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A19495 Heauen opened VVherein the counsaile of God concerning mans saluation is yet more cleerely manifested, so that they that haue eyes may come and se the Christian possessed and crowned in his heauenly kingdome: which is the greatest and last benefit we haue by Christ Iesus our Lord. Come and see. First, written, and now newly amended and enlarged, by Mr. William Cowper, minister of Gods word. Cowper, William, 1568-1619. 1611 (1611) STC 5920; ESTC S121914 411,827 530

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like the gourd of Ionas vvhich the one day growes vp and the next day is consumed by the vvormes If Salomon who proued all the pleasures this life could yeeld after tryall of them cryed out all is vanitie if Iob vvhen his wealth had worne from him looking to his fore-passed dayes was compelled to conclude I haue had for inheritance Iob. 14. 5. the mouth● of vanitie vvhat shall wee looke to finde more comfort in this wretched life than those men of God before vs haue found let vs not thinke it if we seeke our comfort in her perishing gaine or glory wee shall lament at the last we haue fished all night and haue taken nothing we haue wearied our selues and it doth not profit vs. O what a silly life is this quae viuendo decresit which in liuing weareth away and that which is worse not onely sodainly goeth away but also transeundo nos terit wearies vs in He hath fewest yeares who hath liued most yeares the going by and makes vs euer the longer the lesse the more of her dayes this miserable life hath lent thee the fewer thou hast Worldlings accounts them who are aged men of most yeares but that they count wrong shall be made cleare by this similitude I admit that one who had in his purse ten thousand pounds hath wasted all to one will any man speaking of him call him for that a man of great riches the most they can say if they speake in truth is that once he was wealthy but now is become poore It might haue beene said of him who now is aged when he came first into the world that he was a man of many yeares for then he had fifty sixty or seauenty yeares as it pleased God to number them to thee before to be spent but now the more of these yeares thou hast receiued the fewer thou hast remayning vnto thee so deceiueable a thing is this life that when she giues vs most she leaues vs least Non enim accedunt nobis anni sed discedunt for yeares doe not so come to vs that they bide with vs but that they goe from vs. Are not worthy The word is vsed to expresse things The word exponed which being waighed in a ballance are found equall and so his meaning is that our present sufferings are not of equall weight with that glory Wee will not here stand out of this place to dispute against the doctrine of merits which might be destroyed by an argument a consequenti onely wee will answere that sophisticall reason which the Iesuits in their marginall notes on this place vse to stablish it the workes of Christ cannot be denied to be meritorious for the works of men are the workes of Christ being done in them by the spirit of Christ therefore are they meritorious That the workes of Christ are meritorious wee denie not vnderstanding Onely the personall workes of Christ are meritorious thereby his personall workes that is those which as Mediator he did in his owne person in his owne blessed body while he was vpon earth he bare the punishment of our sinnes by the once offering vp of his blessed body vpon the Crosse he made an attonement for vs and satisfied his Fathers iustice by himselfe he hath made the purgation of our sinnes and so in his owne body hath finished and perfected that action of meriting there needes no more to be done neither by himselfe in his owne body nor by himselfe in the bodies of his children for meriting grace and life to them who are his then that which hee hath done already in his owne blessed body As for the workes therefore which by his holy spirit hee Workes of grace in regenerate men are not supplemēts of Christs personall merit workes in good men hee doth them not as supplements to his most perfect personall merits for so his personall merits should be found vnsufficient which were blasphemie to thinke but hee workes them in the godly as effects of his vertue whereby he communicates to them those benefits which once in his owne person he hath perfectly merited to wit righteousnesse and life and that for the beginning and finishing of their conformity with him Secondly those workes which Christ by his Spirit works They are not pure perfect in vs are in such sort wrought by him that they are not wrought without vs and therefore cannot be perfectly holy and consequently meritorious As the fountaine is so must the water of the spring be as we our selues are so must our works be we our selues in a great part are vncleane and vnregenerate what worke then perfectly cleane and holy can be done by vs But leauing them and their errour let vs marke here Our present vaine sinfull pleasures requited with an infinite weight of wrath for our instruction that the inequalitie betweene our present sufferings and that glory consists in these two the one are light and momentane the other of an infinite weight and eternall and as our sufferings for these respects are not worthie of the glory to be reuealed so are not the present perishing pleasures of sinne of any worth to be compared with that infinite weight of eternall wrath which is due to them As the seauen yeares of Famine in Aegipt did eate vp the former seauen yeares of plenty so shal the endlesse sorrowes of the wicked make all their former pleasures to be forgotten the dayes shall come vpon them in the which they shal say I haue no pleasure in them Oh that men could consider this double losse they incurre by continuing in their sinnes Esau sold his birth-right for a mease of pottage and Adam lost Paradise for an apple and thou more to be lamented that becomes not wise by their example looses like a foole that glory to be reuealed for a floure for what better are the best things of the vvorld than the floure of the Rose which wanteth not the owne thornes and vermine being plucked in the garden it withers in thy hand before thou canst bring it home to thy house and yet for the like of these thou doest forgoe those things which are aboue and more then that redeemes those shadowes by bringing vpon thy selfe that infinite weight of wrath which is to be vpon all the children of disobedience Of the glory The end of our present sufferings here wee see it is glory Yee shall weepe and lament saith our Sauiour and the world shall reioyce yee shall sorr●w but your sorrow Iohn 16. 20. shall be turned into ioy Sometime God giues his children notable comfort before trouble as Elias receiued a double Comfort comes sometime before trouble sometime in trouble but alway after trouble to the godly portion before his forty dayes fasting Peter Iames and Iohn saw the glory of Christ transfigured on Mount Tabor before they saw his fearefull and bloudy sweat in the garden it pleased the Lord by the sight of the one
and they shall wither the whirle-wind shal take them away like stubble O silly glory of worldlings which dieth to them oftentimes before themselues at least with them their beauties consumes whē Psal 49. 14. they go from the house to the graue their pomp doth not descend after them Onely happy sure is the estate of that man who is in Christ neither life nor death things present nor things to come shal seperate him from the loue of God Now the lessons of instruction are chiefly two first is They who are planted in Christ should be humble the roote beares them not they the roote a lesson of humilitie seeing it so that in Christ wee haue life let vs be humble in our selues forasmuch as that which we haue we haue of another so taught the auncient fathers agreable to holy scripture eleauen hundred yeers before vs which I mark the rather to point out the agreement in one truth between vs and the Fathers of the primitiue Church Ita sunt in vite palmites vt illi nihil conferant sed inde accipiant Consil 2. Arausicanū ex Carranza vnde viuant sic quippe vitis est in palmitibus vt vitale subministret illis non sumat ab ijs ac per hoc manentem in se habere Christum manere in Christo discipulis prodest non Christo the branches are so in the vine that they giue nothing vnto it but receiues from it that sap of grace wherby they liue but the vine is so in the branches that it ministers life vnto them and receiues nothing from them that therefore Christ abideth in vs and we in him is profitable to vs who are his Disciples but not vnto himselfe Thus they learned from our Sauiour who in his speech to his Disciples denyes that man is able to doe any good thing without him as the branch can beare no fruit except it abide in the root no more can ye except ye abide in me for without me ye are able to doe nothing And that which is subioyned doth yet more humble vs praeciso palmite potest de viua radice Ibidem alius pullulare qui autem praecisus est non potest● sine radice viuere though a branch be cut off from the root another may spring out but the branch which is cut off cannot liue without the root it withereth and is meet for nothing but the fire he that falleth away from Christ shall perish like a withered branch but the Lord Iesus shall not want another who shall grow vp in him we stand by faith let vs not Rom. 11. 16. be high minded but feare The second is a lesson of thankfulnesse we who professe They who are planted in Christ beare fruit so soone as they are planted that we are in Christ should be fruitfull in good works herein saith our Sauiour is my Father glorified that yee beare much fruit There is such a liuely power in this stocke of life that they who are planted in him flourish incontinent Proofe hereof we haue in Lidia and in the Theefe crucified with Christ and conuerted by him Arons rodde was no sooner changed from a withered sticke into a flourishing tree then he is from a barren malefactor into a fruitfull professor for see what a fruit he beares in an instant he confesseth his owne sinnes he rebuketh the sinnes of his companion he giueth a good testimonie vnto Christ and earnestly prayes that Christ would remember him when he comes into his kingdome Alas how may this make vs ashamed who so long haue professed Christ but hath not bene fruitfull in good workes The Psalmist compares a godly man to the Palme tree which as Plinie writeth groweth by the waters side and in moyst places and is in Summer winter both flourishing and bearing fruit But the wicked carnall professors of this age are become worse than that figge-tree which Christ cursed for it had leaues albeit no fruit but they as Ierome complaynes of the shamelesse sinners in his time haue cast away the very leaues also an euident token that they were neuer planted in Christ Iesus they haue done nothing in their liues to glorifie God and may looke as little to be comforted by him in their deaths but of this we shall haue occasion to speake more hereafter Who walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Albeit By flesh is meant our naturall corruption and how workes of the flesh are done by spirits the comfort of our deliuerance by Christ be exceeding great yet least it should be vsurped of those to whom it belongs not the Apostle as he hath before restrained it to them who are in Christ so here he giues vs an euident marke whereby we may know them to wit that they are such as walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit Where before we enter into the doctrine it is necessary we know what the Apostle meanes by the word flesh Among many significations which it hath in holy Scripture it is here vsed to expresse the whole sinfull corruption of our nature repugnant to the Law of God not onely carnal actions done in the members of the body but also sinfull motions and affections Diabolus enim cum sit spiritus agit tamen opera carnis for Sathan notwithstanding he be a spirit yet doth Aug. de ciui dei lib. 14. he the workes of the flesh and the Apostle reckons out pride enuie and such like among the workes of the flesh Gal. 5. 22. This may serue to beate downe the presumptuous conceits of those who proudly iustifie themselues and think themselues free from sinne because they are cleere of the carnal action as if the word of God did condemne sinne in the branch onely and not in the roote also This corruption of our nature for three causes is exprest For three causes is our sinful corruption exprest by flesh by the name of flesh first because it is propagated from man to man in the seed of flesh secondly because it is executed in our earthly and carnall members thirdly because it is nourished strengthned and augmented by outward fleshly obiects and so by this name our corruption is distinguished from the corrupt nature of apostate Angels which is not propagated nor nourished nor executed as Ephe. 6. 12. ours is and therefore called by the Apostle Spirituall wickednesse By the spirit here againe I vnderstand that new and spirituall By the spirit is meant the new disposition of the whole man wrought by spirit disposition which the Spirit of God workes in our minde will and affections comformable to the law of God Whereof it is euident that all our motions affections and actions before the Spirit of Christ sanctifie and reforme vs are flesh and not Spirit and againe that euen the Christian after his ingrafting into Christ hath remaining in him while he dwelleth in the body some carnall and
law to saue vs appeares in two things things first it craued that of vs which we had not to giue namely perfect obedience vnto all the Lords commandements and that vnder paine of death which albeit most 1 It craues that which now our nature cannot giue iustly it be required of vs considering that by creation we receiued from God a nature so holy that it was able to doe the law yet now by reason of the deprauation of our nature drawne on by ourselues it is impossible that wee can 2 It giues not that which our estate now craueth performe it Secondly the law could not giue that vnto vs whereof we stoode in neede namely that the infinite debt of transgressions which wee had contracted should be forgiuen vnto vs this I say the law could not doe for the law commands obedience but promises not pardon of disobedience yea rather it bindes the curse of God vpon vs for it And againe we stood in neede of a supernaturall grace to reforme deformed nature and this also the law could not doe it being a doctrine that shewes vs the way to life but ministers not grace vnto vs to walke therein but all these which the law could not doe Iesus Christ by whom commeth grace and life hath done vnto vs. Where first we haue to marke the pittifull estate of those Miserable blinde are they who seeke li●e in perfect obseruance of the Law who seeke life in the obseruance of the law which here the Apostle saith is impossible for the law to giue they seeke life where they shall neuer finde it The Apostle in another place calles the law the ministerie of death and condemnation and that because it instantly bindes men vnder death for euery transgression of her commandements so that he who hath eyes to see what an vniuersall rebellion of nature there is in man vnregenerate to Gods holy law yea what imperfections and discordance with the law are remanent in them who are renued by grace may easily espie the blinde presumption of those that seeke their liues in the ministrie of death Yet so vniuersall is this error that it hath Yet such are all the children of Adam by nature ouergone the whole posterity of Adam nature teaching all men who are not illumina●ed by Christ to seeke saluation in their owne deedes that is to stand to the couenant of works But the supernaturall doctrine of the Euangelist teaches vs to transcend nature to goe out of our selues and to seeke saluation in the Lord Iesus and so to vse the law not that we seek life by fulfilling it which here is impossible but as a schoole-master to leade vs vnto Christ in whom we haue remission of our sinnes sanctification of our nature acceptation of our imperfect obedience benefits which the law could neuer aford vnto vs. Inasmuch as it was weake because of the flesh The Apostle doth in such sort ascribe to the law an impotencie to saue vs that hee blames not the Law but the corruption of The impotencie of the law comes not of the law which is good but of our owne corrupted nature our fleshly nature being not able to fulfill that righteousnesse which the law requireth yea as the Apostle hath taught vs before so farre is our nature peruerted by our Apostasie from God that we are not onely vnable to doe that which the good and holy law of God requires but also we become worse by the law for by the commaundements of the law sin reuiues in our nature and takes occasion by the law to become more sinfull and so like a desperate disease it conuerts that medicine which is ministred to cure it into a nourishment and confirmation of the sicknesse it selfe It is Our nature becomes worse by the law the nature of contraries that euery of them intends the selfe to expell another whereof it comes that there is greatest cold in the bosome of the earth euen then when the Sunne with greatest vehemencie shines on it to califie and heat it euen so our corrupted nature doth neuer shew it selfe more rebellious and stubborne than when the law of God beginnes to rectifie it As an vnruly and vntamed horse the more he is spurred foreward the faster he runnes backward so the peruerse nature of man nititur semper in vetitum is so farre from being reformed by the law that by the contrary sinne that was dead without the law is reuiued by the law and takes occasion to worke in vs all manner of concupiscence The Apostle is not ashamed to confesse that he found this in his owne person Augustine also examining Aug. lib. 2. confess cap. 4. his former sinful life doth hereby aggrauate his corruption that in his young yeeres hee was accustomed to steale his neighbours fruit not so much for loue of the fruit for he had better at home as for sinfull delight he had to goe with his companions to commit euill so that where the law should haue restrained his sinfull nature it was so much the more prouoked to sinne by the law Let therefore the Semipelagians of our time say to the contrary what they wil let them magnifie the arme of flesh to diminish the praise of the grace of God and dreame that mans nature vnregenerate can bring forth merits of congruitie or workes of preparation yet doth the Lord herein greatly abase man when he telleth him that not onely he cannot doe that which the law requireth but that also the more he is commaunded the more he repines vntill Grace reforme him God sending his owne Sonne The Apostle proceeds and How Christ hath done that which the law could not let vs see how the Lord by Christ hath wrought that saluation which the law could not Wherein first it is to be marked that the Apostle saith not we sought from the Lord a Sauiour but that the Lord sent him vnto vs vnrequired Surely neither man nor Angell could haue euer thought of such a way of Saluation the Lord hath found it out himselfe in his incomprehensible wisedome a way so to saue man that the glory both of his mercie and iustice shall be saued also Most properly therefore is he called Pater non iudiciorum sed misericordiarum Father not of iudgements but of mercies for both the purpose and the Why God is called father of mercie not of iudgements meanes of our saluation are from himselfe he hath found causes without him moouing to execute his iustice he hath beene prouoked thereunto by the disobedience of apostate Angels and men but a cause mouing him to shew mercie is within himselfe this praise is due to God it is the greatest glory that can be giuen vnto him Abhominable therefore is that errour of fore-seene merites by which the aduersaries doe what they can to obscure the praise of the bright shining glory of Gods mercie His owne Sonne Iesus Christ is called Gods owne How Christ is Gods
for hee speaketh this by way of supposition if there be yet any other creature than those vvhom I haue named I am sure be vvhat they will they cannot seperate vs from the loue of Christ Here in the last roome vvee doe obserue the suretie of a Christian aboue all other men in the world onely the Christian is sure his estate shall neuer be changed Worldlings may Esay 47. 7. Luke 12. 19. No worldling shall abide in the state wherin now hee stands Esay 22. 18. thinke with Babel in her prosperitie I shall neuer be moued and vvith the rich Glutton promise to themselues many yeeres to come but they shall be deceiued none of them shall continue in that state vvherein presently they stand the Lord shall driue them from their station as it vvere vvith vvheeles and shall roll them like a ball as hee threatned to Sh●bna Pharaoh his pompe shall perish in the Red Sea Nabuchadnezzar shall be changed from a Monarch of men vnto a companion of Beasts Manasses from the Pallace shall goe to the Prison and all the men of the vvorld shall goe from the house to the graue their beautie and royall pompe shall consume as a Moth onely the Christian shall stand for euer in that happy vnion and fellowship with God this is the state of the Christian this is his life this is his glory and from it nothing present nor to come shall euer be able to transchange him Euerlasting praise therefore be to the Lord our God through Iesus Christ. Amen FINIS A TABLE DIRECTING THE Reader how to finde out the principall points of Doctrine contained in these Treatises A ABraham and the rest of the Fathers shall not be perfected without vs pag. 213 Accusations of all sorts vsed against Christians 416. 417. Accusations of Sathan made against vs for sinne past should be preseruatiues against sinne to come 329 Accusation of the carelesse Christian 166 Adam had Euah for a wife a sister and a daughter 23 Admonition with a comfort for weak Christians 208 Adoption naturall and spirituall 194. how the Spiritual excels the Naturall 194. 195. by adoption the sons of God know that God is their Father 195. Adoption two-fold 276. Affections of the Christian and carnall man how different 85. except wee slay inordinate affections wee cannot suffer affliction 218. if we slay not them they will slay vs. See sinne Affliction abhorred by nature 219. It is Gods wine-presse 230. 431. Inward outward and their comforts 225. Good to looke to the end of affliction 226 Afflictions for sinne past are medicinall restoratiues 440. For sinnes to come are wholesome preseruatiues 441. Causes of affliction would be marked 440. What is required in afflictions for Gods sake 442. Not euer inflicted for sinne 441. How profitable 330. Afflictions of the godly and wicked how different 431. See Crosse See suffering Allegorie vsed by Christ Luke 11. exponed 285 Angels and men Apostates only false witnesses against God 38. the fall of Angels of man and of the creature compared 259. Angels and men Apostates how miserable 260. how reprobate Angels hath names of power giuen them 454. how they are Gods messengers and to what end 453. Anger of God toward his Children how to be thought of 327 Apparell of worldlings how it hides not but shewes their nakednes 435. Aquila and Priscilla how they were Martyrs for Christ 444 Assurance of saluation 449. it is no presumption in the Christian to be assured 451. that the christian may be and is assured is proued 119 comfort against the want of feeling of this assurance in the godly 449. It is an euill religion that learnes doubting 450. Papistry can make no man sure of saluation 451. B Battell Christian what it is and how Naturalists haue a battell betweene flesh and flesh not betweene flesh and the Spirit 40. Battell must goe before triumph 415. Difficultie of the christian Battell 41. Our best estate is to fight 42. And how we should help that partie in vs which we would haue victorious 42. Why Sathan sights against vs. 48. And what comfort we haue therein 483. The last battell is the greatest 454 Banishment secludes not the children of God from his familiaritie 432 Benefits of God are obligations 157. they encrease our debt and therefore should humble vs 158. but they are abused by the wicked against God 163 Bondage of sinne how intolerable 50 three things to be considered in it 51. 52. 53. a three-fold meditation to make vs weary of it 53. 54. Bodies are to be humbled in publique exercise 114. how some abuse this 115 Bookes of law and conscience how they shall be opened in the day of iudgement 12 Brotherhood Christian how strait it is 378 C Calling is the first manifestation of our election 382. what inward calling is 382. how it makes a difference betweene man and man 383. it is a new creation 385. wrought without man 385. Calling and conuersion are from Gods purpose 356. it diuides betweene vs and our old sinnes 339. it makes a wonderfull distinction betweene man and man 386. miserable are they who are not seperate by it 387. time of our calling 384. it is short 388. no calling after this life 388. If he cease to call it is one token of his anger 360. the calling of God findes euery man euill exercised 367 Care should be moderate 410. care without Gods blessing is vaine 411 Two sorts of care 412 Carnall professors how miserable 91. 294. they professe friendship to Christ but keepe couenant with Sathan 404. See Professors Carnall presence improued 122 Certaintie of saluation See assurance Communion three-fold betweene Christ the Christian 27. 28. 29. Comforts against the remanents of sinne 102. 105. against the fruit of sinne 121. against death 138. no comfort gotten without the annexed condition 140 Condemnation of the wicked threefold 10 Conscience her terrours 61. a wounded Conscience desires not death 275. The book of Conscience 12. errour thereof 420 Concupiscence euen without consent proued to be a sinne 33. 34. 35. Confidence in God 336 Conformitie with Christ wherein it stands 372. reasons mouing vs to a conformitie with him 375. Some workes wherein wee should not proser to conforme our selues to Christ 372. 373. Contentment of our estate and reasons mouing vs vnto it 411 Chaine of Saluation what sure comfort it renders 362 Christian and carnall men how different euen vnder one Crosse and in doing one worke 131. as different as men and beasts 82. wherefrom comes this difference 84. they are compared in their affections and vnderstanding 85. in speaking and hearing 86. 87. eyther of them counts others fooles 89. but not vpon like warrants 90 Christian how farre hee exceeds the Worldling 108. his glorious priuiledges 211. his prerogatiues 380. Worldlings can not match him in glory 108. his end is better then his beginning the Worldling is the contrarie 221. hee is sure neuer to change his state not so the worldling