Watchman what of the night Watchman Isa 21.11 12. Mat. 14.25 Exod. 14.24 Psal 130.6 what of the night if ye will enquire enquire return come We may now suppose it about the third hour or the last watch in the Gospel it is called the fourth watch of the night elsewhere it is called the morning-watch which continueth till the morning And of the Acts done in this interval of time we are next to treat SECT VII Of Christ's Examination and Condemnation with their Appendices NOw it was that they led him from Annas to Caiphas and presently a Council is called of the High Priests Scribes and Elders these were the greatest gravest learned'st wisest men amongst them and they all conspire to judge him who is the great Judge both of quick and dead In their proceedings we may observe 1. The captious examination of the High Priest 2. The sacrilegious smiting of one of the Servants 3. The impious accusations of the Witnesses 4. The Sentence of the Judges 5. The perfidious denial of perjured Peter 6. The shameful delusion and abuses of the base Attendants 1. For the captious examination of the High Priest The High Priest then asked Jesus of his Disciples John 18.19 and of his Doctrine 1. Of his Disciples what the Questions were it is not expressed but probably they might be such as these How many Disciples he had and where they were and what was become of them why he should take upon him to be better guarded than others
brought unto Pilate's house John 18.28 Mat. 27.1 2 3 4 5. then led they Jesus from Caiphas unto the Judgment-Hall and it was early When the Morning was come all the chief Priests and Elders of the People took council against Jesus to put him to death and when they had bound him and led him away and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the Governour Then Judas which had betrayed him hanged himself O the readiness of our nature to evil When the Israelites would sacrifice to the Golden-Calf they rose up early in the Morning if God leave us to our selves Exod. 32.6 we are as ready to practise mischief as the fire is to burn without delay But on this Circumstance I shall not long stay the transactions of this hour I shall consider in these two passages Christ's Indictment and Judas's fearful end In Christ's Indictment we may observe 1. His Accusation 2. His Examination In his Accusation we may observe 1. Who are his Accusers 2. Where he was accused 3. What was the matter of which they do accuse him 1. His Accusers were the chief Priests and Elders of the People Mat. 27.12 the very same that before had judged him guilty of Death are now his Accusers before the temporal Judge but why must our Saviour be twice Judged was not the Sanhedrim or Ecclesiastical Court sufficient to condemn him I answer He is twice judged 1. That his Innocency might more appear true Gold often tried in the fire is not consumed but rather perfected so Christ's Integrity though examined again and again by divers Judges wholly corrupt yet thereby it was not hurt but made rather more illustrious 2. Because his firster judgment was in the night and a sentence pronounced then was not reputed valid it is said of Moses that he judged the People from the morning unto the evening Exod. 18.13 John 18.31 for until night no judgment was protracted 3. Because said the Jews it is not lawful for us to put any man to death These words had need of exposition we know Moses's Law prescribed death to the Adulterers Idolaters Blasphemers Man-slayers Sabbath-breakers but now the Romans say some had come and restrained the Jews from the execution of their Laws others are of another mind and therefore the meaning of these words It is not lawful for us to put any man to death may be understood say they in a double sense 1. That it was not Lawful for them to put any man to such a death as the Death of the Cross Moses's Law was Ignorant of such a death and the words following seem to favour this interpretation John 18 32. that the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled which he spake signifying what death he should die We read only of four sorts of death that were used among the Jews as strangling stoning burning and killing with the sword crucifying was the invention of Romans and not of Jews 2. That it was not Lawful for them to put any man to death at such a time on this day was celebrated the Jews Passover which was in memory of their deliverance out of Egypt so that now they had a custome to deliver some from death the case of Barabbas but they could not now condemn any one to death hence it was that after Herod the Jew had killed James he proceeded further to take Peter also yet during the dayes of unleavened Bread he delivers him to be kept in Prison Acts. 12.14 intending saith the Text after Easter to bring him forth to the People Pilate a Gentile was not tied to these Laws and therefore they led Jesus from Caiaphas unto the Hall of judgment or unto Pilate's House 2. The place of the Accusation was at the door of the House they would not go into the Judgment-Hall lest they should be defiled John 18.28 but that they might eat the Passover See what a piece of Superstition and grose Hypocrisie is here they are curious of a Ceremony but make no strain to shed innocent blood they are precise about small matters but for the weightier matters of the Law as Mercy Judgment Fidelity and the Love of God they let them pass they honour the figurative Passover but the true Passover they seize upon with bloody and sacrilegious hands 3. The matter of which they accuse him 1. That he seduced the People 2. That he forbade to pay Tribute to Cesar 3. That he said he was a King How great but withal how false were these their accusations For the first Christ was so far from stirring up Seditions that he strove and endeavoured to gather the People into one O Jerusalem Mat. 23.37 Jerusalem how often would I have gathered thy Children together even as a Hen gathereth her Chickens under her wings and ye would not For the second instead of denying to pay tribute to Cesar Mat. 17.27 Luke 20.25 he paid it in his own particular take twenty-pence out of the fishes mouth said he to Peter and give unto them for me and thee and give unto Cesar the things that are Cesar's said he to the People and to God the things that are God's For the third instead of making himself a King he professeth that his Kingdom is not of this World and when they would have made him a King instead of flattering them John 18.36 John 6.15 he flieth from them and that into the Wilderness or into a mountain himself alone Thus much of the Accusation 2. For his Examination Pilate was nothing moved with any of the Accusations save only the third and therefore letting all the rest pass he asked him only Art thou the King of the Jews Joh. 18.33.36 To whom Jesus answered My Kingdom is not of this World c. He saith not my Kingdom is not in this World but my Kingdom is not of this World by which Pilate knew well that Christ was no enemy unto Cesar Christs Kingdom is spiritual his government is in the very hearts and Consciences of men and what is this to Cesar Hence Pilate useth a policy to save Jesus Christ they tell him that Christ was of Galilee and therefore he takes occasion to send him to Herod who was Governour of Galilee But of that anon Vse How many Lessons may we learn from hence 1. Christ was accused who can be free The chief Priests and Elders of the Jews accused Christ no wonder if those that are chief and great amongst us accuse poor Christians O there 's a perpetual enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent there is an everlasting irreconcileable implacable enmity and antipathy between Grace and Prophaneness light and darkness Christ and Belial As it is reported of Tigers that they rage when they smell the fragrancy of Spices so it is with the wicked who rage at the spiritual Graces of them that are sincere for God 2. Christ's Accusers would not go into the Judment-Hall lest they
compares the sins of the wicked Jews to very poyson Deut. 32.32 33. For their wine is of the wine of Sodom and of the fields of Gomorrah their Grapes are Grapes of Gall their clusters ar● bitter their Wine is the poyson of Dragons and the cruel venome of Aspes In this respect we may think as hardly of our selves as of the Jews because so oft as we sin against God we do as much as mingle rank poyson and bring it to Jesus Christ to drink 6. They crucified him i.e. they fastened him on the Cross and then lift him up Mat. 27.35 A great question there is amongst the Learned whether Christ was fastened on the cross after it was erected or whiles it was lying on the ground I would not rake too much into these niceties only more probable it is that he was fastened to it whiles it lay flat on the ground and then as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness so was the Son of man lifted up We may express the manner of their acting and his sufferings now John 3.14 as a learned Brother hath done before us Now come the Barbarous inhumane hangmen Herle contem plat on Christs pass and begin to unloose his hands but how alas 't is not to any liberty but to worse bonds of nails then stript they off his gore-glewed cloaths and with them questionless not a little of his mangled skin and flesh as if it were not enough to crucifie him as a thief unless they flea him too as a beast then stretch they him out as another Isaac on his own burthen the Cross that so they might take measure of the holes and though the print of his blood on it gave them his true length yet how strictly do they take it longer than the truth thereby at once both to crucifie and rack him that he was thus stretcht and racked upon his cross Psal 22.17 Ver. 14. David gives more than probable intimation I may tell all my bones and again all my bones are out of joynt which otherwise how could it so well be as by such a violent stretching and distortion whereby it seems they had made him a living anatomy nor was it in the less sensible fleshly parts of his body that they drive these their larger tenters whereon his whole weight must hang but in the hands and feet the most sinewy and consequently the most sensible fleshly parts of all other wherein how rudely and painfully they handle him appears too by that of David they digged my hands and my feet they made wide holes like that of a spade as if they had been digging in some ditch the boystrous and unusual greatness of these nails we have from venerable antiquity Constantine the great is said to have made of them both an Helmet and a Bridle How should I write on but that my tears should blot out what I write Colos 2.14 when it is no other than he that is thus used who hath blotted out that hand-writing of ordinances that was against me But the hour goes on and this is the great business of the worlds redemption of which I would speak a little more by this time we may imagine Christ nailed to the cross and his cross fixed in the ground which with its fall into the place of its station gave infinite torture by so violent a concussion of the body of our Lord. That I mean to observe of this crucifying of Christ I shall reduce to these two heads viz. the shame and pain 1. For the shame it was a cursed death cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Gal. 3.13 When it was in use it was chiefly infflicted upon slaves that either falsely accused or treacherously conspired their Masters death but on whomsoever it was inflicted this death in all Ages among the Jews hath been branded with a special kind of ignominy and so the Apostle signifies when he saith He abased himself to the death Phil. 2.8 2 Sam. 21.6 Deut. 21.23 even to the death of the cross It was a mighty shame that Saul's sons were hanged on a tree and the reason was more specially from the Law of God For he that is hanged is accursed of God I know Moses's Law speakes nothing in particular of crucifying yet he doth include the same under the general of hanging on a tree and some conceive that Moses in speaking that curse foresaw what manner of death the Redeemer should dye 2. For the pain it was a painfull death that appears several wayes As 1. His legs and hands were violently racked and pulled out to the places fitted for his fastening and then pierced through with nails 2. By this means he wanted the use both of his hands and feet and so he was forced to hang immovable upon the cross as being unable to turn any way for his case 3. The longer he lived the more he endured for by the weight of his body his wounds were opened and enlarged his nerves and veins were rent and torn asunder and his blood gushed out more and more abundantly still 4. He died by inch-meal as I may say and not at once the cross was a death long in dying it kept him a great while upon the rack it was full three hours betwixt Christ's affixion and expiration and it would have been longer if he had not freely and willingly given up the Ghost it is reported that Andrew the Apostle was two whole dayes on the Cross before he dyed and so long might Christ have been if God had not heightened it to greater degrees of torment supernaturally I may add to this as above all this the pains of his soul whiles he hanged on the cross for there also Christ had his agonies and soul conflicts these were those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those pains or pangs of death from which Peter tells us Christ was loosed Acts. 2.24 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies the pains of a woman in travel such were the pains of Jesus Christ in death Isa 53.11 Psal 116.3 the Prophet calls it The travel of his Soul and the Psalmist calls it the pains of Hell The sorrows of death compassed me and the pains of Hell gate hold upon me The sorrows or cords of death compassed his body and the pains of Hell gate hold upon his soul And these were they that extorted from him that passionate expostulation Mat. 27.46 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me he complains of that which was more grievous to him than ten thousand deaths My God my God why hast thou withdrawn thy wonted presence and left my soul as it were in pains of Hell Vse And now reflect we on the shame and pain O the curse and bitterness that our sins have brought on Jesus Christ when I but think on these bleeding veins bruised shoulders scourged sides furrowed back harrowed temples digged hands and feet and then
life neither in thought word or deed that being endowed with the Power of Miracles he lovingly employed it in curing the lame and blind and deaf and dumb in casting out devils in healing the sick in restoring the dead to life that as he lived so he dyed for being unjustly condemned mocked stripped whipped crucified he took all patiently praying for his persecutors and leaving to them when he had no temporal thing to give them a legacy of love of life of mercy of pardon of Salvation When the Sermon is done and the Burial is finished let every Mourner go home and begin a new life in imitation of Jesus Christ O my soul that thou wouldst thus meditate and thus imitate that so thy meditation might be fruitful and thy imitation real I mean that thy life and death might be conformable to the life and death of Jesus Christ But of that hereafter SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that Respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the work of our salvation in his death Jesus Christ to a fallen sinner is the chief object of desire but Jesus Christ as crucified is the chief piece of that object Humbled souls look after the remedy and they find chiefly in Christ crucified and hence are so many cryes after bathings in Christ's blood and hiding in Christ's righteousness active and passive Indeed nothing doth so cool and refresh a parched dry and thirsty soul as the blood of Jesus which made the poor woman cry out so earnestly I have an husband and Children and many other comforts but I would give them all and all the good that ever I shall see in this world or in the world to come to have my poor thirsty soul refreshed with that precious blood of the Lord Jesus Christ But what is there in Christ's blood or death that is so desirable I answer 1. There is in it the person of Christ he that is God-man man-God Heb. 1.3 The brightness of his father's Glory and the express Image of his Person it is he that dyed every drop of his blood was not only the blood of an innocent man but of one that was God as well as man God with his own blood purchased the Church Acts 20.28 now surely every thing of God is most desirable 2. There is in it a worth or price Christ considered under the notion of a sacrifice is of infinite worth now this sacrifice saith the Apostle he offered up Heb. 9.28 Heb. 9.28 He offered up not in Heaven as the Socinians would have it in presenting himself before God his Father but upon earth viz. in his Passion upon the Cross No wealth in heaven or earth besides this could redeem one soul and therefore the Apostle sets this against all corruptible things as silver and gold the things so much set by amongst the men of this world Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver 1 Pet. 1.18 and gold but with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot 3. There is in it a merit and satisfaction the Scripture indeed doth not expresly use these words but it hath the sense and meaning of them As in that text Ephes 6.7 He hath made us accepted in the beloved to whom we have redemption through his blood I know there is a different notion in these words for merit doth properly respect the good that is to be procured but satisfaction the evil that is repelled but in Christ we stand not on these distinctions because in his merit was satisfaction and in his satisfaction was merit A great controversie is of late risen up Whether Christ's death be a satisfaction to Divine justice But the very words redeeming and buying do plainly demonstrate that a satisfaction was given to God by the death of Jesus Tit. 2 14. 1 Cor. 6.20 Rev. 5.9 He gave himself for us that he might redeem us ye are bought with a price and what price was that why his own blood Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood i.e. by thy death and Passion Mat. 20.28 1 Tit. 2.6 This was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that ransome which Christ gave for his Elect The Son of man came to give his life a ransome for many or as the Apostle He gave himself a ransome for all the word is here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an adequate price or a counterprice as when one doth or undergoeth something in the room of another as when one yields himself a Captive for the redeeming of another out of Captivity or gives up his own life for the saving of another man's life so Christ gave himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a ransome or counterprice submitting himself to the like punishment that his redeemed ones should have undergone The Socinians tell us that Christ's sufferings and death were not for satisfaction to God but in reference to us that we might believe the truth of his Doctrine confirmed and sealed as they say by his death and that we might yield obedience to God according to the pattern that he hath set before us and that so believing and obeying we might obtain the remission of Sins and eternal Life But the Scripture goes higher in that mutual compact and agreement betwixt God and Christ we find God the Father imposing and Christ submitting to this satisfaction Isa 53.6 1. The Father imposeth it by charging the sins of his Elect upon Jesus Christ The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all not the sins themselves not the evill in them or fault of them but the guilt and penalty belonging to them this God laid upon his Son and charged it upon him he charged it as a Creditor chargeth the debt upon the Surety requiring satisfaction 2. Christ undertook it He was oppressed Ver. 7. and he was afflicted or as some translate It was exacted and he answered i.e. God the Father required satisfaction for sin and Jesus Christ was our Surety answered in our behalf Ver. 12. He bear the Sins of many he bear them as a porter that bears the burthen for another which himself is not able to stand under he bear them by undergoing the punishment which was due for them he bear them as our Surety submitting himself unto the penalty which we had deserved and by that means he made satisfaction to the justice of God Surely Christs death was not only for confirmation of his Doctrine but for satisfaction to God 4. There is in it not only a true but a copious and full satisfaction Christ's death and blood is superabundant to our sins The grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant 1. Tim. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was over-full redundant more than enough Many an humble soul is apt enough to complain Oh if I had not been so great a sinner if I had not committed such and such transgressions there might have been
are not barely to consider the History of Christ's death but the aim of Christ in his death Many read the History and they are affected with it there is a principle of humanity in men which will stir up compassion and love and pity towards all in misery whilst Christ was suffering the women followed after him weeping but this weeping not being spiritual or rais'd enough he said to them Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but for your selves The way of Faith drawing virtue out of Christ's death it is especially to look to the scope and drift of Christ in his sufferings As God looks principally to the meaning of the Spirit by Prayer so doth faith look principally to the meaning of Christ in his sufferings mistake not my meaning is not that we should be ignorant of the History of Christ's death or of the manner of Christ's sufferings you see we have opened it largely and followed it close from first to last but we must not stick there we should above all look to the mind and heart of Christ in all this some observe that both in the Old and New Testament we find this Method first the History and then the Mystery first the Manner and then the Meaning of Christ's sufferings as in the Old Testament We have first the History in Psal 22. written by David and then the Mystery in Isa 52. written by Isaiah And in the New Testament we have first the manner of his sufferings written at large by all the Evangelists and then the meaning written by the Apostles in all their Epistles Now accordingly are the acts of Faith we must first look on Jesus as lifted up and then look at the end and meaning why was this Jesus thus lifted up Well but you may demand what was the end the plot the great design of Christ in this respect I answer some ends were remote and others were more immediate but omitting all those ends that are remote his Glory our Salvation c. I shall only answer in these Particulars 1. One design of Christ's death was to redeem us from the slavery of Death and Hell He hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us Gal. 3. as it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree Hence it is that we say that by his sufferings Christ hath redeemed us from Hell and by his doings Christ hath given us a right to heaven he was made under the Law Gal. 3.4 5. that he might redeem them that were under the Law Alas we were carnal sold under sin whereupon the Law seized on us lock'd us up as it were in a dungeon yea the sentence passed and we but waited for execution now to get us rid from this dismal damnable estate Christ himself is made under the Law that he might redeem us Redeem us how not by way of entreaty to step in and beg our pardon that would not serve the turn sold we were and bought we must be a price must be laid down for us it was a matter of Redemption but with what must we be redeemed surely with no easie price ah no it cost him dear and very dear Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and Gold 1 Pet. 1.18 but with the precious blood of Christ his precious blood was the price we stood him in which he paid when he gave his life a ransome for many Mat. 20.28 the case stood thus betwixt Christ and us in this point of Redemption we all like a crew or company of Malefactors were ready to suffer and to be executed now what said Christ to this Why I will come under the Law said Christ I will suffer that which they should suffer I will take upon me their execution upon condition I may redeem them now this he did at his death and this was the end why he died that by his death we might be redeemed from the slavery of Death and Hell 2. Another Design of Christ's death was to free us from sin not only would he remove the effect but he would take away the cause also Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation for the remission of sin Rom. 3.25 John 1.29 2 Cor. 5.21 Heb. 9.26 1 John 1.7 Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Once hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself And the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin This was the plot which God by an ancient design aimed at in the suffering of Jesus Christ that he would take away sin And thus Faith must take it up and look upon it When Peter had set forth the hainousness of the Jews sin in killing Christ he tells them at last of that design of old All this was done said he Acts 2.2 by the determinate counsel of God His meaning was first to humble them and then to raise them up q. d. It was not so much they that wrought his death as the Decree of God and the agreement of God and Christ there was an ancient contrivement that Jesus Christ should die for sin and that all our sins should be laid on the back of Jesus Christ and therefore he seems to speak comfort to them in this that howsoever they designed it yet God and Christ designed a further end in it than they imagined even to remission of sins Who was delivered to death for our sins Rom. 4.25 and rose again for our justification The death of Christ as one observes was the greatest and strangest design that ever God undertook and therefore sure he had an end proportionable to it God that willeth not the death of a sinner would not for any inferior end will the death of his Son whom he loved more than all the world besides it must needs be some great matter for which God should contrive the death of his Son and indeed it could be no less than to remove that which he most hated and that was sin Here then is another end of Christ's death it was for the remission of sin one main part of our justification 3. Another design of Christ's death was to mortifie our members which are upon the earth Not only would he remit sin but he would destroy it kill it crucifie it he would not have it reign in our mortal bodies Rom. 6.11 1 Pet. 2.24 that we should obey it in the lusts thereof This Design the Apostle sets out in these words he bare our sins in his own body upon the Tree that we being dead unto sin should live unto righteousness Christ by his death had not only a design to deliver us from the guilt of sin but also from the power of sin God forbid that I should glory Gal. 6.14 save in the
hangs over thy head like Democles s sword and therefore thou leavest thy sin thus Ahab for a time acts the part of a penitent but no thanks to Ahab for the Prophet had rung him such a peal for his fin as made both his ears tingle 1 King 21.19 In the place where dogs licked the blood of Naboth shall dogs lick thy blood even thine or it may be there is in thee a fear of Hell in thy apprehension death is come and is ready to carry thee before the dreadful Tribunal of a terrible God and therefore thou leavest thy sin thus Sea-men in a stress part with their goods not because they are out of love with them but because they love their lives better they see plainly that either they must part with them or perish with them Now in these cases thy leaving off sin bears no similitude with the death of Christ for his death was voluntary and true mortification is a voluntary action But may there not be some reluctancy in this work betwixt the flesh and the Spirit Quest and if so is it then voluntary I answer Yes such a reluctancy we find in the humane nature of Christ concerning the Cup Answ Mat. 26.39 that it might pass from him and yet his death was a true voluntary death An action is said to be voluntary or involuntary according to the superior faculties of the Soul and not according to the inferior if the reasonable part be consenting the action may be called voluntary though there be some reluctancy in the sensitive appetite Thus in the Christian in whom there is nature and grace flesh and spirit an unregenerate and a regenerate part if the superior and better part be willing I mean advisedly and deliberately willing with full consent of the inward man though perhaps there may be some reluctancy in the flesh in the unregenerate part yet this is said to be a true voluntary act So then with the mind I my self serve the Law of God Rom. 7.25 22 23. but with my flesh the Law of sin I delight in the Law of God after the inward man but I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind Paul was dead to sin according to the inward man the regenerate part though he found a reluctancy in his outwards members and therefore his death to sin carried with it the resemblance of the death of Christ it was a voluntary death 2. Christ's death was a violent death he died not naturally but violently 1 Pet. 3.18 Isa 53.7 he was put to death in the flesh he was brought as a Lamb to the slaughter So is our mortification it is voluntary in respect of us but violent in respect of sin and herein is the life as I may say of this death Oh when a man layes violent hands on his sins when he cuts them off being yet in their flower and strength and power and vigor when he pulls up those weeds before they whither in themselves this is true mortification many have left their sins who never mortified them so the aged Adulterer hath left his Lust because his body is dead and hence it is that late repentance in an aged sinner is seldom found true alas he dies not to sin but his sin dies to him I will not say but God may call at the eleventh hour though it be very seldom but in that case you had need to be jealous over your selves with a godly jealousie what do you find some sins within you to be dead that were sometimes alive O be inquisitive impannel a Jury call a Coroners Inquest upon your own souls enquire how they came by their deaths whether they died a violent or natural death search what wounds they have received and whether they were deadly wounds yea or no enquire what weapon it was that slew them whether the Sword of the Spirit that two-edged Sword the Word of God what purposes what resolutions have been taken up and levelled against them what prayers and tears have been spent upon them If you find not these signs you may g●●e in your Verdict that they died not a violent but a natural death And here 's a good Caveat for others Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth Eccles 12.1 while the evil days come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them Oh take heed of reprieving your Lusts let them not live till to morrow now bring them forth in the sight and presence of God arraign condemn crucifie mortifie them whiles they might yet live Surely this is true mortification when the body of sin dieth as Christ died a violent death 3. Christ's Death was a lingring death he hung divers hours upon the Cross From the first hour to the ninth hour saith Matthew i.e. from our twelve to three before he gave up the Ghost So is our mortification a lingring death sin is not put to death all at once but languisheth by little and little this is looked upon as one main difference betwixt justification and sanctification the former is a perfect work admitting of no degrees but so is not the latt●r though a Believer is freed perfectly from the guilt of sin yet not so from the power of it sin dwelleth in us though it hath not altogether a dominion over us Rom. 7.17 It is no more I that do it but sin that dwelleth in me like a rebellious Tenant it keeps possession in despight of the owner till the house be pulled down over his head True indeed the body of sin in a regenerate soul hath received its death-wound and in that respect it may be said to be dead but it is not quite dead still it stirreth and moveth dying but by degrees What the Apostle saith of the renewing of the new man we may say of the destroying of the old man the inward man is renewed day by day 2 Cor. 4.16 ●nd the old man is destroyed d●y by day or as Paul said of himself in respect of his afflictions we may say of a Christian in respect of his sins I die daily 1 Cor. 15.31 there is not the most sanctified soul upon earth but has some remainders of corruption left in it which God in his wise providence permits for the trying exercising and humbling of our souls and for the making his own rich Graces in renewing and multiplying pardons so much the more glorious Gen. 25.22 And here is a ground of consolation to a drooping and dejected soul such an one cries out alas I feel the stirring and vigorous actings of sin and I am afraid my sin is not mortified as Rebekah said when she felt the Children strugling within her if it b● so why am I thus so if sin be mortified saith the soul why am I thus trembling soul let not this discourage Jesus Christ was not dead so soon as he was fastned to the
who are of weak judgments and fiery Spirits look to this point least as now when they cannot answer a Separatist they turn Separatists and when they cannot answer an Antinomian they turn Antinomians and when they cannot answer a Seeker Quaker Blasphemer they turn to them so when they cannot answer the subtle Arguments of a Jew they should as easily turn Jews and deny Christ and the resurrection of Christ I mean not to enter into controversies only I shall declare from what heads Arguments of this nature may be drawn As 1. More generally from Gentiles grants Jews concessions typical instructions prophetical predictions 2. More specially from these clear demonstrations that circumstantially and substantially do prove this Christ to have risen again 1. the Arguments in general are 1. From Gentiles grants Pilate that condemned Christ testified in a letter to Tiberius Cesar that Christ was risen again Tertul. l. cont Gent. Egesippus de vito resur Christi and therefore Tiberius desired the Senate to admit Christ into the number of their gods which when they refused Tiberius was incensed and gave free leave to all Christians to profess Christianity And to the Gentiles Sybylla left written these very words He shall end the necessity of death by three dayes sleep and then returning from death to life again he shall be the first that shall shew the beginning of resurrection to his chosen for that by conquering death he shall bring us life 2. For the Jews concessions Josephus Joseph Antiq. lib. 8. c. 9. the most learned amongst the latter Jews acknowledgeth that after Pilate had crucified him he appeared unto his followers the third day accordingly as the Prophets had foretold The Scribes and Pharisees being astonished with the sudden news of his rising again confirmed by the Souldiers whom they set to watch found no other way to resist the same but only by saying as all the Jews do unto this day that his Disciples came by night and stole away his body whiles the Souldiers slept O strange if they were asleep how know they that his Disciples stole away his body and if they were not asl●ep how could a few weak fishers take away his body from a band of armed Souldiers 3. From typical instructions such was Adam's sleep Isaac's laying upon the Altar Joseph's imprisonment Sampson's breaking of the gates of Gaza David's escaping out of Saul's hands Jeremy's deliverance out of the pit the raising of the Shunamites child of the widow of Sarephtahs son of the Temple of Solomon of Jonah from the deep a thousand of these types might be produced which relate to this antitype Christ's resurrection 4. From prophetical predictions Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thine holy one to see corruption Psal 16.10 Psal 16.10 After two dayes he will revive us in the third day he will raise us up Hosea 6.2 Hos 6.2 he will raise us up i.e. his Son united to us or our flesh assumed by his Son Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Psal 2.7 Psal 2.7 Acts 13.33 I laid me down and slept I waked for the Lord sustained me Psal 3 5. Psal 3.5 Above all how plain was the prophesie of Christ himself that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things of the Elders and chief Priests and Scribes and be killed and be ra●sed again the third day Matth. 16.21 Mat 16.21 2. The special Arguments are exceeding many as 1. The Angels Assertion He is not here for he is ris●n as he said come see the place where the Lord lay Matth. 28.6 Mat. 28 6. 2. The great Earthquake And behold there was a great earthquake for the Angel of the Lord ●●cended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone from the door Matth. 28.2 Mat. 28.2 3. The Apparitions of raised bodies and the graves were opened and many bodies of Saints which s●●pt arose and came out of the graves after his resurrection and went into the holy City and appeared unto many Matth. 27.52 53. 〈◊〉 27.52 53 4. The sudden courage of the Apostles whereas a little before they durst not peep out of doors they presently after compassed the whole world and confidently taught that there was no other name given under heaven whereby men may be saved but the Name of ●esus Act. 4.12 Acts 4.12 5. The Martyrs sufferings even for this truth 6. The Adversaries conf●ssions even to this truth 7. The Jews punishments even to this day for not believing this saving truth There is one Rabbi Samuel who six hundred years since writ a Tract in form of an Epistle to Rabbi Isaac Master of the Synagogue of the Jews wherein he doth excellently discuss the cause of their long captivity and extream misery And after that he had proved it was inflicted for some grievous sin he sheweth that sin to be the same which Amos speaks of For three transgressions of Israel and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they sold the righteous for silver Amos 2.6 Amos 2.6 the selling of Joseph he makes the first sin the worshipping of the Calf in Horeb the second sin the abusing and killing of God's Prophets the third sin and the selling of Jesus Christ the fourth sin For the first They served four hundred years in Egypt for the second They wandred forty years in the wilderness for the third They were captives seventy years in Babylon and for the fourth They are held in pitiful captivity even till this day 8. The last Argument on which only I shall insist it is the several Apparitions that Christ made to others after his Resurrection some reckon them ten times others eleven times and others twelve times according to the number of his twelve Apostles Luke 24.34 1. He appeared unto Mary Magdalen apart As a woman was the first instrument of death so was a woman the first Messenger of Life she brought the first tidings of the Resurrection of Christ which is the surest Argument of man's Salvation 2. He appeared to all the Maries together as they returned homewards from the Sepulchre never any truly sought for Christ but with these women they were sure to find Christ 3 He appeared to Simon Peter alone he was the first among men to whom he appeared he first went into the Sepulchre and he first saw him that was raised thence he was called first and he confessed Christ to be the Son of God and therefore Christ appears first to him Mark 16.7 the Angel bade the women to tell his Disciples and Peter that is to say and Peter especially that he was risen and gone before them into Galilee 1 Cor. 15.5 Of this speaks Paul He was first seen of Cephas and then of the Twelve 4. He appeared to the two Disciples journeying towards Emmaus the name of the one was Cleophas and probable it is the other was
have preached his resurrection oh no he himself would stay in person he himself would make it out by many infallible proofs that he was risen again he himself would by his own example learn us a lesson of love of meekness of patience in waiting after sufferings for the reward Methinks a few of these passages should set all our hearts on a flame of love we love earth and earthly things we dig into the veins of the earth for thick clay but if Christ be risen set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth Oh if the love of Christ were but in us Colos 3.1 2 as the love of the world is in base worldlings it would make us wholly to despise this world it would make us to forget it as worldly love makes a man to forget his God Nay it would be so strong and ardent and rooted in our souls that we should not be able voluntary and freely to think on any thing else but Jesus Christ we should not then fear contempt or care for disgrace or the reproaches of men we should not then fear death 1 Cor. 15.55 57. or the grave or hell or devils but we should sing in triumph O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which giveth us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord. SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection This is the great Gospel-duty we should rejoyce in the Lord and again rejoyce Phil. 4.4 yea rejoyce evermore A Christian estate should be a joyful and comfortable estate none have such cause of joy as the Children of Zion sing O daughter of Zion 1 Thes 5.16 shout O Jerusalem be glad and rejoyce with all thy heart O daughter of Jerusalem Zach. 3.14 And why so a thousand reasons might be rendred but here is one a prime one Christ is risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep A commemoration of Christ's resurrection hath ever been a means of rejoycing in God 1 Cor. 15.20 Some may object what is Christ's resurrection to me indeed if thou hast no part in Christ the resurrection of Christ is nothing at all to thee but if Christ be thine then art thou risen with him and in him then all he did was in thy name and for thy sake Others may object supposing Christ's resurrection mine what am I better how do not all the priviledges of Christ flow from the power and vertue of his resurrection as well as death tell me what is thy state what possibly can be the condition of thy soul wherein thou mayst not draw sweet from Christ's resurrection As 1 Pet. 3.21 1. Is thy conscience in trouble for sin the Apostle tells thee the answer of a good conscience towards God is by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Rom. 4.25 2. Art thou afraid of condemnation the Apostle tells thee he was delivered for our offences and he was raised again for our justification 1 Pet. 1.3 3. Dost thou question thy regeneration the Apostle tells thee he hath begotten us again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 4. Art thou distressed persecuted troubled on every side the Apostle tells thee wherein now consists thy confidence comfort courage to wit in the life of Christ in the resurrection of Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 11. We alwayes bear about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus that the life of Jesus might also be made manifest in our body for we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh And thus Beza interprets those following words knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise us up also by Jesus 14. i.e. unto a civil resurrection from our troubles Paul was imprisoned and in part martyred but by the vertue of Christ's resurrection he foresaw his enlargement And this interpretation Beza grounds on the word following and foregoing wherein Paul compares his persecutions to a death and his preservation from them to a life as he had done before also chap. 1. v. 9 10. 5. Art thou afraid of falling off or of falling away why remember that the immutable force and perpetuity of the new covenant is secured by the resurrection of Jesus Christ Isa 55.3 I will make an everlasting covenant with you even the sure mercies of David this the Apostle applies to the resurrection of Christ as the bottoming of that sure covenant and as concerning that he raised him up from the dead he said on this wise I will give you the sure mercies of David Act. 13.34 6. Art thou afraid of death hell and the power of the grave why now remember that Christ is risen from the dead and by his resurrection death is swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15.55 57. so that now thou mayst sing O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which hath given us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ It is the voyce of Christ thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise Isa 26.19 awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust for thy dew is as the dew of herbs and the earth shall cast out the dead David was so lifted up with this resurrection Psal 16.9 10. that he crys it out therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth my flesh also shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Job 19.23 24 25 26 27. But especially Job was so exceedingly transported with this that he breaks out into these extasies O that my words were now written O that they were printed in a book that they were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever for I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms shall destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another though my reins be consumed within me No man ever since Christ did speak more clearly of Christ's resurrection and his own than Job did here before Christ Observe in it O my soul Job's wish and the matter wished his wish was that certain words which had been cordial to him might remain to memory and this wish hath three wishes in one 1. That they might be written 2. That they might be registred in a book enrolled upon record as publick instruments judicial proceedings or whatsoever is most authentical 3. That they might be engraven in stone and in the hardest stone the rock records might last long
the heads of the Saints Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness 1 Tim. 4.8 which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day and not for me onely but unto them also that love his appearing 4. Inherit the Kingdom prepared for you as Tophet was prepared of old so was this Kingdom prepared of old it was the first creature that ever God made In the beginning God created heaven Gen. 1.1 his first work was to make Heaven for himself and his Saints to dwell in he prepared it for them and then he prepared them for it but why for them were not the Angels the first creatures that possessed it nay were they not created in it or together with it yes but yet the Angels are not properly the heirs sons members spouse of God and Christ as the Saints are the Angels are but ministring spirits and the servants of the Bride-groom but the Saints are the Bride her self heirs and co-heirs with Christ 5. Prepared for you from the foundation of the world This was the great design of God and Christ from all eternity before the foundations of the world and at the first stone laid and ever since they have been carrying on this mighty work it is not a business of yesterday onely No no the eternal thoughts of God have been upon it Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world Oh what thoughts are in Saints when this sentence is propounded Oh what joy enters into them now they are to enter into their Masters joy methinks if it were possible that tears could be in a glorified estate the Saints should not see Christ reach out a Crown to set it on their heads but they should weep and hold away their heads but Christ will have it so This honour have all the Saints praise ye the Lord. SECT VI. Of Christ and the Saints judging the rest of the World 6. FOR Christ and his Saints judging the world no sooner shall the Saints be sentenced Justified Acquitted Anointed Crowned but presently they must be enthronized and sit with Jesus Christ to judge the world In the unfolding of this we may observe these particulars 1. As Christ is on a Throne so now must the Elect be set on Thrones Rev. 3.21 To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my Throne Thrones are for Kings and Judges and in that Christ hath now lifted up his Saints to this condition he will have them sit with him as so many Judges and as so many Kings or if it be more honour to have Thrones by themselves than to sit with Christ in his Throne John in his vision saw many Thrones And I saw Thrones and they sat upon them Rev. 20.4 and judgment was given unto them And Christ himself told his Apostles Verily I say unto you that ye which have followed me in the regeneration when the Son of Man shall sit in the throne of his glory ye also shall sit upon twelve Thrones Mat. 19.28 judging the twelve Tribes of Israel Hence some argue that amongst all the Saints the Apostles shall have their Thrones seated next to Christ howsoever the rest shall not be deprived of their Thrones for not onely twelve Thrones but twelve and twelve are set about the Throne of Christ And round about the Throne were four and twenty Thrones or seats and upon the Throne I saw four and twenty Elders sitting cloathed with white rayment Rev. 4.4 and they had on their heads crowns of Gold Onely four and twenty Thrones and four and twenty Elders are numbred but thereby is represented the whole Church of Christ It is plain enough that all the Saints shall appear plainly in the glory of Christ's Kingdom having Thrones with him in the Air during the time of his judgment 2. The goats on the left hand shall then be called to receive their doom No sooner the Saints enthronized but then shall Christ say Ye blessed Angels bring hither all those mine enemies who have said I shall not rule over them that I may bruise them with my Iron mace and break them in pieces like a Potters vessel O the fear and trembling that will now seize on reprobates do but see the case of prisoners when the Judge speaks that word Come Jaylors bring hither those prisoners to the bar But alas what comparison can we make to suite with the condition of these reprobates now shall their hearts fail them for fear now shall they seek death oh how gladly would they die again but shall not find it now shall they cry to rocks and mountains Fall on us Rev. 6.16 and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the Throne and from the wrath of the Lamb. As a prisoner in a desperate case had rather remain in his fordid stinking dungeon than coming into the open air for execution so the reprobates newly raised from the earth would fain return again into the earth glad to remain though not on the face of it with pleasure yet in the bowels of it with rottenness and solitude like malefactors pressing to death they cry out for more weight Hills cover us mountains fall upon us yet more weight more rocks more mountains hide us press us cover us dispatch us But all in vain the command is out Angels and Devils will force them to the bar for the Lord hath spoken it Those mine enemies which would not that I should reign over them Luke 19.27 bring them hither 3. They shall look on Christ and his Saints now sitting on their Thrones As prisoners that stand at the bar in the face of the Judge so must these reprobates look the Judge and all his Assessors in the very face 1. For the judge they shall look on him Behold he cometh with clouds and every eye shall see him and they also which pierced him We heard before that no sooner Christ in the clouds but they saw him then as the prisoners that see the Judge riding to his Judgment-seat Oh but now they shall see him in the Judgment-seat ready with sparkling eyes and thundring voice to speak their sentence Prisoners at the bar must not turn their backs on the Judge when he begins their sentence no more must reprobates In Majestate visuri sunt in humilitate videre noluerunt ut tanto distrinctius virtutem sentiant quanto contemptius infirmitatem deriserunt They must see him in Majesty whom they would not deigne to look upon in humility that by so much more they may feel his power by how much more they derided his weakness Oh the difference betwixt Christ's first coming in the flesh and in his second coming in the clouds then he came in poverty now in Majesty then in humility now in Glory then with poor-Shepherds now with mighty Angels then the contempt of Nations now the terror of the World then crowned with
swallowed up all my natural affections that I cannot but laugh at thy calamity and joy in thy damnation I gave thee a body and God himself gave thee a Soul but now let the Devils have both and torment them in Hell be gone I shall never see thee again Or if the Child be the Saint and the Parent the Reprobate then shall the Child say O unworthy Parent unworthy of everlasting life I had my natural being from thee but my Spiritual being was from the Lord if I had followed thy steps I had been everlastingly damned did I not know thy ignorance thy unbelief thy worldliness thy covetousness thy pride thy malice thy lust thy lukewarmness thy impatiency thy discontentment thy vain-glory thy self-love didst not thou often check me for my forwardness and zeal and holiness in Religion didst not thou ask me what art thou wiser than the rest of the neighbour-hood are there not many gray hairs amongst us whose wisdom and experience thou hast not yet attained and canst not thou walk on soberly towards heaven and either do as the most or keep pace with the wisest what have any of the Rulers or of the Pharisees believed on Christ oh I shall ever remember to the praise and glory of Christ what discouragements I had and yet how the Lord pluckt me as a fire-brand out of the fire and now hath the Lord set me on the Throne to judge thee according to thy demerits and therefore I joyn with him who is the Father of Spirits against the Father of my flesh depart go to the Gods whom thou hast served and see if they will help thee in the day of thy calamity 3. Betwixt Husband and Wife now if the Husband be the Saint and the Wife the Reprobate then shall the Husband say Thou art she whom I knew in the flesh whom I dearly affected with my heart and soul whom I nourished and cherished as my own body thou art she that was the Wife of my bosom as near and dear to me as my heart in my bosom thou wast my companion my yoke-fellow and my very delight but oh I could never rule thee lead thee guide thee in the way of life in the path that is called holy many a time have I wooed sued and sought to gain thy soul to that blessed Bridegroom the Lord Jesus Christ many a time have I prayed with thee and for thee many a time have I stirred thee up to hear the Word to waite upon God in the use of all means publick and private and instead of imbraces or yieldings to these blessed motions Prov. 19.13.27.15 I have met with contentions and jars as a continual dropping in a very rainy day but death hath dissolved that knot so that now I am no more thy Husband this is the day of separation and I shall no more consort with thee at the Resurrection there is no use of Marriage but now I am to live as an Angel in Heaven and because thou wouldst not draw with me in Christ's yoke now therefore adue for ever and ever we shall never more lye in one bed Mark 12.29 or sit at one board or walk in one Field or grind at one mill thou hast lost me and thou hast lost Jesus Christ two husbands in one day go now and take thy choice in Hell thou art free from us but thou shalt be bound there with indissoluble bonds to the Devill and his Angels Or if the Wife be the Saint and the Husband the Reprobate then shall the Wife say Thou art he who I looked upon as my second-self my head my governour my helper my husband for whom I was willing to forsake my native home Fathers house dear Relations of Father Mother Brother Sister and many comforts in that kind and I expected to have found new matter and a continued influence of comfort and delight in a marriage-state but oh the vexations of Spirit hadst thou not almost drawn me away from Jesus Christ was I not forced through many provocations sometimes to break out and say Surely a bloody husband art thou to me many a time I cryed out Exod. 4.25 O my Husband when wilt thou set up the rich and royal trade of grace in thy Family when wilt thou exercise prayer reading catechizing conference days of humiliation and other houshold holy duties oh for doing something to assure our souls of meeting together hereafter in heaven But alas it would not be and now see the effect here I stand like a Queen deck't and adorn'd with cloth of Gold with rayment of needle-work with the white robe of Christ's righteousness so that the King of Heaven greatly desires my beauty and my soul is this day marryed to Christ I acknowledge him and no other Husband in the world and for thee who refused to joyn with me in the worship of God now God hath refused thee fare well or fare ill for ever 4. Betwixt Minister and some of his people at least if the people be as so many Saints and the Minister the Reprobate then shall the people say O thou art the man that undertookest that high and mighty calling of feeding souls with the Word of life but now are thy sins written in thy fore-head for either thou run'st before thou wast sent or being sent thou hast been exceeding negligent in the gift that was in thee Didst not thou prophesie in Baal and cause God's people to erre didst thou not studiously and mainly seek for the Fleece not regarding respectively the Flock didst not thou strengthen the hands of evil-doers in Preaching peace peace to wicked men wa st thou not prophane and wicked and loose in thy life and by that means ledst many thousands to hell O thou bloody Butcher of Souls hadst thou been faithful in thy Ministry well might those damned Companions about thee have escaped the flames but they are doomed to death and now thou mayest hear their cries and grievous groans and complaints against thee this was the man set over us to give us the bread of Life but oh Christ did he not fail us did he not feed us with unprofitable matter fables conceits airy sentences rather than any thing tending to godly edifying which is in faith did not our tongues and the tongues of our Children stick to the roof of our mouths in calling and crying for bread for the bread of life and he would not pity us we gave him the tenths which thou appointed but he gave not us thy truth which thou didst command him why Lord Christ thou Judge of all the world didst not thou bid him feed feed feed didst thou not bid him feed the flock committed to his charge didst not bid him preach the word be instant in season and out of season reprove rebuke exhort with all long-suffering and notwithstanding all thy commands did he not miserably starve us instead of feeding us unto salvation hath he not starved many thousands of us to our
Paradise Oh what a goodly sight is here In this meditation I may see with John Rev. 21.2 The new Jerusalem coming down from God out of heaven prepared as a Bride adorned for her husband Down comes Christ and down come the Angels and down come the spirits of the just made perfect and as they come along see how they shake the Heavens and dim and dark the very lights of Heaven see what a flood of fire goes before them see how they pass into the cloud where Christ makes a stand and erects a Throne for himself to sit on Sure 't will be a guilded glorious cloud when Christ with all his celestial servants shall sit upon it a mornings cloud guilded with the beams of the Sun is admirably fair and shining but what a shining cloud is that where the Sun of righteousness with all his morning stars do sit and shine here 's enough to dazzle my eyes and to take up my thoughts O my soul think on it 3. Consider Christ's summons of the Elect to come under judgment no sooner in the cloud but He shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds from the one end of heaven to another Will not this be a strange sight to see Christ a coming with Trumpets sounding before him causing all the dead to awaken out of their sleeps of death the very sound of this Trumpet was ever in Jerom's ears Arise ye dead and come to Judgment and no question but thy ears shall be filled with the blast thereof the Trumpet shall found that shall bp heard over all the World and then shall the dead arise out of their graves and every Saints soul shall re-enter into his own body by vertue of the resurrection of Christ their Head Can I pass this meditation without some reflection on my self O my soul how joyfully wilt thou greet thy body when thou shalt enliven it again how wilt thou say O my dear Sister whom I left behind me in the dust when I went to Heaven how sweet is thy carcass how comely is thy countenance how do I enter into thee and animate thee and I will never more leave thee thou wast my yoke-fellow in the Lords Labours and my companion in persecution and wrong now shall we enter together into our Masters joy see lift up thy head behold Jesus Christ yonder sitting in the cloud and lo here the Angels waiting on us and coming to take us with the rest of the Saints into the Air to meet our Redeemer there Could I but realize this summons this resurrection this meeting of the soul and body and going with the Angels into the judgment-seat oh how would it work and what work would it make within 4. Consider Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day oh how shall the Saints look and stare and gaze at the beauty of Jesus Christ oh how will they break out into admiration at the first view of those glories which never before appeared on this side Heaven is not this he will they say of whom we read so often that he was fairer than the sons of men that he was white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousands that his countenance was as Lebanon excellent as the Cedars glorious as when the Sun shineth in his strength but was ever the half told us of what now we see and behold O the super-excellent transcendent beauty of this Son of righteousness O the treasures of loveliness in this Jesus Christ never seen before And thus as they admire so they adore now they begin those Hallelujahs that never never shall have end they fall at the feet of Christ and the Lord Christ takes them up with his hands and folds them in his arms oh what mutual reciprocal salutations are these betwixt Christ and his members oh my head and oh my body oh my husband and oh my spouse oh my dear and oh my darling never two lovers met with such heat of love as Christ and his Saints come saith Christ and sit you down here at my right hand and let the world be on my left hand it was otherwise with you in your life-time my gold and my jewels were then cast in the dust you were then cloathed with infamy and the vilest of men were then guilded with honour but now I will set all right now the dust shall be swept away and the jewels of my Kingdom shall be gathered up now the Goats shall be driven into the desart and you who are the Sheep shall be brought into my fold Oh my soul what a meeting is this what a sight will this be to behold the Saints in this condition and thy self amongst them couldst thou but realize this one very passage it were enough to quench thy lust and to kindle a flame of pure love in thy heart to Jesus Christ it is a quickning rouzing rising rejoycing consideration 5. Consider Christ sentencing the Saints for eternal glory then shall the books be opened and all the good works of the Saints shall be revealed and made known and then shall the Judg from his Throne of Majesty in the sight and hearing of all the world pronounce that sentence Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world Mat. 25.34 q. d. Come my Saints come with me into glory come now from labour to rest from disgrace to glory from the jaws of death to the joys of eternal life for my sake ye have been railed on reviled and cursed but now it shall appear to all those cursed Esaus that you are the true Jacobs that shall receive the blessing and blessed shall you be come now and possess with me the inheritance of Heaven where you shall be for love Sons for birth-right heirs for dignity Kings for holiness Priests come you may boldly enter in for my Father hath prepared and kept it for you ever since the first foundation of the World was laid O my soul dost thou not remember when sometimes thou hast been at the feet of Christ in the beauty of holyness and there tookest in those droppings of his spirit which were better to thee than the feasts of Kings dost thou not remember when sometimes thou hast had the very beams of light darted from the face of Jesus Christ when he whispered to thy soul the forgiveness of thy sins saying Fear not thy sins shall not hurt thee I am thy salvation oh what joy was then what meltings movings stirrings leapings of heart were then in thy bosom but was that joy any thing to this or to be compared with this that was a drop but here 's an Ocean here 's fulness of joy oh what leapings of heart what ravishments will be within when thou shalt see thy self in the arms of Christ and shalt receive words of life from the mouth of Christ in the face of