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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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with the Spirit of Christ assisting but not reforming as an Angel sometimes appears in an assumed Body But 't is dangerous to rest in this it maketh our sin and Judgement the greater if after a taste we rest in a common work Historical Faith if not growing into a saving sound Faith 't is a kind of mocking of God and an Hypocrites portion As for instance We profess to believe him Omniscient yet fear not to sin in his presence Omnipotent yet cannot depend upon his Alsufficiency to believe a day of Judgement yet make no preparation for our Account Tit. 1.16 Mens sins and Judgements are aggravated according to the sense they have had of Religion and so their latter end may be worse than their beginning 2 Pet. 2.20 And sad it will be for those that from hopefull beginnings fall off from God I will tell you a man may live and die with a temporary Faith and Affections to God and Holiness without making any visible Apostasie and yet have no sound Faith of the right Constitution Yea if you regard what little rooting Grace hath in mens hearts how weak their Pulse beateth this way how strong their Affections are to the World and the things thereof how little they can vanquish the cares and fears of this world and the temptations that arise from voluptuous living 't is to be feared the far greatest part of Christians are but Temporaries 3. Oh then be sure to get this truth of Grace into your Hearts let your Hearts be effectually subdued to God let there be a Principle of Life set up in them Religion respects our Principles as well as our Performances 2 Tim. 1.5 The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure Heart and a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned There must be a renewed Heart as the fountain a well informed Conscience as our guide and Faith unfeigned as our great encouragement And so all acts of Charity to God and men are accepted with God as a piece of Obedience done to him If we will not regard the Manner God will not regard the Matter Oh then get this renewed Heart and a lively Faith and an awakened Conscience This is to get Oyl into your Vessels and if once you get this it will never fail but increase exceedingly like the Sareptan's Oyl But how shall we get it I answer 1. You have this Oyl from Christ. The Unction is from the Holy One 2 Joh. 2.20 As the Precious Oyl was first poured on Aaron's Head and then came down to the Skirts of his Garment so Christ is first possessed of the Spirit and then we have it by our Union with him Joh. 1 16. Of his fulness we receive Grace for Grace We must go to the Fountain every day to seek new supplies Christ was anointed with the Oyl of gladness above his fellows Zech 4. Christ is represented by the Bowl and the two Olive Trees that alwayes poured forth Golden Oyl Christ as Mediator is the Store-house of the Church who is intrusted with all Gifts and Graces for our benefit Oh bring your empty Vessels to this golden Olive-tree The Widdow only brought Casks the Oyl failed not till the Vessels failed 2. If you would have it from Christ you must use the Means of Grace the Word Prayer Sacraments Meditation We need continual supplies must use continual Prayers seek the Grace of the Spirit to keep in our Lamps Luk. 11.13 So the Word God droppeth in something to the Soul that waiteth on him Mark 4.24 Take heed how you hear for with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again If we be earnest and diligent in waiting upon God God will abound to us in blessing his Word to us So for Meditation Mat. 13.19 The High-way Ground did not bring the Word to their minds again doth not revolve it mindeth it not heedeth it not So for the Lords Supper 't is a means to root us in the Love of God when we so often renew our Oath of Allegiance to him to excite our Faith in Christ. All these are a price put into our hands to get Oyl in our Lamps and prepare for his Coming 3. Keep your Vessels clean The Spirit dwelleth not but in a clean Heart Doves build not their Habitations on Dung-hills He cometh as an efficient Cause as a Spirit assisting before he comes as a Spirit inhabiting and purifieth our Hearts by Faith 4. After you have gotten this Oyl cherish it that it may not decay Of its own nature it would do so witness that stock of Original Righteousness which Adam had Gods Promise by which it is secured supposeth our endeavours to waste it Luk. 8.18 Whosoever hath to him shall be given but whosoever hath not from him shall be taken even that which he seemeth to have 5. Do not only cherish and keep it from decay but see that you encrease it 2 Pet. 1.5 Add to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledge 1 Thes. 3.10 Perfect what is lacking 1 Thes. 4.1 That as you have received of us how you ought to walk and please God so you should abound therein A little Faith will be as no Faith not honourable to God nor comfortable to you nor useful to others All our doubts perplexities uncertainties come from the smallness of our Graces 'T will not make an Evidence therefore give diligence No endeavour labour pursuit after God but hath its recompense not an earnest thought an earnest Prayer or time spent What shall I say They whose Hearts are upon the wayes thereof go on from strength to strength You are almost at home nearer than when you first believed Then you thought all your pains too much now all too little Let me apply all to the Sacrament 1. There we come to meet the Bridegroom in a way of Grace The Marriage Covenant between God Incarnate and his espoused Ones is here celebrated and solemnized The Sacrament is a Transfiguration of the last Marriage Supper to ascertain us what entertainment we shall have at the Day of Judgment when the Bride the Lamb's Wife shall be made ready and cloathed with fine Linnen Rev. 19.23 and then be received in to the Nuptial Feast Blessed are they that are called to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. All is now prepared in this Duty 2. In some respect there should be a Serious Preparation for the one as for the other as we would prepare to dye or prepare to meet Christ the Judge Christ did not wash his Disciples feet when he took them with him to Tabor to his Transfiguration but when he took them with him at his last Supper Joh. 13.7 Surely to rush upon the presence of the Bridegroom with a perfunctory careless common frame of spirit is a dangerous thing When a People come hand over head prepare themselves slightly pray slightly before they come and live carelesly and negligently they slight the Bridegroom and wrong themselves strengthen themselves in sin rather than
Praise are the Revenues of the Crown of Heaven and all the Persons of the Godhead are Joynt-Possessors the Father will be glorified the Son and the Spirit will be glorified too Well then they that expect all Comfort and do not regard Duty they mistake the Tenor of the Covenant God must needs be angry when we deny him his Rent and Acknowledgment you forfeit your Lease and Charter and how will you do to pray with Confidence It is notable in the Covenant of Grace what God doth to us in a way of Mercy the Creatures return to God again in a way of Duty God justifieth sanctifieth glorifieth the Creature these are the great Blessings of the Covenant and in our way we are to do it again to God to justify sanctify and glorify God To justify God Luke 7.29 And all the People that heard him and the Publicans justified God being baptized with the Baptism of John To sanctify God Isa. 8.13 Sanctify the Lord of Hosts in your Hearts and here I am glorfied in them We are to justify God his Ways against the Cavils of the World the Riches of Grace against the Prejudices of our own Hearts to sanctify God to set him aloof in point of Fear and Trust above the Powers all Excellencies in the World as to sanctify is to set apart from common use And then we glorify him when we advance him in our Thoughts and Faith and Esteem Our best Thoughts are but a Disgrace to the Godhead he is advanced far above all Blessing and Praise yet God counteth he hath another Throne when he is exalted in thy Heart 3. Because we gratify the Aim of God God's great End in all his Dispensations is to glorify his Son and in his Son himself God seeketh his own Glory by glorifying Christ in our Nature We had neither had Word nor Gospel nor Christ nor Grace but for his Glory It is said Prov. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself that is for the Manifestation of his Glory for God being so perfect as he is can no other ways be advanced it must be therefore to make himself known He made the World that he might be glorified and for the same Reason he made us in Christ Ephes. 1.12 That we should be to the Praise of his Glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all that we are in Religion is for this end We had need respect God's Glory for we owe all that we have to it God is set upon it 1 Sam. 2.30 They that honour me I will honour Vse 1. Information We lose nothing by glorifying Christ It is a Pledg of our Interest in his Intercession We shall have this Honour and Comfort that Christ will be our Advocate In the World we are like those six hundred that were David's Companions in the Wilderness they had hard Service and little Wages but when David was crowned in Hebron they were all advanced to Offices and Places of Power and Trust. In the World if we glorify Christ indeed we shall meet with hard Entertainment but you will not repent of it when Christ appeareth in the day of his Royalty Nay for the present you will lose nothing Worldly Losses are made up in Spiritual Comforts and that is a good Exchange Do but observe Peter's Question and Christ's Answer Mat. 19.27 28. Peter said Behold we have forsaken all and followed thee what shall we have therefore In Peter's Question we may observe that albeit we suffer little for Christ we think much of it Peter's Case was poor and slender alas what did he leave a poor Cottage a Net a fishing Boat he had no Lands nor Heritage From a Fisher-man he was made a Disciple The Loss is little but we think it a great matter if we part with our Superfluities with the tenth part of a Child's Portion for Christ's Cause and owning Christ's Interest or the propagating of Religion Nay if we suffer but a disgraceful Word or Discountenance or a small Inconvenience in our Name or Estates we are apt to say with Peter What shall we have therefore Thoughts of Merit are natural and we put an high Price upon our petty Services what shall we be the better But observe Christ's Answer And Jesus said unto them 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 judging the Twelve Tribes of Israel Pray mark Christ pardoneth the Infirmity of the Demand there was somewhat of Pride in it and somewhat of Fleshliness in having respect to a carnal Reward they dreamed of Earthly Honours that Christ would share and divide among them but Christ passeth it over and gives a gracious Answer Nay mark Christ promiseth a greater Reward than Peter could expect a Kingdom to each of them in the Regeneration I shall not examine that Expression that doth not so suit with my purpose But I observe that though the things we do and suffer for Christ be not worthy to be spoken of yet the least thing if done in Sincerity will be highly esteemed and richly rewarded Christ will intercede for thee and plead for thee with his Father and if once he openeth his Mouth thou canst never miscarry The Apostle saith Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the utmost all that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make Intercession for them Christ when he hath begun to intercede doth not give over till thou hast Honour enough for honouring him he will save thee to the utmost Oh why should we be prejudiced against the Service of Christ certainly we shall be no Losers in the End Christ will not be behind-hand with you he is making way for your Everlasting Glory by his constant Intercession Now therefore be not troubled you need not seek another Pay-master than Christ we have something in Hand there is present Comfort besides what we have in Hope Vse 2. Exhortation to press us to glorify Christ order your Lives so that Christ may plead Father I am glorified in them I do not press you now to glorify God in general but to glorify Christ as Mediator But what is it to glorify Christ I Answer 1. You will glorify him by Faith Christ is glorified when you acknowledg his Person and Office as revealed to you in the Word and accordingly build your Hopes and Comfort on him Now Faith hath a double Office it accepts Christ from God and presents Christ to God It accepts Christ in the Word and maketh use of him in Prayer Let us speak of both these 1. It accepts Christ. When Men slight the Offers of Christ which God maketh to them they dishonour him exceedingly it is a contempt cast upon the Son of God as if he were not worth the taking Acts 4.11 This is the Stone which was set at nought of you Builders which is become the Head of the Corner God made
near you as Dogs snarling at one another for a bone or piece of Carrion 2. They destroy the welfare of our Bodies the part gratified is depressed by them Prov. 14.30 A sound heart is the life of the flesh but envy is the rottenness of the bones Prov. 5.11 Thou mourn at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed 3. These Lusts war against the Soul The perfection of the Soul consists in the Image of God which is defaced by these Lusts yea against the Graces and Motions of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit against the comfort of the Soul which dependeth on the holy sanctifying Spirit he is grieved when his work is hindered in us 4. These Lusts oppose our everlasting Felicity and Happiness when to gratifie the Flesh we run the hazard of losing Soul and Body for ever 1. By Efficiency they steal away our hearts from God take up our time turn our thoughts from the one thing necessary The great end of Faith is the saving of the Soul they make it the great end of their living to pamper the Body They put Heaven away from them sell it for a trifle in effect bid God keep his Heaven to himself Heb. 12.16 Prophane Esau for one morsel of bread sold his birt●right 2. By Desert Gal. 6.8 He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption Rom. 6.13 Neither yield ye your bodies as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin God is provoked and so our Damnation is sure they spend their strength time estates on the service of fleshly Lusts surely these can look for nothing but everlasting perdition SERMON XI ROM VI. 13 Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God HERE is the second Branch of the Exhortation which concerneth Vivification for expresly the Apostle speaketh to them as those that are alive from the dead This part of the Exhortation is propounded negatively Yield not c. positively but yield c. 1. The Negative is necessary For further declaring the sense of which he had said before Let not sin reign in your mortal body The body is mentioned as the seat of sin for two Reasons First Because these Lusts gratifie the Body and bodily Life and so pervert the Soul that is spoken to there Secondly Because they are executed by the Body this is spoken to here if they gain the consent of your minds yet yield not your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin let them not be acted by your bodies 2. Positively it is expressed But yield your selves unto God There observe the order set down first yield your selves unto God then your members as instruments of righteousness unto God The general Dedication is the ground of the Particular first I am Gods then I bestow my time and strength for God first we give our selves to him nor in part but in whole to serve him with all our heart and all our might and strength then sometimes the outward or inward Man as the nature of the business calleth for 3. In both take notice 1. Of the two opposite Masters Sin and God 2. The opposite Imployments are Righteousness and Vnrighteousness 3. The Instrument used by both and that is the Body or the members of the Body 1. The two Masters Sin and God the one is an Usurper the other is our rightful and most gracious Lord. God is our proper Lord for he is our Creator and therefore our Owner and Governour and he is our most gracious Lord jure beneficiario he hath obliged us to him by many benefits so that a Christian should say as Paul did Acts 27.23 His I am and him I serve 2. The two Imployments Vnrighteousness and Righteousness Unrighteousness is put for all evil works and actions for all sin is unrighteousness whether committed against God or man By sin we deal unrighteously with God whom we disobey and dishonour Mal. 1.6 If I be a Father where is mine honour if I be a Master where is my fear we deny God his due We deal unrighteously with our selves whom we defile and destroy 1 Cor. 6.18 He that committed fornication sinneth against his own body and Prov. 8.36 He that sinneth against me wrongeth his own soul. And also in many sins we hurt our Neighbour either in Soul Body Goods or good Name as is evident On the other side Holiness is Righteousness or giving God his due Righteousness is sometimes taken strictly for that Grace which inclineth us to perform our duty to man as 1 Tim. 6.11 Follow after righteousness godliness c. Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men Sometimes largely for newness of Life for all those holy actions which are required of a Christian 1 Joh. 2.29 If ye know that he is righteous ye know that every one that doth righteousness is born of him 3. The Instrument used in both is the Body or the members of the Body For our Body is of a middle Nature which may be used well or ill and the members of the Body are weapons with which the Soul is armed to do well or ill and it is notable that the word used by the Apostle is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instrumenta as we render it in the Text but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 weapons or arms as we translate it in the Margine The work on both sides is a kind of Warfare 1. They that serve sin or indulge bodily lusts sight for Sin and the Devil against God and their own Salvation 1 Pet. 2.11 Abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul. Rom. 7.23 I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind While ye suffer the body to be thus employed ye wage war against God whether ye know it or owne it yea or no. 2. The other work is also a Warfare our Graces are called Armour of light Rom. 13.12 though you fight for your Duty you must perform it Doctrine That sincere Christians should not suffer themselves to be employed by Sin but offer up and present themselves to God to do his Will 1. Let us explain the Duty 2. Shew you the Necessity of it 1. In explaining the Duty here enforced let me observe to you 1. That there are two Masters which divide the World between them Sin and God every man doth serve one of these but no man can serve both Every man serveth one of these Sin or Righteousness God or Satan for there is no neutral or middle state either their time and strength is spent in the service of the Flesh or in the service of God Rom. 8.5 They that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh and they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit Gal. 6.8 They that sow to
then have we con●idence towards God 3. This external and internal calling may be ineffectual or effectual 1. The ineffectual call consists in the bare tender and offer of grace but is not entertained God may knock at the door of the heart that doth not open to him knock by the word knock by the motions of the Spirit and checks of conscience so many are called but few are chosen Matth. 22.14 There is not the fruit of election nor are these the called according to purpose 2. The effectual call is when God changeth the heart and bringeth it home to himself by Jesus Christ we are not only invited to Christ but come to him by the strength and power of his own grace John 6.44 No man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him When we yeild to the call as Paul who was extraordinarily called saith Acts 26.19 I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision we have his consent and resignation recorded Acts 9.6 Lord what wilt thou have me to do He yeildeth up the keys of his heart that Christ may come and take possession In an ordinary call 2 Cor. 8.5 They first gave themselves to the Lord 'T is in other places expressed by our receiving or imbracing Christ John 1.12 both are implyed our thankful accepting of Christ and our giving up our selves to him they both go together and where the one is the other is also In every Covenant there is ratio dati accepti something given and something required Christ and his benefits and what we have are and do both are an answer to Gods call 2. The properties of effectual calling 1. 'T is an holy calling 2 Tim. 1.9 Who hath called us with an holy calling And 't is also an Heavenly calling Heb. 3.1 Partakers of the heavenly calling because we are called to duties and priviledges these must not be severed some are forward to the priviledges of the calling but backward to the duties thereof A good Christian must mind both the priviledges to take him off from the false happiness and the duties that he may return to his obedience to God the one is the way and means to come to the other for 't is said he hath called us to glory and virtue 2 Pet. 1.3 Meaning by glory eternal life and by virtue grace and holiness in the way that God offereth it we embrace it we heartily consent to seek after eternal glory in the way of faith and holiness and so by it the heart is turned by Christ from the creature to God from sin to holiness 3. The ends of effectual calling both on Gods part and the creatures 1. On Gods part That God may shew his wisdom power and goodness 1. His wisdom is seen partly in the way and means that God taketh to convert sinners to himself There is a sweet contemperation and mixture of wisdom and power there is no violence offered to the will of the creatures nor the liberty of second causes taken away and yet the effect is obtained The proposal of good to the understanding and will by the secret power of the Lords grace is made effectual and at the same time we are taught and drawn John 6.44 45. No man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him as it is written in the Prophets They shall all be taught of God every man therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh to me There is opening blind eyes and turning an hard heart Acts 26.18 He worketh strongly like himself sweetly with respect to us that he may not oppress the liberty of our faculties and the Convert at the same time is made willing by his own choice and effectually cured by Gods grace so that Christ cometh conqueringly into the heart and yet not by force but by consent We are transformed but so as we prove what the good and acceptable will of the Lord is Rom. 12.2 The power of God and the liberty of man do sweetly consist together and we have at the same time a new heart and a free spirit and the powerful efficacy of his grace doth not destroy the consent and good liking of the sinner The will is moved and also changed and renewed In the perswasive and moral way of working God taketh the most likely course to gain the heart of man discovering himself to us as a God of kindness and mercy ready to pardon and forgive Psal. 130.4 But there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared For guilty creatures would stand aloof off from a condemning God no God hath laid the foundation of the offer of his grace in the highest demonstration of his love and goodness that ever could come into the ears of man to hear or could enter into the heart of man to conceive viz. in giving his Son to dye for a sinful world 2 Cor. 5.19 20. To wit that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself not imputing their trespasses unto them and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God And not only in the offers of pardon but eternal life and blessedness so infinitely beyond the false happiness that our carnal self-love inclineth us unto that 't is a shame and disgrace to our reason to think that these things are worthy to be compared in any serious debate or that all the pleasures and honours and profits we dote upon should come in competition with that blessed immortality and life which is brought to light in the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 And powerful grace goeth along with all this to make it effectual partly in the time of conversion taking us in our month and that season which is fittest for the glory of his grace some are called in the morning some at noon some in the evening of their age as Matth. 20.3 4 5 6. c. some were hired to go into the vineyard at the third some the ninth some the eleventh hour That any believe in Christ at all is mercy that some believe in him sooner some later is the Lords wise ordering He that is called betimes may consider Gods goodness which broke out so early before he longer provoked him and contracted an habit of evil customs and that God instructed him betimes to take heed of sin and spending his fresh and flowry youth in the service of the Devil whereas otherwise lost days and months and years would have been a perpetual grief to him He that is called at the latter end of his days having so many sins upon him may be quickned to glorifie God that he would not refuse him at last nor despise him for all his rebellions nor remember against him the sins of his youth That a long and an old enemy should be taken into favour God knoweth how best to gain upon every heart
A Second Volume OF SERMONS PREACHED by the Late REVEREND and LEARNED Thomas Manton D. D. In Two PARTS The FIRST Containing XXVII SERMONS ON The Twenty Fifth CHAPTER of St. MATTHEW XLV ON The Seventeenth CHAPTER of St. IOHN AND XXIV ON The Sixth CHAPTER of the Epistle to the ROMANS PART II. Containing XLV SERMONS ON The Eighth Chapter of the Epistle to the ROMANS AND XL. ON The Fifth Chapter of the Second Epistle to the CORINTHIANS WITH ALPHABETICAL TABLES To each Chapter of the PRINCIPAL MATTERS therein Contained LONDON Printed by J. Astwood for Jonathan Robinson at the Golden Lion in St. Paul's Church-yard MDC.LXXXIV TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE WILLIAM Earl of Bedford BARON of THORNAVGH AND KNIGHT of the Most Noble Order of the GARTER My LORD IF the Soveraign Disposer of all things had continued the Life of the Author of the following SERMONS he had express'd his Thankfulness for your Real and Noble Favours by the Dedication of the best Fruits of his Studies to your Lordship But since it hath pleased God to remove him from the Church on Earth to the Church in Heaven I am desired by his most near surviving Relation to comply with his Intention by Inscribing your highly Honourable Name in the Frontispiece of this Work Your Lordships Esteem of the Author and most free Kindness plac'd him in an Eminent Station and how faithfully he discharged his Publick Ministry for those great and most worthy Ends the Glory of God and the Salvation of Souls as there is a full Testimony given by many sincere and understanding Persons of all Ranks that were the happy Partakers of it so it is evident to others by the several Volumes of most useful SERMONS Printed since his Decease These had been more Exact and worthy of your Lordships perusal if they had been publisht by himself But such as they are I doubt not but they will be very Acceptable for the heavenly Matter contained in them I shall not Record here the many excellent Vertues that are Conspicuous in your Lordship and truely adorn your Honour but I cannot forbear to mention the Foundation of them Sincere and Solid Piety so clearly discovered in a most Christian Deportment under your heavy Afflictions Surely that Reverence and meek Submission to the high and Holy Providence of God that humble Trust in his Mercy which so admirably appeared in your deep Distress was from the Divine Spirit whose glorious Attribute is The Comforter I shall Earnestly pray That God who turneth the shadow of Death into the Morning will be pleased alwayes to Support you with his Reviving Presence that he will guide you by his Counsel through this Afflicting World and bring you to his Glory I am My LORD Your Lordships very Humble and Obedient Servant WILLIAM BATES To the READER Christian Reader OVR blessed Lord calling the Multitude to some account of their so free and frequent motions in going to hear the first Gospel Preacher John the Baptist doth it in these terms Matth. 11.7 8. What went you out into the Wilderness to see A Reed shaken with the wind But what went ye out for to see A man cloathed in soft Rayment They that wear soft Cloathing are in Kings houses But what went ye out for to see A Prophet yea I say unto you and more than a Prophet V. 11. Verily I say unto you that amongst them that are born of Women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist notwithstanding he that is least in the Kingdom of God is greater than he Teaching us several things by that speech relating to the Religious action of hearing the Word and to a true Gospel Minister With reference to the former 1. That he that goeth out to hear ought in the first place to propound to himself a due End 2. That men may propose to themselves in such motions very false and undue Ends such as going to see Reeds shaken with the wind men cloathed with soft Rayment c. 3. That the true End men should propose to themselves should be not to hear a Philosopher or an Orator but a Prophet which term signifieth a Person revealing the Will of God for the signification of that term is not to be restrained to one onely from God revealing things to come but publishing the Divine Will whether relating to future things or things before revealed which is evident not only from the application of it to the Baptist but to any that will consider that Predictions of future Contingencies was the least part of any of the ancient Prophets work This is that true and more special End which every good man ought to propound to himself when he goeth to hear as a Religious action whose Object is not a meer sound which is the Object of hearing considered as a natural Act but of the joyful Sound Nor can there lye any Obligation upon any religiously to hear any thing but the will of God which a Discourse doth not cease to be by the addition of mans words for the Explanation or Application of any part of the divine Will by such as God hath betrusted with that Employment more than an Embassadors message ceaseth to be his Masters will because delivered in his own words thô to the Sense of his Instructions Which thing well digested would not only teach Ministers what and how to preach but the People also what and how to hear according to the direction of their Lord. If our End in hearing were to tickle our Ears with a Sound our Reason would guide us to hear such whose Language is as the voice of one that hath a Lovely Song and can play well on an Instrument If our end were to promove our selves in Critical Learning or improve our Reason the same Reason would guide us to choose to hear the best Philosophizers or Grammarians such as best understood the Niceties of words and varietyes of Syntax But if our end be to hear a Prophet one that should reveal Gods mind unto us and to make it more intelligible that by it we may be more improved in Knowledge Faith Love Obedience and other Habits fitting us for the Kingdom of God and Eternal Salvation the same reason will teach us to hear the most substantial scriptural and practical Sermons that we can as being most accommodate to the true end of our action to which every wise man proportioneth mediate actions And indeed all other Discourses are abusively called Preaching and Athens were a more proper place for them than a Preachers Pulpit God hath seemed to have reserved it for a great Blessing to the last age of the World that for ought appears to us from any Books it hath been more fertile of such Preaching than any since that of the Apostles The ancient Church had Persons that did famously in their Generations such were Chrysostom in the Greek and Augustine in the Latine Church but besides that they were but very few whose reads the one and the
explicitly and formally engaged and contracted to one another Christ to us as Head we to him as Members of his Mystical Body as 't is real so 't is near they twain shall be one flesh we one Spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 He that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit Whole Christ is ours we are or should be altogether his as full of Kindness and Love Eph. 5.25 26 27. Zeph. 3.17 And 't is indissoluble the Marriage knot remaineth inviolable for ever I will betroth thee to me for ever Hos. 2.19 2. This Marriage may be considered in four respects 1. With respect to the ground and foundation of it 2. With respect to our first Entrance into this Relation 3. With respect to the State of it in this world 4. With respect to its perfect Consummation First With respect to the Ground and Foundation that was laid for it in Christs Incarnation or at his first coming Marriage is between parties of the same kind as in the first Marriage Adam called Eve Bone of his Bone and Flesh of his Flesh Gen. 2.20 So Christ came to fit himself for that relation of Husband to his Church by taking our nature upon him and therefore the Apostle when he speaketh of the Marriage between Christ and his Church useth the same name which Adam had used Eph. 5.30 For we are members of his Body of his Flesh and of his Bone When Christ was in the world he made a way for the Marriage He parted from us 't is true but there was an interchange of tokens he took our Flesh and left with us his Spirit Secondly With respect to our first Entrance into this relation when first converted to God or upon our thankful broken-hearted willing acceptance of Christ for Lord and Husband All Marriage is utered into by a consent Christ giveth his Consent in the Promises and we by Faith which is a broken-hearted willing and thankful acceptance of the Lord Jesus Christ to the ends for which God offereth him Where note that Faith is an Acceptance of Christ John 1.12 To as many as received him Next for the mode and manner of this Acceptance 't is Broken-hearted because we are undeserving and ill deserving Creatures altogether unworthy to be taken into such a near relation to Christ as Abigail when David sent to her to make her his Wife debased her self 1 Sam. 25.40 41. Let thine hand-maid wash the feet of thy Servants Alas who are we A poor trembling Soul is afraid of being too bold but Gods offer encourageth it And as 't is a broken-hearted so 't is a Willing acceptance of Christ for Christ will not draw us into this Relation by force or bestow the Priviledges of it without or against our consent Rev. 22.17 Whosoever will let him take of the water of Life freely If the will be to Christ the great difficulty is over Christianity is but an hearty consent to accept of Christ and his Benefits but the Creatures Will is not soon gained Math. 23.37 I would but ye would not he inviteth and clucketh by the renewed messages of his Grace but we will not be gathered Isa. 65.2 I have spread out my hands all the day long to a rebellious People The ungodly careless world knoweth not the worth of Gods greatest Mercies and therefore despise them yea take them for intolerable Injuries and Troubles because they are against their fleshly Appetites but when the will is once thoroughly gained to God the great work of Conversion is drawing to a happy Period the consent of the Will is the closing act When we yield our selves to the Lord resolving to become his and to be disposed ordered and governed by him at his own pleasure I entered into Covenant with thee and thou becamest mine Ezek. 16.8 And as 't is a willing acceptance so 't is a thankful acceptance of Christ because 't is a great favour and honour done to us considering the infinite distance between the parties to be joyned in the Marriage-covenant God over all blessed for ever and we poor wretched Creatures There may be among us great distance between the persons that enter into the Marriage-covenant but all that distance is but finite for it is but such as can be between Creature and Creature which are equal in their being notwithstanding the inequality of many extrinsical respects but in this distance between Christ and his People the distance is between the Creator and the Creature the Potter and the Clay the thing formed and him that formed it betwixt the most lovely person and the most loathsome between the Heir of all things and the Children of Wrath the King immortal and a poor Vassal to Sin and Sathan And consider also the many benefits we enjoy by it we have the Communion of his Righteousness Spirit and Graces 2 Cor. 5.21 He was made sin for us that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him There are two Maxims in the Civil Law Vxor fulget radiis mariti the Wife participateth in the Honour of the Husband so we have the Communion of Christs Righteousness and Vxori lis non intenditur the Husband is answerable for the Wife the Pleas must be brought against him So Jesus Christ hath paid our Debts and representeth the merit of his Sacrifice he is responsible for the Debts we owe to Divine Justice Participation is another Benefit Eph. 5.26 Husbands love your Wives as Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctifie and cleanse it by the washing of Water Christ upon the Cross had merit enough to purchase and love enough to intend and Wisdom enough to choose the greatest benefit for us and what did he purchase intend and choose but to sanctifie and cleanse us by the washing of water through the Word And lastly we must receive him to the Ends for which God offereth him that is to be Lord and Husband which importeth a forsaking all others and a devoting and giving up our selves to Christ to live in his Love and Obedience 1. Before there can be a Receiving there must be a Renouncing of all other Loves Christ will be entertained alone The Husband cannot endure a Corrival and Competitor And the Marriage consent implyeth an Election and Choice which is a renouncing all others and a preferring him alone So the Marriage Covenant runneth Hos. 3.3 Thou shalt not be for another but shalt be for me So Psal. 45.10 11. Hearken O Daughter and consider incline thine ear Forget also thine own people and thy Fathers House So shall the King greatly desire thy Beauty for he is thy Lord and worship thou him All that do consider what is offered in Christs name and consent to the motion they must forsake all their old wayes their old Corruptions and old Passions and old Affections and seriously think of leaving all their worldly Pleasures and Vanities they must not stick at their choicest Interests most pleasing Lusts and dearest Sins
but who well discharges his own part Base or Treble So in our account 't is not what part we have acted so much as how we have acted it whether glorified God in the work which he hath given us to do Joh. 17.4 If thou hast doubled thy Talents though but two Christ will welcome thee into the joy of thy Lord. 'T is not who hath undergone the greatest bodily labour in Religion or pass'd the severest Sufferings or gone through the eminentest Offices and Employments but who hath most honoured God in his place got most holiness in his Heart been most humble and contented with his Condition VSE 2. Is for the Encouragement of poor weak Christians who have the Essentials of Godliness tho' they be weak and have not attained to the Eminency of many others These should not be dismayed there are persons of all sizes and several degrees in Heaven and they are all possessed with the same common happiness 2 Pet. 1.2 To them that have obtained like precious faith with us Mean Believers in some sense have like precious faith with an Apostle as to the great ends of the Covenant the same Jewel complectitur Puerulus complectitur Gigas one holds with a strong the other with a trembling hand the Jewel is of the same value The same Sacrifice for sin we all depend upon the infinite mercies of the same God the same Phisician of Souls hath us in cure who hath cured all others the same Captain that hath saved others who are more eminent is conducting us to Salvation and is preparing us for the same Estate which they hope to enjoy They have no greater nor better High-priest and Mediatour with God than we have they are going to the same place that we are and we that they are only they have gotten the start a great way before us But whilest we strive to overtake them and make as much haste as we can though we bewail our imperfections yet we should not lose the comfort of our sincerity Doct. II. Though the essential Happiness of the Saints be the same yet there are degrees in Glory Luk. 19.16 17 18 19. We read there of having authority over ten Cities and five Cities More is required of the first Servant and more is given him and more is required of the first Servant than the second as we expect an Horse-man should come sooner than a Foot-man But more particularly to prove that there are degrees of Glory First From Scripture 2 Cor. 9.6 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly and he that soweth bountifully shall reap bountifully As there is a difference in the kind of the Crop according to the kind of the seed Gal. 6.6 7. so according to the degree some do well others do better so some fare well others fare better are more bountifully rewarded For God will deal more liberally with them who shall accordingly with greater fidelity acquit themselves in well-doing There is a Proportion observed Again the common happiness of the Saints is To shine as the Stars Mat. 13. and Dan. 12.3 yet the Apostle telleth us that one star differeth from another in glory so shall it be in the resurrection from the dead 1 Cor. 15.41 namely that their Glory shall be according to their inequality in Zeal Service and Faithfulness to God Another place shall be that 1 Cor. 3.8 Every man shall receive his own reward according to his own labour that is according to the degree for he speaketh there of degrees of serviceableness in the Church Every man hath a labour of his own that is such a measure and degree of service appropriately his and so by consequence hath his own reward somewhat which doth exactly answer his labour Some have thought no That the Saints in Heaven their Reward is exactly equal It 's true all shall have enough but some more than others So Eph. 6.8 Whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free that is shall be punctually and particularly considered by God for it he shall receive the same not for kind but quantity and proportion They shall have in their Reward a particular and appropriate consideration a Bondman a Bondmans Reward a Freeman a Freemans Reward every degree of goodness shall be considered by God so there seemeth to be a distinction between a Prophets Reward and a righteous mans Reward and a Disciples Reward Mat. 10.41 42. Add that concerning Zebedee's Children Mat. 20.21 22. she cometh to Christ and prayeth that her two Sons might sit one at his right hand and the other at his left in his Kingdom Christ doth not deny but that something there is which may be signified by his right hand and his left yea rather asserts it for he saith It shall be given to those for whom it is prepared of my Father There are some chiefest and highest places of Glory and Preferment in his Kingdom and he hath prepared these places for persons of the greatest worth and eminency in his service for these the greatest Honours of the World to come are reserved Reasons of the Point 1. From the Nature of that Glory and Blessedness we expect It standeth in Communion with God and Conformity to him or the Vision and full fruition of God Psal. 17.15 1 Joh. 3.2 Now the more holy the more suited to this happiness and therefore have larger measures of it Mat. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Heb. 12.14 Without holiness no man shall see the Lord. We behold his face in righteousness Now we are more capacitated Vessels of a larger bore 'T is unreasonable to imagine that clarified Souls have no more fruition of God than those that only have Grace enough to make an hard shift to get to Heaven Sicut se habet simpliciter ad simpliciter ita magis ad magis Holiness singly fits to see God and without it we cannot see him So a little Holiness fits us to take in a little of God the more Holiness the more of God 2. From the pleasure God taketh in his own Image So much of the Image of God as his Creature hath so far more amiable in the sight of God The Lord delighteth in the Vpright Prov. 11.20 If God delighteth in them he delighteth more in one that is more holy and upright Thus from God Holiness we may argue he doth not delight in the impure Psal. 5.4 Thou art not a God that hast pleasure in wickedness He cannot so fully delight in the less pure Psal. 18.25 26. With the upright man thou wilt shew thy self upright with the pure thou wilt shew thy self pure 3. From the Justice of God and the Quality of that Happiness which we expect Though it be an act of free Grace and bounty in God to bestow it on us yet 't is a Reward and Reward is considerable with respect to the work The Reward is not of Merit but Grace but
Trust the very scope of this Parable sheweth it and it may be further confirmed by Isa. 43.21 22 23 24. This People I have formed for my self they shall shew forth my praise But thou hast not called upon me O Jacob but thou hast been weary of me O Israel Thou hast not brought me the small Cattel of thy Burnt-Offerings neither hast thou honoured me with thy Sacrifices I have not caused thee to serve with an Offering nor wearied thee with Incense Thou hast bought me no Sweet-cane with Money neither hast thou filled me with the Fat of thy Sacrifices but thou hast made me to serve with thy sins thou hast wearied me with thy iniquities That where God hath given a People advantages he expecteth answerable service and Improvement and that we are bound to this by the Covenant of Grace wherein we give up our selves to the Lord for his use and service and that God reckoneth upon this Gen. 18.19 I know my servant Abraham that he will command his Children and his Houshold after him And Luke 13.7 Then said he to the dresser of the Vineyard Behold these three years have I come seeking fruit on this Fig-tree and Isa. 63.8 For he said Surely they are my People Children that will not lie Only now I pres●● that Unfruitfulness and breach of Trust is a great Crime and a disappointing the righteous expectation of God a very provoking thing and therefore the sloathful Servant that doth not answer the Ends of his trust nor fulfill his Covenant Vow must needs be highly culpable though he should not break out into acts of gross excess and apparent enmity against God 4. He that ceaseth to do Good Evil must needs ensue and the unprofitable Servant hath his blots and blemishes which render him odious unto God Homines nihil agendo malè agere discunt saith Cato Standing Pools are apt to putrifie and the Psalmist saith Psal. 14.2 They are all become filthy and abominable for there is none that seeketh God When the Gardiner holdeth his hand the ground is soon overgrown with Weeds Sins of Omission will make way for Sins of Commission and those that neglect Improvement lose all reverence and awe of God every day more and more and so are given up to an hatred of his People and many brutish Lusts As a Carkase not embalmed is more noysome every day Job 15.4 Thou castest off Fear and restrainest Prayer before God 1 VSE Let us all be ashamed of our Sloath. There is more evil in it than we are aware of 1. Consider the Necessity of Diligence There is nothing in Religion can be gotten kept increased or maintained without great Diligence No Comfort without it 2 Pet. 1.10 Wherefore the rather Brethren give all diligence to make your Calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 3.14 Wherefore beloved seeing that ye look for such things be diligent that you may be found of him in peace No Grace without it 2 Pet. 1.5 And besides this give all diligence io adde to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledge No hope of coming to Heaven without it Heb. 6.11 And we desire that every one of you do shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope to the end Illi falsi sunt saith Salust qui diversissimas res expectant ignaviae voluptatem proemia virtutis 'T is in vain to think that a loytering Profession will ever bring any glory to God Comfort or increase of Grace to our selves or breed in us any comfortable Hope and expectation of Blessedness to come All excellent things are hard to come by 't is true in Earthly matters 't is much more true in Spiritual 2. Consider the evil of Sloath. A sloathful man and a prophane man differ very little Prov. 18.9 He that is sloathful in work is brother to him that is a great waster the one getteth nothing and the other spendeth all Thou wilt say thou art no Drunkard no Whoremonger But thou art idle and negligent so that you and they are Brothers all the difference is as between a Consumption and an Apoplexy the one destroyeth in an instant the other consumeth by degrees the one is like splitting a Ship that goes down to the bottom presently the other like a leaky Ship that sinketh by degrees Though you do not run into the same excess of riot with others yet you are idle in the Lords work it cometh much to the same effect the Heart groweth poorer and poorer till at length it ends in final hardness Nay in some sense Negligence is worse than gross Prophaneness Many from great Sinners have turned great Saints but few from a lukewarm careless Profession have come to any thing Therefore these are spued out of Gods mouth Rev. 3.16 There is more hope of a Sinner than of a lukewarm careless person for he doth not think himself evil and so is more liable to Security God may give Grace to the one but taketh away the Talent from the other 3. Consider the Rewards of Diligence This labour will turn to a good effect 1 Cor. 15.58 Your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. If there were nothing in chase or not so great a Reward we had more Excuse but when the Reward is so full and so sure shall not we labour for it We labour and toyl and use all diligence to obtain the things of this world and shall we think to go to Heaven with our hands in our bosom or lying upon a Bed of ease To see men under the power of a Lust may shame us Psal. 127.2 Men rise early and go to Bed late to gain the world men labour sweat and travel and spare not cost to go to Hell The Devil gets more Servants than God with all his Promises Threatnings and Mercies shall they be so diligent that have such bad work worse wages and the worst Master and shall not we bestir our selves 4. The whole course of Nature inviteth us to Labour and Diligence in order to our future Estate The Sun is unwearied in his motion that he may go up and down Preaching God to the world Prov. 6.6 Go to the Aunt thou sluggard consider her wayes and be wise There is a great deal of morality hidden in the bosom of Nature if we had the skill to find it out What can the Aunt do She provideth her meat in Summer and gathereth her food in the Harvest These little Creatures are not able to endure the cold of Winter therefore work themselves deep into the earth but they carry their food along with them and should not we have as great a sense of futurity We cannot endure the day of the Lord unless we make provision Pro. 10.5 He that gathereth in Summer is a wise Son but he that sleepeth in Harvest is a Son that causeth shame Now is our season to work that in the day of our Accounts we may not be unprovided The Means against Sloath are Faith Patience and Love
Faith and Patience we have in one place Heb. 6.12 That ye be not sloathful but followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises They inherited the Promises that is the things Promised If we propound to our selves such a divine and noble end as those great and glorious things that are offered in the Promises we must use the means they had Faith so must we have they had Patience and we must be Patient First By Faith we are not to understand Confidence and relyance upon Gods Promises a probable humane Faith and Hope will not be sufficient but a firm adherence to Gods Word whatever falleth out we are sure to have enough in the Promise We must have Faith because the things Promised are invisible rare and excellent far above the power of the Creature to give The Promise is a firm and immutable foundation of our Hope we should rejoyce in it as much as if the thing Promised were in hand In God I will rejoyce in the Lord I will praise his Word or praise his Word 'till the thing Promised cometh to be enjoyed Faith 't is the substance of things hoped for Secondly For Patience Heb. 10.36 For ye have need of Patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the Promise And we must have Patience because the things hoped for are to come and at a great distance Rom. 8.25 But if we hope for that we see not then do we with patience wait for it Besides we shall meet with many Difficulties Oppositions and Tryals all which must be overcome many things must be done many things must be suffered and we must make our way through the midst of dreadful Enemies before we can attain our End Further our Desires are vehement and we long for enjoyment which is yet to come therefore we must be patient that we may quietly wait Gods leisure Rom. 2.7 To them who by patient continuing in well doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternal life Thirdly The next Grace is Love Where there is Love there will be Labour Heb. 6.10 For God is not Unrighteous to forget your work and labour of Love 1 Thes. 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your work of Faith and labour of Love and patience of Hope Revel 2.3 4. And hast born and hast patience and for my names sake hast laboured and hast not fainted Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee because thou hast left thy first Love And Love is said to endure all things 1 Cor. 13.7 'T was Love made Christ to suffer Hunger and Weariness and to forbear to refresh himself for the good of Souls 't was Love made him endure the bitter Agonies of the Cross Love puts strength and life into the Soul addeth wings and feet to the Body spareth no pains nor cost Keep up this Grace and you have an over-ruling bent upon your hearts 2. VSE If spiritual Sloath be so great an evil let the Children of God take heed of it when first it beginneth to creep upon their Spirits As when they begin to Pray without Affection or fervour of Spirit to Meditate of divine things without any sense affection or fruit when they find it difficult to withdraw from carnal Company or vain Discourse and are hardly perswaded to return unto themselves and to consider their wayes and can freely let loose their thoughts and words to all manner of vanity and their Comfort is rather sought in the Creature than in God they can rarely speak of others but 't is in reflecting upon them rather than themselves when Reproofs grow burthensom and are not entertained as an help but as an injury when they give up themselves to carnal Sports and take a license for vain Recreations and so fly from the labours that are profitable and necessary for their Souls health their Zeal languisheth their Duties are not so frequent nor the means of Grace used with life vigour and affection but they are more coldly affected towards them a satiety and fulness creepeth upon them they do not so solicitously avoid the causes of sin begin to indulge the Body or the bodily life to have more admiring thoughts of the Honours and Pleasures and Profits of the World either neglect or quench the motions of the Spirit All these are the effects of a remiss Will or a fainting Heart that beginneth to tire in the wayes of God 3. VSE It serves to justifie God in his Judgments upon the careless and negligent though they be not grossely Dissolute and Prophane There is more Contempt of God in neglecters than you can at first be sensible of Hypocrites complain of the severity of God the rigour of his Law the grievousness of his Judgments they should rather complain of the naughtiness of their own Hearts they are convinced of more Duty than they are willing to perform and they are not willing because they follow after a few paltry Vanities which is a great dishonour to God 'T was not the austerity and rigidness of the Master in requiring Improvement that hindred the increase of his Talent but his own baseness being wedded to sensual delights They say The wayes of the Lord are not equal but their hearts are not right with God Secondly I come now to the Retortion of his vain Excuse upon himself The damned can have no just Complaint against God they are apt to murmur and lay their defects upon the rigidness of Gods Government or Gods Providence but in the issue the blame will light upon themselves even the things they alledge make against them He was convinced the Master expected Increase therefore he should have done what he could Luk. 19.22 Out of thy own Mouth I will condemn thee So 't is here mens Consciences convince them they ought not to live in Idleness and if they have a Master the thought of their Account should inforce them if not their own Inclination especially if a severe Master Grand the Sinners supposition it bindeth the Duty upon him and so he cuts his Throat with his own Sword as they said of Job Chap. 15.6 Thine own Mouth condemneth thee thine own lips testifie against thee Doct. No excuse shall serve the unfaithful and sloathful Servant at the day of Iudgment Let a Man deceive himself now and please himself with these Pretences as he will all his Excuses shall be retorted upon him and made matter of his Condemnation For the Judge is Impartial and Omniscient his Eyes cannot be blinded nay he can open your own Consciences and so overwhelm you with the Evidence and Conviction of your Sins that you shall have nothing to say As in the 22 th of Matthew The Man was speechless when arraigned But because the excusing Humour is very rife and many things serve the turn now which will not bear weight then I shall a little handle this Matter of Excusing In the general an Excuse is an Apology or vain Defence whereby the Sinner seeketh to palliate his
in Christ's Name whatever we obtain is put upon Christ's Account 't is not for our Merit but Christ's so whatsoever you do to any Person in Christ's Name and for Christ's sake is done to Christ If you send another in your name if he be denyed you take your selves to be denyed if granted for your sake you think it granted to you I come now to consider Secondly The Scope These things are parabolically represented to increase our Faith concerning the Reward of Charity The Doctrine is this Doct. That one special End and Vse unto which rich Men should employ their worldly Wealth should be the help and relief of the Poor Consider 1. In the General 't is not to the Rich but to the Poor Feasts and Entertainments are usually for the Rich but Christ saith Luk. 14.12 13 14. When thou makest a Dinner or a Supper call not thy Friends thy Brethren neither thy Kinsmen nor thy Neighbour lest they bid thee again and a recompence be made thee But when thou makest a Feast call the Poor the Maimed the Blind the Lame and thou shalt be blessed for they cannot recompense thee for thou shalt be recompensed at the Resurrection of the Just. Many truck with their Kindness they make Merchandize rather than impart their Charity This is not Charity but Merchandize 2. Of the Poor there are three sorts 1. Pauperes Diaboli the Devils Poor such as have riotously spent their Patrimonies and reduced themselves to Raggs and Beggery by their own Mis-government These are not wholly to be excluded when their necessity is extream you give it to the Man not to the Sin It may work upon them especially when you joyn spiritual Alms with temporal 2. There are Pauperes Mundi the World 's Poor such as come of poor Parents and live in poor Estate those are to be relieved There is a common tye of Nature between us and them Isa. 58.7 Thou shalt not hide thy self from thine own flesh 3. There are Pauperes Christi Christ's Poor such as have suffered loss of Goods for Christ's sake or being otherwise poor profess the Gospel these especially should be relieved Rom. 12.13 Distributing to the necessities of the Saints And Gal. 6.10 Let us do good to all especially to the Houshold of Faith There is an Order First our own Families our Parents our Children or Kindred 1 Tim. 5.8 then Strangers and among them those that profess the same Faith with us and then them who do most evidence the reality of Faith by an holy Life and then to all as occasion is offered Reasons of this Duty 1. The near Vnion that is between Christ and his People Christ and Believers are one and the same Mystical Body with Christ their Head 1 Cor. 12.12 For as the Body is one and hath many Members and all the Members of that one Body being many are one Body so is Christ Now that Union comprizeth all When one Member suffereth all the Members suffer with it ver 26. There is a sympathy and fellow-feeling When you tread upon the Toe the Tongue will cry out and say You have hurt me They cast themselves out of the Body that have not common Joyes and common Sorrows with the rest of the Members 2. Christ hath commended them to us as his Proxies and Deputies He himself receiveth nothing from us he is above our kindness being exalted into the Heavens but in every Age he leaveth some to try the Respects of the World Oh what men would do for Christ if he were now in the flesh 'T is an usual deceit of Heart to betray our Duties by our wishes Now Christ hath put some in his place 1 Joh. 4.20 If any man say I love God and hateth his Brother he is a Liar for he that loveth not his Brother whom he hath seen how can he love God whom he hath not seen We would be as much prejudiced against Christ as we are against the godly Poor That which your Servant receiveth by your order you receive it He receiveth your Respects by the hands of the Poor he hath devolved this right on the Poor as his Deputies Mat. 26.11 For ye have the Poor alwayes with you but Me ye have not alwayes We pretend much Love to Christ if he were sick in a Bed we would visit him if in Prison or in want we would relieve him What is done to one of these is done to him 3. 'T is a great Honour put upon us to be Instruments of Divine Providence and Preservation of others You are God's Substitutes in giving as the Poor in receiving As Gods to them we relieve and comfort them He could give to them without thee but God will put the honour of the work upon thee This is the greatest Resemblance of God Act. 20.35 'T is more blessed to give than to receive that is more God-like 'T is a great Mercy to be able and willing Luk. 6.36 Be ye therefore merciful as your Heavenly Father is merciful The true advantage of Wealth is in relieving and supporting others nothing sheweth our Conformity to God so much as this Christ saith not if ye fast ye shall be like your heavenly Father or if ye pray or if ye prophesie or if ye be learned but if ye be merciful as your Heavenly Father is merciful Thou holdest the place of God and art as it were a God to them 4. The Profit of this Duty It seemeth a loss but 't is the most gainful Trade in the World 'T is the way to preserve your Estates to increase them to cleanse them to provide for Eternal Comfort in them 1. To keep what you have Your Goods are best secured to you when they are deposited in God's hands you provide baggs that wax not old Many an Estate hath been wasted for want of Charity Jam. 5.2 3. 2. To increase it as Seed in the Ground The Husbandman getteth nothing by keeping the Corn by him 2 Cor. 9.6 He which soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly and he which soweth bountifully shall reap bountifully Deut. 15.10 When thou givest to thy poor Brother the Lord thy God shall bless thee in all thy works and in all that thou puttest thy hand unto All your works of Mercy and Liberality shall be abundantly repay'd Luk. 6.36 Give and it shall be given to you good measure pressed down shaken together and running over But above all Prov. 19.17 He that giveth to the Poor lendeth to the Lord that which he hath given he shall pay him again If you would put out your Money to the best advantage lend it to the Lord the Interest shall be infinitely greater than the Principal What better Security than God's He is a sure Pay-Master and he will pay them to the full great Increase for all that he borroweth an hundred for one which is an Usury not yet heard of in the World You can expect nothing from the poor sort they have nothing to give you but God is
for ever to make intercession for us He is interceding with God that the Merit of his Death may be applied to us and that is Salvation to the uttermost The Heirs of Salvation need not to fear miscarrying Jesus Christ who is the Testator who by Will and Testament made over the Heritage to them he liveth for ever to see his own Will executed tho he died once to make the Testament yet he liveth for ever to see it made good Christ is risen from the Dead and dieth no more and therefore a Believer cannot miscarry 3. On the Spirit 's part there is a continued Influence so as to maintain the Essence and Seed of Grace The Father's Love is continued by the Merit of Christ that he will not depart from us and we are preserved by the Spirit of Christ that we may not depart from him He doth not only put into our Hearts Faith and Fear and other Graces at first but he maintaineth and keepeth them that the Fire may never go out Our Hearts are his Temples and he will not leave his Dwelling-place There is a continued Influence Now this he doth to preserve the Honour of Christ and the Comfort of Believers he glorifieth Christ and is our Comforter It is to preserve the Glory of Christ. Christ hath received a Charge from the Father John 6.39 This is the Father's Will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last Day nothing neither Body nor Soul In point of Honour and that he may be true to his Trust he sendeth his Spirit as his Deputy or Executor that his Merit may be fully applied therefore for the honour of Christ where-ever the Work is begun it is continued Christ is called Heb. 12.2 the Author and Finisher of our Faith Where-ever the Spirit is an Author he is also a Finisher when the good Work is begun he will also perfect it and continue his Grace to the end It was said of the foolish Builder He began and was not able to make an end This Dishonour cannot be cast upon Christ because of the Power and Faithfulness of the Spirit he doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 go through with the Work which he hath begun Phil 1.6 Being confident of this that he that hath begun a good Work in you will perform it unto the day of Christ. The Spirit is to fit Vessels for Glory he doth not use to leave them half carved but finish them for the honour of Christ. The Spirit is faithful to Christ as Christ is to the Father The Father chuseth the Vessels Christ buyeth them and the Spirit carveth and fitteth them that they may be Vessels of Praise and Honour He is our Comforter working Grace he puts us into an expectation of Comfort and Glory and therefore to make it good he carrieth on the Work without failing Rom. 8.23 And not only they but our selves also who have the first-fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Body 2. Cor. 1.22 Who hath sealed us and given the Earnest of the Spirit in our Hearts We have the Taste and the Pledge of it it is good it is sure The first degree of Grace is conferred as a Pledg of eternal Life he giveth it as an Earnest or Pledg assuring us of a more perfect Enjoyment of him It is a Pledg of the whole Crop as an Earnest hereby God assureth us that he will pay the whole Sum. An Earnest is a Pledg whereby we confirm a Bargain it is a Piece of Money whereby we are assured he will pay the whole Grace it is the Livery and Seisin of Glory as soon as a real Change is wrought in us we have a Right that is indefeasible it is engaged by Promise Therefore that the Spirit may be faithful when he hath given us the First-fruits the Earnest shall he not give us the Inheritance Vse 1. It exhorteth us to persevere with the more care John 2.26 27 28. These things have I written unto you concerning them that seduce you But the Anointing which you have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any Man teach you but as the same Anointing teacheth you of all things and is Truth and is no Lie and even as it hath taught you you shall abide in him And now little Children abide in him that when he shall appear ye may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming Since we have so many Advantages of standing let us not fall from him O how great will your Sin be if you should fall and dishonour God! We pity a Child that falleth when it is not looked after but when a froward Child wresteth and forceth it self out of the Arms of the Nurse we are angry with it You have more ground to stand than others being brought into an unchangeable Estate of Grace being held in the Arms of Christ so that God will be very angry with your Slips and Fallings Mercy holdeth you fast and you seek to wrest your selves out of Mercies Arms. Never any can sin as you do there is much frowardness in your Sins You disparage the Spirit 's Custody the Merit of Christ and the Mercy of the Father Heb. 4.1 Let us therefore fear lest a Promise being left us of entring into his Rest any of you should seem to come short of it Some seem to stand and do not and some seem to fall utterly and do not A Child of God indeed cannot come short but he should not seem nor give any appearance of coming short Our Course in Religion is often interrupted tho it be not broken off this is a seeming to come short of it Hereby you bring a Scandal upon the Love of Christ as if it were changeable upon the Merit of Christ as if it were not a perfect Merit Tho we do not fall so as to break our Necks yet we may fall so as to break our Bones Vse 2. If you fall be not utterly discouraged As the Spinster leaveth a Lock of Wooll to draw on the next Thread There is somewhat left when you are departed from God you have more hold-fast in him than an unregenerate Sinner A Child tho a Prodigal will go to him and say Father Psal. 119.176 I have gone astray like a lost Sheep seek thy Servant for I do not forget thy Commandments Through natural Weakness I have gone astray like a Sheep but I seek thy Commandments there is some Grace left yet Isa. 64.8 But now O Lord thou art our Father we are the Clay and thou art Potter we are all the Work of thine Hand The Church pleadeth thus nay God is angry when we do not plead so Jer. 3.4 Wilt thou not from this time cry My Father thou art the Guide of my Youth You have an Interest in God yet Thus do and your Fall
will be like them that go back to fetch their Leap more commodiously Vse 3. When you stand let it incite you to Love and Thankfulness Nothing maketh the Saints more love God than his Unchangeableness His Mercy made you come to him and his Truth will not suffer you to depart from him Mercy and Truth are like Jachin and Boaz. Micah 7.20 Thou wilt perform the Truth to Jacob and the Mercy to Abraham which thou hast sworn unto our Fathers from the days of old The Covenant was made with Abraham and made good to Jacob. You may rejoyce notwithstanding your Weakness and Satan's daily Assaults as Daniel in the Lion's Den to see the Lions ramping and roaring about him yet their Mouths muzzled 2 Sam. 2.9 By strength shall no Man prevail that is by his own That any of us have stood hitherto let us ascribe it wholly to God we might have been vile and scandalous even as others Many of better Gifts may fall away and thou keepest thy standing what is the reason We have done enough a thousand times to cause God to depart from us Deut. 23.14 If he see any unclean thing among thee he will turn away from thee And is it not strange that the Spirit of Grace should yet abide with us hitherto when there is so much uncleanness in every one of us The great Argument of the Saints why they love and praise him is the Constancy and Unchangeableness of his Love Psal. 136. For his Mercy endureth for ever and Psal. 106.1 Praise the Lord O give Thanks unto the Lord for he is good for his Mercy endureth for ever No Form more frequent in the Mouths of his Saints Vse 4. If any fall often constantly frequently and easily they have no Interest in Grace 1 John 3.9 Whosoever is born of God doth not commit Sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he maketh not a Trade of Sin that is the force of that Phrase God's Children slip often but not with such a frequent constant readiness into the same Sin Therefore he that liveth in a course of Prophaneness Worldliness Drunkenness his Spot is not the Spot of God's Children Deut 32.5 You are tried by your constant Course Rom. 8.1 That walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit What is your Road and Walk I except only those Sins which are of usual incidence and sudden surreption as Anger Vanity of Thoughts and yet for them a Man should be more humble If it be not felt nor striven against nor mourned for it is a bad Sign What is your Course and Walk There is an Uniformity in a Christian's Course It is nothing to have some Fits and good Moods and Motions Vse 5. It provoketh us to get an Interest in such a sure Condition Be not contented with outward Happiness things are worthy according to their duration Nature hath such a sense of God's Eternity that the more lasting things are it accounteth them the better The immortal Soul must have an eternal Good Now all things in the World are frail and passing away therefore they are called uncertain Riches 1 Tim. 6.17 compared with Prov. 8.18 Riches and Honour are with me yea durable Riches and Righteousness The Flower of these things perisheth their Grace passeth away in the midst of their Pride and Beauty like Herod in his Royalty they vanish and are blasted The better part is not taken away Luke 10.42 Mary hath chosen the better part which cannot be taken away from her A Man may outlive his Happiness be stripped of the Flower of all Worldly Glory is sure to end with Life that is transitory And still they are uncertain Riches uncertain whether we shall get them uncertain whether we shall keep them By a care of the better part we may have these Things with a Blessing Mat. 6.33 Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added to you Gifts they are for the Body rather than the Person that hath them Men may be carnal and yet come behind in no Gifts Judas could cast out Devils and yet afterwards was cast out among Devils 1 Cor. 12.31 the Apostle had discoursed largely of Gifts but saith he Yet I shew you a more excellent Way and that is Grace that abideth Many that have great Abilities to pray preach discourse yet fall away according to the Place which they sustain in the Body so they have great Gifts of Knowledg Utterance to comfort direct instruct others to answer their Doubts to reason in holy Discourse and yet may fall fouly Heb. 6.4 5. They may be once enlightned and have tasted of the heavenly Gift and were made Partakers of the Holy-Ghost and have tasted the good Word of God and the Powers of the World to come They may have a great share of Church-Gifts Nay Gifts themselves wither and vanish when the bodily Vigor is spent 1 Pet. 1.24 All Flesh is Grass and all the Glory of Man as the Flower of Grass the Grass withereth and the Flower thereof falleth away Whatever Excellency we have by Nature Wit Knowledg Strength of natural Parts nothing but what the Spirit of God worketh in us will last for ever So for seeming unsound Grace as false Faith such as beginneth in Joy will end in Trouble it easeth you for the present but you shall lie down in Sorrow General Probabilities loose Hopes uncertain Conjectures vanishing Apprehensions of Comfort all fail The planting of true Faith is troublesom at first but it leadeth to true Joy you may look upon the Gospel with some kind of delectation Thorns may blaze under the Pot tho they cannot keep in the Fire Do not rest in tasting the good Word of God Heb. 6.5 in some sleight and transitory Comfort Hymeneus and Alexander are said to make shipwrack of Faith 1 Tim. 1.19 20. that is of a false Faith So for a formal Profession Men may begin in the Spirit and end in the Flesh. Gal. 3.3 Are ye so foolish having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the Flesh A Man may seem to himself and to the Church of God to have true Grace nay he may be enlightned find some comfort in the Word escape the Pollutions of the World foul gross Sins yea these good things may be the Works and the Effects of the Spirit of God not of Nature only not professed out of a carnal Aim but there is no setled Root and therefore it is but of short continuance But certainly that Form that is taken up out of private Aims will surely fail God delighteth to take off the Mask and Disguise of Hypocrites by letting them fall into some scandalous Sins Paint is soon washed off Therefore rest not in these things till solid and substantial Grace be wrought in your Hearts Vse 6. Is Comfort to God's Children Grace is sure and the Privileges of it sure Grace is sure through your Folly it may be nigh unto Death but it cannot
sat down under a Juniper Tree and be requested for himself that be might die and said It is enough now O Lord take away my Life for I am not better than my Fathers 3. From the peevishness of fond and doting Love 2 Sam. 18.33 O my Son Absalom my Son my Son Absalom would God I had died for thee O Absalom my Son my Son As the Wives of the Barbarians that burn themselves to attend the Ghosts of their dead Husbands 4. From Distrust and Despair the Evil is too hard for them they are at their Wits end Job 7.15 My Soul chuseth strangling and Death rather than Life In all these Cases it is but a shameful Retreat from the conflict and burden of the present Life from carnal Irksomeness under the labours and burdens of the present Life or a distrust of God's Help There may be Murder in a rash Wish if it proceed from a vexed Heart These are but froward Thoughts not a sanctified Resolution 3. Such desires of Death and Dissolution as are lawful and must be cherished come from a good ground A Heart deadned to the World they are crucified to it their Hearts are mortified set on things above Col. 3.1 Some competent Assurance Rom. 8.23 We groan waiting for the Adoption viz. the Redemption of our Body They have tasted the Clusters of Canaan as Simeon Luke 2.28 29. Lord now lettest thou thy Servant depart in peace for mine Eyes have seen thy Salvation the Eyes of his Faith as well as of his Body Now Lord I do but wait for my departure hence as a Merchant-man richly laden desires to be at his Port. 4. You must look to the End Men have a blind Notion of Heaven they expect a Carnal Heaven as the Jews looked for a Carnal Messiah to enjoy a Turkish Paradise full of Ease and Pleasure The People of God desire Heaven to have a perfect Union and Communion with him whom their Souls love Phil. 1.23 I desire to depart and be with Christ. Phil. 3.20 Our Conversation is in Heaven whence we look for a Saviour they long to see him to be where he is Heart and Head should be together And so also to be freed from Sin B●om 7.24 O wretched Man that I am who shall deliver me from this Body of Death They would be in Heaven that they may sin no more Men look upon Heaven as a kind of Reserve if the World do not hold We should desire Heaven not to be freed from Trouble but to be freed from Sin and to be with Christ there must be an holy desire of a better Life 5. The manner must be regarded it must be with Submission Phil. 1.24 Nevertheless to abide in the Flesh is more needful for you otherwise we encroach upon God's Right and would deprive him of a Servant without his leave A Christian will die and live as the Lord will while others want submission to live in trouble he is satisfied or to die if he be not in trouble if it be the Lord's Pleasure a Believer is satisfied with long Life Psal. 91.16 he is willing to live and die as God liketh he will wait till his change comes when God will give him a discharge by his own immediate Hand or by Enemies Gratias agi●●● quòd à molestis Domiesis libera●ur God knoweth how to chuse the fittest time otherwise we know not what we ask 3. Obs. That a Spiritual Victory over Evil is to be preserved before a total Exemption from it Christ doth not pray for an absolute immunity and deliverance but a preservation from the Evil of the World Christ prayeth thus and so he teacheth us to pray Mat. 6.13 Lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from Evil. When we say Lead us not into Temptation he doth not mean that we should pray fo●●n absolute exemption from Temptation that is the Lot of all the Saints but that we may not fall under the weight of a Temptation that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it is explained that he would not as a Judg by a Spiritual Excommunication put us into the Hands of Satan to be crushed by him as it is explained in the next Verse But deliver us from Evil. Vse 1. It teacheth us how to pray to God Our Prayers should be to be delivered not from the World so much as from the Evil of the World from Sins rather than Afflictions The Saints seek Grace rather than Deliverance in their Afflictions Direction as well as Protection that they may do nothing unseemly while they suffer Psal. 141.3 4. Set a match O Lord before my Mouth keep the Dear of my Lips Incline not my Heart to any evil thing to practise wicked Works with them that work iniquity and let me not eat of their Dainties And they desire Improvement rather than a Discharge for the Saints do not conceive Prayers out of Interest but from a principle of the new Nature to a gracious Eye Sustentation under the Cross is better than absolute Deliverance the Deliverance is a common Mercy the Sustentation is a special Mercy Carnal Men may be without Affliction but Carnal Men have no experience of Grace and bare Deliverance is no sign of special Love but Improvement is My Grace is sufficient for thee It is Divinity preached from Heaven makes the Saints to rejoice in Infirmities Paul before was earnest to be freed from the trouble Vse 2. How to wait and hope for the Blessings of Christ's Purchase Absolute Immunity is not to be looked for but Victory and Conservation 2 Tim. 4.18 The Lord shall deliver me from every evil Work and will preserve me unto his Heavenly Kingdom A Christian placeth his Hope chiefly on that Paul could not look for such a deliverance again from the Lion but from an unworthy Carriage The Blessings which Christ hath obtained of his Father are rather Spiritual and Celestial than Temporal therefore he is more sollicitous to free us from Sin than from Trouble Mat. 1.21 Th●● shalt call his Name Jesus for he shall save his People from their Sins not from their Troubles their Sorrows but their Sins We would be delivered from Sickness Trouble Danger but Christ is a Spiritual Saviour the great Deliverance is to be freed from Sin Vse 3. To teach us to suffer with Patience Let us endure the Evil of Punishment that we may escape the Evil of Sin Moral Evil is worse than Natural it is better to be miserable than to be sinful Of all Evil Sin is the greatest to be Carnal a Swearer a Drunkard an unclean Person this is a greater Evil than Poverty Sickness Blindness Lameness this doth not separate from God 4. Obs. The Danger of the Worldly Estate It appears in two things First The multiplicity of Snares The whole World is full of Snares and we can walk no where but we are like to be defiled It is a Vale of Tears and a Place of Snares and therefore a Vale of Tears because a
God and the Apostles by Christ they were his Deputies and Representatives as he was God's that is the Notion of Apostle or one sent in the New Testament not as bare Messengers but as Proxies see Hammond and we read of Messengers of the Churches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Churche● Deputies and Representatives Yea they had Power to send others as Christ had The World was bound to acknowledg them for such To despise Christ was to despise God whose Deputy he was and to despise them was to despise Christ to hear them was to hear Christ and to hear Christ was to hear God Mat. 10.40 He that receiveth you receiveth me and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me And Luke 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me But why doth Christ urge this Argument in this place They were sent and sent as I was sent I Answer It is an Argument as to God and it is a ground of Hope to the Apostles An Argument fit to be urged to God in Prayer they are sent as I was Thou didst send me to redeem the World out of thy Grace and they are sent to preach this Redemption and therefore it is fit they should be preserved and sanctified It is a fit ground of Hope for the Apostles to meditate upon they were sent as Christ was If they be in great Poverty want the help and assistance of the World so did Christ. All God's Witnesses prophesy in Sackcloth Well then here we have the first rise of a Gospel-Ministry Christ was sent by God the Apostles by Christ and others are their Successors authorized and sent by them The Points which I shall handle are two First The Necessity of a Call to the Ministry Secondly The Dignity of those that are so called Both are implied in the word sent Before I enter upon the Discussion let none take offence that I apply that to the Ministry in general which is spoken of the Apostles in the Text I have sent them Which I do for two Reasons 1. Partly because we may compare ordinary Ministers and the Apostles together if their Mission be compared with Christ's As Christ's Mission had something extraordinary and peculiar by which it was distinguished from the Mission of the Apostles so the Apostles Mission hath something peculiar but both agree in this that they must be sent this they have in common Rom. 10.14 How can they preach except they be sent Mark the Apostles were sent as Christ was sent tho Christ was sent to redeem as well as to prophesy and teach and so Ministers are sent they must be authorized as well as the Apostles tho the Apostles had somewhat peculiar and proper to that Office as the Infallibility of Doctrine power of working Miracles the largeness of their Circuit which was the whole World whereas ordinary Ministers are set over one Church and fastned to one place Again the Apostles were appointed to write Scriptures and Pastors and Teachers to apply Scripture The Apostles were authorized by Christ himself received their Call immediatly from his Mouth ordinary Ministers are called by a Power derived Yet they both agree in this that they serve in the Work of the Gospel and that they are Officers that must be called and sent as not only they are the King's Officers who are immediatly appointed by the King but those also that are appointed by subordinate Powers 2. Partly because a part of the Comparison lieth in this that as Christ was sent by God and had Power to call others so the Apostles were sent by Christ and had a Power to send and constitute others and so the Succession was to continue That this was a part of their Power appeareth because Christ when he gave them their Commission saith He will be with them to the end of the World Mat. 28.20 that is with them in their Persons and their Successors who are taken into the same Patent and Commission and have a Power to call others to the end of the World and therefore the Apostles ordained Elders in every City Acts 14.23 And those Elders ordained others as the Apostle giveth leave to Titus so to do Tit. 1.5 For this cause left I thee in Crete that thou shouldest set in order the things that are wanting and ordain Elders in every City as I had appointed thee Christ was not only sent to be a Prophet himself but to authorize others So the Apostles not only were sent to preach the Gospel themselves but to authorize others and they others even to the end of the World This being premised I come to handle First The Necessity of a Call That none can enter upon this Work or upon the Office of the Ministry without a Call is I suppose out of controversy All the Difficulty will be to shew you what a Call is Gifts meerly do not make a Call but something else Now a Call is either Extraordinary or Ordinary 1. Extraordinary and that is an immediate Call from God himself by Voice Vision or Oracle or by Christ in Person So was Moses called to his Office so the Baptist so the Apostles and so also was Paul called because he had not seen Christ in Person which it seemeth was necessary to the Call of an Apostle he was called by Christ appearing from Heaven and therefore he saith Gal. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of Men neither by Man but by Jesus Christ c. Now this extraordinary Call may be pretended but cannot be expected in these latter dayes Many have pretended to an extraordinary Call Eusebius in his ● th Book tells us of some that pretended they had a Book sent from Heaven according to which they were to instruct their Disciples And Sozomen speaketh of a Monk that pretended that the Instruction that he offered to the Church was written by an Angel And since in all Ages especially in ours do Men pretend to Ill●minations Teachings and Voices within Thus it may be pretended but it cannot be expected For an immediate extraordinary Calling hath only place in establishing a new Doctrine But now the Canon of Faith is closed up This Doctrine of the Kingdom is to be preached to all Nations till the end come Mat. 24.14 And the Ordinances of the Church are setled and put into a stated course till Christ come and therefore we cannot reasonably expect new Miracles and new Calls And besides every extraordinary Call is manifested by some Vision Miracle or special Effect and Gift of the Holy Ghost by which the Truth of that Calling may be made out to others and hath been always sealed with extraordinary Effects which are ceased in these Days 2. The Ordinary Call then is that which we should chiefly regard and that is two-fold either Inward or Outward 1. The Inward Calling that is to be regarded in the first place Be sure you be Ministers of Christ's making There
be spared and of all Offices Hearing is least necessary The Ear received the first Temptation Sin and Misery broke in that way so doth Life and Peace The Happiness of Heaven is expressed by Seeing the Happiness in the Church by Hearing This is our great Emploiment to wait upon the Word preached next to Christ's Word it is a great Benefit to have the Word written next to the Word written the Word preached Christ sent first Apostles then Pastors and Teachers God could have converted Paul without Ananias taught the Eunuch without Philip instructed Cornelius without Peter Do not hearken to those that cry up an inward Teaching to exclude the outward Teaching as if the external Word were but an empty sound and noise as the Libertines in Calvin's Time Faith confirmed by Reading is usually begotten by Hearing 2. The Use of the Word It is our Warrant What have we to shew for our great Hopes by Christ but the Word It is our Excitement a Means and Instrument to shew us God's Heart and our own our natural Face and the worth of Christ the Key which God useth and openeth our Hearts by Ministers are Christ's Spokesmen if we will not open the Ear why should God open the Heart 3. The Power of the Word is exceeding great It is the Power of God to Salvation The first Gospel-Sermon that ever was preached after the pouring forth of the Spirit had great success Acts 2.41 The same day there were added to the Church about three thousand Souls It was a mighty thing that an Angel should slay 185000 in one Night in Senacherib's Host But it is easier to kill so many than to convert one Soul One Angel by his meer natural strength could kill so many armed Men but all the Angels in Heaven if they should join all their Forces together could not convert one Soul There were single Miracles of curing one Blind or one Lame Ay but the Apostle's Word could work three thousand Miracles 1 Cor. 3.5 Who is Paul and who is Apollo but Ministers by whom ye believed even as the Lord gave to every Man Why doth God use the Word I Answer Because it pleased him 1 Cor. 1.21 It pleased God by the foolishness of Preaching to save them that believe 1. It is most suitable to Man's Nature Man is made of Body and Soul and God will deal with him both ways by internal Grace and external Exhortations Man is a reasonable Creature his Will is not brutish God will not offer Violence to the Principles of Humane Nature Man is not only weak but wicked there is Hatred as well as Impotency God will overcome both together by sweet Counsels mixed with a mighty Force he useth such a Remedy as our Disease requireth the Gospel is not only called the Power of God but the Wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1.24 There are excellent Arguments which the Heart of Man could not have found out 2. It is agreeable to his own Counsels to try the Reprobate by an outward Rule and Offer wherein they have as much favour as the Elect they shall one day know that a Prophet hath been among them and so be left without excuse Rom. 1.20 The Rain falleth on Rocks as well as Fields the Sun shineth to blind Men as well as those that can see 3. It commendeth his Grace to the Elect. Their Faith must be ascribed to Grace When others have the same Means the same Voice and Exhortations it is the peculiar Grace of God that they come to understand and believe Whence is it that the Difference ariseth that whereas wicked Men are by the Word restrained and made civil there being an use of wicked Men in the World as of a Hedg of Thorns about a Garden they are by the same Word converted and brought home to God It is from the Grace of God Vse Examination Is our Faith thus wrought Every one should look how he cometh by his Faith by what Means True Faith is begotten and grounded upon the Word it is the ordinary means to work Faith The Word will be continued and a Ministry to preach it as long as there are any to be converted The Gospel alone revealeth that which may satisfy our Necessities it giveth a bottom for Faith and particular Application as being the Declaration of God's Will It is the only Means sanctified by Christ for that End John 17.17 Sanctify them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth James 1.18 Of his own Will begat he us with the Word of Truth The Condition of those is woful that want the Gospel or put it from them Acts 13.46 Seeing ye put it from you and judg your selves unworthy of Everlasting Life lo we turn to the Gentiles If Faith be of the right make the Word will shew thee once thou hadst none and that thou wert not able of thy self to believe beseech the Lord to work it in thee SERMON XXXV JOHN XVII 21 That they all may be One as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the World may believe that thou hast sent me WE have seen for whom Christ prayeth Now let us see what he prayeth for their comfortable Estate in the World and the Happiness of their everlasting Estate in Heaven With respect to their Estate in the World Christ mentioneth no other Blessing but the Mystical Union which is amplified throughout Vers. 21 22 23. Here he beginneth That they may be all one as thou Father art in me and I in thee He had before prayed for the Apostles that they may be One as we are One Vers. 11. and now let them ALL be One. The Welfare of the Church is concerned not only in the Unity of the Apostles but of private Believers you had need be One as well as your Pastors Many Times Divisions arise from the People and those that have least Knowledg are most carried aside with blind Zeal and Principles of Separation therefore Christ prayeth for private Believers That they may be all One c. In which words there is First The Blessing prayed for That they may be all One. Secondly The Manner of this Unity illustrated by the Original Patern and Exemplar of it As thou Father art in me and I in thee the ineffable Unity of the Persons in the Divine Essence Thirdly The Ground of this Unity the Mystical Union with Christ and by Christ with God That they may be One with us Fourthly The End and Event of this Union That the World may believe that thou hast sent me First From the Blessing prayed for I Observe That the great Blessing Christ asketh for his Church is the Mystical Vnion of Believers in the same Body Let them be One One in us and as thou in me and I in thee All these Expressions shew that the Mystical Union is here intended Let them be One 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is elsewhere explained
effects of the World's Conviction Page 314 Why Christ prays so earnestly for it Page 315 God honoured hereby Page 315 The advantage of it to the Elect. Page 316 It lessons and increases the World's Iudgment and how Page 317 Arguments to press Christians so to live as to convince the World Page 321 God would have the World convinced of his Love to his People Page 347 Reasons of it Page 348 How the World should be thus convinced Page 347 Convictions not to be slighted nor rested in Page 318 319 How we may know whether we are convinced only or converted Page 319 Covenant of Redemption the terms of it Page 77 What was proposed by the Father in it Page 155 What Christ undertook Page 156 Covetousness one of Judas's Sins Page 174 The evil of the Sin Page 177 To be avoided Page 177 Creatures discover God Page 28 33 Doting upon the Creatures withdraw the Heart from God Page 335 D. DAnger cannot be withstood by us in our own Strength Page 171 Christ apprehensive of the Danger of his People in this World Page 133 Reasons of it his Interest Love Charge Experience Page 133 Comfort from hence Page 136 Death desire of Death vid. Desire Death of Christ Christ died to promote Vnity among Christians Page 1●● Why the Death of Christ hath so little Effect upon us Page 291 Decay of the Power of Godliness brings trouble on the Church Page 195 Delight excessive in worldly things shews a worldly Heart Page 209 Desires show the temper of the Soul Page 208 Desire of Death whether lawful and what Desires are so Page 212 213 Difference between serious and passionate Desire of Death Page 213 Carnal Desires of Death whence they arise Page 212 Believers must be willing to dye Page 354 Despair one of Judas's Sin Page 175 To be avoided Page 178 Devil the great Author of the Troubles of the Church Page 201 219. Difference in course of Life provokes wicked Men especially Difference in Religion Page 200 Difference between Believers and Men of the World in their Principles Rule Conversation End Aims Page 204 Disrespect of the World not to be regarded and why Page 225 Hard to be digested Page 224 The best way to digest it is to consider Christ's Example Page 225 Distraction of Man's Thoughts after the Fall Page 333 This continueth till we return to God Page 334 Divisions in the Church how they arise Page 163 The mischief of them Page 165 166 They bring on Trouble Page 194 They that promote them contrary to Christ. Page 164 Who are guilty of this Sin Page 165 Doctrines of the Word shew it to be from God Page 260 Doctrines Christian vid. Christian. E. ELect none of them can be lost Page 173 Election a special Priviledg Page 66 Not for foreseen Faith good Works or Perseverance Page 364 Original and actual what Page 71 Election of Ministers the Peoples Right Page 273 End a Man is as his End is Page 55 Enjoying no enjoying God without Christ. Page 30 Envy of others worldly Happiness shews a worldly Heart Page 209 Wicked Men envy the Good in others Page 201 Error makes way for Looseness Page 232 Esteem of the World discovers a worldly Heart Page 208 Eternal State the Foundation of it laid in this Life Page 370 Evil Satan hath an Hand in the Evil that befals God's Church and People Page 219 Example of Christ the heavenliness of it Page 206 The Courage of it Page 206 Experience Christ hath Experience of his Peples Sufferings Page 134 F. FAith various Expressions by which it is set-forth in Scripture Page 391 The Nature of it Page 90 95. Difference between true Faith and counterfeit Page 93 The Acts of Faith Page 296 297 In Faith Assent Consent and Trust. Page 93 The Office of Faith to accept Christ and present him in Prayer Page 115 The Object of Faith Page 85 97 296 The Word vid. Receiving the Word Christ vid. Receiving Christ. Three things concur to the working of it the Light of the Spirit external Revelation and the use of fit Instruments Page 84 The Word the means to work Faith Page 88 The necessity use and power of the Word to work Faith Page 298 299 Why God useth the Word to this end Page 299 Incouragements to Faith Page 295 The Excellency of Faith Page 296 How it sanctifies Page 234 Faith a help to Ioy. Page 189 Faith cannot be without Knowledg Page 90 What a kind of Light the Light of Faith is Page 91 In the Knowledg of Faith there is undoubted Certainty Page 90 The work of Faith when we cannot apply Christ. Page 298 The Faith of the Apostles work yet by Christ commended to the Father Page 97 Faithfulness to our Charge recommended Page 67 Of Christ to his Father Page 83 Fall into Sin why God sometimes leaves his People to fall into Sin Page 218 What falls into Sin are inconsistent with Grace Page 148 Belivers not to be discouraged by every Fall into Sin Page 147 Father a Comfort in Prayer to call God Father Page 6 How to carry our selves in Afflictions towards God as a Father Page 7 God the Father chiefly offended by Sin Page 86 263 And he the supream Iudg. Page 86 264 Fear of want discovers a worldly Heart Page 208 Filth of Sin our Filthiness by Nature Page 291 Nothing can cleanse us but the Blood of Christ. Page 291 Finishing what Christ's finishing his Work signifies Page 47 G. GEntleness of Christ in bearing with his Peoples failings Page 80 85. Gift the Privileges of the human Nature a Gift Page 48 Work it self a Gift Page ibid. Gifts are fading Page 148 Wicked Mens Gifts useful to the Church Page 316 Given how Christ had given to his Disciples the Word of God Page 191 Given to Christ who are given to Christ. Page 21 76 153 351. None given to Christ but they that are the Fathers vid. Commensurable Page 72 107 109. Why God gave the Elect to Christ. Page 77 How Belivers given to Christ. By way of Charge vid. Charge Page 21 72 154 156 351. By way of Reward Page 21 72.154 155 351. How shall we knowwe are given to Christ. Page 159 351 Being given to Christ a ground of Consolation and Establishment to the Elect. Page 154 How it is such a ground of Establishment Page 158 Glory the fruit of Vnion as well as Grace Page 326 Shame the way to Glory Page 10 Christ in his last Will and Testament gives Glory to his People Page 350 The Glory that is given by Christ we have as sure as if in the Possession of it Page 322 The freeness of Grace in giving us Glory Page 349 Looking to future Glory a remedy in Tribulation Page 10 Glory of God much advanced by Iesus Christ. Page 11 Glory of Christ's Person what it is Page 358 What the Glory was Christ prayed for Page 9 61 Why Christ begged it of the Father Page 58 Why he was so earnest for
vid. Willingness Did not fall out by chance Page 180 Were appointed by the Father Page 7 Foretold by the Prophets Page 8 Always attended with some Glory Page 9 Sufferings of God's People short Page 8 God's People to prepare for them Page 194 vid Troubles When they come do not think strange at them Page 195 How to know when God is about to bring Trouble on the Church Page 164 Cautions in suffering for Christ. Page 117 Christ hath Experience of his Peoples Sufferings Page 134 T. TEaching of Christ the manner of it Page 69 Christ the great Teacher of the Church Page 74 Temptations fitted to every State Page 135 To every Condition Calling Action Place Page 214 215 Lust within gives advantage to Temptations without Page 129 260 Tender God is tender of his Truth and Saints Page 239 337 Threatnings of the Word always fulfilled Page 250 Objections answered Page 250 Titles of God in Scripture suited to Requests made to him Page 136 349 367 Toleration Arguments against it Page 236 Treason against Christ one of Judas's Sins Page 175 To be avoided Page 178 Trinity the Doctrine of the Trinity opened and proved Page 37 vid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Person How we are to imitate the Trinity Page 168 309 Truth a great Treasure Page 236 Truth of the Scriptures Scriptures must be fulfilled Page 182 vid. Scriptures Divine Authority U. VIctory over evil to be preferred before Exemption from it Page 213 Vision of Christ in Heaven ocular and mental what Page 358 359 Why our Happiness lies in it Page 359 Vision the cause of all Fruition in Heaven Page 359 It shall be comfortable Page 361 Who are they that shall see Christ in Heaven Page 361 Union moral of Believers one with another what it is vid. Unity Page 106 303 Union mystical of Believers with Christ what it is Page 160 301 389 The whole Trinity is concerned in this Union Page 301 Whole Christ is united to a whole Believer Page 301 This Union is secret and mysterious but real Page 302 Illustrated by the Union of Head and Members Page 302 And by the Conjugal Union Page 390 All the Ordinances have an aspect on our Union with Christ. Page 332 How this Union is brought about and in what order Page 389 What the Act of Faith is whereby we are united to Christ. Page 389 The end of it Page 333 The advantages Believers have by it Page 305 Glory the Fruit of Union as well as Grace Page 326 The Honour and Happiness of those that are united to Christ. Page 304 305 The Resemblance between the Mystical Union and the Union of the Divine and Humane Nature in Christ. Page 308 The disagreement between these two Unions Page 308 The Resemblance between the Mystical Union and the Union of Father and Son in the Trinity Page 308 Why Christ prayeth for this Union Page 303 How we may know we are united to Christ. Page 305 391 Those who are united to Christ to look for greater things than they enjoy Page 326 This should teach us Dependance Page 331 What those Fruits are of it whereby the World is convinced of the Truth of Christianity vid. Conviction Page 311 320 Unity of Believers hath some resemblance of the Unity of the Divine Persons Page 167 What is contrary to it Page 165 To be prayed for Page 163 Believers to be earnest for it Page 165 How much Christ's Heart is set on the Unity of his Members Page 161 vid. Love of Brethren Why Christ so earnestly prays for it Page 162 Arguments to press it Page 166 It is possible to be attained Page 163 What an excellent Blessing it is Page 162 The need the Church hath of it Page 163 Directions to attain it Page 166 Directions to restore it Page 166 How God keepeth the Saints together Page 168 Unity between God and Christ. Page 307 Unworthiness what we should do when dejected with a sense of our Unworthiness Page 344 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Original and Signification of the Word vid. Person Page 38 W. WAiting ●n God a Duty tho we want outward Supplies Page 172 Walk Christians to walk wisely towards them that are without Page 203 Warning Sinners to take warning by Iudgments on others Page 180 Watching what a Believer should watch against Page 216 Watching and Prayer should go together Page 216 Welcome of Christ by the Father at his Ascension Page 123 Willingness of Christ to undertake the Work of Redemption Page 286 And to suffer Page 9 287 Word of God the necessity of God's giving us a Word Page 238 VVhat it is Page 240 To be reverenced Page 250 How given to Christ. Page 88 The proper means to work Faith Page 88 vid. Faith It will work without Miracles Page 89 The Spirit will not work without it Page 89 The Power of it to convert Souls Page 89 The Truth of it vid. Scripture Divine Authority It helps our Ioy. Page 190 Work every Man hath his Work Page 52 This Work is given to him by God Page 53 This Work must be finished Page 54 World why God permits his People to be in the World Page 131 The weakness of the World Page 105 The danger of living in the World Page 129 214 The Enemies we meet with in the World Page 130 Christ apprehensive of his Peoples danger in this World and why vid. Da●ger Page 133 VVhy we should grow weary of the World Page 135 How Christians are not of this World Page 204 VVhy Christians are not of this World Page 204 Characters of those that live as if they were of this World Page 206 How to know whether our Hearts are set on this World vid. Heart Page 206 207 How should a Christian know when the Wor●d incroacheth upon him Page 217 VVe can never enough be cautioned against the World Page 222 Worldly Conversation wherein seen Page 209 Worldly Men their dangerous Estate Page 106 Men of the World apt to defile the People of God Page 130 How the People of God differ from the Men of the World Page 191 Worldly Spirit to be avoided Page 224 Worldly things are frail Page 148 Worldliness expressed by Adultery and Idolatry and why Page 217 223 Arguments against it Page 223 Worldliness of Professors brings Troubles on the Church Page 195 Worship God to be worshipped in an holy manner Page 142 VVe should go away the more holy from Worship Page 142 A TABLE Of the Places of Scriptures explained in this PART       Pag. GEn. 3. 15. 197 19. 17. 216 Ex. 28. 12 29. 265 29. 4. 230 1 Sam. 2. 9. 171   25. 86 264 Job 1. 5. 105 4. 18. 138 31. 14. 56 Psalm 14. 1. 33 16. 3 4. 106 19. 7 8 9. 235 24. 7 8. 253   11. 122 25. 14. 372 62. 10. 209 93. ult 140 112. 96. 235 259 Proverb 8. 12. 91 13. 17. 281 14. 13. 187 18. 10. 152 29. 27. 197 30. 8 9. 214 Eccles. 2. 2. 187
Grace is an effectual Principle both to produce its own operations and to restrain sin Prov. 16.6 By mercy and truth iniquity is purged and by the fear of the Lord men depart from evil Iniquity is purged in a way of Sanctification SERMON XXI ROM VI. 21 What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of those things is death THE Apostle pursueth his Argument why they should be as free from Sin as formerly they were from Righteousness by comparing the two Services together the service of Sin and the service of Righteousness he speaketh in the next Verse of the service of Righteousness in the Text of the service of Sin As to the service of Righteousness it is matter of joy and pleasure while it is a doing of comfort and confidence in the remembrance of it and for the future Life and eternal Salvation But on the contrary if we take a view of sin with respect to the three distinctions of time past present and to come we shall find it evil and very evil What fruit had you of those things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of those things is death Sin may be considered three ways either as to the time of committing it or the time of remembring it or the time of Gods rewarding and punishing of it and you find in all so many Arguments against it First As to the Time of committing it so the Apostle argueth ab inutili There is no fruit then when you lived a carnal life what fruit had you Secondly As to the present Remembrance Ye are now ashamed Now that is 1. Now the Commission is over Or rather 2. Now after your Conversion to God Grace breedeth shame in us because of foregoing sins so that here the Apostle argueth à turpi Thirdly As to future Expectation The end of those things is death there the Argument is à damno from the hurt and damage that cometh to us thereby As to time past sin is unprofitable as to time present shameful as to time to come pernicious and deadly By all these Considerations it may be made fearful to us First The Apostles Argument ab inutili is propounded by way of Question which is the strongest way either of Affirmation or Denial for it is an Appeal to Conscience and Experience if the service of sin was at any time fruitful it was questionless when it was a doing when you were servants of sin and had nothing to check and allay it but were altogether blinded by your lusts feeding the oblectation and pleasure of your fleshly minds with the vanities of the World What fruit had you then that is you had none at all Doctrine There is no solid Benefit or Profit to be gotten by Sin The Scripture representeth it as unfruitful and deceitful 1. As unfruitful Eph. 4.11 Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness A state of sin maketh us unfruitful to God we cannot gather Grapes of Thorns and Figs of Thistles so it is unfruitful to the Sinner himself who loseth his time and strength for that which will only occasion shame and trouble and hereafter Eternal death 2. As deceitful Eph. 4.22 That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts Heb. 3.13 Lest any of you be hardned through the deceitfulness of sin It is so called because is promiseth much and performeth but little 1. It promiseth much Sin smileth on the Soul with inticing blandishments Satan told our first Parents Ye shall be as Gods Gen. 3.5 and still we promise our selves something from sin some contentment some profit for no man would be wicked gratis meerly for his minds sake or without an aim at some further end meer evil as evil cannot be the object of choice there is some fruit or benefit expected in all that we do 2. It doth not make good its word to us 1. It doth not answer Expectation the Sinner looketh for more contentment and satisfaction than ever he doth injoy Eccles. 5.16 What profit hath he that hath laboured for the wind it is fruitless enterprise it may be there is a wind a short-lived transitory delight but it is gone assoon as it cometh nothing cometh of it that may be called Fruit nothing that may be solid satisfaction to a man that hath a Conscience and is capable of an immortal Estate and hath a Maker or a Judge to whom he must give an account how he hath spent his time and strength and what hath been the business of his Life in the World Alas the fruit of sin dieth with the very act and when the lust is satisfied it beginneth ●o be contemned as Amnon hated Tamar more than ever be loved her 2 Sam. 13.15 So short are all unlawful pleasures enduring no longer than the sinful act for which like Fools men hazard and lose pleasures for evermore Reason taketh the Throne when Appetite is satisfied and scourgeth the Soul with bitter remorse because Appetite hath been obeyed before it Sin after the committing appeareth worse than before when it is too late the Sinner cryeth out What have I done Esau when he had sold the birth-right sought it afterwards with tears Heb. 12.16 17. Judas when the Treason was over he saw the worthlesness of the price for which he sold his Master Mat. 27.4 I have sinned in that I have betrayed innocent blood When once Conscience is touched and awakened Guilt flasheth in the Sinners face then the bitter effects of sin are felt by Experience 2. It is not valuable the Profit will not countervail the Loss nor the Pleasure the Pain 1. The Profit will not countervail the Loss men hazard their Souls and then gain a little wealth and that is the worst bargain men can make Mat. 16.26 What will it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul Besides that the wealth gotten by sin cometh with a Curse that within a while consumeth it Prov. 10.2 The treasures of wickedness profit nothing so that to seek to grow rich by sin is in the eye of Faith at least a fruitless enterpise 2. Nor the Pleasure the Pain it is delightful to the sensual part but at the end it biteth like a Serpent Heb. 11.26 All the pleasures of sin are but for a season Sometimes they leave us in the midst always in ●●e end of our days and then the horrour and anguish beginneth But to speak nothing of what is eternal but of that which is of present feeling sin raiseth a tempest and storm in the Conscience which is not easily allayed Hos. 8.7 They have sown the wind they shall reap the whirlwind The pleasure we fancy in sin is lost assoon as injoyed but the sting is not so soon gone the Crop doth answer the seed and usually with increase they that sow the wind can expect
to your satisfaction and peace This is enough to support us in all conditions one drop of it is enough to sweeten all our crosses Rom. 5.5 Hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us And it is the life of all our comforts Psal. 4.6 7. Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Thou hast put gladness in my heart more than in the time that their corn and their wine increased And Psal. 63.3 Because thy loving-kindness is better than life my lips shall praise thee 3. As God will owne them so Conscience speaketh peace and comfort to them that have their fruit to Holiness Before our full and final reward we have this solace that our own hearts do not only acquit us but approve what we do and a holy course of Life is usually rewarded with peace of Conscience it is not only without offence Acts 24.16 Herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man but it breedeth Joy 2 Cor. 1.2 Our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world On the contrary mens hearts smite and reproach them for their sins and the breaches they make in their Duty Job 27.6 My heart shall not reproach me as long as I live the words imply that the heart hath a reproaching and condemning power when we do evil we shall sensibly find it by accusing thoughts within our selves Rom. 2.15 Their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts in the mean time accusing or else excusing one another Conscience must be better used before it will speak a word of well-grounded peace to a man They that keep the thorn in the foot will never walk without pain If you would prevent the checks and upbraidings of your own Consciences you must take away the causes and occasions thereof walk so that our hearts may not reproach you Do you take care of your Duty and God will take care of your Comfort but if you give way to sin Conscience will awaken upon you 4. Our Title to the heavenly Inheritance is more clear and our Right confirmed by Holiness There is fulness of joy reserved for Gods People Psal. 16.11 and if we look to the end it must needs make the way the more pleasant and comfortable especially when we have by Faith a lively foresight of this endless Glory and Blessedness Heb. 11.1 Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen and by Hope and Love a foretaste of it Rom. 5.2 We rejoyce in hope of the glory of God Blessed will the time be when ye shall be for ever with the Lord and see his Glory and this is the end of the way you walk in Alas others can never have solid comfort they know where they are but know not where they shall be when they dye they must into an unknown World and which is worse to an unknown God of whose Love they never had any Taste or Experience But those that live always in the fight of the World to come and keep themselves in the way that tendeth thither and look continually when God will translate them into his immediate Presence they have the Foretaste before they have the Injoyment the Promise is matter of joy to them which is Gods Grant Psal. 119.11 Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever for they are the rejoycing of my heart The way they walk in is matter of Joy to them because that confirmeth their Right 1 Tim 6.12 Fight the good fight of faith lay hold on eternal life whereunto thou art also called and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses While they are in the way they look to the end of their Journey while running their Race they see a Crown set before them the very Acts of Faith Hope and Love are pleasant Rom. 15.13 Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory Well then who live the more pleasant lives they that walk upon the brink of Hell every moment or the Heirs of Eternal Life and Happiness who have an Heaven to wait for 5. They have easier Access to God or more free Communion with him here than others have because there is nothing to hinder neither on Gods part nor theirs God hath assured them of Audience and Welcome and they have in a great measure overcome their legal Bondage so as they are not shy of God nor stand aloof from him they do not allow themselves in the omission of any known Duty nor in the commission of any known sin and are sincere though not perfect 1 Joh. 3.21 22. If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God And whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandments and do the things which are pleasing in his sight Two things obstruct our ready access to God our own Guiltiness and Gods Terror Our own Guiltiness straitens the heart and stops the mouth and makes us afraid and shy of God but they who are renewed and pardoned come out of this state of bondage their hearts do not condemn them for living in any known disobedience to God or course of sin which whosoever doth carrieth his sting and his wound about him and is subject to tormenting evils and legal fear On Gods part he is reconciled to such as make Conscience of Holiness and they may obtain at his hands whatever in Reason and Righteousness they ask of him he hath given them Liberty by his new Covenant-Grant and Charter founded in the Blood of Christ the Covenant is large and gracious and their Claim firm and sure and therefore they come boldly unto him But now Gods Presence which is the comfort of the Faithful is the burden of the carnal and the guilty terrible to them that live in sin and therefore they think they are never better than when they are furthest off from God Well then you see to have our Fruit to Holiness is the pleasure and comfort of our Lives for then we maintain our liberty in Prayer and our confidence towards God there is an open door of access to admit us to God and free and full Communion with him 6. Their Work is more easie because it is not done against the bent of the Heart but it is the course of Life which they have chosen Psal. 40.8 I delight to do thy will O God yea thy Law is within my heart 1 Joh. 5.3 This is the love of God that we keep his commandments and
rather God's Subject and hired Servant than his Son The people of Israel were ●his Children but as Children in their non age for an heir as long as he is a Child 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 4.1 The heir as long as he is a child differeth little from a servant though he be Lord of all A servile Spirit was upmost in that dispensation With respect to the Covenant of Grace so we are most strictly said to be children of God Gal. 3.26 For ye are all children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Some live onely under the visible Administration of the New Covenant but not under the Efficacy and Power and by the Ordinances of the Gospel have the badg●s of liberty but they are not free indeed sons indeed there are among them others whom God hath begotten by his Spirit and Adopted and taken into his Family he hath a Paternal Affection towards them and they a Filial disposition towards him he hath a Paternal care and providence over them and they have a Filial confidence and dependance on him he expects the honour of a Father and they may expect the priviledges of Children his special Relation is distinct from his common Relation to other men for it proceedeth not from his common goodness but his special and peculiar love The whole Commerce and Communion that is between us and him is on God's part Fatherly on our part Childlike He giveth us his choicest benefits and we perform to him the best service we can 4. The manner how 't is brought about The first Foundation of it was laid in the Election of God He is the bottom-Stone in this Building Eph. 1.5 Predestinated to the adoption of children according to the good pleasure of his will Now what are we that the thoughts of God should be taken up about us so long ago Secondly Before God's Eternal purposes could be executed and conveniently made known to the World Redemption by Christ was necessary Therefore 't is said Gal. 4.4 5. That he was made of a woman made under the law that we might receive the adoption of children Sin needed to be Expiated by the Son of God in our Nature before God would bestow his honour upon us Christ was to be our Brother before God could be our Father and to take a Mother upon Earth that we might have a Father in Heaven and to endure the Law 's Curse before we could be instated in the Blessing 3. It is necessary That we should be regenerated and born of God before it can be applied to us For this new Relation dependeth upon the New Bir●h and none are Adopted but those that are Regenerated and renewed to the Image and Likeness of God Nominal Christians are Bastards and not Sons not illegitimate but degenerate Children The Relative Change goeth before the Real John 1.12 13. To as many as receive him to them gave he power to become the sons of God which are born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And the next Foundation of this Relation is not our Being which we have from God as a Creator but our New Being which we have from him as our Father in Christ. As we are Men God is a Governor to us and we are his Subjects As we are New Men God is a Father to us and we are his Children 4. The Immediate issue of Regeneration is Faith John 1.12 To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the S●ns of God even to as many as believe in his name Receiving Christ is an ●earty consent to take Christ to the ends for which God offereth him namely That he may be our Lord and Saviour that we depending upon the Merit of his Obedience and Sacrifice and assurance of his Covenant and Promise may obey his Laws and wait for our final Reward 5. The benefits occuring to us thereby I shall Instance in Three 1. The gift of the Spirit to be our Sanctifyer Guide and Comforter This is a gift which he giveth to none but his Children and which he giveth to all his Children A gift which suiteth with the greatness and love of our Father and absolutely necessary for us as Children God as a Creator giveth us our Natural Endowments but as a Father in Christ he giveth us his Spirit Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into our hearts If we have this high Priviledge of Adoption we have also the spirit of Adoption to reside and dwell in our hearts as our Sanctifyer Guide and Comforter as a Sanctifyer he doth first change our hearts and transform us into the Image of God in Christ 2 Cor. 3.18 But we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into his image from glory to glory And Titus 3.5 6. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and the renewing of the holy Ghost which he hath shed on us abundently through Jesus Christ our Saviour and so he maketh us Children but as Bees first frame their Cells and then dwell in them so he doth dwell in us that he may further sanctifie us restraining us from sin Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortify the deeds of the body ye shall live And quickening us to holiness Gal. 5.25 If we live in the spirit let us also walk in the spirit As a guide leading us into all Truth John 16.13 When the spirit of truth is come he shall guide us into all truth And regulating all the motions of the spiritual Life Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the spirit especially our prayers Jude 20. Praying in the holy Ghost Rom. 8.26 We know not what we should pray for as we ought but the spirit maketh intercession for us As a Comforter confirming our present Interest and future hopes 2 Cor. 5.5 Now he that hath wrought us for the self same thing is God who also hath given us the earnest of his spirit Indeed the spirit is not so necessarily a Comforter as a Sanctifyer yet a Comforter he is and if not so explicitely and manifestly we may blame our selves This is Gods allowance and we deprive our selves of the benefit of it by our own folly 2. Such an allowance of Temporal Mercies as is convenient for us Matt. 6.32 For your heavenly father knoweth that ye have need of all these things A Christian hath Two things to relieve him against all his distrustful fears and cares Adoption and particular Providence he hath a Father in Heaven and his Father is not ignorant of his condition nor mindless of it and therefore tho he hath little or nothing in hand 't is enough that his Father keepeth the Purse for him whose care extendeth to all things and
together 2 Cor. 4.17 This light affliction which is but for a moment They are light just so they are short in comparison of eternal Glory as of short continuance if compared with eternity so of small weight if compared with the reward eternity maketh them short and the greatness of the reward maketh them easie There are degrees in our troubles some of the Saints get to Heaven at a cheaper rate than others do but yet the afflictions of all are light if we consider the unspeakable Glory of the world to come indeed we do but prattle when we presume fully to describe it for it doth not appear what we shall be and it hath not entered into the heart of man to conceive the great things which he hath prepared for them that love him But the Scripture expressions every where shew it shall be exceeding great and also by the beginnings of it the world is ignorant and incredulous of futurity therefore God giveth us the beginnings of Heaven and Hell in this world in a wounded spirit and the comforts of a good Conscience these things we have experience of we know not exactly what our future condition will be but the hopes and fears of that estate are very affective the fears and horrors of eternal torment which are found in a Guilty Conscience do in part shew what hell will be or the nature of that wo and anguish which abideth for the impenitent Prov. 18.14 The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity but a wounded spirit who can bear The Salve for this Sore must come from Heaven only so the joys of a good conscience which are unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 shew that the happiness appointed for the Saints will be exceeding great for if the foretast be so sweet the hope and expectation be so ravishing what will the injoyment be Besides God moderateth our sufferings that they may not be overlong or over grievous 1 Cor. 10.13 But God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it If the trial be heavy he fortifieth us by the comfort and support of the spirit and so maketh it light and easie to us To a strong Back that Burden is light which would crush the weak and faint and cause them to shrink under it but tho God moderateth our afflictions he doth not abate our Glory that is given without measure A far more exceeding weight of glory 5. The sufferings are in our mortal bodies but the glory is both in soul and body 'T is but the flesh which is troubled and grieved by affliction the flesh which if delicately used soon becometh our enemy the Soul is free and not liable to the power of man now it becometh a man much more a believer to look after the Soul Heb. 1● 39 We are not of them who draw back to perdition but of them that believe to the saving of the soul. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Implying that they that are tender of the flesh are Apostates in heart if not actually and indeed so yet in practice But those which will purchase the saving of the Soul at any rates are the true and sound Believers The World which gratifieth the bodily life may be bought at too dear a rate but not so the Salvation of the Soul they that are so thrifty of the Comforts and Interests of the Bodily Life will certainly be prodigal of their Salvation But a Believer is all for the saving of his Soul That is the end of his Faith and labours and sufferings and his Self-denial The end of his Faith is to save his Soul 1 Pet. 1.9 So much as God is to be preferred before the Creature Heaven before the World Eternity before Time the Soul before the Body so much doth it concern us to have the better part safe But yet this is not all that which is lost for a while is preserved to us for ever if the body be lost temporally 't is secured to all eternity If we lose it by the way we are sure to have it at the end of the journey when the body shall have many priviledges bestowed upon it but this above all the rest that it shall be united to a Soul fully sanctified from which it shall never any more be seaprated but both together shall be the eternal Temple of the Holy Ghost 6. Sufferings do mostly deprive us of those things which are without a man but this is a glory which shall be revealed in us By sufferings we lose estate liberty comfortable abode in the world among our Friends and Relations If life its self which is within us 't is only as to its capacity of outward injoyments for as to the fruition of God and Christ so 't is true he that loseth his life shall save it Matth. 25.16 and shall live tho he die John 11.25 'T is but deposited in Christs hands But this Glory is revealed in us in our Bodies in their Immortality agility clarity and brightness in our Souls by the beatifical vision the ardent love of God the unconceivable joy and everlasting peace and rest which we shall have when we shall attain our end now if we be deprived of things without us for such things within us if we be denyed to live in dependance on the creature that we may immediately enjoy God should we grudg and murmur 7. Our sufferings dishonour us in the sight of the world but this glory maketh us amiable in the sight of God For having such a near relation to God and being made like him we are qualified for a perfect reception of his love to us we love God more in the glorified estate and God loveth us more as appeareth by the effects for he communicateth himself to us in a greater latitude than we are capable of here now is the hatred of the world worthy to be compared with the love of a Father Or should their frowns be a temptation to us to divert us from that estate wherein we shall be presented holy and unblamable and irreprovable in his sight Col. 1.22 When perfectly sanctified we love God more and are more beloved by him 8. The order is to be considered for look as to the wicked God will turn their glory into shame so as to the godly he will turn their shame into glory 'T is good to have the best at last for 't is a miserable thing to have been happy and to have had experience of a better condition and to become miserable Luke 6.20 Wo to you rich for you have received your consolation and Luke 16.25 Son in thy life time thou receivedst thy good things and Lazarus evil things but now he is comforted and thou art tormented The beggar had first temporal evils and then eternal good things but the rich man had first temporal good things and then eternal evil
not utterly destroyed This is the design of this Scripture and therefore this general conflagration seemeth not to turn all things into nothing in regard of their substance but change of qualities and to change them with a perfective not a destructive change that change the matter not reduce it into nothing for that which is made matter of desire or hope cannot be simple and total destruction or annihilation as it is by the Apostle here and 't is compared with the deluge where the form of the world was destroyed not the substance 2 Pet. 2.6 As the world that was overflowed by water perished so shall the world perish which is consumed with fire Not by annihilation but a change of qualities only for the better as that was for the worse 6. What use this restored world serveth for we need not anxiously enquire whether to be a perpetual monument of the Wisdom Power and Goodness of the Creator the creating of the world served for this end so may the renewing of it or whether it shall be an habitation for the just during the judgment which is by some conceived to last for a thousand years and at first consumed by a purging fire and afterwards utterly destroyed by a consuming fire we shall enquire in the following Verses 3. Doct. That this estate of things ought earnestly to he desired and expected by us For to this end the Apostle mentioneth the earnest expectation of the creature and the day principally concerneth us and therefore 't is the duty of Gods children to look for this day There are two choice Scriptures that describe the Communion of the Church with Christ and the dispensations of Christ to the Church and they both conclude with a desire of his coming one is Cant. 8.14 the other is Rev. 22.20 the first place Make hast my beloved and be like a young hart or roe upon the mountains of spices Christ is not slack but the Churches Affections are strong make hast my Beloved that is the brides last and great suit to the bridegroom his coming in glory to judg the world The wanton prostitute would have her husband defer his coming but the chast spouse thinketh he ean never come soon enough they that go a whoring after the world and ar● wholly taken up with the world neither desire his coming nor love his appearing but the Spouse would have all things hastened that he may return either come down to them or take them up to himself 't is that day only can perfect a believers consolation They do what they can to have the blessed and longed for meeting hastened In the other place Christ saith surely I come quickly and the Church like a quick eccho saith Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly It taketh the word out of Christs mouth There is the same spirit in Christ and the Church for 't is Christs spirit which resideth in the Church and therefore Christ speaketh in a way proper to him behold I come quickly in a way of promise And the Church in a way proper to her even so come And Christs voice and the Churches voice are Unisons our acclamation answereth to his proclamation Christ saith I come as desiring to meet with us even so come as desiring his fellowship and company the Saints look for his coming Titus 2.13 by faith and hope and long for his coming love his appearing 2 Tim. 4.8 in a way of love Now his coming must be desired by us 1. With earnestness and hearty groans 2 Cor. 5.2 For this we groan earnestly 2. With constancy not for a fit the spirit in the bride saith come Rev. 22.17 The new nature stirreth up these desires in us as soon and as long as he worketh in us there is a bent this way We should always stand ready to meet him 3. With patience here is earnest desire and waiting in the Text 1 Thes. 1.10 We wait for his son from heaven USE is to reprove those that never look after this estate 1. That have nothing to incline them to look no higher than the world that are under the power of a carnal nature that wholly bendeth them to earthly things Phil. 3.19 That are well enough satisfied with the happiness of beasts to injoy pleasures without remorse have not sense and care of the World to come Those whose happiness is terminated on things of the present life are so far from Christians that they are scarce men 2. Have much to divert them from it Namely unpardoned and unmortified sin if thieves and malefactors might have liberty to choose whether there should be an Assizes would they give their vote that way Would they look and long for the time They are not fire-proof or such as may abide the day of refining 2 Pet. 2.11 Seeing all these things must be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness They are not at peace with God v. 14. 2. USE To press believers to live in the constant expectation of this glorious day to make us Heavenly Phil. 3.20 But our Conversation is in Heaven from whence we look for a Saviour Live as if it were always present which by faith we look for this will make us faithful 2 Tim. 4 9. persevere to the end 1 John 2.24 make us press forward and make us long to be at home 2 Cor. 5.8 For we are confident I say willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord. SERMON XXVII ROM VIII 20 For the creature was made subject to vanity not willingly but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope HERE is the reason why the creature waiteth with earnest expectation for the consummate state of the faithful because it is for the present in a disordered estate subject to vanity In the words three things 1. The present state of the creature 2. The manner how it came into that estate 3. The hope of getting out of it Doct. The creature is made subject to vanity for mans sin Here I shall enquire 1. In what sense the creature is made subject to vanity 2. The manner how it came into it 3. The reason why the innocent creature is punished for mans sin 1. In what sense the creature is made subject to vanity In several respects First 'T is put by the order of its natural estate or much of that harmonious and perfect condition wherein God disposed it The perfection and harmony of the world is often now disturbed by tempests inundations distempered weather pestilential airs and noxious fogs and vapours whence come plagues and famine and murrains and other diseases The world is a Theater whereon much sin and many changes have been acted for thousands of years not only among men but much destructive emnity is to be found among elements themselves and a mutual invasion of one another for the confederacies of Nature are in a great measure loosned though not altogether
peace with God but his going off from the world and must believe not only to the pardon of sins but also to Eternal life 1 Tim. 1.16 For this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them that should afterwards believe on him to everlasting life There is the final and ultimate object of faith which must be first thought of for all things are influenced by the last end when we are invited to Christ we are invited by this motive That sinners shall not only be pardoned but glorified Therefore a true and well grounded hope of Eternal life is a more weighty point than we usually think of and a great part of Religion lyeth in drawing off the heart from things visible and temporal to those that are invisible and Eternal The great effects of faith which are love to God and victory over the world are more easily produced when faith hath the assistance of hope or this lively expectation of the world to come Therefore we must not only consider the death of Christ as it hath procured for us the pardon of sin or the promise of pardon But as he dyed for us that we might live for ever with him 1 Thes. 5.9 that so the soul may more directly and expresly be carried to God and Heaven 4. It informeth us That none can be saved without hope of salvation A Christian as soon as he is made a Christian hath not the good things promised by Christ but as soon as he is made a Christian he expecteth them As an heir is rich in hope though he hath little in possession Take any notion of applying grace as soon as we are justified we are made heirs according to the hope of Eternal life Tit. 3.7 as soon as we are converted and regenerated we are begotten to a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 and as soon as we are united to Christ Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory And without hope how can a man act as a Christian since the whole business of the world is done by hope certainly the whole spiritual life is quickned by this grace Titus 2.12 13. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously godly in the present world looking for the blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ. And Phil. 3.20 21. for our conversation is in Heaven from whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body But then here ariseth a great doubt how far every man is bound to hope for salvation For those that have no assurance of their own sincerity and cannot unquestionably make out their propriety and interest how can they hope for salvation Answer To solve this doubt we must consider a little the several states of men as they stand concerned in everlasting life some have but a bare possibility others have a probability a third are gotten so far as a conditional certainty others have an actual certainty or firm perswasion of their own right and interest 1. To some the hope of Heaven is but a bare possibility as to the careless Christian who is yet intangled in his lusts but God continueth to them the offer of salvation by Christ they may be saved if they will accept this offer 't is brought home to their doors and left to their choice 'T is impossible indeed in the state in which they are but their hearts may be changed by the Lords grace Mark 10.27 With men 't is impossible but not with God for with God all things are possible He can make the filthy heart to become clean and holy the sensual heart to become spiritual and heavenly There are many bars in the way but grace can break through and remove them This possibility checketh scruples and aggravateth their evil choice for they forsake their own mercies Jonah 2.8 by their vain course of life they deprive themselves of happiness which might be theirs 't is their own by offer for God did not exclude them but not their own by choice for they excluded themselves judge themselves unworthy of eternal life Acts 13.46 This possibility is an incouragement to use the means Acts 8.22 Pray if perhaps or if it be possible the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee 2. Others have a probability or a probable hope of Eternal life as when men begin to be serious or in some measure to mind the things of God but are conscious to some notorious defect in their duty or have not such a soundness of heart as may warrant their claim to everlasting blessedness as we read of almost Christians Acts 20.28 and not far from the kingdom of Heaven Mark 10.24 and such are all those which have only the grace of the second or third ground they receive the word with joy but know not what tryals may do they have good sentiments of Religion but they are much choaked and obstructed by voluptuous living or the cares of the world Luke 8.14 yea some such thing may befall weak believers They dare not quit their hopes of Heaven for all the world but cannot actually lay claim to it and say 't is theirs Now probabilities must incourage us till we get a greater certainty for we must not despise the day of small things and 't is better to be a seeker than a wanderer 3. A conditional certainty which is more than possible or probable That is when we adhere to Gods covenant and set our selves in good earnest to perform the conditions required in the promises of the Gospel expecting this way the blessings offered as for instance the hope is described by Paul Acts 24.15 16. And have hope towards God which they themselves also allow that there shall be a resurrection of the dead both of the just and the unjust and herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men there is such a dependance upon the promise as breedeth an hope and this hope puts upon strict and exact walking such a conditional certainty is described in Rom. 2.7 Who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory honour immortality and eternal life I am sure to find salvation and Eternal life if I self-denyingly and patiently continue this way and by the grace of God I am resolved so to continue Now there is much of hope in this partly because this is the hope which is the immediate effect of regeneration The hope that is the fruit of experience and belongeth to the seasoned and tryed Christian who hath approved himself hearsay is another thing Rom. 5.4 and partly because this suiteth with Gods covenant or the conditional offer of Eternal life according to the terms of the Gospel where the
and unseen But other qualifications are necessary beyond these already mentioned 1. It must be something promised by God 2. Believed by us before we can hope for it 1. Such future things as God hath promised to bestow upon us These are the matter and object of our faith and hope the promise giveth us notice and the promise giveth us assurance First Notice We can have no other certain knowledg of their futurity but by Gods promise the light of nature or reason giveth a shrewd guess at a future estate but the certain knowledg we have by Gods Word there life and immortality is brought to light 2 Tim. 1.10 He brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel There we have the clear prospect of it the Heathen had nothing but the light of nature to guide them spake doubtfully of a future estate like men travelling on the hills and see the spire of a steeple at a distance sometimes they have a sight of it and presently they lose it and so cannot certainly tell whether they saw it yea or no but all is clear full and open in Gods promise 2. Certainty and assurance for it conveyeth a right to us upon certain terms for he that believeth on the Son of God hath everlasting life John 3.36 Hath it in the offer and promise of God if he will fulfil the condition required not only shall have it at the close of their days but they have the grant already and therefore wait for 〈◊〉 ●●uition as we are fulfilling the conditions we gain more security and confidence that we shall have it 1 Tim. 6.12 Fight the good fight of faith lay hold on eternal life V. 19. Laying up in store for themselves a good foundation that they may lay hold on eternal life The meaning is challenge it for theirs In short our expectation must be grounded on some promise or else 't is but a fancy and presumption 2. The thing hoped for must be believed by us For there can be no expectation of things not seen till there be faith which is the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 First There is a firm assent by faith we are as confident in some measure of those things as if we saw them with our eyes or as we are of those things which we daylie see then after this assent there followeth earnest expectation For hope maketh the assent practical Though God promise never so much yet if we believe him not we expect nothing therefore faith is necessary look as to bodily sight there needeth an object to be seen and an eye by which we see so in spiritual sight the promise sets the object before us Heb. 12.2 Looking unto Jesus and Heb. 6.18 lay held of the hope set before us But the eye is faith which though it cannot give us sight it giveth us foresight we have heard of it though yet we have not seen it and see it by the eyes of the mind as it is contained in the promise of the everlasting God though we do not and cannot see it with the eyes of the body Compare it with reason By reason we apprehend more than we see for we see effects in their causes but that is but probable foresight for many things intervene between the cause and the effect by faith we foresee the blessing in the promise by reason we see things beyond sense so far as natural probabilities will carry us by faith we see things beyond reason so far as the promises of good invite us to a better hope But how can we surely hope for that we see not which neither sense nor reason can inform us of Answer 1. This glory is not a fancy 't is seen by many in our nature that now possess it and by the word of God you are invited to follow them in the same course of holiness and godliness that you may in time see it also Heb. 6.12 be ye followers of them who through faith and patience have inherited the promises propound the same noble end and the same holy course and matters of faith will in time become matters of sense Now though the end be unknown the way is so good and holy and justifiable by reason that we should venture the imitation of them not their holiness only but their faith Heb. 11.13 they lived and dyed in this faith their life was holy and their death was happy that are gone into the other world But you will say If we could talk with any of these that are gone into the other world Luke 16.30 31. And he said Nay father Abraham but if one went unto them from the dead they would repent and he said unto him They have Moses and the Prophets and if they will not hear them neither will they be perswaded if one should come from the dead They are out of the sphere of our commerce their testimony is not convenient for the government of God who will not govern the world by sense but by faith and besides you have better hopes Moses and the Prophets there is more reason to perswade a man the Scriptures are true than to believe a message brought him from one among the dead 2. One that hath seen and is an infallible witness hath testified to us of the truth of these things we hope for John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten son which is in the bosome of the father he hath declared him Christ perfectly saw and knew all that he hath told us of ●od and the world to come John 3.11 Verily verily I say unto thee We speak that which we know and testify that we have seen and ye receive not our witness so that our faith and hope goeth on sure grounds so verse 32. What he hath seen and heard he testifieth and no man receiveth his testimony A good man whose testimony is valuable that hath been in a strange country and testifieth what he hath seen there of it would not we believe him Christ that came from the other world and told us of the blessedness of it deserveth the credit of a good man he used a faithful plainness John 14.2 if it were not so I would have told you But more of a Teacher sent from God who confirmed his message by miracles and laid down a Doctrine holy and good and shall not we receive his testimony concerning these things he had perfect knowledge of assured us of the truth of them shall we not receive his testimony 3. Those that saw him and conversed with him were not only authorized by him to shew us the way to Eternal life but saw so much of it themselves as the mortal state is capable of yet enough to prove the reality of the thing 1 John 1.1 2 3. That which was from the beginning which we have heard which we have seen with our eyes which we have looked upon and our hands have handled of the word of life for the life was
the means you would have used in a just measure and with respect to the end Fasting is prescribed in measure and blood-letting in measure the potions neither too bitter nor too strong nor in too great quantity you do not fear to be made too well or too healthy or too strong this is your end A man that giveth up himself to a scholars life his end is learning he doth not fear to be too learned yet too much reading is a weariness to the flesh and dulleth the mind there is a greater largeness about the end than about the means Now God is the chief good and so the last end Therefore all the heart and all the soul and all the mind Surely not a cold but an high and strong love is due to him 4. Because of the wonder of his love towards us The highest Angel doth not love God with such a love as he loveth the meanest saints and shall we love him coldly and faintly who hath loved us at so high a rate I will not speak of his love which he shewed us in creation when as yet we had no being he made us after his own image and lords of the visible world with bodies so exactly contrived and souls endowed with such excellent faculties But I will speak of the wonders of his love in our redemption that when we were enemies he sent his son to die for us I urge this I press this this is enough for my purpose God so loved the world so much above the conception or thought of men and Angels that his Son came in the similitude of sinful flesh and dyed for us Now as one fire kindleth another so should this love beget a like love in us We love him because he loved us first 1 John 4.19 4. I need scarce add that it must be a superlative love that God must be loved above all other things above the creature above our selves not to be respected as an inferior good nor meerly as equal unto any but above all or else we do not at all love him we cannot love him so much as he deserveth to be loved for so God only loveth himself we cannot love him so much as the glorified Saints and Angels love him for we are not yet perfect we do not love him as some eminent Saints in flesh because we it may be are novices or because of our negligence but we must love him more than any other thing is loved we must love him above all and all in and for God or else we are not sincere Matth. 10.37 He that loveth Father or Mother more than me is not worthy of me Some have a partial half-love to God when they have a greater love to other things then Religion will be an underling and Gods interest least minded if any thing be nearer and dearer to us than God and the advantages we expect from men are preferred before the conscience of our duty to him we cannot be upright and faithful to Christ. 2. Why is this made the evidence of our interest in this priviledge Why those that love God rather than those that believe in him especially since faith is the immediate fruit of effectual calling I answer 1. The Apostle speaketh of the children of God and children will love their father What more natural What more kindly They are regenerated and sanctified by the spirit for this end Gal. 4.6 Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba Father An heart inclined to God cannot keep away from him 2. Of children that belong to the gospel-dispensation Now they that love God are the only Gospel Christians being deeply possessed with that love which God hath shewed to us in Christ 1 John 4.19 We love him because he loved us first Now we see greater reasons of loving God and are taught a more perfect way of loving God We know God more and feel more and tast more of his love Luke 7.47 Wherefore I say unto thee her sins which are many are forgiven for she loved much but to whom little is forgiven the same loveth little 3. This gospel estate we enter into by faith Now faith is such a believing of Gods love to us in Christ as giveth us a lively sense of it in our souls 'T is not a bare apprehension an hearsay-knowledge but a tast that we have by faith 1 John 4.16 And we have known and believed the love that God hath to us And 1 Pet. 2.3 If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious Whatever of the love of God faith apprehendeth and feeleth begetteth love again Gal. 5.6 Knowledge and Faith and Hope are but the bellows to keep in this holy fire to work our hearts to love God 4. This faith is the fruit of effectual calling which is a great expression of Gods love to us who were so unworthy 2 Tim. 1.9 and passing by thousands and ten thousands who were all as good as we and we as deep in the common pollution as they and in outward respects were far better and more considerable great wise and learned 1 Cor. 1.26 Ye see your calling brethren that not many wise men after the flesh not many noble are called And called us to such dignity and honour and blessedness 1. Pet. 3.9 Knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing 1 Thes. 2.12 That ye would walk worthy of God who hath called us to his kingdom and glory 'T was not our will nor our worth that moved him but his own love Now this love calleth fo● love again God loveth first best and most but yet we should love as we can love to our utmost that which was begun in love on Gods part should be accompanied with love on ours 5. This effectual calling is the fruit of Gods eternal purpose which he purposed in himself to save us by Christ. Vocation is actual election the first eruption and breaking out of his eternal purpose For as God distinguished us from others who lay in the same polluted mass of mankind by the purpose of his grace before time so he actually calleth us out from others in time to be a people to himself therefore vocation is called election John 15.19 Now in Gods free election we have the clearest view of his love and our great obligations to God And therefore what should more excite our love and gratitude this was ancient love before we or the world had a being 't was the design God travelled with from all eternity And who are we that the thoughts of God should be taken up about us so long ago 'T is love purposed and designed his heart is set upon it to do us good 't was not a thing of chance but fore-layed and fore-ordained If one doth us a kindness that lieth in his way and when opportunity doth fairly invite him he is friendly to us but when he studieth to do us good 't is more
come to Christ For the power of God disposeth us to accept of his offer and not only encourageth but inclineth us to come to him for his calling is sanctifying and changing the heart Rom. 9.25 I will call them my people which were not my people That is make them to be so 1. VSE Hearken to this calling 1. From the benefit Doth God call thee to thy loss or do thee any wrong when he disturbeth thy sleep in sin and invites thee to partake of the riches of his Grace in Christ No he calls thee to the greatest happiness thou art capable of 2 Thes. 2.14 He hath called you by our gospel to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. God seeketh to advance you to the greatest honour can be put upon mankind 'T is a blessed estate 1 Pet. 5.10 He hath called you to his eternal glory by Jesus Christ. That glorious happiness for ever 2. The great misery if we refuse this call None of those that were bidden shall tast of my Supper Luke 14.24 They are not only excluded from happiness but are under extream wrath and misery Prov. 24 25 26. Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded but ye have set at nought all my counsel and would none of my reproof I will also laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh 2. USE is To press you to make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 It cannot be more sure than it is in its self but it may be more sure to us This may be known by these signs ●● cation can be imagined either in God or out of God not in God nothing can fall out but what God foresaw at first nor can be frustrated for any defect of power for he is Almighty Angels Devils and Men being subject to him as the supreme and universal Lord. 4. This grace is brought about in a way most convenient for the honour of God and the good of the creature in a way of Faith and Holiness Faith John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on him should not perish but have everlasting life Holiness Eph. 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before him in love Now faith is his gift Eph. 2.8 We are saved by grace through faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God And Holiness is wrought in us by the spirit of Sanctification and that with a respect to his election 2 Thes. 2.13 He hath chosen you to salvation through the sanctification of the spirit and belief of the truth God did not chuse us because he did foresee that we should be believers or would be holy but that we might believe and might be holy he could not foresee any faith or holiness in us but what was the fruit of his own grace and elective love to us all is still according to his purpose and grace which was given us in Christ before the world began Faith and holiness is the way and means of bringing about his purpose not the foreseen cause and reason or the end the fruit of it not the motive to induce God to shew us mercy 5. To promote this faith and holiness and to preserve them 'till their glorified estate Gods Providence about them is very remarkable 1. He contriveth means to bring them into the world Many of their Parent may be wicked and deserve to be cut off for their sins but because there is a blessing in some of the Clusters they are not destroyed Many times a slip may be taken from an ill stock and grafted into the Tree of Life tho the Grace of the Covenant runneth most kindly in the channel of the Covenant How much more shall these which be the natural branches be grafted into their own Olive-tree Rom. 11.24 But yet God will shew the liberty of his counsels and chuse some out of families very opposite to his wayes and therefore many wicked men are spared that they may be a means to bring into the world those that afterwards shall believe Ahaz is let alone to beget Hezekiah and a wicked Ammon Josiah and there was one in the house of Jeroboam who made Israel to sin one child only in whom was found some good thing towards the Lord God of Israel 1 Kings 14.13 a godly young man that had in his heart the true seeds of Religion 2. When they are born God hath a special care of them that they may not dye in their unregenerate condition from the womb the decree beginneth to take place and be put in act Gal. 1.15 It pleased God who separated me from my mothers womb and called me by his grace Jer. 1 5. When thou camest out of the womb I knew thee He took special notice that that child was a vessel of mercy and to be employed for his glory and used for such and such purposes as he had designed them unto to fit them with such a constitution of body and mind as might best serve for that use if a man would trace the progress of Providence he would plainly see that God still hath been pursuing his choice and that that antecedent love which is the fountain of all our mercies is it which rocked you in your cradles suckled you at your Mothers breast trained you up and took care of your non-age visited you with his early mercies disposed of several Providences for your safety and preservation 't is said in Heaven we shall know as we are known 1 Cor. 13.12 compare Gal. 4.9 But now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God Then we shall understand how many several circumstances concurred to bring us home to God and how the goodness of God hath gone along with you from time to time to preserve you till the time of Grace was come rescued you in eminent dangers when the thred of your life was likely to be fretted asunder 3. The dispensation of means and the directing of means to such a place and people where and among whom the course of your life fell Not only the Doctrine but the journeys of the Apostles were ordered by the Spirit Acts 16.7 They assayed to go into Bythinia but the spirit suffered them not Acts 13.26 To you is this word of salvation sent Not brought by us but sent by God not only in regard of his institution but providential direction certainly there is a special Providence goeth along with ordinances and they are ordered and directed with respect to Gods elective love he sendeth furnis●eth continueth able instruments Acts 18.10 I am with thee and no man shall let on thee to hurt thee for I have much people in this city Wherever God lighteth a candle he hath some lost groat to seek He had much people belonging to his election in
of God as not in Christ so not in us the head was to bear his share and the members their share and because the cross and sufferings are a means conducing to conformity to Christ in holiness and happiness for whom he did foreknow c. In the words observe 1. The way God took in bringing his children unto glory by conformity to Christ in those words To be conformed to the image of his Son 2. The grounds of this conformity set forth by two words foreknowledge and predestination whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate 3. The reason of this conformity to Christ that he might be the first-born among many brethren that is that he might have the priviledge of the elder Son or the true and proper heir the elder Son was to be the head of the family and lord of all the rest of the brethren Let us explain these things 1. The way and end aimed at to conform us to the image of his Son That is in resemblance to Christ that we might enter into glory the way by which Christ entred by a life of sufferings and hardness 2. The grounds of this conformity Gods foreknowledge and predestination The first of these terms implieth his gracious purpose to save us foreknowing here is chusing or taking them for his own from all eternity 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the foreknowledge of God That is according to the eternal purpose of his love to them For having all Adams posterity in his eye and view he freely chose them they were in a sort present to God and in his eye before the foundation of the world so that his foreknowledge is his purpose to do them good the other word predestination is his appointing them to come to glory by the way of faith and holiness for to destinate is to appoint or order means to a certain end and to predestinate is to appoint aforehand and this predestinating is used of Gods act because when man willeth or chuseth or ordereth any thing it presupposeth an antecedent goodness in the things which he willeth or chuseth or an antecedent conveniency in the thing ordered to the end to which it is appointed which is prudent destination but when God chuseth or willeth or ordereth any thing he causeth this goodness or conveniency to be in it and therefore 't is properly called predestination Well then observe Not things but persons are here spoken of whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate his foreknowledge implyeth his favour and his choice John 10.14 I am the good shepherd that know my sheep and am known of mine and verse 27. I know them and they follow me And his predestination is his appointing them to come to such an end by convenient means sometimes 't is applied to priviledges sometimes to duties to priviledges because of the conveniency of antecedent and subsequent priviledges so Eph. 1.5 He hath predestinated us to the adoption of children 't is fit we should be made children before we have a right to a childs portion therefore God by predestinating us to the adoption of children maketh us fit to obtain the inheritance Sometimes to duties as to faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed and in the text to holiness he did predestinate us to be conformed to the image of his Son that is by predestination he bringeth it to pass that in time they do resemble Christ. The order and course of Gods saving the elect must not be broken he hath decreed and forecasteth by what means he will bring them to glory in short foreknowledge and predestination agree in that both are eternal but they differ in the formality of the notion foreknowledge noteth his choice or the purpose of his love predestination his decree to bring things to a certain end by certain appointed means and so he did fore ordain and design them by conformity to Christ in life and suffering to come to coelestial glory and thus by foreknowing he did predestinate and by predestinating he did fore-know 3. The reason of this conformity to Christ that he might be the first-born among many brethren That is that he might have the honour due to the first born the first born was lord of the rest of the family Gen. 27.31 I have made him thy lord and the rest of his brethren have I given to him for servants The first born gave to the rest of his brethren a share of his fathers goods reserving to himself a double portion Deut. 21.17 Now this is applied to Christ who is Lord of the Church or head of the body Col. 1.18 and heir of all things Heb. 1.2 And by vertue of this relation to the Church he must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 first it in all things or as we translate it he must in all things have the preeminence Col 1.18 in our conflicts and tryals he is the captain of our salvation Heb. 2.10 in holiness he is our pattern or copy 2 Cor. 3.18 primum in unquoque genere est mensura regula Coeterorum in our glory and blessedness he is our forerunner Heb. 6.20 having actuali● taken possession of that felicity and glory which he spake of to his followers so that Christs honour is reserved and believers are comforted whilest they follow their Head and Leader in every state and condition Doct. That the elect are in time distinguished from others by being conformed to the image of Christ. 1. Wherein this conformity to Christ consisteth 2. Why this is the distinction between the elect or called according to purpose and others 1. Wherein this conformity to Christ consisteth I answer In Three things 1. In sufferings and afflictions In our passage to a better estate As by the bounty of God we tast somewhat of the world to sweeten our pilgrimage so also somewhat of the evil of the world to make us hasten our journey and herein we are made conformable to Christ who was a man of sorrows Isa. 53.3 This must be expected by us for John 15.20 The servant is not greater than the Lord if they have persecuted me they will persecute you also Art thou poor none of us is so poor as Christ was Hast thou many enemies he had more and was pursued with greater malignity It must be patiently indured by us 1 Pet. 2.21 Because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps we that look for his glory must bear his cross Now he calleth us to no harder lot than he himself endured or to go in any part of rough way that he hath not trod before us surely they that fancy to themselves an easie life free from all kind of sufferings and molestations must seek another leader 2 Tim. 2.11 12. If ye be dead with him ye shall also live with him if we suffer with him we shall also reign with him We must be like him whom we have chosen for our head and chief in
have found a ransom From the beginning of the world Christ was known to be a Redeemer who saved the world by a ransom paid no other way could the effects of the Lords grace be communicated to us we receive mercies freely but they were dearly purchased by Christ. The second notion is that of a Mediatorial Sacrifice Isa. 53.10 He shall make his soul an offering for sin So Eph. 5.2 He gave himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Sin is a wrong done to God and therefore there must be something offered to God in our stead by way of satisfaction before he would quit his controversie against us this Christ hath done all that was signified by the Ancient Sacrifices and offerings was accomplished by him They were flayed killed burned all which are but shadows of what our Lord endured He is the true and real Sacrifice wherein provoked justice doth rest satisfied his wrath appeased and we that were loathsome by reason of sin made acceptabl●●nd well-pleasing unto God The third notion is that of a propitiation 1 John 2.2 He gave himself a propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world And Rom 3 25. Whom God set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood This implyeth Gods being pacified and appeased so as to become propitious and merciful for ever to sinful m●● in which sense he is also said to make reconciliation for the sins of his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2.17 whereby is meant Gods being reconciled to us This was the great end why Christ dyed for us to appease Gods wrath and displeasure and to reduce us into grace and favour with him again by tendering a full compensation to God for all our sins 2. The effects ascribed to it 1. Sin is expiated or purged out Heb. 1.3 When he had by himself purged our sins he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high As God would not be appeased without a Ransom Sacrifice or Satisfaction so could not sin be purged out without bearing the punishment so the conscience is said to be purged from dead works by the blood of Christ Heb. 9 4. and Revel 1.5 He hath washed us from our sins in his blood That is done that which will remove the guilt and pollution of it when 't is rightly applyed to us and so he is said to finish transgression and make an end of sin Dan. 9.24 That is to destroy the reign of sin and to seal up the role and hand-writing that was against us that it may not be imputed and brought into the judgment 2. The sin is pardoned and the sinner justified Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption in his blood the forgiveness of sins That 's the great benefit which floweth from the death of Christ which is offered in the New Testament Acts 10.41 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And 't is sealed and represented in the Lords Supper Matth. 26.28 This is my blood of the New Testament which was shed for the remission of sins 3. The sanctifying the sinner to God Heb. 13.12 Jesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate Heb. 10.10 By the which will we are sanctified by the offering of Jesus Christ once for all So Eph. 5.26 That he might sanctifie and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word So John 17.19 That they also might be sanctified through the truth In these and many other places is meant both our dedication to God and the renovation of our natures that qualifieth for communion with him 4. The consummation or the perfecting of the sanctified as Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected the sanctified for ever The priests of the law were forced to renew their Sacrifices because they could not compleatly take away sin for the law made nothing perfect Heb. 7.19 Could not yield us sufficient expiation for sin to justifie and sanctifie the person so as to open Heaven to him and a free access to God but Christ hath fully done this perfected us for ever by one offering There needeth no other Sacrifice no other satisfaction to remove the guilt and eternal punishment John 19.30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all is finished or perfected all is undergone that was necessary for the redemption of the Elect there needed no more to satisfie justice or procure salvation for us 3. The sufficiency of it to these ends and effects 1. From the Dignity of the person He had all fulness in him a fulness of holiness Col. 1.9 a fulness of the Godhead Col. 2.9 He was holy and innocent and also God and will not the blood of God cleanse us from all our sins 2. The unity of his office and Sacrifice There is but one Redeemer and one Sacrifice and if but one this is enough 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one God and one Mediator between God and Man the Man Christ Jesus One Sacrifice Heb. 10.12 But this man after he had offered one Sacrifice for sins for ever sat down at the right hand of God Heb. 9.26 But now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself And Rom. 5.18 The free gift came upon all to the justification of life The Scripture much insists upon this 3. The greatness of his sufferings Isa. 53.4 5 6. Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows yet did we esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed All we like sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own way and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquities of us all Phil. 2.7 8. But made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant and was made in the liken●●● of men and being found in fashion as a man ●e humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the cross And Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Now Christians all this is offered to our Faith The notions the effects or ends the sufficiency of it to these ends and purposes The price is paid by Christ and accepted by God We partake of these benefits as soon as we perform the conditions of the Gospel but we triumph when more explicitely we declare our selves to be true and sound Christians God doth not look for an Expiatory Sacrifice at our hands but a thorough application of what he hath found out for us This broad foundation laid is not only free for God to build upon but for us to build
John 10.28 29. This is the great security of the Fold that they are under the power of so careful and so able a Shepherd This Almighty power of God and Christ doth mightily fortifie us against all temptations we meet with in the way to Heaven 6. This right accrueth to believers by virtue of their interest in Christ 1 Cor. 3.22 23. All things are yours whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or to come all are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods All things are theirs wherein they are concerned if not in possession yet in reduction or final use Friends Enemies Ordinances Providences all conditions Life Death If you resolve firmly to obey Christ and adhere to him you need not fear any thing Now upon these grounds a Christian may conclude that nothing shall separate him from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 4. That we ought firmly to be perswaded of this here I shall shew you how this perswasion is bred in us 1. By the word of the Gospel discovering to us the whole mystery of our Redemption by Christ with all the consequent benefits There all Gods merciful designs for the justifying sanctifying and glorifying the creature are manifested to us as matter of our faith Acts 19.8 And perswading the things concerning the kingdom of God The Doctrine and end of his Ministry was to perswade men of the necessity of coming out of their lapsed estate and the power of the Devil and to put themselves under the government of the King whom God hath set upon his holy hill of Sion that he may defend them against the Devil the World and the Flesh and at length bring them to everlasting happiness Again Acts 28.23 And he expounded and testified the kingdom of God perswading them concerning Jesus c. Assuring them of his sufficiency to save them Now this they did partly by shewing the danger of the contrary 2 Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men and partly by shewing the grace and readiness of God to own them in all troubles Acts 13.43 Perswading them to continue in the grace of God And if men do quarrel at this dispensation they will not be edified by any other be it never so extraordinary Luke 16.31 Neither will they be perswaded though one should rise from the dead There is more reason to perswade the Scriptures are true than if a message were brought to us by a vision or apparition which would not induce us to quit our sinful habits and customs Now this is the means when we receive it and are perswaded of it 2. By the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.12 Now we have not received the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we may know the things that are freely given us of God The spirit of God is necessary that we may believe the Doctrine of the Gospel and cure our worldly and sensual inclinations for who else will be brought to forsake the things which he seeth and loveth for a God and a Glory which he never saw 3. By faith which is a perswasion of the truth of such things as God hath revealed because God hath revealed them 1 John 4.16 And we have known and believed the love which God hath to us 'T is matter of faith to believe the love and care of God over his people 4. Experience The perswasion with application increaseth our confidence His love to us in particular is known by what he hath wrought in us and for us and this increaseth our perswasion and breedeth in us a holy confidence 2 Cor. 1.10 Who hath delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us 2 Tim. 4.17 18. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me and strengthned me and I was delivered out of the mouth of the Lyon and the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work In this perswasion confirmed seasoned experienced Christians do continue who have not only a true faith in Christ and a settled love to him but such as maketh up an evidence in their conscience of their sincerity and giveth an undoubted perswasion of his love to them 1. They are such as are rooted and grounded in faith The full comfort of Christianity is reserved for such as are described by the Apostle Col. 1.23 If ye continue in the faith grounded and settled and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel There is an initial faith which may wither as the grace of the second and third ground and there is a rooted faith which will be supported and maintained in the good and honest heart Therefore 't is not sufficient once to assent to the truth of the Gospel in our understandings or imbrace the good things offered to us by our will and affections but we must be rooted and grounded in the faith Fluctuating opinion without a well-grounded perswasion will not serve the turn Some slight desires and affections to blessedness to come will not maintain us against the several blasts of so many temptations as we meet with but we must get a faith that will make us indifferent to all worldly things heighth or depth life or death The sound world-conquering faith will only give us safety and I am sure will only give us comfort 1 John 5.4 For whosoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith Such a sound belief of blessedness to come maketh us dead to the present world 2. Such as are rooted and grounded in love A taste may fail Heb. 6.3 4. A slender insufficient touch of the love of God upon the soul will not break the force of opposite inclinations and temptations Eph. 3.17 18 19. That ye being rooted and grounded in love may be able with all saints to comprehend what is the breadth and length and depth and heigth and know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge A sincere love doth so fasten us to Christ that no temptation is able to shake us or unloose us for they are acquainted more and more with Christs love and admire it are ravished by it feel the effects of it The breadth noteth the great blessings we have by it or the ample priviledges of the New Covenant The length the duration of it from one eternity to another The depth of it his profound condescention fetching us out of Hell its self by a painful cursed and ignominious death The heigth as it raised us up to the glory of Heaven and that everlasting blessedness Now none are said to comprehend this but those that are rooted and grounded in love that is to comprehend them to their comfort and joy to comprehend it to their conquest and victory over temptations to comprehend it as their triumph and confidence None but those whose hearts are filled with the love of God and
hope in us John 20.31 These things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing ye might have eternal life in his name All that is written in the Gospel is to establish Faith in Christ as the Messiah and that in order to eternal life The whole sum of the Christian Religion is That God hath chosen us to Salvation through Sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth whereunto he hath called you by our Gospel to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Thess. 2.13 14. All the parts of Religion harmoniously concur to establish this hope The whole Covenant of God implyeth it A Covenant is a transaction of God as the Soveraign with his Subjects and consists of Precepts and Laws invested with the Sanction of Promises and Threatnings His Commands all of them imply such an estate Some express it All imply it For they are work propounded to us in order to wages or a reward to be given and 't is not fit we should have wages before our work be over Some express it as John 6.27 Labour not for the meat which perisheth but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life c. and Mat. 6.19 20. we are commanded not to lay up Treasures upon Earth but in Heaven c. And Luke 13.24 Strive to enter in c. And if there were no such estate all these Laws were in vain and would the wise and faithful God give us Laws in vain his Threatnings would be but a vain Scare-crow if there were not a world to come his promises but flatter us with a lye All the Doctrines concerning Christ point out such an eternal condition to us whether they concern his Person or Estates His coming from Heaven the place of Souls his going thither again or sitting down on the right hand of God and then his coming to Judgment Wherefore was Christ apparelled with our flesh But that we might be cloathed with his glory if Christ were in the Womb why not we in Heaven 'T is more credible to believe a Creature in Heaven than a God in the Grave Therefore he came into the world to purchase a right for us and he went to Heaven again to plead prosecute and apply that right Rom. 5.10 He is gone thither with the names of the Tribes on his Breast and Shoulders Heb. 9.12 All the benefits of Christ tend to this Justification Our release from the curse that we may be capable of life Rom. 5.18 Sanctification to prepare fit us for it and to begin this life in us for he that hath the Son hath life 1 John 5.12 All ordinances The word Isa. 55.3 Hear and your Souls shall live The Supper Luke 22.20 all Graces Faith to see it 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving the end of your Faith even the Salvation of your Souls Love to desire it hope to wait for it The comforts of the Spirit to give us a tast of it So that this is the great object of Faith and to which all the rest tend 2dly The believing of this constituteth a main difference between the Animal and Spiritual life by which the world of mankind are distinguished The Animal life is that which is supported by the comforts and delights of the present world such as Lands Honours Pleasures Riches and when these are out of sight they are at loss and utterly dismayed But the Spiritual and Divine life is supported by the comforts and delights of the world to come by reflecting upon everlasting happiness and the glory and blessedness we shall injoy there as in the verses before the Text in the close of the former Chapter when we believe these things another kind of Spirit cometh upon a man and hath such a life and strength derived into his heart that he can bear up with joy and courage when the outward and Animal life is exposed to the greatest difficulties and decays because he is a man of another world And therefore we are said to live by Faith because we apprehend those great and glorious things which are kept for us in Heaven 2 Cor. 413 14. We having the same Spirit of Faith according as 't is written I believed and therefore have I spoken We also believe and therefore speak knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise up us also by Jesus and shall present us with you Oh 't is a mighty thing to have a Spirit of Faith in the lowest condition such an one can hold up his head and avouch his hopes He can own Christ how dear soever it cost him None are of such a Noble and Divine Spirit as they Without it a man that wholly loveth the Animal life is but a wiser sort of Beast Not only the Sensualist or the Covetous but even the Ambitious who aspire after Crowns and Kingdoms and great Fame by their Gallantry and Noble Exploits are but poor base Spirits in comparison of those in whose Breasts the sparks of this Heavenly fire do ever burn and carry them out in the zealous pursuit of the world to come 3dly We need press this sound belief of the world to come Because whatever men pretend eternal life is little believed in the World The most part of those men who live in the common light of Christianity are purblind and cannot see afar of or look beyond the Grave Gods own Children have too cold and doubtful thoughts of this estate not such a lively clear and firm persuasion of things to come but that it needeth to be increased more and more The Apostle prayeth for the converted Ephesians That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of Glory may give unto you the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightned that ye may know what is the hope of his Calling c. Eph. 1.17 18. That is more clearly see and more firmly believe those good things which they should injoy in Heaven Alas we are so taken up with trifles and childish toys that our Faith is very weak about these excellent Blessings The evidences that 't is little believed are these 1. Because we are far more swayed with the promises of small temporal advantages than we are with the promise of eternal life The Blessings we expect in the other world are far more excellent and more glorious in their nature and certain in their duration yet they have less influence upon us than poor paltry perishing vanities What should be the reason I Answ. When a thing of less weight weigheth down a greater we judge then the ballances are not equal The Soul doubteth of things to come but readily closeth with things present Who would prefer a Cottage before a Palace A Lease for an year before an Inheritance There is no comparison between the things themselves but we are not equally persuaded of things to come and things in hand and of a present
unto the day of Redemption When freed from all sin and misery All sin at Death and misery at the last day Converse and Communion with God here is the beginning of our Everlasting Communion and living with God hereafter For the throne of grace is the gate and porch of Heaven so that a Believer when he dyeth doth only change place not company 4. Earnest is given for the security of the Party that receiveth it not for him that giveth it Indeed he that giveth the Earnest is obliged to fulfil the Bargain but 't is most for the satisfaction of the receiver So this Earnest is given for our sakes there is no danger of breaking on God's part but God was willing more abundantly to shew to the Heirs of Promise the Immutability of his Counsel because of our frequent doubts and fears in the midst of our Troubles and Tryals we need this Confirmation 5. 'T is not taken away till all be consummated and therein an Earnest differeth from a Pawn or Pledge A Pledge is something left with us to be restored or taken away from us but an Earnest is filled up with the whole Sum So God giveth part to assure us of obtaining the whole in due season the beginning assureth the man of obtaining the full Possession Phil. 1.6 Being confident of this very thing that he that hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Christ. The beginning assureth the Comp●eat Consummation of their blessed estate in Soul and Body Spiritual comforts are joys of the Spirit which assure us that we shall receive the end of our Faith the Salvation of our Souls 1 Pet. 18. 3. The use and end of an Earnest is 1. To raise our confidence of the certainty of these things Believers are apt to doubt if ever the Covenanted Inheritance shall be bestowed and actually injoyed by them Now to assure them that God will be as good as his word and doth not weary us altogether with expectation he giveth us something in hand that we may be confident You see God offered you this Happiness when you had no thought of it and that with an incessant importunity till thy anxious Soul was troubled and made a business of it and by the secret drawings of his Spirit inclined thy heart to chuse him for thy portion pardoned thy failings visited thee in Ordinances supported thee in troubles helped thee in temptations his Spirit liveth dwelleth and worketh in thee therefore always confident ver 6. There is some place for doubts and fears till we be in full possession from weakness of Grace and greatness of Tryals 2. To quicken our earnest desires and industrious diligence The first fruits are to shew how good as well as earnest how sure this is but a little part and portion of those great things which God hath provided for us If the Earnest be so sweet what will the Possession be A glimpse of God in the heart how r●●ishing is it O how comfortable a more lively expectation 3. To bind us not to depart from these Hopes The Earnest of the Spirit convincing comforting changing the heart have you felt this in your selves and will you turn back from God after Experience SERMON VIII 2 Cor. 5.6 Therefore we are always Confident knowing that while we are at home in the Body we are absent from the Lord. IN the words observe Two things 1. The Effect of God's giving the Earnest of the Spirit Therefore we are always confident 2. The State of a Believer in this World Knowing that while we are at home in the Body we are absent from the Lord. In the first Branch take notice 1. Of the Effect its self We are confident 2. The constancy or continuance of this Confidence Always To be confident at times when not tempted or assaulted is easie but in all conditions to keep up an equal tenour of Confidence is the Christian heighth which we should aspire unto for the strength of this Confidence is discovered by manifold Tryals and Difficulties 3. The illative Particle Therefore Why Because God hath wrought us for this very thing and given us the Earnest of the Spirit For the Effect itself There is a twofold Confidence 1. Of the thing 2. Of the Person for both are requisite for the latter presupposeth the former there can be no certainty to a person of a thing which is not certain in itself An Immortal state of Bliss is to be had and enjoyed after this life we are Confident of that before we can be Confident of our Interest and actual injoyment of it We are Confident of the thing because God hath promised it and set it forth in the Gospel But because the promise requireth a Qualification and performance of duty in the person to whom the promise is made Therefore before twe can be certain of our own Interest and future injoyment we must not only perform he duty and have the Qualification but we must certainly know that we have done that which the promise requireth and are duly Qualified Now the Serious performance of our duty Evidenceth its self to the Conscience And as our diligence increaseth so doth our Confidence But so far as a man neglecteth his duty and abateth his Qualification so far his confidence may abate also The Illative Particle Therefore The earnest of the Spirit hath influence both upon the Confidence of the thing and of our own interest 1. Of the thing If God never meant to bestow Eternal life upon his people he would not give Earnest 2. Of our Interest and future injoyment For the Spirit of God convincing Comforting and changing the heart doth assure us that he hath appointed us to Everlasting glory Well then the full meaning of this clause is That we certainly know that we shall be Crowned in Glory and being assured by the Earnest of the Spirit that we shall not fail of it therefore we lift up the Head in the midst of pressures and afflictions knowing that if they should arise as high as death they will bring us the sooner to the Lord that we may live with him for ever Doct. They who have the Earnest of the Spirit are and may be Confident of their future and glorious Estate Let me shew you 1. What is this Confidence 2. What is the Earnest of the Spirit 3. How this Confidence ariseth from having the Earnest of the Spirit in our hearts 1. What is this Confidence 1. The Nature of it 2. The Opposites of it 3. The Effects of it 4. The Properties of it 1. The nature 'T is a Well grounded perswasion of our Eternal Happiness But I must distinguish again as before There is a twofold Confidence one which is proper to faith another which may be called assurance or a sense of our own interest 1. There is a Confidence included in the very nature of Faith usually called Affiance We have often considered Faith as it implyeth a firm assent and
profession without any fears of persecutions and sufferings as Heb. 3.6 Whose House we are if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of hope firm to the end And in the 14. verse For we are made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence stedfast unto the end And again Heb. 10.35 Cast not away your confidence which hath great recompense of reward In all which places confidence noteth a bold owning and avowing of Christ or fearlesness and courage in our Christian profession arising from our certain perswasion of and dependance on Christ rewards in another World The great use of Faith is to fortify us against all Temptations and difficulties and inconveniences that we meet with in our passage to Heaven even against Death it self Then are we confident when born up against all dangers and sufferings There is a like word used John 16.33 Be of good cheer I have overcome the World Gods Children may be bold or of good cheer in the midst of all their afflictions for Faith assureth them the end shall be Glorious Therefore we are bold perform our duty and pass on in our pilgrimage with a couragious and quiet mind This couragious confident encountering with trouble is the immediate fruit of Faith Because Faith inableth us to look to the end of trouble and our Salvation as sure and near 2. 'T is seen also in a generous contempt of all the baits and pleasures of sense and the delightful things in this World and cheerfully carrying on our duty though the flesh would tempt us to the contrary Faith is an obediential confidence and the strength of it is seen in checking of Temptations Or an affiance on God as it draweth our hearts after better things than that the world offereth We can more easily want and miss the contentments of the flesh and the pomp and ease and gratification of the present Life So that to be confident is to be prepared and resolved to do those things which God commandeth though with denial of those sensual good things which the flesh craveth as to endure what happeneth in the way to Heaven so to refuse and reject what hindreth us from it For we are exercised with tryals both on the right hand and on the left and we need the Armour of Righteousness both on the right hand and on the left 2 Cor. 6 7. Our way to Heaven lyeth per blanda aspera As the terrours of sense are a discouragement to us so the delights of sense are a snare to us confidence hath an influence upon both it breedeth a weanedness from the baits of the flesh and a rejection of what would divert us from the pursuit of Eternal Life and is much seen in mortification 1 Cor. 9.26.27 I run not as one that is uncertain therefore I keep under my Body As if he had said I am confident therefore I am mortified contemn the allurements of sense As they dyeted themselves for the Isthmick games Hope to get a Crown of Laurel made them look to their bodies that they were in fit plight for the race There 's much more confidence of an Eternal Crown 3. There is another branch of this boldness that carryeth the name of this confidence also And that is Child-like Freedom with God in prayer Eph. 3.12 We have access with confidence and boldness through the Faith of him And 1 John 3.21 If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God And 1 John 5.14 And this is our confidence that whatsoever we ask of him he heareth us And Heb. 10.19 Having therefore brethren boldness to enter into the Holyest by the Blood of Jesus An Holy boldness with God in Prayer or a filial Child-like access to God in Prayer for obtaining what he hath promised There is a shyness of God His presence reviveth our guilty fears As David when he had sinned hung off from the Throne of Grace Psa. 32.3 Or as Adam run to the Bushes when he heard the voice of God in the Garden Now this is done away by Faith in the promises This Holy comfortable addressing our selves to God by Christ is a great branch of this confidence it imboldeneth us to go to him in Prayer and to trust in him and expect Salvation from him In the hour of his extremity he is not to seek of a God to pray to or a Mediator to interceed for him or a Spirit of Adoption to inable him to fly for help as a Child to his reconciled Father having been frequently intertained and accepted by him 4. The last and greatest of all is confidence at his coming 1 John 2.28 When he shall appear we may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming We feel the comfort of it when we seriously think of Death or when God summoneth us into his presence 2 Kings 20.3 I beseech thee O Lord remember now how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart We know that we shall receive a Crown of Righteousness at his appearing Before they look for it and wait for it with confidence A Christian should cherish no other Confidence but what will be approved then what will hold out then If our Confidence cannot bear the thoughts of it and supposition of it how will it bear the day its self 4. The Properties of this Confidence 1. 'T is an Obediential Confidence or Affiance for he that hopeth for mercy is thereby bound to Duty and Obedience for mercy must be had in God's way and we cannot depend upon his Rewards unless we regard his Precepts 1 Pet. 4.19 Commit the keeping of your Souls to him in well doing We come to the one by the other yea the one breedeth the other Psal. 119.166 Lord I have hoped for thy Salvation and have done thy Commandments Dependance certainly begets observance and if we look for all from God certainly we will be faithful to him and keep close to his ways 'T is a lazy Presumption not a Christian Confidence that consisteth with disobedience both the Promises and the Precepts are the Object of Faith Psal. 119.166 I have believed thy Commandments Our believing the one breedeth Confidence in the other our believing the other breedeth Obedience but they must both go together if there be any difference in believing these by a right Faith 't is weaker in the Promises than in the Precepts because the Precepts commend themselves to our Consciences by their own Light and Evidence the Promises contain meer matter of Faith and lye farther out of the view of Sense and Reason Well then if we believe these Laws to be God's Laws and these Promises to be God's Promises our sense of duty will be at least equal with our hope of mercy Certainly Confidence and relying upon the Mercy of God for Salvation may be less than our care to walk in Obedience ordinarily greater it cannot be 2. This Confidence must be well rooted that fear of
parentage is from Heaven every thing tendeth to the place of its original Men Love their native soil things bred in the water delight to return thither Inanimate things tend to their centre a stone will fall to the ground though broken in pieces by the fall air imprisoned in the bowels and caverns of the Earth causes terrible Convulsions and Earthquakes till it get up to its own place All things seek to return thither from whence they came Grace that came from Heaven carryeth the Heart thither again Jerusalem from above is the Mother of us all Heaven is our native Country but the World is a strange place And therefore though the man be at home yet the Christian is not he is out of his proper place Contempt of the World is usually made the fruit of our regeneration 1 John 5.4 Whosoever is born of God overcometh the World There is something in them that intitleth it self to God and worketh towards him and carryeth the Soul thither where God sheweth most of himself so 2 Pet. 1.4 We are made partakers of the Divine Nature and escape the corruption which is in the World through lust The World will not satisfy the Divine Nature there is a strong inclination in us which disposeth us to look after another World 1 Pet. 1.3 Assoon as made Children we reckon upon a Childs portion another Nature hath another aim and tendency There is a double reason why the new Creature cannot be satisfied here 1. Here is not enough dispensed to answer Gods Love in the Covenant I will be your God noteth the gift of some better thing than this World can afford unto us Heb. 11.16 God is not ashamed to be called their God for he hath prepared for them a City That Title is not justified till he give us Eternal rewards For to be a God to any is to be an Infinite Eternal Benefactor Compare Matth. 22.32 with the forementioned place 2dly Here is not enough to satisfy the desire expectation and inclination of the renewed heart The aim of it is carryed after two things Perfect injoyment of God and perfect conformity to God There is their home where they may be with God and where they may be free from sin Their Love to Christ is such that where he is there they must be Phil. 1.23 Having a desire to depart and to be with Christ Col. 3.1 If ye be risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God And there is a final perfect estate to which the new Creature is tending when it shall never dishonour God more but be made like him and compleatly subject to him when never troubled with sin more 2. There lyeth their Treasure and their Inheritance 'T is said Eph. 1.3 that Christ had blessed us with spiritual Blessings in heavenly places He hath blessed us with spiritual blessings in earthly places hath he not Here he hath Adopted Justified and Sanctified us in part but the full accomplishment is reserved for the World to come God would not dispense the fulness of our blessedness in the present World that 's an unquiet place we are not out of Gun-shot and harms way nor in an earthly Paradise There Adam injoyed God among the beasts but we shall injoy him in Heaven among the Angels In the World God would shew his bounty to all his Creatures A Common Inn for Sons and Bastards the place of tryal not of recompense the place where God hath set his Foot-stool not his Throne Isa. 66. 'T is Satans walk the Devils Circuit Whence comest thou From compassing the Earth too and fro Job 2.2 A place defiled with sin and beareth the marks of it given to all mankind in Common Psa. 115.16 The Heaven even the Heavens are the Lords but the Earth hath he given to the Children of men The slaughter House and shambles of the Saints for they are slain upon Earth A receptacle for elect and reprobate 3. There are all our kindred There is our home and Country where our Father is and our Lord Jesus Christ and all the Holy ones of God Vbi pater ibi patria We pray to him Our Father which art in Heaven 'T is Heaven that is our Fathers House and the everlasting mansions of the Blessed There is our Redeemer and Elder Brother Col. 3.1 The Heaven of Heavens doth contain him There are the best of the family Matth. 8.12 There is Abraham Isaac and Jacob. 'T is a misery to be strangers to the common-wealth of Israel to be shut out from the society of Gods people but in Heaven there are other manner of Saints there To be shut out from the company of the Blessed is a dreadful excommunication indeed 4. There we abide longest An Inn cannot be called our home Here we abide but for a night but there for ever with the Lord. The World must be surely left if we had a certain term of years fixed yet 't is very short in comparison of Eternity Therefore since we live longest in the other World there is our home Mic. 2.10 Arise depart hence this is not your rest God speaketh it of the Land of Canaan when they had polluted it with sin 't is true of all the world sin hath brought in Death and there must be a riddance This Life is but a passage to Eternity Israel first dwelt in a wandring Camp before they came to dwell in Cities and walled Towns and the Mysteries of their Religion were first seated in a Tabernacle and then in a Temple So here first in a Mortal Frail Condition and then come to the place of our Eternal rest There is an appointed time for us all to remove Job 7.1 There is an appointed time for man upon Earth his days are as the days of an hireling An hireling when he hath done his work then he receiveth his wages and is gone Actors when they have finished their parts they go within the curtain and are seen no more So when we have served our generation and finished our course our place will know us no more and God will furnish the World with a new Scene both of Acts and Actors 5. The necessary graces that belong to a Christian shew that a Christian is not yet in his proper place as Faith Hope and Love 1. Faith hath another World in prospect and view and our great aim is to come at it Sense sheweth us we have no abiding City upon Earth but Faith points at one to come where Christ is and we shall one day be Now this Faith were but a fancy if we should always abide in this Earthly Tabernacle and there were no other Life to be expected when this is at an end The Salvation of our Souls is called the end of our Faith 1 Pet. 1.9 That is the main Blessing we look for from Christ. So 1 Tim. 1.16 We believe on him to Life everlasting So Heb. 10.39 We are not of them who draw
back to perdition but of them that believe to the saving of their Souls The great satisfaction that the immortal Soul hath by Faith is that it seeth a place of Eternal abode and therefore it cannot settle here it must look higher than the present World Faith perswadeth us that the end of our Creation and Regeneration was far more noble than a little miserable abode here There is no man in the world but if he follow the light of reason much more if he be guided by the Light of Grace will seek a place and an estate of rest wherein he may finally quiet his mind Therefore Faith cannot be satisfied till we reach our Heavenly Mansion he is unworthy of an Immortal Soul that looketh no further than earthly things 2. Hope was made for things to come especially for our full and final Happiness God fits us with grace as well as with Happiness he doth not only make a grant of a glorious estate but hath given us grace to expect it Hope would be of no use if it did not look out for another Condition Rom. 8.24 Hope that is seen is not hope for what a man seeth why doth he yet hope for it No there is something to come and therefore because we have it not in possession we lift up the head and look for it with a longing and desirous expectation 'T is said Col. 1.5 That our Hope is laid up for us in Heaven A Believers portion is not given him in hand he hath it only in hope He hath it not but 't is safely kept for his use and that in a most sure place in Heaven where Thieves cannot break thorough and steal 3. Love The Saints have heard much of Christ read much of Christ tasted and felt much of Christ they would fain see him and be with him 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen ye Love Many Love Jesus Christ whom they have not seen in the flesh or conversed with him bodily but though they have not seen him they desire to see him for Love is an affection of union it desireth to be with the party loved The Spirit in the Bride saith come Rev. 22.17 The Adulteress saith stay away but the loving Spouse and the Bride saith come Carnal men will not give their vote this way but the Soul that loveth Christ would have him either come to them or take them up to him their Souls are not at ease till this be accomplished 1. Use. Let us give in our names among them that profess themselves to be strangers and sojourners here in the World This Confession must be made not in word only but indeed and in truth We must carry our selves as strangers and pilgrims 1. Let us be drawing home as fast as we can A Traveller would be passing over his Journey as soon as may be so should we be hastening home in our desires and affections 'T is but a sorry home to be at home in the Body when all that while we are absent from the Lord. There is a tendency in the New Nature to God a perfect enjoyment of God and a perfect subjection to God therefore our desires should still draw homewards Heb. 11.16 They desire a Countrey that is an heavenly All that have gotten a new heart and nature from the Lord their hearts run upon the expectation of what God hath promised they cannot be satisfied with any thing they enjoy here 2. By making serious provision for the other World Matth. 6.33 But first seek the Kingdom of Heaven and the Righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added unto you Men that bestow all their labour and travel about earthly things and neglect their precious and immortal Souls they are contented to be at home in the Body and look no farther But when you are furnishing the Soul with Grace and grow more heavenly strict and mortified you are more meet Col. 1.12 Who hath made us meet to be partakers of the Inheritance of the Saints in Light They that wallow in the delights and contentments of the flesh dislike strictness and holiness What should they do with Heaven they are not fit for it Every degree of Grace is a step nearer home Psal. 84.7 They shall go on from strength to strength Get clearer Evidences of your right to everlasting Life 1 Tim. 6.19 Laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold of eternal life The comfort of what you have done for God will abide with you therefore let it be your care and great business not so much to live well here as to live well hereafter our wealth and honours and dignities do not follow us into the other world but our works do Consider the place you are bound for and what Commodities grow currant there what will stead you when other things fail 3. Mortifie Carnal desires 1 Pet. 2.11 As strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the Soul The Flesh-pots of Aegypt made Israel despise Canaan Fleshly lusts do only gratifie the Body as corrupted with sin and therefore they must be subdued and kept under by those who have higher and better things to care for If we were to live here for ever it were no such absurd thing to gratifie the flesh and please the body though even so it were not a practice so suitable to the rational life yet not altogether so absurd as when we must be gone and shortly dislodge and when we have great and precious Promises of happiness in another World 2 Cor. 7.1 Having therefore these Promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit That bindeth it more upon us These lusts blind the mind besot the heart burden us in our Journey homeward divert our thoughts and care yea being indulged and allowed they make us forfeit Heaven and will prove at length the ruine of our Souls Sowing to the flesh cuts off the hopes of happiness Gal. 6.8 Well then bethink your selves if you look for Heaven will you cherish the flesh which is the Enemy of your Salvation Do you expect a room among the Angels and will you live as those who are slaves of the Devil The World is not your Countrey and will you wholly be occupied and taken up about worldly things what you shall eat and drink and what you shall put on 4 Patiently endure the inconveniencies of your Pilgrimage Strangers will meet with hard usage 'T is no news that all things do not succeed with the Heirs of Promise according to their hearts desire here in the World The World will love its own but they are chosen out of the World Joh. 15.19 Christ died not for this that we should be dandled upon the Worlds knees As long as the end shall be happy let us bear the inconveniencies of the way with the more patience A Christian that is convinced of a Life to come should not be greatly dismayed at
by the power and influence of Faith 'T is not enough to have Faith but we must walk by it our whole Conversation is carryed on and influenced by Faith and by the Spirit of God on Christs part Gal. 2.20 I live by the Faith of the Son of God a lively Faith There living by Faith is spoken of as it respecteth the principle of the Spiritual Life here walking by Faith as the scope and end of it there as we derive vertue from Christ here as we press on to Heaven in the practice of Holyness In short walking noteth a progress and passing on from one place to another through a strait and beaten way which lyeth between both So we pass on from the earthly state to the Heavenly by the power and influence of our way our way is through all Conditions we are appointed unto and through all duties required of us 1. Through all Conditions By honour and dishonour evil report and good report afflictions prosperities 2 Cor. 6.4 5 6.7 8. Whether despised or countenanced still minding our great journey to Heaven Faith is necessary for all that the evil be not a discouragement nor the good a snare Evil Rom. 8.18 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the Glory that shall be revealed in us Good 2 Tim. 4.10 For Demas hath forsaken us and loved the present World 2. All duties required of us That we still keep a good Conscience towards God and towards man Acts 24.15 16. In this Faith and Hope Reasons 1. Walking by Faith maketh a man sincere because he expecteth his reward from God only though no man observe him no man commend him Matth. 6 6. Thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly Yea though all men hate him condemn him Matth 5.11 12. Blessed are you when men shall revile and persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsely for my names sake rejoice and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven Now this is true sincerity when we make God alone our pay master and count his rewards enough to repair our losses and repay our cost 2. It maketh a man vigorous and lively When we consider at the end of our work there is a Life of endless joys to be possessed in Heaven with God that we shall never repent of the labour and pain that we have taken in the Spiritual Life 1 Cor. 15.58 Always abounding in the work of the Lord knowing that your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. Phil. 3.14 I press towards the mark because of the high prize of the calling of God in Jesus Christ. The thoughts of the prize and worth of the reward do add Spirits to the runner 3. It maketh a man watchful that he be not corrupted with the delights of sense which are apt to call back our thoughts to interrupt our affections to divert us from our work and quench our zeal Now one that walks by Faith can compare his Eternal Happiness with these transitory pleasures which will soon have an end and everlastingly forsake those miserable Souls who were deluded by them As Moses Heb. 11.24 25. By Faith Moses when he was come to years refused to be called the Son of Pharaohs Daughter Choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to injoy the pleasures of sin for a season 4. Walking by Faith will make a man self denying having for Heaven in his Eye he knoweth that he cannot be a loser by God Mark 10.21 Forsake all that thou hast and thou shalt have treasure in Heaven So the 29 30. Verily I say unto you there is no man that hath left House or Brethren or Sister or Father or Mother and Children and Lands for my names sake but he shall receive an hundred fold 5. Walking by Faith maketh a man comfortable and confident a Believer is incouraged in all his duty imboldened in his conflicts comforted in all his sufferings The quieting or imboldening the Soul is the great work of Faith or trust in Gods fidelity A promise to him is more than all the visible things on Earth or sensible objects in the World it can do more with him to make him forsake all earthly pleasures possessions and hopes Psa. 56.4 In God I will praise his word in God I have put my trust I will not fear what flesh can do unto me So Paul Acts 20.24 But none of those things move me neither count I my Life dear unto me so I may fulfil my course with joy Save the Holy Ghost witnesseth in every City saying that bonds and afflictions abide me Did wait for him every where I make no reckoning of these things I maketh us constant Have ye fixed upon these hopes with so great deliberation and will you draw back and slack in the prosecution of them Have you gone so far in the way to Heaven and do you begin to look behind you as if you were about to change your mind Heb. 10.39 The Apostle saith Phil. 3.13 I forget the things which are behind reaching forth unto the things which are before The World and the flesh are things behind us We turned our backs upon them when we first looked after Heavenly things Heaven and remaining duties are the things before us if we lose our Crown we lose our selves for ever Use is to shew the advantage the people of God have above the carnal and unregenerate The people of God walk by Faith against the present want of sight How do the World walk Not by Faith they have it not nor by the sight of Heaven for they are not there and so continuing never shall be there So they have neither Faith nor sight what do they live by then They live by sense and by fancy by sense as to the present World and they live by fancy and vain conceit as to the World to come Live in their sins and vain pleasures and yet hope to be saved Here they walk by sight but not such a sight as the Apostle meaneth they must have something in the view of sense Lands Honours pleasures and when these are out of sight they are in darkness and have nothing to live upon But now a Christian is never at a loss let his Condition be what it will Suppose God should bring him so low and bare that he hath no estate to live on no House to dwell in yet he hath an inheritance in the promises Psa. 119.111 Thy Testimonies I have taken for an heritage for ever And God is his Habitation Psa. 90.1 A full heap in his own keeping is not such a supply to him as Gods alsufficiency Gen. 17.1 That 's his storehouse But his great Happiness is in the other World there is all his hope and his desire and he looketh upon other promises only in order to that SERMON XI 2 Cor. 5.8 We are confident I say and willing rather to be
but feignedly and hypocritically shunning that by all means which we profess to be our happiness 2. He is not a true Christian that doth not love Christ more than his own Body and his own life or any World thing whatsoever 'T is one of Christs conditions Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not Father and Mother Brothers and Sisters and Wife and Children yea and his own life also he cannot be my disciple All things must be trampled upon for Christs sake or else his heart is not sincere with him A chooseing Earth before Heaven preferring present things before Christ a fixing our happiness here these things are contrary to the integrity of our covenanting with God our valuation of the presence of Christ should be so high and our affection to it so great that we should not exchange our title to it or hopes of it for any Worldly Good whatsoever if God would give thee thy Health and Wealth upon Earth then thou wouldest look for no other happiness this is naught 3. As he cannot be a true and sound Christian so neither discharge the duties of a Christian who is not of this frame and constitution of Spirit 1. Not venture his life for Christ. Heb. 12.4 Ye have not yet resisted unto blood striving against sin Unless willing rather to be with the Lord than in the Body 2. Not Imploy his life for Christ nor live in order to eternity unless he hath been kept looking and longing for this happy change Gen. 49.19 Lord I have waited for thy Salvation As if all his life time he had been waiting for this None live the Heavenly life but those that look upon it as better than the worldly and accordingly wait and prepare for it 't is the end sweetneth the means 3. Nor lay down nor yield up his life with comfort The very fore-thoughts of their change are grievous to most men because they are not willing rather to be with Christ h●an in the Body and so they move from that which they speculatively call their Blessedness and count themselves undone when they come to injoy 4. There are many things to invite us to desire presence with Christ as there are many things to shew us why we are not satisfied with remaining in the body While we remain in the Body we dwell in an evil World Gal. 1.4 Which is a place of sins snares and troubles But of this see verse 4 th of this Chapter Use. Let us all be of this temper and frame of Spirit willing rather to be absent from the Body and to be present with the Lord. Almost all will prefer the Life to come in words when indeed they utterly neglect it and prefer the fleshly pleasures of this life before it cry out of the vanity and vexation of the World and yet set their hearts upon it and love it better than God and the World to come Gods Children do not often enough compare the difference between being present with the Body and being present with the Lord they root here to much The desire of this life is very natural to us but yet if it withdraweth us from these Heavenly good things and weakneth our esteem of the true life it should be curbed and mortified and reduced into its due order and place Therefore it is very necessary that we should often revive these thoughts and right Judge of the present and future life and use earthly good things piously as long as it pleaseth God to keep us here but still to be mindful of home and to keep our hearts in a constant breathing after Heavenly things Two things I shall press upon you 1. Vse the pleasures of the bodily life more sparingly 2. Let your love to Christ be more strong and more earnest 1. Vse the pleasures of the bodily life more sparingly They that have too great a care and love to the body neglect their Souls and disable themselves for these Heavenly desires and motions they cannot act them in prayer 1 Pet. 4.7 Be sober and watch unto prayer And they lye open to Satans temptations 1 Pet. 5.8 For your adversary the Devil goeth about like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devour Therefore unless there be a great deal of Moderation and a spare medling of earthly delights they are indisposed for the Christian warfare 1 Thes. 5.8 Let us who are of the day be sober putting on the breast-plate of Faith and Love we cannot exercise Faith and Love with any liveliness nor expect the Happiness of the World to come 1 Pet. 1. 13. Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind be sober and hope to the end Whilest we hire out our reason to the service of lust and appetite and glut our selves with the delights of the flesh and worldly pomp as dainty fare costly apparel sports plays and gaming there is a strange oblivion and deadness groweth upon our hearts as to Heavenly things A Christian looketh for days of refreshing from the presence of the Lord. But these must have their refreshings here The Drunkard seeketh his refreshing in pleasing his palate the idle man is loth to be put to work he would have his rest here The vain they must have their senses tickled and pleased pomp and vanity and sports and pastimes is the great business and pleasure of most mens lives 2. Let your love to Christ be stronger and more earnest for where love is we desire union and presence 'T is but a pretence of love where we aim not at the nearest conjunction that may be if we love our friend his presence is comfortable his absence troublesome as Dalilah said to Samson how canst thou say thou lovest me when thy Spirit is not with me Judges 16.15 If we love one we desire to be with him 4. Point That this will and choice cometh from confidence of a better estate and our own interest in it For while the Soul doubteth of the thing or of our injoying it we shall desire the continuance of our Earthly Happiness rather than to depart out of the Body with fears of going to Hell 1. 'T is Faith that breedeth hope which is a longing and desirous expectation For 't is the substance of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 2. 'T is assurance that doth increase it 'T is easie to convince men that Heaven is the only Happiness but is it thy Happiness Though the knowledge of excellency and suitableness may stir up that love which worketh by degrees yet there must be the knowledge of our interest to set a-work our complacency and delight We cannot so delightfully and cheerfully expect our change till our title be somewhat cleared 'T is sad with a man that is uncertain whither he is a going Use. Let us labour for this confidence an holy and well built confidence For he is not in the best Condition that hath least trouble about his everlasting estate but he that hath least cause Many that have been confident of
them that do well and evil with them that do evil That every man should reap according to what he hath sown Therefore those whom Christ will receive into Everlasting life must appear faithful and obedient for then God will judge the world in righteousness Acts 17.31 Now in patience towards the wicked now by way of exercise and tryal of his people 2. The certainty of the Event The hour is coming John 5.28 That there is such a time coming he ill deserveth the name of a Christian who maketh any Question of it But because many live as if they shall never be called to an account I shall evidence that certainly we shall appear both by natural Light and Scripture 1. Let the evidence of Reason be heard so far as it will go Reason sheweth that it may be and argueth 1. From the nature of God There is a God That God is just and 't is agreeable to his justice that it should be well with them that do well and ill with them that do evil These are principles out of dispute and foundations in the structure and building of the Christian Faith Here the best suffer most and are exercised with poverty disgrace scorn and all manner of persecutions and the wicked live a life of pomp and ease how shall we reconcile these things with the notions which we have of God and his Providence No satisfactory account can be given but this The wicked are reserved to future punishment and the Godly to future reward Here the goodness of God towards the good and the justice of God towards the wicked is not enough manifested therefore there is a day when his Judgment shall be brought to light and his different respect to good and bad made more Conspicuous 2. From the providence of God There are many Judgments which are pledges of the general Judgment that at length God will Judge the whole world for sin As the drowning of the Old World the burning of Sodom the destruction of Jerusalem these are as a warning to all for 't is said Jude 7. these are set forth as a warning to all that should live ungodly God is the same still Gal. 3.20 God is one that is in one mind of punishing the wicked without variation and change he hateth the sins of one as well as of another If he would not put up the iniquities of the Old World he will not put up the iniquities of the New if he punished the iniquities of Sodom he will punish the iniquities of others who sinned in like manner God is not grown more indulgent to sin than he was before though it be not now there will be a time when he will call them to a reckoning In every Age he keepeth a petty Sessions but then will be the general Assizes When man first sinned God did not immediately execute the Sentence of his Law upon him but giveth him time of Repentance till he dieth As he giveth every man time and space so he giveth all the World for he would not have all the World to be born at once and die at once but to live in several successions of Ages from Father to Son throughout divers generations till we come to that Period which his Providence hath fixed Now as he reckoned with every man particularly at his death so with all the World at the end of time Particular Judgments shew that God is not asleep or unmindful of humane Affairs but the general Judgment is deferred till then 3. From the Feelings of Conscience After sin men are troubled though there be none about them in the World to call them to an account or though the fact be done so secretly that it is not liable to an humane Tribunal Nature is sensible that there is an higher Judgment that Divine Justice must have a solemn Triumph Conscience is afraid of it Heathens are sensible of such a thing Rom. 1.32 Who knowing the Judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death Foelix trembled at the mention of it which sheweth there is an easie reception of such a Truth Acts 24.25 There is an hidden fear in the Consciences of all men which is soon revived and awakened by the Thoughts of this Truth Every guilty person is more or less held in the Chains of darkness which sheweth how easily this Truth can insinuate it self into a rational mind 2. Faith sheweth that it shall be The light of Faith is more certain and more distinct 'T is more certain for it buildeth upon a Divine Testimony which is more infallible than the ghesses of Reason And 't is more distinct for Nature could never find out the circumstances of that day as by whom this Judgment shall be managed and in what manner that God hath appointed one Man by whom he will judg the World in Righteousness that he shall come in the glory of his Father and all the holy Angels with him Faith concludeth this certainty 1. From that Revelation which God hath made in his Word Matth. 13.49 50. So shall it be at the end of the World the Angels shall come forth and sever the wicked from among the just and shall cast them into the Furnace of Fire there shall be weeping and gnashing of Teeth Joh. 5.28 29. The hour is coming in the which all that are in their graves shall hear his voice and shall come forth they that have done good unto the resurrection of life and they that done evil unto the resurrection of damnation Heb. 9.27 And it is appointed unto men once to die and after this the Judgment Rom. 14.12 So then every one of us shall give an account of himself to God Matth. 12.36 37. But I say unto you that every idle word that men shall speak they shall give account thereof in the day of Judgment For by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words thou shalt be condemned Rev. 20.12 And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the Books were opened and another Book was opened which is the Book of Life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the Books according to their works And in many other places for this being a necessary Truth is more plentifully revealed than others of lesser importance This was the great Promise ever kept afoot in the Church Scoffers took notice of it saying Where is the Promise of his coming The Apostle Jude intimateth the Ancient Promise of it Jude v. 14. And Enoch also the seventh Son from Adam prophesied of these things saying Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints And it hath been revived in all Ages by Moses and David and Daniel and Joel Zechary and Malachi and more clearly by Christ himself and his Apostles every where Now we may reason that hath God been faithful in all things will not fail at last he hath ever stood to his Word when more unlikely things have been
condemned by the world But how shall Wisdom be justified by us Answ. 1. By disclaiming and renouncing them who Adopt Fooleries into their Religion and betray it to the scorn of all considering men In this class and rank I put the Papists and the Quakers The first by a Pageantry of many ridiculous Ceremonies have so disguised the Christian Religion that it is made Contemptible Therefore is it that where this Religion hath most absolutely commanded Atheism aboundeth for the heart of a rational man can find no satisfaction in these things nothing of the Majesty of God and the power of his Ordinances where they are made so sense-pleasing and accommodated with such worldly Pomp and silly Rudiments which can only prevail upon the weaker sort of Spirits The more knowing and searching wits cannot but secretly scorn those things in their hearts and therefore no other Religion being allowed and countenanced they lie under a dangerous Temptation to Atheism and Unbelief The other sort are the Quakers a sort of People whose Principles are not yet fixed but in the forming being of a vertiginous spirit are a ready prey for Sathan and fit instruments for him to work by to the great disturbance of Religion or to disgrace and shame it and betray it to scorn Now the main of what their Religion hitherto hath been is to teach men to cast away their Bands and their Cuffs and the trimmings of their Garments and to deny Civilities and to teach men to say thou these make Religion ridiculous and prostitute Scripture phrase to scorn and by them the way of truth is evil spoken of 2. By pleading for it Surely Godliness is not madness but the highest Wisdom This Argument will clear it Wisdom lieth in the fixing of a right end and the choice of apt and good means and a dexterous pursuit of these means These things are evident to reason Now in all these respects there is not a wiser man than a godly man and the more godly he is the more he excelleth in Wisdom And therefore folly and madness can no more be ascribed to godliness than heat to the Snow or cold to the fire 1. He fixeth upon an higher end than all the rest of the world doth which is the pleasing glorifying injoying God Alas what 's the heaping up of wealth the getting of a little honour or designing to wallow in ease and pleasure as to these things He is wiser that is wise to Salvation 2 Tim. 3.16 That chooseth God for his portion God hath given him counsel in his Reins All the Wisdom of the world is Earthly Sensual and Devilish Jam. 1.3 Others are Foolish and Madmen Who are wiser They that run after painted Butterflies or spend their time in making Clay-pies like Children or sucking at the dry Breast of the Creature or those who are able to govern Commonwealths or do things for publick good Who are wiser They that can pass by their worldly designs to carry on their Heavenly Or they that are wise for the present and Fools to all Eternity 2. He chuseth apt and sit means He takes not an uncertain course in the world but goeth by the certain rule of Gods Word Deut. 4.6 Keep them and do them for this is your Wisdom Jer. 8.9 They have rejected the Word of the Lord and what Wisdom is in them And the Testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the simple Psal. 19.7 The more a man keepeth to the Word of the Lord the more wise and as far as he abateth he sheweth fo●ly and madness as others do 3. For diligent pursuit being heedful Eph 5.15 See then that ye walk circumspectly not as Fools but as Wise Avoiding what may be a snare they are true to their end by being serious and diligent Eccl. 10.2 A wise mans heart is at his right hand by self denyal spareth no cost selleth all for the Pearl of great Price Matth. 13. Though to despise the Delights and Honours and Pleasures of the world seemeth the greatest folly and madness to Carnal men Nothing venture nothing have Rom. 8.6 To be Carnally minded is death and to be Spiritually minded is life and peace He loseth something but getteth much better If a man should keep his money by him and neglect a gainful purchase that would yield him an hundred fold this would be accounted folly among worldly wise men what is their course who venture death and eternal Destruction rather than be at the pains to save their Souls 3. Let us wipe off ●his reproach by our Conversations Not by abating our zeal and diligence in the Heavenly life but by a prudent behaviour giving no occasion by any ridiculous actions of ours to blemish the Holy Profession I 'le urge but this one Argument that a Christian is to shew forth the vertues of God or the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praises of God 1 Pet. 2.9 as an Image is to represent the Party Now the vertues of God are chiefly three Wisdom Power and Goodness A Christian is to shew forth Gods Power by his reverence and awfulness not daring to do any thing that God hath forbidden His Goodness of benignity by his delight and readiness of obedience as his beneficial goodness so his moral Goodness by our Holiness 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy So also his Wisdom we shew he is Wise by whose Counsel we are guided and wait on God for the direction of his Word and the Spirit will help you to do it Jam. 1.5 If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God who giveth liberally and upbraideth no man Use 3. Is Caution to Carnal men Let them forbear the censures of the Godly and study their own case we charge them with madness and folly not to upbraid them but to convince them not out of Malice as they do but compassion that they may repent and grow wise to Salvation Repentance is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a returning to our wits again What is that 1. When you begin to be serious When the Conversion of the Gentiles to the Christian Faith is Prophesied of 't is said Psalm 22.27 All the ends of the Earth shall remember and turn to the Lord. As long as men are thoughtless and mindless of Heavenly things they know not what they do but are as men sleeping and distracted not making use of the common light of Reason or those Principles which are ingrafted into the hearts of all men What am I Who made me What do all these Creatures proclaim all that I can see and feel but an Eternal Power Have I any Interest in him Alas they went on madly before sleeping in the lap of Carnal Pleasures when the Philistines were upon them or else plunging themselves in a gulph of business and worldly distractions and there they lie in the deep waters till they be ready to sink to the bottom Oh remember and return you are undone for ever if you do not escape out
then applied to us by him who is now alive and liveth for evermore for that end and purpose Therefore 't is said 1 Pet. 1.3 That God hath begotten us to a lively hope by the resurrection of Christ. By vertue of that power which he now hath as risen from the dead And Eph. 1.19 20. And what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us ward who believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in Heavenly places The same power worketh in believers which wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead The same power which wrought in and towards Christs exaltation is ingaged for Believers to work grace and carry on the work of grace in them Christ risen and living in Heaven is the Fountain of life in all new creatures He is the great receptacle of grace and sendeth it out by his Spirit A vital influence to all such as belong to him And therefore our life is made dependant upon his John 14.19 Because I live ye shall live also The life of believers is derived from Christs life who is our quickening head communicating vertue to all his members There is a vertue in his life to quicken us so that we do not live so much as Christ liveth in us Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me As the root in the branches and the head in the members USE 1. Information It teacheth us three things in point of use 1. The Suitableness between Christ and Believers Consider him as God or Mediator As God Christ hath life communicated to him by eternal Generation so by Regeneration we are made partakers of the Divine Nature As Mediator he subsists in his life as man by vertue of the personal union with the God-head So do we live by vertue of the mystical inhabitation or union with Christ by his Spirit for our spiritual life floweth from the gracious presence of God in us by his Spirit Christ as man had first a frail life subject to hunger cold and sufferings so have believers a Spiritual life consistent with many weaknesses and infirmities But now Christ liveth gloriously at the Fathers right hand so we shall one day bear the Image of the Heavenly and be one day freed from all weaknesses thus are we conformed unto Christ and partake of the same life he doth 2. It informeth us in what way this life is conveyed and continued to us By Vertue of Christs death and resurrection by the Spirit through faith his death is at the bottom of it for he died that we should live together with him 1 Thes. 5.10 Who died for us that whether we wake or sleep we should live together with him His resurrection is the pattern pledge and cause of it For Rom. 5.10 If we were reconciled by his death much more being reconciled shall we be saved by his life After he had rescued us from the power and danger of our sins by his rising from the dead he is in a greater capacity to send out that Spirit by which he was raised to raise us up to a new life Then the Spirit is the Immediate worker of it for Christ maketh his first entry and dwelleth in the hearts of believers by his Spirit for we are renewed and born again by the Spirit John 3.5 That which is born of Flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Without which we are not capable of it The Spirit worketh Faith and then there is an habitation fit for Christ in the Soul Eph. 3.17 That he may dwell in your hearts by faith Then he liveth in us as the head in the members Col. 2.19 And the root in the branches John 15 1. 'T is by faith that the union is compleated John 1.12 To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God And then a vertue and power floweth from this union to inable us to do those things which are spiritually good and acceptable to God which is nothing but that which we call life Without him we can do nothing John 15.5 With him and by him all things Phil. 4.13 I can do all things through Christ which strengthneth me Namely by the influence of his Spirit received by faith 3. It informeth us 'T is not enough to believe that Christ died for you unless also you permit Christ to live in you 'T is not enough for your faith 't is not enough for your love the Apostle mentions both and we must look after both As to have our old offences expiated so to live a new life in Christ Rom. 6.5 For if we have been planted together into the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection We are branches of that tree whereof Christ is the root We must have communion with Christ living as well as with Christ dying and not only freed from the damning power of sin but quickened to a new life Use 2. is exhortation to press you to several duties 1. To believe that there is such a life 'T is matter of faith for when Christ had said John 11.26 Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die he presently addeth Beleivest thou this Few mind and regard it The general faith concerning life by Christ must go before the special application Besides 't is an hidden thing your life is hidden with Christ in God Col. 3.3 'T is not visible to sense And invisible things are only seen by faith 'T is hidden from sense and therefore it must be believed 'T is hidden from the carnal World as colours are from a blind man because they have no eyes to see it The natural man cannot see things that must be spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2.14 Besides the Spiritual life is hidden under the natural Gal. 2.20 The life that I live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God They live in the flesh but they do not live after the flesh 't is a life within a life the Spiritual life is nothing else but the natural life sublimated and over-ruled to higher and nobler ends spiritual men eat and drink and sleep and trade and marry give in Marriage as others do for they have not divested themselves of the interests and concernments of flesh and blood but all these things are governed by grace and are carried on to holy and eternal ends Besides 't is hidden because there is upon it the vail and covering of afflictions and outward meanness and a basement as it was said of some of whom the World was not worthy that they wandred about in sheep-skins and Goat-skins Heb. 11.37 38. Who would think so much worth should lye under such a base outside Their glory is darkened and obscured by their condition Besides too this life is often hidden by reproaches and censures
he is ascended into Heaven he is to be known in Faith and worshipped in Spirit his body is above all kindness and his memory is to be respected not as the memory of an honourable man but as one who is Lord of the Church and governeth it by his Spirit to the end of the World Phil. 2.10 11. Not Lord Lord but obedience Matth. 7.22 1 USE is reproof of those that please themselves with that deceit of heart that if they had lived in the days of Christ conversed with our Saviour and heard his Doctrine and seen his Miracles and holy life they would not have used him as the Jews did but expressed kindness and love to his person Now to these let me say First That 't is an old deceit of heart We usually translate the scene of our duty to former times and lay aside at the present that work and expression of love which God hath called us to God knoweth in what age to cast you and what means and dispensations are fittest for you he that doth not improve present means will not improve any 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen we love in whom though now you see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory If ye receive his Doctrine obey his Laws believe in him love him rejoyce in the midst of afflictions you express your love to Christ. 2. It is not likely you would do otherwise having the same temper and constitution of Soul which they had that opposed Christ the same root of bitterness in you You hate those in whom there is the Image of Christ and some representation of his Holiness and Meekness We read of those Mat. 23.29 30. Who build the Tombs of the Prophets and garnish the Sepulchers of the Righteous and say if we had been in the days of our Fathers we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the Prophets who yet persecuted Christ as many will condemn the former Adversaries of the Martyrs Bonner and Gardiner Christ taught no other Doctrine than that which the Prophets and Martyrs had done but dead Saints do not exasperate And what entertainment would a rude dissolute sort of people give to such a mean but holy Person as Christ was that was so free in his Reproofs Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father ye will do John 8.44 He that now sheweth a spightful and malicious mind against the Truth and Servants of God shall never make me think otherwise but if he had lived in Christs days he would have been as ready and forward to persecute him as the worst Certainly an Herod and an Herodias to John Baptist would have been an Ahab and a Jezabel to Elijah ask them what they thought of Ahab and Jezabel they would have made many great Protestations that they would have done far otherwise but they did the same things to him that came in the Spirit and Power of Elias No miscreant but will cry out on the treachery of Judas the envy and malice of the High-Priests the fury of the Jews yet the same thing is done by them whilest Godliness is Persecuted they are still desirous to break this Vessel where this Treasure lyeth Dead Saints are out of sight no Eye sore to them no way offensive to their Ears 3. If you should this would not save you without Conversion to God The same Laws were in force then that are now knowing Christ after the flesh would do you no good but a spiritual and true affection to him The Reward was still promised to true Disciples John 12.26 If any man serve me let him follow me and where I am there shall also my servant be if any man serve me him will my Father honour When some came to see him he exhorted to imitation of his Example and subjection to his Laws It is not an outside appearance unless we humbly engage in his Service and have a desire to please him in all things Oh therefore let us make this use of the love of Christ and the sense of our engagements to him as to know Christ not after the flesh but so as to love him and serve him and subject our selves to his Laws Use 2. Have we a better knowledge of Christ Do we know him after the flesh or after the Spirit 1. The ground of our Knowledge what is it common Tradition Human Credulity or the illumination of the Holy Ghost The same Truths work differently as represented in a different light Common Report begets a cold Christianity Mat. 16.16 17. 1 John 5 4 5. 1 Cor. 2.4 Hear-say is an advantage yet not to be rested in We stand upon higher ground than Heathens yet are not taller men John 4.42 Now we believe not because of thy saying for we have heard him our selves and know that this is indeed the Christ the Saviour of the World We our selves should be acquainted with Christ then we know the Truth with more efficacy John 8.32 Ye shall know the Truth and the Truth shall make you free with more clearness and certainty John 17.8 They have known surely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that I came out from thee Acts 2.36 Therefore let all the house of Israel know 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 assuredly that God hath made that same Jesus whom ye have Crucified both Lord and Christ You may venture safely upon it build on it as a sure Foundation the other is but a dead and weak thing it vanquisheth no Temptations subdueth no carnal Affections 2. The fruits and effects of our Knowledge 1. It is a transforming Knowledge 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory Such a Knowledge as begets Union with Christ and a thorow change so as to be converted to him For it follows in the next verse to the Text Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a new Creature Christ liveth a new kind of life in Heaven so should we upon Earth he hath laid aside his mortal life so should we our carnal life live to God in the Spirit Know him and the power of his Resurrection Phil. 2.10 Christians are to be esteemed by their profiting in Godliness that is knowing him after the Spirit When we know that Spiritual Power which is in him and feel it in our selves renewing and changing the heart we find the power of his Resurrection raising us from the death of Sin to the life of Grace if we are planted into Christ as living Members of his Mystical Body 2. It is a knowledge that obscureth the splendor of all outward excellencies in our Opinion Estimation and Affection 1 Cor. 2.2 For I determined not to know any thing among you save Jesus Christ and him Crucifyed Phil. 3.8 Yea doubtless and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord for whom
the Saints are called the excellent ones of the earth Psal. 16.3 as the wicked are called vile persons Psal. 15.4 Wickedness maketh a man base and vile as holiness puts honour and glory upon them therefore this is the greatest excellency we are capable of to come as near to God as we can in Wisdom Purity and Holiness 2. When this glory was lost none was fit to restore it but Jesus Christ the Son of God incarnate or made man For thereby the glory of the Father was again visible in him in our nature Col. 1.18 He is the image of the invisible God Heb. 1.3 The brightness of his fathers glory and the express image of his person He was made flesh that the perfections of the Godhead might once more shine forth in humane nature in an image there must be similitude and likeness and deduction or a means of conveying that likeness therefore to make us like God there must be a fit means God is is a pure Spirit we are creatures that indeed have an immortal Spirit but it dwelleth in flesh therefore to make us like God the word was made flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld his glory as the glory of the only begotten Son of God John 1.14 So by this means was this likeness deduced and the image of God restored to lost man and man restored to Gods favour and made capable of happiness therefore all the heirs of promise are predestinated to be conformed to the image of his Son or to God appearing in their nature 2. Because they are all called after Christs name Christians from Christ now all that are called after Christs name should be framed after his image otherwise they will be called Christians to the disgrace of Christ the Apostles never transferred their names to their disciples They were of several factions that said one I am of Paul another I am of Apollos another I am of Cephas and I of Christ 1 Cor. 1.13 No we are all of Christ and called Christians because we partake of his purity and holiness surely then we ought to transcribe Christs life and live as if another Jesus Christ were come into the world Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity 2 Tim. 2.19 He that nameth the name of Christ that calleth himself by Christ name or undertaketh the profession of the faith of Christ must depart from iniquity as Christ did 3. Because all that are elected by God and redeemed by Christ are sealed by the spirit and what is the seal of the spirit but conformity to the image of Christ 't is often spoken of in Scripture Eph. 1.15 Ye are sealed by the Holy Spirit of promise and Eph. 4.30 and grieve not the Holy Spirit whereby ye are sealed to the day of Redemption 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath sealed us and given us the earnest of the Spirit What is it but the image of Christ impressed upon the soul by his Spirit A seal prints on the wax that which is engraven upon its self Princes stamp their own image on their Coin so doth the Holy Ghost form Christ in us or imprint the image of God upon our souls now they that are thus sealed have Gods mark and are his peculiar treasure and the first fruits of his creatures chosen out from others to be a people to serve please glorifie and injoy God so that if a man be to examine and judge his own estate this is that which he is to look after whether he be conformed to the image of Christ yea or no 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the faith prove your selves know ye not your own selves that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be reprobates That is it your observation and search must fix upon whether Jesus Christ be in you or no. 1. Christ may be in you objectively as he is apprehended and imbraced by faith and love the object is in the faculty things we often think of and love are in our minds and hearts that is not it or not all you seek after 2. Again Christ is in you effectively as a principle of a new and heavenly life by his spirit Gal. 2.20 Christ liveth in me That indeed is more 3. Christ is in you representatively or by way of conformity Gal. 4.19 Till Christ be formed in you Whether his nature and graces be there whether you do resemble him in nature and life this is that you seek after as the fruit of the former 4. Because Christ was an example this hath great force I take it for granted that 't is a great advantage not only to have a rule but a pattern and example because man is so prone to imitate an example in our nature maketh it the more operative therefore Christ came to be an example of Holiness and Patience and Happiness to us 1. By this example our pattern is the more compleat There are some graces wherein we cannot be said to resemble God as in humility patience obedience these things imply inferiority and subjection and God is inferiour to none but there are other graces as Knowledg Wisdom Justice Mercy Purity wherein we resemble God but in the other we have pattern from Christ Humility Matth. 11.29 Obedience Heb. 5.8 Patience 1 Pet. 1.21 These are hard duties go against the bent and hair but when the Son of God will submit to them and give us the example shall we refuse to live in that manner and by those laws the Son of God chose to live by Besides 't is the more likely he will pity and help us because he knoweth what 't is to obey in these cases 2. This example sheweth that an holy life is possible to those who are renewed by Grace Christ hath humbled himself and obeyed God in our nature and so had the interests of flesh and blood ●o gratifie as well as others therefore all these things may be done by those that have not divested themselves of flesh and blood to assure us the more of this Christ chose a life that might minister instruction to all men rich and poor bond and free may imitate him persons retired and solitary and those that live abroad in the world learned and unlearned had he lived deliciously and conquered Kingdoms and acted as a free Monarch and Potentate the poor might have been disheartned but the meanest may learn of him and the others need not be discouraged if they have an heart to subordinate all to God Christ sanctified a free life 3. This example sheweth what will be the issue and success of a life spent in patience and holiness Christ when he had fulfilled all righteousness and suffered what was necessary for our Redemption went home to God and entred into that glory he spake of and was received up into Heaven as the reward of his obedience 1 Pet. 1.21 God gave him glory that our faith and hope might be in God That this might be a visible
demonstration to the world what shall be the end of a life spent in Holiness and Obedience 1. USE is Information 1. What little hopes they have to get to Heaven who are no way like Christ. 1. So unlike him in Holiness When Christ spent whole nights in prayer they either pray not at all in secret or put off God with the glance of a short complement 't was as meat and drink to Christ to do his Fathers will and 't is their burden Christ was humble and meek they proud and disdainful Christ went about doing good and they go about doing mischief Christ was holy and heavenly they vain and sensual darkness is as much like light as they like Christ Instead of shewing forth the vertues of the Redeemer they are of their father the Devil and his lusts will they do 1 Pet. 2.1 Compared with John 8.4 2. So unlike him in patience and courage under sufferings Christ obeyed God at the dearest rates and they are drawn from their duty by a small interest a weak temptation a shameful pleasure a slight injury the greatest things that can befall us are in comparison of eternal glory but a light affliction which is but for a moment our sufferings cannot be long for the chains which unite the soul to the body are soon broken 2. It informeth us how we should be satisfied in our good estate or know whether we have the true holiness viz. when we are such in the world as Christ was in the world some are satisfied and content themselves with this they are not as other men who are beasts in mans shape Luke 18.11 God I thank thee that I am not as other men extortioners unjust adulterers or even as this publican This is a sorry plea when we have nothing to bear up our confidence but the badness of others others seek for vertue among the Heathens and think their perfection lyeth in imitating the Pagan gallantry 〈◊〉 alas their vertue was but a shadow self-love was the principle pride the soul and vain glory the end thereof besides it was stained with many notorious blemishes Alexander was valiant but in his anger often dyed his hands in the blood of his friends Pompey wise but ambitious Cato generous and stiff for publick liberty but many times drank somewhat too liberally Caesar was merciful but lascivious no 't is not these but the Son of God we must look upon who hath established the genuine holiness Others look no higher than the people who are in reputation for goodness among whom they live but remember they have their blemishes either they sit down with low degrees of holiness whereas we are to be holy as he is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 pure as Christ is pure 1 John 3 3. or else are tainted with some of their errors for good people have their failings which are authorized to the professing world by their example as sheep go out at the gap where others have gone out before them 2 Cor. 11.1 Be ye followers of me as I am of Christ. Alas otherwise to follow the best men will mislead us others bolster up themselves by the failings of the Saints whose miscarriages are recorded in the word of God si David cur non ego if David why not I No Christ must be the copy that must ever be before our eyes you must be holy as he is holy and pure as he is pure 2. USE Is Exhortation to perswade you to look after Conformity to the image of his Son All men would be like God in Glory and felicity but not in righteousness and holiness Satans temptation to our first parents was ye shall be as Gods Gen. 3.5 not in a blessed conformity but a cursed self-sufficiency but this is no temptation we bring to you but a remedy to recover the loss you incurred by that temptation and a remedy not invented by our selves but decreed by God and brought about in the most solemn way that can be imagined The Son of God became one of us that we might be made like him Phil. 2.7 He was made in the likeness of men Rom. 8.3 came in the similitude of sinful flesh took mans nature and punishment upon him that he might purchase grace to conform us to that holy life which he carried on in our nature this is that we perswade you unto Now for directions 1. The foundation is laid in the new birth and the change wrought in us by regeneration The Son of God was conceived by the operation of the Holy Ghost so are we born of water and the spirit John 3.5 in the birth of Christ it was said Luke 1.35 The Holy Gholst shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall over shadow thee therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God The Holy Ghost was the dispenser of this mystery who formed the body of the word incarnate and gave him life now thus we are conformed to the image of his Son 'T is the Holy Ghost that begets us unto God and maketh us new creatures we owe our birth to him that birth whereby we become the children of God 2. Christ being formed in the virgins womb by the Holy Ghost devoteth himself to God for he saith Heb. 10.7 A body hast thou prepared me for lo I come to do thy will 1 Cor. 3. last Christ is God's he came into the world as God's Such a resignation there must be of our selves to God that we may do his will whatever it costs us and suffer whatever he imposeth upon us 1 Cor. 8.5 They first gave themselves to the Lord and to us by the will of God 3. When we are dedicated to God the Holy Ghost is the same to Christians that he was to Christ a guide and comforter he that giveth life giveth conduct and motion you find Christ still guided by the spirit If he retire into the deserts Matth. 4.1 Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness when he went back again Luke 4.14 Jesus returned by the power of the Spirit into Galilee So Christians are still guided by the Spirit led into and out of conflicts Rom. 8.14 So a Comforter John 1.32 Vpon him shalt thou see the Spirit descending and remaining on him so 1 John 3.24 4. There is a conformity of life necessary that we be such to God and man as Christ was to God seeking his glory I seek not mine own glory John 8.50 pleasing God verse 29. obeying his will John 6.38 Delighting in converse with him for Christ spent much time in prayer was subject to his natural Parents Luke 2.51 Subject to rulers Matth. 17.27 Good to all Acts 10.38 Went about doing good Humble to inferiors John 13.3 4. 5. Eye your pattern much Heb. 12.2 Christ told the Jews John 8.12 I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness his doctrine his example You must often examine what proportion