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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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So that they do not truly and savingly believe such things who are not seriously and constantly diligent in the spiritual life I cannot say that an assent separate from practice is no Faith but 't is no saving Faith 't is such a Faith as the Devils may have who know there is a God and a Christ and a World to come they believe it and fear it So may carnal men believe it so far as to stir up bondage and legal fears in their Hearts but while they improve it not and prepare not for their everlasting Estate their Faith is ineffectual to Salvation True Faith is tryed rather by Living than by Talking 1 John 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a Lyar and the truth is not in him There is a difference between an Untruth and a Lye now where the Actions do not correspond to the Profession that Profession is not only an Untruth but a Lye There is a denying in word as well as works Titus 1.16 Many Profess and believe as Christians but live as Atheists T is not notions but affections living rather than talking that will demonstrate true Faith Now the paucity of serious walkers sheweth the paucity of true Believers 2. In this Improvement there is an Appeal to Conscience for here is a question put to our own Hearts let Reason and Conscience speak After the serious consideration of the glory and terrour of Christs second coming what holiness and preparation is necessary on our part Surely the holiest upon Earth if they would put this question to their own hearts they would not be satisfied with that holiness which they had but would seek after more their desires would be strengthned their endeavours quickened their diligence doubled 'T is for want of self-communing that we are so dull and sluggish If men did oftner ask of themselves Reason would tell them that no slight thing will serve the turn But Truths are not improved First For want of a sound Belief Secondly For want of a serious Consideration Therefore in Scripture when any notable Truth is propounded and improved there are these Appeals to Conscience Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation and Rom. 8.31 What shall we say to these things 3. In this Appeal the qualification of our persons is first regarded and looked after For pray mark the question 't is not How holy ought our Conversations to be but What manner of persons The state of the person must be first regarded and then the course of our actions and conversations There are some persons at whose hands God will not accept a gift God had respect first to Abel and then to his Offering The state of the person is to be judged of according to the two great priviledges of Christianity Justification and Sanctification 1. That we be justified and reconciled to God through Christ that we daily renew friendship by the exercise of a godly sorrow for sin and a lively faith in Christ. 1 John 5.1 Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God And 1 John 2.1 Little Children these things I write unto you that ye sin not And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the Righteous Others are not accepted with God 2. That we be sanctified or renewed by the Spirit Tit. 3.5 and so fitted and framed by this general Holiness for the particular duties we are called to A Bowl must be made round before it can run round The Instrument must be framed and strung and put in tune before it can make any melody the Tree must first be made good before we can expect any good fruit from it Mat. 12.33 Actions are holy by their rule a person is holy by his principle Therefore till there be a principle of Grace wrought in our hearts we are not such manner of persons as God will accept Nor are we fitted to perform him any service or to meet him at his coming 4. When our Persons are in frame we must look to the course of our Actions or walking For the tree is known by its fruit and a man by the course of his actions We do but imagine we have holiness within unless we manifest it in our outward conversation and will strive to shew our selves mindful and respectful of Gods commands at every turn Psal. 119.1 Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord not only undefiled in the rule but undefiled in the way A sincere constant uniform obedience to Gods Law or a careful endeavour to approve our selves to God in all our wayes is the mark of true blessedness A man is judged by the tenour of his life not by one action 5. This holiness must be in all the parts of our Conversation In all holy conversation In our outward carriage and secret practice common affairs and religious duties In the duties of Gods immediate Worship and the duties of Relations towards Superiors Inferiors and Equals 1 Pet. 1.5 in every creek and turning of our lives there is no part of a Christian conversation but should savour of Holiness and Godliness His common and civil actions in adversity prosperity at home and abroad So Tit. 2.12 13. The grace of God which bringeth Salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Soberly as to our selves Righteously as to our Neighbour Godly as to God To rest in a partial practice of holiness will not become the expectation of Christs coming who will examine us upon every point of duty 6. Godliness is added to Holiness to increase the sense and signification There is some formal difference between these two Holiness signifieth the purity of our actions and Godliness the respect they have to God that He be eyed and aimed at in all that we do That all things should be done in and to the Lord or for his glory This should be the supream end of all our wayes and actions If we consider Grace as it provideth for the rectitude of our actions positively it is called Holiness If relatively with respect to our dedication to God 't is called Godliness Well then we should be such manner of persons not only in all holy conversation but Godliness We should stir up our selves to do more for God in the World and love him and fear him and honour him in all that we do 7. In both we should endeavour the highest pitch that possibly we can attain unto For 't is in the Original all holy conversations and godlinesses which doth not only imply the extention as we render it in all holy conversation and godliness but the intention and degree as well as all the parts and points of Godliness Those that have made most progress in Godliness should still aspire after higher degrees the more will our comfort be now and the more our glory
Dangers they may pluck Joint from Joint but they cannot pluck the Soul from Christ that is once really implanted into him 2. Observe That Eternal Life is Christ's Gift It is not the Merit of our Works but the Fruit of his Grace Rom. 6.23 The Wages of Sin is Death but the Gift of God is Eternal Life through Jesus Christ our Lord. It is good to observe how the expression is diversified Sin and Death are suited like Work and Wages but Eternal Life is a mere Donative not from the Merit of the Receiver but the Bounty of the Giver Works that need Pardon can never deserve Glory Grace in us runneth as Water in a muddy Channel the Child hath more of the Mother It is true there is a concurrence of Works but not by way of Causality but Order God will first justify then sanctify then glorify Justification is the Cause and Foundation of Eternal Life and Sanctification the Beginning and Introduction of it and we have both by Christ. The first is obtained by Christ's Blood the second wrought by his Spirit See Ephes. 2.8 9. By Grace ye are saved through Faith and that not of your selves it is the Gift of God Not of Works left any Man should boast The Instrument of Salvation is Faith which requireth a renouncing of Works and Faith also is of Grace The Papists to excuse the gross Conceit of Merit say our Works do not merit but as they come from the Grace of God and are washed with the Blood of Christ. But neither Salve will serve for this Sore 1. It is not enough to ascribe Grace to God all Justitiaries will do so the Pharisee said God I thank thee I am so and so You confound the Covenants when you think we may merit of God by his own Grace God maketh us Righteous by Grace and if by the exercise of it we deserve Life Adam under the Covenant of Works must then have been said to be saved by Grace because he could not persevere in the use of his Free Will unless he had received it from God 2. Nor as dyed in the Blood of Christ because Faith disclaimeth all Works as to the Act of Justification and there is no Merit if it be of Grace Learn then to admire Grace with Comfort and Hope Merit-Mongers are left to be confuted by Experience Surely Men that cry up Works seldom look into their own Consciences Let them use the same Plea in their Prayers they do in their Disputes Give me not Eternal Life till I deserve it Lord let me have no Mercy till I deserve it Or let them dispute thus when they come to dispute with their own Consciences in the Agonies of Death then Optimum est inniti Meritis Christi 3. Observe The Gifts that God is wont to give are not earthly Riches worldly Power transitory Honours but Eternal Life This was the great End for which he was ordained by the Father Many come to Christ as that Man Luke 12.13 Master speak to my Brother to divide the Inheritance with me He looked upon him as aliquem magnum one furnished with great Power fit to serve his Carnal Ends such fleshly Requests are not acceptable to our Mediator The Lord loveth to give Blessings suitable to his own Being He liveth for ever and he giveth Eternal Life to the Elect. Learn then how to frame your Requests Say I will not be satisfied with these things Remember me with the favour of thy People O visit me with thy Salvation that I may see the good of thy Chosen that I may rejoice in the gladness of thy Nation that I may glory with thine Inheritance Psal. 106.4 5. 4. Observe From the Expression Eternal Life Our Estate in Heaven is expressed by Life and Eternal Life This is a term frequently used to signify the glorified Estate Now it doth imply not only our bare subsistence for ever but also the Tranquillity and Happiness of that state 1. It is Life Heirs together of the Grace of Life 1 Pet. 3.7 Life is the most precious Possession and Heritage of the Creature there can be no Happiness without it All our Comforts begin and end with Life Life is better than Food Mat. 6.25 Is not the Life more than Meat and the Body than Raiment Poisons and Cordials are all one to a dead Man Creatures base if they have Life are better than those which are most excellent A living Dog is better than a dead Lion All Creatures desire to preserve Life All the Travail of Men under the Sun is for Life to prop up a Tabernacle that is always falling Job 2.7 Skin for Skin and all that a Man hath will he give for his Life All our labour and care is for it and when we have made provision for it it is taken from us It is called the Life of our Hands Isa. 57.10 We make hard shift to maintain it This Life is a poor thing it is no great matter to be Heir to it James 4.14 What is your Life it is even a Vapor that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away 2. It is Life Eternal not like the Earthly Life which is but as a Vapor a little warm Breath or warm Smoak tunn'd in and out by the Nostrils Our present Life is a Lamp that may be soon quenched it is in the Power of every Ru●●ian and Assassinate But this is Life Eternal In Heaven there is a fair Estate the Tenure is for Life but we need not take thought for Heirs We and our Happiness shall always live together The Blossoms of Paradise are for ever fresh and green therefore if we love Life why should we not love Heaven This is a Life that is never spent and we are never weary of living This Life is short yet we soon grow weary of it The shortest Life is long enough to be encumbred with a thousand Miseries If you live till old Age Age is a burden to it self The Days shall come in which they shall say we have no pleasure Eccles. 12.1 Life it self may become a burden but you will never wish for an end of Eternal Life that is a long date of days without misery and without weariness Eternity is every day more lovely Well might David say The loving Kindness of God is better than Life Men have cursed the Day of their Birth but never the Day of their New Birth Those that have once tasted the sweet and benefit of God's Life never grow weary of it 3. This Life is begun and carried on by degrees 1. The Foundation of it is laid in Regeneration Then do we begin to live when Christ beginneth to live in us and we may reckon from that day when in the Power of his Life we began to advance towards Heaven for then there was a Seed laid of a Life which cannot be destroyed The Life of Nature may be extinguished but not of Grace Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus
the spirit he is regenerate or a new Creature if his heart be set to seek serve please and glorifie God and doth prefer Christ before all the world Phil. 3.8 Then he hath not only a spirit contrary to the flesh and the world but a spirit prevailing above the flesh and the world 1 Cor. 2.12 for we have not received the spirit of the world but the spirit of God Then the Government of the Soul is in the hands of Grace 6. The prevalency of the principle is known not only by the bent and habit of our wills but our setled course of Life By our walk for 't is said in the Text They that walk not after the flesh but after the spirit A man is not known by an act or two but by the tenor of his life those that make corrupt inclination their ordinary guide and rule and the satisfaction thereof their common trade they are carnal and in the flesh and so cannot please God Rom. 8.5 but those whose Business it is to serve please and glorifie God and their end to enjoy him and by whom this is diligently and uniformly pursued they walk after the spirit because they live in the spirit they walk in the spirit Gal. 5.25 I come to apply this Discourse The first Use is Information 1. That Condemnation yet remaineth upon all those that are out of Christ for that promise there is no condemnation hath an exception limiting it to those that are in Christ. Carnal men think God will not deal so severely as to condemn them but there is no comfort hence to them the Scripture propoundeth Priviledges with their ●ecessary limitations and restrictions where sin remaineth in its power and strength the Law condemneth men Conscience convinceth them and God will condemn them also So the Brutes are more happy than they who follow their pleasure without remorse and offend not the Law of their Creation as they do and when they die death puts an end to their pains and pleasures at once but those that walk after their lusts are but Christians in name certainly they are not made partakers of the spirit of Christ for if they did live in the spirit they would walk in the spirit and none but such can escape Condemnation they that walk after the flesh are without God and without Christ but every one will shift this off from himself but the works of the flesh are manifest Gal. 5.19 Many men visibly declare that they walk not after the spirit by their Drunkenness Adultery Wrath Strife Malice Envy Others more closely live only to satisfie a fleshly mind now whether openly or closely if they cannot make out their living after the spirit they walk after the flesh 2. It informeth us That we can never have solid peace till justification and sanctification be joyned together Justification Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace wiih God Mat. 9.2 Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee so for sanctification 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversations in the world Still there are fears of damnation while sin is in us but when it is our honest purpose to please God and we strive against sin and do in a good measure overcome it our Consciences may be the better and the sooner setled The next Use is for Exhortation To quicken us to seek after this Priviledg Do you fear Damnation or do you not if not what grounds of Comfort have you What course have you taken to escape it If you do fear it why do you not flee from wrath to come Mat. 3.7 Why do you not run for refuge Heb. 6.18 You cannot be speedy and earnest enough in a matter of such concernment Again This calls to those that are in Christ to be sensible of their priviledg so that they may bless God for it Gratitude is the life and soul of our Religion and 't is a cold and dull thanksgiving only to give thanks for temporal Mercies it cometh more heartily from us when we bless God for spiritual mercies Psal. 103.1 2 3. Bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy name Bless the Lord O my soul and forget not all his benefits who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases It also calls to all such to be tender of their peace Every Sin doth not put you into a state of Condemnation again but every known wilful sin puts us to get a new extract of our pardon 1 John 2.1 2. My little children these things write I unto you that ye sin not and if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous who is the propitiation for our sins By sin your Title is made questionable and your claim made doubtful repenting and forsaking sin is necessary when we have been foiled by sin that we may have a new grant of a pardon SERMON II. ROM VIII 2 For the law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Iesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin and Death THAT these words are brought as a proof of the former assertion is clear from the causal particle For but whether they are a proof of the Priviledg or Qualification is usually disputed I think of both as when they are explained will appear Therefore I shall first open the w●●ds and then suit the proof to the foregoing assertion In opening the words observe 1. Here is Law opposed to Law 2. By the one we are freed from the other 1. There is a perfect opposition of the Law of the spirit of Life in Christ Jesus to the Law of Sin and Death here is Law against Law and the Spirit against Sin and Life against Death Now what are these two Laws I think they may be explained by that of the Apostle Rom. 3.27 Where is boasting then it is excluded by what law of works nay but by the law of faith What is there called the law of works and the law of faith is here called the law of the spirit of life and the law of sin and death in short by these two laws is meant the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace 1. The Covenant of Grace is called the Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus a Law it is for it hath all the requisites of a Law a precept and a sanction They err certainly That tell us the Gospel is no Law for if there were no Law there would be no Governour and no Government no Duty no Sin no Judgment no Punishment nor Reward but of that more by and by 2. A Law of the Spirit it is Not only because of its spiritual nature as it cometh nearer and closer to the Soul than the Law of outward and beggarly rudiments and therefore Christ called the Ordinances of the Gospel Spirit and Truth John 4.24 Spirit in opposition to the
his internal or external government and giveth us many blessings as the pledge of his love and above all the gift of the Holy Spirit whereby he sanctifieth us more thoroughly and worketh in us that which is pleasing in his sight This he giveth as the God of peace as reconciled to us in Christ Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus that great shepherd of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting Covenant make you perfect in every good work to do his will working in you that which is pleasing in his sight through Jesus Christ. 1 Thes. 5.23 And the very God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ faithful is he that calleth you who will do it but more fully at the last day when we enter into everlasting glory and the wicked are turned into hell with the Devil and his Angels Matth. 25.46 And these shall go into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternal then is the full and final execution a perfect freedom from all misery and a possession of all happiness 3. How it can stand with the wisdom justice and holiness of God to justifie a sinner 'T is a great crime to take the unrighteous to be righteous and to pronounce the wicked justified seemeth to be against the word of God Prov. 24.24 He that saith unto the wicked Thou art righteous him shall the people curse Nations shall abhor him Prov. 17.15 He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are an abomination unto the Lord now what is an abomination unto the Lord is surely contrary to his nature Exod. 34.7 He will by no means clear the guilty Answer There is no abating the force of these objections if there were not good ground for Gods absolution or sentence of justification I shall mention three Christs ransom the Covenant of grace and our faith or conversion to God First Christs ransom maketh it reconcilable with Gods justice and the honour of his law and government Job 33.24 Then he is gracious unto him and saith deliver him from going down into the pit I have found a ransom Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins There is full satisfaction given to Gods wronged justice 2. His Covenant reconcileth it with his wisdom God is not mistaken in judging us righteous when we are not for we are constituted righteous and then deemed and pronounced so made righteous as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.19 Our right is founded in Christs obedience but resulteth from the promise The constitution is by Covenant God doth first put us into a state of favour and reconciliation and then treateth and dealeth with us as such constituteth us righteous by his Covenant and then in his judgment accepteth us as righteous he will not acquit them in judgment whom his Covenant doth not first pardon 3. Effectual calling or the conversion of man reconcileth it with his holiness for a sinner as a sinner is not justified but a penitent believer 't is true 't is said God justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4.5 those that were once so but not those that continue so certainly he sanctifieth before he justifieth Acts 26.18 To open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith that is in me And in many other places No man is freed from the guilt of sin which rendreth us obnoxious to Gods wrath who is not freed from the filth of sin which tainteth our faculties for Christ is made to us both righteousness and sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 By losing Gods image we lost his favour and in the order wherein we lost it we recover it God regenerateth that he may pardon and justifie and restoreth first our holiness and then our happiness 't is not consistent with Gods holiness to give us pardon and let us alone in our sins A man would not put a Toad in his bosome But more fully to give you a prospect into this matter let us take notice of the several things which are mentioned in Scripture as belonging to our justification as for instance sometimes we are said to be justified by grace as Rom. 3.24 Being justified freely by his grace sometimes by the blood of Christ as Rom. 5.9 Being justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him sometimes by faith as Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ sometimes by works James 2.24 Ye see then how that by works a man is justified and not by faith only All these things concur to our justification and do not contradict but imply one another The first moving cause of all is grace the meritorious cause is Christs blood the means of applying or the condition on our part upon which we are capable at first of receiving so great a priviledge is faith and the means of continuing in our justified estate is by good works or new obedience I say our first actual pardon justification and right to life is given upon condition of our first faith and repentance but this estate is continued to us both by faith Rom. 1.17 and new obedience these fairly accord The grace of God will do nothing without the intervention of Christs merits and Christs merits doth not profit us 'till it be applyed by faith and sound believers will live in a course of new obedience Let us consider them severally 1. The first moving cause that inclined God to shew us mercy in our undone and lost estate was meerly his grace God might have left us obnoxious to the curse without any offer of peace as he did the fallen Angels but such was his grace that he thought of the way of our recovery how we might be redeemed renewed and justified surely all this is of grace Titus 3.5 6 7. 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 shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour that being justified by his grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life The rise of all is the love and good will of God 2. We are justified by the blood of Christ. Blood is not exclusive of the other parts of his obedience but doth imply them rather as the consummate act thereof Phil. 2.7 He became obedient unto death even the death of the cross 'T is by the merit of his sacrifice and obedience God took this course to exalt the glory of his justice as well as his grace and in the mystery of
sinners is never seen in all its glory or graciousness till then 2. The good which the faithful do is very imperfect and mixed with many weaknesses and infirmities it may endure the touchstone but it cannot endure the balance as we shall find then when our Righteous Judge shall compare our best actions with his Holy Law After we repented and believed and returned to the obedience of God the Lord knoweth our Righteousness is as filthy rags and our best robes need to be washed in the Blood of the Lamb. Sin is our nakedness and graces are our garments 3. Though it were never so perfect yet it merits nothing by its own intrinsick worth at Gods hands when we have done all we are but unprofitable Servants Luke 17.10 And paying a due debt deserveth no reward 't is a grace bestowed upon us that we can do any thing for God 2 Cor. 8.1 And services and sufferings bear no equality with the reward Rom. 8.18 And all is done by those that did once deserve Eternal Death Rom. 6.17 18. And were redeemed and recovered out of that misery by an infinite grace 1 Pet. 1.18 19. And already appointed Heirs of Eternal Life before we serve him Rom. 8.17 by his precedent elective love In short they that continually need to implore the mercy of God for the pardon of sin and cannot oblige God by any work of theirs must needs admire grace and the more grace is discovered to them and they discovered to themselves the more they will do so 2. The other end of the Judgment is to convince the Creature and that is best done by bringing our works whether good or evil into the Judgment If only the purposes of God were manifested the condemned would have a just exception and their cavils would be justified that it was long of God they were not saved Man is apt to charge God wrongfully Pro. 9.3 The foolishness of man perverteth his way and his heart freteth against the Lord. What ever exceptions men have against God now then all is clear their works are produced their own evil choice and course if the grace of the Redeemer were only produced those who are excluded from the benefit might seem to tax the proceeding as arbitrary and the whole business would seem to be a matter of Favour and not of Justice But when their destruction is of themselves there is no cause of complaint if only the good estate of men were considered there would not be such an open vindication of Gods Righteous dealing In any Judgment all things are rightly and convincingly carryed when the Judge doth proceed secundum regulas juris secundum allegata probata according to the Law as a Rule and according to the things alledged and proved as to the application of the rule to the parties Judged Now the producing of the things done in the Body whether good or evil suiteth with both these and so in the day of Judgment there is a right course taken for convincing the Creature 1. The Judge must keep close to the Law as his rule for the absolving or acquitting of the parties impleaded So it belongeth to Christ as a Judge to determine our case according to the Law which we are under We Christians are under a double Law of Nature and Grace the Law of Nature bindeth us to love and serve our Creator but because of mans Apostacy the Law of Grace findeth out a remedy of repentance or returning to our duty after the breach and Faith or sueing out the mercy of God in the name of Jesus Christ. Now those who will not accept of the Second Covenant remain under the bond of the first which exacteth perfect obedience from them and the Judge doth them no wrong if he Judge them according to their works But now those who have accepted the Second Covenant and devoted themselves to God taking sanctuary at the mercy of their Redeemer they indeed have a plea against the first Covenant they are sinners but they are repenting sinners and believing in Christ. Now their claim must be examined by the Judge whether this penitence and acceptance of grace be sincere and real whether true Penitents and sound believers that must be seen by our works and the Judge must examine whether our repentance and returning to our duty be verified by our after obedience and our thankful acceptance of Christ and doth ingage us to constancy and cheerfulness in that obedience A double accusation may be brought against man before the Tribunal of God That he is a sinner and so guilty of the breach of the first Covenant Or that he is no sound believer Having not fulfilled the Condition of the Second As to the first accusation we are justified by Faith as to the Second by works and so James and Paul are reconciled Rom. 3.24 A man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law Jam. 2.24 A man is justified by works and not by Faith only Every one of us may be considered as a man that liveth in the World Or as a sinner in the State of Nature or as a man called to the grace of God in Christ or as a Christian professing Faith in the Redeemer According to this double relation there is a double Judgment past upon us According to the Law so condemned already according to the Gospel so accepted in the Beloved To this double Judgment there answereth a double justification Of a sinner by vertue of the satisfaction of Christ apprehended by Faith without the works of the Law Of a believer or one in the state of grace so justified by works for here 't is not enquired whether he have satisfied the Law that he may have Life by it but whether professing himself to be a Christian he be a true believer and that must be tryed by his works for as God in the Covenant of grace giveth us two benefits remission of sins and sanctification by the Spirit So he requireth two duties from us A thankful acceptance of his grace by Faith and also new obedience as the fruit of love Well then this being so to wit that Christs Commission and charge is to give Eternal Life to true believers and them only the only found mark of true believers is their works of new obedience These must be tryed in the Judgment 2. A Judge must proceed secundum alligata probata not to give sentence by guess but upon the evidence of the Fact Therefore Christ to convince men that they are sinners by the first Covenant or Hypocrites or sincere by the Second must consider their works Mens profession must not be taken in the case but their lives must be considered for there are Christians in the Letter and Christians in the Spirit some that have a Form of godliness but deny the Power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 And God doth not respect the outward profession 1 Pet. 1.17 There may be a carnal Christian as well as a carnal Heathen
a Kingdom that cannot be shaken of which none can dispossess us our Sufferings may be many long and grievous but then all will be at an end when Christ shall place us at his right hand Heb. 6.19 Which Hope have we as an Anchor of the Soul both sure and steadfast and which entereth into that within the veil We have a sure Anchor in the stormy gusts of Temptations 1 Thes. 5.8 Let us put on the Breast-plate of Faith and Love and for an Helmet the hope of Salvation and Eph. 6.17 And take the Helmet of Salvation Hope is our Helmet in the dreadful day of Battel As long as we can lift up our heads and look to Heaven we should patiently bear all Calamities We shall at last hear this Blessed Voice Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the Foundation of the World SERMON XXII MATTH XXV v. 35 36. For I was an Hungred and ye gave me Meat I was Thirsty and ye gave me Drink I was a Stranger and ye took me in Naked and ye Cloathed me I was Sick and ye visited me I was in Prison and ye came unto me WE have seen the Sentence now the Reason of the Sentence For The Illative Particle sheweth that many like the Sentence would be glad to be entertained with a Come ye blessed of my Father But turn back upon the Reason to Visit Feed and Cloath they have no mind or to any other serious Duties and Acts of Faith and Self-denyal but we must regard both and I hope in a business of such moment you will not be skittish and impatient of the word of Exhortation I shall first Vindicate the words and then give you some Observations from them First Vindicate them and assert their proper sense and intendment for upon the Reading four Doubts may arise in your minds 1. That good Works are the reason of this Sentence 2. That the good Works of the Faithful are only mentioned and not the evil they have committed 3. That only works of Mercy or the fruits of Love are specified 4. All cannot express their Love and Self-denyal this way Let me clear these things and our way will be the more easie and smooth afterward I. For the first Doubt That works are assigned as the reason of the Sentence of Absolution For the Papists thence inferr their Merit and causal influence upon Eternal Life I Answer 1. 'T is one thing to give a Reason of the Sentence another to express the Cause of the Benefit received and adjudged to us by that Sentence A Charter may be given to a sort of People out of meer grace and Priviledges promised to all such as are under such a qualification though that qualification no way m●riteth those Priviledges and that Grace promised As if a King should offer Pardon and Preferment to Rebels that lay down their Arms and return to their Duty and Allegiance and live in such bounds their returning to their Duty doth not merit this Pardon for it was a meer act of Grace in the Prince much less doth their return to their Duty and living peaceably within their ancient bounds merit the Honours and Advancement promised yet this is pleadable in Court and the Judge that taketh knowledge of the Cause taketh the Reason of his Sentence from their peaceable Living within their bounds whereby he Judgeth them capable of the Honours promised and expected So here God of his meer Grace promiseth the Pardon of our Sins and to bestow upon us Eternal life if we Believe and Repent and return to the Duty we owed him by our Creation Our Obedience is not the Cause of our Pardon or of our right to Glory but his free Promise but yet this qualification must be taken notice of by our Judge in the great day as the Reason of his Sentence The sprinkling of the Door-posts with Blood was not a proper cause to move the destroying Angel to pass over but according to that Rule he must proceed the admitting all that have a Ticket to any Solemnity is not the Cause why they are worthy to be received This is clear that a Person is justified in some other way than a Sentence is justified These works are produced to justifie the Righteousness of his Sentence before the whole World A Sinner is justified by Faith Christ's Sentence by the Believers Obedience 2. That Works merit not the Blessings promised and adjudged to us is evident For they are due Luke 17.10 So likewise ye when ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you say We are unprofitable Servants ne have done that which was our Duty to doe And they are imperfect Phil. 3.12 Not as though I had already attained or were already perfect And they are Gifts of God for which we ought to give him thanks 2 Cor. 8.1 A Grace of God bestowed on us and Gifts have no Equality with the Reward Rom. 8.18 And they are done by Servants redeemed by an Infinite Price 1 Pet. 1.19 With the Precious Blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot being already appointed Heirs of Eternal Life Rom. 8.17 Deserving eternal Death Rom. 6.17 and that need continually implore the Mercy of God for the Pardon of Sin So much as you ascribe to mans Merit so much you detract from the Grace of God And the more sin is acknowledged the more Illustrious is Grace Rom. 5.20 Where sin abounded Grace did much more abound You cross the Counsel of God all glorying in himself 1 Cor. 1.29 That no flesh should glory in his presence And Deut. 9.4 5 6. Speak not thou in thy Heart after that the Lord thy God hath cast them out from before thee saying For my Righteousness the Lord hath brought me in to possess this Land but for the wickedness of these Nations the Lord doth drive them out from before thee Not for thy Righteousness or for the uprightness of thine heart dost thou go to possess their Land But for the wickedness of these Nations the Lord thy God doth drive them out from before thee and that he may perform the word which the Lord sware unto thy Fathers Abraham Isaac and Jacob. Vnderstand therefore that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possess it for thy Righteousness for thou art a stiff-necked People 3. That Works are produced as the undoubted Evidences and Fruits of a true and sound Faith Justification is opposed to Accusation before Gods Tribunal A double Accusation may be brought against us That we are Sinners or guilty of the breach of the first Covenant And that we are no sound Believers having not fulfilled the Conditions of the Second From the first Accusation we are justified by Faith From the latter we are justified by Works and that not only in this World but in the day of Judgment Christs Commission and Charge is to give Eternal Life to true Believers and the Mark of true
Torments of Hell Page 133 A State of Torment as well as a state of Death Page 193 Set forth by Darkness and outer Darkness and why Vid. Darkness Page 133 Indignation of the damned in Hell against God the Saints and themselves Page 136 Sorrow of the damned in Hell Page 136 The wicked go to Hell at Death Page 196 They have not their full Torments till the day of Iudgment Page 197 Punishment of Hell may consist with Gods being merciful Page 193 Fire of Hell vid. Fire Punishment of Hell v. Punishment of Loss and Punishment of Sense Hiding Talents a great sin and why Page 96 He that hides his Talents faulty as well as he that abuses them Page 96 What is the cause of this unfaithfulness in hiding Talents Page 96 Honour the Honour that shall be put on the Saints at the day of Iudgment Page 165 Hope what it is Page 7 Weak and groundless Hope of Heaven Page 9 Cold and careless Hope what Page 24 What kind of Hope may be in Hypocrites Page 7 Hope of wicked men will fail them and when Page 47 48 Hope of Heaven how it sheweth it self Page 172 How this Hope puts us on a diligent pursuit of this Blessedness Page 172 This Hope must moderate our Cares Fears and Sorrowes as to temporal things Page 173 Humility Saints have a humble sense of their own good Works Page 183 184 Hypocrites shall be discovered at the day of Iudgment Page 164 I. IDleness the evil of it Vid. Sloath. Page 96 Impotency why God requires Duty of fallen Creatures that have no power to perform it Page 114 Natural Impotency no Excuse to the sloathful Page 123 Inclination of heart towards good how expressed in Scripture Page 14 Increase Diligence the Means and God's blessing the Cause of all increase Page 127 Our Increase should be of the same Talent that is given us Page 127 This Increase is given by degrees Page 129 And is to be continued till it be full and perfect Page 129 Indignation of the Damned in Hell against God the Saints and themselves Page 136 Infants what to judge of Infants that dye in Infancy Page 157 Inheritance of Heaven the Properties of it Page 169 Joyes of Heaven whence they arise Page 104 Why called the Joy of the Lord. Page 105 Judge we are not to judge of others or our selves by the outward esteem of others Page 185 Judge the Qualifications of a Judge Wisdom Iustice Power Authority Page 142 These Qualifications found in Christ. Page 143 Christ the Judge of the World Page 142 Why Christ Judge of the World rather than Father or Spirit Page 146 In what Nature Christ is Judge Page 147 Why Christ as Mediator is Judge of the World Page 147 Why Christ as Judge called King Page 167 Judgments temporal may be kept off from the wicked by the Society of the godly Page 50 One Judgment makes way for another Page 198 Judgment-day proved Page 33 34 Cavils against it answered Page 154 The Conveniency of such a day Page 34 The business of that day shall be to glorifie Gods Holiness rewarding Iustice and Truth Page 178 All shall come to Judgment Page 156 Infants and Grown Persons Page 156 Dead and living Page 157 Good and Bad. Page 158 Believers and Vnbelievers Page 158 High and low Page 160 At Judgment-day all shall be judged according to their works Page 177 Why works of Mercy and Charity rather than Piety are then mentioned Page 176 Whether the sins of the righteous shall then be mentioned Page 176 Who shall be judged by the Gospel Page 158 Whether Papists Turks Iews since Christ shall be judged by the Gospel Page 158 By what rule Pagans shall be judgeth Page 159 There shall be a separation of good and bad at the Judgment-day and why Page 164 Hypocrites shall be discovered at the day of Judgment Page 164 The Honour that shall be put on the Saints at the day of Judgment Page 165 The godly shall be first absolved before the wicked are condemned and why Page 166 Judgement-day should be believed feared loved by the Saints and hoped for Page 154 It should make us patient under disgraces Page 154 Thoughts of Judgement should make us serious and why Page 160 Justice and Righteousness of Christ explained Page 144 Justice of God 3 * Page 178 Justification opposed to Accusation Page 175 How we are justified by Faith and how by Works Page 175 K. KIng why Christ as Iudge of the World is called a King Page 167 Kingdom of Heaven what it signifies Page 3 Why Heaven is called a Kingdom Page 169 Knowledge of Christ. How Christ knowes his People Page 66 Christ knowes all his Sheep Page 162 Knowledge of God intuitive and approbative Page 66 L. LAmps going out of Lamps of foolish Virgins what it signifies Page 47 When their Lamps shall go out Page 48 Trimming of Lamps v. Trimming Law and Grace strive for Victory in the hearts of those that have any sense of Religion Page 111 Lawes of God no Tyranny in them Page 113 Left hand why Sinners are set on the left hand at the day of Iudgment Page 169 Loss vide Punishment of Loss Love to God what it is Page 7 Feeble and sleepy Love what Page 24 What a kind of Love is due to Christ. Page 58 Lye difference between a Lye and an Vntruth Page 41 M. MArriage-Union between Christ and Believers the foundation of it layed in Christs Incarnation Page 57 Entred into at Conversion Page 57 The present state of it in this world Page 58 The Consummation of it in another world Page 59 Why the Second Coming of Christ is called a Consummation of this Marriage Page 59 The duties that result from this Marriage-Union Page 58 Motives to be espoused to Christ. Page 60 N. NAme of God what it is Page 112 Poor trembling Souls to study the Name of God Page 112 New-Creature why God expects more honour from them than from the World Page 89 O. ODium Abominationis odium Inimicitiae Page 17 Omissions Sins of Omission and Commission what they are and how distinguished Page 138 211 Omissions Sins as well as Commissions Page 117 They are both in every actual sin Page 138 212 The greatness of Sins of Omission Page 138 212 Some Sins of Omission greater than others Page 139 212 In many cases Sins of Omission are greater than Sins of Commission Page 139 213 The Causes of them Page 139 212 The Effects of them Page 139 212 Omission of holy Duties breeds Security Page 28 Omissions make way for Commissions Page 140 213 Opportunities of doing good may be lost Page 130 Ordinances considered as Dutyes Priviledges Means Talents Page 90 May be lost Page 131 Oyl not only to be had in Lamps but in Vessels Page 11 Oyl in Vessels what it is Page 12 14 To get Oyl in Vessels is our true wisdom Page 22 Directions to get it Page 21 P. PArables why Christ taught by Parables Page
they which when they have heard the word go forth and are choaked with cares and riches and pleasures of this life and bring forth no fruit to perfection It makes our abode in the World dangerous 2 Pet. 1.4 Having escaped the corruption that is in world through lust It maketh us lazy and negligent in our callings It turneth our table into a snare while we glut our selves with carnal delights and oppress our bodies when we should refresh them and maketh us inordinate in all that we enjoy and do Therefore to get rid of such an enemy surely is a great mercy 6. Till you get rid of sin there is a thorn in your foot so that you will have no ease nor comfort till you set your selves to destroy every sin of heart and life and make it your principal care and daily business For if you live in wilful sin and negligence you are unwilling to be delivered and so lose all comfort of Justification and Hope by Christ. While you cherish sensual lusts which you should mortifie all the Promises in Gods Book will not yield you one dram of comfort nor help you to assurance you may complain long enough before you have ease for this still lyeth against you You regard iniquity in your hearts Psal. 66.18 Conscience must be better used before it will speak peace to you They only that have cast off the yoke of sin are freed from the guilt of it they that give way to sin are not justified Justification is opposed both to the condemnation of a Sinner and to the condemnation of an Hypocrite A Sinner is justified from his sin by Faith in Christ only if his Faith be sincere if he still indulge sin in his heart and be a servant of sin he is still liable to be condemned both as a Sinner and an Hypocrite For he remains a Sinner still and is an Hypocrite inasmuch as he pretends to that Faith by which he should be justified from all his other sins while he hath it not IV. How is it a Consequent of our dying with Christ There are two sorts of men that profess Communion with Christs Death 1. Those that are visibly baptized into his Name 2. Those that are really converted to God The professed or penitent Believer or the nominal and real Christian. 1. The visible Professor it is his duty to look after freedom from sin All Christians do visibly profess by virtue of Christs Death to dye unto sin they are dead by Profession they are dead by their Baptismal Vow and Undertaking but this is but in word and in deed in shew not in power if they do not mind these things The careless Christian forgets the obligation of Baptism though he doth not renounce it 2 Pet. 1.9 He is blind and cannot see afar off and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins Christianity calleth him out of those pollutions that he walloweth in and affordeth him great helps to avoid them but he undervalueth all and is little affected with that Pardon and Life which is offered in the new Covenant and which by his Baptism he seemed and was esteemed to have a right unto and as a purblind man cannot see things at a distance they are so intent upon things worldly and sensual that they forget the purification of their Souls or due preparation for the World to come Now we cannot say de facto that such a man is actually freed from sin for he is not truly dead with Christ but de jure of right he should mind this dying to sin that he may no longer serve sin he cannot comfortably conclude himself to be pardoned or sanctified or one who is made a partaker of this Grace it is not his Priviledge to be freed from sin but because of his ingagement to Christ it is his duty 2. The next sort is the real Convert or penitent Believer who is indeed dead with Christ it is both his duty and his priviledge he hath not only undertaken to dye unto sin and to renounce his former course of life but hath seriously begun it and by the power of the Spirit of Christ carrieth on this work daily so that by virtue of Christs dying he is dead and so really is and is also reckoned to be one that is freed from the dominion of sin So the Apostles speech in the Text is exactly parallel with that 1 Pet. 4.1 He that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin he that is dead that is spiritually dead here is the same with him that hath suffered in the flesh freed from sin that is is absolved from sin not in regard of guilt but power is the same with hath ceased from sin there so that one place doth explain another But let me prove 1. It is his duty to be cleansed from sin or freed from the dominion of sin for it is brought to prove that he must no longer serve sin 1. All our Communion with Christ is by the Spirit of Christ now where-ever the Spirit comes to dwell he doth infuse a Principle of Grace which doth not only strive against sin but conquer sin at least so far as to take away the dominion of it Gal. 5.16 17. Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh for the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh therefore they cannot serve sin as they did before There are two Principles in us and accordingly there are two Desires the one proceeding from the Flesh the other from the Spirit which are so opposite one to another that what the one liketh the other disliketh and whatsoever you do in compliance with the one you do it in opposition to the other But that which is in predominancy is the Spirit which rebuketh the carnal Nature and Principle in us 2. In our Conversion to Christ there is included an aversion from sin and therefore it must not bear sway and command and influence our actions as it did formerly It is called Repentance from dead works Heb. 6.1 not for them only but from them it breedeth not only a sorrow but a loathing and forsaking of the sin we repent of Many will say they are sorry and do repent for sin which they have committed but all kind of sorrow doth not evidence true Repentance there is a sort of repenting and sorrow for sin in Hell all do repent and are sorry for sin at last when a sinner hath sucked out all the carnal sweet that is in sin and the sting only is left behind no wonder if he be troubled this is Attrition not Contrition not a sorrow that ariseth from love to God a sorrow that doth not break the force of sin they go on still there is no change of heart or life 3. There must be a difference between a man carnal and regenerate and what is the difference since sin remaineth in both The one serveth sin and the other serveth God
is of this Nature and when it is strong and vigorous it will make strong and mighty impressions upon the heart no opposition will extinguish it Waters will quench fire but nothing will quench this love Rom. 8.37 Nay in all those things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us There are two sorts of tryals that ordinarily carry away Souls from Christ the first is from the left hand from crosses these carry away some but not all though the stony ground could not yet the thorny ground could abide the heat of the Sun yet the Second sort of tryals the cares of the World the deceitfulness of riches and voluptuous living which are the Temptations of the right hand will draw away unmortified Souls and choak the Word Pleasures Honours Riches are a more strong and subtile sort of Temptations than the other But yet these are too weak to prevail with that heart which hath a sincere love to Christ planted in it They will not be tempted and inticed away from Christ If a man would give all the substance of his house such a Soul will be faithful to Christ and these offers and treaties are in vain If love be true and powerful 't is not easily ensnared but rejects the allurements of the World and the flesh with an holy disdain and indignation all as dung and dross that would tempt it from Christ Phil. 3.9 And these essays to cool it and divert it and draw it away are to no purpose Well then this warm love to Christ is the hold and bulwark that maintaineth Christs Interest in the Soul The Devil the World and the Flesh batter it and hope to throw it down but they cannot nothing else will serve the turn in Christs room 3. Whence love to Christ cometh to have such a force upon us or which is all one how so forcible a love is wrought in us I answer 1. Partly by the worth of the object And 2. Partly by the manner how it is considered by us and applyed to us 1. From the worth of the object When we consider what Christ is what he hath done for us and what love he hath shewed therein how can we choose but love with such a constraining unconquerable love as to stick at no difficulty and danger for his sake The circumstances which do most affect our hearts are these our Condition and Necessity when he came to shew this love to us we were guilty sinners in a lost and lapsed estate and so altogether hopeless unless some means were used for our recovery kindness to them that are ready to perish doth most affect them Oh how should we love Christ who are as men fetched up from the Gates of Hell under sentence of condemnation when we were in our blood Ezek. 16. Had sold our selves to Satan Isa. 52.3 Cast away the mercies of our Creation and had all come short of the Glory of God Rom. 3.23 When sentenced to death John 3.18 And ready for execution Eph. 2.3 Then did Christ by a wonderful act of love step in to rescue and recover us Not staying till we relented and cryed for mercy but before we were sensible of our misery or regarded any remedy then the Son of God came to die for us 2. The astonishing way in which our deliverance was brought about by the incarnation death shame blood and agonies of the Son of God Who was set up in our natures as a glass and pledge of Gods great love to us 1 John 3.16 Hereby perceive we the love of God because he laid down his life for us We had never known so much of the love of God had it not been for this instance He shewed love to us in Creation in that he gave us a reasonable Nature when he might have made us Toads and Serpents He sheweth love to us in our daily sustentation in that he keepeth us at his expence though we do him so little service and do so often offend him But herein was love that the Son of God himself must hang upon a cross and become a propitiation for our sins We now come to learn by this instance that God is love 1 John 4.8 What was Jesus Christ but love incarnate love born of a Virgin love hanging upon a cross laid in the grave love made sin love made a curse for us 3. The consequent benefits I 'le name three to which all the rest may be reduced 1. Justification of our persons Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God And Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins And Rom. 5.9 Being justified by his blood we are saved from wrath through him To be at present upon good terms with God and capable of Communion with him and access to him with assurance of welcome and audience To have all acts of hostility cease this is to stop mischief at the fountain head For if God be at peace with us of whom should we be afraid Then to have sin pardoned which is the great ground of our bondage and terror that which blasteth all our comforts and maketh them unsavory to us and is the venom and sting of all our crosses and miseries the great make-bate between God and us Once more to be freed from the fear of Hell and the Wrath of God which is so deservedly terrible to all serious persons that are mindful of their Condition So that we may live in an holy security and peace Oh how should we love the Lord Jesus who hath procured these benefits for us 2. To have our natures sanctified and healed and freed from the stain of sin as well as the guilt of it and to have Gods impress imprinted upon our Souls this is also consequent of the death of Jesus Christ Eph. 5.26 That he might sanctify and cleanse it by the washing of water And Titus 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purify unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works So that being delivered from the thraldom of sin which is a great ease to a burdened Soul and fitted for the service of God for Christ came to make a people ready for the Lord to be cleansed from all filthiness of flesh and Spirit and to have a Nature Divine and heavenly Let diseased Souls desire worldly greatness swine take pleasure in the mire and ravenous beasts feed on dung and carrion An inlarged Soul must have those higher blessings and looketh upon holiness not only as a duty but a great priviledge to be made like God and made serviceable to him This is that which indears their hearts to Christ he hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood that we might be Kings and Priests unto God Revel 1.5 3. Eternal Life and Glory 1 John 3.1 2. Behold what manner of love the Father hath shewed us That we should be called the Sons of God It doth
Believers is Holiness Therefore if his Judgment be right by producing this Fruit and Effect it must be justified A Judge is to proceed Secundum regulas Juris allegata probata as to the partyes judged And because in the day of Judgment the Covenant of Grace hath the force of a Law therefore it belongeth to Christ as a Judge to see we have fulfilled the Condition of it which is Faith And that our Faith is true is proved by Works When we are first pressed with Sin because the Promise of Justification or Remission of Sin requireth Faith it must be embraced by Faith and taken hold of by Faith our Faith must pitch upon it draw Comfort from it even before good Works are done by us But because the next Accusation will presently arise as if our Faith were not true we must be justified from this Accusation by good Works Not be contented with one or two good Works but abounding in all that thus we may be justified more and more and approved by our Judge 4. That Faith is implyed in all the Works mentioned is evident 1. From Christ's scope The Manner of judging those in the Visible Church is intended And 2. The Expression sheweth it for 't is Christ they respected in his Members Now it requireth Faith to see Christ in a poor Beggar or Prisoner to love Christ in them above our worldly Goods and Actually to part with them for Christ's sake Self-denyal is the Fruit of Faith 'T is not meerly the Relieving of the Poor but the doing of it as in and to Christ. 3. There is a near link between Faith and Works Faith is not sound and perfect unless it produce these Works and these Works are not acceptable unless they were the VVorks of Faith and done in Faith II. The Second Doubt is Whether the good Works of the Faithful shall be only mentioned and not the Evil I Answer So some would collect from this Scheme and Draught set down by Christ 'T is a Probleme disputed with Probabilities on both sides by good Men. Some reason from the terms by which Pardon is expressed As by the Blotting out of Sin Remembring Transgressions no more Cast into the depths of the Sea 'T is like God will cover them because repented of and forgiven in the World On the other side they urge The exact Reckoning Rev. 20.11 The general Particles 2 Cor. 5.10 and ●ccles 12.13 And that for every Idle word that men shall speak they shall give an Account thereof in the day of Judgment Matth. 12.36 I would not interpose I cannot say absolutely that their Sins shall not be mentioned at all for Acts 3.19 't is said Repent ●e therefore and be converted that your sins may be blotted out when the times of Refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Certainly not to their Trouble and Confusion Possibly not particularly These Scriptures are not cogent to prove they shall For it may be meant distributively All the Evil of the Wicked and the Good of the Godly Howevever these Scriptures should breed an Awe in our Hearts III. A Third Doubt is That only Works of Mercy and Charity rather than Piety are mentioned by our Lord and Saviour I Answer 1. 'T is clear that the Special is put for the General and an Act of Self-denying Obea●nce is put for all the rest In other Places a more general Expression is put as Matth. 16.27 For the Son of Man shall come in the Glory of his Father with his Angels and th●n h● shall re●ard every Man according to his Works And 2 Cor. 5.10 For we must all appear before the Judgment-Seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his Body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad And Rev. 20.12 And I say the Dead small and great stand before God and the Books ●ere op●ned 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 therefore Acts of Mercy are not intended to be cryed up alone as separate from all other Acts of Piety and Charity to God and Men yea all Acts of Charity for which we are accountable unto God are not mentioned Comforting the Afflicted Reproving the Faulty Instructing the Weak Counselling the Erring Praying for others Therefore under these Works of Charity all the Fruits of Faith are understood and the real gracious Constitution of the Heart that must produce them 1 Cor. 13.3 And though I bestow all my Goods to feed the Poor and though I give my Body to be burned and have not Charity it profiteth me not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But Christ doth not express that so plainly because he would shew that this Judgment shall proceed according to what is visible and sensible 2. Christ singled out Works of Mercy for the Evidence because the Jews had been more exact and diligent in the observing the Ceremonies of External Worship but negligent of these things Therefore doth God so often by the Prophets tell them of Mercy above Sacrifices Hosea 6.6 For I desired Mercy and not Sacrifice and the Knowledge of God more than burnt Offerings And Mercy above Fasting Isa. 58 6 7. These are Duties never out of Season and including a real Benefit to Mankind God preferreth them before External Rites of Worship 3. These are most evident and sensible Discoveries and so fitted to be produced as Fruits of Faith There is a Demonstration of the Soundness of it A signis notioribus These are most conspicuous and so fittest to justifie Believers before all the World who reckon Good and Evil most by the Bodily Life Therefore doth Christ instance in Acts of Bodily rather than Spiritual Charity Not in Reproving Converting Counselling but in Feeding and Cloathing 4. These are Acts wherein we do exercise Faith and Self-denyal In imparting Spiritual Gifts to others we lose nothing our selves as our Candle loseth nothing by communicating Light to another Christ would have us venture something on our Heavenly Hopes and not please our selves with a Religion that costs us nothing and puts us to no Charges Alms is an expensive Duty here is something parted with and that upon Reasons of Faith Eccles. 11.1 Cast thy Bread upon the Waters for thou shalt find it after many Dayes Prov. 19.17 He that hath pity upon the Poor lendeth unto the Lord and that which he giveth them will he pay it again 5. Christ would hereby represent the Excellency of Charity and commend it to the Covetous niggardly World 'T is the Duty wherein we do very much resemble God and Christ And all his Followers should be like him These are all Works of God To Feed the Hungry Cloath the Naked Visit the Sick we imitate him in this are Instruments of his Providence Mercy is a very lovely thing an imitation of the Divine Nature Our Lord told us Act. 20.35
them that are troubled rest c. This with respect to Christ's Merit and the Qualification of the Parties 3. The Third Righteousness is in Performance of his Promises For though his Promise be free yet if it be once made Justice doth require it and God is not free but bound to perform it Now in these two latter Respects are they capable 3. They are Signs and Tokens of their being approved and accepted with God according to the Gospel-Covenant Christ as God's Steward cometh to distribute the appointed Reward to the Heirs of Glory This is the Evidence he is to proceed by When the destroying Angel was sent to destroy the First-born of the Aegyptians he was to take notice of the Sign of Sprinkling of Blood on the Door-Posts Exod. 12. Not that that Blood deserved but it signified that there dwelt Israelites 4. They are Measures according to the Degrees of Grace and our abounding in the Work of the Lord 2 Cor. 9.6 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly and he that soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully The Reward is more full or sparing according to what we have done or suffered for God VSE To set us right in the Doctrine of Grace and Works we have to do with three Parties 1. The Pharisaical Legalist 2. The Carnal-Gospeller and 3. The Broken-hearted and serious Christian. 1. The Legalist that trusts in himself that he is Righteous and hopeth to be accepted with God for his Works sake Trusting in Works is very natural and very dangerous 'T is very Natural because of the Law written upon our Hearts We all come into the World with a sense of a Duty-Covenant and because every one would be sufficient to his own Happiness an unhumbled Soul is apt to give more to Duty and Personal Righteousness than to Christ Rom. 10.3 For they being ignorant of God's Righteousness and going about to establish their own Righteousness have not submitted themselves unto the Righteousness of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A russet ragged Coat of his own pleaseth a Proud Man better than a silken Coat that is borrowed 'T is dangerous for 't is contrary to all the Declarations of God Eph. 2.9 By Grace ye are saved not of Works lest any man should boast The whole Progress of Salvation from its first Step in Regeneration till its final and last Period in Glorification doth intirely flow from God's Grace and not from our Works The securing the Interest of free Grace in our Salvation is a thing the Spirit of God is very careful of in the Scriptures the Glory of Grace being that which God mainly aimeth at Eph. 1.6 and a thing which we do naturally incline to intrench upon and to rob him of in whole or in part It crosseth the great End which God aimed at in contriving of Man's Salvation which was that all ground of glorying should be taken away from Man as being in the meanest or least respect a Saviour to himself and that all the Glory might be ascribed compleatly to God in Christ 1 Cor. 1.29 30 31. Christ spake a Parable against those that trusted in themselves that they were righteous Luk. 18.9 Two men went up into the Temple to pray the one a Pharisee the other a Publican The one cometh Appealing to Justice The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself God I thank thee that I am not as other men are Extortioners Vnjust c. I fast twice in the Week I give Tythes of all that I possess The other cometh crying out Grace The Publican standing a far off ●ould not lift up so much as his eyes unto Heaven but smote upon his Breast saying God be merciful to me a Sinner The Sinner is justified not the Worker In short to prevent all Mistakes First Our Works whatever they are either Works of Love to God or Man and the good use of External Means or Common Grace are not the moving Cause or Inducement to incline God to give us Christ or the Grace of Faith or Work of Conversion before others but this is the meer work of Grace or the Mercy and good Pleasure of God Tit. 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 renewing of the Holy Ghost Which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Secondly Works both before and after Conversion are not that Righteousness nor any part of that Righteousness by which Sin is expiated or the Wrath of God appeased or whereby we are reconciled to God and do originally obtain a Right to Eternal Life This is only ascribed to the Merit of Christ Rom. 3.24 25. Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his Blood to declare his Righteousness for the Remission of Sins that are past through the forbearance of God The Merit is in Christ's Blood Christ's Obedience his Ransom and meritorious Price 3. Our Works or what we do to fulfill the Law of God are not that Instrument by vertue of which we apply the Merits of Christ to our selves or receive that Righteousness by vertue of which we are reconciled to God Our Interest in the Merits of Christ our Right to Pardon of Sin and Grace doth not arise from Works but meerly Faith Rom. 3.22 So that in the Plea of Justification or our Suit for the Pardon of Sin we must renounce all our good Works and wholly rely on the Merits of Christ giving up our selves to do the Will of God ' Bate this and then Works indeed come in as the fruits of Faith as Evidences of Eternal Life and the way to Glory 2. The Carnal-Gospeller is the other person we have to do with And to him we say 1. That no man can maintain his Comfort and faithfully relye upon Christs Merits but he that is faithful in doing his Fathers will No other Faith is allowed by the Scriptures for sound in the Judgment of our Consciences but such a Faith Gal. 5.6 For in Christ Jesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor Vncircumcision but Faith which worketh by love No other Faith will be approved by Christ for sound at the last day Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven 2. That the doing of some good Works cannot excuse men for the Omission of others which be as necessary we must not do one act of Charity only but all Many acts are reckoned up of one kind to imply all the rest not only fed but cloathed not only cloathed but visited Therefore besides the goodness of the work which we are bound to do there must be an Uniformity in them There are good Works of divers kinds many Works of the same kind To Prophesie in Christ's Name is a good
the School of Christ He hath begotten us by the Word of Truth And the Ordinance of preaching the Word is consecrated to this purpose Ephes. 5.26 That he might sanctify them by the washing of Water through the Word There are other Occasional Helps but this is the Instituted Means God will work no other way in his ordinary and revealed course and will accept no other Obedience and Sanctification but by the Word Holiness or that Piety which is proper and genuine is wrought by a Divine Truth otherwise it is Superstition not Godliness Civility not Holiness of Conversation Tho Men have never so good an Inclination yet because they have not a Divine Revelation for their Warrant it is but a Bastard Religion Superstition or framing a strictness of our own accompanied with opposition against the Truth The Word and Spirit are in Conjunction Isa. 59.21 My Spirit that is upon thee and my Words which I have put in thy Mouth shall not depart out of thy Mouth c. These act in Conjunction and it is for the honour of the Scriptures that God hath annexed them 1 Thess. 5.19 20. Quench not the Spirit Despise not Prophesying Preaching of the Word and pouring out of the Spirit go together 4. Every part of the Truth worketh not but only the Gospel which is the Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Law sheweth us our Spots and the Gospel cleanseth and washeth them away The Work of the Law is Preparation but that which hath a special and direct influence upon Sanctification is the Gospel John 15.3 Now ye are clean through the Word which I have spoken to you and that was the Gospel Privilege This pulleth in the Heart to God that we may be partakers of his Grace Moses brought them to the Borders but Joshua brought them into the Land of Canaan The Apostle appealeth to the Experience of Believers Gal. 3.2 This only would I learn of you Received ye the Spirit by the VVorks of the Law or by the hearing of Faith Tho the Spirit may be received by the preaching of any part of Canonical Scripture yet most usually by the preaching of the Gospel The Lord would give us this sensible and authentick Proof of the Truth and Excellency of the Gospel that we receive the Spirit of Regeneration by it and not by the Law It is the Instrument by which God useth to confer the Spirit So 2 Pet. 1.4 To us are given exceeding great and precious Promises that by these we may be made partakers of the Divine Nature What part of the Word worketh the Heart to a conformity to God likeneth us in Holiness to God the great and precious Promises It is not by moral Strains nor by terrible Threatnings these have their use in their place but by the great and precious Promises as God was in the s●●ll Voice 5. The Gospel worketh not unless it be accompanied with the Spirit There is a great deal of difference between seeing things in the Light of Reason and seeing things in the Light of the Spirit Truth represented in the Light of Reason begets but an humane Faith leaveth a weak impression and hath but a weak operation upon the Soul but things represented in the light of the Spirit ●●●keth quite otherwise there is not only a notional Irradiation but an experimental Feeling they see another manner of Beauty and Excellency in Christ a vanity in worldly Delights which they never saw before Running-water and Strong-water differ not in colour but in taste and virtue John 16.13 When he the Spirit of Truth is come he will guide you into all 〈◊〉 1 John 2.27 The Anointing which ye have received of him abidet● 〈◊〉 you and ye need not that any Man teach you but as the same Anointing teacheth you of all things Most Men content themselves with a superficial Belief they have but a h●●ane knowledg of Divine Things and therefore their Souls are not carried out to Holiness Love Fear Trust Obedience they have a cold and naked apprehension lite●●● Knowledg is wa●hy and weak it worketh not 1 Pet. 1.22 Seeing ye have purified your Souls in obeying the Truth through the Spirit 6. This must not only be represented in the Power and Demonstration of the Spirit but received and applied by Faith Sanctification is sometimes ascribed to the Gospel and sometimes to Faith which receiveth the Gospel Acts 15.9 Purifying their Hearts by Faith Our Hearts are purified by the Word of Truth 1 Pet. 1.22 Seeing that ●e have purified your Souls in obeying the Truth through the Spirit Here they were purified by Faith The Word worketh not without an Act on our part as well as on God's The Word preached did not profit them not being mixed with Faith in them that heard it Heb. 4.2 As a Plaster worketh not till it be applied to the Sore Nay the Apostle's Word implieth more the Word must not only be applied to the Soul but mingled with the Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As in a Medicine the Ingredients must be mixed together to do good So if we have the Word we must have the Spirit and we must have Faith mix it altogether and then it worketh Faith receiveth the Word as a divine and infallible Truth and that begets an Awe In short Faith working to Sanctification apprehends the Love of God the Blood of Christ the Promises Precepts of the Word and by all these it is ever purging and working out Corruption By apprehending the Love of God Gal. 5.6 In Christ Jesus neither Circumcision● availeth any thing nor Vncircumcision but Faith that worketh by Love Shall I love that which God hateth O do not this abominable Thing that I hate Jer. 44.4 Faith representeth God pleading thus Is this thy Kindness to thy Friend Do I thus requite God for all his Kindness to me in Christ There is an Exasperation against Lusts. It maketh use of the Blood of Christ. 1 John 1.7 The Blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all Sins Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the Blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your Consciences from dead Works to serve the Living God That is an excellent Purger In outward Purging it is the Water and the Soap cleanseth but the Hand of the Laundress applieth it and rubbeth the Cloaths that are washed Faith apprehendeth the Blood of Christ to purge the Conscience it waiteth for the sanctifying Virtue of his Blood and the Grace purchased thereby So Faith maketh use of the Promises this giveth Faith encouragement to expect glorious Rewards Assistance is purchased and Acceptance is promised 2 Cor. 7.1 Having therefore these Promises dearly Beloved let us cleanse our selves from all Filthiness of the Flesh and Spirit perfecting Holiness in the Fear of God Then Faith constantly maketh use of the Precepts and Counsels of the Word by which Sin is discovered and taxed When the Word is received by Faith there goeth a
Men neglect and contemn the Word of God they damm up the Fountain of Holiness 5. What is the true Witness of the Scripture's Certainty not the Testimony of the Church but feeling the sanctifying virtue of it It is good to take the Testimony of the Church at first as we take a Medicine from others upon their Experience but we must not rest in it 1 Thess. 1.5 For our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but also in Power and in the Holy Ghost and in much Assurance this giveth Certainty At first we believe upon the Church's Saying as the VVoman commended Christ to her Citizens John 10.42 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 VVorld There is a preparative humane Faith as in taking Pills we do not chew them but swallow them It is not good to be disputing away our Hopes But we should not rest in this but labour to get an Experience of the Power of the Truth upon our Hearts 6. The difference between Civility and Sanctification Civility is wrought by meer moral Education according to natural Principles without any Knowledg or so much as a desire to be acquainted with the Word of God Thus many are careful of common Honesty in Matters of Traffick and Commerce obedience to Civil Laws being restrained from gross Enormities but have no true Grace but in true Holiness we are inclined by the Word 1 Pet. 2.2 As new-born Babes desire the sincere Milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby This is true Holiness when we conform and subject our selves in Heart and Practice to the Will of God revealed in the Word The Word of God must be Reason and Rule Reason 1 Thess. 5.18 This is the VVill of God concerning you and Rule Gal. 6.16 As many as walk according to this Rule Peace be on them Why do you do this as the Children must ask their Parents VVhy do ye keep the Passe-over Still all must be examined by the Word John 3.21 He that doth Truth cometh to the Light that his Deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought of God he trieth every Action by it Only the Word is our Rule in all our Actions we seek to it as our Guide obey it for Truth 's sake Vse 2. Exhortation 1. Beware of Error It is a defiling thing the more mixture of Falshood the less awe of God upon the Soul and the more carnal Affections are gratified A constant use of the Word discovers Sin 2. To press you to wait upon God for the purifying of your Hearts through the Word in the use of the Word through the Spirit to look for the Purification and Sanctification of your Souls Here I should press you to take heed That you hear How you hear and What you hear 1. That you hear You need wait upon God and hearken diligently The Apostle infers it James 1.18 Of his own Will begat he us by the Word of Truth What then therefore be swift to hear Continually you will find some new Enforcement or new Consideration to promote your Holiness and Sanctification 2. Take heed what ye hear Mark 4.24 You must get the distinguishing Ear that as the Mouth tasteth Meats so the Ear may taste Doctrines and you may judg of Things that differ 3. Take heed How you hear Luke 8.18 that is wait for the Operations of the Spirit do not ●ear carelesly negligently It is said Acts 10.44 While Peter was speaking those things the Holy Ghost fell upon them While we are speaking to you there are many good Motions stirred up in your Hearts Take heed how you hear that the Blessing may 〈…〉 from you Thy Word is Truth The Point which I am now to discuss is The Truth of the Word In managing this Discourse I shall shew I. What Necessity there is that God should give us his Word or a Declaration of his Will II. Where we shall infallibly find this Word or Declaration of his Will III. Of what Concernment it is to ●e established in the Truth of this Word IV. Whether it be possible that Carnal Men remaining so can have any Assurance of this Truth or whether it be only left to be cleared up infallibly to the Soul by the Light and Working of the Spirit I. What necessity there is of God's Word or some outward signification of his Will An absolute Necessity of an outward Rule there is not God might immediatly reveal himself to the Heart of Man he who made the Heart can stamp it with the full knowledg of his Will But the written Word is best for God's Honour and for the safety of Religion and because of the weakness of our Nature 1. For the Honour of God that he should give Man a Rule You know all Creatures that God hath made they have a Rule without themselves by which they are guided and directed in their Operations It is God's own Priviledg to be a Rule to himself The Angels have a Rule that is distinct from their Essence And in Innocency tho God stamped the Knowledg of his Will immediatly upon Man's Heart that Adam's Heart was as it were his Bible yet his Rule was distinguished from his Essence otherwise he could not have sinned against God If Man were his own Rule there would be an impossibility of sinning and so there would be an intrenchment upon God's own Privilege You know it is God's own Privilege that his Act is his Rule and therefore it is impossible that God should sin Look as when a Carpenter choppeth and squareth a piece of Timber there is a Line and Rule without him by which he is guided and directed If it were to be supposed that his Hand could never strike amiss that would be his Rule he would need no Line or Rule without him But this is proper to no Creature it is God's own Privilege that his Essence and his Rule are not distinguished but still a Man should not share with him in his peculiar Privilege therefore he hath given him a Rule Besides if Man were a Rule to himself there would be no room for Rewards there is no Commendation nor Praise where there is a natural necessity of doing good as Stocks and Stones are not capable of a Reward for not sinning because they cannot sin 2. For the Safety of Religion now Man is fallen that he might not obtrude Fancies on his Neighbour Isa. 8.20 To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to this VVord it is because their is no Light in them Let it be Voice or Oracle all is to be measured by the outward Rule which God hath given to the Church 3. In respect of Man to repair the Defects of Nature and to satisfy the Desires of Nature 1. To Repair the Defects of Nature Fallen Man is brutish and knows not how to carve out a Right VVorship for God or a Rule of
career of Sin 1 Cor. 11.32 For when we are judged we are chastned of the Lord that we may not be condemned with the World How many Disappointments did we meet with in a carnal Course As David said to Abigail 1 Sam. 25.32 33. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which se●● thee this day to meet me And blessed be thy Advice and blessed be thou which hast kept ●● this day from coming to shed Blood and from avenging my self with mine own Hand O how sweet is it to see Eternal Love in all that befalleth us It will be our speculation in Heaven we shall know as we are known and be able to interpret all the Windings and Circuits of Providence Vse 3. It shameth us that we adjourn and put off our Love to God till old Age when we have spent our strength in the World and wasted our selves in Satan's Work we dream of a devout Retirement O consider God's Love to us is as ancient as his Being and are not we ashamed that we should put off God till the latter and none decrepid part of our Lives It is a commendation to be an old Disciple and God loveth an early Love Jer. 2.2 Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the Kindness of thy Youth the Love of thine Espousals before our Affections are prostituted to other Objects Under the Law the first-Fruits were the Lord's he should have the First God's Children are wont to return Love for Love and like Love therefore let it be as Ancient as you can Do not say Art thou come no torment me before my time and dream of a more convenient Season Vse 4. It teacheth us to disclaim Merit 1. God's Love was before our Being and Acting Paul out of a less Circumstance concludeth Election not to be of Works Rom. 9.11 For the Children being yet ●●-born neither having done Good or Evil that the Purpose of God according to Election might stand not of Works but of him that calleth it was said The Elder shall serve the Younger God's Election is before all Acts of ours therefore we deserve nothing but all is from God It is not a thing of Yesterday our Love is not the cause of God's neither is it a fit Reward and Satisfaction Object But doth not God foresee our good Works or at least Faith and final Perseverance He knew who would believe the Gospel who would live Holy and who would remain in their Sins I Answer If this were true there were not such a gracious Freedom in Grace It is true God foreseeth all things that shall be but first he fore-ordaineth them Prescience includeth and supposeth Preordination things are not because they are foreseen but they are foreseen because they shall be From Predestination issueth Faith Sanctification Perseverance So that we are not chosen because we are Holy but to be Holy Ephes. 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 And to be rich in death James 2.5 Hearken my beloved Brethren Hath not God chosen the Poor of this World Rich in Faith and Heirs of the Kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him As Paul saith of himself 1 Cor. 7.25 I give my Judgment as one that hath obtained Mercy of the Lord to be faithful not that God foresaw that he was so Our Ordination to Life is the Cause of Faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to Eternal Life believed 2. When we were we were not lovely there was nothing to excite God to shew us Mercy Our natural Condition is described Titus 3.3 For we our selves also were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers Lusts and Pleasures living in 〈◊〉 and Envy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hateful and hating one another All are abominable and worthy of hatred yet one hateth another as if he were lovely and the other only abominable There are two Causes of Self-conceit we have not a Spiritual Discerning and are partial in our our own Cause and guilty of Self-love 1. We have not a Spiritual Discerning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are filthy deformed hateful in the Eyes of God stink in the Nostrils of God If we see a deformed Creature overgrown with Scurf and Sores or a stinking Carkass we turn away the Head in great abomination and cry O filthy yet we are all so before God A Toad a stinking Carkass cannot be so loathsome to us as a Sinner is to God If a Man had but a Glass to see his own natural Face he would wonder that God should love him Indeed we have a Glass but we have not Eyes What could God see in us to excite him to shew Mercy God is not blinded with the vehemence of any Passion yea the Object is uncomely uncomely to a Spiritual Eye much more to the Father of Spirits 2. Self-love blindeth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If Men would hold together and like one another all would be well but now we cannot love one another and live with one another in safety we seem such odd Creatures Fratrum concordia rara est We are hateful Creatures to God to Angels to Devils to our Selves Object But some are more civil and refined Answ. It is true Natural Corruption doth not break out in all with a like Violence but a benummed Snake is a Snake a Sow washed is not changed As when the Liver groweth other parts languish one great Lust intercepteth the nourishment of other Corruptions Object But do not some use Free-Will better than others Sure God loveth them more Answ. No not according to the Works which we have done but according to his Mercy he saved us Tit. 3.5 God's Original Motives to do good are from himself Vse 5. We are not to measure God's Love by Temporal Accidents that which cometh from Eternity and tendeth to Eternity that is an evidence of his special Love Eccles. 9.1 No Man knoweth either Love or Hatred by all that is before him The Pleasures of Sin are for a Season Heb. 11.25 and Afflictions are for a season but Spiritual Blessings in Heavenly Places which come from Heaven and tend to Heaven which have no dependance upon this World whether it stand or no these evidence the best Love God's special Mercy Why they were devised before ever the Foundations of the World were laid and it is most of all shewed when the World is at an end Therefore moderate your desires of Earthly Things which the Apostle calls this World's Goods 1 John 3.17 they are of no use in Eternity And bear Afflictions with more Patience you do but lose a little for the present that you may be safe for ever Hic ure hic seca ut in aeternum parcas Vse 6. It presseth us to get an Interest in this Eternal Love How shall we discern it 1. By the Scope and Aim of your Lives and Actions Do you labour for another World 2 Cor. 4.18
times because of our blockishness Col. 2.3 In him are hid all the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledg Hidden not that they should not be found out but because they are seen by the Eye of Faith Hidden because deposited there to be dispensed to us God made Christ a Storehouse to furnish all our Necessities 1 Cor. 1.30 Of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us Wisdom and Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption Wisdom to give us Spiritual Illumination Be not discouraged it is not the Pregnancy of the Scholar that prevaileth here but the Excellency of the Teacher If Christ be the Teacher no matter how dull the Scholar be Pride in Parts hath been in hinderance but Simpleness hath never been an hinderance Psal. 19.7 The Testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the Simple Jer. 31.33 34. I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my People And they shall teach no more every Man his Neighbour and every Man his Brother saying Know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. Mat. 11.25 I thank thee O Father Lord of Heaven and Earth because thou hast hid these things from the Wise and Prudent and hast revealed them unto Babes God can give to shallow and weak People great understanding in Spiritual Things as he cured him that was born blind John 9. 2. With Earnestness cry for Knowledg and lift up thy Voice for Vnderstanding Prov. 2.3 Many times God withholdeth Knowledg that we may cry for it especially when the Case is doubtful and litigious John wept when the Book was sealed with seven Seals Rev. 5.4 We need to cry for all Grace but especially for Saving-Knowledg Let us groan and sigh when we are in the Dark 1. Consider the Necessity of Knowledg The blind Man cried after Christ because he knew what it was to want Eyes Luke 18.41 Lord that I may receive my Sight We are not sensible of our natural blindness as we ought to be There is Ignorance and Folly in all but Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledg in Christ. If we are not ignorant yet we are indiscreet Men know not how to guide and order their Course Certainly if you were acquainted with your selves you would not hold your peace 2. Consider the Excellency of Knowledg All Knowledg is Excellent as all Light is Comfortable Knowledg is your Excellency above the Beasts that you have Receptive Faculties capable of knowing and understanding Things that you are intelligent Creatures this is your advantage above the Beasts But Saving-Knowledg is far more excellent even the Knowledg of God in Christ. This is the Glory of a Man Jer. 29.23 24. Let not the wise Man glory in his Wisdom neither let the mighty Man glory in his Might let not the rich Man glory in his Riches But let him that glorieth glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me that I am the Lord c. If Men should be able to dispute of every thing that might be known from the highest Star to the lowest Shrub this Knowledg is nothing to the Knowledg of God in Christ which is far better than all the Knowledg of the Questionists and Disputers of this World The Fear of God that is the best Excellency and that is it which Christ teacheth I observe the Providence of God in that one thing viz. Solomon had wrote many Books of Philosophy which are not extant when the Books of some Heathens as Aristotle's Book de Animalibus c. are extant but his Books of the Fear of God are preserved by a special Providence not one of them lost we may want the other without any loss of true Wisdom but we cannot want these And therefore you are more concerned in the getting of Saving-Knowledg than you are aware of Light was the first Creature that God made so it is the way by which all Grace is wrought in the Soul for in all Communications of Grace God beginneth with the Understanding Jer. 31.19 After I was instructed I smote upon my Thigh He makes the Creature to submit to his Providence to be contented in all Estates and Conditions Phil. 4.12 In all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need God draws you to Christ but his drawing is accompanied with a Teaching John 6.44 No Man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him Ver. 45. And they shall be all taught of God Every Man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the Father cometh unto me God's drawing is not a blind Force but there is a teaching with it God loves rational Service not blind Obedience And therefore cry for Knowledg and run to Christ that he may teach you and lead you into the Paths of Righteousness SERMON XLIV JOHN XVII 26 And I have declared unto them thy Name and will declare it that the Love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them THIS is the second Reason taken from the Benefits Christ had bestowed upon them Here is his Gift and his Aim In the first what he had done what he will do Where 1. Quid the Manifestation of his Father's Name 2. Quibus to whom principally to the Apostles and from them to Believers 3. Quomodo I have that is by his Ministry upon Earth and I will in the pouring out the Spirit and his Discourses with them after the Resurrection All that needeth Explication is What is meant by God's Name Answ. The use of Names from the beginning was a distinction to separate Creature from Creature by their Appellations At first Adam gave Names to the Beasts that their Species and Kinds might be distinguished for Beasts are distinguished only by their Herds and Kinds But the Names which Men bear are individual and particular Man being an excellent Creature made for Rule and Commerce and therefore is to be known not by his Kind but Name But now what is God's Name Where there are many there is need of Names but where there is but one the singularity is distinction enough But yet God hath his Name by way of distinction from Creatures so we have a Negative Name removing the Imperfections of the Creature and to distinguish him from those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods that are so called and his Name is a Jealous God Exod. 34.14 For thou shalt worship no other God for the Lord whose Name is Jealous is a Jealous God And by way of Notification that we may conceive of him aright as Names are not only distinctive but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Damascen So all that by which he is known or distinguished that is his Name and so God hath many Names because one cannot enough express him his Works are a part of his Name but chiefly his Word the Doctrine
Teaching of Christ. Providence doth not hinder Prayer Page 1● Providence of God in guarding Man is observable Page 172 R. REading the Scriptures the advantage of it Page 27 Scriptures to be read with Prayer Page 28 Receiving Christ what it is Page 389 What it is to receive Christ with all the Heart Page 94 Receiving the Word what it is Page 92 What it is to receive the Word with all the Heart Page 93 Reconciliation the Mercy of God in seeking Reconciliation with us Page 28● Redemption In the work of Redemption the Father the supream Author supream Cause supream Iudg. Page 86 87 Vniversal Redemption disproved Page 105 Covenant of Redemption vid. Covenant Reformation after Trials and Reformations come Trials and Probations Page 194 God oftentimes promotes Reformation by Troubles Page 194 What Call the first Reformers had Page 277 Rejoycing what reason a Christian hath to rejoyce Page 189 Religion no Religion but the Christian Religion the way to Salvation Page 32 Repentance the Ingredients of it Page 179 Repetition of the same Truths grievous to Nature and why Page 220 But profitable to Grace and why Page 220 Not to be grievous to us Page 221 Directions to Ministers in repeating the same Truths Page 222 Resemblance between us and Christ as the Son of God and as Mediator vid. Likeness Page 323 Respect of the World to be suspected Page 201 Restraint wicked Men restrained from Persecution by the Conviction of Sin on their Hearts Page 316 Resurrection how Christ was raised by the Father and how by himself Page 266 Revelation of God's Will to Adam to the World to the Church Page 240 241 Various manners of Revelation of God's Will 1. By Word without writing 2. By Word and writing 3. By writing alone vid. Scriptures Page 241 242 Reverence to be used in Prayer Page 3 138 Right God hath a Right to all we have Page 55 Righteousness of God how God is said to be righteous Page 367 Rule God's Act his Rule Page 238 There must be some Rule from God to guide the Creatures Page 261 Light of Nature not a sufficient Rule to fallen Man Page 239 S. SAcraments promote our Ioy. Page 190 Sacrament of the Lord's Supper the end of it Page 293 Sacrifice how Christ was both Priest and Sacrifice Page 288 Christ offered himself a Sacrifice Page 288 This Sacrifice Christ offered not for himself Page 288 But for all the Elect. Page 289 Sadness of Spirit the causes of it Page 188 In some it deserves Pity in others Rebuke Page 187 In Christians disproved Page 187 It brings a Scandal on Christ's Spiritual Kingdom and on the Ways of God Page 188 A Christian hath cause of Ioy when he hath Sorrow and Sadness of Spirit Page 188 Salvation next to God's Glory Christ's Aim was our Salvation Page 13 The business of our Salvation put into safe Hands Page 158 No Salvation out of the true Religion Page 236 Sanctification the various senses of the Word Page 226 287 293 It is actual Election Page 227 The difference between Civility and Sanctification Page 237 The efficient cause of it God Page 229 We cannot sanctify our selves Page 229 Means cannot do it without God Page 229 The Instrument of it the Word of God Page 231 233 Chiefly the Gospel Page 233 The Gospel worketh not without the Spirit Page 233 This must be received and applied by Faith Page 233 How Faith sanctifies Page 234 How we are sanctified by the Word Page 291 Why God sanctifieth by his Word Page 234 The Word of God is morally accommodated to this Page 235 The Excellency of Sanctification Page 227 Why we should pray for it Page 227 It is God's aim in all his Dispensations Page 227 The end of Christ's Death Page 290 Those that are sanctified need to be sanctified more and more Page 230 Sanctify what it is to sanctify God Page 243 What Christ's sanctifying himself signifies Page 290 Why Christ sanctified himself Page 290 Satisfaction of Christ the value of it Page 102 Saviour how Christ saves us Page 42 Scholars Believers Scholars of Christ's School Page 74 157 Scriptures the necessity of the Scriptures or written Word Page 241 The advantage we have by the Scriptures above what the Iews and Gentiles had Page 68 We are to bless God for the Scriptures Page 245 The Scriptures not corrupted Page 254 The aim of the Scriptures Page 261 To be the Iudg of Controversies Page 262 To be the constant Rule of Faith and Manners Page 262 Reading the Scriptures vid. Reading Divine Authority of Scriptures why we should inquire into it Page 242 Sufficiently assured to us Page 245 More Reason to believe than doubt it Page 261 How to settle the Conscience concerning it Page 261 What they shall do that stagger about it Page 244 Whether wicked Men can have any absolute assurance of the truth of it Page 243 Arguments to prove it Page 246 External 1. How God hath owned them Page 246 2. How the Church hath owned them by Tradition by Martyrdom Page 255 256 The Churches duty to the Scriptures Page 255 What respect we ought to bear to the Churches Testimony Page 255 3. How the malignant World hath owned them Page 256 Internal Arguments Page 257 1. The manner and form of them Page 257 The Majesty and yet the Simplicity of the Stile of Scriptures Page 257 The Harmony of the Scriptures Page 258 The Impartiality of them vid. Penmen of Scriptures Page 259 2. The matter of Scriptures vid. Precepts Promises Doctrines Histories Prophecies Self-Concei● the causes of it Page 365 Self-Murder the sinfulness of it Page 212 Sending of Ministers vid. Mission of Ministers Sent Christ was sent by the Father Page 263 What it implys Page 25 40 264 The ends of it Page 267 Christ's Condescension in submitting to be sent Page 269 Sending of Christ and sending the Apostles compared Page 270 271 Separation a great Crime Page 165 What grounds of Separation warrantable Page 165 Shame the way to Glory Page 10 Sight of Christ the greatness of the Priviledg Page 360 vid. Vision Sin committed against God chiefly as the wronged Party and highest Iudg. Page 86 263 Makes God stand at a distance from us Page 335 Sin prevails by degrees Page 176 Wilful Sins the danger of them Page 174 Sitting of Christ at God's Right-hand what it implys Page 62 Snares the World full of Snares Page 214 Sorrow the Nature of Man more acquainted with Sorrow than Pleasures Page 186 vid. Sadness of Spirit Spirit how it confirms the Word Page 27 85 Given to promote Vnity Page 164 Testimony of the Spirit how discerned Page 253 How we should know whether we have the Spirit of Christ. Page 306 386 Spirit of the World to be avoided Page 207 How it maybe discerned Page 207 Success to be desired by Ministers Page 277 Of the Doctrine the Scripture teacheth Page 246 Sufferings of Christ the greatness of them Page 287 He willingly underwent them
Cant. 2. 2. 243   13. 97 Isaiah 11. 6 7. 164 34. 16. 181 43. 11. 132 51. 9. 16 52. 7. 280 63. 1 2 3. 122 Jerem. 6. 16. 240   20. 176 Daniel 7. 13. 122 Matth. 6. 13. 213 7. 29. 257 8. 8 9. 28   12. 370 9. 6. 86 12. 4. 154 15. 6. 117 19. 27 28. 114 20. 23. 350 22. 5. 115 23. 29 30. 129 24. 14. 193 26. 39. 101 28. 20. 271 Mark 13. 9. 193 Luke 1. 17. 258 4. 4. 276   17. 207 21. 13. 193 23. 43. 252 John 1. 4. 232 3. 3. 349 5. 19. 87 6. 27. 86 264 7. 17. 262 8. 27. 207 10. 36. 86 12. 28. 11   42 43. 311 13. 10. 230   27. 287   34. 162 14. 1. 296   28. 25 15. 19. 197 16. 8 9 10 11. 312   15. 110   26 27. 11.   28. 98   30. 40 17. 5. 269   12. 76 153   20. 100   22. 164   26. 100 Acts 1. 12. 121   18. 177 2. 21. 31   33. 63 5. 30 31. 313 6. 3. 273 9. 6. 304   15. 275 13. 12. 272 273 16. 7. 279 19. 14 15. 274 20. 28. 265 Romans 4. 25. 87 5. 5. 384 6. 23. 19 8. 23. 349 11. 29. 146 15. 3. 13 1 Corint 2. 4. 92 2. 14. 243 375 6. 17. 302 10. 31. 51 11. 32. 211 12. 4. 164 15. 24. 22 73 157   28. 334   32. 193 2 Corinth 3. 3. 321   18. 281 4. 4. 130 374. 5. 9. 117 12. 9. 131 Galatians 4. 45. 41 264 265   29. 198 6. 14. 222 Ephes. 1. 10. 161   23. 304 2. 3. 363   14 15 16. 164   19. 109 3. 12. 298   17. 355 4. 6. 164   24. 141 5. 14. 232 6. 20. 282 284 Philippian 1. 1. 274   23. 352 3. 15 16. 163 Colossians 1. 24. 304   27 28. 280 2. 3. 328   15. 123 3. 3. 347   14. 162   24. 349 2 Thess. 1. 7 8. 315 1 Tim. 4. 12. 281 2 Tim. 3. 18. 29 Titus 2. 14. 108 3. 3. 365 Hebrews 1. 1. 241 2. 3. 319   18. 134 3. 1. 41 25 157 267 4. 1. 147   2. 234   16. 151 6. 12. 132 8. 3. 134   4. 124 12. 9. 146   24. 129 10. 14. 146   22. 94 12. 14. 140   15. 198 James 5. 10. 193 2 Pet. 1. 19. 245 1 John 1. 5. 137 3. 1. 340 1 John 3. 9. 148   12. 197 5. 6. 84 252 Revelat. 5. 8. 118 21. 27. 154 ERRATA PAge 2. line 3. for free read first P. 5. l. 12. r. he prayeth as God-Man P. 16. l. 31. f. agrue r. argue P. 32. l. 50. f. this r. his P. 35. l. 36. f. sure r. sore P. 46. l. 15. f. then r. when l. 25. f. general r. several P. 48. l. 15. f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 20. f. this r. the. P. 57. l. 39. f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 71. l. 38. f. tamen r. attamen P. 86. l. 58. r. John 6.27 P. 113. l. 33. r. this is one P. 123. l. 41. dele P. 125. l. 2. r. Accusations P. 134. l. 19. f. it r. I. P. 136. l. 35. f. in r. of P. 141. l. 30. f. an Act r. a Care P. 143. l. 8. f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 149. l. 54. f. Goal r. Goel P. 154. l. 56. f. Gift r. Reward P. 163. l. 33. r. to a sick Person P. 183. l. 32. f. must r. might P. 186. l. 5. f. libera● r. liberatio P. 195. l. 36. r. whippeth it out again by the VVorld God will c. P. 211. l. 38. after themselves add in the depth of Sorrow P. 222. l. 26. f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 241. l. 17. f. Creatures r. Nations P. 249. l. 21. f. lessen r. beseem P. 250. l. 67. f. Promises r. promised P. 263. l. 10. r. as a thing done P. 312. l. 27. r. as to be put to silence P. 359. l. 15. f. Men r. even P. 370. l. 6. f. Love r. loose P. 374. l. 43. f. no r. not P. 382. l. 16. dele l. 34. f. mere r. more P. 388. l. 5. f. Representation r. representative P. 392. l. 35. f. these r. there SERMONS UPON THE SIXTH CHAPTER OF THE ROMANS SERMON I. ROM VI. 1 2. What shall we say then shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein THE drift of the Apostle in this Chapter is to shew That free justification by Faith in Christ greatly tendeth to promote Holiness which he first proveth from the tenor of Christianity and then exhorteth the justified to get increase and exercise this Holiness in all their actions In these Words there are three things 1. An Objection supposed 2. A Rejection of it with abhorrence and indignation 3. A Confutation of it First The Objection is a preposterous Inference from what the Apostle had said Chap. 5.20 That where sin abounded grace did much more abound The Apostle propoundeth it by way of interrogation What shall we say then shall we continue in sin that grace may abound The words may be conceived as a slander raised by Jewish prejudice to make the Doctrine of the Gospel odious as if it did foster people in sin an unjust calumny Or as a temptation incident to loose carnal and careless Christians who are apt to abuse Grace and have such wretched reasonings in their own hearts that they might take the more liberty to sin that the Grace of God might thereby appear more illustrious and abundant You may therefore look upon it as produced either as a check to an Objection already made or as a prevention of an Abuse that might afterwards be made Secondly He rejecteth this Inference as absurd and blasphemous by a form of speech familiar to him Gal. 2.17 Rom. 3.8.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let this thought be far from us or this is a thing that all Christian Hearts should abominate Thirdly Paul's Reason against it or Confutation of it represented in an emphatical Interrogation How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein Where Observe First That to continue in sin and live longer in sin are equivalent expressions for in the Objection the expression is shall we continue in sin But in the Apostles Answer and Argument to the contrary it is can we live any longer therein Secondly Observe that before Grace we lived in sin for when he sai●● any longer he implieth that we were given to sin enslaved by sin before but shall we continue this course far be it from us to think so or say so much more to do so Thirdly Observe the Argument lyeth here we that are dead c. All that have given their names to Christ are or should be dead to sin now to be
〈◊〉 Make no provision for the flesh they are provident in sin studied to please their Lusts. Surely such a like care should we have of Sanctity Providing things honest Rom. 12.17 Pass the time of your sojourning here in fear 1 Pet. 1.17 When men are solicitous that the new Nature be not annoyed as they were formerly that the carnal Nature might be gratified it is a sign that serious Godliness possesseth their hearts Now men were careful heretofore that their lusts might want no satisfaction and shall they not be careful that the course of their obedience shall be carried on without interruption Secondly Industry and Diligence is notable in the servants of sin We read of some that do evil with both hands earnestly Micah 7.3 There is an eager disposition in many to sin Wicked men take a great deal of pains to go to Hell we all served sin with all our might and strength Now should there not be such an unwearied diligence in Holiness Rom. 12.11 Not slothful in business fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. As industrious as you were in obeying your base lusts and vile affections so industrious should you be in obeying the Precepts of Christ. Our vigor is turned into another chanel See Paul's instance Acts 26.11 I punished them ost in every Synagogue and compelled them to blaspheme and being exceedingly mad against them I persecuted them even unto strange Cities compared with 2 Cor. 5.13 For whether we be besides our selves it is to God or whether we be sober it is for your cause Thirdly With a like promptness and readiness of mind There need no great deal ado to draw men to evil as a stone runneth down hill of its own accord because of its natural tendency thereto and the smallest temptations seem to have an irresistible force in them Prov. 7.21 With the flattery of her lips she forced him Now after Grace received we should be as ready to obey the motions of the Spirit There is no greater evidence of the new Nature than that our obedience becometh more easie and even There needeth not much ado to perswade the new Creature to such things as belong unto and suit with the new Nature 1 Thess. 4.9 For as touching brotherly love ye need not that I write to you for ye your selves are taught of God to love one another Inclination preventeth perswasion Others with much ado are brought to a sense of their Duty and after all they put off God with a little compulsory service which they have no mind unto and had rather forbear than do it Fourthly Resolution and Self-denial How firm are men to a purpose of sinning and go on still though it cost them dear much expence of time waste their Estate bring a blot on their Name yea many a wound in their Consciences and flesh and blood is consumed Prov. 5.11 O that we could thus deny our selves for Christ Every lesser hinderance is pleaded by way of hesitancy and bar to our Duty a little inconvenience in the Service of God seemeth irksom and grievous to us Those that do not take notice of the inconveniences of sin but will easily take notice of the troubles of afflicted Godliness What iniquity have you found in me Jer. 2.5 Alas that we cannot more deny our selves for God who gave us all that we have and can give us greater things than ever we lost for him Fifthly They stopped at no sin Ye yielded your members to uncleanness and to inequity unto iniquity from habitual sin they proceeded to actual from one kind to another rested not in the lust or purpose but were still accomplishing what their lusts craved at their hands So will you count your selves servants of Righteousness because you have some purpose to do good or have some wishes to be better though they never come into act and effect Alas a Christian is to be determined not by knowing or wishing and woulding but by doing He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me Joh. 14.21 And whoso keepeth my words in him verily is the love of God perfected 1 Joh. 2.5 The carnal Nature venteth it self not in Lusts only but Practices so doth the new Nature it is an Habit and Principle that influenceth your daily course of life the same God that ruleth the Heart doth also rule the Life the root is for the fruit and the life within to inable us for action without so we have the root and life of Grace and Holiness that we may bring forth the fruit and do the works of Grace and Holiness Therefore whatever wishes and desires men have if they live as they did before neither God nor any wise man will judge that they are freed from sin and become the servants of Righteousness Sixthly The Progress they went forward from one sin to another and never stopped Now as they heaped up sin upon sin so should we add to Grace Grace 2 Pet. 1.5 6 7. Add to your faith vertue to vertue knowledge and to knowledge temperance and to temperance patience and to patience godliness and to godliness brotherly kindness and to brotherly kindness charity You should always grow more pure and holy and aim at an higher degree of Sanctification till all be perfected in Heaven 2 Cor. 7.1 Perfecting holiness in the fear of God The more Grace overcometh Nature the more comfortable every day will your lives be and Religion will grow a more easie and delightful thing to you the compleat subjection of our will to the Will of God is the health ease and quietness of our wills therefore study to be perfect 2. The Reasons why it must be so 1. From the Love and Goodness of God shewed in our Change which should constrain us and awaken in us principles of gratitude towards him 2 Cor. 5.14 15. For the love of Christ constraineth us c. Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her for she loved much It is a trouble to them that God hath been so long detained out of his right that the Devil hath ingrossed so much of their choicest time and best strength and therefore now they would make some recompence as Travellers that set forth late ride the faster Especially doth this hold good of them that have been great sinners it is possible that some have stuck at no villany but have ingulphed themselves in all manner of dissoluteness O how zealous should they be for God for time to come and bestir themselves that they may shew forth the sacred influence of Grace as they have done the cursed rigour of Nature 2. By Grace we have received a new Principle and Power Now Principiata respondent suis principiis a new Heart sheweth it self by newness of Life therefore the power and effect of Grace must as much discover it self as formerly we bewrayed the power of sin otherwise why is this new Principle planted in our hearts It is dangerous to receive objective Grace in vain
you Where the ministration of the spirit is made a distinct branch from working miracles doth he it by the works of the law or by the hearing of faith So that the spirit of Regeneration Sanctification and Adoption cometh by the Doctrine of the Gospel I will prove this by some reasons 1. From the Institution of God God delighteth to bless his own means and the great Institution of God for the benefit of mankind is the Gospel which being a supernatural Doctrine needed to be attested from Heaven that the truth of it might be known by the mighty Power that doth accompany it therefore this new Covenant is the law of the spirit the Powerful Influence of the Spirit of God on all those that submit to it is the seal and confirmation of it no other Doctrine can so change the soul and convert it to God John 17.17 Sanctifie them through the truth thy word is truth John 8.31 42. And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free That is to say then we know it to be the truth a Doctrine of God sanctifying us and making us Conquerors over sin and Satan 2. From the nature of the Gospel For God will work agreeably by suitable means not only agreeable to the Subject upon which he worketh the souls of men but agreeably to the Object by which he worketh 1. In the General It is a spiritual Doctrine By a spiritual Doctrine he will pour out more of the spirit which was but sparingly dispensed when the Ordinances which he instituted were carnal and bodily more fully when he had given a Law that suited more with his own spiritual nature and came closer to the soul of man that the law of a carnal commandment this law was by the Law of the spirit when he would break the obstinacy of the Jews he tried them by many positive Laws and external Observances but when he would reduce the world into a state of liberty his laws were spiritual and rational and with them he poureth out a mighty spirit therefore the Apostle intimateth that they served God in the oldness of the letter but we serve him in the newness of the spirit Rom. 7.6 that is in that true holiness whereunto we are renewed by the Holy Ghost through the preaching of the Gospel which is called the ministry of the spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 There was more letter then but more spirit now Phil. 3.3 A believer hath no confidence in the flesh doth not place his hope in the Observances of carnal Ordinances but rejoiceth in Christ Jesus serving God in the spirit 2. More particularly The Gospel is suited to the Operation of the spirit It being a Doctrine of profound Wisdom great Power and rich goodness in comparison of which all other knowledg is but cold and dry the spirit we are possessed withall is but a transcript of the word Heb. 8.10 2 Cor. 3.3 Ye are manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ written not with ink but with the spirit of the living God There is the prescript there the transcript as suppose a man would stamp his Coat of Arms upon Wax there needeth Wax a Seal graven with it and an hand to apply it this is the case here God would stamp his Image upon our souls but first the Characters of it are upon the word by this word of Wisdom he will give us the spirit of a sound mind that we may know God and our selves and the difference between good and evil by this Word of Grace or account of his love to us in Christ he gives us the spirit of Love by this Word of Power wherein there are such rich and great Promises he will raise a noble spirit in us to carry us above the world the stamp is prepared only to make an impression there is required a strong hand to apply it to the heart of man for tho the Gospel doth powerfully excite our dead and drowsie hearts to spiritual and heavenly things yet 't is not enough that the Doctrine be opened but it must be applied to the soul by the spirit or else 't is not healed and changed the Word is the means but the Spirit reneweth us as the principal cause for the Word doth not work upon all nor upon all those alike on whom it worketh The Gospel is a fit Instrument for it every thing communicateth its own nature fire turneth all about it into fire an Holy and Heavenly Doctrine is fit to beget an Holy and Heavenly Spirit 3. For the honour of our Redeemer in his Lordship or Kingly Office Who as he requireth new Duties of man fallen and disabled so he giveth strength proportionably the difficulty of our recovery lay not only in our reconciliation with God but in the renovation of our nature and subduing our obstinacy or changing our hearts Of his Prophetical Office that we might have the effect and comfort of it external Doctrine is not only necessary but the illumination of the spirit who leadeth us into all truth His Priestly Office That his merit may be known to be full his intercession powerful its needful that such a gift should be given to his people as the visible pouring out of the Spirit Act. 2.30 1. Use is To convince the rabble of carnal Christians how little they have gained by that Christianity they have Alas In what a case are those poor Souls who have not the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 If any man hath not the spirit of Christ he is none of his They do not belong to Christ have no interest in the fruits of his redemption and then How will ye stand before God in the Judgment and make answer to all that may be alledged against you the accusations of the Law or Satan or your own Consciences Certainly the guilt of Sin remaineth where the power of it is not broken there are Christians in name and Christians in power in profession and in deed and in truth Christians in the Letter and Christians in Spirit these are such as are sanctified by the Spirit unto Obedience and none but such have interest in the comfortable promises of mercy of the new Covenant Gal. 6.16 As many as walk according to this rule peace and mercy be upon them And none other shall be saved at last Heb. 59. He is the author of salvation to them that obey him Heb. 12.14 Without Holiness no man shall see the Lord. 2 d Use is To humble the better sort of Christians that they have gotten so little of the spirit That the effects of it in their Souls are so imperfect clouded with a mixture of remaining infirmities All that are godly have this Spirit are guided by it walk after it but all have it not in a like measure some are weak it doth not subdue their Lusts and Fears nor breed such mortification and courage as should be found in the Disciples of Christ these want comfort if possibly they should be sincere
the way which God hath set forth for you All will chuse happiness before misery but they are out in the means they do not chuse the good of holiness before the pleasures of sin nor the life of faith before the life of sence If you have more mind to keep sin than to let it go you are still charmed and inchanted with the delights of the flesh your will and resolution is not fixed 3. To this add an industrious pursuit and seeking after these things for our choice is known by our pursuit and our bent by our work these things must be diligently sought after that we may behave our selves like men that are desirous to have what they seek Heb. 11.6 God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him Everlasting Joys will not drop into the mouth of the lazy soul these things are not trifles they will cost us diligence and seriousness Phil. 2.12 Work out your salvation with fear and trembling It is a weighty work and it must be followed close if you miscarry in it you are undone for ever but if you happily get through it you are in a blessed state indeed 4. You must seek after the priviledges of the Gospel in Gods way You cannot have spiritual life and Adoption and Justification by Christ till you are united to him by faith 1 John 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life You cannot have Heaven and Glory but by patient continuance in well doing Rom. 2.3 To them that by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life You cannot have the end but in the use of means and you do not like the end if you do not like the means till you come to God by Christ you cannot live the life of Grace and till you live the Life of Grace you are not capable of Glory Therefore you must ask your souls often What have I to show for my Title to Salvation more than most of the world have 5. It is not enough that you seek after them in Gods way but you must seek after them above other things A feeble desire cannot maintain it self against fleshly lusts and temptations if you have a mind to these things and a greater mind to other things your resolution will be soon shaken carnal things will intercept the vigor and life of your souls these things must be sought first and most all must be sold for the Pearl of Price Mat. 13.45 46. 6. You must beg of God to give you a new mind and a new heart Both to discern and relish spiritual things for your old corrupt minds and hearts will never do it 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness to him neither can he receive them because they are spiritually discerned He cannot accept nor savingly understand these things so as to believe them with a sound belief and a large affection Exhortations are in vain for inclination here doth more than Perswasion all things are of God 2 Cor. 5.17 18. God must give both and therefore ask them of him SERMON VIII ROM VIII 6 For to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace THE Apostle is giving Reasons Why the Comforts of Justification do only belong to the sanctified He only takes notice of Two First The difference between the sanctified and unsanctified as to their disposition Secondly The difference that is between them as to the Event and Issue There is a contrary disposition and a contrary end and issue First How they are affected or what they mind Secondly What will come of it according to Gods Oordination and Appointment 1. He reasoneth from the contrary disposition of the unsanctified They being after the flesh do only mind and savour carnal things they study to please the flesh value all things by the interest of the flesh therefore are justly excluded from the priviledges of the spiritual life for 't is not fit men should be happy against their wills or be possess'd of priviledges they do not care for God will not cast Pearl before swine that trample on them nor bestow these precious comforts where they are not valued This Argument you have v. 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 Because they mind them not they have them not 2. He reasoneth from the consequent issue and event by the Ordination and Appointment of God Thus in the Text For to be carnally minded is death Death belongeth to the carnally minded and Life and Peace to the spiritually minded In this Scripture there are two Ways and two ends both opposite and contrary to each other 1. The two Ways The Carnal minding and the Spiritual minding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The Two Ends Death and Life and Peace Doct. That the carnal mind tendeth and bringeth a man to Death but the spiritual mind is the way to life and peace The Text and the Doctrine being a copulate Axiom must be explained by parts 1. To be carnally minded is death I must open Two Things 1. The carnal minding 2. That death which is the fruit and consequent of it 1. What is this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which here we translate to be carnally minded in the Margent the minding of the flesh and some Translations the wisdom of the flesh 1. I Answer 'T is the influence of the flesh upon all the faculties Vnderstanding Will and Affections as also upon our practice and conversation when the Wisdom of the flesh governeth our counsels choices and actions It includeth the acts of the mind There are two acts of the mind Apprehension and Cogitation in both the flesh bewrayeth its self 1. As to Apprehension We are acute in discerning the Nature Worth and Value of carnal things but stupid and blockish in things spiritual and heavenly Luke 16.9 The children of this world are wiser in their generation than the children of light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 More dexterous in the course of their affairs skilful in all things of a secular interest in back and belly concernments but very sensless in things that are without the line of the flesh and beyond the present world 2 Pet. 1.9 He is blind and cannot see afar off He can see nothing of the danger of perishing for ever or the worth of Salvation or the need of Christ to heal wounded souls or the necessity of making serious preparation for the world to come 'T is strange to consider how acute Wits are stupid and sensless in these things being blinded by the delusions of the flesh surely none have such a lively knowledg of spiritual things as spiritual men Object But do not many carnal men understand the Mysteries of Godliness Yea sometimes more distinctly and acurately than the sanctified I Answer Carnal
is a permanent and abiding testimony By his constant operation we are acquainted with him and know him what moveth and stirreth in us but now and then we understand not but the Holy Ghost is familiar with us resideth and dwelleth in our hearts we feel his pulse and motions John 14.7 I will send you the spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth in you and shall be in you Therefore they know 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they that constantly feel his Operations in comforting quickning instructing them they may see how they are beloved of God and minded by him upon all occasions the effects of the spirit are life holiness faith strength joy comfort and peace he enlightneth our understanding confirmeth our faith and assures us of salvation exciteth us to prayer stirreth up holy desires and motions comforteth us in crosses awakeneth us in groans after heaven Now those that have such constant experience of the illuminating sanctifying quickning work of the spirit on their souls cannot but know what kind of spirit dwelleth and worketh in them 4. The sanctifying spirit is the surest note of our reconciliation with God as that which will not deceive us when he sanctifieth he is pacified towards us Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus the great shepherd of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting covenant make you perfect in every good work to do his will working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight And 1 Thes. 5.23 The very God of peace sanctifie you wholly in body soul and spirit 2 Cor. 5.17 18. If any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become new And all things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ. A man lieth open to delusions by other evidences and may be long enough without true and solid comfort 4. From Gods constant government But there is a twofold way of Providence by which he governeth the world or else conducteth souls to glory There is an external sort of government by prosperities and adversities and afflictions and worldly blessings now these have their use to invite us to obedience and to caution us against sin but these things are not dispenc●d as sure evidences of Gods love and hatred Eccles. 9.2 Worldly good things may be given in anger lest men should be marked out by their outward condition rather than the disposition of their souls God would not distinguish the good by the blessings of his common providence nor brand and mark out the bad by their afflictions Therefore these mercies that run in the channel of common providence are dispenced promiscuously But God hath another way of internal government carried on within the soul by troubles of conscience for sin and the comforts of a good conscience as the reward of obedience Now in this sort of Government the influence of the spirit is mainly seen God sheweth his anger or his love his pleasure or displeasure by giving and withholding the spirit When he is pleased we have the Testimony of it in our Consciences by the presence and comforts of the spirit when displeased he withdraweth the spirit this is reward and punishment the accesses and recesses of the spirit if we have sinned Psal. 51.10 Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy spirit from me The retaining and withholding the spirit is one of the greatest calamities in the world v. 11. renew a right spirit in me 12. and uphold me by thy free spirit On the contrary the reward of obedience is the increase of the spirit Rom. 14.17 For the kingdom of God is not in meats and drinks but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy ghost Now this being Gods constant way of internal government whereby he manifesteth his pleasure or displeasure by withholding or withdrawing or giving out his spirit and this a surer way than the effects of his external Providence I cannot say God hateth me because he denieth earthly blessings or blasteth them when bestowed This may be for other reasons than to manifest his anger or hatred I cannot say God loveth me because I enjoy outward prosperity but if I have the spirit that is never given in anger 1. VSE is To perswade us to seek after the presence of the spirit in our hearts 'T is not enough to be baptized to have the common Faith and Profession of Christians no we must also have the spirit of Christ for while we are carnal we are Christians only in the Letter two things I will press you to To receive and retain him to get him and keep him 1. Get him See that he be entred into your hearts to recover your souls to God John 3.5 See that you be born again of water and of the Spirit And not only so but get an increase and supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ Phil. 1.17 Through your prayers and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Seek more of the Spirit and lose him not in part nor in whole quench not the spirit Eph. 4.30 To encourage you consider God is ready to give the holy spirit Luke 11.13 And Christ hath purchased it that it might not be shed on us in a sparing manner Tit. 3.5 6. 'T is applied to us by the Word or Gospel-Dispensation 2 Cor. 3.18 Baptism hath its use Tit. 3.5 It doth not signifie so much the blood of Christ as the sanctifying cleansing spirit purchased thereby The promise of the spirit is sometimes made absolutely as Zech. 12.10 I will pour out a spirit of grace and supplication as implying the first grace you must take your lot if you miss of it 't is long of your selves you resist former warnings motions and strivings of the spirit wait in the use of means Sometimes conditionally to faith John 7.39 This he spake of the spirit which they that believe on him should receive Sometimes to Repentance Acts 2.38 Repent and thou shalt receive the gift of the Holy Ghost Prov. 1.38 Now these must be often renewed if we would get more of the spirit into our hearts for the spirit is continued and encreased to us by the same acts by which it is gotten at first by faith and repentance faith assenting or consenting or denying 1. Assenting with admiration of the infinite goodness and love of God shining forth to us in our redemption by Christ the assent must be strong that it may more effectually lead on other parts of faith and because the actions of the three Persons are a great Mystery 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the foreknowledg of God the father through the sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Here is the eternal love of the Father the infinite merit of Christ and the all powerful operation
some promised good The act is a desirous expectation The object is some promised good Of the act I shall speak afterwards the object I shall consider now 'T is some good for evil is not hoped for but feared and a good promised for hope the grace is grounded upon the word of God Psal. 130.5 I have hoped in thy word And the Apostle telleth us that the heirs of promise being secured by two immutable things Gods word and Gods oath do fly for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before them Heb. 6.18 The promise doth both declare and assure declare what we may hope for the Apostle saith 't is set before us not before our senses or the eyes of the body but before our faith the eyes of our minds in the Gospel and with all doth assure us in hoping for we have the word of God who is the supream Verity that neither can deceive nor be deceived and the promises of the Gospel are ratified by the solemnity of an oath the more to excite our drowsie mind●●o consider upon what sure grounds we go upon Well then there is some word of promise assented unto by faith before we expect the good promised Promises are the holdfast we have upon God and the sure grounds of raising hope in our selves or pleading with God in Prayer we may plead them to our selves if we would have strong and solid consolation Psal. 56.4 In God I will praise his word in God have I put my trust I will not fear what man can do unto me Thus did David rebuke his fears The fidelity of God in his promises is matter of firm confidence and hope to us Only we must not make promises to our selves lest we become false Prophets to our selves and build upon our own dreams So in pleading with God we have free leave to challenge God upon his word Psal. 119.45 Remember the word unto thy servant wherein thou hast caused me to hope Our necessities lead us to the promises and the promises to Christ in whom they are yea and amen and Christ to God as the fountain of grace there we put these bonds in suit and turn promises into prayers 2. The promises do concern either this life or that which is to come 1 Tim. 4.8 Godliness is profitable to all things having the promise of this life that now is and that which is to come There are supplies necessary for us during our pilgrimage therefore God hath undertaken not only to give us Heaven and happiness in the next world but to carry us thither in a way best pleasing to himself and conducible to our good that we may serve him with comfort and peace all the days of our lives Therefore there is an hope in Gods promises for what we stand in need of by the way and God delighteth to train us up in a way of faith and hope in expecting our present supplies that by often trying and trusting him for these things we may the better hope for the great salvation as men practice swimming in the shallow brooks before they venture in the deep ocean But temporal things are only promised so far as it may be for Gods Glory and our good we must not set God a task to provide meat for our lusts or imagine that his providence will lacquey upon our humours and vain fancies 'T is the ordinary practice of his free grace and fatherly love to provide things comfortable and necessary for his Children Matth. 6.32 For your heavenly father knoweth that ye have need of all these things There is a common bounty and goodness which reacheth to all his creatures even to the preservation of the smallest worm how much more will he provide for us whom he hath Adopted into his family and to whom he hath made promises that he will never leave us to insupportable difficulties You would count him an unnatural Father that feedeth his dogs and hawks and lets his Children die of hunger Certainly we may hope in God that he will do what is best all things considered 3. The great promise and so the principal object of our hope is salvation by Christ or eternal life 1 John 2.25 This is the promise which he hath promised us eternal life Christ hath promised other things but this is the promise 'T is the great end of Christs mediation to bring us to God 1 Pet. 3.18 For Christ also hath once suffered the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God And that is not fully done till we live with him in Heaven this is the end of our faith 1 Pet. 1.9 This is the prime benefit offered to us in the Gospel to which all others tend By Justification our incapacity is removed by Sanctification eternal life is begun by the mercies of daily providence we are preserved in our duty and motion towards this happy estate Kept blameless to the heavenly kingdom 2 Tim. 4.8 From hence we fetch our comfort during the whole course of our Pilgrimage This we look upon as the recompence of all our pains and losses and upon the hopes of it the life of grace is carryed on and the temptations of sense defeated and therefore hope is described in Scripture by this object more than any other thing Called thence The hope of salvation and all other hopes are in order to this Rom. 15.4 Whatever things were written afore time were written for our learning that we through the patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope that is by submiting and waiting upon him in variety of Providences here in the world we might still keep up the hope of eternal life 4. Eternal life must be expected in the way God promiseth it We must not take that absolutely which God promiseth conditionally God promiseth it to them that believe in Christ John 6.40 This is the will of him that sent me that every one which seeth the son and believeth on him may have everlasting life and I will raise him up at the last day Those that saw him with the eyes of the body and were not offended at his despicable appearance but could own him as the Messias as Lord and Saviour Those that see him with the eyes of the mind see such Worth and Excellency in him as to be content to run all hazzards with him and count all things but dung and dross that they may be found in him that they may venture their souls and all their interests in his hands Sometimes to the obedient Heb. 5.8 Sometimes to them that persevere notwithstanding temptations Rom. 2.7 Sometimes to the mortified Rom. 8.13 Now you must consider not only the grant or the benefit contained in the promise but the precept the condition required the benefit or priviledg offered expresseth Gods Grace the condition required points out your duty and by consequence your right for we are not duly qualified according to promise and the gift is suspended till we fulfil the condition but
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
Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest for I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities I will remember no more 'T is fit Gods turn should be served before ours that we should be willing to return to our obedience before we have our discharge 3. The next step is and whom he justified them he also glorified But you will say Doth the Apostle in the several links of the Golden Chain omit Sanctification I Answer No 'T is included as to the beginning in vocation as to the continuance and further degree 't is included in glorification this therefore is the order God doth first regenerate that he may pardon and he pardoneth that he may further sanctifie and so make us everlastingly happy now Regeneration is included in vocation for his calling us is all one with his begetting us by the word of truth James 1.18 But his further sanctifying which is consequent to justification is implied in the word glorified as grace is glory begun so glorification is sanctification consummate and compleated 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath sealed us and given us the earnest of the spirit in our hearts which is centessima pars Here our happiness standeth in loving God and being beloved of him there in the most perfect act of love and reception of his benefits this love is here inkinddled by faith there by vision here so far like God that sin is mortified there nullified 4. Those that are sanctified are glorified in part There are fully glorified the Apostle speaketh of it as past he will certainly and infallibly glorifie them as if they were in Heaven already Hath eternal life John 5.24 Hath it in the promise hath it in the pledg the gift of the sanctifying spirit we have small beginnings and earnests and fore-tasts of everlasting blessedness in this life by faith we may foresee what God will be for ever to his Saints now by being sanctified we are put into a capacity of eternal life Without holiness we cannot see God Heb. 12.14 But holiness maketh us more fit and as it is increased in us so we are nearer to Glory and are more suited to it 1. VSE is information It informeth us of divers truths necessary to be observed by us 1. In all this order and chain of causes there is no mention of merits But all is ascribed to grace and Gods free favour chusing calling justifying sanctifying glorifying us from the first step to the last 't is all grace our best works are excluded from having any meritorious influence upon it Rom. 9.11 Before the children had done either good or evil it was said Jacob have I loved and Esau have I hated that the purpose of God according to election might stand Mark there was a voluntas and voluntas miserendi 2 Tim. 1.9 Not according to works but according to his purpose and grace which was given us in Christ before the world began Works are still excluded as they stand in opposition to Gods free mercy and goodness 't is a free act of his disposing to which only God was induced by his own love 2. That predestination is most free not depending upon foreseen works and faith We are chosen to faith and holiness but not for it the Scripture saith to Faith 2 Thes. 2.13 Because God hath from the beginning of the world chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the spirit and belief of the truth And to Holiness Eph. 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the world that we should be holy But we are not chosen because we believed and were holy or because God did foresee it but that we might believe and be holy Faith and Holiness are only fruits and effects of Gods Grace in us there was no foreseen cause in us to move God to bestow it upon us 3. That predestination to glory doth not exclude the means by which 't is brought about Such as Christs Gospel Ministry Faith Holiness the Cross No A conditional dispensation is subordinate to an absolute decree God hath predestinated will yet call before he will justifie God giveth the condition taketh away the heart of Stone worketh Faith and Holiness in us Gods purpose is that such and such shall be called and saved by faith in Christ now this maketh an absolute connection between faith and salvation now the elect till they are called and do believe know nothing of this but 't is their duty to fulfil the condition 4. The greatness of our obligation to God Here are the several steps and degrees whereby his eternal love descendeth to his chosen or the several acts and effects by which he bringeth them to their purposed blessedness and do all infer a new obligation that he was pleased to chuse us who were equally involved in misery with others and call us with an holy calling passing by thousands and ten thousands in outward respects much before us and justifie us freely by his grace forgiving us so many offences and bestowed upon us the gift of the sanctifying spirit by which we are regenerated and fitted for everlasting glory see here the great love of God Gods love in time cannot be valued enough but Gods love before all time should never be forgotten by you there you have the rise and fountain of all the benefits done unto us 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 so long be taken up about us 'T is love managed with wisdom and counsel his heart is set upon it to do us good those benefits came not by chance but were fore-layed and fore-ordained by God if one do us a kindness that lyeth in his way and when opportunity doth fairly invite him he is friendly to us but when he studieth to do us good we know his heart is towards us God sets all his Wisdom and Grace awork this was a feast long in preparing that it might be the more full and ample and all things be ready if we be ready and our remedy at hand before our misery took effect this is a distinguishing love differencing us from others all along by chusing calling justifying glorifying that one should be taken and the other left 5. The blessedness of a Christian they are predestinated called justified and glorified all which are special grounds of comfort and patience under the cross what ever may befal a Christian in this world God hath predestinated and singled us to be objects of his grace and instruments of his glory in this world and to be conformed to the image of his Son v. 29. And we can fare no worse than Christ did and that the Lord should call us in due time out of the corrupt and miserable state of mankind to the Faith of Christ and shall not we suffer for it And then justifie us and free us from the
our salvation there is such a temperament of both that they shine with an equal glory 3. We are justified by faith Acts 13.39 And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses certainly none are justified in a state of impenitency and unbelief 't is not enough to look to the first moving cause the grace of God or the impetration of it by the blood of Christ but how it is applied to our selves and what right we have For the righteousness of Christ is none of ours till we do repent and believe let us see how our title doth arise when we thankfully seriously and broken-heartedly accept Christ as our Lord and Saviour then we are found in him not having our own righteousness 4. We are justified by works and not by faith only by which are meant the fruits of sanctification for true faith and true holiness will shew its self by good works faith giveth us the first right but works continue it for otherwise a course of sin would put us into a state of damnation again therefore at the last judgment these are considered Revel 20.12 And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works Matth. 25.35 36. For I was an hungry and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in naked and ye cloathed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me Faith is our consent but obedience verifieth it or is our performance of what we consented unto the one as covenant making the other as covenant-keeping we are admitted by covenant-making but continued in our priviledges by covenant-keeping Psal. 25.10 All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his Covenant But yet a little more must be said to reconcile the two Apostles Paul saith A man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law Rom. 3.28 and James saith Chapt. 2.24 Ye see then how by works a man is justified and not by faith only There is a two-fold charge commenced against us as sinners and breakers of the law as hypocrites and unsound believers To the first we have nothing but the merits of Christ to plead to the second a fruitful obedience or else Paul in the opposition between works and faith meaneth by works legal observances by faith true Christianity The Jews boasted of their legal observances to the rejection of the faith of Christ and James by faith a dead faith and by works Christian duties or acts of obedience to God not external observances of the law of man 4. Why no charge or accusation can lie against them whom God justifieth 1. Because God is the supream law-giver to appoint the terms and conditions upon which we shall be justified and when he hath stated them and declared his will who shall reverse it or revoke it Heb. 6.17 18. Wherein God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation No cause of revocation can be imagined in God or out of God within God not want of wisdom for nothing can fall out but what he foresaw at first Psal. 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent Not inconstancy of will for he is not as man that he should repent 1 Sam. 15.29 Nor can his will be frustrated through any defect of power for he is Almighty Nothing without God neither Devils nor Angels nor Men have power to null and frustrate the force of his constitutions The New Covenant is his resolved will and purpose not to be altered surely in making it God determineth of his own and not another's right 't is in his power to absolve or condemn upon what terms he pleaseth therefore if out of his Soveraign will he hath put our justification in such a course who can reverse it 2. Because the promise of justification is built upon Christs everlasting merit and satisfaction and therefore it will hold good for ever Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Christ procured these promises for us and that by his death therefore everlastingly they hold good 2 Cor 1.20 For all the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen and called the everlasting Covenant 'T is even become the interest of God to justifie us that he may not lose the glory of his grace and the merit and oblation of Christ Isa. 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities He that hath born our sins all this cost would be in vain if he should not pardon and justifie There is such a value in the death and obedience of Christ that the Scripture puts a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon it compare it with the influence of Adam as a common root Rom. 5.17 18. For if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life And with the legal sacrifices Heb. 9.13 For if the blood of Bulls and Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ c. There is the same reason in both besides institution and appointment there is an intrinsick value 3. Because 't is conveyed by the solemnity of a Covenant now God by his Covenant hath made it our right his justice is ingaged 1 John 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which the righteous Judge shall give me at that day By solemn promise you convey a right to another in the thing promised so doth God 4. When we believe God as the supream Judge actually determineth our right so that a believer is rectus incuria hath his quietus est Rom. 4.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. And then who can lay any thing to our charge to reverse Gods grant 5. The Lord as the soveraign disposer of mans felicity doth many times uncontroulably give us the comfort of it in our own consciences Job 34.29 When he giveth quietness who can trouble and when he hideth his face who then can behold him whether it be done against a nation or against a man only None can obstruct the peace which he giveth Gods dispensations whether for good or evil are effectual
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
thee naked as in the day wherein thou wast born 'T is not meant that God would take away their apparel but deprive them of his Spiritual favours leave them as he found them at their first birth and then how miserable were they Well then in its self 't is shameful and maketh us odious and abominable to God To flye from him to shun his presence as Adam when he sinned found himself naked and ran away from God to the Bushes Gen. 3.7 So all naturally lye before God as deformed sinners have naked and loathsome Souls though the Body should be clad with gorgeous Robes 2dly We being naked our great business is to get a Garment wherewith to cover our nakedness that our shame may not appear Rev. 2.17 18. Thou art poor and blind and miserable and naked I Counsel thee to buy of me white Raiment that thou mayest be Clothed Our business is to be traffiquing with Christ about Garments of Salvation how to get our sins covered with such a covering as will hide them from the sight of God This is our business if we would not have God dreadful but amiable Adam when he found himself naked was looking out for a covering But he could find out nothing but a few fig leaves till the Lord made him Coats of Skins possibly of those beasts which were offered in sacrifice for the news of the seed of the woman or the first tydings of the Messiah who should come to redeem the world was then imediately made known to him and Sacrifice appointed to signify and prefigure it 3dly There are no Garments of Salvation to be had but from Christ alone no way else found out to cover our nakedness Therefore we are said to put on Christ Gal. 3.27 Rom. 13.11 Put on the Lord Jesus So that then we are not found naked but Clothed with Christ who alone can cover our loathsome nakedness and render us acceptable to God As Hester had Garments out of the Kings Ward-robe so the Church hath granted unto her by the Kings gift and allowance fine Linnen which is the Righteousness of the Saints Rev. 19.8 Whatever the Instruments be yet Christ saith I will give thee change of Raiment Zech. 2.4 Alas our own Righteousness is as filthy rags and will never cover our nakedness our best Robes need to be washed in the Lambs Blood or there is no appearing before God with any comfort and confidence 3dly Why none but they can groan and desire earnestly to be Cloathed upon with the House which is from Heaven 1. None but they are in a state or have a right to enjoy it the change of an earthly estate into an Heavenly one requireth first as a necessary foregoing Condition that we should be in this world Clothed with Christs Righteousness and regenerated and sanctified by his Spirit and Glorifie God by new obedience For Corruption cannot inherit incorruption and none but new Creatures shall inherit the new Jerusalem And good works are the way to the Crown c. Well then none but they are got ready and so are in a Conditon desirously to expect this Glory The Soul being Conscious to its self of having this true qualification doth more comfortably expect and desire and groan for immortality 'T is but a small part of lost mankind who shall injoy this Blessedness for the flock to whom the Father will give the Kingdom is but a little flock And these are such as are Justified and Sanctified They that are destitute of Righteousness cannot look God in the Face much less desire his presence Surely a man must be born again before he can enter into the Kingdom of God Joh 3.3 5. 2dly None have a right temper of heart to incline them to it but those that are Cloathed A man is ashamed to be seen in his nakedness especially before his Superiors but being Clothed cometh forth with confidence So here guilt and sin breed a shyness of God but pardon and sanctification give an Holy boldness Joh. 2.28 And now little Children abide in him that when he shall appear we may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming So 1 Joh 4.17 That we may have boldness at the day of Judgment because as he is so are we in the world Be justified be Sanctified and walk as Christ walked and why should you be afraid to appear in his presence Whereas others are ashamed to be seen by him Shame is properly a fear of a rebuke a reproof from the Judge of the world is the greatest rebuke of all Now what maketh the Saints so bold and allayeth their fear and shame since they are Conscious to themselves of many infirmities Answ. Their nakedness is covered they have white raiment cast upon them that all their defects and infirmities are hidden More particularly 1. That which is the matter and cause of fear and shame is removed That which makes a man afraid is guilt and sin which sometimes is represented under the notion of filthiness and sometimes of nakedness Now this filthiness is washed away by the Blood of Christ This nakedness is covered by the Righteousness of Christ. They have put on Christ and are invested with his Righteousness Rom. 8.1 2dly The ground of our boldness is laid so that we may have a comfortable expectation of Everlasting Blessedness 1. The Justified and Sanctified are at peace with God Rom. 5.1 Being Justified by Faith we have peace with God through our Lord-Jesus Christ. And for Sanctification Gal. 6.16 And as man as walk according to this Rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Our great business is to be found of God at peace in a state of amity at the last day 2 Pet. 3.14 Since ye look for such things be the diligent that may be found of him in peace and without spot and blame The great end of all diligence is to be found of him in peace and there is no way to be so but to be without spot and blame without spot relateth to the Soul without blame to the Conversation The great business then wherein a Christian is to be exercised is in the getting off our ●inful spots and in putting off our filthy Garments that we may be Clothed with change of Raiment Certainly much sweet peace and quietness is found in their Spirits who make it their serious work to have the guilt of sin washed away by the application of the Blood of Jesus and their filthy natures changed by the power of his Spirit On the Contrary others lye under much unquietness and bitter anxiety who are still under the burden of unpardoned guilt and unrenewed nature These are not at peace with God 2dly They have a Conscience witnessing of their sincerity though they have many failings And the Testimony of Conscience giveth great boldness and confidence 2 Cor. 1.12 1 Joh. 3.21 1 Joh. 3.19 Hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts
providence It ingageth my dependance to know there is a providence but it helpeth my dependance to know how 't is managed for the good of Gods Children They that know thy name will put their trust in thee Psa. 9.10 So the Doctrine of Justification by Christ. The thing is plain in all points 2. Firm assent John 17.8 They have known surely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indeed or in truth And Acts 2.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 assuredly safely without danger of errour The certainty of faith mightily enlivens our apprehensions of any truth and makes them more forcible and operative But usually there is a defect in our assent hated truths are usually suspected Ministers speak of it coldly and in jest as if not perswaded of what they say And we hearers learn it by rote Yet this I must say God hath not only warned the World of wrath in the Old Testament and the New But also natural light doth so far evidence this truth that in their serious and sober moods men cannot get rid of the apprehensions of Immortality and punishment after Death Reason will tell us that God perfectly hateth sin will terribly punish it we cannot easily lay aside these fears nor stifle them in our Bosoms nor sport them away nor jest them away when we are alone or when we are serious or when we come to dye they will revive and haunt us But oh that we were oftner alone and would resuscitate and blow up these sentiments which lye hid in the heart and revive our Faith about them 3. It implyeth serious consideration knowing that is considering acting our thoughts upon it for next to sound belief to make truths active there is required serious consideration Thoughts of Hell may keep many out of Hell 'T is a moral means which God may bless 't will be no loss to Christians to think of their danger before they incur it They that cannot endure to think of it or hear of it discover their guilt and the security of their own hearts presumption is a coward and a run-away but Faith meeteth its enemy in open field Psa. 23.4 Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of Death I will fear no evil for thou art with me It supposeth the worst suppose God should reject me consider with thy self aforehand as the unjust steward Luke 16. what to do when turned out of doors how shall I make my defence when God shall rise up what shall I answer him Job 31.14 What shall I then do 4. Here is perswasion as to the effect and fruit of all which implyeth three things 1. The thing to which they were perswaded That is not mentioned but the matter in hand sheweth it to be such things as would bear weight in the Judgment and exempt them from wrath to come Such as Faith Repentance and new Obedience Faith in the Redeemer 2 Thes. 1.10 Heb. 6.18 Repentance Matth. 3.19 And Acts 3.19 New obedience Heb. 5.9 2 Thes. 1.8 or a serious coming to Christ and hearty subjection to him is the only way to escape that wrath To these we exhort and perswade you again and again without these you are obnoxious to the severity of his revenging Justice 2. Earnest zeal and endeavours on the part of Paul and his colleagues and all that are like minded with them they must not only teach and instruct but perswade Col. 1.28 Warning every man and teaching every man in all wisdom that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus He addeth verse 29. Whereunto I also labour striveing according to his working The understanding is dark and blind in the things of God and needeth teaching The will and affections are perverse and backward and they need warning And therefore we must warn and teach Warn and that not in a cold or slaunting manner as if we were in jest and did not believe the things we speak of But with such vigour and labour and striving as becometh those who would present them to Christ as the travail of our Souls at the last day and as those who are sensible of the terrour of the Lord our selves 3. It implyeth a being perswaded on the peoples part For all that mind their own welfare will take this warning and since we must shortly appear before the bar of the dreadful God to give an account what use we have made of these perswasions When God giveth warning and God giveth time our condemnation is the more aggravated Revel 2.21 I gave her space to repent and she repented not Warning and perswasion as Reuben did not I warn you 2 Cor. 6.1 We beseech you receive not this grace in vain God keepeth an account of these warnings Luke 13.7 And the importunity of these pressing convictions which we have had very request and exhortation made for God will be as a fiery dart in your Souls how fresh will every Sermon come into your minds The melting words of exhortation which you were wont to hear will be as so many hot burning coals in your hearts to torment you It will be easier for the people of Sodom and Gomorrah then for you Matth. 10.15 VSE is to teach us all to apply this truth What Paul had spoken in general concerning the last Judgment he applyeth to himself 'T is not enough to have a general knowledge of truth but we must improve and apply them to our own use Men of all ranks must do so 1. It presseth Preachers to perswade men Oh how diligently should we study how earnestly should we perswade with what love and tender compassion should we beseech men to escape this wrath to come How unweariedly should we bear all opposition and mocks and scorns and unthankful returns How plainly should we rip up mens soars and open their very hearts to them How carefully should we watch over every particular Soul How importunate should we be with all sinners for their conversion considering that shortly they must be judged Cry aloud spare not Isa. 58.1 'T is a notable help against a sleepy Ministry to consider that those Souls to whom we speak must within a while receive their everlasting doom When you find a deadness rowse up your selves by these thoughts this will put a life into your exhortations a sense of what we speak zeal for the Glory of God and compassion over Souls will not suffer us to do the work of the Lord negligently 2. To all Christians 1. Perswade your selves commune with your own Souls Do I know the terrour of the Lord What have I done to escape it If you would not fall into the hands of a living God cast your selves into the arms of a dying Saviour Hide your selves before the storm cometh if his anger be but kindled a little blessed are all those that put their trust in him Psa. 2.12 Seek conditions of peace while a great way off Luke 14. A powerful enemy marcheth against us especially when you begin to grow negligent dead hearted and
is satisfied with Christs Obedience as a perfect Ransom for us and is well pleased with those who make use of it and apply it in the appointed way by the subordinate New Testament Righteousness Now as it is the Righteousness of God 't is a great comfort for the Righteousness of God is better than the Righteousness of a meer creature With the Righteousness of God we may appear before God with all confidence and look for all manner of Blessings from him The Law which condemneth us is the Law of God The wrath and punnishment which we fear is the wrath of God The Glory which we expect is the Glory of God The Presence into which we come is the Presence of God And to suit with it the Righteousness upon which we stand is the Righteousness of God which is a great support to us 4. Mark again How the business is carried on by way of exchange Christ made Sin and we Righteousness Christ is dealt with as the sinner in Law and we are pronounced as Righteousness before God our Surety is to bear our punishment and we to be accepted as pleasing and acceptable to God Thus by a wonderful exchange he taketh our evil things upon himself that he might bestow his good things upon us He took from us misery that he might convey to us mercy He was made a curse for us that the Blessing of Abraham might come upon us by Faith Gal. 3.13 14. He suffered death that he might convey life took our sin upon himself that he might impart to us his Righteousness This exchange agreeth in this that on both sides something not merited by the person himself is transferred upon them What more averse from the Holy Nature of Christ than sin He knew no sin and yet is made sin What more alien and strange on our part than Righteousness who are so many ways culpable Yet we are made the Righteousness of God in him This is by no errour of judgment but the wise contrivance ordination and appointment of God that by something done by another it should be imputed and esteemed to that other as if done in his own person So for our sin was Death imposed upon Christ as if he had been the sinner And for Christs Righteousness Life and the Heavenly Inheritance is bestowed upon us as if we had fulfilled the Law and satisfied it in our own person But here is the difference our sins are imputed to Christ out of Gods Justice he being our Surety His Righteousness is imputed to us out of Gods Mercy Our sin was transferred upon him that he might abolish it or take it away for he came to take away sin 1 Joh. 3.5 His Righteousness was imputed to us that it might continue as an everlasting ground of our acceptance with God therefore he is said to finish transgression and to make an end of sin and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in an everlasting Righteousness The vertue of his Righteousness is never spent it abideth for ever He was made a curse for us that this curse might be dissolved and swallowed up but his Blessing is derived to us that it may abide and continue with us to all eternity He took our filthy rags that he might throw them into the depth of the sea but we have the garment of our Elder Brother that we might put it on and Minister in it before the Lord and find grace in his sight Hence is it that though we may be said truly to be Righteous and the Children of God yet Christ cannot be said to be a sinner or the Child of wrath because he had no sin of his own and the wrath of God did not remain on him but only pass over him 2dly There is but one thing remaining in the Text In him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And that noteth the time when and the manner how we are actually interested in this benefit When we are in him We are by faith grafted into Christ before this Righteousness is made ours upon this union This Righteousness is adjudged to us 1 Cor. 1.30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made to us Wisdom Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption First in him by a lively Faith then 't is imputed to us And as we abide in his love by a constant obedience so 't is continued to us This Righteousness is revealed from Faith to Faith Rom. 1.17 And 't is by Faith unto all and upon all that believe Rom. 3.22 So that we must look to this also how we come to be possessed of it as well as how it is brought about on Christs part As sin or sins could not be imputed to Christ but by the common bond of the same nature and unless he had been united to us by his voluntary Suretyship and undertaking so neither could the Righteousness of Christ have been imputed to us unless we had become one with him in the same Mystical Body so that we believing in Christ and abiding in him are made partakers of his Righteousness and so are pleasing and acceptable to God The Price was paid when Christ died our actual possession and admission into the priviledge is when we are planted into Christ by a lively Faith Doct. That Christ being made sin for us is the meritorious cause and way of our being the Righteousness of God in him Isa. 53.11 By his Knowledge shall my Righteous Servant justify many for he shall bear their iniquities So that his bearing of our iniquities is the cause of our being accepted as Righteous through Faith in him So Rom. 5.18 19. Therefore as by the offence of one Judgment came upon all men to condemnation Even so by the Righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made Righteous On this foundation hath the Lord established for the Saints an unchangeable rule of Justification I shall give you the Sum of this point in these Propositions 1. The First covenant requireth of us perfect obedience upon pain of eternal death if we perform it not for the tenor of it is do and live sin and dye The least sin according to that covenant merits eternal Death Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them 2dly All mankind have sinned and so are liable to that Death Rom. 3.23 For all have sinned and come short of the Glory of God And Rom. 5.12 Wherefore as by one man sin entred into the World and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned 3dly Christ became the Mediatour and stepped between us and the full execution of it and took the penalties upon himself and became a Sacrifice to offended Justice and a ransom for the sinners So that his sufferings were