Selected quad for the lemma: glory_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
glory_n body_n glorious_a resurrection_n 2,384 5 9.2419 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A30241 CXLV expository sermons upon the whole 17th chapter of the Gospel according to St. John, or, Christs prayer before his passion explicated, and both practically and polemically improved by Anthony Burgess ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing B5651; ESTC R13734 964,431 860

There are 28 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

own life neither doth he take any pleasure in any earthly contents Hence it is that the inanimate creatures Trees and Rocks though they should be free from pain yet cannot be said to be happy because they have no faculty of reflexion They cannot perceive or discern their happinesse but in this eternal life The knowledge and assurance of their happinesse is that which makes it indeed to be a blessed life The Heavens are not happy though they shall abide ever because they have not life nor can they reflect upon what they are A childe in the womb though heir to a vast inheritance yet cannot take any comfort from it because he hath no reason to discern it But then our souls shall have the most accurate quicknesse and there will not be the least circumstance that shall aggravate our happines but we shall apprehend it we shall know how to improve every comfortable consideration Alas in this life the godly through their weaknesse of knowledge and faith make not that advantage of Christ as they may There are many blessed arguments to refresh their souls and they know them not or attend not to them but when we shall come to eat of this bread of life we shall not lose one crumb of it Then there is nothing shall be hid from our eyes but according to our capacity we shall then love God and Christ and enjoy them to the full Come we in the next place to the properties of this life for we can better speak of them then the life it self as we can better look upon the Sun-beams then the Sun it self And 1. It 's a continued life of happinesse There is no interruption or stop put to this joy and comfort and that is a transcendent thing for in this life two things intermit our joy 1. Occurrent adversities contrary miseries our health is taken away by diseases our wealth by poverty our hopes by fears so that every mans life hath more gall then hony And 2. If there were no opposite calamity as there was not to Adam yet there is a naturall intermission of it by sleep so that if we were never so happy yet as often as we sleep our Sun would be ecclipsed but this happy life we speak of admits of neither of these Interruptions There cannot be any misery or grief there for God will wash away all tears from their eyes and it must needs be so because all the cause of misery which is sinne is there taken away so that as there cannot be any thunder or lightning in the upper Region because the vapours which are the materials of it cannot ascend so high can have no entrance there so because no unclean thing no sinful thing can enter heaven therefore no evil no misery or affliction can come there This should make us all despise this valley of tears for that Mount of Vision or transfiguration What is this Wildernesse to that Canaan What are these husks to that Manna Why are we so hardly plucked out of this world that hath so many thorns and troubles with it to enter into heaven where there is no grief no complaining or discontent at all Again There is not the second intermission of this happinesse for there is no night no sleep nor drousinesse but it is a waking joyful life to all Eternity Alas if here we should have the most desirable comforts that can be yet we would call for a time to sleep they could not keep us alive without this bodily Rect but there the body is made so glorious a body that it 's no more capable of sleep then it is of hunger or thirst Oh then happy and thrice happy is that life where thou shalt not for a moment be taken off from God It 's impossible for the godly in this life to have an actual love and complacency in God never to be distracted or diverted by other thoughts something or other comes and steals the heart away and laieth the dead childe in the room of the living one but then we shall have a constant intuitive beholding of God and nothing shall withdraw us from him Thus it is not to be interrupted 2. In this life there is an affluence and an accumulation of all things to make it blessed The very Philosophers thought happinesse must be such a state wherein was an aggravation of all good things so that if a man could have all good things and want but one he could not be called an happy man Hence in the Scripture the Hebrew word for happinesse is in the plural number because it is not one or two or twenty good things can make a man happy but there must be all things And for this reason it is that the Scripture hath so many variety of resemblances to represent this blessednesse To shew you that it hath all desirable things It 's called a Kingdom a Crown of glory a Feast and Banquet a place of joy Heaven is said to be paved with all precious stones Now why doth the Scripture use such expressions Not that we should conceive any carnal pleasures or worldly contents there as Mahomets Alcoran speaketh of a bruitish happinesse altogether sensual but from earthly things would lift up your hearts to heavenly it would gather you a Posie of the finest flowers and tell you heaven is this Do but abstract the imperfections of the creatures and the perfection that is in heaven Even as Divines say concerning the perfections of creatures God hath them but in an eminent manner abstracted from the imperfections he hath wisedom but not the imperfection of mans wisedom he doth understand he willeth as well as a man but not with the imperfection of a man So it is here Heaven is riches heaven is health heaven is glory heaven is honour but still without the imperfection of these earthly comforts 3. This life is a glorious life Beside freedom from evil and a positive affluence of all good there is external glory to make it yet more desirable Our souls shall be made glorious souls our bodies glorious bodies Heaven is a glorious place The Angels are glorious the Majesty of God will then be resplendent in all his glory If the Queen of Sheba had no more spirit within her beholding Solomons temporal glory how ravishing must this heavenly glory be The Scripture every where speaks of the glory of this condition now glory is that which exciteth all generous spirits What did the Romans the Pharisees doe for glory but it was a vain empty glory This is called by the Scripture The exceeding weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 It 's a solid substantial glory glorious within and without also 4. It is an holy life For if you ask what shall be the emploiment of those who have this Eternal life The Scripture tels us that both Angels and Saints are wholly exercised in this in praising and glorifying God The Angels Isa 6. are brought in crying Holy Holy
these particulars we are by the glory of Christ to understand all things that did any way make him glorious especially considered as a Mediatour and an head of Beleevers Now this glory he did not receive for himself only but for us also As the Sun of heaven hath its light not so much for it self as for the world So Christ the Sun of Righteousnesse hath a compleat fulnesse not so much for himself as for us that we might be made partakers of it Hence all the work of grace in its progresse to happinesse is called glory as 2 Cor. 3.18 a place brought by Calvin to illustrate my Text to which we may adde 2 Cor. 4 6. of which places more in time The words thus explained observe That the glory which Christ hath he communicates one way or other to his people Christ thinketh it not sufficient to have glory himself but he doth communicate the blessed effects thereof so that they are made glorious likewise by him The two similitudes that Christ taketh to himself illustrate this as that of an Head If the head be crowned with glory that redounds to all the body because the head and the whole body are considered as one and thus Christ though he be exalted to all glory and honour and so it is his own personal priviledge yet all this is for our good and that by being glorious himself he might also make us glorious Hence some expound this glory of Christ concerning his Sonship that he is the Son of God and indeed it cannot be denied but that this is an eminent part of this glory Now he hath not this Sonship only but Joh. 1. He gives us power also to become the Sons of God Only he is the Sonne of God by nature we by grace and adoption Another similitude is that of an husband and wife so often mentioned in the Canticles and by the Apostle Now if the husband be a glorious King or Potentate though he have a Wife of mean and despised birth yet he communicates all his glory to her and though God say of his essential glory He will not give it to another yet Christ gives of his glory in some sence to his people though they are not thereby made equal to him in glory To understand this Doctrine Consider First That the glory which Christ hath as it is personally and subjectively his so it 's incommunicable It 's impossible that the glory which Christ hath personally should be made ours for then we should be the only begotten Sons of God then we should be Mediatours and Saviours which would be blasphemy for us to assume but as God will not nor indeed cannot communicate his glory unto a creature so neither can nor will Christ communicate this glory as it 's personally his unto us but as it is with the Sun it communicates glorious light to the Stars yet the Stars have not the subjective light of the Sun so Christ though he do communicate of his glory to us yet not as it 's inherent in him but in respect of the fruits thereof 2. We are to conceive a difference of those effects of Glory which Christ vouchsafeth to his One instance of glory was to work Miracles to doe such great things as Christ did yea Christ saith they should do greater then he Now this glory was given only to some Apostles and other believers in the primitive times of the Church This was part of that glory which was common to Christ and others Although indeed this was also communicated to such of whom he was not an head in a spirituall and saving manner but only external in respect of outward administrations yet when this glory was communicated to work miracles there was a great difference between Christ and Beleevers for he did them in his own name and power but they through the Name of Christ 2. There were some things which Christ did and they are made legally ours God accounts us as if we had done them Thus Christs Sufferings to take away the Curse of the Law and his obedience to the Rule of the Law is made ours he being our Surety and therefore by his Obedience we are said to be made Righteous His obeying the Law and suffering was not only for our good as when he wrought Miracles and preached but it was in our stead Not as if we therefore were as righteous as Christ or were Redeemers and Mediatours but we are the Subjects receiving of it 3. There are glorious priviledges which Christ hath and he gives them to us also We are Sons as well as he we are co-heirs with him in glory Rom. 8. We shall be glorified with him we shall reign with him we shall be raised up and sit on Thrones of glory with him We shall judge the world with him yea as he hath a Rod of Iron to break the Nations with So the Saints shall have Rev. 2.26 27. Oh the enlarged affections we should have in this particular Why do the people of God alwaies go bowed down afflicted with their own unworthinesse and temptations Oh give faith some breathing-place go and meditate on this The glory that Christ hath thou maist claim it also Is he the Son of God Is he heir Is he exalted to glory Know that thou art thus also and although Christ is in the possession of consummate glory but thou art wrastling and toiling in a miserable world yet as the Apostle argueth if we shall not rise then Christ is not risen 1 Cor. 15. So if we shall not be glorified then Christ is not glorified Hence our Saviour joyneth himself with the disciples I go to my Father and your Father Joh. 20.17 and so it s Christs glory and thy glory Christs Heaven and thy Heaven 4. There is the sanctification of our nature by grace and as Christ was sanctified so also doth he sanctifie us Hence you heard he sanctified himself for us Now the humane nature of Christ received the Spirit of God without measure and therefore he was called the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the holy One Luk. 1. but was this holinesse for himself only no it was for his members also Joh. 1.10 Of his fulness we have received grace for grace Some understand it by way of similitude and imitation as we say of a childe he receiveth of his Father limb for limb he answereth his Father in every point so we are to resemble Christ that as Christ is the Image of the Father so we are to be the Image of Christ and therefore are laid to bear the Image of the heavenly and thus we are made one with Christ as the seal and the wax are made one the Seal leaving a stamp upon the wax like it self Now whereas the glory of Miracles others might have that were not united to Christ this none can have but who are members of that head and therefore do the people of God want grace do they mourn under their
imperfections let them quicken up praier upon this consideration The glory Christ had he will give to beleevers Why had he such fulnesse but for thy emptinesse Why had he such glory but to make thee glorious Shall our vile bodies be made glorious like his glorious body and shall not our vile and corrupted souls be also made glorious like his soul This is excellently illustrated 2 Co. 3.18 where we are said te be transformed from glory to glory that is from grace grace is glory so much godliness so much glory thou hast and because it is not perfect therefore we proceed from glory to glory and how is this done by the Gospel for we beholding the glory of God in Christ are thereby changed Thus 2 Cor. 4.6 the glory of God is said to be seen in the face of Jesus Christ the meaning is that whereas God is in his own nature invisible and we are not able to conceive of him aright in Jesus Christ We see the infinite wisedom and grace of God so that we become glorious in grace by faith looking on God in Christ this makes heavenly this changeth and altereth the heart That as Moses by communing with God did obtain external glory which was so dazeling that the Israelites could not behold it So the people of God by Faith beholding God in Christ are thereby enlivened and made more heavenly every day Thus we see what those effects of glory are which Christ gives of that treasury of glory to us In the third general place Consider that none are made partakers of that Glory of Christ but by Vnion with him Now this Union is twofold either meerly external in the outward Ordinances in which sence our Saviour Joh. 15. supposeth a branch may be in him and yet not bring forth fruit By vertue of this Union we may obtain many glorious gifts and common graces from the Spirit So that we may have much spiritual glory in the eyes of others or else there is an internal and invisible Union and by this only we are made partakers of Christs glory Therefore none may be contented in any outside of Religion let thy duties be never so ravishing and affectionate yet not these but faith in the Olive Tree is that which maketh us partakers of this fat●ess so that the Union of Christ with the believer is the foundation of all grace and glory for as a branch separated from the vine or a member from the body doth not partake of any vital act and nourishment So neither doth that soul which is disjoyned from Christ if the beams of the Sunne had not immediate dependance and emanation from the Sun they could not have such lustre and Glory So neither were not believers joyned to Christ and made one with him they could not put forth such glorious acts of grace as they do for if power to work Miracles and transcend nature be called a glory how much more to perform the acts of grace which do also surpass the course of nature It 's a glorious thing to beleeve to be patient to be heavenly-minded to be zealous for God In these actions the spirit of Christ which is also the spirit of glory doth reside upon us 4. As union with Christ makes us partakers of glory So the foundation and Original of this is because Christ is one with the Father and one with us He is the Mediator between God and man So that by this means he receiveth glory from the Father which otherwise would be incommunicable to sinners and doth convey it to such as are his members So that still our eyes are to he fastened on Christ as a Mediator for none can or may approach to God in his own ablolute nature but as those who cannot look upon the Sun behold it in a basin of water where the reflexion is Thus we who could not draw nigh to that infinite wise and pure God having a Mediatour that both partaketh of Gods Nature and mans thereby is afforded an admirable passage of conveyance of glory from the Father through Christ to us as the light is conveyed from the Sun through the glass into the house Vse To make us admire the dignity and excellent condition of a Christian united to Christ for all the glory of Christ redounds and diffuseth it self to them Whatsoever priviledge or glory Christ hath it is proportionably communicated to thee therefore lift up thy head by faith and live joyfully in the meditation of this Doth not the woman though contemptible when married to an honourable person forget her Fathers Cottage and rags and saith Now she shall have the riches the glory the honour the state that her Husband hath since thy Soul hath been united to Christ all thy old poor despicable things are laid aside Truly the ground of all a godly mans discouragements and perplexities ariseth for want of faith herein SERMON CXXIII Practicall Conclusions from the fore-going Doctrine JOHN 17.22 And the Glory which thou gavest me I have given them c. HAving cleared the sense of this Text and shewed what that glory is which Christ giveth us Let us proceed to make some Corollaries or practical Conclusions from this Doctrine And hence therefore in the first place this Conclusion is to be asserted That no man till he be united unto Christ hath any true and solid glory For if the glory of a Christian be in Christ the fountain as the Sunne-beams are in the Sunne then till partakers of Christ we do not receive any of his glory And this truth may quell the vain brags of the world and the boasts of carnal men Some account riches their glory their birth their glory outward honours their glory but these are not worthy the name of glory Christ came not into the world to give men riches honours greatness but a spiritual glory The Hebrew word for glory signifieth a weight and the Apostle alludes to this when 2 Cor. 4.17 he cals the happiness in Heaven an eternal weight of glory Let therefore a man be never so much exalted in this world yet if not given to Christ he doth not partake of Christs glory This earthly glory is no more true glory then a glow-worm is the Sunne The Scripture cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a meer fancy that presently passeth away All humane glory is but like Jonahs gourd that is presently consumed or like Herod Act. 12.21 who being arayed in royal apparel and blasphemous acclamations made to him he was immediately eaten up with worms Be not then any longer like children that account a toy a glorious thing thou art no wiser when riches greatness beauty c. are accounted matter of glory an obedient ear to Gods word is more glorious then an ear full of jewels interest in Christ is greater glory then all that of the world which our Saviour was tempted with yet is there any thing that is more apt to ensnare our hearts then this
vain-glory Did not the Devil think to overcome even Christ himself in this temptation when he shewed him all the glory of the world Begin then to despise and contemn all the earthly glory of this world what will this avail when thou art vile in Gods eyes Thou art a loathsom abominable creature before God though richly cloathed and faring deliciously every day Now the grounds why humane and earthly glory do not arise to this heavenly is from these particulars 1. It 's not a lasting during glory The fear and certainty of losing of it takes off from all the lustre of it A flour is a glorious creature yet because quickly withered none makes long account of it and thus all the glorious things of man are compared to no better The Prophet Isaiah Isa 40.6 and John Baptist of all Sermons and truths were to proclaim this All flesh is grasse and the flower thereof fadeth away c. And this was to make way for Christ implying that while men continued in their confidence about these things they were too high mountains and so no prepared path to receive Christ As therefore our Saviour argued in another case If the grasse be so cloathed with glory that is to be cut down and withereth so if thou art thus carefull to cloath thy body with glory that presently must become dust and worms meat rotting in the grave how much rather shouldst thou look to have thy soul cloathed with the glorious robes of Christ that continue for ever call that glory and that alone which is eternal which will live with thee and not die with thee 2. It 's no true glory because it 's not inward and substantial It 's not this glory of a man in his most substantial part which is his soul The soul of a man in Scripture language is called a mans glory Gen. 49.6 unto their assembly Let not my honour or glory be united that is not my soul If then a man hath the earthly glory of this world this is not the honour of his soul this is not solid it 's not in the noblest part of him If rich and glorious apparel should be put upon a dead corpse what glory were this to the corpse it would not bring life and comelinesse to the dead body So it is here let a wicked man have more earthly glory then a Solomon yet he is but a dead corpse he hath not that which should be the proper glory of a man viz. the adorning of his soul Hence grace is called glory as you heard So that nothing makes a man glorious but grace this is the image of God in him The Heathen could say That an horse is not chosen by his trappings and other rich accoutrements but as he is naked in his own body and certainly man much lesse is accounted glorious by body or wealth but by his soul 3. It 's not the proper glory of a man as he is a Christian And this is much to be considered Every creature hath that which is a peculiar grace and glory to it in its kinde So Seneca We praise a Vine if it burden its branches with fruit if another had golden grapes or golden leaves the fruitfull Vine would be preferred before it So that what is comely to one is not to another now take man as he is a Christian and so all his glory is spiritual and invisible if you look upon Christ who giveth him his glory he had none external nay none had lesse of that then he for he knew not where to lay his head yet in regard of spiritual glory he did abound in it he had the glory of a Messias though not of a temporal Monarch and thus it is here that is only a Christians glory which is excellency in Christianity The Apostle speaking of women saith Whose glory let not it be of embroidered apparel c. 1 Pet. 3.3 but an humble and meek spirit Hence the Kings daughter is said to be all glorious within Psal 45.13 That then which the world doth deride and contemn that is indeed the greatest glory and hence the glory of a Christian is to be justified to be sanctified to have communion and fellowship with the Father in Christ Lastly There is no true glory without Christ because in times of afflictions and tribulations he only gives occasion to glory Rom. 5. We glory in tribulation and Peter saith While we suffer for righteousnesse sake the Spirit of glory resteth upon us 1 Pet. 3.14 What then will thy outward glory avail in the time of Gods wrath when he shall set thy sins in order before thee he will make all thy desirable things to perish When Belshazzar is smitten with trembling for his sins he findes little glory in his stately Palace in his golden cups he was carousing in Oh then prize such a glory that will bear up thy heart in the saddest extremities A second Corollary is That the meanest Christian united to Christ though never so contemptible yet is surpassing Solomon in all his glory Every believer if you look upon him spiritually is more glorious then the greatest Potentates in the world for concerning that they made a blaze in their solemn installings of the Pope saying Sic transit gloria mundi but the glory of heaven abideth for ever It 's true this world doth not see any glory in a believer no more then they did in Christ Therefore in the Caniicles the women asked the Spouse What was her beloved more then other women They saw no such comelinesse and beauty in him and thus it is with wicked men What glory can we see in those that walk more strictly What is admirable in them more then in others Therefore this glory Christ giveth his people is invisible and discovered onely by the eye of faith So that this should exceedingly bear up the heart of a believer while he lieth under all the reproaches contempts and oppositions of the wicked world Oh comfort thy self with this spiritual glory God gives thee glory Christ gives thee glory while the world doth thus despise thee and doe not be discontented because God hath not given thee so much of the worlds glory as he hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ven others What then if he revealeth and vouchsafeth this spiritual glory to thee he doth more then if he should give thee the glory of many worlds Nay further thou many times art dejected in thy own eyes and as thou hast no external glory amonstg men so neither dost thou perceive any spiritual glory in thy self Oh thou criest out that thy soul pollution thy ●oul defilements are worst of all but remember this glory comes from Christ without that it doth not naturally grow up in thee Thirdly Though Christ give part and a beginning of this glory here yet it is not perfected and consummated till hereafter I have saith Christ given them glory already yet he prayeth afterwards for the consummation of this
glorification of the body For without these Happinesse would not be in enjoying of God Mat. 5. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God As the Eye corrupted with humours is not able to behold the most refreshing Object with any delight So neither can a heart defiled with sin account it any happinesse to be enjoying so holy a God Therefore there is required a through and perfect Sanctification of the whole man that it may take full and adequate delight in God Hence if it were possible for the devils and damned in hell to behold all this glory in heaven yet it would not make them happy yea through malice and envy they would be tormented the more And why so only because they want pure holinesse within and being destitute of this they cannot delight in the presence of such holy company In the next place let us Consider What is that glory which they shall behold shining in Christ We reade of Christ in praier how that in a wonderfull Transfiguration his face did shine Mat. 17.2 like the Sun here was great glory but yet it 's nothing to Christs glory hereafter yea we reade of Moses his face that it did shine with such glory that the people could not behold it Therefore a veil was put upon his face But in heaven there the glory of Christ will transcend all these and there will be no need of a Veil for we shall be enabled to behold it Now this glory of Christ in heaven is 1. That essential glory which he hath as God This he never laid aside no more then his God-head but as the Sun in a dark gloomy day may not send forth its glorious beams Thus the Lord Christ while here upon the earth subject to many infirmities had that divine glory covered for a while otherwise he could not have been in a capacity to suffer for us but when in heaven then all those infirmities are laid aside Then the body of Christ will not hinder the breaking forth of all his divine glory This glory then of Christ will be manifestly set forth for in heaven doth God put forth his more immediate glory 2. Christs Mediatory glory will then also be manifested for though Christ as God had right to all the glory in heaven yet he did upon a new and distinct title acquire this glory to himself whether indeed this great name given him above all names in heaven and earth being lifted up above all principalities and powers was as an effect or consequent only of his foregoing humiliation is disputed as also what this Mediatory glory is and whether distinct from divine is much debated by the Learned But this is sure the Scripture speaks clearly of a wonderfull great Majesty and power expressed by sitting at Gods right hand vouchsafed unto Christ after his resurrection Now all this glory we shall be made beholders of 3. We shall behold Christs glory in a passive sence that is all the glory which Angels and Saints shall give unto him for so you may reade That the Elders gave their Crowns unto the Lamb Rev. 5.8 9 10. with all praise and glory for he was worthy It 's unspeakable to consider all the glory and praise which then shall be given unto the Lord Christ by whose means they are all made happy and without whom there had not been one glorified Saint Vse of Exhortation Let the Meditation of this glorious time wean thee from inordinate affections to all humane and earthly glory Doth a stately glorious house allure thee think what is this to the glory in heaven Do glorious garments and apparell bewitch thee Say what are these to those glorious robes in heaven Let this Sun put out the light of the Stars and let this also make thee patient under all losses and chastisements SERMON CXXXVII How Christ as Mediatour had his Glory given him although as God he could not properly have any thing given him except by way of Manifestation Against the Socinians JOHN 17.24 To behold the Glory which thou hast given me THere remain two things more observable in this Petition whereof one is the efficient cause of that glory which we are constantly to behold in heaven The other is the subject for whom he thus supplicateth both which we shall dispatch at this time And First of the Description of Christs glory from the Authour of it which is God the Father from whom he hath it by way of gift I shall not be long on this because I have already spoken much to it Only the Doubt is What glory it is that here is said to be given by the Father and without any further ingaging into controversies we may fully conclude That it is of his glory as Mediator and if you ask How is that said to be already given him when he had not yet suffered and so had not entered into glory The answer is either that the Father had given it him in respect of his decree to give in which sense learned men say the word give is used sometimes in this Chapter or else he had it actually given in respect of right and title even before his Resurrection Or Lastly It is said to be already given because he was immediately to possesse his glory for thus before in the Chapter he was said to be no longer in this world because he was presently to leave it So here the glory which thou hast given me because he was presently to be made partaker of it So that from this we may observe That Christ as Mediatour had his glory given him This appeareth by Christs prayer in this Chapter to the Father that he would glorifie him as also by other Texts plainly affirming this to be given him Phil. 2.9 God hath highly exalted him and given him a Name c. So Mat. 28.18 All power is given me in heaven and earth and in many other places Now it cannot be denied but the Doctrine of Christs mediatory glory and the manner of obtaining it is full of difficulty insomuch that it hath greatly exercised the thoughts of the learned but I shall not lanch into the deeps of it because it is here occasionally spoken of I shall only declare some particulars that may clear the truth And First Christ as God cannot have any thing given unto him in time unlesse it be by way of manifestation and external celebration by the creature Thus God himself is said to have honour and glory and worship from the creature thus his Name is said to be glorified not that Gods infinite perfection is capable of any new advantage which he had not alwayes only here is a declaration and acknowledgement of this by the creatures and this consideration should greatly humble us in our best and choicest services we have not made God more happy or blessed thereby neither doth he need our services only it is for our good as when the eye seeth the Sun or the thirsty
a Command yet withall sheweth the difficulty of it and whence it doth come to pass that the children of God sensible of their sins are so hardly brought to Beleeve As also why ungodly men think it so easie a thing SERM. XXXIX Further sheweth how acceptable it is to God to beleeve in Christ the Mediatour and setteth forth the dangerous nature of Trusting in our own Righteousness SERM. XL. Further setteth forth the Excellency and Necessity of pressing the Doctrine of Faith in Christ the Mediatour and of our being affected with it and invites the greatest sinners to come unto him for Salvation SERM. XLI JOHN 17.9 I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me for they are thine Of praying both for the Godly and the wicked with the Reasons and Motives thereof SERM. XLII The Excellency and Efficacy of Christs Mediatory prayer set forth in many Aggravations of it for the Consolation of the Godly SERM. XLIII Of the Extent of Christs Mediatory Prayer and of his Death That he praied and died not for all and every one of mankinde but only for the Elect and that the Scripture expressions of Christs dying for all are to be understood indefinitely and not universally SERM. XLIV Reasons why the Scripture speaks thus universally about Christs death when yet but some were intended Also what Benefits Reprobates have by Christ with some Arguments further proving the point of Christs dying not for every man but some SERM. XLV The Application of the former Subject setting forth the Necessity of Faith and Repentance as to the interesting us in Christ The Freeness of Gods Love The Qualifications of those to whom Christs death is made advantagious and also their priviledges above all others SERM. XLVI Of Free-Grace opposite to Arminianism tending to raise the hearts of those that are Godly to Joy and Thankfulness SERM. XLVII Of Gods Propriety in his people as the ground of all the good that accrueth to them SERM. XLVIII JOHN 17.10 And all mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them The Deity of Jesus Christ cleared and defended against the Socinians SERM. XLIX Of mans glorifying of Christ and how many waies that is done SERM. L. JOHN 17.11 And now I am no more in the world but these are in the world and I come to thee holy Father keep through thine own Name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as we are Of Christs tender care of all his people in the greatest of their care and afflictions SERM. LI. Of the great danger of Gods peoples being in the world chiefly from its tempting and seducing to sin SERM. LII Of the danger Gods people are in in the world in respect of its hating and opposing of them with Reasons why the Lord makes the world such a disquieting place such a valley of tears unto his own people SERM. LIII The Exaltation of Christ improved for the Joy of all Beleevers SERM. LIV. That all Civil Governours as well as Ecclesiasticall from the meanest Master of a Family to the greatest Monarch have from Christ a spirituall charge of those that are under them and are above all things to endeavour the good of their souls SERM. LV. The great Lord-keeper of Israel from inevitable Ruine both of body and soul extolled SERM. LVI That it 's not enough to be put into a state of Grace unless by Gods power we are kept therein How farre men may acknowledge Gods help and yet with the Pelagians Arminians and Papists not give him his due Glory And also sheweth how many waies the power of God keepeth his people SERM. LVII Reasons proving the Necessity of Gods preserving his children in Grace That God keeps them by Faith Also why and how Faith keeps them rather then other Graces SERM. LVIII The greatness of the mercy of being kept sound in the Truth and the damnableness of Errour demonstrated SERM. LIX That it 's a speciall Mercy for the Ministers of the Gospel to agree in one Wherein their unity should be and the Reasons of the differences that are among them SERM. LX. The great Pattern of Unity the Nature and Property of the Unity that is between God the Father and the Sonne against the Socinians That the Ministers of God should endeavour after a perfect Unity even to be one as the Father and Sonne are Also some Rules guiding thereunto SERM. LXI JOHN 17.12 While I was with them in the world I kept them in thy Name those that thou gavest me I have kept and none of them is lost but the son of perdition that the Scripture might be fulfilled The great changes that even a Godly man is subject unto in respect of the having and losing those sensible supports both outward and inward which God at sometimes vouchsafeth to them Also what those sensible injoyments are and why God doth so change the condition of his people SERM. LXII Sheweth how prone men are for to know Christ after the flesh and wherein it appears SERM. LXIII Of the Saints Lord-keeper shewing how safe the Godly are kept to Salvation by Christ as a trust committed to him SERM. LXIV Of the manner of Christs keeping those that are his Of a four fold principle that is operative to the preservation of Beleevers And of the excellent effects of the Lively Meditation of this Doctrine of being kept by Christ to Salvation SERM. LXV Of the Perseverance of the Saints The Question stated SERM. LXVI Of the Perseverance of the Saints SERM. LXVII Arguments proving that every one that is in the state of Grace shall be preserved to Eternall Life SERM. LXVIII Of the sonne of perdition Shewing that some persons are wilfully set for to damn themselves though they have never so many excellent Remedies and Means to the contrary And what are the Causes that move them thereunto and Characters of such persons SERM. LXIX Of the son of perdition Shewing more Causes and Symptoms of such wretched persons that are desperately bent to damn themselves SERM. LXX Of the sonne of perdition Sheweth from the example of Judas that men may be eminent for a while in the Church of God and afterwards prove desperate Apostates SERM. LXXI Of the sonne of Perdition SERM. LXXII Of the sonne of Perdition SERM. LXXIII The great stumbling-blocks of Religion removed SERM. LXXIV Of the Scripture SERM. LXXV Of the truth of Scripture-prophesies and against Judiciall Astrology and Witchcraft shewing the vanity and wickedness thereof and of seeking to them SERM. LXXVI John 17.13 And now I come to thee and these things I speak in the world that they might have my joy fulfilled in themselves The Joy of Saints handled both as a duty and priviledge as being one great end of Christs Prayer Command Promises and Ministry SERM. LXXVII Of Joy and Comfort shewing how many waies the Spirit of God works it in the hearts of his people SERM. LXXVIII The severall
strength should fail them lest one time or other they should yeeld to sinne and be overwhelmed Now in the midst of all these fears Christ hath praied for thee as well as for Peter that thy faith may not fail Insomuch that we may say Christs praier for beleevers is all their hope and foundation In some sad exigences how carefull are we to have the praiers of all Gods people to be remembred in such and such a Congregation but if all the Churches in the world should pray for a man it would not amount to so much as Christs praier therefore let the godly comfort one another with these things Lastly He hath praied for their glorification Thus he praied that they may be one even as he and the father are one and that they be where he is viz. that they may enjoy that glory which Christ had purchased for them Therefore he is called the Resurrection Job 11.25 because he will raise up such at the last day The body though dead and consumed to ashes shall not alwaies be in the grave neither shall the soul have such rags and deformities upon it continually but shall be cloathed with glorious robes Thus you see the chief and main matter of Christs praier not so much earthly and temporall things as heavenly for although Christ did comfort his Disciples even in earthly straits Mat. 6.25 that they had a Father in Heaven and if he did provide for all the creatures in the world they might much rather be perswaded of his care to them and Paul argued Rom. 8. he gave his only Son for them how shall he not give all things else Yet the great things that Christ before his sufferings thought fit to commend unto God were spirituall and heavenly benefits And that is the first consideration The matter of Christs Praier Secondly Take notice of the nature of this Praier it 's by way of Mediation It 's a Mediatory Praier and so differs from all the praiers of other men As they are bare meer men so their praiers are bare meer praiers There is no merit no mediation in thee but Christs praier is of a farre more transcendent nature Even as the bloud of the Martyrs came farre short of Christs Their bloud was not expiatory it was not by way of a Sacrifice for sinnes whereas Christs was Thus there is a vast difference between praiers and praiers God may regard one mans praier more then anothers it may be more effectuall as in that supposition though Daniel and Job stood and praied they should not be heard Job you know was commanded to pray for his Friends and his praier was accepted of more then theirs and Daniel was said to be a man greatly beloved because his praiers were so readily heard Likewise the praier of many or a Church is more prevalent then the praier of one single person So a Praier from one in office as a Minister is more then of one in a private condition but yet the praier of Christ as in the office of a Mediatour doth farre surmount all So then in Christs praier we are especially to look to the Mediatory power to the impetratory efficacy of it It 's not a meer supplication as ours are but a powerfull obtaining of what is desired His praier can be no more refused then his bloud they both are in the same nature they go along under the same respect his bloud may as well be without advantage as his praier The high-Priests praier for the people was of greater concernment for the people then their own praiers I tell thee all thy own praiers are not of that consequence to thee as Christs praier is all Mediatory and impetratory efficacy is from that Thirdly Consider the dignity of the Person who did pray for beleevers and thereby cometh an infinite efficacy and worth to it Christ who praied for us being God and man in regard of his divine nature there cometh an infinite worth upon his praier his praier is like himself and from this account it is that it is meritorious with God that it is just with God to grant him his Requests his Supplications are put up in his own name he needeth no Mediatour there is none to make way for his acceptance with God so that this Meditation affords unspeakable consolation though all thy praiers and duties be nothing worth yet Christs is of infinite value The dignity and merit whereby any good cometh to us is not for our praiers but for Christs Certainly the people of God do not live so chearfully upon this consideration as they ought They are careful to pour out their own praiers but not by faith to rest on Christs What needest thou fear who canst bring praiers of infinite merit The Lord Christ hath praied that I might have this mercy he hath praied that this grace should be vouchsafed unto me What fault can be found with Christ What blame or imperfection is to be seen or found in him how can Christ be denied in justice It is his right to have his Requests answered Fourthly Consider the respect and relation Christ stands in towards God the Father And then you will still say his praier is of great concernment to 〈◊〉 Now his relation is the only Son of God and dearly beloved by him This is my well-beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased Mat. 3.17 So that his praiers are heard unquestionably upon a twofold ground the one of justice because infinite in worth the other of love because the only begotten Son This Heb. 5.7 He is said while he praied to be heard in what he feared and Joh. 11.12 Christ thanks the Father that he heard him alwaies and often doth he professe that the Father loveth him the Sonne and that the Father and the Son are one This also is very comfortable to meditate upon Thou hast the praier of him who is the only begotten of the Father whom the Father heareth alwaies and to whom he denieth nothing if we are able to say Lord this is not my praier only This is not my desire only but it s the request of Christ so beloved of thee then thou maist justly beleeve thou shalt be accepted of O Lord though I have no lovelinesse no comelinesse yet Christ hath Some have doubted whether Christ was heard in every thing he praied for and they instance in his praier that the cup might passe from him but that was only conditionall If it be thy will and therefore he added Not my will but thine be done That which he absolutely praied for was Gods support and preservation of him as also the raising him out of the grave That which seemeth to have gteat difficulty is his praier Luke 23.34 Father forgive them for they know not what they do but of the efficacy of this we need not doubt of because the Pharisees and others they sinned against their knowledge and conscience and for such Christ praied not but
these do accuse thee say if a discharge had not been fully made how could Christ be glorified 2. It makes much to our eomfort because of that near relation which is between us so miserable and afflicted here and Christ our head now glorified What can be a greater cordiall then in the midst of all those exercises and trials and reproaches the people of God are debased with then to think they have a glorified head in heaven Though they be contemptible he is not This is but a conformity to him in his sufferings that we may also resemble him in glory 3. It is much to our comfort and advantage to hear of this because his glorification is a sure and effectual cause of ours so that our hearts may greatly rejoyce at this truth For as the Apostle argueth from Christs Resurrection If he be risen then shall we also certainly rise So doth the Argument unavoidably follow if Christ be glorified then shall we also be glorified with him so that when those innumerable Objections do arise how shall these vile bodies ever be made glorious How shall these corrupt and weak souls ever be made happy and blessed The answer is easie What is already done to Christ glorified will in time be fulfilled to us Death and the grave had no dominion over him no more shall it have over us Hence it is that the Scripture saith We are already set down with Christ in heavenly places Eph. 2.6 because he is our head Fear not then such a glorified head will not forget his members He said He went to provide a mansion place Joh. 14.2 It cannot then be but that Christ will set you on Thrones of his glory as well as he himself is set So that this doctrine is wholly for thy comfort 4. It may much rejoyce us to hear that Christ is glorified because in this state of glorification he is mindeful of us and pleading for us So that howsoever the greatest parts or effects of our mediation were seen in the time of his humiliation by his life and his death The Scripture attributeth all the mercies we do enjoy yet since he ascended into heaven and is partaker of all this power he maketh intercession for us his daily will is that the priviledges he purchased should be applied to us He daily acts as a King subduing our lusts conquering our corruptions applying his comforts and consolations to his people Well then Christ is glorified not for himself only neither is he exalted for his own honour meerly but it is for our glory as well as his for our honour as well as his As Joseph was lifted up in Pharaohs Court not for himself meerly but for his brethren to succour them in their necessities And as the glorious effects of the Sun are not so much for it self as for us the Creatures below oh then let thy soul cast off all unbelief and trouble when it heareth of Christ glorified for in all this glory he doth not forget thee he is not ashamed of thee Lastly This advantage the soul may make of this Truth thereby to lift up our hearts to heaven and to desire to be there where our glorified head is Thus the Apostle he longs to depart to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 and the Church longs for and hastens the coming of Christ from whence we look for Christ saith the Apostle Phil. 3.21 Who shall change our vile bodies into his glorious body Oh this should make us draw off all our affections and desires from other things Christ glorified should be the loadstone we should not be at ease or quietnesse till we come to him which made Austin say That as there were some men who needed patience to die so there were others who needed patience to live for the love and desire after Christ did so burn in their hearts that having tasted of this honey they judged every thing else gall and wormwood so that this Truth may be like fire burning in our bones In the next place let us consider the nature of this glory which Christ praied for And 1. There were three degrees to it The first and immediate beginning of this glory was upon his Resurrection After the black and dismall clouds this Sunne had been in the first glory of it began to appear in its Resurrection from the grave By this he was conqueror of death and the grave By this he judged the Prince of the world Till this was in all mens thoughts Christ seemed to be overcome in all appearance he was now brought under the power and command of death and Satan He was judged weak till this power discovered it self and this resurrection being not only by the Fathers power but his own He being the Sampson that brake the barres and bonds of death it was thereby made manifest to all the world that he was the Sonne of God Resurrection is such an impossible thing to humane reason and so incredible that Paul was cried down for a vain babler Act. 17.18 in promulging such doctrine and only in the Church of God Was ever such a thing heard of But this Resurrection was remarkable in Christ who not only raised himself from the dead but also caused many others to rise with him here was the first degree of his glory 2. The second degree was his ascension into heaven and this did exceed his Resurrection for though he was risen yet he conversed with his disciples did eat and drink with them occasionally so that he was to partake of greater and fuller glory when he ascended into heaven This Ascension of his into Heaven was great matter of wonderment and astonishment to his Disciples They all stood admiring when he was carried up thither Act. 1. 3. The last and chiefest degree of this glory was sitting down at the right hand of God By which expression is meant that great and wonderfull honour which God put upon him he sitteth at the right hand that demonstrateth a full and compleat victory over all his enemies and a quiet possession of this glory In these three things lieth all the glory Christ praieth for Resurrection Ascension and sitting down at Gods right hand all which immediatly followed his passions and sufferings and God had appointed such an order that one must be before the other and such a way God also doth take with his people They must have a Crown of thorns before they have a Crown of glory In the third place let us consider some of the most eminent and chiefest particulars wherein this glory of Christ doth manifest it self And 1. It lieth in that spirituall command and authority which he hath in his Church This is expressed when he saith All power is given to me in heaven and earth therefore go make disciples and baptize Here you see the Institution of Sacraments is founded upon that power given to Christ and from this it is Eph. 4 That upon his Ascention He led
necessary companion to the minding of heavenly things There is no externall duty of praying or hearing that will make the heart moderate and regular in the use of all comforts unlesse it be accompanied with mortification Let not then the waters overflow the banks Do not over-love over-desire over-grieve about these earthly comforts It 's an argument thou lovest them for their own sakes or thy own sake and not for God who art thus over-sollicitous about them so then to say I desire no temporall mercy but to honour God thereby requireth an heart mortified and crucified if we would speak the truth and not deceive our own souls Till therefore we be thus divinely qualified within You may as soon gather grapes of thorns and figs of thistles as the honour of God from such men In the next place take notice of the Reasons why we are to pray for all our comforts in reference to Gods glory And 1. Because God himself doth all things for his own glory His own actions are for it and therefore much more ought ours to be God made the world God saveth his people and all this is for his own glory and indeed as Gods wisedom is only able to comprehend himself so his own love is able to love him in quantum est amabilis yet we are commanded to be holy as he is holy Now as his holinesse is in willing of his own glory and all things in reference thereunto So our godlinesse consists in willing and procuring Gods glory and improving all we have for that purpose If God made the world for his glory do thou use it for his glory If God give thee parts and gifts to glorifie him oh do not abuse these against their good and lawfull end 2. From the nature of Gods glory and all these earthly comforts respectively that is the ultimus finis and these are the media and morall Philosophy teacheth us that media movent bonitate finis it 's not absolute goodnesse in the means but the relative goodnesse of the end in the means that excite and provoke the appetite It 's not Physick for Physicks sake though never so sweet but for healths sake that we take it Lay this as an undeniable argument upon thy own soul These good things are but the means they are not the end Now they are desired not in an unlimited but commensurated manner If a man would quench his thirst he doth not desire all the water in the Sea but as much as will quench his thirst If a man desire a garment to cover his nakednesse he would not have all the cloth in the world but what is proportioned for his body So it 's here Thou art not to will as much wealth as much honour and greatnesse as may be had but what will be serviceable to that great end the glory of God otherwise thou art in thy abundance as David in Sauls armour It was too great for him and in stead of being serviceable was cumbersome and truly hence ariseth the inordinate sinfulnesse of our sences in all earthly comforts we desire them for their own sake and so are infinite and never satisfied still saying Give whereas this regulated desire would much moderate us Appetitus non est regula concoctionis the appetite is not the rule of our concoction is in Divinity true as well as in Philosophy 3. Consider the greatnesse of Gods glory It 's more worth then all the world all thy wealth estate and greatnesse is nothing to this glory of God neither thy soul or body no nor all mens souls and bodies are to be compared to this Better we all perish then that God should lose his glory Oh then how should this make us whatsoever we do to do all to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 because the Sun is far above one Star the Ocean above one drop 4. If we desire not all things in reference to him we are guilty of spirituall Idolatry we set up another God besides him or we attribute that supreme dominion to another which belongs only to him unlesse we were God himself we might not do so how severe was God against that Jewish Idolatry in worshiping Idols his glory he would not have given to another Now this is not the lesse Idolatry because it 's not so bodily The more secret and hidden it is the more abominable Herod was eaten up with lice because he was not displeased when others said The voice of God and not of man Act. 12.23 He was tickled with it and received it well enough I tell thee such sins as this are committed when thou takest thy wealth thy honours and exaltest thy self thereby and not God Vse of Instruction How few then take notice of this doctrine who desire mercies only to serve God thereby riches and greatnesse to promote God therewith If this were so there could not be those immoderate and unsatisfied affections in thee Thou wouldst be more solliciuous bow to improve all for God Thy heart would tremble lest God receive not more glory by giving thee more mercies We give thee of thy own said David 1 Chro. 29 14. and certainly if we have any thing to glorifie God by both the gift and the good use of it is wholly of Gods grace What wilt thou do who takest the good mercies of God and usest them as weapons against him Thou servest thy own lusts and the devils Will the patience of God alwaies bear this SERMON VII The Text Vindicated from Arians Vbiquitarians and Papists And the power and dominion of Christ observ'd and applied to the comfort of his Disciples and terrour of his Enemies JOH 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him THe Verse before spake of the mutual glorification which is between the Sonne and the Father Now this second verse is specificative or declarative of that wherein or whereby the Sonne may and doth glorifie the Father viz. by the power that he hath in the whole world more especially in the Church of God giving eternal life to them that do beleeve So that this Text containeth one principall way or manner how the Sonne doth glorifie the Father All the wondrous works that are done in the world bring not so much glory to God as the spiritual works which are wrought by Christ in the Church In the words we may take notice of Christs power and the use or exercise of it The power is mentioned in the former part The exercise in the latter Concerning the former observe 1. The power expressed in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which say some doth not signifie a meer power but a power with right and so difference it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if that signified any power this only is just and lawfull As among the Latines potentia and potestas are diversified but this is not universally true for 〈◊〉
also There cannot be any more two meritorious causes of salvation then there can be two Suns in the Orb Christ will not have a copartner under any distinction whatsoever in the work of our Redemption As for the doctrine or thoughts of perfection let those be abandoned Let us walk humbly and lowly under our imperfections yet breathing after perfection Fifthly Because no works we do can be perfect hence at the end of our daies when we look over all our former life we may not put any trust or confidence in what we have done Paul that knew nothing by himself yet was not thereby justified The Pharisees are condemned for this that they trusted in their own righteousnesse yea the whole Nation of the Jews that they went about to establish their own righteousnesse and would not submit to the righteousnesse of Christ Rom. 10. Though self-righteousnesse be not a grosse scandalous sinne making men abominable and no●some in the world yet it is as damnable and as dangerous as those sins yea more damnable partly because it overthroweth all the principles of being cured None being more miserable then those who are so yet do not feel or think so This is like the Psalmists arrow that destroieth at mid-day and then partly because it doth so immediatly oppose Christ revealed as a Mediatour and Saviour for they that trust in their own righteousnesse are a Christ are a Saviour to themselves Lastly Though all this be true our godlinesse is no merit no ground of confidence yet a faithful zealous performing of those duties God hath required of us may as a sign and evidence wonderfully comfort and imbolden our hearts As the Rainbow is not a cause but a sign that God will never destroy the world more by water so this tendernesse and diligence of thine in all the waies of God are not a cause but a sure signe that Gods eternal love is placed on thee and that thou art in the number of those who are prepared for glory our rejoycing is this saith Paul the testimony of a good conscience 2 Cor. 1.12 and 1 Joh. 3.21 Hereby we are sure he heareth us if our hearts condemn us not Hezekiah and Paul did not mention their good life as a cause or means Neither did they put confidence in them only they took this as a comfortable signe they were in the favour of God and they looked upon these things as inseparable qualifications Even as Rahabs thred hanging out of the window was not a cause but a signe that she was in the number of those who were exempted from destruction and in this sence we maintain the doctrine That it 's a blessed thing at the end of our daies to have this testimony this cordial in our hearts Let us consider the grounds of this blessednesse 1. At the time of death all our earthly comforts they vanish away they continue with us no longer Now if thou think how rich thou hast been what pleasures and delights thou hast had this is so farre from comforting that it torments the more but a drop of this heavenly assurance of our endeavour to please God will be more precious then all the world Oh foolish people and unwise that do no more consider your latter end Can you but look on your body and say this face these arms this body will one day moulder in the dust Can you but look on your houses and habitations and say These dwellings will know me no more must every thing break thy heart thou lookest upon thy husband thy Children thy friends mourning by thee must there be such a sad and dolefull time and dost thou provide no comfort no hopes to encourage thee The Psalmist saith not as the horse and mule without understanding whose mouth must be held in by a Bridle Psa 31.9 Alas thou art worse here is a bridle put on thee to keep thee from rushing upon sinne any more and yet it will not stop thee If then all these earthly comforts will fail thee and thou shalt look back upon thy life and that torment thee that torture thee also thou art twice and thrice miserable 2. It 's a blessed thing to have this Testimony and Seal upon our hearts that we have glorified God and done his work because Conscience if ever is then awakened and the devil he is most busie to tempt and trouble He that formerly shewed only the pleasant bait of sinne will now manifest the hook He that before said you should not be damned now makes it necessary he that made pardon easie now makes it impossible and as the devil is thus a roaring Lion so conscience is a roaring witnesse within Thou hast stopt the mouth of it and muzled it a long time but now 't will speak and thou canst not make it quiet Indeed too many die like beasts rather then men They think not of their sinnes they consider not Eternity but drop into hell before they consider any thing but yet when death comes commonly there is some terrour and trembling upon the conscience and if ever any sinne did formerly sting it will then Oh then how blessed a thing is it to have such an argument in our mouths that shall quiet conscience and confound the devil when they tell thee there is no hope thou hast been an hypocrite thou canst bring this testimony out of thy bosome O Lord thou knowest though I was overtaken by many infirmities yet my heart was set to glorifie thee I was tender and careful to discharge all my work though I failed in many things this will make thee like Adamant and marble how much did the consciousnesse of the integrity which Job had strengthen him under those powerfull storms and blasts that fell upon him 3. It 's a blessed thing to be able to say thus upon just grounds because of the terrour of death to flesh and bloud We cannot be willing and ready to die all the while the worms of conscience are gnawing the soul before worms be gnawing the body When Simeon had seen Christ and taken him in his arms then he saith Lord let thy Servant depart in thy Peace Luk. 2. When Paul hath thus discharged his trust then I have fought a good fight and there is laid up for me a Crown of glory It hath been the case of many good men to have uncomfortable sicknesses and an uncomfortable death and what makes it sometimes so but want of this assurance this good testimony about themselves oh their life troubles them such sins and such barrenesse They know not what to do Their hearts are within them They think of death and their soul is troubled so that it 's a most desirable thing to have this in thy heart when thou art dying Oh thou thinkest Would I might have such a Minister such a Friend by me when I am dying I tell thee this is the best friend It was Augustus his wish that he might have an 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quiet easie death without pangs and torment but this is the easiest the comfortablest the best dying Oh that we should preferre any thing before that Oh that thou shouldst not cry out of every sin This will trouble me when I am dying 4. It 's a blessed thing to go out of the world having done Gods work because we are immediatly to appear before him No sooner is thy soul gone out of the body but it appeareth before God he either for thy sinne adjudgeth it to hell or because thou art a member of Christ appoints thee to eternall glory oh then when there is but such distance between God and thy soul how comfortable is it to have been all thy life time glorifying God Thou hast been glorifying God and God comes now to glorifie thee Thou hast been doing his work and now he is giving thee the good things promised Oh Beloved how should this prevail with you there is but a step between my soul and God how will God look on me who can endure his frowns and displeasures Doth not the Apostle say It 's a fearfull thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10.3 And now I am falling into Gods hands either the hands of a merciful Father or provoked enemy Well then while thou art in these conflicts and agonies what support is it to have this sure evidence O Lord in my life time I lived for thee and to thee now I come to live with thee O Lord In my life time I knew thee I did thy work but I was at a vast distance now I come to the immediate injoying of thee Reas 5 5. It s a blessed thing to have this evidence because it 's of that good which will be eternall Canst thou truly say thus then it 's an immortall Crown of Glory that is laid up for thee no more deaths no more changes no more fears or tears thou art made for ever But of this heretofore Vse of Admonition Let every one attend and give all diligence to get this evidence Oh the terrour and horrour that must take hold on thee if thou hast been dishonouring of God all thy life long if thou hast been doing the work that sinne and Satan tempted thee to why art thou so devoid of all understanding will thy health and strength alwaies hold Art thou exempted from the stroke of death Is not thy time running on sit down then and consider what thoughts will at thy death possesse thee What testimony have I that I have done the work of the Lord Oh doth not thy life accuse thee Is it not all over bloody Canst thou think of what thou hast been with any content Is thy life at present such that thou canst say O Lord I am doing thy work Oh the amazement and astonishment that should take hold on such men SERMON XX. Sheweth who they are that cannot at the close of their daies take comfort in this That they have finished the work God gave them to do As also what things if not avoided will much diminish the comfort of the Godly ones at that day JOH 17.4 I have glorified thee on earth c. THe Doctrine observed was That it is a most blessed and happy thing in the close of our daies to be able to say upon good grounds We have finished the work God gave us to do You have heard particulars illustrating it and the grounds of the point I shall now amplifie this and in the first place shew Who they are that cannot with any comfort or very little be able to say thus For although this truth in the general be very terrible yet in the particular it loseth its edge because every man is a self-flatterer Every one is apt to think I have done Gods work and therefore it will be well with me If therefore it be possible my endeavour shall be that this arrow of Gods truth may enter in at the joynts of thy armour seeing it cannot any where else Consider then who they are that may say they are dogs and not children so that this bread doth not belong to them And first All those who daily and constantly are doing the clean contrary work to what God requireth such whose conversation is a perpetuall reproach and dishonour to God these do not at all glorifie God These have cause to tremble and quake when death approaches and their accounts must be made and is not this the condition of most Look generally upon mens lives are they not doing the devils works are they not dishonouring God all the day long by their ungodly conversation If there be any that are tender and consciencious are they not like gleanings after a Vintage here a man and there a woman otherwise for most men you would think they thought hell and the day of judgement to be but fables and such a truth as this to be a meer bugbear But God will not be mocked neither can mans greatnesse or atheism or prophane scoffings put off these things Oh then be at last perswaded that that life thou livest will be little comfort to thee one day Oh how speechlesse and confounded wilt thou be when God shall enquire into all thy words into all thy actions and there is nothing but sinne appeareth when every thing will be turned into blood as the Egyptian punishment was into the bloud of thy soul When God looked over all his works he had done he saw them exceeding good and so blessed the seventh day but thou wilt look over all thou hast done and finde it exceeding evil and curse both the day of thy birth and the day of thy death Oh that men would be wise that they would consider their later end What wilt thou do when God when thy conscience when the law when devils will accuse thee Where wilt thou hide thy self Remember Jacob Gen. 32.13 when his brother Esau was to meet him who was enraged and provoked against him how carefull he was by Presents and humble deprecations to mitigate his anger Remember the unjust Steward Luke 16.8 who knowing he must be called to account taketh all the subtill waies he can to make himself friends when he shall be cast out of his office our Saviour speaks that parable to this purpose That when God shall say to every one of us Thou shalt be no long or steward in this relation in that condition I will have an account of all that then we manage all things so that we may be able to have some comfortable refuge 2. Those have nothing of this texts comfort who though they do not contrary work yet do different non-required work It 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though they do not male yet they do aliud agere a servant though he do not contrary to his Masters work yet if he do not the same he is commanded he is obnoxious to his Masters wrath And this is
to the order of our matter That which is absolutely necessary is to be preferred before what is convenient only what relates to Gods glory and our salvation is farre to be preferred before any temporall good thing as we see by the direction in our Lords Praier and by Christs command Seek ye first the Kingdom of heaven Mat. 6.33 It 's disputed whether temporall mercies may be praied for or no it may seem a thing below the heavenly Spirit of a Christian but if it be lawful then it 's disputed how far whether absolutely or conditionally only and it 's resolved that because temporal mercies are not promised by God absolutely nor are they absolutely necessary to our salvation Therefore we may pray only with submission and subordination if it be Gods will and so farre as they may be a furtherance to our spiritual good 3. There must be an attention to the words we use in our prayer as well as to the matter That they be grave decent and comely That there be nothing of vanity affectation or irreverence Praier is a worship of God When Abraham was admitted to a discourse with God how greatly did he debase himself he was but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 and who was he that he should speak to God Eccl. 5.2 There is a notable advice to look to our words when we have to do with God He is in heaven and thou on earth That is a vast distance and great disproportion Therefore let thy words be few The wiseman doth not there forbid a long praier for he himself made a very long one at the Dedication of the Temple and repeated this Petition very often Then hear thou in heaven and forgive and heal this people 1 Kin. 8. But that we should look to our words that they be not idle superfluous and vain a long praier in this sence may be said to have few words when the matter is pithy and the words pertinent as he said of a Book Non sunt longa c. That is not a long Book from which you cannot well take away any thing so that the length and shortnesse of a praier lieth not so much in the quantity of time as in the matter a praier held out for an hour without any savory matter or comely words is a long praier Look we then to the matter in the first place and then to words but if we look towards more then matter and make an eloquent oration to God rather then an humble supplication this is ridiculous and sinfull 4. We are to have our attention upon the obiect to whom we do pray and that to God himself What preparations and perfumings were there to come into Abashuerus his presence If the Majesty of an earthly King strike such terrour then what ought not the presence of so great a God so that a diligent attention to his greatness must greatly elevate and raise up the Spirit must unite and strengthen it to one object how can distraction and divisions enter into thy heart when it 's applying it self to such infinite greatnesse 5. We are to be attentive to all those concomitant graces without which Praier is like a Bird without wings or a rusty Key Zeal and fervency and faith in the promise and power of God are necessarily required for Without faith it 's impossible to please God Heb. 11. This is the life and soul of all There must be also heavenly mindednesse and a hatred of all sin otherwise we are not fit to have any communion with God Lastly We are to attend to the end we have in our Praier for lawful temporal things Jam. 4.7 You ask and have not because you ask amisse You ask to spend on your lusts and this is very difficult to ask health life and strength for no other end but thereby to glorifie God and promote his Kingdom Thus briefly because not principally intended to declare how great a matter it is to pray 3. Vocal praier or the use of the tongue in praier is not for information of God as if thereby we would discover to him that which he did not know before Nor if we use repetition in praier is it to move God as importunity may a Judge If it were so then no wonder if we did double and treble the same thing over and over again but partly because we consisting of a soul and body are thereby to glorifie God and honour him with both Hence not only the heart but the tongue is called upon to glorifie God and that is called the glory of a man Though some expound it of the soul and partly because the voice and exercise thereof doth stir up and move the affections there being a reciprocal efficacy one upon another and a circular causality Even as vapors make the clouds which distilling in rain do make vapors again so out of the heart come affectionate expressions in praier and these again do encrease heat in the heart These things premised let us consider When Repetitions or ingeminations of the same matter in Praier may be useful and necessary and we shall speak of such a vocal Praier as is publique wherein not only the Petitions but the edification of others is greatly to be respected for this you must know and it may serve for a fourth particular to preface this matter That in publique praier wherein many joyn together he that praieth is not only to attend to all the forementioned particulars but to them that are assembled also to consider what Petitions what confessions are fit for them to be stirred up unto and that is 1 Cor. 14. The reason why the Apostle so much pleadeth against praier among other duties in an unknown tongue because it will not edifie those that are conioyned with us and so some expound that I will pray in the Spirit that is for his own particular and I will pray in the understanding also that is in respect of others to advantage and benefit them so that in our publique whether as a Minister as a Master of a Family or otherwise We must consider the persons with us what they need what things most concern them and this is a particular way to affect them it being here as with a Sermon the closer it comes to the heart the more good it doth so with a praier the more any Petition closeth with another mans heart the more it doth affect him and enlarge him and therefore fit words and fit matter are especially to be attended unto in such publique praier where not only supplication but edification is intended Let us then consider when the ground of repetition and ingemination is good And 1. When the matter is so exceeding necessary that our hearts are deeply sensible of it As when a burthened soul lieth under the guilt of sinne sinne is like a Mountain upon him it gnaweth and devoureth within then to beg for pardon over and over again the soul cannot but do it The necessity
that praier doth not draw God to us but our hearts to God In our earnest Petitions we do not bring Gods will to ours but ours to him Praier is a golden chain that reacheth from heaven to earth and although we think to move God to us yet we move our selves to him as the Ship that is fastened with the Cable doth not bring the haven to it but it 's self to the haven so that the change praier makes is not on God but on our selves 6. Praier is necessary because hereby Faith is drawn out in all the choice and excellent effects of it Praier without faith is like the musicall Instrument without an hand to make a sound melodious It 's like a picture without life but of this more in the qualifications of a praier The demand then may be What is that Praier and how must it be accomplished that is a fruitful Praier such a praier as will bring about what we desire And 1. It must be the praier of a righteous man such who washeth himself from his sinnes for sinnes they have a tongue and they cry for vengeance and will quickly cry louder then our praiers Hence a wicked mans praier is said to be an abomination to the Lord Pro. 28.9 and the blinde man could see and say this God heareth not the praiers of a sinner There is a twofold sinner a sinner wilfully going on in his wickednesse and such God will not hear but then there is a sinner praying mourning and repenting as the Publican who said Lord be mercifull to me a sinner and such sins God doth hear Nay all men are sinners in this respect and thus God should hear no praier at all if he did not hear such But for other kinde of sins of which all places are full those God doth loath and their duties David hath expressed it fully If I regard iniquity in my heart God will not hear me Psa 66.18 Oh then look to thy self and thy life when thou goest to pray If the tongue that praieth be a cursing swearing tongue If the eyes lifted up to heaven be full of wantonnesse and adultery If the hands held out towards heaven be full of violence fraud and injustice God is of purer eyes then to behold such 2. They must be fervent zealous praiers The effectual fervent praier of a righteous man availeth much Jam. 5. He must be righteous but many a righteous godly mans praier may have no successe if it be full of dulnesse distractions and lukewarmnesse Therefore it must be fervent We must be Jacobs wrestling with God ere we can be Israels prevailing with God Praier is compared to Incense and it 's the fruit of Gods Spirit which is compared to fire Rom. 8. They are said to be groans unutterable It 's not then enough to pray unlesse it be fervently and zealously otherwise they are like a Bird without wings or a Messenger without feet 5. They must be beleeving praiers Let him ask in faith nothing doubting For he that doubteth is to conclude he shall not receive any thing in spiritual things that are necessary our faith is to be absolute in other things our fiducial faith is to be guided by our doctrinal faith so farre as those things make for our good and Gods glory our faith is to conclude of them This is the grace that crowneth our praiers This grace God highly honoureth insomuch that Without faith it 's said it's impossible to please God Heb. 11. Now though presumption be a weed that comes up of it self yet Faith is a gift of Gods own planting and great opposition great difficulty there is to put this forth Lastly It must be persevering and constant Praier our Saviour spake that Parable of the unjust Judge that we should pray incessantly not give God over till we obtain the blessing not to be discouraged though we meet with many delaies and great discouragements like that Woman of Canaan whose Praiers had an holy kinde of impudency and pertinacy in this to take no deniall Vse of Exhortation To be a people much in praier that it may be said of thee as of Paul Behold he praieth and of thy house as of Gods Temple an house of Praier Oh what shall those prophane persons and prophane Families expect but Gods dreadfull vengeance who rise and go to bed without such fervent zealous praiers never expect good from that man or Family that is not tender and constant in this duty he is like a Tree in the barren Wildernesse that cannot bring forth any fruit and do not say I have no time to pray this and that businesse puts it out Wouldst thou have time to receive mercies from God and no time to go by praier to God Shall the Sluggard sit still neither plow or sow or take pains and yet expect his ground should yeeld a plentiful crop oh what hope would there be that God would blesse the Ministry work conversion by it If ye were more diligent in this duty But how greatly is it neglected by most and those that do it how formall and customary are they so that it brings no good at all to the soul Think of these things more and tremble under them SERMON XXVI Of Heavenly Glory as opposed to Earthly And how the hopes thereof earnestly sought and prayed for will comfort a man against the fear and in the midst of all Trials and Afflictions JOH 17.5 And now O Father glorifie thou me with thy own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was THE next thing in order to be pursued is the nature of that glory which Christ praied for For Christ being near the bitterest part of his Cross and seeing nothing but gall for him to drink he comforteth and encourageth himself with that glory which is provided for him and this makes him so earnest in praier for it where by the way we may see the arrogant presumption of those who hold they are above Praier They will give thanks to God as Angels do but their perfection is such that they need not present Petitions in Praier what a Diabolical delusion is this for Christ himself though he confessed no sinne in Praier yet was not above Petitions as we see in this Chapter and if it were granted which cannot be that they were so pure as to be without sinne yet they have not as yet glorified bodies and therefore for that glory in heaven they ought to pray but why do we meddle with these who indeed need praier most and that to see themselves deluded and to be in a farre more dangerous estate then many other persons We come 1. to the description of this glory praied for from the nature or inherent property of it It 's a glory with Gods own self Glorifie me with thy own self This as you heard is spoken partly oppositely to humane glory and the honour of the world for as Christ despised the shame and was not
carnal appetite his lustful heart Thus they eat and drink and go down quick to hell The second thing is faith and herein the godly themselves are greatly to be blamed They do not often in private Meditation and by faith inflame their hearts with the thoughts of glory No wonder if they be so ready to faint and swoon under distresses They have not this water of life to drink of They think They speak They are affected as if all their hopes were in this life only Oh what a shame is it that when the earthly man can day and night comfort himself in his great treasures and abundance of wealth that this eternal glory should not raise thee up There is nothing will make thee a Christian of an excellent and heroical Spirit but faith about this eternal glory Shall the thoughts of a Crown or of a great Inheritance keep up the heart of worldly men and shall not the thoughts of eternal glory keep thee from sinking in the waters of affliction 2. It 's a full substantiall glory It 's called the weight of glory by the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. It 's so full that the heart of man cannot speak or conceive about it As humane glory is compared to all the empty things that are vapors and bubbles and a meer breath a shadow without any substance So this glory in heaven is a massie weighty glory it hath all fulnesse in it There is fulnesse of holinesse We are made pure and without the least spot There is fulnesse of peace and joy The Sea is not fuller of waters then their hearts and souls of eternal comforts There is fulnesse of all thy desires and expectations Here we have the dropsie disposition we have and still we ask yea we can sit down and fancy golden Mountains Oh what compleat conditions and happinesse may men in their thoughts make to themselves and their thoughts are wide but the matter is nothing at all but here this glory is above our thoughts above our desires above our wishes we cannot desire better then what we have The second part implied in the Doctrine is That this glory is to be earnestly praied for by the Children of God And the grounds of this are First Because as you heard God will not vouchsafe this mercy but to a praying people Rom. 2. To those that seek for immortality and honour Hence this is directed to in that Petition Thy Kingdom come and certainly if Christ himself who was thus unquestionably assured of this glory and had merited it at Gods hands doth yet pray for it how much more ought we to have it solely of meer grace Some have put it as a doubt whether it be not a mercenary disposition too unworthy the childe of God to pray for glory Yea it 's disputed by Papists against Protestants that it 's lawful in all our godly actions to have an eye to this reward of glory but they fight with a shadow The Protestants do acknowledge it not only lawfull but a duty to seek after and pray for this crown of glory only we say The love to Gods glory should be preferred before ours We are to desire his glory principally and our salvation as subordinate Oh then let the prophane and wicked men of the world tremble at their death when their night approacheth for how canst thou look for glory who never didst pray for it how canst thou think to be partaker of it who wast never much in seeking after it 2. We are to pray for it because hereby our desires and esteem of it will be more kindled and enflamed Praier is nothing but the desire of the soul expressed by a strong inclination of heart Hence it is That where there are cold desires there are cold praiers where there are importunate desires there are importunate praiers and for this reason it is that even natural men can put up hearty praiers to God for earthly mercies as they are their desires because of the sutablenesse therein but as for spirituall mercies they are like dead men in the grave not at all affected so then by earnest praier for this eternal glory we demonstrate our heavenly desires of it and also our desires are thereby more quickned and enlarged after it Oh what a shame is it that we should pray for health of body freedom from pain pardon of sinne and encrease of grace and not pray for this which containeth it all for everlasting glory is all mercy 3. By earnest praying for it our hope of it is much strengthened and confirmed Now a divine hope of this glory is rhat which makes us bear all afflictions endure all chastisements This is the Oyl to keep our Lamps up It 's the anchor to the Ship It 's that only which keeps the heart from breaking The Scripture cals it the lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 all worldly hopes are dead and fading but this hope is in the power and promise of God Now there is no way to blow up these sparks of hope into a flame so much as by praier for praier if rightly discharged being a praier of faith it must needs beget a lively hope Oh then that we had this hope of eternal glory reigning in us more Thou hast carnal hope worldly hope all the day long is spent in hoping after some earthly comfort or other but this divine hope is a stranger to thee In the third place let us consider how this glory earnestly praied for will be a cordiall against all temptations will be a reviving to the dry bones in all afflictions yea our whole life in all the changes of it is to be maintained and supported by this hope of glory It 's as necessary the Meditation of this is as the very air we live in as we cannot breath without it so neither can we live without this hope so that the things we hope for in heaven should be the bread we feed on the treasure we inrich our selves by And 1. Because this glory with God is an universall medicine to all our diseases It 's a full treasury for all our wants The Pool of Bethesda was only for one kinde of mercy he that being diseased stept in was healed of his bodily infirmity but it did not cure all other grievances it did not make a poor man rich nor a grieved man chearful or a mortal man immortall but eternal glory doth all things Thou art a Lazarus in soul and body all over full of sores Thou wantest all soul-mercies and all body-mercies here is glory that will do all for thee This is the Ocean other are but shelves This is the Sun other are but Stars In praying for glory thou praiest for all things together in one this one word glory hath every thing in it to say Lord glorifie me there is all things comprehended in it 2. This is the most sutable mercy to a gracious and spirituall heart To be glorified is to be put out
and the merits of their own works eclipse Christ Hence they are like the Moon which though it receiveth all light from the Sunne yet is the only thing that obscures and ecclipseth it by its Interposition 3. To glorifie Christ is not thus only to acknowledge him and to rest on him for these are only internal acts of the soul and so a spiritual inward glory known by God only but it 's greatly seen in the outward confession and profession of him and that to the greatest reproach and danger which can be in the world Rom. 10. With the heart man beleeveth but with the tongue profession is made to Salvation He that will be saved must in the greatest danger and most scornful reproaches own Christ and his way Thus our Saviour Luk 12.8 Whosoever shall not confesse me before a crooked generation of him my Father and I will be ashamed Certainly in this particular the Disciples did highly honour Christ for we know Christ himself was both by birth and life in a most contemptible manner There was no comelinesse or desirablenesse in him and then at last was crucified in a most ignominious manner Now for the Apostles to look on him as the Messias to have such high and indeared thoughts of him when all the world held Christ wretched and accursed and would not upon any terms be of his followers this was greatly to honour him Therefore our Saviour said Blessed is he that is not offended at me Mat. 11.6 It was the greatest wonder in the world not to stumble at Christ We see the wise men the great men that lived then they were all offended at his meannesse Is not this the Carpenters Son Mar. 4. Oh how hard would it have been for us to have received him as the Messias if we had lived in those daies for those that followed Christ they were but a handful comparatively and they were of the more despicable sort and they were accounted illiterate and mad simple people that adhered to him 4. They glorifie Christ who receive him as a Lord and King to whose Laws they willingly submit themselves For the self-love of a man may make him glad of Christ as a Saviour but then to resigne up themselves in an obediential manner to all the commands of Christ in this they draw back Christ is not to be considered only as a propitiation for our sins but also as a King who doth govern his people by holy and spiritual laws and hence we may reade that he interpreted the Law in a more spiritual and strict way Mat. 5. then the Pharisaical Doctors had done and laid the axe to the very root of all corruption within us he forbids heart-lusts heart-passions these Embers in the fire though they never flame out he cals upon all to deny themselves to take up their crosse and to follow him To love him more then Father or mother If therefore we would honour Christ it 's our duty to forsake all those rebellions we are guilty of To lay down our opposition and enmity against his commands to take his yoke upon us and to think it light and easie What an honour was it to Christ to have men leave all their outward subsistence and earthly comforts to follow him Did they not hereby declare that they prized the service of Christ more then all the world and that they accounted more of his commands then the greatest Monarchs in the world So that all who walk disorderly and contrary to Christs command they say with those in the Parable Christ shall not reign over us Though he will reign over them maugre all their disobedience if he do not govern them with the Scepter of grace he will break them with a rod of Iron 5. Those that suffer and endure all persecutions willingly for his Name and Truth They do in an high degree glorifie Christ In a special manner did Christ take notice of his Disciples because they had accompanied him in his Temptations and the Apostle Peter doth at large shew how God is glorified when men suffer not for ill doing but as Christians That as they glorifie Christ so Christ makes a spirit of glory to rest upon them 1 Pet. 4.14 Those marks Paul did bear on his body They were so many Trophees Even as Souldiers count wounds a mark of honour they have received in fight for their commander When the Disciples went away rejoycing that they were accounted worthy to suffer any thing for Christs sake This did greatly redound to Christs glory Oh then let not the people of God be afraid or shrink at reproaches dishonours and troubles for Christs sake for wherein can they glorifie him more Or can the world say upon better grounds Behold how they loved Christ and his Truth better then their estates or their lives Those millions of Martyrs that have died for Christs sake brought an astonishing even to the very heathens No Emperour or Monarch No Master or Teacher ever had such a multitude of Disciples readily sacrificing their lives so that we mistake if we think the glory of Christ hath been in such an outward pomp as earthly Kings have been No by sufferings by revilings by the most cruell deaths that malicious men could invent they made the Name of Christ glorious through the whole world Even as Christ called his own death a glorifying both of himself and his Father so did the miseries and calamities of his Children redound greatly to his honour for greater love and esteem they could not shew then by laying down their lives for him 6. Those honour Christ and glorifie him who walk in an holy and worthy manner to that calling whereby Christ hath called them 2 Thes 1.12 That the Name of Christ may be glorified in them And how was that by walking worthy of their calling Even as on the other side when men live prophanely and wickedly they reproach Christ and make the Gentiles to blaspheme the Christian way Oh that this were sadly thought upon by most Is not every Town every Family full of cursing swearing drunken and unclean persons Now these are a Reproach to Christ they make the Christian Religion a scorn and the name of it even to stink Even as Salvian a zealous Writer against the prophane lives of Christians said The heathens by way of scorn might say Christiani sanctè vixissent si Christus sancta docuisset They thought the reason why Christians had no more sober chaste and godly lives was because Christ was not an holy Law-giver he did not give them holy precepts The loosenesse and prophanesse of a Servant is a disgrace to his Master and what dishonour must this be that those who call upon Christs Name yet should live according to the devils temptations that they should say they are for Christ and their lives for Satan 7. They honour and glorifie Christ who live chearfully and comfortably in the midst of all their troubles and exercises For
whom yet they fastened many impious actions upon for certainly nature would have told them That was God quo nibil melius cogitari potest Thus the God whom Christians according to the Scripture doe serve is the onely holy and true God Thirdly He is holy in respect of his will command and approbation His word is an holy Word The Scriptures are holy Scriptures They command They approve They encourage and comfort nothing but holinesse David Psal 19. compareth them to Gold often refined that hath no drosse and Hab. 1. God is of purer eyes then to behold Iniquity viz. by approbation Therefore he is said to be angry with the wicked all the day long Oh then though other men love thee and thou art in love with thy own self yet if not holy God doth not God cannot love thee Fourthly God is holy efficiently He is the Authour and cause of all the holinesse we have Iames 1.17 Every good and perfect gift comes from him We are his Workmanship created to good works He made the Angels holy He created Adam holy yea he infused all holinesse into Christs humane Nature and therefore much rather must he cause all the holinesse that is in us Therefore Christ by praying that God would sanctifie his Disciples doth thereby teach that none can make holy but God alone Let then the proud Patrons of free-will be confounded at this They that cannot make themselves Creatures will they say ' they make themselves holy Creatures Minus est te fecisse hominem quam justum Fifthly He is finally holy That is all our holinesse is to terminate in him Holinesse doth properly respect God as the Object and therefore though a man praieth heareth giveth alms yea his body to be burnt and doth not with a pure and chaste Intention look at Gods glory in all this it is not holinesse Hence it is that many have low thoughts about holinesse and grosly mistake in it taking copper for Gold and Samuels Ghost for Samuel himself Thou art not holy till thou canst truly say in some Degree at least though with much opposition Whom have I in Heaven but God and none on Earth besides him In Heaven Heaven it self would not be heaven to a gracious heart but because God is there Sixthly God is holy exemplarily He is the Rule Pattern and Example of holinesse 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy as I am holy Levit. 20.26 So that if we would know how we are to be holy it must not be as men think or as the world prescribeth but as God is holy Not that we can attain to an equality but to a similitude onely So that the principle of the world must fall to the ground They will doe as others doe or as most doe Oh but rather Consider that God himself hath set down a Form for thee and because there is such fulnesse in him as in an Ocean therefore we have a necessity of growing every day No man is as holy as the patern therefore still he is to be perfecting Holinesse and Righteousnesse in the Fear of God 1 Cor. 7.1 Thus you have heard that God is holy But in the next place know it is our Duty to improve this Attribute for our Good For so our Saviour doth not look upon it as an absolute property in God but as that which may be profitable unto his Disciples So that we are to make use of this by Faith And that first Because when God becomes our God by the Covenant of Grace he is wholly ours and all his Attributes are for our benefit and advantage I will be their God Now God is not our God nulesse his Wisedome be ours his Holinesse be ours that is for our benefit For we cannnot separate God and these Oh then what an unwise and foolish thing is it in a Christian when he hath such a Treasure and yet will make no use of it Such a Mine and yet improveth it not In God there is holinesse for all Angels and men much more for thee Secondly God being thus absolutely good he is communicating of it and it is a Rule The more any thing is good the more diffusive it is of it self As we see in God who though glorious and happy enough in himself yet he created a world and ordained many to Eternall Glory out of his meer good pleasure and Fullnesse not that he needed or wanted any Oh then it is very acceptable and well-pleasing to God that we should come with thirsting Souls unto this Fountain and draw Water out of it That we should suck plentifully at these full Breasts and be refreshed Vse of Instruction to the People of God who are greatly afflicted under this great Temptation They are not an holy People Oh they finde sinne captivating them sinne prevailing over them but where is an holy heart holy affections and holy aims in what they doe Oh they say Could they finde they were more holy though they were poor and afflicted yet they should rejoyce Let such Consider It is their Unbelief and want of earnest Praier if they be not richly supplied and furnished in this for God is infinitely holy and he delights to communicate it The larger the Vessell is the more willing he is and will be to fill it and there cannot be any Prayer more acceptable then to begge for this above all things Vse 2. Is God thus holy Then let the most holy be humble in all their approaches to him for he is of such pure Eyes that he findes spots and blemishes yea damnable matter in thy most holy duties Angels holinesse is not proportionable to him Thirdly Of Reproof to wicked men who deride scoff and maliciously oppose holinesse What is this but to rise up against God himself Is not Holinesse the Glorious Attribute of God And do the Beams of this shining in his People offend thee This argueth thou art of a perverse and of a devilish Spirit for thou shouldest rather reverence and honour it saying Oh that I might live and dye like such holy men Indeed there are many would like Balaam die like a Godly man but not live like him as One said He would live like Croesus but die like Socrates Yet this is impossible There must be an holy Life else there will hardly be an holy Death SERMON LV. The Great Lord-Keeper of Israel from inevitable Ruine both of Body and Soul extolled JOH 17.11 Holy Father keep through thy own Name those thou hast given me c. WE have dispatched the Introductory Compellation and now proceed to the Petition it self and in that Consider 1. The mercy praied for and 2. The Amplification of it The mercy praied for is Keep The amplification is 1. From the Subject described by their Election from Eternity And 2. Actuall donation to Christ in time Those thou hast given me This is often repeated by our Saviour as being a main Argument why nothing should he denied them that were thus
be full of blemishes yet when we present Christ by Faith then there is no fault to be found Lastly The vertue of this Sacrifice is to make us like Christ himself he thinketh it not enough to be King and Priest himself but he maketh us also Kings and Priests for ever We offer up Praiers and Praises to him and by him we conquer all our spiritual Enemies The devil and our lusts are subdued Such glory have all they that are partakers of this Sacrifice Vse of Terrour to all wicked and ungodly men who by their Unbelief and Prophanesse reject this Sacrifice The Apostle Heb. 10. cals it trampling upon the bloud of Christ and accounting it a prophane thing Oh how many thousand live that have no esteem and make no account of this Sacrifice Oh remember that this is the last and ultimate Sacrifice He that rejects this hath no more hope There remaineth no more oblation for sinne There is not another Christ or another Sacrifice if thou refuse this Vse 2. Of Encouragement to the Godly Come to this Fountain that is set open for Judah and Jerusalem to cleanse in Doe not say because Christ crucified is a stumbling block and foolishnesse to wicked men that therefore thou wilt disesteem him also There is no sore but this blood will heal and cure Oh let the blood of thy soul be stanched with this blood of Christ This blood speaks good and comfortable things better then that of Abel SERMON CI. Of Sanctification as the Effect of Christs Death Shewing That no man truly believeth in Christ for Justification that doth not also for Sanctification JOH 17.19 And for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also may be sanctified through the Truth WE are now come to the end of Christs Sanctification which is two-fold the finis cui and cujus We shall put them both together for so they are conjoyned in the following clause That they might be sanctified through the Truth Wherein you have 1. The final Cause 2. The Manner of accomplishing it The final Cause That they might be sanctified and from this the Socinian would argue That Sanctification in the former clause was not meant of an oblation by way of Sacrifice because the same word is applied to the Apostles in the Text and they were not to be sacrificed for us To answer this First Some Expositours do expound it of their offering up of themselves by Martyrdom to confirm the truth for Paul professeth his willingnesse herein using the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 2.15 which was used of some kinde of their Sacrifices but we need not runne to that it 's no new thing in Scripture to use the same word in one verse in different significations and it 's a Rule Talia sunt praedicata qualia permittuntur à subjectis The Apostles then needing not such a Sanctification as Christ applied to himself but that for which he prayed in the former verse We must understand it in the same sense as there It 's true by Sanctification some also will have Justification comprehended and so speak of an imputed Sanctification but we need not stretch the word violently but understand it first Of making inwardly holy and then consequently A setting apart and dedicating our selves wholly unto God by living unto him and thence observe That Christ died not only for our Justification but Sanctification also He made himself a Sacrifice not onely to remove the guilt of sinne but to remove and subdue the power of it not onely to make us happy but also holy Let us consider What is implied in this That Sanctification comes by Christs death And First We are to know that Christ is the Cause of our Sanctification several wayes partly efficiently for not only the Father and the Spirit but Christ himself also is the cause of all the holinesse we have and therefore he is called the life because he gives all supernatural life unto his and is compared to the vine Joh. 15. because as the branch separated from the Vine can bring forth no fruit so neither is a man able without Christ to do the least holy action he is also called the Head and John 1. Of his fulnesse we are all said to receive Thus as God in the course of nature is the authour of every natural gift therefore it 's said In him we live and move and have our being Act. 17.28 So in the way of grace Christ is the authour and finisher as of our faith so of every holy work in us The Author Heb. 12.2 and therefore we cannot so much as begin or meet Christ he must prevent us and the finisher for although we have begun yet we have not the same manutenency and powerfull preservation what we have begun to build would immediately fall to the ground Thus Christ is the Alpha and Omega of our spiritual life 2. Christ is the meritorious cause of our Sanctification and therefore not only remission of sin but holinesse and zeal is made the consequent of Christs death And the Apostle doth not only Rom. 7.8 shew that we are justified by Christ but also that the body of sinne is mortified thereby Thus Heb. 10. what Sanctification that Apostate had is attributed to the blood of Christ Christ then hath as efficaciously merited holinesse as happinesse He died to destroy the workes of the devil now our captivity to him was not onely in respect of guilt but that bondage and slavery we were in to all lusts and therefore those two benefits are like Castor and Pollux one cannot be without the other 3. Christ is in some large and improper sense called the formal cause of the good in us an assistant form not informing that is Christ received and applied by faith doth in a most inward and intimate manner live in us and thereby strengtheneth us so the Apostle Gal. 2.20 I no longer live but Christ in me Here you see Christ liveth in a godly man for by faith we are united unto him and thus Christ becomes our Head from whom we have all spiritual influx Now an head is a conjoyned and united cause made one with the body and thus is Christ and his Church and therefore is that similitude of an Head and the Body so often used 4 Christ is the final cause of our Sanctification that is we are made holy to this end both that we might shew forth the praises and glory of Christ as our Redeemer as also that we should live to him and set all our affections and desires upon him desiring with Paul To know nothing but Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2.1 Secondly In that by Christs death we are sanctified there is implied That we of our selves are very impure and unclean that we are like so many noisome dunghils For our being unsanctified doth imply 1. Our filthiness or uncleanness this is the state of every man till sanctified by Christ he is like an unclean leper his
Arguments seek for it at the Fathers hands Thus Psal 2. when God there declares his will of making him King over his Church and giving the Nations of the world for an Inheritance to him it 's said Ask of me and I will give thee Christ is to ask and pray for such things So that in this respect Christ praied even as all the Godly do though God hath appointed and promised to bestow such glorious things upon his penple yet it is by way of praier that they must be possessed of them God could give them otherwise Neither do our praiers or Christs Praiers make God alter or change his minde only praier is appointed by him as that medium whereby his purpose shall be brought to passe 4. Christ praied upon the same ground as he gave thanks Now we reade he praised God severall times yea they sang an Hymn to God Praier is divided into Petition and Thanks-giving If then Christ could give God praise by the same reason he might make Petition to him He praiseth God as the Father of such mercies his Soul was affected with and so he praieth to God for such things as he had not yet the full accomplishment of Lastly These main Reasons being laid down then we may adde Christ praied for our example also It 's wonder any should be so transported with pride as to think themselves above praier that they need not to pray when we see Christ himself diligent in this Duty So that as we are to learn of him and imitate the Zeal Patience and Love that was in him so we are the Religious Conversation also of Christ which was manifested in his fervent Praiers unto God upon all occasions yet though Christ did thus pray there was a great difference between Christs Praiers and ours For first If we speak absolutely of Christ as a person so he needed not to pray for being in that respect God as well as man Therefore he could have done all things the humane Nature desired without any humble Supplication unto the Father It was then in respect of his humane nature only and his voluntary Humiliation of himself otherwise being God as well as man He might have done all things by sole power and authority Indeed there are some who hold that Christ still in Heaven as man doth pray to God the Father properly and formally in respect of his Church and so understand those places where he is said to be an Advocate with the Father and where he is said still to make intercession for us not say they that he praieth in such a servile humbled manner as he did here on Earth yet they say it 's more then meer a representation of himself or will that the Father fulfill what he hath purchased It 's true and formall praying neither say they is this any more indecent and unbeseeming Christ as man in Heaven then praising of God which yet as man he doth Howsoever this be yet it 's sure that when he did pray on earth yet it was not with such an absolute necessity and indigency as any man or the whole Church doth pray for they cannot in any Consideration help themselves 2. Neither did Christ pray for any spiritual gracious mercies These are the chiefest matter of our praier insomuch that temporall things are praied for only with a submission unto Gods Will and so farre as they conduce to our spirituall good but Christ had already received the Spirit of God in so full measure that he could not pray for further Sanctification nor for a better heart or more communion with God then he had much lesse could he pray for such things as suppose a sinnefull Imperfection in the Subject So he did not or could not pray for the pardon of sinne which yet he taught the most holy that are to pray continually for neither could he pray for justifying Faith for although he had faith and confidence in God yet he had not justifying Faith which is the relying upon Christ for Righteousnesse Neither could he pray for the conquering and subduing of corruption seeing his pure Nature remained altogether spotlesse and free from the least stain or pollution Neither 3. Were Praiers to him as they are to us means to quicken up and excite the heart to make it more Heavenly and zealous Prayer in us doth quicken and excite a man and takes off the rust upon his Soul Christ was alwaies in contemplation and enjoyment of God and therefore he did not need praier to make his soul ascend higher to God Hence in the fourth place All the matter he could pray for in reference to himself was concerning his body and the further glorifying of that for seeing it pleased him to take our body upon him in all the natural defects and infirmities thereof sinne only excepted it was necessary that he should not alwaies be in such a passible mortal way but rise again to glory dominion and all honour Now this Christ praied for as being to be obtained by praier as well as his Sufferings He praied also for assistance and deliverance in those agonies he conflicted with But in respect of his praier for the Church So he praied for their Sanctification though not for his own he praied Peters Faith might not fail he praied God would not impute sinne to some of those who did crucifie him Though he needed not such Petitions yet we do and therefore in this respect Christ praied in which we cannot imitate him for he praied as he was to offer up himself a Sacrifice for our sinnes so it behoved him also to put up praier for his people Thus you have heard how Christ was capable of Praier though God Let us now Consider the comfortable advantage of these Praiers of Christs unto us And 1. See the love of Christ that he doth remember our good in his praiers as well as his own It is not enough to pray for his own Glory but he beggeth and prayeth for ours also Paul speaketh of it as his great affection and Love to some that he made mention alwaies of them in his Prayers he never praied for himself but for them also And thus we see Christ though ready to be offered up and to die such a tormented ignominious Death So that he might justly be taken up with Praier for himself only yet he doth the same time think of his Church and all that shall beleeve in him Oh what comfortable Refreshment and Encouragement should this be to the dejected and humbled Soul That Christ doth in his Prayer remember and consider of thee as well as his own Glorification 2. This Prayer of Christ is alwaies heard We many times pray and God doth deny us because as the Apostle James saith Chapt. 4. vers 4. We ask amisse or we ask not in Faith Now Christ had every thing concurrent that might make his Prayer successefull Therefore John 11.42 Christ there professeth God the Father heard him alwaies In
became man and was thus furnished with all fitnesse to be a Mediatour because we could not be without him It behoved us saith the Apostle Heb 7.26 to have such a High-Priest that was holy and unspotted separated from sinners that needed not to offer for his own sins 5. We reade that not only habitual grace was given him in respect of his humane nature but also the spirit of God was bestowed on him and though this be thought by the Socinians a pregnant Argument because he that is God cannot have the Spirit of God given him Now to this we readily grant that not only the graces and gifts of Gods Spirit but the Spirit it self also was bestowed on him So the Prophet Isa 11.2 The spirit of the Lord is said to rest on him the spirit of wisedom and counsell Thus Act. 1.2 he is said through the holy Ghost to give Commandments unto the Apostles whom he had chosen but yet this doth not take off from his God head for first the assistance and operation of the holy Ghost was only in respect of his humane nature for as by the holy Ghost his humane body was prepared and fitted So also his rationall soul by the same holy spirit was sanctified and made the holy One It was not therefore in respect of his divine nature but his humane that he had the holy Ghost working in him and if you say What necessity was there of the holy Ghost Seeing his divine nature was able to assist and sanctifie his humane nature It 's answered that the holy spirit being the third person cannot be separate from the Father and the Sonne though therefore Christ as the second person was able to do all things yet because where the Father and Son is there also is the holy Ghost therefore that works also as the other not that the other persons need it but because of the inseparability Even as the Father did at first create all things by the Son not that he was insufficient or impotent without him but because of their intimate Union 6. That which we do so eminently reade of in the Scripture is the glory power and honour that the Father gave him upon fullfilling the work of Redemption for us Act. 2.36 God hath made Jesus both Lord and Christ he was made Lord Now that dominion is not his essentiall dominion which he had as God for so he could not be made any more Lord then God but his Mediatory Dominion whereby he is exalted above all and rules all things for the good of his people So Phil. 2.9 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him giving him a Name above all Names c. In these and many other places we reade of wonderfull Majesty and glory bestowed upon him and that upon his humiliation and voluntary obedience in reference to us but although the Scripture doth evidently speak of this glory and power given him yet this doth not take off from his God-head For 1. It is one thing to speak of the giving of the right and property to a thing another thing to speak of the possession of it It 's true indeed Christ upon his Resurrection had the possession of all that glory and honour which the Word mentioneth but yet he had right to it farre before and therefore we reade of divine wotship given to him before his Resurrection as also of a Kingdom he had and that he could work what Miracles he pleased and so he believing God had a right to all that glory which could any waies be superadded to him 2. This dominion and glory given to him is so farre from evacuating his Godhead that it doth rather necessarily presuppose it for who can be made the Judge of the whole world who can be exalted to be the King of Saints and the Nations but he who hath infinite wisedom power and greatness Vse 1. Doth Christ receive all that he hath not for himself but for his members then what great encouragements and hopes have all the people of God for though they have not enough yet Christ hath Though the starre hath not light enough to dispell the day yet the Sun hath Though the stream cannot refresh yet the Fountain hath water enough Oh therefore that beleevers would more enlarge and quicken themselves up with hopes in Christ That they would live on his fulnesse That they would depend on his fulness God gives thee grace and many gifts but what he hath given Christ that must be thy only support Vse 2. How wofull the condition of all wicked men is who are separated from Christ for if all fulnesse come by him then none of this can be derived to thee The devil will give of the torments he hath to thee not Christ of his glory SERMON CXXV Vnity among Christians is part of that Glory Christ hath purchased for them JOH 17.22 That they may be one even as we are one THough this Unity of believers so earnestly prayed for hath been at large treated of yet because here again repeated I shall consider it relatively as it stands with respect to the fore-going words Christ giveth his glory he received from the Father to those that believe in him That they may be one Now the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here as in other places may be taken either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the end of this glory or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as specifying what is part of that glory which he giveth to them for so some understand this as describing and determining what that glory is he would give them viz. the glory of unity and agreement which as Chrysostom observeth was more admirable then that of signes and doctrines which they abounded in Their unity did more glorifie them then their miracles Others they understand it as the end and fruit of that glory they received by Glory understanding all the heavenly benefits and priviledges vouchsafed unto them From these Interpretations conjoyned and the relative capacity the words stand in I observe That Vnity among Believers is part of that Glory which Christ as Mediatour hath obtained for them For Christ speaks here as Mediatour in whom and by whom only the spiritual unity of believers can be obtained In this Doctrinal Proposition three particulars are observable 1. That Unity among believers is part of that spiritual glory Christ purchased for them 2. That Christ as Mediatour purchased Unity as well as other priviledges 3. That Believers cannot have Unity but from Christ till he command these dry bones to come together and be united they lie scattered up and down Let us consider First That Vnity is part of the Churches glory It 's their Glory both actively and passively Their glory actively they may in an humble and holy manner rejoyce in it Not indeed as the Papists who confidently and falsly triumph in their Unity but in a godly and sober manner for if schisms and divisions in the Church did so greatly divide and
rend Pauls heart no doubt but their Unity and accord did as much rejoyce him Therefore how emphatically doth he speak Phil. 2.1 2. If any consolation if any bowels fulfill ye my joy that ye may be like minded c. It 's then the Ministers glory and the Churches glory to walk in lovely accord when in the Church as in Solomons Temple the voice of the hammer is not heard whenas God promised in respect of temporal peace The sword should be turned into plow-shares so the controversal and polemical part of Divinity shall be changed into the practical and affectionate part Again It 's the glory of the Church passively in this sense that for it we are exceedingly to glorifie and praise God We should look upon the spiritual peace of the Church as a greater mercy then all external mercies What an heavy thing is it when Jerusalem shall be made a Babel when the Church shall be like the chaos and confusion that was made at first when God shall bring such a spiritual judgement on the Church as sometimes he did a temporal one upon the enemies thereof Every mans weapon against his neighbour till they had destroyed one another When therefore we see God forming the hearts of believers to uniting terms this we ought to praise God for as being a special means to promote Christs Kingdom Now it 's the glory of believers to be at Unity 1. Because this will exalt them in the very hearts and thoughts of their greatest enemies What is glory but the clara notitia the famous acknowledging of the excellency of such a thing Now nothing will sooner divulge the fame and like the heavens make the noise thereof to go through the Land then unity and agreement As Solomons wisdom spread it self over the world Insomuch that many came from afar to see and admire it Thus it will be also for the Churches accord therefore the Psalmist put an Ecce upon it Behold how good and comely it is for brethren to be of one accord Psal 133.1 2. Thus you heard The Heathens admired the love of primitive Christians Ecce quam se mu●uo diligenti fratres vocant whereas now we may say Behold how they hate and oppose one another calling one another by all uncharitable names It 's unity then that makes the Churches fame to be over the world 2. Vnity is the glory of the Church because it ariseth from the beauty and pulchritude of it The beauty of a thing is the glory of it now beauty doth arise from the sweet harmony and proportion of all the parts and this is the unity of the Church when every member thereof is harmoniously joyned unto another when there is no dissonancy or difference Certainly It 's a better wish to see the Church in this glory then that of Austins to see Rome in all her temporal glory If any member be deformed or unproportionable to the other parts How unlovely and uncomely doth it make that body So it is here if any make a rent be proud froward or opposite the glory thereof is departed 3. It 's part of their glory because the happinesse and blessednesse of a Church is in their Communion-graces A Church denoteth some society and company Now the advantage of such improvements is by union if one part of the body be divided from the other there is no suppeditation of mutual help therefore there are nerves and ligaments in the body to unite each part to other You see in a civil society if there be not union the glory of it presently dieth divisions like moths rise from within and do immediately consume If then the happinesse of believers lie in their communion-graces and duties What can be more glorious then unity which is the only means to procure subserviency to one another as if several Cities were supplied by pipes of water one to another if those pipes be stopt or cut it brings a necessary destruction The second main particular is That Christ purchased as Mediatour this priviledge as well as others He did not onely die to justifie them to sanctifie them but to unite them also And this should teach us several things As 1. It should not be accounted a slight and little sinne to make any breaches or divisions in Gods Church to do any thing through strife and vain-glory Why because Christ died against this he as Mediatour intended not onely to save his people but to bring them into one Why then dost thou by thy contentions by thy heretical opinions thus sinne against Christs death his intercession and his prayer are for the same effects Now you see in this Chapter that his prayer for unity is ingeminated over and over again and therefore Christ had this even in his thoughts in his very death hence it was that also at his death he appointed the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which though chiefly to seal Gods grace to us yet it did also signifie the love we ought to have to one another as the Apostle urgeth 1 Cor. 10. that as the several corns make up one bread thus do the godly make up one mystical body Divisions then in the Church are against Christs death and against the Sacrament of his death Shall we therefore runne into such sinnes that have such an hainous aggravation 2. That the people of God where they see these divisions are to improve this Argument for Vnity Even as when they groan under any corruption and would gladly have the mastery of it they runne to the blood of Christ praying O Lord Did not Christ die that these sinnes might die Was not Christ crucified to crucifie these lusts So it ought to be in matter of unity Oh Lord make all thy people of one heart of one minde and spirit because Christ died for this also let not his death be in vain Thou wouldst not suffer his bones to be broken nor his garment divided why then shall his Church be torn and divided Do not think humane policies and invented syncretisms will be able to soder together It must be this blood of Christ that obtaineth this 3. Christ did not onely meritoriously purchase this Vnity by his death but in him exemplarily and formally we are made one So that Christ is both the moral cause of this unity and the exemplar also for he by being both God and man in one Person made God and man one when there was such an infinite distance before there is made the most intimate union that can be even an hypostatical union between God and man Now though we cannot attain to such an union yet by reason of this all believers are made one with God and amongst themselves Hence is that often expression of our being in him of ingraffing in him of living in him all which do denote our intimate union with him so that as Christ is not divided in himself The Divine Nature doth not will one thing and the humane Nature the contrary
in the Vine and vers 5 6. he doth not onely speak of our being in Christ but Christs being in us Abide in me and I in you and again He that abideth in me and I in him by which expressions it appeareth that these are two distinct things our being in Christ and Christs being in us and indeed one is the cause of the other the preserver and continuer of the other for because Christ is in us giving daily influence and supply therefore we are kept in him To open this To open this Consider First That the Scripture doth not only say Christ is in a believer but he liveth in him As Paul Gal. 2.20 And this denoteth That Christs presence in us is operative and active for as life in a man quoad actum primum doth alwayes more or lesse sensibly put forth life quoad actum secundum Thus it is with Christ he is in the soul not as he was once in the ship asleep and so ceasing from any action but he liveth in us for even as God in respect of the creatures doth still work by Conservation as at first by Creation so that if he did but for a moment with-draw his influence this whole fabrick would fall into nothing Thus it is also in respect of Grace As Christ did at first put supernatural life into us so did he not continually act and enliven us we should quickly become dead in our sinnes but Christ liveth in us And if you say How then comes it about that so many times Christ seemeth to be gone from the soul that he hath left his habitation that no life or workings of Christ appear That may be answered afterwards Onely for the present know That Christ is the Sunne of Righteousnesse Mal. 4.2 which ariseth with healing in his wings and he is the Tree of Life yea he cals himself in the abstract I am the life John 11.25 And therefore if thy heart be dead dull formal the defect is not from Christ living but by sinfull obstructions by sinne in thee Even as it is said of Christs Countrey He could doe no miracles there because of their unbelief Mark 6.6 But as Christ is said to live in believers so to abide in them and that denoteth more then living for Christ were it not for the Covenant of Grace made sure in his blood might have lived in the godly but his life in us might have passed away as our life and like a shadow As God for a long while was with the people of Israel in a Tabernacle that moved up and down before he was in a Temple fixed Thus God was graciously present in Adam in the Apostate Angels but this presence was ambulatory onely now through Christ he hath fixed his abode with us he comes and so dwels with us that he will never go from us When therefore Christ hath once begun to live in thee he will alwayes abide so Christ is alwayes in thy soul though thou mayest not perceive it yea the Scripture doth not onely say Christ abideth in us but that he dwelleth in us Ephes 3.17 Now dwelling doth denote that intimatenesse and familiarity as also that care and cost Christ is willing to bestow on our souls No man that is able will suffer his house he liveth in to runne to decay and to fall into utter ruines and indeed the house cannot take care for it self but the master doth Thus it is here Christ will not suffer his own dwelling-place to fall into decayes he will see it be repaired It will be Christs losse as well as the beleevers Secondly Because there are erroneous and dangerous conceits about Christs being in his people Let us first remove the false wayes and then assert the true As 1. When Christ is said to be in his people That is not to be understood as if there were a confusion of their beings or as if they were made one reall and physical person with him for thus some have dangerously affirmed That we are Christed with Christ and made one reall person with Christ It is true Christ and his people make up one spiritual and mystical Person They are not to be considered as two no more then the Head and the body yet it 's an hainous errour as also high non-sense to affirm such a being of Christ in us as that we are turned into Christ There are among the Popish devout Writers those that are called M●sti●i Theologi as if they onely did enter into the Holy of Holies and all other Writers were but meer literarists and these speak much of such raptures and elevation of the soul that in these pangs it doth lose its own being and is transessentiated into God Many sublime and unintelligible expressions they have such as the Paracelsians amongst Physicians Now what these say about God many have an imitating language of in respect of Christ but when Christ is said to live and dwell in us you must not conceive as if we were turned into Christ or Christ in us we must not fancy such an imagination as the Papists do about Transubstantiation thinking that the bread is turned into the very body of Christ Hence in the second place It 's horrible blasphemy which some would inferre from Gods or Christs being in us That they doe not sinne at all They work not but God or Christ in them Calvin of old wrote against such Libertines affirming That by their horrid doctrines they made God worse then the Devil And of late there have been some who have boldly vomited this poison of the red Dragon let them commit never such abominable and notorious crimes they doe not sinne Why Because Christ is in them But though Christ live in the godly in a spiritual sense yet they do not lose their personall being or operations It 's not Christ that repents or believeth in them but they themselves though he efficiently help to these duties much lesse is it Christ that sinneth or commits iniquity in them Thirdly When Christ is said to be in us this is not to be understood as if he were bodily living in us as if his body were received into our body No the body of Christ is now exalted at the right hand of God in glory And howsoever the Lutherans do hotly dispute for the ubiquity of Christs body yet that is to kick against the pricks The Scripture is clear That his body is so in Heaven that it is not corporeally any where else It 's true all beleevers do partake of whole Christ of his Person and therefore of his body as well as of his Divine Nature but the participation of his body is not after a bodily manner he doth not live and dwell in us bodily It 's true in the Virgin Mari●s womb Christ was there once bodily but not so in the wombs of other women Neither had she been happy meerly through that had not Christ even then lived spiritually in her heart Fourthly Neither
after that heavenly unity to have it with the Church here in grace as it shall be with the Church hereafter in glory And certainly if this were not accomplished in Heaven then there would not be all tears wiped away nor would the reproach of Jerusalem cease Thus you have heard what it is that makes this unity of believers consummate and perfect Now let us consider What is the cause of this and that we shall finde to be no humane strength or outward wisdome and policy but the lively communication of grace inabling thereunto by Christ himself Though the Papist pleades That the acknowledgement of one visible Head in the Church is the onely means to preserve unity yet experience sheweth the falsenesse of it The divisions and breaches of the godly like those of Reuben have made sad workings of heart and many have come running in with their water to quench this fire Several Antidotes have been prescribed against this corruption but yet when all is done It 's the onely power of Jesus Christ as Head of his Church that workes this sweet Harmony It 's true indeed many rules and pacificall means are commended by wise and godly men to make an unity but these work onely morally and swasorily that which doth as it were physically and really worke it is the Lord Christ himselfe as the fountain of this unity And the reason is because this unity among believers is not onely externall but internall and spirituall Now no man can worke this unity in the hearts of the godly any more then he can worke purity and holinesse Therefore we see in the Text That because Christ is in us and the Father in Christ therefore are the godly perfected in one so that it requireth a Divine Supernaturall power to make the godly at heavenly accord even as it doth to make them godly Hence it is that in this prayer Christ commendeth it to God to work it as being beyond all humane power to effect it Now Christs being in a believer is a cause of these things in reference to their unity First He is thereby a cause of the Vnity it self For we told you This unity though externall yet is chiefly spirituall and internall viz. The harmonious knitting and joyning of all the Members of Christ together in him their Head Now this being wholly spirituall none can effect it but God alone for naturally we are dis-joyned from God and full of contrariety to him Therefore to be made a member of Christ and implanted into him cannot be by any other but the Spirit of God As those dry bones in Ezekiel could not of themselves gather together nor can a Cyen graft it self into a stock Thus it is here till the Spirit of God joyne us to Christ we are enemies and adversaries unto him That power therefore which gives grace that onely unites As in the naturall body the same cause which makes a member makes it also a united member Insomuch that in all the fractions and divisions we see amongst the godly we ought to have our eyes up more to God to consider that power which makes them holy must unite them and indeed to make them gracious and holy is the greater work yea unity would flow by a necessary resultancy from our membership in Christ but that still our corruptions are too strong and apt to disturb all Secondly Christs being in us is not onely the cause of our Vnity but also of the harmonious sutable proportion to each other We have an admirable description of this harmonious sutablenesse in the unity of Christs body Colos 2.19 Ephes 4.15 16. For the first It 's a Text full of rich and glorious matter and to understand it consider What it is that the Apostle makes the cause why those false Teachers did advance the worship of Angels introduce humane traditions and all to set up other means and wayes of Justification then the Scripture hath appointed It is saith he because they hold not the Head So that every Christian in the matter of all spirituall concernments is still to look up to Christ as the Head and not to let him goe and this he amplifieth from a two-fold precious effect of this Head The first respects the union of beleevers to Christ and so the body is said by joynts to receive nourishment that as the body hath it's nourishment suppeditated by those natural helpes so hath every Christian from Christ Now the joynt that suppeditates these spirituall helps is chiefly the Spirit of God So Romans 8.9 If any man have net the Spirit of Christ he is none of his So that as that is not a member truely united to the Head which is not informed with the same forme the Head is so neither is that Christian really united to Christ which wants the Spirit of Christ Now the Spirit of Christ is here said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To administer nourishment The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie to supply all those ornaments which were necessary to such as kept their sacred dancings and festivities but here it signifieth the supply of those things that are necessary for our spirituall end and the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added amplifieth it denoting the full plentifull and abundant supply it giveth So that you see it 's Christs Spirit not ours which doth thus inable us The second benefit flowing from Christ our Head is of the Members themselves They by bands are knit together Now the band here is chiefly also the Spirit of God though gifts and graces doe ordinarily unite So the Apostle 1 Cor. 12.13 For we all by one Spirit are baptized into one body So that the Spirit of God which is in Christ doth also work in all beleevers inflaming and exciting to such graces whereby they have intimate communion one with another Now from these two benefits conjoyned we have the admirable fruit thereof that the body groweth with the increase of God The spirituall growth of Christians as in the body is called The increase of God partly because God onely is the efficient and cause of it partly formally because the nature of this increase is divine and heavenly partly finally because it is to the glory and honour of God So that by all this we see Every true member of Christ is a thriving and growing member and that harmoniously according to it's respective nature and all this comes wholly by the Spirit of Christ so that an unity in the harmonious increase of it depends solely upon him By this Explication the other fore-mentioned Text may also be discovered Lastly Christs being in us is the cause of the perpetuity and constancy of that Vnity the godly have This Union in Christs body can never be dissolved As the Personall Union of Christ could never be divided so neither the mysticall Therefore our sound Divines doe well from Christs in-dwelling in us propugne and assert the perseverance of the Saints Vse of Instruction
A second real effect of the Fathers love is Glorification of Christ The glory that Christ was to have after his sufferings is often mentioned in the Scripture In this Chapter we see our Saviour earnestly praying for it and after his Resurrection we reade how highly he was exalted and what glory he was lifted up into now the Father loveth all believers with the same efficacy as they suffer with Christ so they shall reign with him here they are said not only to be sons but heirs and co-heirs with Christ they shall sit on thrones of glory with Christ Thus Gods love runs in the same effects to Christ and us SERMON CXXXII Sheweth of what high concernment it is to the men of the world to know how greatly Believers whom they hate and persecute are beloved of God JOH 17.23 That thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me THe glorious priviledge of a believer hath been considered from this priviledge viz. that they and Christ are imbraced with the same love and are made co-heirs with Christ Now before we conclude this an Objection doth present it self to this purpose It may seem that the Father loveth us more then Christ for he giveth him to be a ransom and price for us Christ is made a curse dieth an ignominious and a painfull death not for himself but for us by which it may appear that the Fathers love is more to us then to him for he delivers him to death that we might live he is made a man of sorrows and full of grief to provide consolation for us so that Christ seemeth to be but the means and we the end and the end hath more amability and appetibility in it then the means But to this these things may be returned by way of answer First That Christ when he died for us and procured our salvation he did it as an efficient cause by his own inward worth and power So that our spiritual mercies are not so much to be considered the end of Christs death as the effects of it So that we may truly say what the people did to David in an higher manner to Christ Thou art worth ten thousand of us yea then all believers So that Christ died not for us in such a way as when a Martyr dieth for the truth or a private person for the Common-wealth for these die to preferre a greater good above the less The truth of God is more worth then any mans life The publique good is more precious then the temporal advantage of any one man and in these instances the lesser good is lost for the greater but when Christ was thus afflicted by the Father for us this was that a greater good might obtain a lesser for in Christs blood there was plenty and all fulness to redeem his people so that we are not to look on Christ dying as a meer passive means ordained for us but as an active means by the causality and vertue whereof our eternal good is accomplished Secondly The Father doth not love us more then Christ though for a while he was made miserable for us for Christs willing offering up of himself to this Sacrifice did infinitely draw out the love of God to him So that the Father loved him the more because he would out himself from the exercise and actual enjoyment of his Fathers love for a season that he was contented for a time to be in those agonies and conflicts grapling with the sense of his Fathers displeasure for this very reason his Father did infinitely love him so Christ himself witnesseth Job 10.17 Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life for my sheep and herein was the Fathers love and acceptance seen that upon his sufferings the Father exalted him to such transcendent glory exalting him above every name that is named So that although many Divines say Christ merited nothing for himself yet others say with great confidence That the Covenant which was made with Christ as our Mediatour did promise him all that mediatorial honour and glory which he enjoyed upon the discharge of his Suretiship and this they make to be the principal and great thing intended by God viz. the exaltation of Christ and giving of him such transcendent glory onely they confesse this glory of Christ doth redound for our good but that which was principally aimed at in the Fathers agreement with Christ was the glorious rewarding of him Thirdly Though Christ was given for us yet this doth not follow that we were loved more then Christ Because the Father laid no more upon him then he was willing and able to bear So that Christ conquered all his enemies neither sinne nor death were able to over-master him and therefore he was for a season under these sufferings that we might be made happy to all eternity If indeed the Father had left him in a perpetual desertion and suffered his body to see corruption for ever to procure our peace then it would have followed that he preferred us before his Sonne but that could not be What was ordered to befall him was no more then he could bear and quickly remove and therefore Christ lost nothing by becoming our Saviour and yet we also are made happy thereby Fourthly Therefore Christ was loved more then us though he died for us Because the ultimate end of his death was that we being redeemed by his death might acknowledge him our Lord and for ever live to his praise and glory So that the salvation of believers is but a proxim and immediate end of Christs death that which is ultimate that which was principally intended was that we being thus ransomed might to all eternity set forth the praises and glory of him who thus loved us to death Vse of Exhortation To behold and admire the unspeakable love of the Father to all believers That he joyneth Christ and them in the same love the same heaven the same glory for kinde that Christ hath all believers likewise shall partake of Even as for wicked men the same hell the same damnation and torments which are prepared for the devil and his Angels are also appointed for the ungodly If D●vid said Seemeth it a light matter to be made a son-in-law to the King then yet Sauls purpose was not to make him like Jonathan and co-heir with him of that temporal Kingdom How much more should this affect us which the Father doth for us Oh say and often say Blessed Father is this a little matter for such a poor weak sinner to be taken into the same chariot of glory with Christ to have love like his glory to his as Abigail said to David when he sent for her to make her his wife she acknowledged her unworthiness Make me one of thy hand-maids said she So O Lord if I have a drop of water a morsel of bread this is enough for me but to be taken into fellowship with Christ and co-heir with him This
should be justified Though David was Gods servant and that after his own heart yet he could not be justified and so not saved unless God did graciously forgive what was imperfect Oh then how greatly should this humble us when we shall consider we never did any thing in our lives though in the most holy manner but it needed a pardon as Nehemiah when he mentioned the many particulars he had done for God and desired to be remembred for them yet added also that he might be spared and have mercy shewed unto him Nehem. 13.22 2. It 's the gift of God because any gracious action is so farre from making a man to merit at Gods hand that he is thereby the more obliged and bound to God So that the more holy he is the lesse he can deserve because in that he is the more indebted unto God So that it is absurd to think that because God hath heaped more mercies upon us that therefore still we deserve more but rather to acknowledge that both grace here and glory hereafter is wholly from the gift of God 3. Glory cannot be the proper and natural reward of our grace Because of the vast disproportion and distance which is between one and the other Alas what is an act of faith or love or patience or all of them put together which have been in the short time of this life unto all eternity If thy body hath endured the pains of Martyrdom for an hour what is that to have honour glory and freedom from all pain with unspeakable joy and delight to all eternity Vse To humble the best of Gods servants under the highest exercises of grace How often doth the devil and thy own corrupt heart upon any holy duty puff thee up and make thee secure and confident seeking for Justification by something in thy own self How apt to think thy self better then others and to trust in thy own heart Is not this to say thou comest to heaven and happinesse by thy own power How often doth God speak to the people of Israel that they should not say they entered into the Land of Canaan for their righteousness If for a temporal mercy they were to take heed their hearts were not lifted up much more for heaven it self If Jacob said Gen. 32.10 He was lesse then the least of Gods mercies much more then the greatest SERMON CXXXIV Of immediate Enjoyment of and Communion with Christ in Heaven as the Complement of mans happinesse JOH 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am THE next thing considerable is the object matter of this Petition which is two-fold 1. To be where Christ is 2. To behold the glory which the Father had given him Let us Consider the first particular To be with Christ where Christ is and Austin doth well observe that he doth not pray They may be where he is for though a man be wretched and miserable he is where Christ is but not with Christ as saith he a blinde man may be where the light is but not with the light It 's therefore added to be with him where Christ is and that denoteth the gracious and happy enjoyment of him Some understand it of Christs gracious presence here vouchsafed to beleevers but the context doth more genuinely comprehend the former For our Suviour was now to be no longer in this world and besides the expression of being with God and Christ in the Scripture-sence is proper to that eternal felicity and glory which they are made partakers of only the doubt may be if it be understood of glorious presence with Christ why Christ speaks in the present tense where I am Some answer that this is to be understood in respect of his divine nature by which he was alwaies glorious Others understand it spoken in the present because he was very immediatly to be glorified every way and then it may well be received There are some who make this Argument that this must be understood of a glorious presence not a gracious because say they of a gracious presence the phrase alwaies is God is with us but of a glorious presence We are with God but though this may be admitted as the most common expression yet some few instances may be shewed to the contrary Therefore the former Reasons especially if we adde the words following That they may behold my glory which seem to be exegeticall of what went before will evidence that we must understand the sence of that happy eternall presence with Christ in heaven Obs That the greatest part of our glory and happinesse which we shall have in heaven lieth in this that then we shall be with Christ and have immediate Communion with the Lord Though we are apt to look upon the happinesse of heaven as it freeth from all pains and torments as it delivers us from the curse and vengeance of God yet that which is indeed the sublime and chief part of our happinesse is that we shall there have an immediate enjoyment of God and Christ It 's asserted as a Truth that the greatest misery in hell is in the poena damni not in the poena sensus and Chrysostome considering that dreadfull Sentence pronounced Depart ye cursed into everlasting fire makes these words depart to be farre more terrible then eternall fire The doctrine of heaven and hell was not so fully and evidently preached in the Old Testament as in the New yet even then we have David thus breaking forth into an holy passion Whom have I in heaven but thee and whom in earth in comparison of thee Psal 73.25 Whom in heaven but thee implying that heaven would not be heaven if God were not there and that in heaven he looketh not to Angels or Saints there but God himself Now though the happinesse of heaven be described from other particulars yet that this is the sum of all may appear from these two places Phil. 1.23 where you finde Paul in a divine perplexity and heavenly streight whether he should desire to live or die and although for the Churches good he is contented to live yet absolutely and simply his desire was to depatt and why because this was to be with Christ which is farre better So then this was that which so moved Paul to be no longer in this world viz to be with Christ No doubt Paul had many godly Friends in seeing whose faces and enjoying their company he took great delight and this he often expresseth but all these are nothing to Christs Company Thus to godly hearts though it be a great comfort to enjoy their Wives and Children yet when raised by grace they can preferre the company of Christ above all The second place is 1 Thess 47. when the Apostle in a divine and ravishing manner had treated on the Resurrection then he mentioneth this as the summe and Complement of all our felicity that we shall be with the Lord for ever To
received into his presence but it is for our good solely and certainly if the Queen of Sheba pronounced Solomons servants happy because they were alwaies in his presence how unspeakable shall the happinesse of all beleevers be who shall constantly behold and enjoy Christs glory But let us Consider more largely what was only hinted before viz. How much is comprehended in this expression of beholding Christs glory And first There is the immediate seeing and looking upon all that Majesty and Glory which God and Christ have This is often called by Divines Beatisical vision The sight of God which makes immediatly happy Now because God is an infinite and spirituall invisible Object It 's disputed whether we shall behold God by our bodily eyes That with our understanding which are the spiritual eyes of the Soul we shall behold him is acknowledged by all and clear by Scripture for then we shall see him face to face that is perfectly not as in this world And as for the beholding of God as a Spirit with our bodily eyes there are Divines that affirm it for although say they it be naturally impossible for a bodily eye to see a Spirit yet then God will in a wonderfull manner lift up the eye of the body above that which naturally it can do even as then God will make it a body without passion or heavinesse and as they say the torments in hell and the flames of fire there do by Gods power work upon the devils and the souls of men though spirits in hell But it may be a curiosity to determine this Therefore though it may be doubted whether our bodily eyes shall directly behold the glory and majesty of God yet consequentially we shall for we shall with our bodily eyes behold Christ in respect of his humane nature and body which he hath now in heaven so that the Glory which Christ as Mediatour hath in heaven is externally visible and to be beheld by the bodily eyes of a glorified Saint So that although God be a Light that no man can approach unto yet in and through Christ we may draw nigh unto this light Now this happinesse of the souls knowing and the bodies seeing of God and Christ in heaven must be unspeakable for there is an excellent consonancy and conveniency between the faculties and the objects how farre do men go to see objects of worldly glory It was Austins wish that he might have seen Rome in her temporal glory but what is all this to see Christ sitting on the right hand of God on the throne of glory 2. All our happinesse doth not lie in the meer beholding and seeing of God but in the enjoying of him as our happinesse and our good Therefore we are said to be Co-heirs with Christ and to be glorified with him yea in the Rev. 3.21 we are said to sit on the same Throne with Christ himself not but that Christ hath a prerogative in his glory and his glory is incommunicable yet in some proportion and according to our capacity we are made partakers of the same glory Therefore it 's necessary to take seeing for enjoying here and indeed it cannot be but that the immediate beholding of Christ should make men happy for he is an object filled with all sufficiency and perfection able to satiate and replenish the appetite of the soul even to the very utmost Oh therefore how easily should we mortifie our hearts as to earthly and worldly glory who would lose this heavenly glory to obtain that Let the devil shew thee all the glory of this world but know Christ in his word sheweth thee the glory of heaven and wilt thou fall down to worship the devil rather then Christ so that we do not only behold and see Christs glory without some enjoyments as Moses did see the Land of Canaan but was not admitted into it but we see the expression is Come thou faithfull Servant enter into thy Masters Joy Mat. 25.23 Not only behold it but enter into it Oh that our hearts were more affected in this 3. From the seeing and enioying of Christ there doth arise in the will infinite complacency joy and delight It 's disputed wherher happinesse be more in the acts of the understanding or the will and some conclude that it is principally in the will because that is an active appetite and predominant in a man Indeed the whole of a man Now in beholding of God the whole soul must needs be swallowed up for God is an object infinitely satisfying the knowledge and also replenishing the will so that nothing but God can satisfie the soul and this happinesse is the more encreased because God will then widen and enlarge the faculties of the soul that they shall be able to know more to love and delight more then they can do in this life Therefore our joy here is but a drop to this Ocean as we know but in part so we rejoyce and delight but in part Hence it is if God should communicate himself to us in this life as he will do in heaven we were not able to bear no more then the eye can endure the dazeling beams of the Sun it would be true that none can see God in this sence and live so that in heaven the souls of men will be enlarged to receive more of God then they can do in this life 4. From this joy and delight in beholding Christs glory their mouths will be filled with all praise and thanks-giving We reade of Angels and Saints continually praising of God in heaven so that whereas many duties will cease in heaven this of Thanks-giving will abide for ever there shall be no more the duties of humiliation and mourning the acts of patience and justifying faith will cease in heaven but the duty of praising and glorifying God will continue to all Eternity And no wonder if praise be our only work there for if upon some temporall Deliverance and particular eminent mercies the Church of God hath solemnly broken forth into all praises of him how much more in heaven when there is such an universall Deliverance from all Enemies that there will be no more tears or fears There will be no more matter of complaints either from within or without Oh then that blessed time which beleevers shall have in Heaven to all Eternity Nothing to do but with joy and gladnesse to sing forth the praises of God and that his Mercy endureth for ever Oh beloved how should this make the godly long for and desire that glory more Here they are in a Valley of Tears here they are sighing groaning exercised with one care one fear after another Thus we are groveling upon the ground while they in Heaven are full of joy and delight This should teach us to be weaned from these things 5. To the performing of all these things there is required a perfect Sanctification of all the parts and the faculties of the Soul as also a full
all majesty and divine honour was in a state of humiliation and he was in a form of a servant even then when he was equal to God and as David when he came to the actuall possession of the Kingdom did come to it by degrees first at Hebron in s●me part and then afterwards in Jerusalem over all Israel Thus the Lord Christ while on earth had severall discoveries of his divine glory and honour but the full enjoyment of it was upon his ascension and hence it is that here he speaks he was loved before the foundation of the world because the Father had appointed this glory to him from all Eternity Thus we have handled this love as it relateth to Christ but you must know that it doth not concern him only but it belongs also to the whole Church of God So that herein is involved our greatest consolation for there are these particulars contained in it 1. That Christ and we are comprehended in one act as it were of Gods love and his Election So that although we may and must conceive a priority and posteriority in signo rationis as they say yet in naturâ they are together for seeing that the Father did predestinate him to be head of his Church and so doth love him as head of his Church it must necessarily follow that the Church also which are members to Christ their head must be included in that Election for the head and the body cannot be severed Now doth not this wonderfully make for the glory and comfort of Gods people that at the same time Christ was appointed to be a Mediatour They also are ordained to be saved by him As soon as ever he was made the head they were made the body In this respect it is that Christ and believers are said to make up one mysticall person and by this means what Christ had and did is communicated unto us 2. Here followeth the Eternity of Gods love to us For seeing that Christ was loved before the foundation of the world So also must we for we are chosen in him Eph. 1.4 from all Eternity So that although the effects of Gods love are vouchsafed to us in time yet the purpose to do this was from all Eternity Oh then the overflowing love of God to a beleever how should this melt thy heart and be like fire in thy bowels when thou hadst no thought of thy self when no friend could speak a word for thee yet even then God had thoughts of mercy towards thee 3. Here is the perpetuity and immutability of the Fathers love to thee for he cannot repent in his love as men may They sometimes love those who prove otherwise then they expected They never thought such would prove so forgetfull and therefore repent of all the kindenesse that ever they shewed them but it is not so with God for he foreknew all that ever we would do he knew our sins our unkindnesses our rebellions and yet for all this intended love to us so that God cannot say these men are greater sinners prove more unkinde to me then ever I thought they would have No the only wise God cannot be subject to such errour besides men may love those where they repent afterwards because they cannot make them good whom they love the more they love it may be the persons loved do become the worse by it but it is not so with God whom he loveth he makes holy This is one great effect of his love to put his Image into them to make them walk in fear of him all the day long Thus God will immutably love because he will alwaies keep up grace in the hearts of those where he hath begun it Furthermore This love is perpetuall because in Christ We are now joyned to him by an Union that can never be dissolved When Christ ceaseth to be an head then we shall cease to be his body So that the perseverance of the Saints is built on this rock they are elected in Christ and are in time united to him and therefore shall never be cast off no more then the Father will cease to love Christ as an head but these things were in part spoken to before Vse Doth the Father thus love Christ Then what strong arguments have we to believe and be confident in all those Petitions which are put up in Christs Name Hath Christ praied for thy Sanctification for thy preservation that the evil of the world may not infect thee Know Christ is so loved that nothing can be denied him What if the Father love not thee for thy own sake what if he see no lovelinesse in thee yet in Christ he seeth enough Certainly as the Father doth only look upon us in Christ so should we also look upon our selves as in him Vse 2. Are the godly also comprehended in the same love wherein Christ is then what matter of joy have they under all discouragements under all the hatred and cruell oppositions they meet with in the world What though the world hate thee though thou hast no love from all thy natural friends ever since thou began to love God Oh possesse thy soul with this love of God in Christ for this answers all things SERMON CXXXIX Of the Righteousness of God as a Judge in his Administrations to Devils and wicked men And as a Father unto his own people JOHN 17.25 O righteous Father the world hath not known thee c. SOme have thought that our Saviour having finished his prayer for all sorts of believers he doth now give thanks to God that had revealed himself to them and not unto the wicked world and therefore they compare it with that place of Luke 10.21 But the general torrent of Interpreters upon more probable grounds does conceive this to be a continuation still of the former prayer for the eternal glory of all believers Indeed Piscator thinks that our Saviour doth in this close return again to the Apostles onely but the Arguments our Saviour useth are general and do relate to all believers and therefore we are not to limit this comfortable passage to some eminent believers onely The Matter you heard prayed for all believers was their eternal happiness expressed in those words to behold the glory which the Father had given him with the reason of it because the Father had loved him before the foundation of the world So that although Christ as God had right to glory alwayes yet being in the flesh after an infirm and passible manner the glory thereof was eclipsed which the Ancients did well express by a Candle or Lamp in a lantern that would indeed give great light but the lantern being compassed about with clay hindred the emission of that light till it were removed and thus till all those humane infirmities were taken away which Christ subjected himself to while in the flesh and he risen again those glorious beams of his Divinity could not send forth themselves This I say being the matter
death but these works of God they are living works partly because they proceed from a life of grace and partly because they will live for ever they will go to the grave with thee to heaven with thee they will never forsake thee 2. It 's our duty to work because God hath made them the necessary way to walk in if we will be saved Without holinesse no man shall see God Labour for the meat that perisheth not Hence if we consider every gracious work of patience love meeknesse we shall see blessednesse is promised to them Not that these justifie only the person justified cannot be without them They are the media ordinata ordained mean in the use whereof we are to arrive at eternal happinesse It 's faith only that receiveth Christ and his righteousnesse yet this faith cannot be separated from an holy walking It 's the eye only that seeth yet the eye cannot be separated from the other parts of the body and thus the Apostle doth immediatly oppose Rom. 4. beleeving working grace and works in respect of Justification yet he doth at the same time presse the Children of God to all holinesse and the fruits of righteousnesse 3. Working is necessary by way of gratitude and thankefulnesse to God and Christ If there were nothing else but this this might pour coals of fire upon thee for how many works of Gods grace hast thou been partaker of If Gods grace did not work all the day long for thee thou couldst not be a moment preserved out of hell and as for Christs working reade the History of his Life he was alwaies finishing the work of thy Redemption and Salvation he had nothing to do for himself all was in reference to thee Oh then how unworthy wilt thou shew thy self of all that love and kindenesse which God and Christ have done for thee If thou like the Sluggard let the Field of thy Soul grow full of briars and thorns Oh how can thy heart be so cold and slothful When thou considerest grace is working for thee all the day long if Christ had no more zealously and earnestly wrought my peace for me then I do perform his duties my soul had perished irrecoverably Lastly Therefore it 's necessary we should work Gods work because we have for a long time spent our selves in the Service of Satan and doing the works of the devil Oh this should be a perpetual goad in thy side this should be fire in thy bosome to consider that there was no hour no day no season but thou didst take the opportunity to satisfie thy lusts Thou never couldst have enough of sinne No thirsty man did more greedily swallow down water then thou didst sinne yea how active to draw on others to infect others with the same plague thou hadst I tell you this will lie heavy upon the godly soul If I were to live Methusalems age it would not be time enough to do God service for the dishonour I have put upon him Thy time is short and thou hast much to do because thou hast undone so much In the next place Consider That it 's lawful for the people of God in all the work they do for God to encourage themselves with this that there is an everlasting glory laid up for them Even as Christ had an eye to this glory so it 's lawful for us Thus Moses had an eye to the recompence of the reward Heb. 11. The godly Rom. 2. are said to be such as seek for immortality and glory Rom. 5.2 They rejoyce in hope of the glory of God and Paul accounted all these sufferings but light in respect of that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 Indeed Gods glory is to be sought in the first place and then our glory so that it 's a shame if in all our doings and sufferings for God we are not full of joy because of that unspeakable glory apprehended by faith Faith makes it present as if we already were partakers of it So that whatsoever temptations and discouragements are in the work of the Lord this glory will abundantly make amends for it Are there reproaches and disgrace in the world All the while thou didst sin and the devils work thou hadst the love and good-will of the world but since thou hast betaken thy self to the service of God thou art the scoff and reproach of all O think of the glory God will crown thee with before all the world Again are all the works of God painful difficult and contrary to flesh and bloud thou must strive and wrastle much in praier be alwaies in a combat and conflict Remember this everlasting glory yea God therefore doth many times put his Children upon all exercises and sad temptations which make them ake at the very heart and all is to encrease their glory the more Thus Job thus Paul they had extraordinary trials that they might have extraordinary glory Furthermore is there self-denial required in Gods work Must thou part with thy pleasures with thy profit thy delights still remember this glory will make thee no loser for alas what proportion is there between these petty things thou leavest and those everlasting treasures God hath provided for thee In the sixth place That the glory of Gods people may be full he giveth them time and large opportunities of working for him and keeps thee in this world not for any earthly and outward advancement of thy self but to serve him in thy generation as it 's said David served God in his generation Act. 13.36 and God calleth Moses his servant Whatsoever thy relation thy place thy office be God hath appointed thee to work and therefore he prolongs thy life till thy work be done This is a comfortable consideration which all the godly may take that death shall not seize on them while thay have work to do for God and when that is finished then this summons to everlasting glory As for Infants this Truth reacheth not to them and if any like the Thief on the Crosse are called at the last hour and so are not able to work in the Vineyard yet even such have an habitual prepared heart for it if they had the opportunity But for others whose daies are prolonged they are thus to think with themselves I have this day this week longer to adde to my work God hath for me to doe Take heed of mispent time take heed of losing daies and weeks The night is coming when none can work Vse 1. How much comfort and joy the godly may take at the hour of death Their work is done now they have nothing but the Robes of glory to put on That fulnesse of glory they are immediatly to possesse should swallow up the fears of death and the love of the world With what joy should they cry out Farewell Friends Wife and Children welcome God welcome eternal glory Alas thou hast no glory here Thy body is a vile body thy soul a
sinful soul the world is the valley of death an Hospitall of diseased men and therefore thou art to rejoice at this approaching glory Hence it is that the righteous is said to have hope in his death to be blessed in his death for all his old things passe away a new place new company new happinesse new joy but yet here are cautions to the godly dying man that hath done his work 1. Not to put confidence in his works Sibi isti fidere non est fidei sed perfidia said Bernard Oh Lord All that I have done is an effect and testimony of thy grace not a merit of eternal glory Thou crownest thy gifts not my merits if I have been able to work it was of thy grace so the more I have done the more I am obliged to thee and the reason why there cannot be any hope or confidence put in the works we do is from the imperfection and insufficiency of them Enter not into judgement with thy Servant saith David Psa 143.2 I would be found not having mine own righteousnesse but that by faith in Christ saith Paul Phil. 3. 2. Therefore after all his works though it were Martyrdom it self he is to look for glory by vertue of Gods promise as a meer gift Upon this tenure thou art to plead for it The gift of God is eternal life for though we had done all yet God might deny us eternal life Though we had perfectly done all our duty yet God might annihilate us and there be at an end Therefore it 's wholly of his grace to make a promise of eternal life for by this means though he be not a debtor to us yet he is to himself he is faithful and cannot deny his own words and for this reason as it 's called a gift so sometimes a reward not as if there were any proportion between our work and this glory but because God hath appointed this as a sure consequent upon doing what is well Therefore Ambrose distinguished well of a reward there is merces liberalitatis as if an whole Kingdome should be given a man for lifting up a straw and there it merces debiti of debt and strict justice but that cannot be between the creature and the Creator much lesse the creature fallen and corrupted Vse 2. Of terrour and woe to wicked men who having done the devils work have nothing to do but to take the reward of devils The same hell the same torments that are prepared for the devil and his Angels are for thee Oh that the name of death the thoughts of death should not fill thee with all fear and amazement oh that this should not be like a sword at thy heart whose work am I doing whom have I served and now I am a dying man whose wages am I to receive Oh that thou shouldst not mourn and pray and get all others to mourn and pray for thee if God will deliver thee out of this gall and wormwood Blessed are they that die in the Lord their works follow them Cursed are they that die in their sins for their works shall follow them though your bodies are put in the grave yet your sins cannot be buried there SERMON XXIV Of vain Tautology in Prayer And what Repetitions in Prayer are such and what not Shewing also what things are absolutely necessary to a good Praier JOH 17.5 And now O Father glorifie thou me with thy own self with the glory I had before the world began IN these words have been considered the matter of the Petition described by the nature and external adjunct thereof as also the causal inference In the matter of the Petition we shall not take notice of the matter it self because handled before But 1. Whereas our Saviour within so little a space doth repeat the same Petition twice We observe That Repetition of the same matter in a Praier is not alwaies a sinful Tautology but is sometimes lawful yea useful and necessary None can think that our Saviour in whom is the Treasure of Wisedom and who is the essentiall Word of God who also giveth the gifts of praier to the Church that he himself should be straitned either for matter or words but this ingemination proceeds from some other excellent ground To open this Point Consider 1. That the same matter may be repeated either insence only but in different words or else in the very same sence and words When it 's done the former way we say a man doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the latter way unlesse there be some grave and serious cause it 's a vain Tautology for the former kinde of repetition the Psalms which are accounted like the Stars in the Scripture Firmament are very frequent in it Many verses being the ingemination of the same sence only in some different words and this we do not so commonly call a repetition of the same thing because every new word the holy Ghost hath doth represent some new notion to the understanding so that it 's like the same meat under several dishings that affords a peculiar taste or like the Philasophers matter which they say is alwaies the same though under divers forms Now our Saviour in this praier doth not only use the same matter but the same words Father glorifie thou me 2. That in our prayers which are a communion with the great God wo ought to have a diligent attention to severall things s Praier is not slightly formally and customarily to be hasted over but being a divine worship of God If ever a man would be in an heavenly holy fervent and indistracted disposition it ought to be when he sets himself to this duty Praier is like that curious oyntment to be made by the High-Priest which consisted of many choice ingredients You may call most mens praiers no more praiers then an Ape a man or a picture the person it represents For 1. We must have a diligent attention to the matter that we pray for That it be lawful good and agreeable to Gods will To ask of God any thing that is unlawful and sinful would be to make God a Patron of sinnes as he in the Poet Da mihi fallere da justum sanctumque videri Jupiter So that this made Aquinas say It was hard to know what we are to pray for because it 's hard to know what to desire Hence Rom. 8. we need the Spirit of God to enable us to know what we pray for Some Heathens have been admired for such a praier as this that they entreated the gods to give them not what they would have but what was good for them whether they desired it or not but we that are Christians are not in such darknesse we have the Word of God to direct us and his Spirit to incline us Look then that the matter thou praiest for be such as is agreeable to Gods holy will 2. We are to consider and attend