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

There are 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 That since he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows since he was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities 't is but just that our Peace should be obtain'd by his chastisements and that by his stripes we should be healed Isa 53.4 5 6 c. 6. If believers c. Hence we gather a cogent and conclusive Argument for the Saints blessed Resurrection at the last day Christ the believers Head is risen risen as their Head risen as the se●ond Adam From hence the Apostle strongly argues for the Saints glorious resurrection 1 Cor. 15.13 14 15 c. If the head be got above surely the body shall not away lie under water True indeed the ungodly and unbelievers shall be raised also Dan. 12.2 Joh. 5.29 There shall be a u 2 Cor. 5.10 general resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust Acts 24.15 and 17.31 But here 's the difference The bodies of the wicked shall be raised up in dishonour by Christ as a powerful and offended Judge John 5.27 28 29. To receive their just sentence and condemnation 2 Thes 1.6 8 9. Matth. 25.33 But the bodies of believers by the Spirit of Christ and by vertue of his resurrection as their Head shall be raised in power spiritual incorruptible and made like to his glorious body 1 Cor. 15.20 22 23 42 43 44. Because he lives they shall live also and have livery and seisin given them of those joyes and gloryes which neither eye hath seen nor ear heard nor can enter into the heart of man to conceive 1 Cor. 2.9 and so shall they be ever with the Lord 1 Thes 4.17 Thus much by way of Corollary for information of the judgement I now proceed to the second Vse which more immediately reflects on the heart and life and that is an Use of 2. Examination Whether there be really and indeed such a spiritual close intimate union betwixt our souls in particular and the Lord Jesus To this purpose give me leave to put the probe into your consciences by a serious proposal of these five Questions Quest 1. Hath Christ given unto you his holy Spirit He that is joyn'd to the Lord is one Spirit saith the Text. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his w 1 Joh. 3.24 Rom. 8.9 Whatever member is really united to the Head hath a natural spirit a soul enlivening of it and acting in it So saith the Apostle Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his S●irit 1 Joh. 4.13 Now this Spirit where ever it is it is 1. A praying Spirit a Spirit of supplication of faithful sincere fervent constant humble supplication Zech. 12.10 Ask then thy soul Canst thou Dost thou go to God and cry as a child with reverence and confidence Abba-Father Rom. 8.15 Does this Spirit help thine infirmities Rom. 8.26 and enable thee to understand both for whom and what and how thy prayer is to be made Does it work and quicken in thy heart at least at some times in some measure such apprehensions affections and graces as are requisite for the right and acceptable performance of so heavenly a duty 2. A mourning Spirit It puts a believer into a dove-like frame Ezek. 7.16 mourning for the losse of its Mate yea mourning for the offence of a gracious God as for the losse of an only sonne Zech. 12.10 Tell me then poor soul Art thou apt ever and anon to strike on thy breast with the contrite Publican x Jer. 31.19 to smite on thy thigh with broken-hearted Ephraim and in an holy consternation of spirit to ask thy self What oh y Jer. 8 6. what have I do●● Does thy Gods bottle and thy tears therein for sin as sin speak for thee 3. A sanctifying Spirit z 1 Cor. 6.11 1 Pet. 1.2 and that with respect to sins graces duties 1. Sinnes The Spirit where ever it is 2 Thes 2.13 mortifies the deeds of the flesh Rom. 8.13 Speak then is thine old man crucified at least as to dominion with thy Christ Rom. 6.6 more especially not to speak of thy more grosse dangerous dishonourable sins Dost thou spit out the sweet morsel under thy tongue Dost thou with Samuel hue thy delicate Agag in pieces with David keep thee from * Psa 18.23 thine iniquity that iniquity to which thy constitution custome calling interest mostly incline thee what sayst thou to thy Isaac Benjamine Absolom Dalilah Herodias the Calves at Dan and Bethel Tell me Art thou apt sadly to remember thine own evil wayes and to loath thy self in thine own sight for all thine iniquities and for all thine abominations Ezek. 36.31 2. Graces Speak Believer Art thou renewed in the Spirit of thy mind hath the Spirit of God re-instampt that glorious Image of God viz. Knowledge Righteousnesse and true Holinesse which thou lost in Adam Ephes 4.24 As thy cloathing is of wrought gold so especially is all thy glory thy chiefest glory within Dost thou find thy graces stirred up increast and strengthened with might by the Spirit in the Inner-man Eph. 3.16 Hath the North-wind so risen the South-wind so come and blown upon thy Garden that the spices thereof flow forth Cant. 4.16 In a word Dost thou more and more grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 Beholding the glory of the Lord art thou changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.18 Art thou still perfecting holinesse in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 3. Duties Where ever the Spirit is it causeth effectually causeth the man to walk in Gods S●atutes to keep his judgements and to do them Ezek. 36.27 It worketh in believers both to will and to do Philip. 2.13 To performe natural moral spiritual duties to spiritual ends in a spiritual manner and that 1. Freely Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 Christs people in the day of his power are a willing people voluntiers in his service Psal 110.3 What say'st thou art thou drag'd to duty as a Bull to a stake as a Swine to slaughter or rather is it thy meat and drink to do thy Gods Will John 4.34 Do the wayes of wisdome seem wayes of * Prov. 3.17 pleasantnesse to thee and all her paths dost thou look upon them as peace 2. Regularly Those that live in the Spirit walk in the Spirit Gal. 5.25 i. e. by the Spirits light according to the Spirits rule the Word of God the great standard of Truth What then dost thou kindle a fire on thine own hearth and compasse thy self about with thine own sparkles d●st thou walk in the light of this fire and in the sparks that thou hast kindled my meaning is Dost thou forsake the Law and Testimony Gods cloud and pillar and follow the guidance of that ignis fatuus
Post mortem hominis inquit Durandus s●perest quae potest utrumque unire anima superest etiam materia praeterea causa scilicet Deus ergo poterit fieri reunitio earundem partium scilicet animae materiae ad idem totum constituendum Upon which Argument Estius hath this Comment Si partes substantiales hominis anima materia non poreant qu●d rei veritas habet Durandi argumentum assumit sed in rerum naturâ permaneant hinc facile probatur resurrectionem esse possibilem Sic enim ad resurrectionem non aliud requiritur quam u● tota materia quae fuerat hujus hominis re olligatur compingatur in eandum figuram m●mbrorum quam aliquando habuit eique anima pristina ut forma restituatur Quod totum Deo possibile esse non est difficile creditu iis qui Dei omnipotentiam attendunt So much for the fifth particular The sixth particular The last thing propounded is to shew After what manner the dead shall rise and what difference there will be between the Resurrection of the just and unjust Answ It is certain as hath been proved that both just and unjust shall rise and rise with the same bodies for substance but yet there will be a vast difference between the Resurrection of the one and of the other which will consist in three particulars 1. The bodies of the just shall rise out of their graves as out of their beds with great joy and rojoycing and therefore it is said Isa 26.19 Awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust As soon as ever they awake they shall sing and rejoyce The godly shall come out of their graves as Jonah out of the Whales belly as Daniel out of the Lyons Den as the chief Butler out of Prison to be restored to all his former dignities and as Joseph who was taken out of Prison to be made Lord of Egypt So shall the bodies of the Saints be taken out of the grave to be crowned with everlasting glory And who can sufficiently express the great joy and rejoycing that will be when the body and soul shall be re-united together when the Soul shall come down from heaven to be married again to its former body Look what sweet embracements there were between Jacob and Joseph when they first saw one another after that Jacob had thought he had been dead and look'd upon him as one raised from the dead such and a thousand times more will be at the souls re-possession of the body Look what joy between Jonathan and David when David came out of the cave to him and what embracements between the Father of the Prodigal and the Prodigal when his Father ran to meet him and imbraced him and kissed him and said My Son was dead but now he is raised again such and much more will there be when body and soul meet together O how will the soul bless God for the body which was an instrument to it in the service of God! and how will the body bless God for the soul which was so careful to get an interest in Christ and to get to be justified and sanctified and how will both body and soul admire the free grace of God in Jesus Christ who hath pickt them out to be heirs of so much mercy Surely we shall never understand the greatness of this joy till we do taste of it But now on the contrary The bodies of the wicked shall come out of their graves as out of their Prisons and as so many malefactors to appear before an angry Judge They shall come out of their graves as the chief Baker did out of Prison to be executed in Hell for ever They shall arise with great fear and trembling and shall call to the hills and mountains to cover and hide th m from the pres nce of the Lamb. And Oh the horror and astonishment that shall be when the soul of a wicked man shall come out of Hell and be again united to its body How will the body curse the soul and the soul the body How will they be fool one another certainly this greeting will be very terrible The Lord grant we may never come to have experience of it 2. The bodies of the Saints shall be raised by vertue of their union with Christ For the Body of a Saint even while it is in the grave 1 Cor. 15.24 is united to Christ and is asleep in J●sus and shall be raised by vertue of this union The Head will raise all its members and cannot be perfect as he is Christ mystical without every one of them 1 Cor. 15.22 As in Adam all dye so in Christ shall all be made alive that is All that are in Christ by faith shall be raised by the power of Christ as a Head and as a merciful Saviour and Redeemer By the same power by which Christ raised himself he will raise all his members But now the ungodly they shall rise out of their graves but it shall be a Resurrection unto Condemnation and it shall be by vertue of Christs power as a terrible Judge and as an angry God to their everlasting shame and confusion 3. The bodies of the wicked at the Resurrection shall be as so many ugly and loathsome carcasses to look upon and their faces shall gather darkness and blackness Isa 66.24 They shall arise to ev●rlasting shame as well as to everlasting torment Dan. 12.2 But the bodies of the godly shall be made very glorious and beautiful They shall shine as the Sun in the firmament Mat. 13.43 and their vile bodies shall be made like unto the glorious body of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.21 Now surely the body of Christ is wonderful glorious We had a specimen of this in his Transfiguration where his face did shine as the Sun Mat. 17.2 and yet this was but a glimse of that glory he now hath and which our vile bodies shall one day have Question How can this be Answer This is according to the working of his mighty power Phil. 3.21 by which he is able to subdue all things unto himself God can do it for he is Almighty and with him all things are possible Indeed the substance of our bodies shall not be altered but the qualities shall be much altered They shall have glorious endowments and qualifications As Wool when died into a purple or scarlet die is not changed in the substance of it but onely is made more glorious So when the bodies of the Saints shall rise the substance of them shall not be changed but they shall be made more glorious and more excellent Question If you ask me what those Endowments are which God bestoweth upon the body at the Resurrection Answer It is impossible to set out all the glory which God will bestow upon the bodies of his Saints at that day For eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entred into the heart of man to
conceive what God hath prepared even for the bodies of those who love him and wait for his appearing Aug. de Civitate Dei lib. 22. cap. 21. Quae sit quam magna spiritualis corporis gloria quoniam nondum venit in experimentum vereor ne temerarium sit omne quod de illa profertur eloquium The Schoolmen reduce them to four heads Impassibility sibility Impassibilitas Subtilitas Agilitas Claritas Subtilty Agility Clarity The Apostle also comprizeth them under four particulars It is sown in weakness it is rai●ed in power It is sown in corruption and raised in incorruption It is sown in dishonour and raised in glory It is sown a natural body and raised a spiritual body Objection If it be a spiritual body how is it the same body Answer It is called a spiritual body not in regard of the substance of it but of the qualities of it and that in two respects 1. Because it shall have no need of meat or drink but shall be as the Angels of Heaven Mat. 20.30 not that we shall have Angelicam essentiam but Angelicas proprietates not the essence but the properties of Angels We shall neither eat nor drink but shall be as the Angels We shall have as Tertullian saith corpora reformata Angelificata Even as a Goldsmith saith Chrysostome puts his silver and gold into a pot and then melts it and forms of it a gold or silver b wl or cup fit to be set before Kings so the Lord melts the bodies of his Saints by death and out of the dead ashes and cinders of the bodies of his servants he frameth and will make goodly vessels of honour to stand before him and to praise him for ever in heaven 2. It is said to be a Spiritual body because it shall be absolutely subject to the soul In the state of glory the soul shall not depend upon the body but the body upon the soul In this life the soul is See this more fully handled in the Sermon preached at Dr. Bollons Funeral as it were carnal because serviceable to the flesh but at the Resurrection the body shall be as it were spiritual because perfectly serviceable to the Spirit But the time will not give me leave to insist largely upon this point So much in answer to the six particulars propounded for the explication of this Doctrine Now for the Application Use 1. LEt us believe this great truth and believe it firmly and undoubtedly That there shall be a Resurrection of the body and that the same numerical body shall rise again the same for substance though not the same for qualities The great God can do this for he is Almighty and to an Almighty power nothing is impossible God can do it because he is Omnipctent and he cannot but do it because he hath promised to do it He cannot be true of his word if the body do not rise again nor can he be a just God as I have shewed for it is just with God that as the body hath been partakers with the soul in good or evil actions so it should be partakers with the soul in everlasting rewards and everlasting punishments And it is just with God that the same body that serves him should be rewarded and the same body that sins against him should be punished And the truth is if the same body doth not rise it cannot be called a Resurrection but rather a new creation as I have shewed Let us I say firmly believe this truth for it is a fundamental truth and the foundation of many other fundamental truths For if the dead rise not then is not Christ risen and then is our faith vain and our preaching in vain Remember Job in the Old Testament believed this Use 2. IF there be a Resurrection of the dead Resurrectio mortuorum est consolatio fiducia Christianorum here is great consolation to all the real members of Jesus Christ For the Resurrection of the dead is the comfort and the hope and confidence of all good Christians This was Jobs comfort upon the dunghil Job 19.26 27. and Davids comfort Psal 16.7 and Christs comfort Mat. 20.19 But the third day he shall rise again It was Christs comfort and it is the comfort of every good Christian 1. Here is comfort against the fear of death As God said to Jacob Gen. 46.3 4. Fear not to go down to Egypt for I will go with thee and I will bring thee out again So give me leave to say to you Fear not to go down to the house of Rottenness to the Den of Death for God will raise you up gain Your Friends and Acquaintance leave you at the grave but God will not leave you The grave is but a dormitory a resting-place a storehouse to keep you safe till the Resurrection Christ hath perfumed the grave 1 Sam. 26. As David when he found Saul asleep took away his spear and cruse of water but when he awoke he restored them again So will death do with us Though it take away out strength and our beauty yet when we awake at the Resurrection they shall be restored again unto us God will keep our dead ashes and preserve them safe as a Druggist keeps every whit of the drug he hath beaten to powder A Saint while he is in the grave is united to Christ he sleeps in Jesus and Jesus will raise him up unto life everlasting John 11.24 2. Comfort against the death of our friends Though they be dead yet they shall rise gain as Martha told Christ I know that he shall rise again at the Resurrection 1 Thess 14. The Saints who dye in the faith of Christ are dead in Christ and such he will raise and bring with him to judgement If a man be to take a long journey his wife and children will not weep and mourn because they hope that ere long he will return again A man that dyes in Christ and sleeps in Christ doth but take a journey from Earth to Heaven but he will come again shortly and therefore let us not mourn as men without hope for our godly relations for we shall meet again and in all probability shall know one another when we meets though not after a carnal manner for we shall rise with the same bodies And if Lazarus was known when raised and the Widows Son known by his Mother if Adam in Innocency knew Eve when he awoke and Peter knew Moses and Elias in the Transfiguration which was but a dark representation of Heaven it is very probable that we also when we awake at the great Resurrection shall know one another which will be no little addition to our Happiness 3. Comfort to those who have maimed and deformed bodies At the great Resurrection all these deformities shall be taken away therefore it is called A Day of Restitution Acts 3.21 wherein God will set all things in joynt If there were
body which hath fasted and prayed and joyned sincerely with the soul in holy services shall one day behold the face of God with comfort Christ will say Are not these the eyes which have been lift●d up unto God in my service Are not these the ears which have hearkned to my word Remember this when your bodies are wearied and tired in the worship of God The more thou servest God with thy body the more glory it shall have at that day 4. Labour to get gracious souls here and you shall have glorified bodies hereafter 5. Labour to be united to Christ by a lively faith and he will be your resurrection and your life It is the great promise of Christ that he will raise up the body at the last day John 6.39.40 54 58. that is raise it up to life everlasting 6. Labour to have part in the first resurrection Revel 20.6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection I know this Text is differently interpreted but sure I am according to the judgement of all learned men there is a double resurrection the one spiritual the other corporal the one of the soul the other of the body Those Texts Ephes 2.1 Col. 2.13 John 5.25 do without all doubt speak of the spiritual resurrection By nature we have dead souls dead in sins and trespasses void of spiritual life as perfectly under the power of sin as a dead man is under the power of death and as unable to do any thing that is spiritually good as a dead man is to do any work Now a soul dead in sin shall be damned for sin but if thy soul be quickned and made alive if the Lord hath infused principles of grace into thee and given thee a new heart and a new spirit if regenerated and born again then thy bodily resurrection shall be happy It is very observable That the Resurrection is called Regeneration Mat. 19.28 In the regeneration that is as many interpret it in the resurrection If spiritually regenerated thy resurrection shall be most happy and glorious O pray unto God and labour for regeneration and a new creation and that thou mayest have a share in the first resurrection 7. Heaken to the voyce of Christ and of his Spirit and of his Ministers and of his Rod and then his voye at the resurrection when he shall call thee out of the grave shall be a happy voyce If thou stoppest thine ears and wilt not hearken to the voyce of the Rod nor to the voyce of his Word and the Ministers of it thou shalt hear the voyce of the Archangel calling thee out of the grave whether thou wilt or no and the voyce of Christ saying Go ye cursed ito Hell-fire c. 8. Count all things dung and dross that thou mayest gain Christ and be found in him at that day not having thine own righteousness but the righteousness which is of God by faith in Christ and be willing to do any thing if by any means you may attain to the resurrection of the dead Phil. 3.8 9 11. that is either to a happy resurrection or rather to such a degree of grace which the Saints shall have at the Resurrection 9. Remember and carry daily in your mind that saying of S. Jerom Whether you eat or drink or whatsoever you are doing think with y ur selves That you hear the Trumpet sounding and the voyce of the Archangel saying Arise ye dead and come to judgement Vse 5. A Divine Project how to make your bodies beautiful and glorious and beautiful in an ominent degree in a supersuperlative measure beautiful as the Sun in the Firmament as the beautiful Body of Christ which so dazzled Pauls eyes that it put them out To make your bodies Majestical Immortal and Impassible and that is by labouring to glorifie God with them and to get an interest in Christ and to get gracious and beautiful souls O that this word were mingled with faith Methinks if any Motive could prevail with you that are Gentlewomen and rich Ladies this should Behold a way how to make your bodies eternally beautiful What trouble and pains do many women that are crooked endure by wearing iron-bodies to make themselves stait What labour and cost are many women at to beautifie their rotten carcasses Hearken to me thou proud dust and ashes thou guilded mud that labourest to beautifie thy body by vain foolish and sinful deckings and trimmings and thinkest thy self deckt in the want of decking That pamperest thy body in all voluptuousness and makest thy self by thy strange fashions so unlike thy self as that if our civil forefathers were alive again they would wonder what strange monster thou wert Hearken unto me I say and consider thy madness and folly by labouring so much to adorn thy body with the neglect of thy soul thou undoest both body and soul The onely way to make thy body beautiful is as I hove said to gain Christ to have a part in the first resurrection and to get a gracious soul and then thou shalt be sure hereafter to have a glorious body Excellent is that saying of Bernard Christ hath a treble coming Once he came in the flesh for the good of our souls and bodies now he comes in the Spirit by the preaching of his Ministers for the good of our souls At the last day he shall come for the good of our bodies to beautifie and glorifie them Noli O homo praeripere tempora Do not O fond man mistake the time This present life is not the time for thy body it is appointed for the beautifying of thy soul and adorning it with grace and holiness The Resurrection is the time wherein Christ will come from Heaven to make thy body glorious How quite contrary to this do most people live Let it be our wisdom with the children of Issachar to have understanding of the times 1 Chro. 12.31 Let us labour to get our souls beautified by Christs second coming with Justification and Sanctification and Christ at his third coming will make our bodies glorious above expression The Day of Judgement asserted ACTS 17.31 Because he hath appointed a Day in which he will judge the world c. SAint Paul perceiving the Idolatry at Athens his spirit was stirred in him ver 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his spirit was sowred and imbittered in him Paul was a bitter man against sin That anger is without sinne which is against sinne Or the word may signifie he was in a Paroxysme or burning fit of zeal and zeal is such a passion as cannot be either dissembled or pent up with this fire he dischargeth against their Idolatry ver 22.23 Ye men of Athen● I perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious for as I passed by and beheld your devotions I found an Altar with this Insc iption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the unknown God Nor doth the Apostle only declaime againg the false god but
called another Comforter now he who is distinguished from the Father and the Sonne in the manner as to be called another comforter is either distinguished in regard of his essence or in regard of his personal subsistence not in regard of his essence for then he would be another God and therefore he is another in regard of his personal subsistence 4. You have a clear proof for this doctrine in the words of the Text There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one and to that purpose consider 1. You have mention here of three witnesses now three witnesses are three persons 2. The Word and holy Ghost are conjoyned in their Testimony with the Father which is not competible to any creature and lest we should doubt of this it is expresly said even by Saint John himself to be the witnesse of God Verse 9. If we receive the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater for this is the witnesse of God which he hath testified of his Son and concerning Christ it is said that he is the true God ver 20. This is the true God and eternal life let the Socinian shew me where any creature is called the true God Concerning the Spirit also in this Chapter it is said ver 6. that he is truth it self It is the Spirit that beareth Witnesse because the Spirit is Truth 3. If there be three witnesses whereof every one of them is God the one not the other and yet not many Gods but one true God the point is clear there are three distinct persons subsisting in one divine essence or which is all one there are three persons and one God 3. I am to speak something to the distinction of these three persons though they cannot be divided yet they may be they are distinguished many things in nature may be distinguished which cannot be divided for instance the cold and the moisture which is in the water may be distinguished but they cannot be divided Now that those three persons are distinguished appears 1. By what hath been already said the Father is not the Son nor the Son the Father nor the holy Ghost the Father or the Son 2. By the words of the Text here are three heavenly witnesses produced to prove that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Son of God namely the Father the Word and the holy Ghost now one and the same person although he hath a thousand names cannot passe for three witnesses upon any faire or reasonable account whatever you may be sure that God reckons right and he sayes John 8.13 Father Sonne and holy Ghost to be three witnesses there are three that bear record in heaven so in Saint Johns Gospel the Pharisees charge our Saviour that he bare record of himself say they thou bearest record of thy self thy record is not true now mark what Christ replies ver 17 18. It is written in your Law Ver. 17 18. that the Testimony of two men is true I am one that bear witnesse of my self and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me where you have our Saviour citing the Law concerning the validity of a Testimony given by two witnesses and then he reckons his Father for one witnesse and himself for another 4. I shall speak a few words to the order of these divine persons in order of subsistence the Father is before the Son and the Son before the holy Ghost The Father the first person in the Trinity hath foundation of personal subsistence in himself the Sonne the second person the foundation of personal subsistence from the Father the holy Ghost the third person hath foundation of personal subsistence from the Father and the Sonne Now although one person be before the other in regard of order yet they are all equal in regard of time Majesty glory essence this I conceive to be the reason why in the Scripture sometimes you have the Sonne placed before the Father as 2 Cor. 13.14 2 Cor. 13.14 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen Gal. 1.1 So Gal. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of men neither by men but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised him from the dead Sometimes the holy Ghost is placed before the Father as Eph. 2.18 Through him we have an accesse by one Spirit unto the Father Eph. 2.18 Rev. 1.4 5. Sometimes before Jesus Christ Rev. 1.4 5. John to the seven Churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven Spirits which are before the Throne by the seven Spirits there is meant the holy Ghost and from Jesus Christ who is the faithful witnesse c. The consideration of this caused that rule amongst our Divines ab ordine verborum nulla est argumentatio there is no argument to be urged from the order of words Now this shews that although one person be before another in regard of relation and order of subsistence yet all are equal one with another in regard of essence And therefore beware lest you derogate the least jota or tittle of glory or Majesty from any of the three persons As in nature a small matter as to the body may be a great matter as to the beauty of the body cut but the haire from the eye brow how disfigured will all the face look If you take away never so little of that honour and glory which is due to any of the divine Persons you do what in you lies to blot to stain to disfigure the faire and beautiful face of the blessed Trinity 5. I am to enquire whether the mystery of the Trinity may be found out by the light of nature Resol There are two things in the general that I would say in answer to this question 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it 2. That the light of nature after divine Revelation cannot oppose it 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it and for that purpose take into your thoughts these following considerations 1. If that which concerns the worship of God cannot be found out by the light of nature much lesse that which concerns Gods nature essence or subsistence but the Antecedent is certainly true For 1. As for the part of the worship and service of God which is instituted and ceremonial it is impossible that it should be found out by the light of nature for instance what man could divine that the Tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise How comes the Church to understand what creatures were clean what were unclean that the Priesthood was setled in the Tribe of Levi and not in the Tribe of Simeon or the Trible of Judah certainly these lessons were not learned by the candle-light of nature 2.
it First This book presses holinesse and godlinesse so as never did any in the world before nor since and gives such Arguments for it as never was heard of nor the wit of man could ever have thought of He that would walk in the Wildernesse of Paganism might hear and there spy a flower growing amongst many weeds now and then a Philosopher that gives you some good directions that concern righteousnesse and external behaviour but the Scripture is a garden wherein whatsoever hath been recommended by all the sober men in the world is put together and wherein they were defective that 's there made up for they were defective especially in this one great point deep humility and though you shall finde many things that concern the exercise of some Christian graces yet in the real practice of humility a man would wonder how incredibly they fell short But as for the Scripture what would you have it bids you live soberly righteously godly Tit. 2.12 it bids you lie at Gods feet as his creature to do with you what he will it would have you like God himself that 's the end of the promises that we should partake of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 it bids you be holy as God is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 it charges upon you whatever thing is good is just is lovely Phil. 4.8 it commands your very thoughts it 's so far from suffering you to do hurt to your brother as not to suffer you to think hurt it 's so far from allowing to act rapine and injustice as not to allow to do any thing that savours of coveting it binds the very heart and soul O what a place of universal calmnesse would this world be should all serve one another in love should all study each others good we should never do injury if any did we should forgive him we should endeavour to be perfect as God is Trypho calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore the Jew could not but say the precepts of the Gospel were wonderful great excellent and transcendent indeed Behold the Scripture is a doctrine according to godlinesse 1 Tim. 6.3 truth according to godlinesse Tit. 1.1 the mystery of godlinesse 1 Tim. 3.16 so that in one word whatever God would think fit for man to do to that God that made him whatever is fit for a sinner to do to a holy God against whom he hath trangressed and between man and man all that is the designe of the Scripture And what the Scripture thus commends it presses by incomparable Arguments shall I name a few 1. Behold God is manifested in the flesh for this purpose 1 Tim. 3.16 Is it nothing sinner that thou wilt live foolishly vainly what wilt thou think to see God dwelling in humane nature to see God live a poor scorned reproached contemned life intimating this great truth that it 's not so unseemly a thing for the Sonne of God himself to live a poor miserable life as 't is for a man to be an impenitent sinner if you remain a wilful and impenitent sinner thou wouldst in thy pride be like God and have no Superiour above thee Behold God condescends and becomes like to thee that if possible he might bring thee back again thou that art a sinner suspectest whether God will do thee good behold how close he comes to thee he dwells in thy own nature 2. Behold the beloved Sonne of God dying upon the Crosse for thee What would you think if any of your Parents should suffer their childe to dye on the behalf of an enemy would you not think it should move that enemy Behold my Sonne in whom I am well-pleased methinks God takes not a quarter of that content in the whole Creation which he does when he speaks of his Sonne yet this Sonne suffered for sinne the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God 1 Pet. 3.18 methinks this love should constrain us 2 Cor. 5.14 Poor soul thou art ready to think God is become thine enemy when sicknesse and death comes thou art ready to say hast thou found me O mine enemy here 's trouble in the world how shall I know whether God intends good Behold it 's beyond peradventure God intends good to a sinner because he dwelt in our nature and his Sonne dyed for us and his Sonne felt pain and infirmity and therefore he may love thee and you need not question any thing of this nature is a hindrance of Gods love the case of a sinner is not so desperate but that a man may be accepted and loved of God for Christs sake will not this move you 3. You have promises of eternal life and threatnings of eternal misery Never did any Philosopher or any other man threaten If you will not observe such and such precepts I l'e throw you into eternal torments nor never did any man say I will give you such glory in heaven but the Scripture does behold life and immortality are brought to light by Christ there 's a future resurrection and this body is like an old house pull'd down by and by it will be a brave building again a spiritual body and we shall shine like the Sunne in the Firmament and be equal to the Angels of God Matth. 13.43 and he like God and Christ Now we know not what we shall be but when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.1 2. And having this hope who would not purifie himself even as God is pure who would not live soberly righteously and godly looking for that blessed hope c If you did but apprehend this glory Tit. 2 13 were not your minde senselesse its impossible you could be quiet without getting an interest in it And how great the day of judgment will be it tells you how our thoughts words and actions and every thing we go about shall come under a severe scrutiny 4. The worth of our souls we minde our bodies but a soul is better than a world The Scripture saith the Sonne of God dyed for souls we never understood so much what souls were wor h as now we do when we see God taking such care and having such designs and thoughts from all eternity 5. The fairest and the most reasonable condition of eternal happinesse and the greatest strength to perform it that 's offer'd in the Gospel Suppose we were sensible we were liable and obnoxious to Gods wrath and could go to heaven and beseech God that he would be pleased not to execute that wrath upon us do but think what terms you would be willing to propose to God would you come and say Lord punish me not for what is past though I intend to do the same thing but he that should say Lord forgive me I am sorry for that which is done and it shall be the businesse of my life to live more circumspectly to thee this is the great thing the Scripture proposes
in his creation with a perfect and universal rectitude 2. That mans defection from his primitive state was purely voluntary and from the unconstrained choice of his own mutable and self-determining will Though the latter part of the Text would afford a sufficient ground to treat of the state of man now fallen yet that being by agreement left to another hand I observe no more from it then what concerns the manner of his fall and that only as it depended on a mutable will In handling these truths I shall 1. Open them in certain explicatory Theses 2. Improve them in some few praictcal and applicatory inferences 1. About the former that God endued c. take these Propositions for explication Prop. 1 1. All created rectitude consists in conformity to some rule or Law Rectitude is a meer relative thing and its relation is to a rule By a rule I here mean a law strictly taken and therefore I speak this only of created rectitude A law is a rule of duty given by a Superiour to an Inferiour nothing can be in that sense a rule to God or the measure of increated rectitude Prop. 2 2. The highest rule of all created rectitude is the will of God considered as including most intrinsecally an eternal and immutable reason justice and goodness 'T is certain there can be no higher rule to creatures than the divine Will Rom. 7.12 Rom. 12.102 Ezek. 18.25 ch 33. and as certain that the government of God over his creatures is alwayes reasonable and just and gracious and that this reasonablenesse justice and goodnesse by which it is so should be subjected any where but in God himself none that know what God is according to our more obvious notions of him can possibly think Prop. 3 3. Any sufficient signification of this Will touching the reasonable creatures duty is a law indispensably obliging such a creature A law is a constitution de debito and 't is the Legislatours will not concealed in his own breast but duly expressed that makes this constitution and infers an obligation on the Subject Prop. 4 4. The Law given to Adam at his creation was partly natural given by way of internal impression upon his soul partly positive given as is probable by some more external discovery or revelation That the main body of laws whereby man was to be governed should be at first given no other way than by stamping them upon his mind and heart was a thing congruous enough to his innocent state as it is to Angels and Saints in glory it being then exactly contempered to his nature highly approvable to his reason as is evident in that being faln his reason ceases not to approve it Rom. 2.18 fully sutable to the inclination and tendency of his will and not at all regretted by any reluctant principle that might in the least oppose or render him doubtful about his duty Yet was it most reasonable also that some positive commands should be superadded that Gods right of dominion and government over him as Creatour might be more expresly asserted and he might more fully apprehend his own obligation as a creature to do somethings because it was his Makers Will as well as others because they appeared to him in their own nature reasonable and fit to be done for so the whole of what God requires of man is fitly distinguished into some things which he commands because they are just and some things that are just because he commands them Prop. 5 5. Adam was indued in his creation with a sufficient ability and habitude to conform to this whole Law both natural and positive in which ability and habitude his original rectitude did consist This Proposition carries in it the main truth we have now in hand therefore requires to be more distinctly insisted on There are two things in it to be considered The thing it self he was endued with The manner of the endowment 1. The thing it self wherewith he was endued that was uprightnesse rectitude otherwise called the image of God though that expression comprehends more than we now speak of as his immortality dominion over the inferiour creatures c. which uprightness or rectitude consisted in the habitual conformity or conformability of all his natural powers to this whole Law of God and is therefore considerable two wayes viz. In relation to its Subject Rule 1. In relation to its subject that was the whole soul in some sense it may be said the whole man even the several powers of it And here we are led to consider the parts of this rectitude for 't is coextended if that phrase may be allowed with its subject and lies spread out into the several powers of the soul for had any power been left destitute of it such is the frame of man and the dependance of his natural powers on each other in order to action that it had disabled him to obey and had destroyed his rectitude for bonum non oritur nisi ex causis integris malum vero ex quovis defectu Davenant de justitia habituali i. And hence as Davenant well observes according to the parts if I may so speak of the subject wherein it was Mans original rectitude must be understood to consist of 1. A perfect illumination of mind to understand and know the Will of God 2. A compliance of heart and will therewith 3. An obedient subordination of the sensitive appetite and other inferiour powers that in nothing they might resist the former That it comprehends all these appears by comparing Col. 3.10 where the image of God wherein man was created is said to consist in knowledge that hath its seat and subject in the mind with Ephes 4.24 where righteousness and holiness are also mentioned the one whereof consists in equity towards men the other in loyalty and devotedness to God both which necessarily suppose the due framing of the other powers of the soul to the ducture of an inlightened mind And besides that work of sanctification which in these Scriptures is expresly called a renovation of man according to the image of God wherein he was created doth in other Scriptures appear as the forementioned Authour also observes to consist of parts proportionable to these I mention viz. illumination of mind Ephes 1.18 conversion of heart Psal 51.10 victory over concupiscence Rom. 6.7 throughout 2. Consider this rectitude in relation to its Rule that is the Will of God revealed 1 John 3.4 or the Law of God sin is the transgression of the Law and accordingly righteousnesse must needs be conformity to the Law viz. actual righteousnesse consists in actual conformity to the Law that habitual rectitude which Adam was furnished with in his Creation of which we are speaking in an habitual conformity or an ability to conform to the same Law This habitual conformity was as of the whole soul so to the whole Law i. e. to both the parts or kinds of it natural and positive
watch over them till the morning of conversion appear in them 3. By their importunate prayers Adam destroyed his posterity by a wanton eye let us study to save ours by a weeping eye by prayer mingled with tears Hannah by prayer obtain'd a Samuel let us by prayer endeavour to make our children Samuels the God of grace can give grace to our issue upon the account of prayer Prayer may obtain that from the second Adam for thy children which they lost in the first 8. Let us consider this with our selves that though from Adam we receive sin and death yet that we charge not our sin and death upon him as if we dyed by his fall and not by our folly it is true our original guilt comes from him but from whom comes our actual he left us a stock of sin but who hath improved this stock Perditio nostra ex nobis our destruction is from our selves his sin is ours as we were in him but O those innumerable iniquities we our selves have adventured upon we had the Egge from Adam but the Serpent is from us that stings to death we cocker lust and warme corruption with our desire and delight that it engenders into killing transgressions Adam hath left us death by original but we apply this death by our actual sin And therefore as our perdition was hatched by Adam so it is fledged by us it is seminally from Adam but ripen'd by us we our own selves perfect our own misery we put the seal to our own destruction by our fostering of our own lusts and by our actual rebellions OF Original sinne INHERING Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin THe Apostles drift throughout the whole Chapter is clearly to beat down sin and to promote holinesse It was not known in his happy dayes how to ascend the Throne of glory but by the steps of grace Those Primitive and truly inspired Saints never thought of commencing any degree in happinesse per saltum knowing that without holinesse they should n●t see God Now to urge his already believing Romans to further sanctity the Apostle uses the consideration of their Baptisme as a special motive in the 3.4 5. verses and indeed those Ordinances in which we receive most from God are greatest obligations of the soul unto God There are these mercies with him that he may be feared When the direct beam of love from God to them is strongest the reflexion of love and duty from them towards their God is hottest then they are constrained and cannot as it were 2 Cor. 5.14 any longer choose but live to him that dyed for them This is that which the Apostle in this verse takes for granted Knowing this or we all know and grant this the participle by an Hebraisme being put for the verb which hath reference unto the foregoing part of the Chapter A Lapide in locum Of which the words following in my Text are the sum and conclusion viz. That our old man is crucified with him c. Which words contain 1. A duty or priviledge for in Religion the same thing is both it being our happinesse to serve so good a Master and to be employed in so good a service 2. The end of that duty or priviledge That the body of sinne might be destroyed c. But my task being only to speak to some of the terms we here meet withal I would not be curious in the division of the words I am only to unfold a word or two in each part Paraeus Chrys viz. Our old man the body of sinne and sinne all which signifie one and the same thing that is they all are put here to expresse our Original pravity and inbred corruption Concerning which I suppose you have in the former Sermon seen this fountain of death opened I am only to shew you the streames that are from it overflowing in every one of us Original pravity inhering in us spoken to in the general And in the handling of this subject give me leave to propound some things first more generally remembring that this discourse is intended partly in the nature of a common place and then I shall speak to it more particularly from the words now before us Considered first that there is such a pravity That which more generally I am to speak unto is First That there is a pravity naughtinesse and corruption in every one Secondly What this corruption and spiritual pravity is 1. That there is such a pravity will partly appear from the forced consent and common experience of all men Arguments to prove it To prove which I need not quote those passages which Austin hath formerly observed out of Plato and Cicero or adde any other for certainly the wickednesse man naturally tends unto is so grosse Contra Julian Pelag. that the dim sight of nature may easily discover it were this to be read of Pagans I would confirme my assertion as Paul did his Acts 17.28 Certain of your own Poets have said it But I remember I have to do with Christians and therefore to the Law and to the Testimony Alas these poor men like those that admired Nilus's streams but were ignorant of its spring-head they could not see so far as to the true cause of all this sinful misery they could complain that none were content with their condition but qui fit how or whence it came so to passe they could not tell Nay more the wisest Heathen with the plummet of reason could never fathom the depth of this corruption St. Paul Rom. 7.7 till a Convert and savingly instructed in the Law did not know this lust And this I the rather premise because I shall take my self tyed up to Scripture-evidence and proofs in the businesse in hand Scripture makes only a full discovery of this disease and of its cure too Here only invenitur venenum here only nascitur antidotus Hence then I shall chiefly fetch these Arguments instead of many The first Argument of our sinful condition by nature may be taken from Gen. 5.3 where 't is said that Adam who had been created in the likenesse of God ver 1. after his fall by sin Arg. 1. From mans begetting children in his own image begat a son in his own likeness who had now made himself like unto the beast that perish or far worse for an Oxe knows his Owner c. Now what is it for God to create man in his likenesse 't is sanctus sanctum A holy God creared man holy and by consequence for Adam to beget Seth in his likenesse is corruptus corruptum defiled Adam begat defiled polluted Seth and indeed who can bring a clean thing out of that which is unclean John 14.4 if the root be corrupt the fruit is not sound if the fountain be poyson'd the waters are not wholesome if the
and more deadly than death it self Jer. 10.24 Correct me O Lord but not in thine anger Apprehensions of wrath were the dregs in Jobs Cup. Job 14.13 O that thou wouldest hide me in the grave and keep me in sec et till thy wrath be passed over He cannot stand in the face of Gods wrath though he knew it was passing and not abiding wrath and therefore begs a hiding anywhere and in the very grave till that wrath be over who then shall dwell with abiding wrath John 3.36 With eve●lasting burnings Isa 33.14 with fire and brimstone and tempest that hath ●atred in it Psa 11.5 6. 5. What the Lords glory is when it is proclaimed and passeth forth in a way of grace only in a little more lustre and brightnesse Moses needs putting in a clift of the Rock and to be covered with the Lords hand while the Lords glory passed by Exodus 33.22 Peter is swallowed up at a glimpse of the power of Christ Luke 5.8 Depart from me for I am a sinful man oh Lord what then when he speaketh in his wrath and vexeth in his sore displeasure Psal 2.5 6. What the Lords wrath is passing upon others All the children in the house tremble when the rod is taken down though not with respect to themselves but their fellows only Take a man whose heart is touched with the sense of the Lords greatness and that will be his temper Isa 2.19 They shall go into the holes of the rocks and into the Caves of the earth for feare of the Lord and for the glory of his Majesty when he ariseth to shake terribly the earth 7. What the Lords wrath is only hanging in the threatening His rebukes made both the eares of Eli to tingle 1 Sam. 3.11 2 King 21.12 There is a terrour when a Prince convenes and rates his Rebels for their conspiracies and insurrections against him though not yet brought to the barre or block Hab. 3.16 When I heard my belly trembled my lips quivered at the voice rottenness entered into my bones c. Josiah his heart was tender 2 King 22.19 When he heard what the Lord spake against Jerusalem and against the inhabitants thereof 8. What Christ himself did under the sense of this wrath to be poured forth Col. 2.9 Heb. 12 2. though supported with all the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelling bodily in him and saw the glory beyond and the certainty of his resurrection and the fruits of the travels of his soul that should be yet sweats Luke 22.44 and that clods of blood to the very ground prayes and that with strong cries and teares that if possible Heb. 5.7 Luke 12 50. this cup might passe Though other considerations made him drink it chearfully yet nature droops and cannot bear up under this burden Those pills are very bitter that very health it self do●h hardly sweeten You that are yet in the mire of meer nature steep your thoughts in these things that ye may have a little taste what an evil and bitter thing it is that Gods wrath and displeasure is out against you But this is not all God may be displeased and very highly with his own people Isa 47.6 I was wroth and polluted mine inheritance viz. dealt with it as if a polluted and unclean thing 2. God reckons and will deal with men and women found in their natural estate as his enemies Gods tender-hearted servants have not been able to bear the apprehension of this Job 19.11 He hath kindled his wrath against me and counteth me to him as his enemies the plural number encreases the sense as his deadly enemy He that takes the Bible and carefully turns it over and considers the contents thereof and what he hath said of those he reckons his enemies will have a further glimpse of the dreadfulnesse of this condition Nahum 1.2 He reserveth wrath for his enemies that is he hath built and made wide the storehouses of hell that there might be wrath enough in due season to be drawn forth for them Luke 19.27 Those mine enemies that would not that I should reign over them bring hither and slay them before me Isa 1.24 Ah I will ease me of my Adversaries and avenge me of my enemies Heb. 10.27 Judgement and fiery indignation shall devoure the Adversaries And this must be applied to both sorts of enemies 1. Close That go closely on in wayes of sin secretly correspond with the Divel and his temptations and their darling lusts and will not lay the bucklers down though they smile in the Lords face and Isa 58.2 Seek him dayly and d●light to know his wayes as a Nation that doth righteousness and forsaketh not the Ordinances of their God Flatter him with their lips and lye to him with their tongues Psal 78.36 2. Open enemies that proclaime and declare warre against heaven that do and will do what they please let the Lord say and do what he will to the contrary As Pharaoh Exod. 5.2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice Psal 12.4 Our lips are our own who is Lord ov r us Luk. 19.14 His Citizens hated him and sent a message after him saying We will not have this man reign ver us And understand when the Lord so deals with this sort of sinners he takes a kind of comfort in it Ezek. 5.13 Thus my anger shall be accomplished and I will cause my fury to rest upon them and I will be comforted To others the Lord distributes sorrows with sorrow and speaks of himself as grieved when he puts them to grief Judg. 10.16 Lam. 3.33 Isa 63.9 But here he is comforted in making them the resting place of his fury Prov. 1.26 The heat and height of his fury poured forth upon incurable sinners is comfortable and pleasing to him Isa 30.32 In every place where the grounded staff shall passe which the Lord shall cause to rest upon him it shall be with Tabrets and Harps Vengeance on such is musick and delight to the Lord Rev. 18.20 and to his people This is the first and not the meanest part of the misery of faln man that he is under the Lords wrath that is such as God is displeased with and will reckon and deale with as his enemies 2. Every natural man and woman is exposed to and under the Curse of the Law Is this nothing to have the Word against thee Job 13. ●6 and to have the Lord write bitterly against thee in that very Book which is the storehouse of comforts and supports to others Dreadful is that language of Ahab concerning Micaiah 1 King 22.8 There is yet a man by whom we may enquire of the Lord but I hate him for he doth not prophesie good concerning me but evil So that language of a natural mans heart Gods mind is in that book but I cannot abide to read therein or to hear it opened and applied by a lively rowzing Preacher for it only raises stormes and tumults in
our own bodies Look upon the difficulties cares turmoyles for provision of us and ours Gen. 3.17 Labour is with toyle wearinesse vexation disappointment We plough and sowe and reap not earne and put in a bag with holes Hag. 1.6 Look upon shameful nakednesse We have lost our Robes of glory and need now the spoiles of beasts to cover our shame with How many trades are there and what toile in them meerly for this end that the dishonour of the body may be hidden Look upon the sorrows of the female sex Gen. 3.16 which though mitigated and mingled with promises yet still are arrows which sin hath shot into their sides and grace doth not quite pluck them forth 1 Tim. 2.15 Look upon the assaults made even to our ruine by those things that otherwise were under our feet Psal 8.6 But now withdraw from the yoke serve with groans remissnesse and much unserviceablenesse and often lift up their heel and turn and tear us these are a very small part and only bare hints of those confusions and effects of the Lords wrath which sin hath let into the body which else had been invulnerable in the very heel 2. Upon the soul Consider 1. The minde O what blindness ignorance thick darknesse in the apprehensions of God his very being most self-evidencing Attributes in the very mysteries of the first magnitude which are the rules of our duty and the grounds of our hope incapableness dulnesse slownesse to believe lothness to inquire or receive the light which shineth forth from heaven doubts distrust mistakes wandrings after that which is not light and into wayes that seem right but the end of them are the ways of death Prov. 14.12 The heresies of the whole earth are seminally in the blindnesse of the minde and would grow up from thence though there were none of our many sowers to scatter them being nothing else but corrupt imaginations formed into a systeme Vnprofitablenesse in the knowledge of truths which we most clearly and distinctly conceive Unsteadinesse that we cannot fix and close upon holy thoughts till the impressions thence be powerful and work a real change There is no Spaniel more wilde and running after every Lark and Butter-flye that rises in his way than our thoughts are gadding after every thing that comes in our way Yea our minde gathers vanity to it self when the eyes are shut and no objects to divert and inveigle us with These are sins and yet are rushing in further as the recompences of former sins which are meet Rom. 1.27 2. The memory Things stick there that a man would gladly learn and count it a singular mercy to attain the art of forgetfulnesse of and others leak and slip away though taught ofen plainly repeated mused upon and we felt the power of them in a degree upon our hearts what Indispositions to the use of means in order to a cure what Proneness to cumber our selves with by-matters till they talk with us sleeping and crowd in and suck away Lords-days themselves and leave nothing but scraps of prayer and preaching to us sin first brought in these plagues and wrath binds them on and leaves judicially the reins loose to them 3. Conscience The directing part is out of tune and either gives no directions as a Master that is no body in his Family or gives wrong directions as false lights on the shore lead the ships upon the Rocks and quicksands forbids where the Lord commands and urges to that which he forbids John 16.2 Tit. 1.15 or gives right directions and hath no authority And the judging part of conscience is out of tune and gives no judgement of what is done like a Bell whose clapper is out or a dumb dog that cannot bark or gives perverse judgement and excuses where it should accuse makes sin no sin or very little and stayes the heart with empty comforts or accuses for having done that which he is bound to do and disquiets with undue fears or accuses rightly for the matter yet with excesse and so sinks the soul under despaire so that there is as much need for conscience to be overseen as to oversee to b● guided as to guide These arrows abide in and the venome of them invades more and more and that is a very dreadful effect of the wrath of God 4. The Will There are sad strokes there Aversenesse and impotence unto that which is spiritually good Phil. 2.13 Psal 110.4 Inclinations and byasses to drink in the very first and the very worst motions and suggestions unto sin Lustings after evil things Job 15.16 and against the Spirit Gal. 5.17 stubbornnesse Rom. 8.3 Contempt of the offers of reconciliation Joh. 5.40 Ezek. 33.11 incompliance with the counsels of the Holy Ghost Act. 7.51 These are cords of mans twisting and the Lord in dreadful wrath sayes Be it so and pinions him with them to the last judgement 5. The affections fly upon unmeet objects headlongly inclining to them and C l spe and cleave there and cannot be gotten off Recoile from that which is good are stirred in respect of evil to embrace it and in respect of good to eschew and be weary of it Ahab imprisons the true Prophets and sets the false at his own Table and gives them his ear and heart Are full of disorders more offended with our injuries than Gods merry Eccles 2.2 and the Holy Ghost calleth it madnesse mourn and swallowed up Cannot be raised to things above and settled on them 2 Cor. 2.7 We complain and justly of servants that are nimble and expert in any piece of knavery and lozels at their work this is the very temper of our hearts nimble and wise to do evil but in the things and wayes of God and which are of greatest necessitie and advantage we have no knowledge And a sharper wrath is not than the Lord to leave us to our selves Psal 81.12 Psal 78.30 These are hints and no more of the Lords wrath upon the soul 3. Upon the estate Look upon the general estate of the whole Creation impaired groaning and subject unto vanity into the Publick state Confusions stumbling-blocks underminings of civil and spiritual liberties c. into the particular estates of men snarles damages wrongs powlings men taken and carried whither they would not build and dwell not therein gather and it melts as butter against the Sun c. 4. Upon Relations Unequal marriages yokefellows disloyal wastful idle with-holding more than is meet troubling their own flesh dampers in the wayes of God suddenly strucken and the greatest comforts leave the smartest wounds after them c. Vnfaithful servants looking only to the Masters eye invading that which is not theirs imbezeling or suffering to go to wrack that which by care they might and ought to preserve Children sickly unnatural taking to no Callings or not diligent and faithful in them dispose themselves without consent run themselves into bryers and see their errour when too late to retreat This
very necessary Matth. 10.17 Beware of men in a sort as of any wild beast or the very Devils themselves This is a glimpse of that wrath which the Lord draweth forth against natural men in this life before the sons of men 2. There are further degrees of this wrath that rush in at the end of this life Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death The bodies of the very heirs of glory and which are Temples of the holy Ghost lie trampled upon under rottennesse and suffer losse of their appointed glory till the last day The Lord batters them till the house tumble about their eares He layes on load till the heart-strings crack and to whom Hell is remitted death is not remitted those must dye that shall not be damned for their sins and death shall have dominion over them till the morning of the resurrection There is a progress in Gods wrath which will not stop in the midway but goes on till it shall be accomplished Ezek. 5.13 3. The full vials and very dregs of this wrath Psal 78.38 shall be poured out in the world to come which now God reins in and lets not get loose and break over the banks or if it do calls it back and turneth it away but then all his wrath shall be stirred up and let forth to the full 1. There shall be the general judgement of the great day in which the Lord himself shall descend from heaven in a shout 1 Thes 4.16 with the voice of the Archangel and with the trump of God and shall be revealed 2 Thes 1.7 with his mighty Angels in flaming fire terribly to execute the curses of that Law which was so terrible in the promulgation Then shall the sinner be forced from his grave dragged to the barre arraigned the books opened all the secrets of darknesse and of the heart made manifest and the Goats put on the left hand and have that dismal sentence Go ye cursed c. Mat. 25.41 2. There shall be dreadful and final execution and this stands in two things 1. In losse expulsion from the Lords face and presence and glory As incurable lepers from the Camp and fellowship of the Saints For the good things which they never cared for and from the good things of the world which they grasped and were their portion from all hopes of grace all preachings of peace all strivings of the Spirit never a friend to comfort a sun to shine a drop of water to cool the tongue or any blessing to come near them any more for ever 2. In sense which is sometimes termed suffering the vengeance of eternal fire Jude ver 7. Wrath to come 1 Thes 1.10 where there shall be with the damned Angels subjection to the eternal wrath of God the worm of a guilty conscience that never dies where the Lord will beare up the creature with one hand that it continue in being and beat it with the other that it shall be ever dying in death alwayes and never dead Use 1. Inform. We may clearly gather divers Corollaries hence 1. This may inform us of the vast and woful change that sin hath made Men could not come possibly such out of the hands of God Gen. 1.31 God saw every thing that he had made and behold it was very good and therefore blessed but sin hath taken him from Mount Gerizim Deut. 27.12 13 and set him upon Ebal and the misery now is such that if the Lord should open the same to the conscience fully the very view would drive men out of their wits and men could not tarry in their beds or rellish a morsel of bread till delivered and blessed with some evidence of deliverance out of that condition This may infome us of the causlessnesse of the offence taken at Ministers for preaching this point Now consider seriously 1. Is there a parallel to the offence taken here in any other case in the whole earth Who is angry with a watchman for giving notice that the house is beset and ready to be broken up or on fire though all be disturbed some half-frighted out of their wits or wholly with the tydings and very great pudder follows till the house be secured and the fire quenched men migh● otherwise have been undone and destroyed in their beds Who flies out against a Centinel that gives a true Alarme and rowzeth the Souldiers at the deadest time of the night he prevents their surprizal or throats being cut in their beds and the Town from being sacked Who storms at a passenger that sticks up a bough in a Quagmire that other Travellers going securely on may not be laid fast ere they think of any danger Who takes it ill of a friend that seeing a bearded arrow coming that would strike the stander next him mortally puls him aside with that force possibly as to draw his arme out of joint and the arrow goes not through his heart Who thinks amisse of a Lawyer that opens the badnesse of his Clients cause to him that he may not insist on a wrong point in which necessarily he must be cast 2. Should we to avoide your displ●asure not give you warning and so draw Gods displeasure Ezek. 3.18 19. Videsis Greenhil in loc and the blood of you perishing upon our heads is this good for you or us 3. Do you well to provoke poor Ministers to bauke that part of their office which flesh and blood makes us too willing to have our edge taken off in Desire we to be messengers of sad tydings or rather to come in the abundance of the comforts of the Gospel A pettish Patient makes the Chyrurgion search the wound lesse than is necessary to a through cure Ye tempt us to stop from speaking needfully of your danger by your lothnesse to hear on that ear and by your rage and regret against the teller Those which have most need of faithful intellig●●ce of the Lords wrath have least upon this very score Job 21.31 Who shall declare his way to his face viz. that is respited and prospers and tramples the doctrine under foot and turns again and tears the Preacher 4. This is no other than what the Scripture speaks and conscience upon retirements will speak and Satan will lay in your dish and the Lord will pay into your bosome Will those flye in the Lords face and of conscience telling this story to them and pronouncing the sentence against them Oh profane partial spirits that cannot endure such Preachers as themselves shall be unto themselves that cannot bear the hearing of those terrours that themselves shall be relators and inflicters of upon themselves Ye had better have the commodity at the first hand conscience will preach in another note and loudnesse than we do and the more because your ears have been stopped against our words 5. There cannot be a greater madnesse than not to be able to live under the noise and news of this wrath and yet stick under the wrath
a Physician who could cure all bodily deformities what flocking would there be to him for help such a Physician is Death As Job had all things restored double when raised from the dunghil so shall a childe of God have all bodily deformities removed and his body shall be raised in glory and shine as the Sun in the firmament And why then should we be so afraid of death it is initium vivae spei the beginning of a living hope The Heathen mans Motto is Dum spiro spero while there is life there is hope but a Christians Motto is Dum expiro spero when I dye then my hope begins to live 4. Comfort to those who forgoe any members of their bodies for Christ If thou losest thy leg or arm or ear God will restore it again at the Resurrection The same leg c. as Christ healed the ear of Matchus he did not give him a new ear but the same again Famous is the story that Josephus tells of one of the seven children in the Maccabees who when he was to have his tongue cut out and his hand cut off said to his Mother These I have received from the Heavens and for the love of my God I despise them and trust that I shall receive them again 5. Comfort to the people of God when in the lowest condition When upon the dunghil and past help of man then let them remember That the God whom we serve can raise the dead and therefore can deliver them out of all their troubles though never so great and incurable This was Jobs comfort when in the saddest condition Job 19.25 26 27. It is proper to God to deliver from the lowest grave Psal 86.13 And for this very end and purpose God oftentimes brings his children into a very deplorable and desperate condition that they might learn to trust in that God who raiseth the dead 2 Cor. 1.12 6. Lastly Here is singular consolation in reference to the sad times in which we live It is with us now as it was with the Disciples when Christ was crucified their hopes dyed when Christ dyed their faith in Christ was dead and buried with Christ therefore they say Luke 24.21 We trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel and besides all this to day is the third day since these things were done As if they should have said Christ hath now been so long in the grave that we have no hope of salvation by him it is now the third day and we hear no tidings of him Even so the people of God are ready to say of these times We had thought that this had been the time wherein Christ would have made the Churches of England very glorious and have taken away all our tynne and drosse out of his Church and perfectly have purged his floor and made a most happy Reformation But we see that Christ is still in the grave and there are mountains upon mountains rowled over him to keep him still in it We are in as bad a condition as ever and our hopes as desperate and it is now not onely the third day but the thirteenth nay the sixteenth year and yet we are not delivered But now hearken to a Word of Consolation As Christ rose in spight of the Jews they rowled a stone upon the mouth of the grave and sealed it and set a watch to keep it and yet he rose in spight of them all So shall Religion and the Gospel and Church of Christ rise notwithstanding all the opposition made against it Though never so many Mountains ●e in the way God will in time rowl away all these Mountains Mat. 16. Isa 54. Zach. 12.3 for Christ haih said That the gates of H●ll shall not prevail against his Church and that no weapon formed against Jacob shall prosper and that he will make Jerusalem a burthensome stone for all people all that burthen themselves with it shall be cut in pieces though all the people of the earth be gathered together against it As the children of Israel the more they were oppressed the more they multiplied so the more the Church of Christ is trodden under foot the more it will prosper As Moses his bush burned and was not consumed because God was in it so the Church of Christ may be burning and full of troubles and afflictions which shall purge it Rev. 11.7 8 9 10 11. and refine it but it shall not be consum●d for Christ is risen and his Church shall rise The God whom we serve is a God who can raise the dead It is related of the two Witnesses that when they shall have flnished their estimony they should be slain and lie three days and an half unburied and that the people that dwell upon the earth should re●o●ce over them and make merry But yet notwithstanding the Spirit of God should after three days and an half enter into them and they should stand upon their feet and ascend up to Heaven in the sight of their Enemies By these two Witnesses are meant all the eminent Opposers of Antichrist whether Magistrates or Ministers who though they prophesie in sackcloath 1260 years and towards the end of them which is yet to come be in a more then ordinary manner massacred and killed yet they shall after a little while rise again in their successors stand ●pon their feet and ascend up to a more heavenly and glorious condition There will be a happy and blessed Resurrection of the Church Famous is the Parable of the Dry Bones Ezek. 37. God saith to the Prophet Son of man can these bones live The Prophet answered O Lord God thou knowest Then God tells him That he would cause breath to enter into the dry bones and make them to live c. Though the Church of Christ be in as sad a condition as the Israelites in Babylon and be as dry bones in a grave and though the Prophets know not how they can be raised 2 Pet. 2.9 yet God knoweth how to deliver his people He can and will in due time raise them up to a more pure and happy estate even in this life Let us comfort one another with these things Use 3. OF Terrour to all the wicked and ungodly that cannot say with Job I know my Redeemer liveth but I know my Revenger liveth There will a time come when they that now stop their ears and will not hear the voyce of Christ speaking by his Word and Ministers shall hear a voyce whether they will or no and shall come out of their graves to the Resurrection of condemnation just as Pharaohs Baker out of Prison or as Malefactors out of Newgate to be executed at Tiburn Happy were it for such that there were no Resurrection that their souls did dye as the souls of Brute Beasts But let such know That there shall be a Resurrection of the unjust as well as of the just and that there will a day come in which
then his * Cant. 2.14 v ice will be sweet when he shall call to them to come up to * Isa 25.6 this Mountain to a feast of fat things a feast of wine on the Lees of fat things full of ma●row of wines on the Lees well refined Laetissimè excipientis 3. 'T is the speech of one that bids us welcome to the feast too Come my friends I it is Come and welcome now Come poor heart thou hast been coming a long time I went my self to call thee I * 2 Chron. 36.15 sent my Messengers rising up early and sending them continually to invite thee to come in I sent my holy Spirit also like a Dove from heaven and it did light upon thee and gave thee an Olive branch of peace in the Wildernesse of thy fears when it allured thee and call'd thee from all thy wandrings then I sent my black rod for thee by that grim Serjeant death to strip thee of thy soul body of sin not to be touched but by the Angel of death then I sent my Angels to bring thy soul to the Courts of thy God and now by the sounding of the last Trumpet I have call'd for thy sleepy body to arise out of the * Psal 22.15 dust of death And now after all these Messengers thou art come I will not upbraid thee for thy delays but come come blessed soul with as many welcomes as there are Saints and Angels in glory I have * John 14.2 prepared a place for thee * Cant. 5.1 thou at come into my Garden Eat oh friends Drink yea drink abundantly oh beloved And so I have done with the explication of the several branches of the Text now let us see what fruit they bear that may be * Cant. 2.3 sweet to oru taste First 1. Infer Then if there be a Kingdome prepared before the foundation of the World for the blessed Saints and holy ones then what manner of persons are * 2 Pet. 3.11 we in all unholy Conversation and godlessnesse in this generation Men are as dead to Religion as if heaven was but a dream and as hot upon sin as if hell had no fire or was all vanished into smoak as atheistical and wretched as if neither heaven hell nor earth neither did feel a God or any memorandum's of his Providence Therefore a little to fortifie this notion which artificial wickednesse hath endeavoured to expel and expunge out of natural consciences I shall endeavour to confirme your faith by Scripture and reason The Socinians deny the revelation of eternal life and a state to come to have been propounded under the Old Testament and the reward being only earth their Law and obedience to be but carnal and low which is to level the Jews to the order of brutes that so the Gentiles under the Gospel might be advanced to the state of men and so by vertue of rhe new prize of immortal life proposed they should have a new command as their care to run which is all as true as that all the Tribes of Israel were converted into Isacar's * Gen. 49.4 strong asses couching down between two burdens but * Luke 7.35 wisdome is justified of her children and the Chaldee paraphrase renders those words * Gen. 4.7 Remittetur tibi in saeculo futuro if thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted by this glosse Amend thy works in this world and thou shalt be forgiven in the world to come and the ●argum says the very dispute betwixt Cain and Abel was concerning a world to come and those carnal Hereticks that * Jude ver 10.11 19. are sensual not having the spirit in what they know naturally as brute beasts corrupt themselves they are gone into the way of Cain But when God tells Abraham * Gen 15.1 I am thy exceeding great reward and Jacob cries out * Gen. 49.18 I have waited for thy salvation O Lord even when about to dye God stiling himse●f their God is not by our Saviours authority * Mat. 22.32 the God of the dead but of the living therefore God held out eternal life in the promises yea and in the very command too * Levit. 18.3 Gen. 3.12 do this and live the reward of that obeeience there enjoyned was no lesse than this everlasting life as appeareth by our Saviours interpretation when the Lawyer came to him * Luke 10.25.28 saying Master What shall I do to inherit eternal life and he said What is written in the Law how readest thou and he answered thou shalt love the Lord c. and Jesus said Thou hast answered right this do and thou shalt live that is thou shalt have that thou desiredst viz. inherit eternal life and the very reproach of the Sadduces and the distinction of their Sect from Pharisees and others argueth sufficiently the world to come was a very common notion among all the Jews and indeed the whole land of Canaan was but a comprehensive type and shadow of heaven and all their Religion but a * Hebr. 10.1 shadow of good things to come in the Kingdome of heaven as well as in the Kingdome of the Messiah * John 8.56 whose day they then saw and were glad and if the Gospel contain the promise of eternal life then they had it in Abrahams days * Gal. 3.8 for the Gospel was preached before to him yea and before to Adam * Gen 3.15 that the seed of the woman should break the S rpents head and the skins of the Sacrifices wherewith he was cloathed might suggest the putting on of that promised seed and his obedience who was * Isa 53.5 to be bruised for the iniquities of his people But now to awaken Atheistical souls that deny not only the revelation of this Kingdome of God under the old Testament but its reality and existence under old and new consider these foure things very briefly as the limits of this Exercise command 1. The whole Creation is a Book which always lyeth open wherein we may read that there is a God who made the goodly Structure and Fabrick of Heaven and Earth Who else could be able to * Job 26.7 hang the vast body of the Earth upon nothing or to * Ver. 10. girdle the Sea and all its mountainous Waves with a Rope of Sand * Psal 104.2 to spread the heavens as a Curtain and hang up those vast Vessels of light in the Skies there must be a being existent from and of himself and so being improduced is infinitely perfect and comprehendeth all those perfections dispersed through the whole Creation and infinitely more yet what he makes is like himself every creature bears his footsteps but * Psal 8 3. Gen. 1.27 the heavens are the works of his fingers and man bears the very image of God We see in the several stories and degrees of the Creation love and
communicativenesse to their off-spring groweth more and more the higher you go it grows more in brutes than plants in men than in brutes in God therefore love and goodnesse which are most communicative are most transcendent Now God himself is the heaven we plead for he is the Region of souls and spirits and for the resurrection of the body his infinite power can surely * 1 Cor. 15.38 give to every seed it s own body though one part of our flesh was sublimated into the fire another precipitated into ashes and cast into the midst of the Sea devoured by a fish taken and eaten again by men and another part dissipated into the Aire and sucked into some other body Borel Med. Pari. ita refert yet if a Chymick can out of the ashes of a flower reproduce the flower in its former beauty nay out of the dung of beasts reproduce the very herbs they have eaten notwithstanding what is passed into nourishment by the architectonical parts and spirits yet abiding in those Reliques much more can God recover our bodies from all possible dispersions and conversions into other bodies when all the World shall be his Furnace and every thing resolved into its first seminal parts by the reverberation of the flames and give to every body * Florem Resurrectionis Tert. de Resur the flowre of resurrection and a reflorescence into glory 2. As there is a God and so that Kingdome so there are heirs and they are immortal souls and therefore fitted to be * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 uti Platonici in Divine conjunction for that which is contiguous to an Eternal Omne contiguum aeterno spirituali est aeternum spirituale Spiritual Being is Eternal and Spiritual but man is here only himself when in communion with God and spiritual things And God when he infused the reasonable soul he breathed into man the * Gen. 2.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breath of lives And Tertullian who had too grosse a conception of the nature of the soul yet calls it * Vaginam afflatus Divini liberalitatis suae haeredem Religionis suae sacerdotem Christi sui sororem the sheath and scabbard of Divine breath heir of his bounty c. in the exercise of those acts of apprehension judgement and argumentation it is impossible such steddy and orderly consequential actions should be performed by a fortuitous concurse of atomes or its reflexive acts much lesse by the purest flame no body being able to penetrate it self nor to dive into it self without a disorder of its parts But Religion rather then Reason being the great * Religio penè sola quae hominem discernat à mutis Lactan. de divi praemio l. 7. difference of a man from brutes 't is a sign he is made for communion with a better being and therefore as Augustine sayes Thou hast made our heart O Lord for thee and it will never * Quum tibi inhaesero ex toto me viva erit vita mea plena te tota nunc autem quia plenus tui non sum oneri mihi sum lib. de confes rest till it come to thee and when I shall wholly inhere and cleave to thee then my life will be lively but now being not full of the enjoyments of thee I am a burden to my self The World was made for brutes to live in but for man to * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lact. ibid. contemplate the Wisdome and Power of God he made many brutes but one man that he might be chieflly for the * Dei socius Aug. de Civ l. 12.20 ut cohaereat autori lib. 22.1 society of God and keep coherence to his Maker And alas the World is but a dry Morsel to an immortal soul whose vast Chaos of desires cannot be satisfied by it though every drop of comfort in it was swelled into an Ocean There is upon the soul such a drought without God as * Cant. 8.7 all the waters in the world cannot quench it such an endlesse thirst after truth and goodnesse in the general notion as it can never be satisfied till it find out the * Psal 36.9 fountain of this water of life 3. This Eternal state is the common sense of the World and the voice of natural conscience hath in all Ages proclaimed it Every Nation hath some Diety or other and so a Religion Heathens sacrifice though it may be it be to the Divel who cruelly sucks their very blood Turks and Saracens must have the black drop cut out of their breast and their circumcision every Religion puts some restraints upon mens lusts and lives Now though I believe though there were no reward or a future state Religion would be as good for our bodies as prunings are to Trees * Prov. 3.8 health to our navels marrow to our bones yet its severities would in no degree down with men were it not for the urgings and prickings on of natural conscience But Christians above * 1 Cor. 15.19 all men were most miserable if in this life only they had hope whose principles enjoin the highest degree of self-denial patience and bearing of the Crosse But every good man let the mad World prate as it will and vomit all its gall and bitternesse in reproaches and persecutions yet if he suffer for righteousnesse sake in innocent patience his own conscience gives him an acquittance and a secret absolution so as he can * Rom. 5.3 glory even in tribulation yea every devout soul more or lesse tasteth of those first fruits of heavenly delight in being conscious * 2 Cor. 1.12 of his duty discharged in simplicity and godly sincerity whatever calamities may attend him in this life which if they were not pledges of a fuller crop in that future harvest of joys the best men were most unhappy by that great frustration and disappointment of their expectations And so wicked men though the World may applaud their actions as highly vertuous by a sordid spirit of flattery yet * Mens habet attonitos surdo verbere coedit Per. their own consciences affr ght them and smite them with many a deadly and deaf blow which no body else doth hear or observe Cain may build his Cities and his Walls as high as the Clouds yet there is that within as he said to the Emperour that will ruine all * Gen. 4.5 his countenance falls and the guilt of his Brothers blood maketh his soul to blush and pulleth down his high looks The highest-formed sinners that have sinned themselves into despaire have nothing left them * Heb. 10.27 but a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery indignation which sh●ll devoure such Adversaries Others that have sinn'd themselves into the highest presumptions never come to any senseless ease till they attaine to * Isa 28.15 make a Covenant with Hell and can be content to * Heb. 11.25 suffer