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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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different entertainment of the good and bad Servant there 't is Good and faithful Servant here Thou wicked and slothful Servant Christ will upbraid the unfaithful at the day of Judgment He is called a wicked evil Servant because unfaithful Sloathful because negligent 1 Doct. A Sloathful Servant is a wicked Servant These two Terms are here coupled There is a twofold Sloath. First Common In the ordinary affairs of this Life 2 Thes. 3.10 We commanded you that if any would not work neither should they eat 1 Tim. 5.8 13. He that provideth not for his own is worse than an Infidel v. 13. And withall they learn to be idle Secondly Spiritual called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Torpor spiritualis one of the seven deadly sins among the Papists a remiss will in divine and heavenly matters or a negligence in the duties of Holiness because of the labour and trouble that accompanieth them Rom. 12.11 Not sloathful in Business fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. Heb. 6.12 That ye be not sloathful but Followers of them who through Faith and Patience have inherited the Promises There are in these Scriptures two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dull Stupid Backward They are both bad but this latter is worst because of the Matter about which 't is conversant The one in our Particular the other in our General Calling To be negligent in our ordinary Callings is bad but much more in the great Affairs of our Souls 'T is not only an evil Thing but an evil Sin Of this principally 1. Because total Omissions against Knowledge and Conscience especially of necessary Duties are very great Sins That Omissions are Sins as well as Sins of Commission appeareth from the Nature of the Law which consists of a Precept and Prohibition It enforceth Good as well as forbiddeth what is Evil. Psal. 34.14 Depart from Evil and do Good In the Government of Man the Law useth both these the Bridle and the Spur inciting him to that which is Good and restraining him from that which is Evil. You deny God his due when you with-hold from Him that Service Love and Worship which He requireth Which is a great Evil in his Creatures which are made by Him and fed and maintained by Him You wrong Him when you deprive Him of your Service for whose Use you were made Therefore Sins of Omission are Sins Now of all Omissions Omissions of the most necessary Duties are most culpable want of Love to God Fear of God Faith in God are greater Evils than not Praying at such a time Hearing of the Word or Labouring in our Callings at such a time The Life of Religion lieth in the one more than in the other and they are more indispensibly required The Scripture pronounceth an heavy Doom upon these kind of Defects 1 Cor. 16.22 If any Man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be accursed Among these Sins contra Remedium are more baneful than Peccata contra Officium Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation Especially when Total To omit an Act of Love to God or to fail in Point of Faith in a particular Case or Exigence is a great Evil but to be wholly careless and mindless of the Favour of God or to seek after it in a very overly sleight manner is worst of all Rom. 3.11 There is none that understandeth that seeketh after God They do not make it their Business to remember God or their Duty to Him or their Study to please Him They think of Him seldom or very neglectfully worship Him or make mention of Him very coldly serve Him carelesly or by the bye This sheweth that Men are naughty wicked and in a cursed Estate Especially when they are convinced of better that God deserveth more serious Regard at their hands and Christ to be more dear and precious to them and their Converses with Him more delightful The Religion they profess doth plainly call for more at their hands and their Consciences are clamorous and the Spirit of God importunate with them To omit a Duty against Knowledge is as great a Sin as to commit Evil against Knowledge Jam. 4.17 Therefore to him that knoweth to do Good and doth it not to him it is Sin The closer the Application by serious Convictions strong Motions and Impulses to do better the greater their Sin For this argueth a flat Disobedience and Contempt of God and a Grieving of his Spirit Ephes. 4.30 To give Him the Repulse when He would fain enter and take Possession of our Hearts Now put all these things together and you will soon find that a Sloathful Servant is a very wicked naughty Servant Satis est Mali ipsum nihil fecisse Boni They are not only evil Servants that teach Falsities but they also that do not promote the Kingdom of Christ to their Power Not only they that do no Hurt but they that do no Good Matth. 3.20 Every Tree that bringeth not forth good Fruit is hewn down and cast into the Fire Not only the Poysonous but the Barren Tree 2. The Motives that draw us to this Idleness and Sloath are paltry base and such as offer great Wrong to God Alas what have we to hinder us in God's Service but a little worldly Profit Pleasure or Honour Now what a gross Sin is it to love the World above God or to neglect Christ that died for thee meerly to please the Flesh and to seek its Ease and Contentment Probatio unius sine contumelia alterius procedere non potest Heb. 12.15 Lest any Root of Bitterness springing up trouble you and thereby many be defiled If there were some better or more considerable thing in the Case the Fault were the less and our Negligence might the more be excused But this is a gross Sin to despise God for poor contemptible Vanities The World counts Prophaneness by another Measure than the Scripture You count Adulterers and Drunkards and Swearers prophane but the Scripture counteth them prophane that have not an esteem of spiritual Priviledges There are peccata majoris infamiae and peccata majoris reatus Some sins in the eye of the world have more filthiness and turpitude in them and some sins in the eye of God have more guilt as when we despise the favour of God and do not think it worthy our most serious and lively diligence the smallness of the temptation aggravateth the negligence The Service of God is of everlasting consequence but the things of the World are of short continuance all this dust is gone with the spurn of a foot one turn of the hand of God separateth thy neglected Soul from thy pampered Body and then whose are all these things 2 Cor. 4. ult 3. Negligent Unfruitfulness is a breach of Trust to which we are bound by Covenant and so a disappointment of Gods expectation To fortifie this Consideration I need not repeat that all Gods Gifts to us imply a
his Sons Commission yet 't was not a total Omission compare 1 Sam. 2.23 24 25. And he said unto them why do ye such things for I hear of your evil dealings by all this People nay my Sons for it is no good report that I hear of you ye make the Lords People to transgress If one man sin against another the Judge shall judge him but if a man sin against the Lord who shall intreat for him notwithstanding they hearkened not to the voice of their Father His Admonition was grave and serious yet 't was not enough All Israel knew their sin before Eli took upon him to reprove them secretly whereas the fact was open and he should have put them to open shame and then his Rebukes were mild and soft he should have frowned upon them punished them but his fondness would not permit that 3. Eternal here in the Text Cast the unprofitable Servant c. These sins Christ will mainly inquire after at the day of Judgment and vers 42.43 of this Chapter and Math. 7.19 Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen down and cast into the fire though not bad or poysonous fruit By all these Arguments it appeareth that sins of Omission may be great sins Thirdly That some sins of Omission are greater than others All are not alike as the more necessary the Duties the more faulty the Omission Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha not if a man hate but if he love not c. These are peccata contra remedium as others contra officium By other sins we make the Wound by these we refuse the Plaister Again If the Omission be total ●er 10.25 Call not on the Name of the Lord Psal. 14.3 None seeketh after God Again When seasonable Duties are neglected Math. 25.44 When I was an hungred ye fed me not 1 Joh. 3.17 He that hath this worlds goods and seeth his Brother in need Prov. 17.16 Why is there a price put into the hand of a Fool And then when 't is easie this is to stand with God for a trifle Luk. 16.24 Desideravit guttam qui non dedit micam Amos. 2.6 They sold the poor for a pair of shoes And when convinced of the duty James 4.17 To him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is sin Fourthly In many cases sins of Omission may be more hainous and more damning than sins of Commission 1. They are the ruine of most part of the carnal world Carnal men are often described by their Omissions to be without God Eph. 3.12 Psal. 10.3 4. The wicked through the pride of their heart will not seek after God God is not in all their thoughts Jer. 2.32 None stirreth up himself to seek after God And 2. Partly because these are most apt to harden us more Foul sins scourge the Conscience with remorse and shame but these bring on insensibly sleightness and hardness of heart and therefore Christ saith Publicans and Harlots shall enter into the Kingdom of God before Pharisees that rested in a superficial Righteousness but neglected Faith Love and Judgment Math. 21.31 And 3. Partly because Omissions make way for Commission of evil Psal. 14.4 They that called not upon God eat up his People like Bread They lye open to gross sins that do not keep the heart tender by a daily attendance upon God If a man do not that which is good he will soon do that which is evil Joh. 2.13 Oh then let us bewail our unprofitableness that we do no more good that we do so much neglect God and no more edifie our neighbour so that Gods best gifts lie idle upon our hands Fifthly The first and main evil of sin was in the Omission Jer. 2.13 My people have forsaken me the Fountain of living waters Jam. 1.14 Every man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lust and inticed First inticed from God and then drawn away to sin therefore the work of Grace is to teach us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts Tit. 2.12 By Ungodliness is meant not denying God but neglecting God there our chief mischief began for when we do not look upon God as our chief good then we seek Happiness in the Creature 1 VSE To shew that if the unprofitable Servant be cast into Hell what will become of them that live in open sins that bid defiance to God 2. To condemn the unprofitable lives of many they live as if they had only their Souls for Salt to keep their Bodies from stinking Cumber the ground Luk. 13.7 Do not good in their Relations are neither comfortable to the Bodies nor Souls of others Certainly how mean and low soever you be in the world you may be useful Dorcas made Coats for the poor Servants may adorn the Gospel Tit. 2.10 3. If sins of Omission be so dangerous we may cry out with David Psal. 19. Who can understand his Errours The Children of God offend in these kind of sins oftener than in the other kind they are not guilty of Drunkenness or Uncleanness but of Omission of good Duties or sleight performance of them Paul complaineth Rom. 7.18 19. For I know that in me that is in my flesh there dwelleth no good thing for to will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not for the good that I would I do not And should not you complain likewise A Child is not counted dutiful because he doth not wrong and beat his Father he must also give him that Reverence that is due to him Alas how many Duties are required of us to God and Men the neglect of which we should humble our selves before God for SERMON XVIII MATTH XXV v. 31 32 33. When the Son of Man shall come in his Glory and all the Holy Angels with him then shall he sit upon the Throne of his Glory And before him shall be gathered all Nations and he shall separate them one from another as a Shepherd divideth his Sheep from the Goats And he shall set the Sheep on his Right Hand but the Goats on the Left THIS latter Paragraph I cannot call a Parable but a Scheme and Draught or a Delineation of the last Judgment intermingled with many Passages that are plainly Parabolical as That Christ setteth forth himself as a King sitting upon the Throne of his Glory and as a Shepherd dividing his Flock That he compareth the Godly to Sheep and the Wicked to Goats Those Allegations and Dialogues between Christ and the Righteous Christ and the Wicked When saw we thee an hungry c. have much of the Nature of a Parable in them In these Three Verses we have described 1. The Appearance or sitting down of the Judge 2. The Presenting the Parties to be judged The former is in Vers. 31. the latter in Vers. 32 33. In
and perfectly as then 1. Partly because now we have not so full a view of our Vnworthiness as when our Actions are scanned and all things are brought to Light whether they be Good or Evil. And 2. Partly because there is not so full and large a Manifestation of God's Favour now as there is in our full and final Reward 'T is Grace now that he is pleased to pass by our Offences and to take us into his Family and give us some taste of his Love and a right to his Heavenly Kingdom But then 't is another manner of Grace and Favour when our Pardon shall be pronounced by our Judges own Mouth and he shall not only take us into his Family but into his immediate Prefence and Heavenly Palace Not only give us a Right but Possession Come ye Blessed of my Father Inherit the Kingdom prepared for you And shall not only have some remote Service and Ministration but be everlastingly employed in loving and delighting in and praising of God This is Grace indeed The Grace of God or his free Favour to Sinners is never seen in all its Glory or Graciousness till then And 't is the more amplified when we see how God dealeth with others who as to Natural Endowments were every way as acceptable as our selves and as to Spirituals Grace alone making the Difference Fourthly Observe the Wicked are described by Sins of Omission as Vers. 42 43. Those that have not visited not cloathed not fed not harboured These shall go into Everlasting Punishment But the Righteous by their Faithfulness in Good Works or Acts of Self denying Obedience shall go into Life Eternal I. The Wicked by their Omission of necessary Duties Because we think Omissions no Sins or light Sins I shall take this occasion to shew the Hainousness of them Sins are commonly distinguished into 1. Sins of Omission and 2. Sins of Commission 1. A Sin of Commission is when we do those things which we ought not to doe 2. A Sin of Omission is when we leave undone those things which we ought to do But when we look more narrowly into these things we shall find both in every actual Sin For in that we commit any thing against the Law of God we omit our Duty and the omitting of our Duty can hardly fall out but that something is preferred before the Love of God and that is a Commission But yet there is a ground for the Distinction Because when any thing is directly and formally against the Negative Precept and Prohibition that 's a Sin of Commission But when we directly sin against an Affirmative Precept that 's an Omission An Instance we have in Eli and his Sons Eli's Sons defiled themselves with the Women that assembled at the Door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 1 Sam. 2.22 But Eli himself sinned in that he restrained them not 1 Sam. 3.13 His Sin was an Omission their Sin was a Commission Now that Sins of Omission may be great Sins appeareth 1. Partly by the Nature of them For there is in them the general Nature of all Sin 'T is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Joh. 3.4 a Transgression of a Law or a Disobedience to God and so by consequence a Contempt of his Authority We cry out upon Pharaoh when we hear him saying Exod. 5.2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his Voice And by Interpretation we all say so This Language is in every Sin we commit and in every Duty we omit Our Negligence is not simple Negligence but downright Disobedience because 't is the Breach of an express Precept and Charge which God hath given us Now when we make no reckoning of it we do in effect say Who is the Lord that I should obey him There may be much Disobedience in a bare Omission When Saul had not done what God bade him to do he telleth him That Rebellion is as the Sin of Witchcraft and Stubbornness as Iniquity and Idolatry 1 Sam. 15.23 Implying that Omission to be Stubbornness and Rebellion parallel to Idolat●● and Witchcraft 2. 〈◊〉 the Causes In the General Corrupt Nature But the Particular Causes are First Idleness They do not stir up themselves Isa. 64.7 Secondly Security Jer. 2.31 32. Thirdly Want of Love to God Isa. 43.22 But thou hast not called upon me O Jacob thou hast been weary of me O Israel Rev. 2.4 Nevertheless I have something against thee because thou hast left thy First Love And Fourthly Zeal for his Glory Not sloathful in business but fervent in Spirit serving the Lord Rom. 12.11 Where there is a Fervour we cannot be idle and neglectful of our Duty 3. By the Effects And they are 1. Internal There is a sad withering 1 Thess. 5.19 Quench not the Spirit Or 2. External It bringeth on many Temporal Judgments God puts by Saul from being King for a Sin of Omission 1 Sam. 15.11 It repenteth me for setting up Saul to be King for he hath not done the thing which I commanded him For this he puts by Eli's House from the Priesthood 1 Sam. 3.13 I will judge his House for ever for the Iniquity which he knoweth because his Sons made themselves vile and he restrained them not That Omission was not total for he reproved them but did not punish them 3. Eternal Matth. 25.30 Cast the unprofitable Servant into utter Darkness So Matth. 7.19 Every Tree that bringeth not forth good Fruit is hewn down and cast into the Fire If it bringeth not forth Good Fruit though not bad or poysonous Fruit. For these Sins Christ condemneth the Wicked in the Text. By all these Arguments it appeareth tht Sins of Omission may be great Sins But II. That some Sins of Omission are greater than others All are not alike As 1. The more necessary the Duties are Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation c 1 Cor. 16.22 If any Man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha These are Peccata contra Remedium as others are contra Officium By other Sins we make the Wound by these we refuse the Plaister 2. If the Omission be total Jer. 10.25 Pour out thy Fury upon the Heathen that know thee not and upon the Families that call not on thy Name Psal. 14.2 None seeketh after God 3. If a Duty be seasonable the feeding the Hungry c. as Vers. 44. When saw we thee an hungred or a-thirst or a Stranger c And 1 Joh. 3.17 He that hath this Worlds Good and seeth his Brother in need and shutteth up his Bowels of Compassion from him how dwelleth the Love of God in him 4. When 't is easie This is to stand with God for a Trifle Luk. 16.24 And he cried and said Father Abraham have Mercy on me and send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his Finger in Water and cool my Tongue for I am tormented in this Flame Desideravit guttam qui non dedit micam 5. When convinced
some live by Manual Labours others by more Noble Employments as Magistrates Ministers who study for Publick Good Manual Labour is not required of all because it is a thing that is not required propter se as simply good and necessary but propter aliud as for Maintenance and Support of Life to ease others and to supply the Uses of Charity Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his Hands the thing that is good that he may have to give to him that needeth When the Ends of Labour cannot otherwise be obtained then Handy-Labour is required All others are to serve their Generation according to the Will of God Acts 13.26 As Instruments of Providence to serve the Common Good to promote the Welfare of their Family Neighbourhood Country Those that spend their whole Life in Eating Drinking Sporting and Sleeping are guilty of brutish Idleness one of Sodom's Sins Ezek. 16.49 Behold this was the Iniquity of thy Sister Sodom Pride Fulness of Bread and abundance of Idleness was in her and in her Daughters And therefore those that are freed from Service and Handy-Labour are not freed from Work and Business If any Man must be allowed to be Idle then one Member must be lost in the Body Politick A Man is born a Member of some Society Family or City and is to seek the good of it he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We see in the Body Natural there is no Member but hath its Function and Use whereby it becometh serviceable to the whole All have not the same Office that would make a confusion but all have their Use either as an Eye or as a Hand or as a Tooth So in the Body Politick no Member may be useless they must have one Function or another wherein to imploy themselves otherwise they are unprofitable Burdens of the Earth Again every Man is more or less intrusted with a Gift which he is to exercise and improve for the good of others and at the day of Judgment he is to give up his Accounts as you may learn from the Parable of the Talents Mat. 25. If he hath but one Talent it must not be hidden in a Napkin Well then if every Man hath a Gift for which he is accountable to God he must have a Calling 1 Cor. 7.17 But as God hath distributed to every Man as the Lord hath called every Man so let him walk and chuse his state of Life Besides a Calling is necessary to prevent the Mischiefs of Idleness and those Inconveniences that follow Men not employed Standing Pools are apt to putrify but running Waters are sweetest an idle Man is a Burden to Himself a Prey to Satan a Grief to the Spirit of God a Mischief to others He is a Burden to himself for he knoweth not what to do with his Time in the Morning he says Would God it were Evening and in the Evening would God it were Morning The Mind is like a Mill when it wanteth Corn it grindeth upon it self He is a Prey to Satan the House is emptied swept and garnished And then he goeth and taketh with himself seven other Spirits more wicked than himself and they enter in and dwell there Mat. 12.44 45. The Devil findeth them at leisure When David was idle on the Tarras he was tempted to Adultery Birds are seldom taken in their Flight but when they pitch and rest on the Ground He is a Grief to God's Spirit Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his Hands that he may have to give to him that needeth with Vers. 30. And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God Idle Men quench the vigor of their Natural Gifts and lose those Abilities that are bestowed on them He is a Mischief to Others 2 Thess. 3.11 For we hear there are some that walk among you disorderly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all but are busy-bodies They that do nothing will do too much no Work maketh way for ill Work or for Censure and busy inquisition into other Mens Actions and so they prove the Fire-brands of Contention and unneighbourly Quarrels There must be a Calling and a Work to do 3. This Work is given them by God He appointeth to every one his Task and will be glorified by no Works but what are by himself assigned to them in their Station 1. By his Word 2. By his Providence 1. By his Word There is no calling and course of Service good but what is agreeable to the Word of God Psal. 119.105 Thy Word is a Light unto my Feet and a Lamp unto my Paths We must not settle in a sinful course of Life Men may tolerate Evil Callings but God never appointed them As for instance if any Calling and Course of Life be against Piety Temperance Justice it is against the Word Titus 2.12 Teaching us that denying Vngodliness and Worldly Lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World Against Piety as to be an Idolatrous Priest or to make Shrines for Idols which was Demetrius his Calling in Ephesus and Tertullian in his Book de Idolatria sheweth this was the practice of many Christians to get their Livings by making Statues and Images and other Ornaments to sell to Heathen Idolaters Against Justice as Pi●●cy Usury and other oppressive Courses Against Sobriety as such Callings as meerly tend to feed the Luxury Pride and Vanity of Men so Mountebanks Comedians Stage-Players It were endless to instance in all In general the Calling must be good and lawful 2. By his Providence which ruleth in every thing that falleth out even to the least Matters especially hath the Lord a great Hand in Callings and appointing to every one his Estate and Condition of Life In Paradise God set Adam his Work to dress and prune the Trees of the Garden Gen. 2.15 And still he doth not only give Abilities and special Inclinations but also disposeth of the Education of the Parent and the Passages of Mens Lives to bring them to such a Calling Isa. 54.16 Behold I have created the Smith that bloweth the Coals in the Fire and that bringeth forth an Instrument for his Work Common Trades and Crafts are from the Lord. The Heathens had a several God for every several Trade as the Papists now have a tutelar Saint but they rob God of his Honour he giveth the Faculty and the Blessing Isa. 28.24 to the end His God doth instruct him to discretion and doth teach him c. He giveth the State and appointeth the Work Your particular Estate and Condition of Life doth not come by Chance or by the Care Will and Pleasure of Man but the Ordination of God without whom a Sparrow cannot fall to the Ground In the higher Callings of Ministry and Magistracy there is a greater solemnity But how should a Man glorify God in his Place and Station wherein God hath set him Answ. 1. Be
1.6 7. When he bringeth in the first begotten into the World he saith And let all the Angels of God worship him And of the Angels he saith Who maketh his Angels Spirits and his Ministers a Flame of Fire He cometh royally attended Then the Father welcometh him with Ask of me and I will give thee the Heathen for thy Inheritance and the utmost parts of the Earth for thy Possession Psal. 2.8 As Mediator Christ was to have a grant of the Kingdom by pleading his Right and then God seateth him on the Throne Sit thou on my right Hand Psal. 110.1 God doth as it were take his Son by the Hand and seat him on the Throne This sitting on God's right Hand implieth 1. The giving of all Power or a restoration of him to the full use of the Godhead He had an Eternal Right as the Second Person but he was to receive a new Grant Mat. 28.18 All Power is given to me in Heaven and in Earth Christ as God hath all Power equal Power with the Father by Eternal Generation but as God Incarnate it is given to him So Phil. 2.9 10. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a Name above every Name that at the Name of Jesus every Knee shall bow of Things in Heaven and Things in Earth and Things under the Earth to make all Enemies stoop to him that he might receive Adoration from Angels Men and Devils 2. A Grant of Authority to rule according to Pleasure He is made Prince of Angels Col. 2.10 He is the Head of all Principality and Power He is to be their Soveraign Lord and Head of the Church Ephes. 1.22 Christ is to us the Head of all Vital Influences And Judg of the World Acts 17.39 He hath appointed a day in which he will judg the World in Righteousness by the Man whom he hath ordained whereof he hath given Assurance to all Men in that he hath raised him from the Dead This is the Sum of Christ's Glorification The Uses of the whole Vse 1. In that Christ prayeth for Glory it presseth us 1. To take heed of dishonouring Christ now he prayeth to be glorified It was a great Sin that the Jews crucified the Lord of Glory but they have some excuse in that they knew not what they did 1 Cor. 2.8 Whom none of the Princes of this World knew for had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory His Glory was not easily seen in his Exinanition and Abasement But now we know more and we cross his Prayers if we crucify him again afresh and put him to open shame Heb. 6.6 We cannot indeed crucify Christ really but we may draw the Guilt of his Enemies that crucified him upon us By your scandalous Lives you do in effect as to your Intentions deprive him of his Glory and approve the Act of the Jews against him you live as if no such thing had been done to Christ as his Translation into Heaven 2. Since Christ so earnestly sued for his Glorification it is our Duty by all means to procure and further his Glory We cannot do any thing as his Father doth we cannot bestow any thing upon him but Praise and magnify him by a stedfast Faith and by an Holy Life Mortified Christians are the Glory of Christ. 3. It is Comfort against the Reproaches and Oppositions of Men as to the Kingdom of Christ. Though the Jews scorn it the Turks blaspheme it Hereticks undermine it yet Christ's Prayers will do more than all their Endeavours still he will appear God manifest in the Flesh. Christ's Glory cannot be hindred he hath prayed for it Vse 2. In that Christ was glorified for he cannot be denied whatever he demands it is useful for our Comfort for our Instruction 1. For our Comfort 1. Christ's Glorification is the Pledg and Earnest of ours Had not he risen and ascended and been received up into Glory neither should we the Gates of Death had been barred upon us and the Gates of Heaven shut against us and we should have been covered with eternal Shame and Ignominy But now Christ like another Sampson hath broken through the Gates and carried them away with him our Head is risen and we in him we receive of his Fulness Glory for Glory as well as Grace for Grace Nobis dedit arrhabonem Spiritus à nobis recepit arrhabonem Carnis We have Livery and Seisin of the Kingdom of Heaven already in Christ. We are ascended with him Ephes. 2.6 And hath raised us up together and made us sit together in Heavenly Places in Christ Jesus In Contracts Pledges are usually taken and given Our Head is crowned and shall not the Members The Humane Nature is already placed in the highest Seat of Glory 2. It is a sign God hath received Satisfaction The Lord sent an Angel to remove the Stone not to supply any Power in Christ But as a Judg when he is satisfied sends an Officer to open the Prison Doors Our Surety is delivered out of Prison with Glory and Honour God hath taken him up to himself What is done to our Surety concerneth us Christ hath perfectly done his Work there is no more to be done by way of Satisfaction God was well-pleased with him or else he had not been at his right Hand Certainly all the Work of his Mediation was not accomplished on Earth he is now in Exaltation performing those other Offices that remain to be fulfilled by him in Heaven 3. Hence we have Confidence in his Ability to do his People Good He is now restored to the full Use and Exercise of the Godhead he can give the Spirit and perform all the Legacies of the Covenant There were many repaired to Christ in the days of his Flesh when he was under Poverty Crosses Death the Thief on the Cross said Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom What shall we not expect now he is entred into Glory Faithful Servants follow their Prince in Banishment but they have greater Encouragement when he is on the Throne Those that adhered to David in the Desert might look for much from him crowned at Hebron Acts 2.33 Therefore being by the right Hand of God exalted and having received of the Father the Promise of the Holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which ye now see and hear Not that then only he was endowed with the Gifts of the Spirit for whilst he was on Earth he was filled with the Spirit without measure but then he received the Accomplishment of the Promise of pouring out the Spirit upon us for by Promise is meant the Accomplishment of the Promise for the Promise was long before Luke 24.49 And behold I send the Promise of my Father upon you but tarry ye in the City of Jerusalem till ye be endued with Power from on High Acts 1.4 And being assembled together with them commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem but wait for
〈◊〉 ye unlord the Law so the word signifieth 6. By taking some solemn time to meditate of and admire the excellency of his Person and the fulness of his Redemption In Heaven this will be our great Work there they praise the Lamb for ever-more Rev. 4.10 11. The four and twenty Elders fall down before him that sat on the Throne and worship him that liveth for ever and ever and cast their Crowns before the Throne saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive Honour and Glory and Power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created They do not slight their glorious Work All the Glory they have is God's meer Bounty they hold it by Grace and magnify it by Grace So Rev. 5.8 The four Beasts and four and twenty Elders fell down before the Lamb having every one of them Harps and golden Vials full of Odours which are the Prayers of the Saints There is the Employment of the Church Militant and Triumphant Harps which are Instruments of Praise belong to Souls already glorified as Vials full of Odours belong to Believers on Earth The Earth is the true place of Prayer as in Heaven we shall be employed in Eternal Thanksgivings All the Church is yielding Homage to Christ It is the Study of Saints Ephes. 1.16 I cease not to give Thanks for you It was Paul's constant practice he breathed nothing but Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 I determined to know nothing among you save Jesus Christ and him crucified Our Thoughts of Christ should be sweet to us we should have ravishing apprehensions of him from day to day ravishing thy Heart with the excellency of Christ. Vse 3. Is Consolation to them that desire to glorify Christ. It is a singular Prop in your Prayers in every Address you have an Interest in Father and Son They are mine saith the Lord I loved them with an everlasting Love They are mine saith Christ I redeemed them with an everlasting Redemption And will not God provide for his own and Christ for his own Can he that hath the Father and Son miscarry and doubt of Audience You have the Father who is the Original Fountain of Blessing and you have Christ who is the Golden Pipe and Conveyance But especially in your last Address when you lie on your Death-Bed you know Christ's own Plea John 17.4 5. Father I have glorified thee upon Earth I have finished the Work that thou hast given me to do And now Father glorify thou me with thy self with the Glory that I had with thee before the World was It is a sweet Evidence What doth God look for from the Creature but Glory Objection 1. But you will say I cannot glorify Christ in my Addresses to God and cannot come with an Assurance becoming his Purchase I Answer 1. When we cannot apply let us disclaim Lord we come not in our own Names our own Worth and Desert which is none at all we come in the Merits of Christ we know there is no other Name under Heaven Hosea 14.3 In thee the Fatherless findeth Mercy that is every Person that wanteth a Guide Relief and Support Though we cannot say Father yet we can say we are Fatherless we have none to help us 2. If we cannot speak of the Love that he beareth to us for Christ's sake yet let us plead the Love that he beareth to him Christ's Name is very dear and precious in Heaven being God's beloved Son Lord for the Love that thou bearest to Christ We are his Clients though we cannot say we are his Members Though I cannot say Thou art mine yet I may say He is thine a Mediator of thy setting up God might have refused us if Christ had not Letters Patents from Heaven and his Commission under the Broad-Seal of God John 6.27 Him hath God the Father sealed Lord he is thy own authorised Mediator Moses was refused that interposed of his own accord Exod. 32.32 33. I have nothing to bring thee but a Mediator of thine own It is a prevailing Argument Object 2. Alas there is little that I do for God my Station is private Those in the Magistracy and Ministry that are in an eminent Sphere of Activity they may glorify Christ they do his Work upon Earth but what do I do I Answer 1. God will be glorified by every Man in his Way and Place John 17.4 Father I have glorified thee upon Earth I have finished the Work that thou hast given me to do We must not speak of our Rank Christ is glorified by thy diligence and Faithfulness in thy private Place a Man-Servant or a Maid-Servant 1 Cor. 7.22 He that is called in the Lord being a Servant is the Lord's Free-man being redeemed from the thraldom of Satan and servitude of Sin he doth glorify Christ. Titus 2.9 10. Exhort Servants to be obedient unto their own Masters and to please them well in all things not answering again Not purloining but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things Godly Servants what an Ornament are they to the Gospel By the first Inlets of Religion into a Family it is made beautiful and lovely in the Eyes of Carnal Men who esteem the Doctrine by the Life and Practice of the Professors of it Servants in those days were bought and sold like Beasts The Lord doth not esteem Men by the Places they hold but by their Carriage in them 2. There is no Station so private but thou mayest do something for Christ to bring up thy Children in the Nurture of the Lord to instruct thy Servants thy Neighbours thy Fellow-Servants Zeal is like Fire or like Leaven it will spread and diffuse it self Object 3. I have laboured but to little purpose Answ. Success is not thy Work but God's We must mind our Duty and leave the success to God we shall not be responsible for lack of Success but want of Endeavours Isa. 49.4 Then I said I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought and in vain yet surely my Judgment is with the Lord and my Work with my God It was a complaint of Christ himself his Ministry was without Fruit yet not without Reward We may have the Crown of Faithfulness if not the Fruit. A Minister is like a Fountain that always runneth whether they will hear or whether they will forbear So must you act in your Families Object 4. I was never called to Martyrdom I doubt I shall not glorify him I Answer 1. Wish not for Troubles but leave them to God and when they come take up his Cross. Simon of Cyrene was compelled we must not chuse our Cross but bear it Christ himself did not carry his Cross till it was laid upon him we must not seek it but take it up not brew our Cup but drink it When a Cross meeteth us in our way which we cannot escape without Sin or breach of Conscience we must bear it 2.
Benefits of Redemption but the Sanctified who have Grace and Holiness infused in them and do devote and consecrate themselves to serve God in Holiness and Righteousness all their dayes 2. The Means Manner or End 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it may be rendered through the Truth in Truth or for the Truth all which Readings admit of a commodious Explication 1. As the Means through the Truth as the Rule and Instrument the Word accompanied with the virtue of Christ's Death is that which sanctifieth 2. The Manner in Truth or truly in opposition to legal Purifications by the use of the Ceremonies of the Law which were but a Shadow of true Holiness Heb. 9.13 14. For if the Blood of Bulls and Goats and the Ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the Vnclean sanctifyeth to the purifying of the Flesh How much more shall the Blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without Spot to God purge your Conscience from dead Works to serve the living God And in opposition to counterfeit Sanctification Ephes. 4.24 And that ye put on the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness such as is sincere true and real 3. The End for the Truth that they may be consecrated set apart and fitted for that Function of Preaching the Truth The Context seemeth to justify this From the whole Observe Doct. That Christ did set himself apart to be a Sacrifice for us that we might be sanctified by the Means appointed thereunto I shall explain this Point by opening the Text. I. I begin with the Meritorious Cause and for their sakes I sanctify my self Where First The Agent I. Secondly The Act Sanctify Thirdly The Object my Self Fourthly The Persons concerned for their Sakes First The Agent I sanctify my self In other Places it is ascribed to the Father and the Spirit To the Father John 10.36 Him hath the Father sanctified and sent into the World To the Spirit Acts 10.38 How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with Power He did not only frame the humane Nature of Christ out of the Substance of the Virgin but adorned it with Gifts and Graces fit for his Office and Work And here Christ saith I sanctify my self All the Persons in the Divine Nature concur to this Work The Father sanctifieth and sets him apart by his Decree and Designation The Son sanctifieth himself to shew his willingness and condescension The Spirit sanctifieth him by his Operation furnishing him with meet Graces and Endowments that were necessary for that singular Person who should redeem the World Christ's sanctifying himself falleth under our consideration and doth shew partly his Original Authority as a Person of the Godhead coequal with the Father and the Spirit Whatsoever the Father doth the Son doth also John 5.19 Partly his voluntary submission as the Father did consecrate the Son to the Office of Mediator and the Spirit qualified him with all fulness of Grace so did Christ consecrate himself as being a most willing Agent in this Work and did really offer himself to become Man and to suffer all that Misery Pain and shame that was necessary for our Expiation The Scripture often sets it forth to us Ephes. 5.2 Walk in Love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given himself for us an Offering and a Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling Savour He did not do this Work by constraint but of a ready mind When it was first propounded to him in God's Decree Heb. 10.9 Then he said Lo I come to do thy Will O God! And before the Time was come about when he should assume the Humane Nature into the Unity of his Person he feasted himself with the thoughts of that Salvation which he should set afoot in the habitable Parts of the Earth Prov. 8.31 Rejoicing in the habitable parts of the Earth and my Delights were with the Sons of Men. When the Incarnation was passed then he longed for the time of his Passion Luke 12.50 I have a Baptism to be baptized with and how am I straitned till it be accomplished So willing was he to do and suffer that whereunto he was sent Luke 22.15 With desire have I desired to eat this Passover with you before I die that Passover because it was the last the Forerunner of his Agonies his Heart was set upon that Work His behaviour in his Death shewed how willingly he did undergo it John 13.1 Having loved his own that were in the World he loved them unto the End then was his bitter Work but that did not abate his Love The Heathens counted it a lucky Sacrifice that went to the Altar without strugling and roaring certainly Christ did meekly suffer what was imposed on him for the expiation of our Sins Isa. 53.7 He is brought as a Lamb to the Slaughter and as a Sheep before the Shearers is dumb so he opened not his Mouth A Swine whineth and maketh a noise but a Sheep is dumb this was the Emblem chosen to represent Christ's Meekness and Patience Salt cast into the Fire danceth and leapeth with a kind of impatience but Oil riseth up in a gentle Flame So Christ suffered not only with patience but delight He did not lay down his Life by constraint but died by consent John 10.18 No Man taketh my Life from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again Now this endeareth our Obligation to him that he would consecrate himself to the Work of the Mediatory Office and to that end assume the Humane Nature into the Unity of his Person and so willingly condescend to all that sorrow and pain that he was to endure for our sakes and offer himself up as a Sacrifice for our Sins being for a while without the actual sense of his Father's Love My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Mat. 27.46 But more distinctly let us consider the greatness of his Sufferings his willingness to endure them 1. The greatness of his Sufferings His Passions take them in the very Letter were sore but they were heightned by the delicacy of his Temper never any Man suffered as he did because never such a Man A blow on the Head is soon felt because it is a principal Member and so more sensible than other parts of the Body A Slave is not so sensible of Blows and Stripes as a Nobleman of a tender and delicate Constitution Our Saviour Christ was of a more delicate Constitution than any other his Body was immediately framed by the Spirit in the Virgin 's Womb Laurence on the Gridiron Stephen when stoned could not be so sensible as Christ on the Cross. None of the Martyrs suffered what he did Christ had a particular knowledg of all Sins committed in the World past present and to come and a particular sorrow for them which was the greater by how much the more he prized the Honour of God His
so outgrow all feelings of Conscience 2. To stir up in the People of God this holy shame by reason of sin past and present It is a great help to the spiritual Life for when we make light of sin we are in danger of being overcome by it Therefore rouse up your selves Is the offending of the eternal God a slight thing Surely God doth not make his Laws for nought nor doth he make such a stir by his Word and Providence against a tame and harmless thing nor threaten men to Hell for small indifferent matters neither needed Christ to have dyed and done all that he hath done to cure a small and little disease More particularly 1. Sin is the Creatures Rebellion and Disobedience to the Law of the absolutely universal Soveraign 1 Joh. 3.4 Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth the Law for sin is the transgression of the Law 2. The Deformity of the noblest Creature upon earth Rom. 3.23 For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God 3. A stain so deep that nothing could wash it away but the Blood of Christ Rev. 1.5 6. To him that loved us and washed our sins with his own blood c. 4. It hath yielded a flood that drowned the World of Sinners yet it did not wash away their sins 2 Pet. 2.9 Bringing in the flood upon the world of the ungodly 5. Hell it self can never do it nor purge out the malignity of it therefore it hath no end Mark 9.44 Where their worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched 6. God himself doth loath the Creature for sin and nothing else but sin Zech. 11.8 Three shepherds also I cut off in one month and my soul loathed them Deut. 32.19 When the Lord saw it he abhorred them because of the provoking of his sons and of his daughters Psal. 78.59 When God saw this he was wroth and greatly abhorred Israel II. As it sets forth the evil and the odiousness of Sin shame dogs Sin at the heels Doctrine That Sin is really the matter of Shame 1. It is so for the present it will make you loathsom to your selves infamous to others odious to God 1. Loathsom to our selves therefore a wicked man dareth not to converse with his own Heart but doth what he can to fly from himself to divert his thoughts from the sight of his own Soul or the view of his own natural face in the Glass of the Word Joh. 3.20 Every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh he to the light lest his deeds should be reproved There is a secret bosom-witness which they fear Job 27.6 My righteousness I hold fast and will not let it go my heart shall not reproach me so long as I live There needeth a great deal of do to bring a man and his Conscience together 2. Infamous to others he bringeth a blot upon himself Prov. 13.5 A righteous man hateth lying but a wicked man is loathsom and cometh to shame They are a disgrace to the Socie●y in which they live 2 Pet. 2.13 Spots are they and blemishes sporting themselves with their own deceivings while they feast with you Those that love sin in themselves hate it in another Tit. 3.3 We our selves also were sometimes foolish disobedient serving divers lusts and pleasures living in malice and envy hateful and hating one another 3. Odious to God Psal. 14.2 3. The Lord looked down from heaven upon the children of men to see if there were any that did understand and seek God They are all gone aside they are altogether become filthy there is none that doth good no not one and they are sensible of it and therefore grow shy of God 1 Joh. 3.20 21. 2. It will be much more so hereafter First At the Day of Judgment Shame is properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fear of a just reproof and that chiefly from one in Authority most of all from the Judge of the World This is principally intended not shame of Face before men so much as shame of Conscience a lothness to come into Gods Presence Gen. 3.10 I was afraid or ashamed because I was naked and I hid my self There was Verecundia before an awful Bashfulness but not Pudor fear of Reproof and Blame that entred with sin much more when all things shall be opened and brought to light as at the great Day 1 Joh. 2.28 That we may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming Wicked persons that are void of Righteousness and all Hypocrites that have been unfaithful and unthankful to him will then be ashamed Secondly In Hell Shame in the Damned is that troublous confounding sense of their lost Estate past Folly and evil Choice having now no hope of his Grace Dan. 12.2 Some shall arise to shame and everlasting contempt they shall be rejected by God as much as they now reject and disowne him Vse Well then let us walk more cautiously not return again to our wallowing in the mire lest we provide matter of grief and shame to our selves It is a Grace to be ashamed in a penitent manner but it is a sin to provide matter of shame anew The godly and wicked are both ashamed the one to get sin pardoned the other would have Conscience deadned the one to get sin mortified the other only to have ease within themselves though they wallow in sin and be not reconciled to God Gods Children are more watchful for the time to come but the other would only get rid of trouble Now if we cannot hope to prevail with the one we have great confidence the other will weigh his motive Will you once more render your selves odious to God a burden to your selves and live contrary to him whose Favour is your Life You have more to do with him than with all the World your happiness is to hold communion with him will you now you have eyes to see the odiousness of sin break through all the restraints which Light and Love lay upon you Thirdly The Apostles Argument is à damno it is harmful the end of sin is death The End may be taken for the Scope or for the Effect it is not scopus peccantis but finis peccati this is the issue it cometh unto we incur the penalty of eternal Death The Sinner hopeth for a better issue but the end of the work is Death it is finis operis though not operantis Doctrine If we continue in Sin we cannot expect other or better Fruit and Conclusion than eternal Death Now we find the Shame hereafter Death All that I shall say now shall be referred to these three Heads 1. It is terrible 2. It is just 3. It is certain 1. It is terrible if we consider the loss a separation from the blessed Presence of God the Disciples wept when Paul said Ye shall see my face no more O what will be our case and plight when God shall say Depart ye cursed ye shall see my face no more
the general Term by which it is expressed Three Objects there are about which this sin of Flesh pleasing is exercised 1 John 2.16 The lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eye and the pride of life Credit or Honour Profit or Riches sensual Pleasure or carnal Delight Now see which of these things do you savour or mind most What carnal interest suiteth with your hearts and groweth there 2. Weaken and subdue them It is your uprightness and faithfulness Psal. 18.23 I was also upright before him and I kept my self from mine iniquities Let a Christian observe the increase or decay of his master sin and other things will succeed the more easily fight not against small nor great but the King of Israel when we can deny our selves in our dearest Lusts Satan is more discouraged Sampsons strength lay in his locks so doth the strength of sin in one part more than another every man is sensible of his darling sin more or less but the next thing to be lookt after is what we do with it Herod raged when John the Baptist touched his Herodias Foelix trembled when Paul touched his bribery and intemperance but puts it off The Young Man went away sad and troubled when Christ told him of selling all that he had for he had great possessions Mar. 10. Many are troubled in Conscience not so much for want of assurance as loathness to part with some bosom lust but when we must pluck out right eyes and cut off right hands Matth. 5 29 30. it is hard to them when you pray and strive against this sin and grow in the contrary grace this sheweth the truth of a mans self-denyal as Abrahams love appeared in that he did not spare Isaac 2. As to evil motions Prevent them and Suppress them 1. Prevent them 1 Pet. 1.11 Abstain from fleshly lusts that war against your souls Which implies not only an abstinence from the outward act but that you weaken the power and root of sin that it do not so easily bud forth those impetus primo primi are sins not only infelicities but sins they would not be so rife with us if the heart were more under command We are guilty of many sins whereunto we do consent because we do not more strongly dissent and more potently and rulingly command all the subject Faculties as a man is guilty of the murder of his Child if he seeth his servant kill him and doth not his best to hinder it but chiefly when some partial consent followeth when the heart is tickled and delighted with them so an unclean glance is adultery Mat. 5.28 If a man look on a woman so as to lust after her he hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart The more they are mortified the heart is the less pestered with them 2. Suppress them speedily When we cannot keep sin under let us crush it when the mind dwelleth on it lust is conceiving which bringeth forth sin James 1.15 The flesh riseth up in arms against every gracious motion so should the spirit against every sinful motion if you let it alone it will break out to Gods dishonour dash Babylons brats against the stones 3. As to sinful actions Prevent them as much as may be repeat them not lest they grow into a habit 1. Prevent them as much as may be it is good to stop at last to hinder the Action when lust hath gained the consent of the will let it not break forth into Action the very lust is a grief to the spirit but the act will bring dishonour to God and give ill example to men Micah 2.1 VVo to them that devise iniquity and work evil upon their bed when the morning is light they practise it because it is in the power of their hands if fire be kindled in thy bosom it is dangerous to let the sparks fly abroad 2. Repeat not these acts Lest they grow into a Habit and setled disposition of soul evil customs increase by many Acts and so the mischief is more remediless Jer. 13.27 I have seen thy adulteries and thy neighings the lewdness of thy whoredoms O Jerusalem Wilt thou not be made clean When shall it once be It is a very difficult thing for a man to leave his inveterate Customs customary exercise in the use of earthly things begets worldly dispositions not easily cured Augustin saith of his Mother Monica ad illud modicum quotidiana modica addando in eam consuetudinem de lapsa erat ut plenos jam mero calices inhianter hauriebar Vinolency crept upon her by degrees To be gratifying carnal desires now with one thing now with another what doth it do but bring us under the power of a distemper which we cannot remedy Heb. 3.13 Exhort one another daily whilst it is called to day lest ye be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Yield a little to sin and it prevaileth more till at last you are brought under the power of it 1 Cor. 6.12 All things are lawful for me but all things are not expedient all things are lawful for me but I will not be brought under the power of any thing 2. Positively as to the things of the spirit 1. Mind the things of the spirit more than ever you have done many stick there in the very acts that properly belong to the mind never so much as trouble themselves or come to any reasoning within themselves about Pardon of their sins Peace with God the sanctification of the spirit or hopes of eternal life Psal. 10.4 The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God God is not in all his thoughts Alas What have you been doing since you came to the use of Reason How have you spent your time in Youth or riper Age If you have never thought of God and his Grace nor regarded the offers of Mercy in the Gospel certainly you have lost your time neglected your duty and betrayed your souls what have you been doing Have you been governed by the flesh or by the spirit If all your care hath been about back and belly and your thoughts have reached no higher than the riches and honours and pleasures and applause and esteem of the world and Heaven and heavenly things have been little regarded alas for the present you are in the high-way to hell and everlasting destruction if you do not correct your error in time and more earnestly mind other things 2. You must not only mind the things of the spirit but prize and chuse them for your work and happiness for some of them belong to your duty and some to your felicity Luk. 10.42 One thing is necessary and Mary hath chosen the better part which shall never be taken from her Give your hearty consent to seek after that happiness in that way without choice or a determinate fixed bent of heart you will never throughly ingage your selves to God determine not only that you must but you will walk in
thereunto Rom. 7.23 But I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind We think and speak too gentle of sin when we think it a tame thing that worketh not till it be irritated by the suggestions of Satan No 't is like a living fountain that poureth out its waters tho no body come to drink of them 't is irritated by the law of God many times and the motions of the spirit these corrupt humors within us are in a continual fermentation Gen. 6.5 And God saw that the wickedness of man was great upon earth and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually Temptations only make them more violent 2. Hindring us from that which is good either it draweth away the heart from duty or distracteth the heart in duty it draweth away the heart from duty Rom. 7.21 I find then a law that when I would do good evil is present with me It abateth the edg of our affections discourageth us by many unbelieving carnal thoughts and so the heart is drawn away from God that sin may the more domineer or distracting our minds in duty Ezek. 33.31 Their hearts go after their coveteousness filling our minds with thoughts of the world vain pleasures revenge turneth our duties into sins 3. The sad consequence of letting sin alone When sin is not mortified it groweth outragious and never ceaseth acting till it hath exposed us to shame before God Men and Angels or hardneth us in a carnal careless course Lusts let alone end in gross sins and gross sins in a casting off all Religion Love of pleasures let alone will end in drunkenness and uncleanness Envy in murther and violence Judas allowed his Covetousness that brought him to betray his Master Gehazi first blasted with Covetousness then with asking a Bribe to Gods dishonour then with Leprosie so became a shame and burden to himself Annanias and Sapphira taken off by a sudden Judgment The Devil loveth by lust to draw us into sin and by sin to shame and by shame to horror and despair sin is no tame thing But do the people of God run into such notable excesses and disorders Yes when they let sin alone and discontinue the exercise of mortification witness David that run into lust and blood and Peter into curses and execrations Solomon into sensuality and idolatry old sins long laid asleep may awaken again and hurry us strangely into mischief and inconvenience 3. In regard of grace received 1. The grace of justification Relyance upon the Righteousness of Christ for Justification doth not shut out the work of Mortification but conduceth much towards it it doth not exclude it for the justified must be mortified it pleadeth for it Grace teacheth us to deny ungodliness Tit. 2.11 That sin may be mortified and put to death for Christs sake Christ was crucified and put to death for our sakes God doth not require it in point of Soveraignty but pleadeth with us upon terms of Grace Grace hath denied us nothing it hath given us Christ and all things with him and shall we stick at our lusts Grace thought nothing too good for us not the Blood of Christ nor the Favour of God not the Joys of Heaven and shall we count anything too dear to part with for Graces sake Mortification is an unpleasing task but Grace commands and calls for it and that with such powerful Oratory as cannot be withstood 2. In regard of the Grace of Sanctification To exercise it preserve it and increase it 1. That we may exercise it to that end for which it was given to us It was given to us to avoid sin 1 John 3.9 Whosoever is born of God dtoh not commit sin for his seed remaineth in him and he cannot sin because he is born of God and 1 John 5.18 We know that whosoever is born of God sinneth not but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself and the wicked one toucheth him not There is a seed and principle within us to curb and restrain sin too and keep us from falling into the power of the Devil or being brought back into our old bondage this other principle was set up in us on purpose as to excite unto what is good so also to abate the power of sin as the way to destroy weeds is to plant the ground with good seed and 't is given us as a bridle actually to restrain the exorbitances and hold it in when it flyeth out now this grace of God will be in vain unless it be used to such a purpose and one of Gods most precious gifts would lie idle therefore we should act it or walk in the spirit that we may not fulfil the lusts of the flesh 2. Preserve it in power and vigour For the life of grace dependeth very much upon the dying of sin as health and strength in the body cometh on as the disease abateth 1 Pet. 2.24 That we being dead unto sin might be alive unto righteousness But as the life of sin increaseth Grace languisheth and withereth and is ready to die Rev. 3.2 The flesh and the spirit are contrary and always are incroaching upon one another and there is this advantage on the flesh's side that it is a native not a foreigner home-bred plants which the soil-yieldeth naturally without any tillage as Nettles will sooner preserve themselves and get ground upon better plants because the earth bringeth them forth of its own accord or as water heated the cold is natural to it and will prevail against the heat unless it be driven out by a constant fire whether the prevalency of sin doth weaken Grace effective or meritorie by its malignant influence or as deserving such a punishment from God I will not now dispute but weaken it it doth that is clear by experience for tho Grace be planted in us by God 't is not settled in such an indivisible point as that it cannot be more or less there is a remission of degrees Matth. 24.12 The love of many shall wax cold Faith may grow sick and weak there are soul-distempers as well as bodily and then a man is altogether unfit for action and performeth duties in a very heartless and uncomfortable fashion therefore still we must be mortifying sin 3. That we may increase it Grace is not only Donum a Gift to be preserved but Talentum a Talent to be improved and increased upon our hands that we may be the more fit to glorifie God that appeareth by the many excitations in Scripture to growth 2 Pet. 3.18 But grow in grace and in the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. 'T is not enough to maintain that measure of Grace which we have already received but we must get more always look after the growth of it in our selves and indeed the one cannot be done without the other there is no possibility to keep what we have unless it be improved he that roweth against the
〈◊〉 God by his Judgment hath subjected the creature to this curse for mans sin man as the meritorious and God the efficient cause of this vanity which is brought upon the creature so that it is brought upon them by man as a sinner by God as a Judge First by man as a sinner that brought the hereditary and old curse As the lower world was created for mans sake so by the just Judgment of God the curse came upon the whole earth for mans sake Gen. 3 17 18. Cursed is the ground for thy sake in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the dayes of thy life thorns and thistles also shall it bring forth unto thee This was the original curse So for the actual curse Psal. 107.33 34. He turneth rivers into a wilderness and the water springs into dry ground a fruitful land into barrenness for the wickedness of them that dwell therein Barrenness or fertility is not a natural accident but ordered by God for the punishment of mans sin Therefore we should lift up our eyes above all natural causes and fix them upon God who chastiseth men for their unfruitfulness towards him and punisheth countries whose plenty hath been infamously abused and spent upon their lusts Secondly by the will and power of the Creator he it is who hath the sovereign disposal of the creature and to order it as he pleaseth with respect to his own Glory 1. Herein we see Gods justice who by the vanity of the creature would give us a standing monument of his displeasure against sin creatures are not as they were made in their primitive institution the enmities and destructive influences of the several creatures had never been known if we had not rebelled aginst God We should never have been aquainted with droughts and famines and pestilences and earthquakes these are fruits of the fall and introduced by our sin and by these God would shew us what an evil thing sin is Jer. 2.19 Thine own wickedness shall correct thee and thy backslidings shall reprove thee know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my fear is not in thee saith the Lord of Hosts We being in a lower sphere of understanding can only know causes by the effects here is an effect it hath brought misery upon us and upon the whole Creation When God looked upon the whole creation all the creatures were good Gen. 1.31 very good but when Solomon had considered them all was vanity very vain what is the reason of this alteration sin had interposed 2. The power and soveraignty of God all the creatures are subject to the will of God even in those things which are contrary to their natural use and inclination for therefore he imployeth them to destory one another and man who hath brought this disorder upon them if God bid the fire burn however kindled what can withstand its flames if he bid the earth cleave and swallow up those who had made a cleft in the congregation of the Lord the earth presently obeyeth Numb 16.31 As he had spoken these words the ground clave asunder that was under them and the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up So if God bid the Sea stand up like a Mountain and Wall of congealed Ice it will do so and afford passage for his people and return again to its wonted course fluidness and drown the Egyptians it will do it Exod. 16.26 The waters returned and covered the chariots So for other things Job 37.6 He saith to the snow Be thou upon the earth and likewise to the great rain Be thou upon the earth Not a drop of Rain falleth from the Clouds but by Gods permission so verse the 12. The clouds are turned about by his councels to do whatever he commandeth them upon the face of the earth Nothing seemeth to be more casual than the motion of the Clouds or at least to arise from meer natural causes yet still are at the direction of God For it followeth v. 13. He causeth it to rain for the correction of a land or for mercy Sometimes 't is sent in mercy and sometimes in judgment this bridle God keepeth upon the world to check their licentiousness and awe them into obedience to himself 3. His mercy during the day of his patience In the midst of judgment he remembreth mercy though there be much vanity in the creature yet there is still an usefulness in them to mankind tho the air might poison us and the earth swallow us up and the mouth of the great deep vomit forth an inundation of waters and the fire scorch up the earth yet 't is great mercy that God hath so bound up the creatures by a law and decree that the earth is still a commodious habitation to man that many of the changes and commotions in the Elementary and lower world conduce to our benefit but especially the stated course of nature that the earth doth bring forth its fruits in due season and the Sun rejoyceth to run its course all this is goodness to poor creatures while God offereth pardon of sin and restitution by Christ we still injoy the blessings we have forfeited tho with some diminution and abatement we are restored to the use of the creatures but these are subject to vanity We have our lives but not that perfect constitution of body which Adam injoyed before his fall Creatures are not so useful and serviceable to us as they were in their first creation In the inward Righteousness and Holiness restored to man there is a mixture of corruption 'T was needful there should be some continual remembrance of sin that we might be the more abased in our selves and more sensible of Gods Mercy And yet for the honour of God some monument should be left of his benignity and bounty to his creature 3. The reasons why the innocent creature is punished for mans sin 1. To destroy the image of jealousy or the great idol that was set up against God mans great sin was his forsaking the Creator and seeking his happiness in the creature Jer. 2.13 For my people have committed two evils they have forsaken me the fountain of living water and hewed them out cisterns broken cisterns that will hold no water and 1 John 3.12 He forsook God by distrust and betook himself to the creature out of necessity for man cannot subsist of himself but must have somewhat to lean unto The first temptation did intice man from God to some inferior good more pleasing to his fleshly mind man was made for God to serve him love him and delight in him and to use all the creatures in order to God for his Service and Glory He was to use nothing but with this intention But by sin all that man was capable of using was abused to please his flesh Now as Satan the tempter aimed at this that by depending on the creature we might have no cause
bitter but the birth will occasion joy enough to countervail the tediousness of it 4. They are complaining accusing groans the Apostle saith Jam. 5.4 Grudg not one against another groan not one against another that is give not occasion to one another to complain against you to God 'T is sad when one Christian complaineth against another for his froward and perverse and unbrotherly carriage much more of near relations Husbands and Wives Ministers and People The Apostle saith 't is not profitable when they give their account with grief and and not with joy Heb. 13.17 This groaning of the creature must be interpreted by the standard of this notion The creature groaneth not with us but groaneth against us because of the slavery we put them unto they groan for vengeance and destruction not in fellow-feeling with thee but in indignation against thee if thou be a wicked man There is a groaning by way of Sympathy and Compassion as we are bidden Rom. 12.15 to rejoice with them that rejoice and weep with them that weep And there is a groaning by way of accusation and appeal for revenge against those that have wronged us we have abused the creature the groan of a worm in the ear of the Lord of Hosts will be heard so James 5.2 3. Your riches are corrupted your garments are moth-eaten your gold and silver is cankered and the rust of them shall be a witness against you and shall eat your flesh as it were fire you have heaped up treasure together for the last days In the day of Judgment the groans of the creature and the circumstances of our sinful actions shall be brought forth as witnesses against us the moth-eaten garments the cankered silver shall be produced so Hab. 2.11 The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beam out of the timber shall answer it That is the materials of the house built by oppression shall come as witnesses there is a kind of antipathy between them therein represented The stones of the wall shall cry Lord we were built up by rapine and violence and the beam shall answer True Lord even so it is The stones shall cry Vengeance Lord upon our ungodly ones and the Beam shall answer Wo to him because he built his house with blood Conscience is a terrible remembrancer The very creatures which sinners abused will be brought in testimony against them to their conviction and condemnation You will say What is this to the Restoration of the Universe or those Elementary Bodies in this lower world to which you seem to confine this restoration These creatures shall be consumed in the last fire how then brought into the Judgment Answer 1. The Elementary bodies do concur to the increase and preservation of these things Lands gotten by violence are made fruitful by Sun Air and Rain the Sun now shineth upon these wicked men and the Rain falleth upon their fields the creatures abused to excess come from both the Sunshine and the Earths Fertility which is the mother of all wealth 2. Tho many of these creatures shall be consumed in this last fire yet they shall have an esse cognitum in the memory and conscience of the sinner tho not an esse rei an actual existence And thus the wine abused to drunkenness may witness against the drunkard the sacrilegious m●rsels which the glutton alienated from the poor and devoted to lust and appetite shall witness against the glutton Memoria praeteritorum is one of the punishments in Hell Luke 16.25 Son remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things The very cloathing by which they did manifest their Pride shall witness against the proud The Lands Goods and Houses of worldlings Isa. 5.8 shall witness against the worldling The Gold and Silver which they preferred before everlasting riches shall witness against the carnal The Place the Room the Bed wherein men committed filthiness and lewdness shall witness against the unclean when conscience shall be forced to the review all these things shall come into his mind To this also may be referred that passage Josh. 24.27 And Joshua said unto all the people Behold this stone shall be a witness unto us for it hath heard all the words of the Lord which he spake unto us it shall be there for a witness to you lest you deny your God How could the stone which he had placed under a great Oak which was very near the Sanctuary of the Lord hear or give witness Partly by Gods Appeal and partly by their memory and conscience it was a monument to put them in mind of this solemn covenant and so might serve to convince them of their sin Thus hearing is ascribed to a sensless stone because it was a circumstance that might be produced in the judgment Thirdly How we know it For whoever heard the groaning of the whole Creation 1. By sensible experience we know the vanity of the creature Ocular demonstration is enough to tell us all that things are frail and perishing Psal. 119.96 I have seen an end of all perfection 2. The Word affirmeth First That this came in by mans sin and the common apprehensions of mankind attesteth it That wicked men are unprofitable burdens of the earth and bring a judgment on the place where they live Secondly That God having repaired the world by Christ there is a better estate appointed for man and so by consequence for the creatures which are an appendage to him Isa. 11.6 7 8 9. The enmity of the creature shall cease there as in Noah's Ark. 3. The Spirit improveth it both the vanity of the creature and our mortality and the hopes of restauration God must teach us the plainest Lessons Psal. 90.12 Lord teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom Deut. 29.2 3 4. Ye have seen all that the Lord did before your eyes in the land of Egypt unto Pharoah and unto all his servants and unto all his land the great temptations which thine eyes have seen the signs and the great miracles yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear unto this day And the hopes of restauration Faith is his meer gift and production Eph. 2.8 For by grace ye are saved through faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God From the whole take these Corallaries 1. That sinful man is an enemy to all the creatures as well as to himself He hath brought misery upon himself and all the world which was his palace to dwell in The Creation was a well-tuned Instrument upon which man might make musick to the praise and honour of God But the strings of the Harp are broken and there is nothing but jarring instead of harmony and groans for praise Yea man himself who is the mouth of the Creation is very dumb and tongue-ty'd in the praises of God 2. That every particular land fareth the worse for wicked
to presume upon the indulgence of that day are such who make a fair profession injoy many outward priviledges As suppose the Jew above the Gentile the Christian above the Jew the Officer or one Imployed in the Church above the common Christian. The priviledge of the Jew was his circumcision the knowledge of the Law and outward obedience thereunto or submission to the rituals of Moses because they were exact in these things they hoped to be accepted with God and to be more favourably dealt with than others The priviledge of the Christian is baptism the knowledge of Christ being of his party and visibly owning his interest in the World they have eaten and drunk in his presence he hath taught in their streets and they have frequented the assembly where he is ordinarily present and more powerfully present Luke 13.26 'T is possible they have put themselves in a stricter garb of religion forborn disgraceful sins been much in external ways of duty given God all the cheap and plausible obedience which the flesh can spare But if all this be without solid godliness or that sound constitution of heart or course of life which the principles of our profession would breed and call for these priviledges will be no advantage to him Well then let the Officer come the Apostle Prophet Pastour or Teacher by what names or titles soever they be distinguished who have born rule in the Church been much in exercising their gifts for his glory have taught others the way of salvation this is their priviledge Mat. 7.22 Lord have we not prophesyed in thy name and in thy name cast out Devils and in thy name done many wondrous works Then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye workers of iniquity Well now if no mans person shall be accepted if not for his profession if not for his Office if not for his external ministrations surely we ought to be strict and diligent and seriously godly as well as others And if we shall all appear before this Holy Just and Impartial Judge we should all pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 2. T is a strict and a just Judgment Acts. 17.30 31. He commandeth now all men every where to repent Because he hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the world in righteousness Now God winketh at every mans faults and doth not take vengeance on them judgeth the World in patience but then all men must give an account those who have refused the remedy offered to lapsed mankind shall have Judgment without mercy And how terrible will that Judgment be when the least sin rendreth us obnoxious to the severity of his revenging justice But those who have heard the Gospel and accepted the redeemers mercy shall also be judged according to their works in the manner formerly explained there is a remunerative Justice observed to them we must give an account of all our actions thoughts speeches affections and intentions that it may be seen whether they will amount to sincerity or a sound belief of the truths of the Gospel and therefore we should be the more careful to walk uprightly before him Matth. 12.36 37. But I say unto you that for every idle word that men shall speak they shall give an account thereof in the Judgment for by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words shalt thou be condemned Words must be accounted for especially false blasphemous words and such as flow out of the evil treasure of the heart and sadly accounted for For in conferring rewards and punishments God taketh notice of words as well as actions they make up a part of the evidence certainly in this just judgment we shall find that 't is a serious business to be a Christian. But those who have owned the redeemer must esteem him in their hearts above all wordly things and value his grace above the allurements of sense and count all things but dung and dross for the excellency of the knowledge of their Lord Phil. 3.7 8 9. And glorify him in their lives 1 Thes. 1.11 12. And pass through the Pikes To him that overcometh Rev. 2.26 And resist the Devil and subdue the flesh and vanquish the World There must be doing and there must be suffering there must be giving and forgiving giving out of our estates and forgiving wrongs and injuries visiting the sick and clothing the naked feeding the hungry there must be believing loving mortifying sin perfecting holiness And this is the tryal of those who come under the Gospel covenant which might be easily proved if the thing were not evident of its self Now judge you whether all this should not beget the fear of reverence or caution at least which fear of God should always reign in the hearts of the faithful 3. Gods final sentence is to be passed upon us upon which our eternal estate dependeth Therefore the great weight and consequence of that day maketh it matter of terrour to us We are to be happy for ever or undone for ever our estate will be then irrevocable Where a man cannot err twice there he cannot use too much solicitude According to our last account so shall the condition of every man be for ever What is a matter of greater moment than to be Judged to everlasting joy or everlasting torment Matters of profit or disprofit credit or discredit temporal life and death are nothing to it If a man lose in one bargain he may recover himself in another credit may bewounded by one action and healed in another though the scar remain the wound may be cured If a man die there is hope of life in another World but if sentenced to eternal death there is no reversing of it Therefore now we knowing the terrour of the Lord sue out our own pardon and perswade others to sue out their pardon in the name of Christ to make all sure for the present 4. The execution in case of failing in our duty is terrible beyond expression Because this is the main circumstance and is at the bottom of all I shall a little dilate upon it not to affright you with needless perplexities but in compassion to your souls God knoweth I shall take the rise thus The object of all fear is some evil approaching now the greater the evil is the nearer it approacheth the more certain and inevitable it is and the more it concerneth our selves the more cause of fear there is all these concur in the business in hand 1. The execution bringeth on the greatest evil The Evil of punishment and the greatest punishment the wrath of God the wrath of the eternal Judge who can and will cast body Soul into eternal fire This was due to all by the first covenant will be the portion of Impenitentsinners by the second Heb. 10.31 It s a fearful thing to f●ll into the hands of the living God Mark first obstinate and impenitent-sinners do Immediately fall