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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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how chearful in our spirits how should we welcome death how should we long til these Tabernacles of dust were crumbled to nothing when affliction comes how should I rejoyce in that I believe that all shall work for good because I love God with what a quiet spirit should I passe through the great Wildernesse of this World The devil knows if he can but beat you from this sort he will quickly beat you out of all other sorts Let the Word of God come to you with much assurance 1 Thes 1.4 5. With the full assurance of understanding Colossians 2.3 you must not understand there he speaks in reference to their persons to assure them they were the children of God but that their faith had a good foundation in it self that this was from God the truth of a good assurance in judgement Take this further advice If you would keep up your faith be true to your faith be sure you live well you will alwayes finde men make shipwrack of a good conscience and of faith together 1 Tim. 6.10 21. 2 Tim. 3.8 1 Tim. 1.19 Remember the Apostles advice Rom. 12.2 Be not conformed to this world but be renewed in your minds that you may prove what is the good and acceptable Will of God Never fear it while thy mind is but willing to be rul'd by God while thy soul is teachable and tractable this will give thee evidence this book is from God except melancholy overcome thee which leads men to be Scepticks except in that case which is the proper effect of a mans body and must be cured by physick but let a man have a mind to live well and to be rul'd by the Word the Bible is the best thing in the World to such a one I might have spoken to a case of conscience concerning the assent of Christians to the Word of God that it is not equal in all nor equally in the same person alwayes and that a man may really believe that in the general of his life which at some particular times he may doubt of and a man may not be fully satisfied in the truth of the Scriptures yet that man may really live under the power of it To conclude all with this since we have this reason to believe the Scripture is Gods Word then never wonder that you find Ministers Parents Masters to presse real piety upon you and see what great reason you have to entertain it Alas it may be you wonder we Preach and presse Religion we are verily perswaded if you do nor love this Religion you will be intolerably miserable and we have so much compassion for you that since we know this to be Gods Word better to be burned in the hottest fire than to lie in those torments We know since God hath said it there is no comfort too great to them that comply with it no judgement too terrible to those that will oppose it therefore you cannot wonder if we do from day to day presse it upon you Consider if it be Gods Word then the threatenings are true and the Promises are true and you shall either have the promises or the threatenings within a while God knows which of us shall be next for 't is but a little while before death and judgement come then either Come ye blessed or Go ye cursed As a man hath wrought so he shall have for he will render to every one according to what he hath done in the flesh therefore knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade you we know this is of Divine stamp and Authority I conclude all with the 20. of the Acts 32. c. And now Brethren I commend you to God and to the Word of his grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified MANS CREATION IN AN HOLY BUT MVTABLE STATE Eccles 7.29 Lo this only have I found that God hath made man upright but they have sought out many inventions IN these words you have the result of a serious inquiry into the state of mankind In the verse immediately foregoing the Preacher speaks his own experience touching each sexe distributively how rare it was to meet with a wise and good man how much rarer with a prudent and vertuous woman so he must be understood though these qualities are not exprest then in the Text gives this verdict touching both collectively tending to acquit their Maker of their universal depravation and convict them Lo this only have I found c. The words contain two Propositions The first touching mans perfection by his creation God made c. The second touching his defection by sinne but they have sought c. Together with a solemn Preface introducing both and recommending them as well-weighed truths Lo this only have I found c. q. d. I do not now speak at randome and by guesse no but I solemnly pronounce it as that which I have found out by serious study and diligent exploration That God made man upright c. The Termes are not obscure and are fitly rendered I find no considerable variety of readings and cannot needlessely spend time about words Only in short By man you must understand man collectively so as to comprehend the whole species Making him upright you must understand so as to refer making not to the adjunct only supposing the subject pre-existent but to both subject and adjunct together and so 't is mans concreate and original righteousnesse that is here meant By inventions understand as the antithesis doth direct such as are alien from this rectitude Nor is it altogether improbable that in this expression some reference may be had to that curious desire of knowing much that tempted Adam and Eve into the first transgression Many inventions seems to be spoken in opposition to that simplicity and singlenesse of heart which this original rectitude did include truth is but one falshood manifold God made man upright 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. simple plain-hearted free from all tortuous windings and involutions so the word rendred upright in the Text doth signifie and Jeshurun derived therefrom which God thought a fit name for his people Israel the seed of plain-hearted Jacob to be known by answerably whereto Nathanael is said to be a true Israelite in whom was no guile John 1.47 Such man was at first now in the room of this simplicity you find a multiplicity he was of one constant uniform frame and tenour of Spirit held one straight direct and even course now he 's become full of inventions grown vafrous multiform as to the frame of his spirit uncertain intricate perplexed in all his wayes Sought out this notes the voluntarinesse and perfect spontaneity of his defecti n 't was his own doing God made him upright he hath sought out means to deform and undo himself The words thus opened afford us two great Gospel-truths Doctrine 1 1. That God endued the nature of man
Gods part upon supposition of his institution 1. His Justice having received a valuable price for Salvation and this price being made the sinners own in the way of Gods own appointment so that believing sinners may humbly plead with God as a righteous Judge for their Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 3.26 Gods justice being not only secured but obliged in a sense by Faith 2. His faithfulness having in his Word promised Salvation to Faith as hath been shown Secondly On Faiths part the reason why God hath conjoyned certain Salvation with it is because it giveth most glory to God of any thing Rom. 4.20 1 Sam. 2.30 therefore God entailes glory on it peculiarly it honoureth God and God will honour them that have it He that believeth sets to his seal that God is true John 3.33 and every way justifieth and advanceth him Properties and notes of Trial convertible with true Faith 5. Properties and reciprocal where Faith is there is this and that where this and that are there is Faith where Faith is not there these are not c. and farther differencing it from other Faith 2 Cor. 13.5 which is a needful work for there is true and false feigned and unfeigned alive and dead Of these some indeed belong to the former Head of Effects and some of them seem not altogether unsuitable to be referred to this Head The First shall be a more general Note True and saving faith receiveth a whole Christ upon judgement and choice on Gods term●s Lord to rule as well as Jesus to save the object of Faith in the Text no separating what God hath joyned and to have a divided Christ not a whole Christ salvation but not self-denial c. True Faith is a considerate thing that which hath least depth Mat. 13 5. springs up most suddenly the soul sits down and weigheth and casteth up all accompts and compareth all things together misery by sin undonnesse in self termes of salvation self-denial a fundamental one taking up the Crosse following Christ universally sincere obedience and what the world lust or Satan can say to the contrary and saith CONTENT to Gods terms and here the bargain is made the soul trusts God contentedly for his part even priviledge and resolvedly sets about its own part even duty Hence true faith proceeding deliberately upon Gods termes is willing to be tryed by the Word declaring those terms which farther tryal according to the Word follows Secondly True and saving Faith is ush●r'd in by godly sorrow and humility in a good degree though they are farther compleated afterward upon the sense of Gods pardoning and accepting love Ezek. 16.63 Mark 1.15 Acts 20.21 Then shalt thou be ashamed c. Repent and believe Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ this is Gospel order The inconsistency between Faith and Pride Hab. 2.4 is evident in that opposition of the souls lifting up and living by Faith and the hinderance of the Jews believing John 5.44 The Centurions and womans Faith were attended with eminent humility Did not humility and godly sorrow accompany and bring in faith the Law could not be our School-master to bring us to Christ This shutteth out that easie merry proud faith that springs up without the dunging of humility or watering of sorrow according to God Thirdly True and saving Faith is abiding and perseverant and this upon supposition of temptations and assaults for otherwise a mock-faith may have a continuance and men dye in a pleasing dream of ungrounded presumptuous confidence Now it must be such or cannot be saving for as it is said He that believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 Mat. 24.13 so he that endureth to the end shall be saved They that have true Faith have the seed of God abiding in them the prayer of Christ for them are kept by the power of God for he that hath begun a good work will finish it his gifts being without repentance Believing and sealing for security are conjoyned Eph. 1.13 The true believer is the wise man that built on the Rock Mat. 7.24 25. his house therefore stood the good ground that hath de●th of earth Mat. 13. Heb. 10.38 39. that what springs may not wither The just shall live by his faith continue therein and so believe to the saving his soul being rooted and established therein through Christ Col. 2.7 See more of this before under the efficient cause principal and instrumental Fourthly True and saving Faith is growing though this growth be not alway discernable or alike That prayer for encrease of Faith flowed from the very nature of Faith Luk. 17.5 it is the good fight which must be carryed on to a compleat conquest running a race 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 Prov. 4.18 speaking progresse to the finishing our course for the way of the just is as light that shineth more and more to a perfect day Whatever hath life hath growth till it reach a state of consistency 1 John 5.13 Saint John wrote to those that did believe that they might believe Vt credatis credere pergatis which belongs to the last Head fide crescatis Beza in loc i. e. grow in faith according to the general Apostolical precept of growing in all grace The same Author accounts this the most plain and natural interpretation of that of Paul from Faith to Faith Fide Rom. 1.17 quae quotidiè incrementum accipiat confirming it by that of Clement of Alexandria The Apostle speaks not of a double Faith but of one and that receiving growth and perfecting The Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 furtherance of faith Col. 2.7 Phil. 1.25 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 establishing and abounding in the Faith speak encrease and growth in root and branches more fixed habit more frequent acts They therefore that have believed ever since they were born and alway alike never believed at all truly Fifthly True and saving Faith is Purging Act 1 Rom 8.1 4 purifying their hearts by Faith Believing and walking not after the flesh are joyned where there is Faith and much more assurance of Faith there will be heart and body cleansed and washed Heb. 10.22 23 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Pet. 1.4 1 John 3.3 pollutions of flesh and spirit taken away by faith receiving the promise of the undefiled inheritance the believer will purifie himself as he is pure in whom he trusteth and hopeth Living flesh will purge out the Sanies and corruption in it a living Fountain the mud that 's stirred up so living faith And indeeed hereby it is permanent for purity preserveth pure Faith cannot be kept but in a good even a cleane conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Sixthly True and saving faith hath other graces accompanying it in a good measure with a proportionable encrease strength and activity I know some are more eminent for this others for that grace as Moses for meekness Job patience Abraham
back to perdition in such God hath no pleasure Heb 10.38 2 Pet 2.21 It had been better for them never to have known c. This commonly ends in bitterest enmity to the Faith and true professors of it 3. All sins laying waste the Conscience are inconsistent with faith because Faith and a good conscience are inseparable companions 2 Tim 3.9 Contrarily By way of Contrariety there may be considered these things possibly some also under the former head in part as Opposite to true Faith First Flesh and blood these cannot enter into the kingdom of G d and oppose faith that would bring thither I name this first because it is the greatest enemy and gives advantage to all others and then indeed are we tempted to unbelief or any thing else when we ●re drawn aside of our own hearts By Flesh and blood is meant Sense 2 Cor 5.7 living by sence is the great hinderer and supplanter of Faith Also Carnal reason judging every thing by its own unsuitable apprehensions and so misrepresenting the things of God to it the Gospel is foolishness though it is the wisdom and power of God to them that believe This taketh notice of the meanness of the faithful in the world and stumbleth at it c. Abraham left both these Servants below when he went up into the Mount to the Lord to exercise that eminent Faith of his Rom 4.18.19 c. Yea indeed Sense and Rea●on appeared eminently contrary to him in his entertaining the ●romise at first else had not the great strength of his Faith been manifested nor God glorifi d so much Secondly Satans assaults He not only at first keeps out Faith by blinding mens minds 2 Cor 4.4 but afterwards doth with Faith as the King of S ria charged his Captains to do with the King of Israel He knows what an enemy to h●s kingdom Faith is 1 King 22.31 by it we resist him and consequent●y put him to flight and quench his darts He knows if our Faith fail all fails Luke 22.31 Luke 8.12 and therefore he desires to winnow the soul and get the go●d seed out of our hearts lest we should believe and be saved Thirdly The World is a great adversary 1 John 5.4 Why else is Faith called the Victory over the world but that there is hostility between the world and it Fourthly I might add m ns own delays 1. Causing hardness in their hearts from themselves To day to day believe Heb 2.15 Joh 12.38 39 40. unless you would harden your hearts 2. Provoking God to seal men up under their injudicious unperswadable minds for their long opposition to the light and word of Faith Gen 6.3 Act 7.51 The Spirit of Faith will not alway strive when men still resist him I shall improve all that hath been spoken by some few Uses and conclude Vses The first sort of Uses shall be Corollaries for Information 1. Of the certain and u ●peakable misery of ●he unbeliever Information from the sure happiness of the believer Contrariorum contraria est consequentia Remember what hath been spoken before of the excellent Effects and Consequents o● Faith Union with Christ Justification Adoption c. and that great and everlasting fruit Salvation upon all which we may co●clude with the Apostle Gal 3.9 blessed are they w●ich be of F●ith or believe with faithful Abraham Luk 45. yea therefore blessed is he tha b●liev●th because there shall be a performan●e of ●ll tho e things which have been spoken of the Lord Now turn the Table invert the sense read all backward understand all contrary of the unb●liever No union with but separation and distance fr●m Christ No pardon of sin reconciliation and justification but guilt in fu l force the curse of the Law John 3● 36 and so he is left to stand or fall by himself and the wrath of God are upon him No Adoption of Sons but rejection as spurious and a Sonship to the Devil the god of this world c. No Salvation Mark 16.16 Joh. 3.18 but inevitable condemnation He that believeth not shall be condemned yea is condemned already because he believeth not in the name of the only begotten Son of God i. e. his present state is a state of certain damnableness as sure as if he were condemned already Not that there can be no believing afterward and recovery thereby 1 Cor. 6.11 for who then should be saved for such were some yea all of them that are justified by faith in the name of the Lord Jesus as the Apostle speaks of other sinners He that believeth not maketh God a liar 1 Joh. 5.10 Joh. 3.36 but he shall find him exactly true to his cost in such words as these He that believeth not the Son shall not see life The unbelieving as well as more carnal sinners shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Rev. 21.8 which is the second death Heb. 3.12 Joh. 5.40 Act. 13.46 Matth. 13.58 Men by unbelief depart from the living God will not come for life and judge themselves unworthy of eternal life and bring a kind of impotency upon the Omnipotent as to the doing them any good No wonder then if Jesus wondered at their unbelief that held his hands from helping them Mark 6.5 6. Oh! how much better were it for them among us that believe not that they had never had offers of Salvation never heard the Gospel of the Grace of God! 2. It is no small matter to be saved since Faith is such a thing as before described and without it there is no Salvation Should Christ now come should he finde Faith on the earth Alas the small number of those that shall be saved there being so few Believers though so many Professors of Faith among Christians This is sadly manifest in the gross Ignorance of the most and suitable apprehensions in the Doctrine of Faith of very few In the Errors Heresies Apostasies of many even denying the Lord that bought them In the altogether contradictory life of most to that Faith they pretend to have which as well as Repentance should have fruits meet for it brought forth and accordingly it is known No wonder if they that take true Saving Faith to be no more than Assent a●d a professed owning the Doctrine of the Gospel a Confidence at all adventures of Gods love c. or some such thing think the way to heaven broad and wonder at any speaking of the paucity of those that shall be saved 3. Hence take notice of the Reasonableness of the Christian Religion 1. That God requireth no more but Believe Other things indeed are required but they naturally flow from faith are inseparably linked with faith and faith cannot be without them faith is the great work of God and command of the Gospel 2. That this is so suitable Without faith no salvation can be
only argument urged by John the Baptist and our Saviour Mat. 3.2 4 17. to enforce Repentance mercy apprehended animateth the miserable sinner to returne to God Israel mourned but made no returne untill Shecaniah cryed There is yet hope in Israel concerning this thing Ezra 10.2 The Assyrians put halters on their necks knowing that the Kings of Israel are merciful The Law shutting the door of hope may stir up grief and horrour but it staveth off Repentance sin seeming unpardonable sets the soule at a distance from God and sinks it in despaire whil'st the pardon proclaimed provoketh Rebells submission Nemo possit poenitentiam agere nisi qui speraverit indulgen iam no hope no help to repentance saith Saint Ambrose Repentance is argued from Gerhard meditat secund Exercitium poenitentiae ex dominica passione and effected by the death of Christ Mount Calvary is the proper Bochim the sufferings of a Saviour the sad comments upon sin the sighs and groanes of a Redeemer most rending to r●gardlesse hearts and the sweat and blood of the Lord most soaking and suppling to an Adamantine soul but faith only apprehendeth and applyeth a crucified Christ Repentance the souls Pump is drie and distills no water untill faith poure in the blood of Christ and water of Gospel-promises so that Faith must precede Repentance as the cause to the effect the mother before the daughter for it must qualifie the true Penitent It is a mystery beyond the reach of nature that a Son should coexist in time with the Father but neither reason nor faith can allow a priority of the daughter before the mother I well know many Divines assert the precedency of Repentance unto faith but to my judgment it is more than probable yea positively clear that in order of time Faith and Repentance are infused together into the soul in order of sense and mans feeling Repentance is indeed before faith but in Divine method and the order of nature Faith is before Repentance as the Fountaine is before the Stream But it is objected that the order of Scripture doth set Repentance before faith so in preaching Mark 1.15 Mat. 3.2 Luke 3.3 Acts 2.38 3.19 And Repentance is required as the qualification which must entitle to the promises remission of sinne is onely offered to the penitent so that Repentance is the reason of faith and ground on which we believe sin is pardoned In Answer to this Objection I shall propound unto your Observation three Rules which make a full and ready resolution to it Rule 1 1. Order of Scripture doth not alwayes conclude order of nature in 2 Pet. 1.10 Calling is mentioned before Election yet who will deny Election to be first in nature for whom God predestinated them he also called Rom. 8.30 Again in 1 Tim. 1.5 Acts 15.9 The pure heart and good conscience is mentioned before faith yet none can deny them to be the effects of faith which purifieth the heart for to the unbelieving nothing is pure but their very minde and conscience is defiled Tit. 1.15 Rule 2 2. Humane sense is in many things the Dictator of Scripture order The Holy Ghost speaketh of things as they are obvious to our sense and capacity rather than as they are in themselves and their own order Hence it is that the promises of peace pardon and the like priviledges are propounded unto Repentance as a qualification obvious to our sense and evidencing our faith Faith and Election must be known à posteriori by their effects Repentance and Vocation and therefore are mentioned after them For though we Believe before we Repent we Repent before we know that we do Believe Rule 3 3. Misappreh●nsion of the nature of Grace doth easily lead into a mistake of the order of Grace Such as deem common illumination and conviction to be Repentance and Assurance of pardon joy and peace to be the formality of faith may very well place Repentance before Faith but such as understand the acceptance of Christ in order to pardon to be true and saving faith and a ceasing from sin and serious application of our selves to piety to be the formality of Repentance will plainly see that faith uniting us to Christ and deriving to us the efficacy of his death and sufferings that we may be holy doth Precede and must needs be the cause of true Repentance Let me then dismisse this Rule with this Note or Observation Note Faith in its existence and essential acts but without its reflexion fruits and effects is the foundation and fountain of true Repentance Such therefore on the one hand as apprehend and assent unto the History of the Gospel and are sometimes affected with and afflicted for their sin but do not accept of Jesus Christ as tendred to be Lord and Saviour do fix their Engine too low to force the waters of Repentance into the soul yet this Divels faith may produce a Judas Repentance for an Hypocritical Repentance is the result of an Historical faith And on the other hand he that seeks assurance of his sin pardoned as an argument of Repentance maketh the effect both cause and effect and concludeth himself into a condition not needing Repentance whilst he pretendeth to enforce it but the true frame of a Gospel Penitent is by saving faith to see salvation through the satisfaction of Christ our Saviour extended to sinners himself not excluded and so closing with accepting of and appropriating to himself the general tenders of grace and terms of the Covenant to prostrate himself at the feet of mercy and pursue his pardon untill by acts of sincere Repentance he assure himself his aimed at happinesse is attained and shall with certainty be possessed and so he experienceth in himself and evidenceth unto all others that the believing sinner is the subject of Gospel Repentance and now I passe to the third Conclusion considerable in the nature of Repentance Conclusion 3 Sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are the procursive acts of true Repentance True Repentance as most Divines determine doth consist in two parts viz. Humiliation and Conversion the casting down the heart for sin 2 Cor. 12.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revel 9.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the casting off sin A Repenting for uncleannesse and sin with grief shame and anguish and Repenting from iniquity Acts 8.22 and from dead works Hebr. 6.1 This distinction or rather distribution of Repentance is not only dictated by the denominations of Repentance which in the Hebrew is called Nacham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An irking of the soul and Teshubba A t rning from iniquity so in the Greek Metamelia After-grief and Metanoia After-wit and in the Latine Paenitentia and Resipiscentia the one expressing the sense and sorrow of the soul the other the retrogradations and returns of it from sin but the Scripture also doth clearly suggest nay speak out these distinct parts of Repentance Humiliation and Conversion
Magistrates themselves under terrors for their vitious actions and those who are not subject to any humane Tribunal why do they with such fury reflect upon themselves for their crimes certainly it proceeds from hence that natural conscience dreads the supreme Judge seeing nothing is able to shelter them from his Tribunal nor restrain his power when he will take vengeance on them In vain doth the Atheist reply that these fears are the product of a common false opinion which is conveyed by education to wit that there is a God who is provoked by sin and that ignorance increases these terrors as little children fear bug-bears in the dark for 't is certain First That no Art or endeavour can totally free a sinner from these terrors whereas groundlesse fears are presently scattered by reason and this argues there is an inviolable principle in nature which respects a God We know there is nothing more disturbs the spirit than fear and every person is an enemy to what torments him hence the sinner labours to conquer conscience that he may freely indulge himself in sin but this is impossible for conscience is so essential that a soul cannot be a soul without it and so inseparable that death it self cannot divorce a man from it perire nec sine te nec tecum potest it can neither dye with the sinner nor without him 't is true the workings of it are unequal as the pulse doth not always beat alike but sometimes more violent and sometimes more remisse so this spiritual pulse is not always in equal motion sometimes it beats sometimes it intermits but returns again those scorners who run a course of sin without controule and seem to despise hell as a meer notion yet they are not free from inward gripes conscience arrests them in the Name of that God whom they deny although they are without faith they are not without fear desperate sinners ruffle it for a time and drench themselves in sensual pleasures to quench that scintilla animae that vital spark which shines and scorches at once but all in vain for it happens to them as to Malefactors who for a time drown the apprehension of their danger in a Sea of drink but when the fumes are evaporated and they seriously ponder their offences they tremble in the fearful expectation of the Axe or Gallows A sinner may conceal his fears from others and appear jolly and brave when conscience stings him with secret remorse as a Clock seems to be calme and still to the eye but 't is full of secret motions within under a merry countenance there may be a bleeding heart To conclude so far is a sinner from being able to quench these terrors that many times the more they are opposed the more powerful they grow thus many who for a time breathed nothing but defiances to conscience and committed sin with greedinesse yet conscience hath with such fury returned upon them that they have run from profanesse to superstition as fugitive slaves are forc't back to their Masters and serve in the vilest Drudgery fearing severe punishments 2. The best men who enjoy a sweet calmness and are not disquieted with the terrors of conscience they abhor that Doctrine which discards the fear of a Deity so that those who are most freed from these terrors believe them to be radicated in nature and grounded upon truth and those who esteem them vain are most furiously tormented with them in which respect the Divine goodnesse shines forth in the greatest lustre towards those who love and fear him and his justice against those who contemn it thus Caligula who was the boldest Atheist in the world yet when it thundred ran with trembling under his bed as if God from heaven had summoned him to judgement whereas Socrates who was the Heathens Martyr died with the same tranquility of spirit wherein he lived 3. 'T is worthy of our serious thoughts that these terrors of conscience are most dreadful when the sinner approaches death the sense of guilt which before was smothered is then revived conscience like a sleeping Lyon awakes and destroys at once experience t●lls us many sinners who have lived in a sencelesse dye in a desperate manner and from whence doth this proceed but from the presages of a future judgement conscience anticipates the vengeance of God then the Alarums are encreast and the storme is more violent for the soul being sensible of its immortal nature extends its fears to Eternity and trembles at him who lives for ever and can punish for ever Argument 3. The consent of Nations agrees in the belief of a God although the Gentiles did grossely mistake the life and essence of the infinite Deity imagining him to be of some humane forme and weaknesse and in this respect were without God in the world yet they conspired in the acknowledgement of a Divinity the multiplicity of their false gods strengthens the Argument it being clear they would rather have any God then none and this belief cannot be an imposture because 't is First Universal What Nation so barbarous as not to worship a God certainly that which is common to all men hath a foundation in nature Secondly 't is perpetual falshoods are not long lived but the Character and Impression of God is indelibly sealed upon the spirits of men Thus we see the Universal Reason of the World to Determine there is a God 2. The Scripture proves there is a God to faith Psal 19. David speaking of the double manifestation of God by his Works and his Word appropriates a converting power to the Word this exceeds the discovery of God in the Creation in respect of its clearnesse and efficacy Psalme 138.2 Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name There are more apparent Characters of Gods Attributes and Perfections in the Scripture than in the Book of Nature in the Creation there is Vestigium the foot-print of God but in the Word there is Imago his Image and lively Representation As the Angels when they assumed visible bodies and appeared unto men yet by the brightnesse and Majesty of their appearance discovered themselves to be above an humane Original so the Scriptures although conveyed to us in ordinary language and words yet by their authority and sanctity evidence their Divine descent and that there is a holy and righteous God from whom they proceed There is a vehement Objection urged by Atheists in all Ages against a Divine Providence and consequently against Gods Being We may hear the Tragedian thus resenting it Sed cur idem Qui tanta regis sub quo vasti Pondera mundi librata suos Ducunt orbes hominum nimium Securus ades non sollicitus Prodesse bonis nocuisse malis Senec. Hippol. The afflicted state of innocency and goodnesse and the prosperous state of oppression and wickednesse Honest men suffer whilest the unrighteous and profane swim in the Streames of Prosperity hence they concluded fortuna certa aut incerta
losse of their lives Ye have not yet resisted unto blood saith the Apostle but how soon it may come to that ye know not Heb. 12.4 It 's your duty and will be your wisdome to prepare for such a black bloody day as that there are two things in the death of Christ that may animate and embolden us into a willingnesse to dye for him 1. A motive one good turne requires another 2. A pattern Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that ye should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2.21 Verbi verba sunt nobis Documenta verbi facta sunt nobis exempla August A place very much abused by the Socinians as though there were no more in the death of Christ then an example but one end of Christs death must not exclude another in the blood of Christ there 's both a price and a pattern he hath set us a Copy and upon his call we should be ready to write after him with our blood 6. By Faith and an hearty acceptance of Christ let us put in for a share and get an interest in the blood of Christ He hath it 's true dyed for sinners but without faith what is all this to you though ye be sinners Without blood Christ could not save you and without faith the blood of Christ cannot save you Rom. 3.25 Heb. 9.14 Acts 15.9 God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood the conscience is purged by his blood and the heart pur●fied by faith This precious blood of Christ doth no other way purifie than as applyed and sprinkled by faith Every man was under the Law to lay his hand on his burnt-offering of atonement Lev. 1.4 he must own it for his Sacrifice thou must stretch out an hand of faith and put it on the head of thy sin-offering owning Christ as thy Lord and Saviour for it is not Christs blood as barely shed upon the Crosse but as received into the heart that justifies and saves The Son of man is lifted up John 3.15 that whosoever believes on him should not perish Universal causes act not but by a particular application as Adams sin pollutes no child till applyed by the generation of the Parent The Sun though it enlightens the whole world helps no man to see till its light be received into the eye Suppose the blood of Christ were as extensive and universal a cause of salvation as any men pretend to and contend for it could produce no such effect till faith hath wrought a particular application a great gift enriches not the beggar in the rich mans hand but in his own having received it Use 3. Here 's abundant comfort to all them that have by faith applyed and interested themselves in Christ crucified here 's blood that will interpose between you and harmes Christs treading the Wine presse leads you into the Wine Celler though to him it was very painful to you it is very comfortable that which he felt as blood believers may taste as wine Never was there such a Cordial for drooping and disconsolate soules as that which came from Christs heart when his side was broacht and set running upon the Crosse Comfort in five particulars 1. Your enemies are foyled A Believer hath many enemies this blood of Christ hath either reconciled or disarmed them either made them friends or left them impotent enemies To give a short list of a few of them 1. The justice of God that 's satisfied out of Christ it hath a dreadful quarrel and implacable controversie and poor believers are many times afraid under their misapprehensions that exact and inexorable justice will either non-suit or give a verdict against them but they are more afraid than hurt this blood hath made justice their friend Being justified by faith Rom. 5.1 Rev. 4.3 we have peace with God and in Christ he now sits with a rain-bow about his Throne God once drowned the world in wrath but smelling a sweet savour of rest from Noahs sacrifice he purposed and promised never to do so any more and as a badge and token of his favour and the firmnesse of that Covenant of Peace he put his Rain-bow in the clouds If you can upon good grounds say that Christ is yours there 's a Rain-bow about Gods Throne his Bench of Judicature and condemnation is turned into a mercy-seat justice will set hand and Seale to your acquittance and be so farre from pleading against you that it turnes your Advocate Rom. 3.25 26. and Christ having shed his blood because God is just the believer must be justified 2. The Law is fulfilled To be under the Law is a state full of danger and terrour and Saints are many times afraid that it will be put in as a black bill of inditement against them but the blood of Christ hath scracht the curses out of the Rolle He hath Redeemed them from the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 Rom. 6.14 being made a Curs● for them they are not under the Law but under grace Not unde● the Law as to its invenomed curses inexorable severity and intolerable penalties The Law it self to every believer 1 Tim. 1.9 is as it were non-suited by the death of the Law-maker It is not made for a righteous man it was given to Adam when he was righteous and yet strongly obliges such as are righteous but it lies not against a righteous man so the word signifies as to his condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not laid as an Axe to the root of the tree Col. 2.15 3. Satan is subdued Christs bruised heele hath broken his head He spoyled principalities and powers and made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in his Crosse The whole Host of Hell with all their traine of Artillery was led Captive by him on the Crosse and tyed to the Chariot-wheels of this triumphant Conquerour When the door-post was sprinkled with blood the destroying Angel passed away the blood of Christ sprinkled on the conscience is a choice Antidote and preservative against this devouring Abaddon not but that he still may be a Tempter and a troubler but he shall never be a conquerour never a tormentor Christopher Haasse a Swedish Senator being at the point of death the Devil appeared by his bed side with pen ink and paper Come quoth he reckon up thy sins in order as thou hast committed them that I may carry them in a Catalogue to Gods Tribunal whether thou art going Well Satan saith he if it must be so let the Catalogue be under this head and Title The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head and away flew the Devil in a great rage ah sirs had we but the right art of pleading the blood of Christ it would make this roaring Lion more to tremble than the Lion doth at the cock-crowing 4. Sin is abolished and that is a far worse enemy than the Devil Many a
Saint is able and apt to say Were it not for sin I would not much care for Satan I could defie and bid him do his worst it is the Devil within that makes the Devil without so formidable Now plead but this blood and the guilt of sin is done away Either as 1. Imprinted on the person to condemnation 2. Or reflected by the conscience in accusation 1. Sin is done away by this blood as it binds over to wrath and punishment it 's a spiritual aqua fortis that eates off the souls prison-shakkles Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Sin may remain but it shall not condemn and whence believers have their discharges the Apostle there shews Ver. 3. Suscipiendo poenam non suscipiendo culpam culpam delevit poenam Aug. God sent his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh If the channel of Christs blood runs through thy soul thou hast shot the gulfe as to condemnation this Scripture brings thee in not guilty and that 's the verdict of a thousand Juryes 2. The blood of Christ abolishes sin as reflected by the conscience in a way of accusation as it raises tumults and turmoyls in the soul and Armes a man against himself It 's a Malignant and mischievous property of sin that it doth not only put the soul into hell but puts hell into the soul Conscience is to sin what the burning-glasse is to the sun-beame twists all together till it scorches smoaks burns and flames but Christs blood hath that in it which is abundantly sufficient to silence and stop the mouth of an angry accusing conscience it 's a soveraign balsome to cure that cancer in the breast a mollifying oyntment and cooling fomentation for those invenomed sin-rankled ulcers that fester and bleed inwardly The blood of sprinkling speaks better things than that of Abel Heb. 12.24 Abels blood was very clamorous in Cains conscience he carryed an hue and cry within himself conscience as a blood-hound hunted him at every turne and its continual cry and eccho in his ears was Vengeance upon the murderer but the blood of Jesus hath in it a pleasant and peaceable voice and hushes all unquiet and tumultuary janglings Applyed by faith it saith to the soules rowling billows that cast up mire and dirt what Christ once said to the raging Sea Peace be still and there is a great calm 5. And the last enemy whose enmity the blood of Christ hath slain is death Not that death is so destroyed to believers that they shall not dye but unstinged that it shall not wound in the vital parts or at once kill bodies and souls The Apostles triumphant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is very remarkable O death 1 Cor. 15.55 57 where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory thanks be to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ When a Bee hath fastned its sting in a mans flesh and thereby lost it it ever after they say turnes a drone death once fastned its sting in Christ and hath ever since to them that are in Christ been like a drone that can humme and affright but not sting and hurt them Death now drives a poor trade amongst them it may destroy the body and when it hath play'd that prank it hath done all its fears as a fierce Mastiffe whose teeth are broken out it can bark or rend and tear the tatter'd and thred-bare coate but it cannot bite to the bone How feeble an enemy is death since it travelled and took a walk to the top of Mount Calvary 2. A Believers enemies are not only foyled but through the blood of Christ his person is accepted Eph. 1.6 7. he hath made us accepted in the beloved he hath begraced us in Christ that is the proper importance of the phrase in whom we have Redemption through his blood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If thou art sprinkled with the blood of Christ God will know his own mark upon thee thy person is accepted and services cannot be unacceptable 3. If a believer here is comfort in that thou mayst be assured that Christ is willing to do any thing for thee He is ready in heaven upon all occasions to plead this price and sollicite thy further affaires shew but Christs blood and I dare warrant the golden Scepter held out The Apostles reasoning is unanswerable He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things Rom. 8.32 Saints need never feare putting Christ to too much trouble in any thing they have for him to do for the shedding of his blood and that he hath already done hath been more troublesome and chargeable than any thing they can set him about for the time to come thou needest not fear his denying any thing to thee who hath thus far denyed himself for thee 4. Here is comfort to a believer in that his grace shall be preserved such a soul is too costly a purchase for Christ to lose he paid so dear that he may be trusted to demand and challenge the making good of his bargain if true grace could be totally and finally lost it might be said Christ payes the price and the devil gets the prize Phil. 1.6 He that hath begun a good work in you will performe it untill the day of Jesus Christ And it lies Christ in hand so to do otherwise he will come off a loser Christ is the good Shepherd John 10.11 28 that giveth his life for the Sheep and gives unto them eternal life and they shall never perish Ah how little do they consult Christs honour or the comfort of souls that tell us Believers may perish in sin like rotten sheep in a ditch if so how then shall Christ save his stake that hath been thus much out of purse upon them 5. Here 's yet further comfort to a believer in that by the blood of Christ heaven is opened Heb. 10 19. and we have boldnesse to enter into the holyest by the blood of Jesus Man had no sooner sinned but God sent an Angel to stand Centinel and keep him from Paradise with a flaming sword the blood of Christ hath opened that passage at once blunting the sword and quenching the flame Christ gave up the Ghost at the ninth hour at three in the Afternoon the time of the evening Sacrifice and at the very instant the Veile of the Temple that parted the holy place and holy of holyes was rent asunder so that the Priest who was then Ministring in the holy place had on the sudden a fair and free prospect into the holyest of all which excellently typifies that the death of Christ hath removed and rent away all obstacles and obstructions that might interpose betwixt believers and the blessednesse of glory The Rivers lead to the Sea the
audaciousness to bid the Son of God fall down and worship him Mat. 4.9 10. Christ said Get thee behind me Satan for it is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve The Devils are bound to bow though they refuse 2. The Devil Rebels and wicked men do not bow to but blaspheme the Name of Christ and yet Jesus Christ hath and doth exercise Authority over them 1. In limiting them 2. In punishing them 1. In that he doth limit them The Devil could not take away either Jobs Cattle Job 1.11 12. Luke 8.32 Servants Children or Health but as far as Gods permissive Providence was pleased to lengthen the chain and though God doth lengthen the chain yet he alwayes keeps the chain in his hand The Devils could not go into the Herd of Swine till they had first ask't leave of Jesus Christ And so persecuters they are limited too the Devil and his instruments they are limited The Devil shall cast some of you into Prison that you may be tried and you shall have tribulation ten dayes Thus the Devil and his instruments are bounded 1. As to the Persons whom they shall persecute the Devil shall cast some of you not all into Prison 2. As to the kind of trouble the Devil shall cast you into Prison not into hell Rev. 2.10 3. As to the time you shall have tribulation ten dayes and not for ever 2. God will punish them and so they shall be Subject to Christ 1. In this life for though the patience of God be long-suffering yet it is not alwayes suffering 2 Pet. 2.8 Luke 18.7 Psal 110.11 Luke 19.27 and though he do beare long yet he will avenge his elect 2. At the last day The unjust are reserved to be punished at the day of judgement then will Christ put all his enemies under his feet and then Christ will say As for those mine enemies that will not that I should reign over them bring them forth and slay them before my face the total final subject on of the Devil and Wicked men of all the enemies of Christ unto him shall be at the last day then shall all knees bow before God Thus the Lord speaks in the Prophet I have sworne by my self the word is gone out of my mouth in righteousness Isa 45.23 and shall not return that unto me every knee shall bow every tongue shall sweare To this Scripture it is that the Apostle alludes in this place and if you ask when shall this vniversal subjection be unto Christ the Apostle will answer you in his Epistle to the Romanes To this end Christ both died and rose and revived Rom. 14.9 10 11 that he might be Lord both of dead and living but why dost thou judge thy Brother or why dost thou set at naught thy Brother we shall all stand before the judgement Seat of Christ for it is written As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confess to God And so I am come to the third and last particular of Christs Exaltation viz. Every tongue shall confesse that Jesus is the Lord. In the handling of which I shall resolve these Questions Quest 1. What are we to understand by every tongue Answ 1. Some understand every tongue for every Nation and then the meaning is Omnis linguae pro quavis Gente Dan. 3.4 Rev. 5.9 Psal 67.7 Psal 2.8 Psal 72.9 Rom. 10.18 that the Name of Christ shall be acknowledged and worshipped by every Nation and so in Scripture Phrase Tongue and Language and Nation they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words of the same notion and import And this is true that before the end of the world all the ends of the earth shall worship the Name of Christ. The Heathen shall be his inheritance and the uttermost ends of the earth his possession and they that dwell in the Wildernesse shall bow before him and the Sunne-light of the Gospel shall shine all the world over And it is very remarkable how God did repair the confusion of tongues by the gift of tongues Gen. 11.7 compared with Acts 2.11 Rom. 10.10 2. But I rather conceive that by every tongue is meant every person as by every knee every person for with the heart man believeth unto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation Quest 2. What are we to understand here that Jesus is the Lord 1 Cor. 2.8 Answ Jesus Christ is the Lord the Lord of glory in several respects 1 Cor. 8 6. Rom. 11.36 1. He is the Lord as he is Creatour of heaven and earth to us there is but one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him For of him and through him and to him are all things Heb. 1.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 1.2 2 Cor. 4.5 2. As he was the Son of God so he is the Lord and so he hath obtained by inheritance this most excellent Name to be Lord and Christ thus Christ is Lord of all jure haereditario as he was the Heire of all things Jesus Christ is the Lord so speaks the Apostle We preach Christ Jesus the Lord. 1. Christ is a Lord to command us he hath that Authority that he hath an absolute Soveraignty over our consciences men are but Servants of our Faith Stat pro rationibus universis Deus vult but Christ is the Lord of our Faith and Consciences It is enough that Christ hath said it that he hath commanded it Heb. 7.25 2. Christ is a Lord to save us and he hath power and ability to save to the uttermost all those that come unto God through him And thus as he hath the Authority of a Lord to command us we should willingly obey him and as he hath the power and ability of a Lord to save us we should chearfully trust in his Name To confess that Jesus is the Lord is so to believe on him as to say Mat. 8.26 Acts 9 6. Lord save us or else we perish and so to obey him as to say Lord what wouldst thou have me to do Now as every knee must bow to the Dominion of Christ so every tongue must confess that Jesus is the Lord. 1. The Devils and Wicked men shall be forced at the last to acknowledge the power of Christ whose Authority they have alwayes rebell'd against And as Pharaoh and the Egyptians cryed out Exod. 14.15 L●t us flee for the Lord fighteth against us So shall the stoutest-hearted sinner one day flee from the presence of Christ Rev. 6.16 and call to the Mountains to shelter them from the wrath of the Lamb. And all the implacable enemies of Christ they shall be forced through spite and rage to gnaw their tongues and gnash their teeth and say as that Cursed Apostate Julian Thou hast overcome me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O Galilean 2. All the Saints
any other grace as love that then would have been currant and have justified us as faith doth now Fifthly God justifieth in a proper sense two ways first 5. How God As a Legislator secondly as a Judge 1. As a Legislator enacting by his Soveraign Authority that sweet and gracious Law of the New Covenant by vertue of whose tenor every sinner that believes is justified from the guilt of sin from which he could not be justified by the Law of Moses Acts 13.38 9. This Law of justification by faith is Gods own act and deed the great Instrumentum pacis between God and man he hath proclaimed his Letters Patents the King of heaven and earth hath in the Gospel our Magna Charta given his Warrant under his own broad Seal that he that believeth shall not be condemned 2. As a Judge the God of heaven may in three respects be said to justifie a Believer First Forthwith upon his believing God owneth him secretly within himself as a person justified God esteems and approves of him as in that state unto which he hath by believing a title good in Law an indefeasible right a justified estate emergeth actually as soon as faith the Law-title thereunto emergeth as a necessary resultance by vertue of the tenor of the Gospel-Law which only justified vertually potentially and conditionally before every Believer in general but now actually absolutely and in particular it justifieth him as a Believer when he is so Secondly At the moment of dissolution God justifieth as the Judge of all the earth passing a private sentence and award unto everlasting life upon every believing soul Thirdly But eminently at the last day when the Ancient of days shall take the Throne and in open Court before the whole Creation by publick sentence for ever acquit and discharge Believers at that great and last Assizes 6. How Works Sixthly Shall I need to adde that Works are said to justifie us Jam. 2.4 because they justifie our faith or demonstrate before God and man and to our own consciences that our faith is not a dead and barren but a true and living one by its fruitfulness in well-doing 7. How the Spirit Seventhly But I must not forget lastly that the Spirit of God is said to justifie us 1 Cor. 6.11 and that two ways first directly by working faith in the heart which is one of the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Now Causa causae est etiam causa causati the Spirit justifieth as it is the Author of the justifying grace Secondly reflexively The Divine Spirit clears up justification to a Believers conscience by discovering the truth of faith by working assurance and by sealing a Believer to the day of Redemption The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God and if children then heirs c. Rom. 8.16 17. Thus I have at length done with my first Task the opening of the Point which finds it self summed up in this definition Justification is a judicial act of God as Law-giver and Judge of the world gracioussly discharging a Believer for the sake of Christs satisfaction from the condemnation of the Law of Works by the tenor of the Gospel-Law or New Covenant which requireth of accepte h from imputeth unto sinners faith in Christ Jesus as their righteousnesse see Rom. 3.25 6 7 8. Rom. 4.5 Phil. 3.9 To improve it now which was my other task by way of refutation I infer against the Antimonians first Vse Refut That justification is not from eternity 1. Because a person must be charged with guilt before he is justified or discharged but nothing can be before eternity if discharg'd from eternity when was he charged what from eternity too then he will be at once eternally charged with and discharged from guilt which if any excuse from a contradiction they are much wiser than I am 2. My Text convinceth them actual faith is not from eternity therefore not justification before God for if faith justifie us not before God but only at the bar of conscience then there will be no justification at Gods bar at all once mention'd in Scripture for works do it at mans bar what is it I wonder that justifieth from eternity Not Gods decree to justifie for then his decree to glorifie would make glorification from eternity too but Decreta Dei nihil ponunt actu in subjecto Gods decrees are immanent acts and passe nothing actually upon the creature 3. A justified person was actually under condemnation whil'st he was an unbeliever Rom. 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already but he could not be at all condemned if justified from eternity 4. Saint Paul expressely affirms that the believing Corinthians were not once but now were justified 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus c. Secondly I infer against them that they are dangerously mistaken in thinking that a Believer is righteous in the sight of God with the self-same active and passive righteousnesse wherewith Christ was righteous as though Believers suffered in Christ and obeyed in Christ and were as righteous in Gods esteem as Christ himself having his personal righteousnesse made personally theirs by imputa●ion This is their fundamental mistake and from hence tanquam ex equo Trojano issue out a throng of such false and corrupt deductions and consequences as these That God sees no sin in his children that affliction and death are not proper punishments of sin to Believers that all future sins are already actually forgiven as well as past and present that a Believer must not pray for the pardon of sinne but only for the manifestation of it that God loved Noah when drunk Lot when so and besides incestuous David when acting Adultery and Murther Peter when he was cursing and swearing and denying Christ with as high a love of complacency and delight as when co●versant in the most spiritual exercises of grace that all which God requires as a sinners duty in the Gospel is to believe that Christ dyed absolutely for him in particular that this is alone true Gospel faith and the doubting or questioning this the unbelief which the Gospel so much condemneth that to argue our justification from our sanctification and gather assurance of Gods love from our love and fear of him is a Legal principle that obedience to Gods Commandments is not properly a Believers debt but that all the obligation which lies upon him to holinesse is only the voluntary expression of his love and gratitude to God not as what is due but what is comely And lastly for I should be tyred to name all that Christ hath kept the Gospel-Covenant for us as well as satisfied the Law So that not only our Legal righteousnesse is without us in Christ our Surety but our Evangelical righteousnesse it self also Now to pluck up all these desperate consequences by
Faith c. yet in good measure must other graces accompany for this is an indispensable duty to add to Faith temperance 2 Pet. 1.5 patience brotherly kindnesse Faith with many other graces are called in the singular number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fruit of the Spirit because connex and inseparable Gal. 5.22 Besides that the growth and strength and activity of other graces have dependance upon it both as it pleads with Christ in prayer for all and pleads with the soul to act stir up and abound in all Abrahams faith had self-denial accompanying it there will be patience for he that believeth will not make hast See more tending to this under the fifth effect of faith Let not men speak of their faith then when other graces are no way suitable Seventhly True and saving Faith is working and fruitful though love and good works are not the form of it as the Papists plead yet it alway hath love accompanying Gal. 5.6 James 2.17 Eph. 1.15 and worketh by love and without works is dead Per opera consummatur fides non ut formatum per suam formam sed ut forma per suas operationes actus primus per actum secundum Alting Faith alone justifieth but Faith which justifieth is not alone Bona opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum They that are in Christ Jesus by Faith are described by walking in Christ and according to the Spirit Quomodo accipitur fide quomodo ambulatur in eo ad praescriptum voluntatis ejus vitam instituendo ex ejus Spiritu vivendo Zanch. in Col. 2.6 Faith is obediential Rom. 16.26 and cannot but be so for he that believeth really his labour shall not be in vain in the Lord cannot in reason and holy ingenuity 1 Cor. 15.58 but think it meet he be fruitful and abounding alway in the work of the Lord Alii cogitant pii credunt Aug. for others they do but think not know the greatness and certainty of the reward Yea indeed that assurance I before spake of proceeds from Faith through obedience By this we know that we know him know put for believe Zanch. in loc as Isa 53.11 if we keep his Commandments I shall therefore according to St. Pauls command to Titus affirm constantly this as a faithful saying Tit. 3.8 That they which have believed must be careful to maintain good works Eighthly True and saving Faith trusting God for the greater will trust him for lesser mercies To them that through Christ do believe in God 1 Pet. 1.21 this will seem forcible arguing and a necessary inference He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up I believe for me Rom 8.32 how will he not with him give me also all things freely God hath made all sorts of promises to true Faith and accordingly many of the Servants of God have expressed confidence in God when things have gone worst with them they would not be afraid what man can do unto them nor of evil tidings Psal 11.7 their hearts were fixed trusting in the Lord The just's living by Faith is true in this sence also Gal. 2.20 and that of Pauls living the life in the flesh by the Faith of the Son of God hath much in it Though I know natural timorousness and living too much the life of sense may occasion some worldly fears in a Believer as boldness of temper carelesness false confidence may much bear up an unbeliever Yet in great measure their pretences to faith are questionable I might say their faith is but pretence who say they can trust God with their Souls but will not trust him with bodies and estates Ninthly 1 Pet. 2.7 Vers 8. Isa 53.2 Cant. 5.9 True and Saving Faith makes Christ very precious to them that believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but to the unperswadable he is a stone of stumbling without form or comeliness they ask the believer What is thy beloved more than another And no wonder for none but the believer hath a cleared eye to behold things that a●e spiritually discerned Tolle meum tolle Deum Psal 34.8 Psal 104.34 None but he hath that special interest which inhanceth the price and valuation None but he hath that experience by which it is tasted and seen that the Lord is good But sight propriety and experience will make him inestimably precious and the meditation of him sweet Faith that seeth his necessity seeth also his excellency and takes him not upon constraint but choyce Those things that are ●pposite to true Faith are of two sorts 6. Opposites First Such as speak the soul void of it and are simply inconsistent with it Secondly Such as actively war against it and repel it These I shall call Contrarily Opposite those Privatively Opposite though the terms may seem not fully suitable to all the particulars Some things are Privatively Opposite to true and Saving Faith Privatively as relating to the Vnderstanding others as to the Will others as to the Life First As to the Vnderstanding and Assent 1. Ignorance bilndness darkness of the inconsistency of which with Faith see before of the Word the Instrumental Cau●e This either is invincible Ignorance Act. 17.30 where means of cure are wanting Or Vincible which carelesness sloath or affectation causeth for there are some persons willingly and wilfully ignorant 2 Pet. 3.5 Joh. 3.19 and love darkness 2. Unperswadableness to assent to the truth of the Word and Promise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Impersuasibilitas Rom 11.30 31 When men are not satisfied in the grounds of believing and so assent not wherein yet somtimes there is a battery shaking the Assent and by parley bringing near a surrender Act. 26.28 an almost perswasion which yet is ineffectual 3. Error in Fundamentals especially those that concern Faith Christ the Promises Justification and salvation Corrupt minds are reprobate concerning the Faith 2 Tim. 3.8 Therefore doubtful Disputations Rom. 14.1 where on one side is error are dangerous to the weak Secondly As to the Will Affections and Consent Heb. 2.3 1. Unbelief not accepting the good things promised through ignorance or careless neglect of great salvation 2. Disbelief when men through dissatisfaction with the reasons to believe or through pride stubbornn●ss uncompliance of spirit Joh 5 39 40 44. WILL not come to Christ for life will not submit to the righteousness of God Thirdly As relating to Life practice and profession 1. Heresie is Privatively Opposite Such as joyn obstinacy and promulgation to their errors 2 Tim 2.16 whose words eat like a gangrene Tit 3.10 are to be rejected as men void of and enemies to the Faith 2. Apostasie from the truth and profession of the Gospel called denial viz. after knowing and owning These never were of the Faith 1 Joh 2.19 else would they not have gone from it This is a dangerous thing drawing
to be tryed for his life he would bethink himself of all the Arguments he could to plead in his own defence we are all shortly to be tryed for our souls while others are thinking how they may grow rich let us bethink our selves how we may abide the day of Christs coming The serious thoughts of judgement would be 1. A Curben-bit to sinne am I stealing the forbidden fruit and the Assizes so neare 2. A spur to holinesse * Nihil est quod magis proficiat ad vitam honestam c. Amb. 1 Pet. 3.10 But the day of the Lord will come as a Thief in the night seeing then all these things shall be dissolved what manner of Persons ought ye to be in all Holy Conversation 2. Branch 2. Branch Let us solemnly prepare our selves for this last and great Trial that is by setting up a judgement-seat in our own souls let us begin a private Sessions before the Assizes it is wisdome to bring our souls first to tryal Lam. 3.40 Let us search and try our wayes let us judge our selves according to the Rule of the Word and let conscience bring in the Verdict The Word of God gives several Characters of a man that shall be absolved at the day of judgement and is sure to go to Heaven Character 1 1. Character is humility Job 22.29 The Lord will save the humble person Now let conscience bring in the Verdict Christian art thou humble not only humbled but humble dost thou esteem others better than thy self Phil. 2.3 dost thou cover thy duties with the vail of Humility as Moses put a vail on his face when it shined if conscience brings in this Verdict thou art sure to be acquitted at the last day Character 2 2. Character love to the Saints 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren Love makes us like God 1 John 4.19 it is * Aug. radix omnium virtutum the root of all the graces Doth conscience witness this for you are you perfum'd with this sweet spice of love do you delight in those who have the Image of God do you reverence their graces do you bear with their infirmities do you love to see Christs picture in a Saint though hung in never so poor a frame this is a good sign that thou shalt pass for currant at the day of judgement Character 3 3. Character a penitential frame of heart Acts 11.18 Repentance unto life Repentance unravels sin and makes it not to be Jerem. 50.20 In those dayes the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for and there shall be none A great ball of Snow is melted and washed away with the rain great sinnes are washed away by holy tears Now can conscience bring in the evidence for thee dost thou tune the penitential string thou that hast sinn'd with Peter dost thou weep with Peter * Qui secutus es Petrum errantem sequere poenitentem Ambros and do thy tears drop from the eye of faith this is a blessed sign thou art judgement-proof and that when thy iniquities shall be sought for at the last day they shall not be found Character 4 4. Character Equity in our dealings Psa 24.3 4. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord mundus volis he that hath clean hands Injustice doth sully and defile the hand what saith conscience is thy hand clean it is a vain th●ng to hold the Bible in one hand and false weights in the other Beloved if conscience upon a Scripture-trial give in the verdict for us it is a blessed sign that we shall lift up our heads with boldnesse at the last day Conscience is Gods eccho in the soul the voice of conscience is the voice of God and if conscience upon an impartial trial doth acquit us God will acquit us 1 John 3.21 If our heart condemn us not 1 John 3.21 then have we confidence towards God If we are absolved in the lower Court of conscience we are sure to be absolved at the last day in the High Court of Justice It were a sweet thing for a Christian thus to bring himself to a Trial. Seneca tells us of a Romane who every day ca led himself to account quod malum sanasti what infirmity is healed wherein art thou grown better then he would lie down at night with these words O quam gratus sonnus O how sweet and refreshing is my sleep to me Use 4 Use 4. Here is a fountaine of Consolation opened to a believer and that in three Cases Consolation In case of 1. Discouraging fear 2. Weaknesse of grace 3. Censures of the world Case 1 First Here is comfort in case of discouraging fear Oh saith a believer I fear my grace is not armour of proof I fear the cause will go against me at the last day Indeed so it would if thou wert out of Christ but as in our Law-Courts the Client hath his Atturney or Advocate to plead for him so every believer by virtue of the interest hath Christ to plead his Cause for him 1 John 2.1 If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 1 John 2.1 What though Satan be the accuser if Christ be the Advocate Christ never lost any Cause he pleaded nay his very pleading alters the nature of the cause Christ will show the debt-book crossed with his own blood and it is no matter what is charged if all be discharged here 's a Believers Comfort his Judge will be his Advocate Case 2 Secondly Here is comfort in regard of weaknesse of grace a Christian seeing his grace so desective is ready to be discouraged but at the day of judgement if Christ finde but a dram of sincerity it shall be accepted if thine be true gold though it may be light Christ will put his merits into the Scales and make it passe currant he that hath no sinne of allowance shall have graines of allowance I may allude to that Amos 9.9 Ne lapillus in terram yet shall not the least grain fall to the earth He that hath but a grain of grace not the least grain shall fall to Hell Case 3 Thirdly it is comfort in case of Censures and slanders the Saints go here through strange reports 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 6.8 John Baptists Head in a Charger is a common dish now adayes 't is ordinary to bring in a Saint Beheaded of his good name but at the day of judgement Christ will unload his people of all their injuries he will vindicate them from all their calumnies Christ will be the Saints Compurgator he at that day will present his Church sine macula ruga * Eph. 5.27 not having spot or wrinkle OF HELL MATTH 25.41 Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand Depart from me ye Cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels IF any in the broad
then his * Cant. 2.14 v ice will be sweet when he shall call to them to come up to * Isa 25.6 this Mountain to a feast of fat things a feast of wine on the Lees of fat things full of ma●row of wines on the Lees well refined Laetissimè excipientis 3. 'T is the speech of one that bids us welcome to the feast too Come my friends I it is Come and welcome now Come poor heart thou hast been coming a long time I went my self to call thee I * 2 Chron. 36.15 sent my Messengers rising up early and sending them continually to invite thee to come in I sent my holy Spirit also like a Dove from heaven and it did light upon thee and gave thee an Olive branch of peace in the Wildernesse of thy fears when it allured thee and call'd thee from all thy wandrings then I sent my black rod for thee by that grim Serjeant death to strip thee of thy soul body of sin not to be touched but by the Angel of death then I sent my Angels to bring thy soul to the Courts of thy God and now by the sounding of the last Trumpet I have call'd for thy sleepy body to arise out of the * Psal 22.15 dust of death And now after all these Messengers thou art come I will not upbraid thee for thy delays but come come blessed soul with as many welcomes as there are Saints and Angels in glory I have * John 14.2 prepared a place for thee * Cant. 5.1 thou at come into my Garden Eat oh friends Drink yea drink abundantly oh beloved And so I have done with the explication of the several branches of the Text now let us see what fruit they bear that may be * Cant. 2.3 sweet to oru taste First 1. Infer Then if there be a Kingdome prepared before the foundation of the World for the blessed Saints and holy ones then what manner of persons are * 2 Pet. 3.11 we in all unholy Conversation and godlessnesse in this generation Men are as dead to Religion as if heaven was but a dream and as hot upon sin as if hell had no fire or was all vanished into smoak as atheistical and wretched as if neither heaven hell nor earth neither did feel a God or any memorandum's of his Providence Therefore a little to fortifie this notion which artificial wickednesse hath endeavoured to expel and expunge out of natural consciences I shall endeavour to confirme your faith by Scripture and reason The Socinians deny the revelation of eternal life and a state to come to have been propounded under the Old Testament and the reward being only earth their Law and obedience to be but carnal and low which is to level the Jews to the order of brutes that so the Gentiles under the Gospel might be advanced to the state of men and so by vertue of rhe new prize of immortal life proposed they should have a new command as their care to run which is all as true as that all the Tribes of Israel were converted into Isacar's * Gen. 49.4 strong asses couching down between two burdens but * Luke 7.35 wisdome is justified of her children and the Chaldee paraphrase renders those words * Gen. 4.7 Remittetur tibi in saeculo futuro if thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted by this glosse Amend thy works in this world and thou shalt be forgiven in the world to come and the ●argum says the very dispute betwixt Cain and Abel was concerning a world to come and those carnal Hereticks that * Jude ver 10.11 19. are sensual not having the spirit in what they know naturally as brute beasts corrupt themselves they are gone into the way of Cain But when God tells Abraham * Gen 15.1 I am thy exceeding great reward and Jacob cries out * Gen. 49.18 I have waited for thy salvation O Lord even when about to dye God stiling himse●f their God is not by our Saviours authority * Mat. 22.32 the God of the dead but of the living therefore God held out eternal life in the promises yea and in the very command too * Levit. 18.3 Gen. 3.12 do this and live the reward of that obeeience there enjoyned was no lesse than this everlasting life as appeareth by our Saviours interpretation when the Lawyer came to him * Luke 10.25.28 saying Master What shall I do to inherit eternal life and he said What is written in the Law how readest thou and he answered thou shalt love the Lord c. and Jesus said Thou hast answered right this do and thou shalt live that is thou shalt have that thou desiredst viz. inherit eternal life and the very reproach of the Sadduces and the distinction of their Sect from Pharisees and others argueth sufficiently the world to come was a very common notion among all the Jews and indeed the whole land of Canaan was but a comprehensive type and shadow of heaven and all their Religion but a * Hebr. 10.1 shadow of good things to come in the Kingdome of heaven as well as in the Kingdome of the Messiah * John 8.56 whose day they then saw and were glad and if the Gospel contain the promise of eternal life then they had it in Abrahams days * Gal. 3.8 for the Gospel was preached before to him yea and before to Adam * Gen 3.15 that the seed of the woman should break the S rpents head and the skins of the Sacrifices wherewith he was cloathed might suggest the putting on of that promised seed and his obedience who was * Isa 53.5 to be bruised for the iniquities of his people But now to awaken Atheistical souls that deny not only the revelation of this Kingdome of God under the old Testament but its reality and existence under old and new consider these foure things very briefly as the limits of this Exercise command 1. The whole Creation is a Book which always lyeth open wherein we may read that there is a God who made the goodly Structure and Fabrick of Heaven and Earth Who else could be able to * Job 26.7 hang the vast body of the Earth upon nothing or to * Ver. 10. girdle the Sea and all its mountainous Waves with a Rope of Sand * Psal 104.2 to spread the heavens as a Curtain and hang up those vast Vessels of light in the Skies there must be a being existent from and of himself and so being improduced is infinitely perfect and comprehendeth all those perfections dispersed through the whole Creation and infinitely more yet what he makes is like himself every creature bears his footsteps but * Psal 8 3. Gen. 1.27 the heavens are the works of his fingers and man bears the very image of God We see in the several stories and degrees of the Creation love and
raised 480. to be believed 581. reasons of it 586 587 588 589. Resurrection the effect of the New Covenant and union with Christ 388. Resurrection after what manner and with what difference 591. how effected p. 593. it is to be believed 595. a ground of comfort ib. 596 597 598 599. a ground of terror 560. how made happy to our selves 603 604. Revenge accompanieth repentance 545. S Sacraments in the Old Testament were various and many 122. Tree of life a Sacrament in Paradise ibid. Sacraments prove corruption of nature 153. Saints are good company 3. Salvation by Christ an Argument of original pravity 153. Salvation the end of Faith 473. Salvation difficult 482. Sanctification Covenant priviledge 14. Satisfaction of Christ explained 337 339 340 341. its Matter 408 Form 412. Terms 417. Satisfaction not made by man himself 407. but by Christ 408 409 410. and how done 402. Satisfaction of Christ the only plea to procure justification at Gods bar ib. Scripture the Word explained 86. Scripture proves a God 48. Scripture similitudes shew the union between Christ and Believers 384. Scripture only discovers mans natural pravity 151. Sea its course and confinement proved a God 35 36. Secret sins discovered by natural conscience 44. Sense of Scriptures power on the soul prove them Divine 98. Sense of sin and sorrow for it are precursive parts of true Repentance 492. Sense of a short life helps to Repentance 349. Self sinful to be studied 168. Self examination an help to Repentance 548. Severity of Gods justice 295. Sense its pain in hell 626. Constituted by Real presence of all evil Impression of justice Personal Feeling 627 628. Sentence of last day 614. Sight of things invisible an effect of Faith 471. Sin to be feared and fled from 643 644. Sin a defect nothing positive 112 113. it is most unreasonable p. 114. subjects man to an impotency of saving himself 115. justifieth God in punishing man 116 117. should rather be gotten out than inquired how it came into the world 113. Sins evil seen in Christ his death 294. Sin better discovered by the New than Old Covenant 250. Sin abolished by Christ his death 302 303. Sin is imputed inherent extensive diffusive 165. Sin may exist and prevaile in a true Saint 505. Sin mortified by the Spirit 389. Sinner elect and called the subjects of Faith 460. Shame was in Christs death 206. Sensible sinner subject of true repentance 489. Society in heaven what 658 659. Sons of God partakers of the whole essence of the Father is the same numerical nature 66. 67. Sonship to God is by Creation 435. Generation 435. Marriage 435. Adoption 435. Sonship by Adoption Honourable 437 440. Free 437 440. Permanent 437 440. Sonship to God marks of it p. 453 454. Sorrow and humility usher faith 476. Soul of Christ suffered 410. Souls in heaven subject to Jesus Christ 324 325. Spirit of God in man a signe of union with Christ 389. Spirit of God justifieth how 422. Spirits evil shall be chained when Saints go to heaven 652. Speed facilitates repentance 452. Sting of conscience a note of Deity 45. Sting in Christ his death 286 287. Study of Scriptures a duty 99 100. Suns scituation and motion proveth a God 33 34. Sullen repentance what 518. Systems of Religion profitable for Ministers and people 5. they instruct in the faith antidote error 7 12. Adorn the truth 16. help the understanding 17. the memory 18. affections 19. such are found in Scripture 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. to be studied by young Divines 21. T Temptation of Satan did not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Things in heaven subject to Christ what 323 324. Things on earth subject to Christ what they are 325. Things under the earth 326. Every Tongue what it means 329. Terms of Covenant between God the Father and his Son 225. Torments of Hell Exquisite Intolerable Easelesse Remediless Universal and various 629 630 631. Tryal of last day shall be 1. Universal 2. Formal 3. Impartial 4. Exact 5. Perspicuous 6. Supreme 610 611 612. its consequence 613. Trinity proved by Old Testament text 72. New Testament 74 75. Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance 50. U Union of two natures in Christ without confusion or transmutation 270. Union of believers and Christ necessary p. 377. what kind it is not 379. what kind it is 381 382. its causes 383. grounds 385. its marks 389 390 391 392. it is to be sought by sinners and improved by Saints 396 397 398 399 400. Unbelievers miserable 48. not Gods sons 447. Vocation its twofold estate 437. Vocation a Resurrection a new Creation 361. W Will of God signified in a rule of rectitude 107. Witness from heaven differs in six particulars from witnesse on earth 67 68. we have both to prove Christ the Son of God 66. Word of God declareth his wrath 181 182 183. World visible its being and parts 31 32. World an enemy to faith 481. to be slighted by ●aints 549. Works their use in point of Covenant 126 127. how they justifie 422. Wrath of God what and how aggravated 177 178 179 180. falleth on man here 184. fully at the day of judgement ibid. sheweth his justice and wisdome p. 193 194 195 196. it is to be avoided 197 198. Y Yoak of the Law borne by Jesus Christ 280 281. Z Zeal Negative p. 2. Affirmative p. 2. Zeal accompanieth true Repentance 544. FINIS