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A51840 A fourth volume containing one hundred and fifty sermons on several texts of Scripture in two parts : part the first containing LXXIV sermons : part the second containing LXXVI sermons : with an alphabetical table to the whole / by ... Thomas Manton ... Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1693 (1693) Wing M524; ESTC R13953 1,954,391 1,278

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Labour and Charge the more Resistance the more Glory God's Children are glad that they may not serve God with that which cost them nothing as David professeth 2 Sam. 24.24 I will not offer a Burnt-offering unto the Lord my God of that which did cost me nothing Certainly Men are not zealous and their Hearts are not set upon the Ways of God when every slight Excuse will serve the turn and every little Profit draws them away and every petty Business doth hinder them and break off Communion with God and every slender Temptation doth interrupt and break off all their Purposes and Resolutions to Duty and Obedience be it Prayer Charity or Acts of Righteousness We must be resolute for Gal. 4.18 It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing 3. To be zealous of good Works imports Diligence and Earnestness to advance Piety to the highest pitch when we are not contented with any low degrees of Obedience but would fain carry out a godly Conversation to the uttermost to do it with all our Heart Is he zealous that is contented with a little Charity with a little Worship only Sloth and Idleness will not stand with Zeal Rom. 12.11 Not slothful in Business fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. Thus it will be when we are seething hot in Spirit as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies A large Affection cannot be contented with mean things and low degrees of Holiness nor lay a dead Child in the room of a living one This the Apostle calls being rich in good VVorks 1 Tim. 6.18 One or two Acts will not serve the turn Thus Dorcas is said to be full of good VVorks Acts 9.36 How full It is not an Allusion to the fulness of a Vessel that is full of Water or a Chest full of Clothes but to the fulness of a Tree loaden with Fruit James 3.17 Full of Mercy and good VVorks Those that are planted into this noble Vine Jesus Christ are full of good Works 4. To be zealous of good Works is to be constant to the End The Fire on the Altar never went out but it was always maintained and kept in so we must never let the Fire of Zeal go out Zeal is not like Fire in Straw Alas sudden Fervours are soon spent they are but Freewill-Pangs the Birth of an unrenewed Will but it is like Fire in Wood that casts a lasting Heat Gal. 4.18 It is good to be zealously affected always Not at first only for a Fit or Pang that doth not come from Sanctification therefore you should keep up your Fervour Watch against all Decays especially in Age. The Motions of Youth are very vehement for Youth is full of eager Spirits and seems to be all on fire but many times these Motions are not so sincere but the Actions of Age are more solid tho many times they want Vigour and Heat Therefore strive to keep up your Zeal Gal. 5.7 Ye did run well who did hinder you Carnal Men when their first Heats are spent give over they grow cold careless and indifferent in Matters of Religion But shall all these Heats and Desires of Reformation be in vain and shall we give over at length In worldly things we will not give over when we have been at great cost but shall all that is past in Religion be in vain Gal. 3.4 Have you suffered so many things in vain if it be yet in vain His meaning is It is not like to be in vain it will but tend to your greater Condemnation An Adulteress is punished more than an Harlot It is more Dishonour and Ingratitude to God to tire at length III. The Respect and Place of Zeal in good Works it is a Note of God's People and a Fruit of Christ's Death 1. It is a Note of God's People Vnumquodque operatur secundum suam formam There is in the New Creature a Propensity and Inclination to good Works As all Creatures are created with an inclination to their proper Operations such a willing tendency is there in the New Creature to those Actions which are Heavenly As Sparks fly upwards and a Stone moves downward so the New Creature is carried to Obedience and Holiness from a free Principle within The Nature of every thing is the Principle of its Motion Faith will discover it self therefore we read of God's fulfilling the VVork of Faith with Power 2 Thess. 1.11 Hope is called lively from the Effect 1 Pet. 1.3 He hath begotten us to a lively Hope by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ from the Dead Love constraineth 2 Cor. 5.14 The Love of Christ constraineth us Good Works are a Note of the New Creature We are the Workmanship of God created in Christ Iesus unto good VVorks Ephes. 2.10 As an Artificer sets a Mark upon his Workmanship that he might know it so God sets a visible Mark upon his Servants he doth not make a new Creature for old Works Good Works are Christianae Fidei quasi testes Witnesses that you can bring to evidence the Truth and Power of Grace Luther saith Good VVorks are Faith incarnate that is Faith is manifested by them as the Son of God was manifested in the Flesh. They are Witnesses to the World to your selves and unto God that you are his They are Signs and Witnesses to the World This is the Badg by which God would have his peculiar Children known not by Pomp and worldly Splendor not by any outward Excellency Riches Greatness and Estate but by Zeal to good Works There are no barren Trees in Christ's Garden it is not for the Honour of God for our heavenly Father would be glorified in his Servants bringing forth much Fruit John 15.8 Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much Fruit so shall ye be my Disciples God standeth much upon his Honour Now it is for the Honour of God that all which are planted and grafted into Christ should be full of good Works And they are Testimonies to our selves 2 Pet. 1.10 Give diligence to make your Calling and Election sure Some Copies add 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make your Calling and Election sure by good VVorks certainly it may be collected from the Context he bids them ver 5. add to their Faith Vertue to Vertue Knowledg c. and so they might come to make their Calling and Election sure Graces are not discerned by their Habits but by their Acts and Exercise Look as in a Tree the Sap and Life is hid but the Fruit and Apples do appear so Zeal of good Works is that which appears and so it manifests and clears up your Condition This is the great Note of Difference between us and the Prophane they are zealous for the Devil's Kingdom Factors for Hell Iohn 8.44 Ye are of your Father the Devil and the Lusts of your Father you will do They are known by their Works they are earnest for Satan zealous for the Devil follow Sin with earnestness and do Evil with both hands
earnestly Micah 7.3 It is the difference between us and civil Men but unregenerate they are like Cypress Trees fair and tall but fruitless of a comely Life but none of these good Works are to be found in them It is the difference between us and Hypocrites A Hypocrite like a Carbuncle seems to be all on a fire but when you touch it it is quite cold so they pretend to Religion talk much but have no true regular Zeal no spiritual Warmth It is notable our Lord himself proves his Divine Original by his Works Iohn 10.38 Tho ye believe not me believe the VVorks that ye may know and believe that the Father is in me and I in him So is this the sensible Evidence you are in Christ and Christ in you Graces are not always evident in feeling but in Fruit the Effects cannot be hid Then they are Signs and Evidences to God himself the Lord will look upon them as Marks and Evidences of his People Look as the destroying Angel was to be guided by a Sign Exod. 12.12 13. by the sprinkling of the Door-posts not that he needed it but because God would have it to be so So the Lord sutes his Dispensations and guides them by a Sign It is true God in his Gifts is arbitrary but in his Judgments he proceeds by Rule according to our Works At the last Day God will judg you not by your Profession but by your Practice what you have done he will not say You have prophesied in my Name you have eaten and drunk in my Presence but you have fed me clothed me visited me That the Faith of the Elect might be found to Praise and Honour he will have Works produced Not that God wants Evidences of our Sincerity but he will have all the World know we have not been unfruitful A Man that expecteth to be posed is preparing to answer and would give somethink to know the Questions aforehand Christ hath told us what are the Questions upon which we shall be examined and taxed at the Day of Judgment he will say Have you fed and clothed my People have you ministred to their Necessities have you relieved them with spiritual Counsel and Admonition have you been good holy and just Therefore let us provide to give an Answer that we might not be ashamed at the last Day Thus this Zeal for good Works hath the place and room of a Witness to God as the Rule and Measure of his Process to our selves as the ground of our Assurance and to the World as the great vindication of the Honour of our Profession 2. It is a Fruit of Christ's Death partly by way of Obligation for certainly God hath not been at all this cost and labour for nothing he did not project the sending of Christ and Jesus Christ did not so give up himself in the Work of Redemption for nothing but to inflame us to a great height of Piety They that live at a low rate of Holiness cross and disgrace the whole Design of the Gospel they are not apprehensive of the Love of God in giving Christ nor the Love of Christ in giving himself Our Redemption was carried on in such a way not only that the Comfort but also the Duty of the Creature might be raised to the highest Partly again as Christ hath purchased the Gift of the Spirit to fit us for good Works yea to make us zealous in them Titus 3.5 6. 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 Iesus Christ our Saviour Now the Spirit dwelleth in our Hearts to set our Graces a working Iohn 4.14 The Water that I shall give him shall be in him a Well of VVater springing up into everlasting Life So Iohn 7.38 39. He that believeth on me as the Scripture saith out of his Belly shall flow Rivers of living VVater This spake he of the Spirit which they that believe on him shall receive The Spirit is not a Fountain sealed up but flowing forth The Spirit of God is a mighty Spirit and comes in upon the Soul not only as a gentle Blast but as a mighty rushing Wind he comes not only in the appearance of a Dove but of cloven Tongues of Fire Acts 2. He comes as a Spirit of Power to quicken and awaken the Soul to great heights and fervours in Obedience Look as Men acted by Satan the unclean Spirit are restless in Evil and carried headlong as the Herd of Swine into the Sea so those that are acted by the Spirit of God are much more carried on with great Earnestness in the Ways of God The Devil hath not such Advantages to work upon his Instruments as the Spirit of God hath upon us The Devil works and operates in all the Children of Disobedience Ephes. 2.3 The Spirit that now worketh in the Children of Disobedience But the Devil cannot work but by Man's Consent neither can he work immediately upon the Soul but only by the Senses and by the Fancy but the Spirit of God can work immediately upon them in whom he acts Therefore being acted by him they must needs be zealous and earnest for the Spirit of God nescit tarda molimina knows no slow Motions The Soul in it self is dead and slothful and apt to yield to Laziness and Delays but when we are acted and quickened by the mighty Spirit then draw us and we will run after thee Cant. 1.4 When the Spirit puts forth its Force upon the Soul such as are drawn by the Holy Ghost they are not in jest as carnal Men are but in earnest they do not dally with Religion but make it their great business to surprize Heaven and carry on constant Communion with God Matth. 11.12 The Kingdom of Heaven suffereth Violence and the Violent take it by force Vse 1. Information 1. That Grace is no Enemy to good Works Libertinism is ancient and natural Christ died to improve Piety not to lessen it but to raise it to the highest to make us zealous of good Works that we might be carried on to Heaven with full Sails Therefore he that grows looser less watchful against Sin less diligent in the exercise of Holiness less frequent in Communion with God less humble and penitent after committing of Sin offers the greatest Abuse to Grace that may be and perverts its natural Use. There is no freezing by the Fire we may freeze indeed by painted Fire that may make us contract Chilliness and Drowsiness but true Grace is a Fire that warms and inflames our Affections Christ came to make us more chearful and lively but not slack careless and cold 2. It informs us what little Reason the World hath to cry out upon Zealots for Christ died to make us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 zealous of good VVorks Men that are only contented with a brain Religion speculative Notions they cannot endure Heats and Fervors they would have
consider Jesus Christ as Mediator so there is a Consent of Obedience to the Father and so as the Father appoints he presents himself as the Price and Sacrifice for Sin Homines non propter homines sed propter Deum dilexit He loved Men not for Mens sake but God's The meaning is the Goodness of the Creature is not the Cause of Christ's Love but his Love to God and that gives us sure ground of Hope Christ loves us not for our own sakes but for his Father's sake Now give me leave to shew why it was necessary that Christ should give up himself partly out of Love and partly out of Obedience 1. It was necessary that he should give up himself out of Obedience partly that his Love might be Rational The Lord is a God of Judgment a wise God and all he doth is with Reason Now the only supream Reason why Christ loves us is the Will of God and the Command of his Father Solomon saith Prov. 17.18 A Man void of Vnderstanding striketh Hands and becometh Surety in the presence of his Friend How is that that is before his Friend asks or desires it it is a Fault to be over-forward and prodigal of Favours It is a Rational Love that is in Christ and partly he doth it out of Obedience to preserve a Respect to God the Father Christ loves us for his sake and therefore we should love God in Christ the more And partly it is the Wisdom of God that the Reasons of Love should lie without Man himself and be found among the Divine Persons because of the Father's Good-will and Command 2. It was convenient that Christ should give himself out of his own Love partly that Christ might be a fit Mediator It cannot stand with God's Justice to punish an Innocent Person for a Nocent unless he himself be willing therefore that Christ might be a Mediator he had a Will of his own otherwise God could not in Honour exact the Debt of Christ but that there was a voluntary Susception he took it upon himself The Lord Christ when he condescended to the Father's Motion when by his own Will he gave up himself and set himself wholly apart to be our Redeemer God might justly require the Debt of him When Paul would take Onesimus his Debt upon himself Philemon might justly require it of him Philem. v. 18 19. If he have wronged thee or oweth thee ought put that on mine Account I Paul have written it with mine own Hand I will repay it Or I may illustrate it thus In the Case of Ionah the Mariners were loth to throw him Over-board but when he saw the Tempest and said Cast me into the Sea and there shall be a Calm then they took him up and cast him in So when the Lord Christ saw the Tempest of his Father's Wrath that was rising against Sinners he saith Cast me into the Sea Indeed there was a difference the Tempest there was for Ionah's sake but this was for our sakes I saw there was no Intercessor th●refore my own Arm brought Salvation The Father's Ordination had no place or room without Christ's voluntary Susception and Undertaking And partly too to set off the worth of his Love Willingness and Freeness commends a Kindness and makes it great What more free than a Gift Therefore his Passion was voluntary Extorted Courtesies lose their Value therefore Jesus Christ gave up ●imsel● to be a Sacrifice for us But the chiefest Reason is this Christ willingly offered up himself that all things might come freely and sweetly from his Father to us that so God might rejoice over us to do us Good as the Expression is Ier. 32.41 All a wicked Man's Blessings seem to be extorted from Providence they have them not from the Heart of God but from God's Anger as the murmuring Israelites had Quails But now that we might have Mercies from God's Heart and not from his Hand only that Mercy might come from Love and all run in a free Channel to us and as a Gift therefore did Christ give himself Object But did not Christ pray that the Cup might pass from him And did not he fear and his Humane Nature stagger and recoil at the Greatness of his Sufferings We read of Prayers Tears and strong Cries Heb. 5.7 and therefore how was Christ so willing Answ. Christ's Prayers were rather for our Example and Comfort than to decline the Suffering Heb. 4.15 He was in all Points tempted like as we are yet without Sin He was to shew himself true Man and therefore was to have humane Love humane Abhorrencies and humane Aversations He was to put on all the innocent Passions of our Nature it was not convenient Christ should suffer as a Stock and dead lump of Flesh. In short in his Sufferings Christ was to discover a double Relation he was to act the part of a private Person and of a publick Person Of a private Person to shew the Verity of his humane Nature and of a publick Person to discover his Willingness to die for the Elect. Now he doth both these It is the Nature of Man to shun that which is grievous and painful to him he was to look upon his Sufferings as contrary to the Perfection and Liberty of his humane Nature and so he was to pray Father if it be possible let this Cup pass from me But now as a publick Person and as Mediator so he was extreamly willing to do this Office of Love for us The innocent Passions of his humane Nature discover the Greatness of his Sufferings they made his Manhood recoil and stagger as being amazed at the dreadfulness of that he was to suffer And though his private humane Nature be allowed to speak Father let this Cup pass yet his publick Relation hath a casting Voice and his submission as a publick Person sheweth his willingness to endure these Sufferings therefore he saith Not my Will but thine be done and freely yields up himself These Fears of Christ certainly were no shrinking from the Work but only a natural Consternation and Retirement from what is dreadful Christ's Fears were a part of that Fire wherein our Sin-offering was to be burnt and roasted and therein he shew'd his willingness that he freely gave up himself to be scorched with those dreadful Apprehensions of God's Wrath. For it is very notable his Agonies came not upon him before he pleased for it is said Matth. 26.38 he went into the Garden and then began to be sorrowful Christ could have kept it off longer and brought it on sooner And then his Tears were but the overflowing of his Love he had an Ocean in his Heart and suffered it to flow out in his Eyes it was part of the Deluge wherein he would drown the World of Sin therefore these do not disparage but increase his Willingness Vse 1. To press us to Thankfulness Here are many Circumstances the Giver the Gift the Manner of Giving the End of
Person of the Godhead to work it out Next to the Gift of Christ we have the Gift of the Spirit O it should be a shame that when we have such a keen Sword to cut the Throat of our Lusts that we act so faintly use it so feebly and are no more valiant And then what pure and excellent Precepts have we in the Christian Religion reaching not only to the Act but the very Aim to the Intents and Thoughts and secret workings of the Heart Psal. 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul And not only to the Sin but to the Lust Thy Commandment is exceeding broad Psal. 119.96 Then we have glorious Hopes The Scriptures that are a perfect Rule in all other Cases yet herein they profess their Imperfection 1 Cor. 13.9 We prophesy but in part Words not fit and great enough to tell us of our Hopes 2 Cor. 4.17 Our light Affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is the highest strain and reach of Fancy In all other things the Garment of Fancy is too great for the Body wherewith it is to be clothed Fancy never takes a right measure of things but the highest Suppositions are too short to express the Greatness of those Hopes that are provided for you And then for the dreadful Punishments we are told of a Worm that never dies of a Fire that shall never be quenched of a Pit without a Bottom of Torments that are without End and without Ease Ours Hearts are filled with Horror when we do but think of these things and shall we not burn now with Zeal for God when we are in danger of burning in Hell-fire for ever hereafter If now we are cold and slow in good Works it were the most incongruous thing in the World where there is such a high Elevation of Duty and Comfort The whole Scriptures are formed to elevate these things to the highest pitch that we may not be backward and slow in the Christian Religion All things are sublime and therefore call for something more than ordinary 8. Consider the great danger of Coldness both to our selves and others To our selves where there is no Zeal there will be Decay Prov. 18.9 He also that is slothful in Work is Brother to him that is a great Waster Not to go forward is to go backward Standing Pools corrupt as a Man that rows against the Tide and Stream if he doth not ply the Oar he will lose ground and be carried away apace So if we be not zealous we cannot stand and keep our ground there will be a Decay Bernard observes to this purpose that all the Angels in Iacob's Ladder were either ascending or descending there is no stay but either going up or going down When they lose their first Love their Zeal is gone Rev. 2.4 5. Thou hast left thy first Love Remember therefore whence thou art fallen and repent and do thy first Works What is the reason Men grow weary of Truth weary of Holiness weary of Prayer Ordinances they do not keep up a constant Diligence First they lost their Zeal they became indifferent cold and careless then off goes the Service of God first their Love and then their Works So consider the danger of it to others Men grow formal by Imitation When Christians high in Profession grow formal cold and careless this makes their Neighbours so There is nothing hardens more than a cold Professor it makes Men sit upon their Lees. Mortified and strict Christians upbraid others by their Example A Man cannot come into the Company of a mortified strict Christian but his Heart will upbraid and shame him And therefore if in this general Decay we have learned Deadness and Formality one of another let us strive now who shall be most forward in the Ways of Grace Heb. 10.24 Let us consider one another to provoke to Love and good Works You shall see in the Times when Idolatry was like to go down Isa. 41.6 7. They helped every one his Neighbour and every one said to his Brother Be of good Courage So the Carpenter encouraged the Goldsmith and he that smootheth with the Hammer him that smote the Anvil c. They were strengthning one another to plead for their Shrines and to get up their Pictures and Idols again that their Trade might not go down Thus Idolaters hold in a String O what a Religious Correspondency should there be in the Children of God When the Power of Godliness is like to decay and go down how should we strengthen and encourage one another and provoke one another by holy Example to be more zealous that we may not contract the Guilt of their Deadness and Formality 9. Consider There is no danger in Zeal we cannot do too much in solid Piety The least is more than enough in Sin because every thing is too much there but in Grace there is never enough In External Worship indeed there may be too much as in Pomp and Ceremonies when Men will be decking God's Ordinances with Gawdery it is not proportionable to the End of Worship therefore there may be too much And in particular Exercises there may be too much it is good to keep a decorum in Praying and Hearing But now in the Love of God and Zeal for God and the Service of God and solid Piety there can be no excess you cannot be too Heavenly or too Holy There is a great deal of Danger of doing too little Many come short of the Glory of God Rom. 3.23 O Christians you cannot be too busy for saving your Souls nor too earnest 2 Pet. 1.11 we are pressed to labour after an abundant Entrance There are some that are afar off that do not enter at all that neither strive nor seek to enter that are as Swine filthy abominable unprofitable good for nothing but to ruin themselves as prophane Persons and Heathens And some are very nigh to the Kingdom of God as the moral Man upon the Brink and Border and as he that was almost perswaded to be a Christian Acts 26.28 Others again make a hard shift to get to Heaven they are scarcely saved or saved as by Fire But others are carried on with full Sails their Hearts are enlarged to God This is our Duty to labour to get this abundant Entrance Some seek to enter and are not able they go far and yet perish Luke 13.24 Many shall seek to enter but shall not be able 10. Consider If your Hearts be dead and cold you lose the comfort of all your Christian Priviledges A dead Christian is as bad as none at all You cannot take comfort in your Conversion a Change without Life and Zeal is but a moral Reformation not a Regeneration for Regeneration is a quickning and a begetting to Life Ephes. 2.5 Even when we were dead in Trespasses and Sins he hath quickned us together with Christ. That
are to be pitied who are provoked to Sin yet the Provocation excuses not the Sinner Moses had led them by God's Direction to this Place and there they murmured against him when they wanted Water and to such a height that he was fain to take shelter in the Sanctuary to avoid their Fury But this doth not excuse Moses Psal. 106.32 They angred him at the Waters of Strife so that it went ill with Moses for their sakes Their Peevishness provoked him yet because he commanded not his Passion he was punished with an exclusion out of Canaan Aaron upon another occasion thought to excuse himself Exod. 32.22 Let not the Anger of my Lord wax hot thou knowest this People that they are set on Mischief c. But Aaron's Sin was so great that God was very angry with him and thought to have destroyed him if Moses had not prayed for him as you may see Deut. 9.20 The Lord was very angry with Aaron to have destroyed him and I prayed for Aaron also at the same time Alas these Excuses are frivolous 't is long of others and consider the great Injuries I received Every Man is to answer for his own Actions and cannot be hurt by others without his own Consent 4. Both the Persons were in publick Offices the Magistracy and the Ministry and the highest and most eminent of their Rank The one chief Governour of Israel the other High-Priest God will spare none yea the higher they are the greater are their Offences because of the influence of their Example and therefore their Lot will be the harder God will reckon with them when he passes by others If any the Duty of whose place obliges them to be eminent in Faith and Holiness miscarry the Provocation is the greater As David's Sin is aggravated by his Office I anointed thee King over Israel 2 Sam. 12.7 And the Priests are sorely threatned Mal. 2.7 8. The Priests Lips should keep Knowledg and they should seek the Law at his Mouth for he is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts But ye are departed out of the way ye have caused many to stumble at the Law ye have corrupted the Covenant of Levi saith the Lord of Hosts Their Negligence and Errors are greater than others they should be Examples to the Flock 1 Pet. 5.3 2 dly The nature of the Crime 1. It was a spiritual one They did not sanctify God in obeying and depending upon his Word before the Eyes of the People We only look to outward gross Sins but spiritual Sins we take no notice of There are Sins in genere moris and in genere fidei Sins against our Moral Duty and Sins against the Rule of Faith There are Peccata majoris infamiae and peccata majoris reatus Sins of greater Infamy and more publickly hateful and Sins of greater Guilt Of the first sort are Murder Adultery Theft c. Natural Light puts a Brand upon these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 5.19 The Works of the Flesh are manifest which are these Adultery Fornication Vncleanness Lasciviousness These smell rank in Nature's Nostrils every one knoweth them to be great Sins and a Child of God doth hardly fall into these sensual Villanies But there are other Sins of a more spiritual Nature such as want of Love to God and Faith in Christ and hope of eternal Life or such necessary degrees of either as may enable us to honour him in the World Few take notice of these but God judgeth not as Man judgeth these may be more dangerous as being not only against our Duty but our Remedy Few think distrustful Thoughts or distracting Cares or sinful Fears or immoderate Sorrow are such grievous Distempers as they afterwards prove to be till they cherish them so long that they find the Grievousness of the Sin in the Greatness of the Punishment 2. It was a sudden occasional Passion or fit of Impatience But by that we may give place to Satan and grieve the Spirit of God Eph. 4.26 27. Let not the Sun go down on your Wrath neither give place to the Devil and ver 30. Grieve not the holy Spirit of God Therefore we should watch against the sudden Disorders of our Passions and Affections otherwise we may do that in a moment the Effects of which will not be altogether blotted out by a long Repentance If we give way to excessive Anger we open a Door to Satan and give him an advantage to excite us to more Evil and the Work of Grace may be so darkened in us that we may long miss of Comfort If we once let the Fire be kindled it will presently send up a black Smoak whereby we dishonour our Profession and provoke God And whatever just cause of Provocation we have we are to overcome and bridle the Exorbitances of our Passions for tho we be provoked we must not provoke God 3. The Sin consisted in this that the Exemplariness of their Faith and Obedience was somewhat obscured We should look to this to have a Faith that will not only save our selves but tend to the Glory of God 2 Thess. 1.11 12. We pray always for you that our God would count you worthy of this Calling and fufil all the good Pleasure of his Goodness and the Work of Faith with Power that the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ may be glorified in you and ye in him We may not be guilty of other Mens Sins We must have Grace not only for our own private Benefit that we may be saved but for a more publick Good that God may be glorified and others edified by our Example Many make an hard shift to go to Heaven they may have Grace enough for their own Salvation but yet have not Grace enough for the Honour and Exaltation of God in the World Now it is a great Fault especially in the Eminent if they neglect the glorifying of God in the Eyes of others Noah was raised up in his Age to condemn the World Heb. 11.7 By Faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with Fear prepared an Ark for the saving of his House by the which he condemned the World that is of their Security and contempt of God's Warnings Thus Moses and Aaron should have condemned the Israelites by their own Faith and ready Obedience And if we do not mind this in our selves we are the more culpable before God 1 Pet. 2.12 Having your Conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good Works which they shall behold glorify God in the Day of Visitation that is in the Day when he shall please to visit them by his saving Grace Otherwise we are accountable for those Sins we draw others into And so a Man may sin after he is dead as his Example out-liveth him In short God is severe upon his scandalous Children though he may pardon their Faults as to Eternal Punishment yet they smart for it
worldly Men's Hearts are so deeply dyed with such Desires as carrieth them out to such things they are hardly Saved Well then Here is another Reason of the Difficulty that our Lusts are born and bred with us from our Infancy and can plead prescription and Religion cometh afterwards and findeth us byassed and prepossessed with other Inclinations which by reason of long use cannot easily be broken and shaken off 3. Let us now consider the great Efficacy and Power which this Inclination to Temporal things hath upon us and then you will see it is very difficult for us to enter into Heaven 1. This Inclination and Addictedness to present things weakens our Sense of the World to come and then our Reward hath no Influence upon us to move us and encourage us to serve God Whilst the World bears bulk in our Eye heavenly things are of small or of no value with us Satan blinds us as the God of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 that is by the Love of the World Christ cured the Blind man by anointing his Eyes with Clay but the Devil puts out the Eyes of our Souls with this thick Clay for Gold is so called Habbac 2.6 That ladeth himself with thick clay He blinds us so as we cannot have a true sight and perswasion of the Truth and Worth of things to come We cannot look afar off into the other World 2 Pet. 1.9 He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off Mountains seem Mole-hills only at so great a distance Heaven is as a matter of nothing in Comparison of present things As in a Prospective Glass look at one end of it it greatens the Object at the other end it lessens the Object Thus when we look upon things to come thrô the Glass of our own Passions and Carnal Affections they are nothing they have no Force nor Power to move us Saith Austin Men do not look after heavenly things Quia in terrena proni dorsum eorum semper incurvum est their Backs and Necks are bowed down that they cannot look upward and have any true sight of heavenly things the World and the Profits of it are real and substantial but heavenly things are Shadows Dreams Matters of Conceit and meer Imagination And therefore since this Addictedness to Temporal things hath such force upon us to hinder the sight of the World to come it must needs be difficult to us to be Saved 2. This Addictedness to present Delights and Pleasures makes us Impatient of the Restrain●s of Religion Our Natural Desires carry us to those things which Religion f●rbi●s We cannot endure to be bridled and kept from forbidden Fruit but we have all an Appetite after it Psal. 2.3 Let us break their bonds asunder and cast away their cords from us And Ier. 5.5 They have altogether broken the Yoke and burst the Bonds And Rom. 8.7 The carnal mind is Enm●ty against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be Nitimur in vetitum the Prohibition doth but Irritate Corruption as a Stream if checked grows more furious A Man wholly given up to present Satisfactions cannot endure the Yokes and Fetters Religion would lay upon him he would be a free Creature and live as he list Indeed it is to be a Captive Creature but this he accounts his Liberty and Freedom 3. It maketh those Duties seem irksom and unnecessary which are necessary as the way to Salvation Look into the Book of God and you will find we are called upon to strive to enter into Heaven and required to work out our Salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2.12 with all holy Solicitude with all lively Diligence to be still employed in this Work to strive to enter in at the strait Gate Luke 13.24 To walk worthy of God who hath called us to his Kingdom and Glory 1 Thes. 2.12 Now they that are addicted to Ease Pleasure and Sensual Delights cannot endure to be held to this Work they do either openly refuse this Work or delay it which is the more modest Denyal or else are cold in it Some prophane Persons cast off all care of Duty as if Religion were but a Point of Policy Heaven but a Dream and Hell but a false Fire the Gospel but a Fable to busie Mens heads with and so resolve to please the Flesh and never trouble themselves about uncertain Futurities Many thus live in defiance of God and Christianity or else they delay to a more convenient Sea●on they have no mind to the Work Acts 24.25 Go thy way for this time when I have a more convenient season I will send for thee Lust must have present Satisfaction but Christ comes always out of Season When Christ makes an offer of Heaven to their Souls hereafter they will be glad to hear of him but now he comes before the time As he said in Seneca A quinquagessima in otiam ●iscedam when I am fifty years old then I will retire and study Philosophy So when their youthful Vanities are spent then they wi●● look after these things When the Heart cannot keep out Light and Conviction of our Duty it seeks to keep off Care and so by making fair Promises for the future we illude the Importunity of present Conviction Or else a Heart addicted to present Satisfaction is very cold in Religion for the Heart that is diverted by other pursuits cannot make Religion it's Work but only minds it by the by The World that is their Business but Religion that is put in the place of a Recreation and they mind earthly things Phil. 3.19 their Heads and Hearts are full of the World so that they have no room for God Their Time Thoughts Discourses are wholly swallowed up of present things and complying with their present Lusts. 4. This Addictedness to present Satisfactions will make us shrink at the Tryals God exerciseth us with before we go to Heaven Acts 14.22 Through much Tribulation we must enter into the Kingdom of God All good things are hard ●o come by and God will shew that Heaven is worth something When Men have cheap thoughts of it God will enhance the price of Heaven There must be striving and suffering before we get thither The howling Wilderness was the ready way to Canaan The Captain of our Salvation was made perfect thro' suffering VVe should else neither esteem the Cross of Christ nor long for Heaven But present Ease present Safety present Wealth doth wonderfully inchant us to have good dayes here and a quiet Life without any trouble If we could compound with God for this World and Heaven too then we should like it But now while we are so wholly inclined and addicted to present things it must needs be a difficult thing to hear of Tryals and Crosses that we must endure III. This Difficulty must be sufficiently understood and seriously thought of by us And here 1. Negatively We should so reflect upon the Difficulty 1. Not to
like Men be strong let all things be done with Charity And therefore that qualification which entituleth us to the Priviledges of the New Covenant is made to be Faith working by Love Gal. 5.6 The one Grace without the other is not sa●ing and sincere Faith without Love is dead Iam. 2.17 and Love without Faith is but a little good Nature or facile Inclination to others not derived from the Spirit of God nor built on our Belief of his Grace in Christ they depend upon one another as the Effect upon the Cause Faith produceth Love as it sheweth the true grounds of Union and from a sense and apprehension of God's Love to us causeth us to love others In short both Graces are recommended by the same Authority 1 Ioh. 3.23 And this is his Commandement that we should believe on the Name of his Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he gave us Commandement He that maketh Conscience of the one will make Conscience of the other also Again the one referreth to God the other to Men Faith for God Charity for our Brethren The one keepeth us from defection from God the other preventeth a Schism and a Breach with our Fellow Christians Well then here was the Commendation of those Thessalonians their Adherence to the Faith was very Constant and they lived in Unity and Amity with one another There is no surer Argument of Sincerity and Proficiency in Christianity than this growth of Faith and Love they are the Fountain of all other Duties and if you would be accounted thorough and growing Christians you must excel in both these Graces for true solid Godliness is rooted in Faith and acted by Love towards God and Men which is the All of Christianity 5. This Growth and Proficiency was found in all Not only some among them were Eminent for Faith and Love but all If the Apostle had only said The Charity of you all aboundeth it might seem to refer to the Church that there was no Schism there but he saith of every one of you all towards each other In other Epistles the Believers to whom the Apostle wrote have all the Style of Churches or men sanctified c. but afterwards notorious and particular miscarriages are reproved which sheweth that the Denomination was a potior parte from the better part but here he mentions all and every one they were a choice sort of Christians where shall we find their Fellows It is our Duty to be such and it should be our Care for here we see what the Grace of God can do if we be serious and what an Advantage it is to be in good Company and to have good Examples about us and how much living Coals do inkindle one another when they lye together 6. He saith Faith groweth but Love aboundeth Love must not only increase but abound to each other A thing may be increased Intensivè or Extensivè Intensively when it is more rooted when there is a greater Fervour and Vigour of Faith and Love Extensively either as to Effects or Objects as to Effects in doing more good as when we abound in Works of Mercy or as to Objects by doing good to more Persons not confining our Love to one only or a few but extending it to all This was the Case of those Thessalonians their Love was not a lank or lean Love but an abounding Love full of all good Fruits and this not to some but to all even the meanest Christians among them If we would give others occasion to Bless God for us let us imitate their Example Occasions are many Objects are many to whom we may be beneficial therefore our Charity must not be streightned but abounding 1. The Internal Affection must increase Phil. 1.9 This I pray that your Love may abound yet more and more that is both their Love to God and their Neighbours especially to those who are God's There are so many things to extinguish it or make it grow cold that we should always seek to increase this Grace that it may be more fervent and strong and not grow cold and dead 2. The external Expressions should abound both as to Acts and Objects 1. As to Acts In Duties of Charity we should not be weary Now we may be weary upon a double Occasion either because we meet not presently with our Reward to that the Apostle speaketh Gal. 6.9 Be not weary of well-doing for in due time we shall reap if we faint not Duties of Charity have their Promises annexed which are not presently accomplished but in their season they will be either in this Life or in the next Or because of continual Occasions when there is no end Heb. 6.10 11. For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love which you have shewed towards his Name in that ye have ministred to the Saints and do minister and we desire that every one of you do shew the same diligence to the full assurance of Hope unto the end Meaning that formerly they had a Courage to own Christ and his despised wayes and to be Charitable to poor Christians now he desireth them to be so still as long as the Occasion continueth so long should the Charity continue that at length they might reap the Reward Ye have ministred and do Minister This is tedious to Nature and to a Niggardly and base Heart but Love will be working and labouring still and ever bringing forth more Fruit. Where this Heavenly Fire is kindled in the Soul it will warm all those that are about them but Love is cold in most it will neither take Pains nor be at Charge to do any thing for the Brethren But Christian Love is an Immortal Fire it will still burn and never dye therefore we should continue the same Diligence Zeal and Affection that formerly we had 2. As to Objects Christ telleth us The poor ye have always with you Matth. 26.11 As long as God findeth Objects we should find Charity and the Apostle saith Gal. 6.10 As we have opportunity let us do good to all Men. Expensive Duties are distastful to a Carnal Heart it may be they would part with something which the Flesh can spare and will snatch at any thing to excuse their neglect they have done it to these and these but as long as God bringeth Objects to our View and Notice and our Ability and Affection doth continue we must give still If our Ability continueth not Providence puts a barr and excuseth but if our Affection doth not continue the Fault is our own Now I come more particularly to speak of the Growth of Faith Your Faith groweth exceedingly Doct. That 't is well with Christians when their Faith groweth and doth considerably increase The Scripture speaketh of a weak Faith and a strong Faith therefore it concerneth us to consider whether our Faith be weak or strong in the wane or in the increase Now we shall best Judge of the growth of Faith 1. By
it especially the Sick and the Dying He that formerly tempted then beginneth to trouble and he that formerly shewed you the pleasant Baits of Sin will then shew you the Hook he who now representeth Pardon easy will then represent it as impossible And when Death cometh he hath Power to hale away the Sinner to Torments For as the good Angels carry the Souls of the Faithful to Christ Luke 16.22 23. so probably the Devil hath a Power to carry them to Hell Now as the Devil hath this Power of Death he bringeth Men into Sin that he may bring them into Terror Yea Satan hath a great hand in the Troubles of Conscience which befal God's Children Well then how is this Power destroyed By satisfying the Law Christ destroyeth the Power of the Devil For first he blotted out the Hand-writing that was against us and then spoiled Principalities and Powers Col. 2.14 15. And when he doth actually justify we feel the Comfort and Benefit of it Rom. 8.33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect It is God that justifieth Who shall condemn It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right Hand of God who also maketh Intercession for us Our Advocate is more gracious in Court than our Accuser having payed our Ransom and interceding for us and pleading it what Accusation from the Law can stand against those who have imbraced this Gospel 3. The Being of Sin For while it remaineth there is somewhat of Satan left which he worketh upon There is a Remnant of his Seed in the best the Godly are yet in the Way but not at the end of the Journey and therefore he hath leave to assault them while they are here but Christ will perfect the Conquest which he has begun and so the very Being of Sin shall at length be taken away Iude 24. To him that is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the Presence of his Glory And Eph. 5.27 That he might present it to himself a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish At Death Sin is totally disannulled the Physician of our Souls will then perfect the Cure As in the first Moment of our Birth we were Sinners so in the Moment of our Expiration all Sin dieth Christ taketh that time to finish his Work No Sinner can enter into the State of Bliss but the Vail of the Flesh being rent we are immediately admitted into the sight of God and so made exactly perfect 2 dly As to the general Case or his Interest in the corrupt World It is true the Kingdom of Satan yet remaineth But he doth and shall divide the Spoil with the Strong Isa. 53.12 Therefore will I divide him a Portion with the Great and he shall divide the Spoil with the Strong And though his Doctrine and Religion meeteth with Opposition in the World yet it doth prevail upon Opposition and against Opposition and by Opposition when in the Seasons of it he cometh to set his Kingdom on foot Rev. 6.2 I saw a white Horse and he that sat on him had a Bow and a Crown was given unto him and he went forth conquering and to conquer This is an Emblematical Representation of the Rise and Progress of Christ's Kingdom Where you may note his Furniture a Crown and a Bow The Crown noteth his Dignity the Bow his Armour and Strength Psal. 45.3 4 5. Gird on thy Sword upon thy Thigh O thou most Mighty with thy Glory and Majesty and in thy Majesty ride prosperously because of Truth and Meekness and Righteousness and thy Right Hand shall teach thee terrible things Thine Arrows are sharp in the Heart of the King's Enemies whereby the People fall under thee Christ having the Grant of a Kingdom over the Nations is every way furnished with Power to obtain it by Means proper to the Mediatory Dispensation by his Word Spirit and Providence 1. His Word which is called the Rod of his Strength Psal. 110.2 The Weapons of our Warfare are not carnal but mighty through God 2 Cor. 10.4 When Christ will work the World cannot resist its convincing Power those that feel it not fear it John 3.20 Every one that doth evil hateth the Light neither cometh to the Light lest his Deeds should be reproved 2. His Spirit Now what can stand before the mighty Spirit of God convincing Men of the Truth of his Religion John 16.8 9 10 11. And when he is come he will reprove the World of Sin and of Righteousness and of Iudgment Of Sin because they believe not on me Of Righteousness because I go to the Father and ye see me no more Of Iudgment because the Prince of this World is judged Shewing hereby Christ was the Messiah and therefore they were guilty of great Sin who did not believe on him That he was a righteous and innocent Person and no Seducer because Christ rose from the Dead and went to the Father That he was an exalted Prince above Satan and whatever things were looked upon as Divine Powers Many that were not converted were convinced of this 3. His Providence All Judgment was put into Christ's Hands to be improved for the advancement of his Mediatory Kingdom John 5.22 For the Father judgeth no Man but hath committed all Iudgment to the Son He hath the Government of all things Angels and all Events that fall out in the World None of the Creatures are left to their own Arbitrement or uncertain Contingences but under the Government of a supreme Providence which is left in Christ's Hands Thus you see though the Devil's Interest be held up by the combined Interests of the World agreeing together to promote the Idolatries and Superstitions wherewith he hath inspired them yet Christ is able to break and dissolve all this Force and Power Secondly How far was Satan destroyed or his Head crushed 1. Negatively 1. Non ratione Essentiae not to take away his Life and Being No there is a Devil still and shall be even when the whole Work of Christ's Redemption is finished For then it is said Rev. 20.10 The Devil that deceived them was cast into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone where the Beast and the false Prophet are and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever So Mat. 25.41 Depart from me ye Cursed into everlasting Fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels Then Eternal Judgment is executed on the Head of the wicked State Sentence was passed before and the Devil feareth it Matth. 8.29 Art thou come hither to torment us before the time He was condemned before but then it is executed upon him he is finally punished and shall for ever remain with the Damned 2. Non ratione Malitiae not in regard of Malice For the Enmity ever continueth between the two Seeds and Satan will be doing though it be always to Loss
as to assure our Hearts before him 3. Conscience is easily offended but not easily appeased As the Eye is easily offended with the least dust or mote which soon gets in but is not easily gotten out But then to appease it costs a great deal of trouble Therefore if we would as Paul keep a Conscience void of Offence there needeth much tenderness and watchfulness for by the Commission of deliberate and wilful Sins you may raise a Tempest that is not easily laid again as David felt broken bones after his foul fall Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce Before the Action Conscience sheweth what is to be done in the Action it guideth us in doing after the Action it censureth it as well or ill done And so either comforteth us with hopes of a Reward or terrifieth us with fear of Punishment As a Man acteth so Conscience is a Party as the Action is censured so Conscience is a Judge after the Action the force of Conscience is usually seen more than before the Fact or in the Fact because before and in the Action the Judgment of Reason is not so clear and strong the Affections raising Mists and Clouds to darken the Mind and trouble it and draw it on their side by their pleasing violence By the Treachery of the Senses and Revolt of the Passions the Mind is betrayed but as the Violence of the Affections ceaseth and is by little and little allayed guilt flasheth in the face of Conscience and Reason hath the greatest force to affect the Mind with grief or fear The Act being over and the Affection satisfied the Soul giveth place to Reason which was before contemned and when it recovereth the Throne it striketh through the Heart with a sharp Sentence and Reproof for obeying Appetite before it self and brings in Terrour and Trouble which causeth the Soul to sit uneasy Matth. 27.4 I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood Rom. 1.32 Knowing the judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death Therefore do not go like an Ox to the Slaughter nor a Fool to the Correction of the Stocks 4. Conscience is the best Friend and the worst Enemy It is the best Friend partly for its Comfort Prov. 15.15 He that is of a merry heart hath a continual feast 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience no Bird sings so sweetly as the Bird in the Bosome Partly for its nearness it is alwaies with us in Health and Sickness in Life and in Death Husbands and Wives who are most together yet because they live a distinct Life they are often apart Death looseth the Bond and Knot but this remaineth with us So it is the worst Enemy Partly for its universal nearness it is sad for a Man to be at odds with himself and fall out with his own Heart It is a Domestical Tribunal which alwaies remaineth with us and therefore Iob could bear the Reproaches of others but his own heart should not reproach him as long as he lived Iob 27.6 Partly because of the grievousness of the Wound and Stroak Prov. 18.14 A wounded spirit who can bear It is no less than the fear of the Wrath of the Eternal God A Man cannot run away from his Conscience no more than he can run away from himself and therefore for a Man to please others and offend his Conscience what folly is that Or to please a Lust to wound his Conscience A Lust or vain Appetite is an unjustifiable thing and will soon appear so but the Fears of Conscience are justified by the highest Reason the Law of God the satisfaction of a Lust is a poor vanishing Pleasure but the observing and keeping a good Conscience breedeth a solid Joy which will stick by thee to the very last and when thou comest to dye will be a support to thee Isa. 38.3 Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight When thou must leave Riches Honours and Pleasures which are the Baits of thy Lust this will stick by thee 1 Iohn 2.17 The world passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever Therefore now thou shouldest mortifie thy Lust and gratifie thy Conscience 5. Thy Conscience is the beginning of Heaven and Hell A good Conscience is the beginning of Heaven and Peace and Joy in believing is a foretast of that fulness of Joy and Pleasure which we shall have when we come into Gods immediate presence The glorified Spirits carry a good Conscience with them to Heaven their works follow them Rev. 14.13 And the damned carry their Stings and Convictions with them to Hell Mark 9.44 Their worm dyeth not and the fire is not quenched Oh think of this The Joys of the Spirit are an Antipast of Glory called often an Earnest in Scripture 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the spirit in our hearts And the Horrors of Conscience are the Suburbs of Hell Oh therefore be sure to keep all quiet within and whatever be your Temptations do not offend Conscience but unfeignedly discharge your Duties to God and Men 6. If there be a crack and a flaw in your Conscience all your trading with Heaven is at a stand there cannot be any serious dealing with God nor Holy boldness in Prayer 1 Iohn 3.21 If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God When you have sinned away your Peace a strangeness and distance groweth between God and you Psalm 32.3 When I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long Gen. 3.8 And Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden Adam run to the bushes Your hearts will grow shie of God and you cannot so comfortably look him in the face and so the sweetness of Holy Privacy and Communion with God will be lost Time was when you could go boldly and open your Hearts to God but now you are afraid of him and every Act of Commerce is a reviving of your Bondage the remembrance of God is a trouble to you 7. If Conscience speaketh not it writeth for it is not only a Witness but a Register and Book of Record Ier. 17.1 The sin of Iudah is written with a pen of iron and with the point of a diamond We know not what Conscience writeth being occupied and taken up with Carnal Vanities and carryed away with foolish and hurtful Lusts but we shall know afterwards when the Book of Conscience shall be opened Rev. 20.12 And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were
my understanding I may work upon my Will and Affections and rouse up my self for the Holy Ghost doth not work upon a Man as upon a block Then the New Nature which inclineth us to God as our chief good and last end for the Holy Ghost doth not blow as to a dead Coal Then the Divine Spirit which exciteth those Graces in us which incline us to God as Faith or a belief of his Being Providence and Covenant Love and Desire of the full fruition of him in the Heavenly Glory and hope of the means and end of the means by which we attain the end and the end that we shall thus enjoy by the means These are the three Agents in Prayer and every Holy work I must do something as a Reasonable Creature something as a New Creature and the Spirit influenceth all The second we are now speaking of the New Nature or Inclination to God which inclination is not barely Natural as the inclination of Creatures without Life as in fire or light bodies to ascend or in a stone or heavy bodies to descend but voluntary as in a rational Agent and therefore it is not so indeclinably set that it needeth not to be strengthned excited and increased in us and this I now press you to if you would keep up your praying frame 3. There is a liberty or confidence which ariseth from our peace and friendship with God 1 Iohn 3.21 If our heart condemn us not then have we confidence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 towards God When we walk unevenly we grow shie of God our Mouths are shut our Prayers choaked in the utterance Therefore we should take heed we do not interrupt our peace 1 Pet. 3.7 Dwelling as heirs together of the grace of life that your prayers be not hindered Our access to God in Prayer cannot be carryed on so chearfully unless we walk orderly and peaceably in our Relations A Christian is very careful that he may not interrupt his Communion with God but must avoid hainous wounding Sins And because do what we can do daily infirmities will break out he often renews his Covenant with God that his Heart may be settled VSE III. To exhort us to pray without ceasing Consider 1. The Throne of Grace which God hath erected in the midst of his People standeth alvvaies upon God doth not keep Termes and dayes of Audience The High Priest vvas not to be too familiar vvith God to come to him but once in a year But vve may come every day Heb. 4.16 Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Let us then be often vvith God 2. Gods Compassions and Mercies never fail There is an inexhausted Treasure and Stock of Grace Iames 1.5 If any of you lack wisdom let him ask of God that giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him Compare this vvith Prov. 25.17 Withdraw thy foot from thy neighbours house lest he be weary of thee and so hate thee You may come too seldom but you can never come too often to God 3. We ovve this respect to God that vve must not go about his Service by fits but constantly As the Queen of Sheba pronounced of Solomons Servants 1 Kings 10.8 Happy are thy men happy are these thy servants that stand continually before thee and that hear thy wisdom much more may it be said of the Servants of God Prov. 8.34 Blessed is the man that heareth me watching daily at my gates waiting at the posts of my doors It is a blessed thing to be much vvith God 4. We never vvant occasions of praying either for our selves or for the Church of God Therefore vve ought alvvaies to live in the sense of our ovvn emptiness and in the Faith of Gods fulness and vvillingness to supply our vvants alvvaies sensible of our need to pray and alvvaies confident of Gods readiness to ansvver and pray accordingly 5. Love vvill not suffer us to keep long out of Gods Company They that delight in one another must have their frequent meetings and frequent interviews An instance of this we have in Ionathan and David 1 Sam. 18.1 The soul of Ionathan was knit with the soul of David and Ionathan loved him as his own soul and therefore he could not be long without his Friend David If we have a love to God we cannot keep long out of Gods Company but will be with him pouring out our hearts to him Consider these things that you may quicken your selves to this Duty of praying without ceasing A SERMON On MARK ii 17 When Iesus heard it he saith unto them They that are whole have no need of the physician but they that are sick I come not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance THE words are Christs Apology for eating with Publicans and Sinners They thought no Iew was to eat or drink or converse with Publicans whom they looked upon as the vilest sort of Men. Publicans are often joyned with Sinners in the Iewish scorn thereby is intended Sinners of the Gentiles Gal. 2.15 Publicans and Heathens Matth. 18.17 Because by reason of their calling they conversed often with Gentiles Their calling was counted sordid hiring or farming the Tributes It is an Hebrew Proverb Take not a Wife out of a Family in which is a Publican because they are all Thieves They were wicked Sinners in common repute Now for Christ to be entertained in the House of a Publican and to converse so familiarly with Publicans this the Pharisaical strictness and rigorous institution could not endure The Cavil was brought to his Disciples and Followers They muttered and whispered about them words that tended to disprove this familiar Converse as not becoming the Person which Christ took upon himself The old Hypocrites deal not directly with the Master himself but the young Converts Christ when he heard it vindicates his practice 1. By representing the agreeableness of this Converse to his Office Represented in a Proverb The whole have no need of the physician but the sick Two things are herein represented 1. That Sin is a soar sickness A Disease not of the Body but the Soul A Mortal Disease it will at length prove unless it be in time cured and the Disease is the more grievous because we are so insensible of it 2. That Christ alone is the true Physician of Souls He knoweth our Malady and our Remedy and is ready and offereth his help to cure if we will but submit to his prescriptions Now both make up his Argument Where doth the Physicians work lye but among the Sick 2. From the end of his Commission I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Where observe 1. The Persons with whom he hath to do not the righteous but sinners 2. The way that he taketh he calleth 3. The end or means of cure on their parts Repentance I. The Persons concerned
be vexed by Sathan for his Tryal Iob 1.12 And Paul had his Messenger of Sathan to try him to see what shift he could make with sufficient internal Grace against outward and vexatious evils 2 Cor. 12.7 8. Now it is better to undergo the fiery Tryal than the fiery Torment Tryed we are then but not destroyed Yea sometimes hurried to Death and yet we overcome Revel 12.11 Christ doth prevail upon opposition and by opposition When Sathans Instruments were killing Christians they were pulling down Sathans Throne and advancing Christs and when they were butchered and slaughtered yet they multiplyed 4. The Means and Manner of Victory is to be considered 1. Christ overcometh this Enmity by taking our Nature He might have destroyed him by his Divine Power but the Conquerer is the Seed of the Woman or the Son of God incarnate He conquered in the same Nature that was so lately foiled and thereby Sathans main design is crossed and counter-worked which was double Partly to make Man jealous of God as if he were envious of our Happiness and by this false representation to alienate our hearts and make a breach between us and him Gen. 3.5 God knoweth that in the day ye eat thereof ye shall be as Gods knowing good and evil This way would he weaken the esteem of God in our Hearts but hereby we have a fuller manifestation of his love to make him the more amiable to us Rom. 5.8 But God commended his love to us that when we were sinners Christ dyed for us And Iohn 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And 1 Iohn 4.9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten Son into the world that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins We would be as God and Christ would be as Man Partly to depress the Nature of Man which in Innocency stood so near to God that was the end of his malicious suggestion But now 't is advanced and set up far above the Angelical Nature and admitted to dwell with God in a Personal Union Heb. 2.16 For verily he took not on him the nature of angels but he took on him the seed of Abraham The Nature of Man being only assumed by Christ the Angels are not concerned in it immediately Man had the benefit and honour put upon him especially in his glorified Estate Eph. 1.20 21. 2. By his Passion or Death on the Cross Heb. 2.14 For as much as the children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is is the Devil Christ would not only take our Nature but also suffer in it so to frustrate and make void the Devils design which was to keep Men for ever under the power of Death wherein he had involved him He had brought Sin upon us and by Sin Death and in this Condition as the Executioner of Gods Curse he would still have held us but that Christ came to put us into a Condition of Holiness and Happiness and so make us capable of Eternal Life The Devil did not conquer Christ by Death but Christ did conquer the Devil When the Roman Soldiers were parting and spoiling his Garments he was spoiling Principalities and Powers 3. By his Resurrection and Ascension After he had been a Sacrifice for Sin by his Resurrection he overcame Death Hell and Sin and soon after he ascended into Heaven that he might triumph over the Devil and lead Captivity Captive Eph. 4.8 His Enemies were foiled upon the Cross but his Triumph over them was at his Ascension whereby he hath assured the World of his Conquest that he hath carried the day and gained an absolute and compleat Victory for our Lord in Heaven is out of the reach of Enemies as having done his work we are only left behind to scatter the Relicks of the Battle 4. By his sitting at the Right Hand of God he doth two things 1. He poureth out the Spirit endowing his Messengers with all Gifts and Graces ordinary and extraordinary to preach the Gospel to the Heathen World whereby the Old Religion by which the Devils Kingdom was supported went to wrack every where his Oracles were silenced his Superstitions suppressed No more the same Temples the same Rites the same Gods all fell before God as worshipped in Christ Iohn 16.11 The spirit shall convince the world of judgment because the prince of this world is judged 'T is true in some parts of the World Sathan yet reigneth where Christ hath not pursued him with his Gospel or withdrawn his Gospel for the ingratitude of Men but where it cometh it prevaileth mightily and the World cannot resist its convincing power 2. By his Secret and Invisible Providence he defendeth his People and stilleth the Enemy and Avenger Christ as God incarnate having the grant of a Kingdom is every way furnished with power to maintain it by Means proper to the mediatory Dispensation by his Word Spirit and Providence this last we are upon All Judgment is put into his hands Iohn 5.22 Though there be many vicissitudes and changes in the outward Condition of the Church yet by invisible wayes God doth notably defeat Sathan and his Instruments And though there be ebbings and flowings of the two Kingdoms yet we have much experience that Christ is upon the Throne by his protecting strengthning and assisting his faithful People and prospering their just endeavours for the advancing of his Kingdom Sometimes he destroyeth Enemies Isa. 27.4 Who would set the briers and thornes against me in battle I would go through them and burn them together Sometimes he infatuateth their Counsels Iob 5.12 13. He disappointeth the devices of the crafty so that their hands cannot performe their enterprize He taketh the wise in his own craftiness and the counsel of the froward is carried head-long Sometimes he hideth his People in the secret of his Presence Psalm 31.20 Sometimes he blasts all their prosperity by an invisible Curse Iob 20.26 A fire not blown shall consume them Or else he divides them as you may read in 2 Chron. 20. Chapter 5. The Degree of the success How far is the Enemy and Avenger stilled I Answer 1. Non ratione essentiae not to take away his Life and Being No there is a Devil still and shall be when the whole work of Christs Redemption is finished for it is said of that time Revel 20.10 That the Devil was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false prophet shall be tormented day and night for ever and for ever So Matth. 25.41 Hell was prepared for the devil and his angels Then Eternal Judgment is executed on the
Bond in suit but spareth upon our intercession Now this should be taken notice of and notably improved A Man is sick afraid to be damned but he recovers again Now though it be not a total pardon we cannot say it is none at all For God took such a one out of the Jaws of Hell for that time So Mat. 18.32 The Debt was forgiven yet required afterwards the meaning is he was spared for the present He did not obtain that full pardon which amounteth to justification yet he was recovered out of sickness misery and apparent danger and that upon his cry to God 7. If you are continued till you have some experience of the Grace of Christ then much more have you cause to bless God for his long-suffering How ill would it have been for your Souls if you had died in your sins God may say to you as he did to his People Isa 43.24 25. Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins thou hast wearied me with thine iniquiti●s I even I am he that blotteth out your transgressions for my own sake and will not remember thy sins If God had been quick with us where should we have been We are of an hot and eager nature cannot bear affronts or despightful usage Luk. 9.54 Lord wilt thou that we call for Fire from Heaven to consu●e them as did Elias This was Iames and Iohn beloved Disciples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The fury of rash zeal appeared in the best even in the Disciple of love but God does not deal so with us Vse 3. To exhort to Repentance If a Malefactor arraigned at the Bar of Justice should perceive by any speech or word or gesture sign or token any inclination in the Judge to Mercy how would he work upon that advantage to get a Reprieve and the Execution put off So should we improve God's forbearance and long-suffering to sue out a Pardon A Sermon on Rom. X. 5 6 7 8 9. For Moses describeth the righteousness which is of the Law that the Man which doth those things shall live by them But the righteousness which is of Faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart Who shall ascend into Heaven that is to bring Christ down from above Or who shall descend into the Deep that is to bring up Christ again from the Dead But what saith it The word is nigh thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of Faith which we Preach That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath Raised him from the Dead thou shalt be saved THese words which I have now Read need both Vindication and Explication My first work shall be First Vindication or reconciling Paul with Moses That seemeth difficult because in the Allegation some things are changed some things added some things omitted as appeareth by the Collation of the Places the Text and Deut. 30.12 13 14. It is not in Heaven that thou shouldest say Who shall go up for us to Heaven and bring it unto us that we may hear it and do it Neither is it beyond the Sea that thou shouldest say Who shall go over the Sea for us and bring it unto us that we may hear it and do it But the word is very nigh unto thee in thy mouth and in thy heart that thou mayest do it To avoid the difficulty some say these words are alledged sensu transumptivo onely by way of Allusion and Accommodation not as Interpreting Moses but as fitting them to his own purpose But this I cannot yield to for these Reasons 1. From the scope of the Apostle which is to draw off the Iews and Iudaizing Brethren from sticking to the Law of Moses as necessary to Justification To do it thoroughly he bringeth an Argument from Moses himself who doth in his Writings give a clear distinction between the Righteousness of the Law and the Righteousness of Faith and so by consequence between the Tenour of the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace Now if it were an Allusion only the Apostle would produce a bare Illustration not a Cogent Argument and so would rather Explain than Convince 2. The Exposition it self is so clear that we need not make it an Allusion if we consider the place whence these passages are taken Deut. 30. The whole Chapter is a Sermon of Evangelical Repentance see the 1 2. Verses And it shall come to pass when all these things are come upon thee the blessing and the curse which I have set before thee and thou shalt call them to mind among all Na●ions whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee And shalt return unto the Lord thy God and shalt obey his voice according to all that I command thee this day thou and thy children with all thy heart and with all thy soul. This was spoken of a time which the Iews themselves confess to belong to the Kingdom of the Messiah And reason sheweth it For the words were spoken by Moses as referring to such a time when the Israelites were dispersed among all Nations which happened not till after Christ's Ascention and the Preaching of the Gospel and doth yet remain and will remain until the Conversion of the Iews of which the Apostle will speak in the next Chapter So that Moses words are applicable to them when the Gospel-dispensation was set on foot That was the word which was nigh them The great prejudice of the Iews against Christ's being the Messiah was because he came not in a way agreeable to their Carnal Conceits or with such Pomp and Visible Demonstration of Authority as to satisfie all his own Countrymen Therefore they were prejudiced and would not own him nor receive the Grace tendered by him but looked for that as afar off which was nigh them and among them And therefore the Apostle doth apply the words of Moses to them to bring them to embrace the New Covenant 3. From the Nature of the thing First Certain it is to us Christians that Moses Wrote of Christ for our Lord saith John 5.46 Had you believed Moses you would have believed me for he Wrote of me Secondly If he Wrote more obscurely we must consider he was a Prophet not an Apostle 3. That he Wrote of Christ in this place the Apostle's Authority is sufficient for he was a good Interpreter If he being infallibly assisted saw more in it than we do we are not to Cavil at his Authority but with reverence to receive this light not vex the Citation by nice Disputes but humbly receive the Interpretation he giveth of it You will say the words are altered But the Apostles usually in Quoting Minded the Sense rather than the Words And Moses his drift was to perswade them to take notice of the Divine Revelation made to them at that time when these things befel them the destroying of the Temple and City and these Dispersions among the Nations Secondly
Passion and Sin because others hurt you by Slanders and Persecutions He that will not forgive hurts himself more than he that doth the Wrong for the Injury offered reacheth but to the Name Body or Goods but the desire of Revenge wounds the Conscience and provokes God to Wrath and shuts the Gate of his Mercy against us The great Motive that excites the Devil to molest and disturb us by his Instruments is not to hurt your Bodies but to tempt your Souls to Impatience and Revenge and to draw you to other Sins and therefore you do not conquer it as a Temptation till you avoid the Sin Iob was robbed and plundered but in all this Iob sinned not to come off with a wounded Conscience this is to be foiled indeed Besides Conscience will take hold of all revengeful Acts David's Heart smote him when he cut off the Lap of Saul's Garment Besides consider the Gain of others Saul wept when he saw David's Tenderness 1 Sam. 24.16 And it came to pass when David had made an end of speaking these words unto Saul that Saul said Is this thy voice my son David And Saul lift up his Voice and wept Tenderness is expressed by heaping up Coals upon your Enemies head Prov. 25.21.22 If thine enemy be hungry give him bread to eat and if he be thirsty give him water to drink For thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head You may make him pliable to your purpose as Lead or Wax melted by Fire such Charity doth often procure Servants to God and Friends to our selves It is indeed said there And the Lord shall reward thee there are indeed some sour and crabbed Pieces that will never be smoother but if distorted and depraved Natures are not won God will reward thee endeavours of Reconciliation are not lost with God though you get nothing but Scorn and Contempt you may comfort your selves with your Sincerity and God will not be wanting Besides all this consider the Honour of being above an Injury Prov. 19.11 The discretion of a man deferreth his anger and it is his glory to pass over a transgression As it is the Glory of God to pardon Sin we think it a Disgrace but the Holy-Ghost tells us it is the Glory of a Man It is the Devil's design to suffer the World to miscall Grace Meekness is Sheepishness and Patience is a kind of Weakness and Servility an Argument Ignavi ingenii of a slow dull temper that hath no sense of things as Astronomers call Glorious Stars Dogs and Bears and Dragons Tails Oh! consider this is an height proper to Christianity Nature could not reach it there is no greater Servility than to be a Slave to ones Passions Ezek. 16.30 How weak is thy heart saith the Lord since thou dost all these things the work of an imperious whorish woman There are no Spirits so feeble as those that are swayed by the ruffle of their own Passions 2. In publick Cases In these times of mutual Provocation we are apt to return Evil for Evil and Word for Word and to Curse and Pray against one another but we should labour to return Good for Evil for Injury doth not justifie Revenge Religious Quarrels are usually carried on with great hatred and animosity for then Religion feedeth the excess of Passion and instead of being a Judge becometh a Party and that which should be a Restraint proveth Fuel The Quarrel between Christ and his Persecutors was a Quarrel of Religion and yet he prays Father forgive them and if Christ did thus why should not Christians Oh! consider it 1. As to open Enemies 2. As to the undue Carriage of Brethren 1. As to open Enemies Christ saith Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute you Lest we should excuse our selves by a colour and shew of Religion and so give Indulgence to the Exorbitancy of our Passions Christ names Persecutors that are not only our Enemies but God's Enemies you are to pray for them and wish them conviction of Sin and Reformation And you see how Christ practiseth his own Doctrine and so taught us not only Living but Dying these were carried on by a blind Zeal alas that they have no more Light nor better Principles I doubt in all our Divisions we have not plyed this way of Love if we did they would be soon cured and healed We pray one against another and seek each other's Ruine and Destruction but when have we commended our Enemies to God's Grace and Pity And after all we are apt to baptize our Sufferings which have been the effects of our Pride and Passion with the glorious Name of Persecution and that exasperateth our Spirits and we think it is but a Duty to call for Fire from Heaven we know not what manner of Spirits we are of An angry Zeal hath the less of God in it because it is so hastily kindled and so hardly suppressed 2. As to undue Carriage of Brethren Iames 5.10 Grudge not one against another Brethren 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Groan not when they should commend each other to the Grace of God they groan one against another We should willingly bury the remembrance of their Injuries There cannot be Unity Sympathy Brotherly Love amongst the Lord's People unless there be a Heart to pity the Infirmities of one another and a proneness of Spirit to do good contrary to what they deserve at our hands Quest. But is it not lawful to pray for Revenge Zechary when he was stoned between the Temple and the Altar said The Lord look upon it and require it 2 Chron. 24.22 And David in the Psalms prays that God would not pardon his Enemies Answ. We cannot always imitate what the Prophet did who could know by special Revelation who had sinned unto Death and therefore cannot use these Imprecations unless conditionally Their Curses were Praedictions and uttered by the Spirit of Prophecy not by any private Spirit Meek and humble Addresses to God and wrestling for their good suit better with us and the Example of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 3.9 Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing but contrary-wise blessing knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing It is more suitable to Christianity to wish good to them that curse and injure you If you will not imitate Christ you are none of his Disciples nor will he be your Saviour nor must you think to live and reign with him in Heaven You must overcome your self and corrupt Nature that thirsteth after Revenge Prov. 16.32 He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a city Overcome and shame the Party that doth the Wrong 1 Sam. 24.17 And he said to David Thou art more righteous than I for thou hast rewarded me good whereas I have rewarded thee evil Look upon them as