Evum of eternity he was doing these things 1. Some things in relation to himself 2. Some things in relation to his creatures 1. Some things in relation to himself and those things were either proper or common to the three persons 1. The things proper to each of the persons were those internal incommunicable actions of God as 1. To beget and that belongs onely to the Father who is neither made nor created nor begotten of any 2. To be begotten and that belongs onely to the Son who is of the Father alone not made nor created but begotten 3. To proceed from both and that belongs onely to the Holy Ghost who is of the Father and the Son neither made nor created nor begotten but proceeding And these were Gods actions in that eternity before all worlds the Father was begetting God the Son the Son was begotten of God the Father the Holy Ghost was proceeding from God the Father and God the Son But what were these actions of God never in action during all that eternity yes as they are called internal actions so they are permanent look as the Sun doth alwayes beget his beams and both Sun and beams do send forth the heats So the Father from all eternity ever did and now doth and ever will beget his Son and both the Father and the Son ever did and now do and ever will aspire and breath forth the Holy Ghost And therefore Origân saith well Oââg hââ âin Jeââm Heb. .3 Prov. 8.25 Our Jesus is the brightness of Gods glory now the brightness of glory is not once begotten and then afterwards leaves to be begotten but as often as the glory riseth from whence the brightness springeth so often doth the brightness of glory arise Before the hills was I brought forth Some translate thus ante colles generat and not as others generavit me before the mountains were setled he begetteth me Surely the Son of God is ever begetting and the Holy Spirit is ever proceeding 2. The things common to the three persons in that eternity were those internal actions of God wherein the three persons did communicate as 1. That one was in another and possessed one another the Father remaining with the Son the Son with the Father and the Holy Ghost in P ov 8.22 John 1.1 John 14.10 and with them both Thus we read of Christ the Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his works of old And in the beginning was the word and the word was with God And I am in the Father and the Father in me 2. That one glorified another John 17 5. the Father glorified the Son and the Son glorified the Father and the holy Ghost glorified both the Father and the Son And now O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was 3. That one delighted in another the Father delighted in the Son the Son delighted in the Father Prov. 8.30 and the Holy Ghost delighted in them both then I was by him as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight rejoycing alwayes before him I was daily his delight in the Original delights intimating that the Son was variety of delights unto his Father rejoycing alwayes before him Christ speaks in terms very quaint and familiar alwayes rejoycing q. d. greatly sporting it is a Metaphor or simile taken from little ones which sport and play before their parents O see how the Father and the Son rejoyce in one anothers fellowship nay see how they spend that long eternity before the creation in nothing but reioycing and delights The Father delights in his Son and the Son rejoyceth in his Father Consider O my Soul thou hast sometimes had a tickling to know what God was a doing before the Creation why now be sober and satisfied with this knowledge God spent all that time if I may call it time in delighting himself in Jesus why this was Gods work to delight in his Son and he so delighted in him that he desired no other pleasure than the company and beholding of him which accordingly he twice told from heaven while Christ was on earth saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased in whom I am well pleased The first sound was at his Baptisme Matth. 3.17 and the second at his transfiguration Mat. 17.5 2. Some other things God was a doing in relation to his creatures they will fall in at our next consideration only this by the way As God and Christ rejoyced in the fruition of one another without communicating the notice thereof to any creature so in the next verse we find them rejoycing in the salvation of men Prov. 8 3â and my delights were with the sons of men Amidst the other considerations O my soul think of this what that God from all eternity should delight in thy salvation why this consideration sets out to purpose the heart and desire of God to save thy soul for 1. Delights arise out of the strongest and choycest desires men are pleased with many things in which they delight not 2 God and Christ are mentioned here to delight in this work and in no other work of theirs not in the Angels not in the world nor in any thing in it 3. This their delight is mentioned next to their delighting in each other 4. This delight is aforehand whilest Gods heart was only in the expectation and his mind but laying the plot of thy salvation all these argue how great a matter this was in Gods esteem and how much his heart was in it even from everlasting O let these fall into thy consideration 2. Consider Jesus meerly in his relation to us consider him in that great transaction betwixt God and him for our salvation And that we may settle our thoughts and dwell here 1. Consider the Project The great God having entertained thoughts within himself to communicate himself out of his aloneness everlasting he layes this plot that all he would do in that respect it should be to the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes 2.6 O my soul consider meditate and muse on this plot of the Almighty it is contained by the Apostle in a very few words do thou weigh them all here is 1. The Praise 2. The glory 3. Of his Grace 1. Praise is a setting forth of this or that by word or deed or gesture it containes in it reverend respect an high esteem a strong admiration 2. Glory is the glorious being or essence of God the glory of God in himself Sometimes we read of the glory of his power that is his glorious essence which is most powerful and sometimes of the glory of his Majesty that is his glorious essence which is most Majestical 2 Thes 1.9 Isa 2.16 Ephes 1.6 and sometimes of the glory of his grace that is his glorious essence which is most gracious and merciful but 3. Why the
from the custome of Kings who place those they honour anâ to whom they commit the Power of government at their right hand more particularly this sitting at Gods right hand implies two things 1. his glorious exaltation 2. The actual administration of his Kingdom Phil. 2.9 1. Christ is exalted Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow this Session is the supreme dignity and glory given by the Father unto Christ after his Ascension this Session is the peerless exaltation of the Mediator in his Kingdom of glory But how was Christ exalted I answer 1. In regard of his divine nature not really or in it self Impossible it was that the divine nature should receive any intrinsecal improvement or glory because all fulness of glory essentially belonged unto it but declaratory or by way of manifestation so it was that his Dâvinity during the time of his humiliation lay hidden and overshadowed as the light of a candle is hidden in a dark and close lanthorn but now in his Session that Divinity and Glory which he had alwayes with his Father was shewed forth and declared Rom. 1.4 He was declared to be the Son of God with Power both at his resurrection and at his Session 2 Iâ regard of his humane nature and yeâ that must be understood soberly for I cannot think that Christs humane nature was at all exalted in regard of the grace of Persânal union or in regard of the habitual perfections of his humane soul because he possessed all these from the beginning but in regard of those interceptions of the beams of the Godhead and Divine glory and in respect of the restraints of that sense and sweetness and feeling opperations of the beatifical Vision during his humiliation in these respects Christ was exalted in his humane nature and had all the glory from the Diety communicated to it which possibly in any way it was capable of There was a time when the Office which Christ undertook for us made him a man of sorrows but when he had finished that dispensation then he was filled with unmatchable glory which before his Session he enjoyed not there was a time when the natural consequence and flowings of Christ's glory from that personal union was stayed and hindred by special dispensation for the working of our salvation but when that miraculous stay was once removed and the work of our redemption fully finished then he was exalted beyond the capacity or comprehension of all the Angels of heaven Heb. 1.13 To which of the Angels said he at any time sit at my right hand in this respect it is said that God highly exalted him exalted he was in his Resurrection Ascension but never so high as at his Session in his Resurrection he was exalted with Jonah from the lower parts to the upper parts of the earth in his Ascension he was exalted with Elijah above the Clouds above the Stars above the Heavens but in his Session he was exalted to the highest place in Heaven even to the right hand of God Far above all Heavens that he might fill all things Eph. 4.10 2. Christ reigns or actually administers his glorious Kingdom and this is the principal part of Christ's sitting at God's right hand So the Psalmist Psal 110.1 2. The Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy foot-stool the Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion rule thou in the midst of thy enemies The Apostle is yet more large God set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places Eph. 1.20 21 22 23. far above all principallity and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be the head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Some describe this Session at Gods right hand to be all one with his reigning in equal power and glory with the Father but the Son hath alwayes so reigned and the holy Ghost hath alwayes so reigned who yet is not said in Scripture to sit at the right hand of the Father I believe therefore there is something in this Session or Reign of Christ which doth difference it from that reigning Power and Glory of the Father and of the Son as only God and of the holy Ghost and if we would know what that is I would call it an actual administration of his Kingdom or an immediate executing of his Power and Glory over every creature as Mediator There is a natural and a dispensatory Kingdom of Jesus Christ for the first the Father reigns immediatly by the Son but by the holy Ghost the Father doth not reign immediatly but through the Son the same order is to be kept in their power which is in the Persons the Father reigns not by himself but of himself because he is of none the Son reigneth by himself not of himself because he is begotten of the Father the holy Ghost reigneth by himself but from the Father and the Son from whom he doth proceed And as in the natural so in the dispensatory Kingdom the Father reigns immediatly by the Son as Mediator and hence it is that the Son as Mediator is only said to sit at Gods right hand because the right of actual administration or immediate execution of the Sovereign power is appropriate and peculiar to the Son as Mediator betwixt God and man And this made Christ to say The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgment unto the Son John 5.22 as Mediator You may object Christ was Mediator immediately after his incarnation but he did not actually administer his Kingdom then I Answer it is true Christ for a time did by a voluntary dispensation empty himself and laid aside the right of actual administration of his Kingdom but immediatly after his Ascension the Father by voluntary dispensation resigned it to the Son again Come now saith the Father and take thou power over every creature till the time that all things shall be subdued under thee This right the one relinquished in the time of that humiliation of himself and this right the other conferred at the time of the exaltation of his Son SECT V. Of the two Natures wherein Christ sits at God's right hand 3. ACcording to what Nature is Christ said to sit at the right hand of God I answer according to both Natures first he sits at God's right hand as God hereby his Divinity was declared and his Kingdom is such that none that is a pure creature can possibly execute Psal 110.1 The Lord said to my Lord saith David sit thou on my right hand The Lord said to my Lord i.e. God said to Christ now
hear of such a Christ and are we not all in a burning love in a seraphical love or at least in a conjugal love O my heart how is it thou art not love sick how is it thou dost not charge the daughters of Jerusalem as the spouse did Cant. 5.8 I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love 2. For his bounty no sooner was he ascended and set down at God's right hand but he gives gifts unto men and he sends down the holy Ghost This was the Gift of gifts I shall only weigh two Circumstances in this Gift either whereof both dignifies and casts a sparkle of bounty from the Giver into the heart of the Receiver to move him to love As One Circumstance is the greatness of the Giver certainly the preheminence or dignity of any principle ennobleth and enhanceth the effect a gift coming from a great Person carries ever a scent with it of a certain greatness and relisheth either of excellency or superiority or nobility or all It is storied of Charles the fifth that in his wars being ever prest with want of money and so unable to remunerate the services of divers Dutch Captains and Nobles whom he had entertained he used after any great exploit performed by them to call together his Nobles and Camp into such a field and there in the presence of them all to take a Gold chain from about his own neck and to put it about the neck of such a Captain or such a Collonel and so to embrace him and to give him thanks for his gallant service why this they esteemed a greater favour being Circumstanced by such a Person in such a way than if in very deed he had given them a sufficient pay or remuneration O they valued that Chain more than many bushels of the like Gold the very Person of the Emperour hanged at the Chain such a precious Jewel as in warlike conceits a million of Gold could not countervail O my soul if an Emperour thus gained the affections of men how shouldst thou but love Christ the great Emperour of Heaven and Earth Numb 11 17. it was he that gave thee his Spirit it was he that took off the Spirit which is upon him so is the expression of God to Moses and put it upon thee and doth not the Person of Christ the Dignity of Christ inhance the value of the gift as all gifts are signs of love so the love of a great Personage and the gifts issuing from such a love ought more to be accounted than any gifts of any meaner person whatsoever 2. Another Circumstance is the greatness of the Gift this argueth greatness of good will and consequently deserveth a correspondence of a semblable affection Now what greater gift had Christ in store than to give his own spirit the spirit proceedeth from him and is the same essence with himself the spirit is the third Person of the true and only God-head proceeding from the Father and the Son and coeternal coequal and consubstantial with the Father and the Son this appears by those divine Attributes and Properties which are attributed and communicated to the holy spirit As 1. Eternity God never was without his spirit Gen. 1.1 2. In the beginning God created heaven and earth and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters 2. Omnipotency because he together with the Father and the Son createth and preserveth all things By his Spirit he hath garnished the heavens Job 26.13 33.4 1 Cor. 12.11 1 Cor. 2.10 the Spirit of God hath made me and all these things worketh that one and the self-same Spirit dividing to every man severally as he will 3. Omnisciency or the knowledge of all things For the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God 4. Immutability or unchangeableness Men and brethren Acts 1.16 Rom. 5.5 this Scripture must needs have been fulfilled which the holy Ghost spake 5. Infinite mercy or love God is love and the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us 6. Holy indignation even against hiââen sins They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit Isa 63.10 Acts 5.3 4 9. Eph. 4.30 why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye to the holy Ghost thou hast not lyed unto men but unto God a plain Text for the Divinity of the holy Ghost How is it that ye have agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord Grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption I might add Miracles Mat. 12.28 28.19 1 Tim. 4.1 2 Cor. 3.38 and the institution of Sacraments and Prophesies and Gifts and Graces as the effects of his Divinity I cast out devils saith Christ by the Spirit of God and baptize in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost And the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith And we are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. See now how the holy spirit is God coeternal coequal and consubstantial with God the Father and God the Son is not this a great gift yea as great a gift as possibly can be given what can he more than to give himself and to give his spirit O the bonds of love that are upon man towards Christ in this respect Come my soul and take a view of the Glory and Bounty of Jesus Christ if thy heart be not all brass and iron and stone if there be any fleshiness softness or pliableness in it why then how shouldst thou chuse but love if either beauty or bounty if either Majesty or magnificence can draw thy affection Christ will have it for in him is all O let him be thy all surely if thou hast any thing besides himself he is the Donor of all he is the beauty of all the sum of all the perfection of all yea he is the Author Preserver and Finisher of all SECT VII Of Joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars there is not a particular under consideration but 't is the object of a Christians joy As 1. How should it heighten my joys and enlarge my comforts when I do but consider that Christ is ascended into glory by this it is clear and evident that Christ is accepted of the Father for me or otherwise he should never have been received into Heaven if any frown had been in the face of God surely Christ coming so near God he should have had it if any exception had been against his satisfaction any flaw in our pardons surely Christ should have heard of it yea without question he must have been turned out of Heaven until he had made a full payment of our debts
out of our selves otherwise we cannot see his Glory we are in our selves shut up in a dark dungeon and therefore we are called upon to come forth into the clear light of faith and with the Eyes of Faith to behold in daily meditation the Glory of Christ Jesus SECT II. An Exhortation to look off all other things ONe word of Exhortation Christians I beseech you look off all other things especially all evil things I know I am pleading with you for an hard thing I had need of the Rhetorick of an Angel to perswade you to turn your Eyes from off these things nay if I had all were too little it is God only must perswade Japhet to dwell in the tents of Shem and yet let me offer a few considerations venture at a perswading of you Gen. 9.17 and leave the issue with God 1. Consider that all other evil things are in Gods account as very nothing verily every man at his best estate is altogether vanity not only man but every man Psal 39.5 nor every man in his worst condition but every man at his best estate nor every man man at his best estate is little worth but every man at his best estate is vanity emptiness nothing it may be so in part nay but in every part he is wholly totally altogether vanity would any man think that a great rich honourable Man whom we look upon with such high admiring thoughts should be laid thus low in Gods esteem O wonder wonder and yet 't is no such wonder but one day you shall find the experience of this truth your selves Rich men have slept their sleeps and none of the men of might have found their hands Psal 76.5 or as others render it they have found nothing in their hands that is rich men have passed over this life as men do pass over a sleep imagining themselves to have golden mountains and rocks of diamond but when they awake at the day of death they find themselves to have nothing Why Christian wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not Prov. 23.5 1. Observe that riches are not they are nothing those things that make men great in the eyes of the world are nothing in the eyes of God 2. Observe that God would not have us so much as set our eyos upon them they are not objects worth the looking on 3. Observe with what indignation he speaks against those that will set their eyes upon these vanities Wilt thou set thine eyes upon a thing which is not q. d. what a vain unreasonable sottish sensless thing is this 2. Consider that all such things if they are any thing they are but trifles deceits thornes miseries uncertain things this is an ordinary theme it is every mans object every mans subject a very easie thing it is to declaim up the vanity misery uncertainty of the creatures Ay but do you make it the matter of your meditation be you serious in it think of it deeply and desire God to be in your thoughts Oh what work will it then make in your breasts O how would it wean your loves and desires off all these things Christians consider all these adjuncts of all sublunary things when the creatures tempt you be not inticed by the beauty of them so as to forget their vanity say Here is a flower faire but fading here is a glass that 's bright but very brittle 3. Consider the difference of these objects Christ and all other things as thus all other things are vanities but Christ is a real solid substantial excellent glorious thing all other things are temporary fading things but Christ is an enduring substance the same yesterday Revel 1.4 and to day and for ever which is and which was and which is to come all other things are thorns vexation of spirit but Christ is full of joy and comfort a most ravishing object Cant. 5.16 all composed of loves or altogether lovely O who would make it his businesse to fill his coffers with pibbles when he may have pearls or gold or silver or precious things what must you look off your sins why see before you the graces of the Spirit of Christ must you look off your idel sinfull company see before you the fellowship of the Father 1 John 1.3 and the Son the Lord Jesus Christ must you look off your pomp and glory see before you the priviledge of adoption you shall be called the sons and daughters of God Rom. 8.13 heirs and co-heirs with Christ must you look off your worldly riches see before you the riches of the graces of Christ must you look off sinful pleasures see before you fulness of joy Psal 16.11 at Christs right hand are pleasures evermore must you look off your own righteousness see before you the righteousness of Christ Jesus O what a vast difference is there betwixt these objects Christ and all other things 4. Consider that Christ looked off heaven and heavenly things for you how much more should you look off the earth and earthly things the world and worldly things for him Christ left the glory the company the pleasures of Paradise for you and he made himself of no reputation he nothing'd himself as it were for you you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Cor 8.9 who though he was rich yet for your sakes he became poor that you through his poverty might be made rich O let that melting love win you to him and wean you off all other things 5. Consider that the rational soul of man is oft too high a birth to spend its strength upon other things the soul of man is of the same nature with Angels it is a kind of divine spark now if a man have a golden mill he would not use it to grind dirt straws and rotten sticks in the soul the mind the thinking faculty of man is too high to be exercised in the things of this earth the soul is of a most excellent capacious nature it is fit to converse not only with Angels but with the eternal God himself with Father Son and Holy Ghost it is of a transcendent being put all the world into the ballance with it and it is nothing in comparison the soul of the meanest gally-slave is more precious than heaven and earth than Sun and Moon and stars and all the hoast of heaven now if a mans soul be of such an high-born nature if the Lord hath put such a spirit into the bosome of man for him to bestow the strength of it upon low base mean and earthly things Oh what an evil is this 9. Consider how short is the time that you have here in this world this is the argument of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29.31 because the time is short therefore let us use the world as if we used it not therefore let our hearts be taken off these things yet a few days and you
you more 2. For the godly are not they careless of this Duty O their excursions from God! sad dejections of spirit inordinat affections of the world and in the mean-while O the neglect of this Gospel-ordinance even amongst Saints themselves I know not whether through want of skill or through want of will but sure I am this duty lies dormant neglected of most of the people of God their faults I may express in these respects 1. In not sending out their understandings in not pointing their minds towards Jesus I write unto you said the Apostle to stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance it is in the Original ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã 2 Pet. 3.1 Psal 57.8 Judg 7.12 to awaken your pure minds and it was but need See how David calls upon himself Awake my glory and see how Deborah calls upon her self Awake awake Deborah awake awake utter a song Awaking is a word that imports rouzing as birds that provoke their young ones by flight to make use of their wings now how few are there that thus call upon themselves it was the Prophets complaint no man stirs up himself Isa 64.7 to take hold of God O what a shame is this is it fit that our understandings which God hath entrusted us withal should be no more improved is it fit that our minds those golden cabinets which God hath given us to be filled with heavenly treasure should either be empty or stuft with vanity nothing worse then nothing O that such glorious creatures as our souls should lacquey after every creature which should be in attendance upon Christ which should be like Angels waiting and standing in the presence of our God! O that such glorious things as our immortal spirits should run after vanity and so become vain which if rightly improved should walk with Angels should lodge themselves in the bosom of the glorious God! Do we not see how Christ is sending out to us continually the thoughts of his heart are love eternal love and shall not we send out our thoughts towards him shall not we let our minds run out towards him 2. In not bending of their minds to this work It may be the mind looks up but it 's so feeble that like an arrow shot from a bow weakly bent it reacheth not the mark It is the wise mans counsel Eccl. 9.10 Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with all they might O that Gods people should be so lazie dull sluggish sloathfull in this spiritual work As Jesus said to the multitudes concerning John Matt 11.7 What went ye out into the wilderness to see So may I ask believers in their looking unto Jesus What went ye out to see when you crawle move as if you had no hearts nor spirits within you whom go ye forth to see what Heb. 1 3. him that is the Lord of glory what him that is the brightness of his Fathers glory and the express image of his person what are such heavy lazy aspects fit to take in such a glory as this is you see in what large streams your thoughts fly forth to other things are you only languishing weak and feeble in things of so great concernment Oh that Christians should be cold in spirituals hot in the pursuit of earthly temporal things 3. In not binding of their minds to this object in not staying the eye on Jesus Christ Some may give a glance at Christ but they are presently wheeled off again but why doth not the eye abide there at least till it come to some profitable issue is not Christ worthy on whom our souls should dwell Certainly if we love our Jesus that love will hold us Christ then will be in our thoughts and minds and we cannot off him as the load-stone having drawn the iron it keeps it fast to it self so if love draw our hearts it holds it fast to the object loved Christ himself acknowledgeth such an operation of love upon himself Turn away thine eyes for they have overcome me thou hast ravished my heart my sister my spouse with one of thine eyes Cant. 6.5 Christ was held in the galleries and captivated with love to his people so that his eyes was ever upon them nay he could not get his eyes off them Can a mother forget her child Isa 49.14 no more can I forget you and is Christ so tender in his love towards us that he ever minds us and shall our minds be so loose to him so fluttering and fleeting shall there be no more care to bind our selves in cords of love to him who hath bound himself in such cords of love to us 4. In not dayly exercising this blessed Duty it may be now and then they are awakened and they get up into heaven to see their Jesus but it is not dayly Oh consider Is this now and then going to heaven within the vail to live the life of friends is this to carry our selves as children what to be so strange at home but now and then once in a month in a year there to be seldom where we should always be is Jesus Christ such a mean thing that a visit now and then should serve the turn the Queen of Sheba hearing Solomons wisdom Oh said she 1 King 10.8 Blessed are those thy servants that always stand before thee and hear thy wisdom if she were so taken with Solomon remember that a greater than Solomon is here and shall we deprive our selves of that blessedness which we might enjoy by standing always in the presence of Christ to hear his Wisdom and to behold his Glory Oh my Brethren let us take shame to our selves that to this day we have been so careless in sending bending binding our minds to this blessed object Jesus Christ yea let us blush that we have not made it our daily business Psal 1.2 David describes the blessed man by his delighting in the law of the Lord and by his meditating on that Law day and night how then is he to be reproved that neither meditates on the Law of the Lord nor on the Lord the Law-maker day and night O alas we keep not a constant course we are not daily in the exercise of viewing Jesus nay I fear we look upon this Duty of looking unto Jesus as a questionable thing it seems to many as a Duty unknown unheard of unthought of it is not in their notice and how should it be in their practice But I leave this first Use SECT IV. Vse of Exhortation IS inward experimental Looking unto Jesus a choice and high Gospel-ordinance Vse 2 One Use of Exhortation I beseech you by the meekness and gentleness of Christ 2 Cor. 10.1 Rom. 12.1 Rom. 15.30 I beseech you by the mercies of God I beseech you brethren for the Lord Jesus Christs sake and for the love of the Spirit to look unto Jesus or if my beseeching will not prevail why yet
thought but somtimes the soul doth muse or meditate on it self as when it thinks of its own Essence or faculties or the like and this we call a reflect thought why now the soul understands it self now it hath some Idea or image of it self now it conceives it self this is our phrase it conceives it self There is not only a carnal but a spiritual Conception as when I understand this or that I say I conceive this or that I have the Idea or image of this or that within my Soul Or as in a glass a man doth conceive and get a perfect image of his own face by a way of reflection so God in beholding and minding of himself doth in himself beget or conceive a most perfect and a most lively image of himself which very image is that in the Trinity which we call the Son of God Thus you read in Scripture that Jesus the Son of God is called the brightness of his Fathers Glory Heb. 1.3 and the express Image of his person 1. The brightness of his Fathers Glory herein God the Father is compared unto a lightsom body and God the Son unto a beam or splendor sent forth or issuing out from that glorious body 2. The express Image of his Person herein God the Father is compared unto a seal and God the Son unto an impression resulting from the seal Now look as wax upon a seal hath the engraven Image of the Seal so the Son of God which the Father hath begotten or conceived of his own understanding is the very Image of his Fathers understanding hence not only the Father but also the Son is called Understanding it self I have Counsel and Wisdom saith Christ I am Vnderstanding Prov. 8.14 whatsoever the Father is the Son is indeed the understanding in men and the thing understood are not usually one and the same but in God it is all one Gods conceivings and begettings are the most inward of all the Father conceives of himself and in himself and his conceiving is a begetting and his begetting abideth still in himself because his understanding can no where meet with any thing suitable but that which he himself is and that conveying of himself or begetting of himself is the second subsistence in the Trinity which we call the everlasting Son of God 4. For the mutual kindness and lovingness of him that begets and of him that is begotten we say this brings forth a third person or subsistence in God Now for the understanding of this matter we must consider two things first that in the Essence of God besides his understanding there is a Will Secondly that this Will doth work everlastingly upon it self as his Understanding doth For the first that in the Essence of God besides his Understanding there is a Will is very clear for he that gives a will to all rational creatures cannot want it himself how should he be without will whose will it is that we will of necessity it is that there should be some prime or chief will on whose will all other wills should depend but the Scriptures are plain I am God and there is none else I am God and there is none like me Isa 46.9 10. My Councel shall stand and I will do all my pleasure For the second that this will in God doth everlastingly work upon it self is clear for as doth the understanding so doth the will but the understanding of God doth act upon it self as the chief and most perfect Truth therefore the will of God doth will himself as the chief and most perfect good Indeed what other sutable Object can the will of God have besides himself an infinite will must needs have an infinite good and in this sense as our Saviour tells us there is none good but one that is God Mat. 9.17 hence it is that the will of God doth reflect upon it self and acquiess in it self as in an infinite good And now we come to the manner of this high mystical spiritual procession of the Spirit from the Father and the Son As the Will of God doth act and reflect upon it self from all Eternity so it works this effect that it delights it self in the infinite good which it knoweth in it self for the action of the Will is delight and liking and this very delight which God or his Will hath in his own infinite goodness doth bring forth a third person or Subsistence in God which we call the holy Ghost So that indeed if you would know what the Holy Ghost is I would answer it is the mutual kindness and lovingness and joy and delight of the Father and the Son The Father by this act of Will doth joy and delight in his Son and the Son by this act of Will doth joy and delight in his Father and this is it which the Son saith of himself and of his Father Prov. 8 30. I was daily his delight rejoycing always before him q. d. I was from all eternity his delight and he was from all Eternity my delight the Father as it were from all Eternity aspired in his Will and Love and joy unto the Son and the Son as it were from all Eternity aspired in his Will and Love and joy unto the Father and from this common desire and aspiring of either Person the Holy Ghost proceeds which makes up the whole Triââây of persons I shall lay out this by some similitude or resemblance As when a man looks in a glass if he smile his image smileth too here 's but one face and yet in this Unity we may find a Trinity the face is one the image of the face in a glass is another and the smiling of them both together is a third and yet all are in one face and are of one face and all are but one face so the understanding which is in God is one the reflection or image or his understanding he beholdeth in himself as in a glass is a second and the love and likeing of them both together by reason of the will fulfilled is a third and yet all are in one God and all are but one God In this Trinity there is neither first nor last in respect of time but all are at once and at one instant even as in a glass the face and the image of the face when they smile they smile together and not one before nor after another For conclusion of all As we have the Son of the Father by his everlasting will in working by his understanding so we have the Holy Ghost of the love and joy and delight of them both by the joynt working of the understanding and will together whereupon we conclude three distinct persons or subsistences which we call the Father Son and holy Ghost in one spiritual yet unspeakable substance which is very God himself My meaning is not to insist on the Father or the holy Ghost but only on the Son Yet thus far I have added
eternity See here I have loved a remnant of mankind both of Jews and Gentiles with an everlasting love I know they will sin and corrupt themselves and so become enemies to me and liable unto eternal death now thou art a mighty person able to do what I require of thee for them if thou wilt take upon thee their nature and sins and undertake to satisfie my Justice and Law and take away that hatred that is in them towards me and my Law and make them a believing holy people then I will pardon them and adopt them in thee for my sons and daughters and make them co-heirs with thee of an incorruptible crown of life And then said Christ loe I come to do thy will O God Heb 10.5.9 then Christ as it were struck hands with God to take upon him the nature and sin of man and to do and suffer for him whatsoever God required of him Certainly this was the whole business of our salvation first transacted betwixt God the Father and Christ before it was revealed to us Hence we are said to be given unto Christ I have manifested thy name said Christ unto the men which thou gavest me out of the world John 17.6 thine they were and thou gavest them me this very giving implies as if the Father in his Eternity should have said to the Son these I take to be vessels of mercy and these thou shalt bring unto me for they will destroy themselves but thou shalt save them out of their lost estate And then the Son takes them at his Fathers hand and looking at his Fathers will this is the Fathers will which hath sent me Jâhn 6.39 that of all which he hath given me I should loose nothing he thereupon takes care of such he would not for a world any of them should be lost which his Father hath given him they are more dear than so In Isaiah 53.10 11. and in Psal 40.7 Christ is brought in as a Surety offering himself for us and readily accepting of Gods will in this very matter and hence it is that he is called Gods servant and his ears are said to be opened Isa 5.11 Psal 40.6 Isa 42.16 In Isa 42.6 this very Covenant is expresly mentioned Thus God speaks of Christ Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soul delighteth I will give thee for a Covenant of the people for a light of the Gentiles Yea this Covenant and agreement seems to be confirmed with an Oath in Heb. 7.28 and for this service Christ is required to ask of God Psal 2 8 and he will give him the heathen for his Inheritance Observe how the Church of God is given to Christ as a reward of that obedience which he shewed in accepting of the office of a Surety for us This stipulation some make to be that counsel of peace spoken of by the prophet Heb. 7.28 and the counsel of peace shall be between them both Zach 6.13 ver 12 i.e. between the Lord and the man whose name is the Branch And for this agreement it is that Christ is called the second Adam for as with the first Adam God plighted a Covenant concerning him and his posterity so also he did indent with Christ and his Seed concerning eternal life to be obtained by him I deny not but that some promises were made only to Christ in his own person and not to descend to his children as Sit on my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy foot-stool Heb. 1.13 Isa 53.10 Psal 2.8 Heb. 1.5 Jer. 32 38 and he shall see his seed he shall prolong his dayes the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hands and ask of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession But there are other promises made to him and his as that grand promise I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son it is first made to him and then to us and that special promise of spiritual grace John 1.16 of justification Isa 50.8 of victory and dominion Psal 110.2 of the Kingdome of glory Luke 24 26. they are every one first made to him and then to us The business from eternity lay thus here is man lost said God to his Son but thou shalt in fullness of time go and be born of flesh and blood and dye for them and satisfie my justice and they shall be thine for a portion and they shall be called the holy people the redeemed of the Lord Isa 62.12 This shalt thou do said the Father and upon these termes they shall live that believe This was Gods Covenant with the Son of his Love for us to whom the Son answered as it were again Psal 40.6 7. Content Father I will go and fulfil thy pleasure and they shall be mine for ever I will in the fullness of time die for them and they shall live in me burnt-offerings and sin-offerings thou hast not required no it was self-offering then said I loe I Come in the volume of the Book it is written of me to do thy will O my God In what Book was it written that Christ should come to do the will of God Not only in the Book of the Law and the Prophets but also in the Book of Gods decrees In this sense the Lamb was slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13.8 His Father from before all time appointed him to be our high Priest and he from all eternity subscribed to his Fathers pleasure in it In Galath 3.15 Gâl 3.15 Brethren I speak after the manner of men though it be but a mans Covenant yet if it be confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto Now to Abraham his seed were the promises made he saith not and to seeds as of many but as of one and to thy seed which is Christ There is a question whether this Covenant here mentioned was made onely betwixt God and Christ or onely betwixt God and us or both betwixt God and Christ betwixt God and us The occasion of this question is in these words Now to Abraham Jer. 3.31 his seed were the promises made he saith not and to seeds as of many but as of one and to thy seed which is Christ 1. Some argue hence that there is no Covenant or promise made to us but only to Christ or with Christ Christ stood for us articled with God for us and performed the conditions for life and glory so that the promises are made all to him yet this indeed is confessed that because we are Christs and are concerned in the Covenant it is therefore sometimes called a Covenant made with us I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah not that the Covenant is really made with us but only with Christ for us and when we feel our selves
his if God in Christ hath of his own free love set thee apart to life and salvation then know it for thy self Jâb 5 27. it is inward experimental knowledge we speak of 4. Study the purpose of God concerning thy salvation this purpose of God speaks the stability and certainty of they salvation in Christ his purpose is in and from himself who is God and not man and therefore cannot repent Numb 23.19 hath he said and shall he not do it hath he spoken and shall he not make it good 5. Study the decrees of God they are all one with Predestination the book of life the seal of God what hath the Lord decreed predestinated booked sealed thee for salvation Psal 89 15. O how blessed is the people that know this joyful sound they shall walk in the light of they countenance O Lord. 6. Study the Covenant of grace remember how the business of eternity lay thus here is every man lost said God to his Son but thou shalt in fulness of time go and be born of flesh and blood and die for some of them and satisfie my Justice and they shall be thine for a portion and they shall be called the holy people the redeemed of the Lord. To whom the Son answered be it so Lord I will go and fulfil thy pleasure and they shall be mine for ever Observe and be acquainted with this Covenant in that very Dialogue first God demands of his Son that he lay down his life and for his labour he promiseth that he shall be his seed and God shall give him many children Isa 53.10 Heb. 10.5 9. And secondly the Son consents to lay down his life and saith here I am to do thy will O God thou hast given me a body What O my soul that the Father and Christ should transact a bargain from eternity concerning thee that there should be any communing betwixt the Father and the Son concerning thy happiness and salvation Surely this is worthy thy paines Job 3.7 and study O hear it and know thou it for thy good SECT II. Of considering Jesus in that respect 2. VVE must consider Jesus carrying on this work of salvation in that eternity It is not enough to study and know him but according to the measure of Knowledg we have attained we must ponder and muse and meditate and consider of him now consideration is an expatiating and enlarging of the mind and heart on this or that subject consideration is a fixing of our thoughts a stedfast bending of our minds to some spiritual matter till it work on the affections and conversation We may know and yet be inconsiderate of that we do know but when the intention of our mind and heart is taken up about some one known object and other things are not for the present taken notice of this is consideration O that if it were possible we could so consider Jesus in this first period of eternity as that for a while at least we could forget all other things Christians I beseech you be dead to the world be insensible of all other things and look onely on Jesus it is said that men in a phrenzy are insensible of what you do to them because their minds are taken up about that which they apprehend so strongly and if ever there was any object made known to take up the mind of a spiritual man it is this even this not but that other objects may be deeply and seriously minded of men it is reported of Archimedes who was a great Mathematician that when the City was taken wherein he was and the warlike instruments of death clattering about his ears and all was in a tumult yet he was so busie about drawing his lines that he heard no noise nor did he know there was any danger but if such objects as those could take up the intention of his mind so as not to regard other things how much more should this consideration of Christ If a carnal heart a man that minds earthly things be so taken up about them because they are an object suitable to him how much more should a gracious heart that can see into the reality of these things of God Christ from everlasting be so taken up with them as to mind nothing else come then O my soul and set thy consideration on work as thus 1. Consider Jesus in his relation to God how he was the eternal Son of the Father I know in some respects we have little reason thus to look on Jesus as we are sinners and fallen from God there is no looking on an absolute Deity alas that Majesty because perfectly and essentially good is no other then an enemy to sinners as sinners so as we are sinners and fallen from God there is no looking on the Son of God I mean on the Son of God considered in the notion of his own eternal being as coequal and coessential to God the Father Alas our sin hath offended his justice which is himself and what have we to do with that dreadful power which we have provoked But considering Jesus as Jesus which sounds a Saviour to all sinners believing on him and that this Jesus containes the two natures of Christ both the God-head man-hood now we that have our interest in him may draw neer Heb 1.3 and as we are capable behold the brightness of his glory To this purpose the Scriptures have discovered to us God the Son how he is the second person in the Trinity having the foundation of personal subsistence from the Father alone of whom by communication of his essence he is begotten from all eternity when there were no depths I was brought forth before the mountains were setled and before the hills I was brought forth Ante colles genita eram Prov. 8.24 25 before the mountains I was begotten as some or ante colles filiata eram before the mountains I was sonned his son as others translate it why thus O my soul consider Jesus the Son of God but in this consideration be not too curious thou hearest of the generation of the Son and of the procession of the Holy Ghost but for the manner how the Father begets the Son or how the Father and Son do spire and send forth the Holy spirit be not too busie to enquire thou mayest know a little and consider a little but for the depth and main of this great mystery of grace let the generation of the Son of God be honoured with silence I remember one being too curious and too inquisitive Aug. lib 1 confess c. 12. what God was doing on that long Evum of eternity before he made the world it was answered he decreed to make hell for such curious inquisitors Be not therefore too nice in this consideration keep within bounds of sobriety and humility and then as thou art able to comprehend the Scriptures will discover that before God made the world in that long-long
Gods purposes are without any alteration the love of Christ after thousands of years is still as the love of a Bridegroom upon the wedding day indeed then ordinarily love is hot and appears much so is Christs love and so is Gods love ever hot there is no moment of time from Eternity to Eternity wherein God rejoyceth not over his Saints as the Bridgroom over his Bride not only as an husband over his wife but as a Bridegroom over his Bride we may say of this purpose of God as it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be World without end O my soul muse and meditate on this purpose of God Isa 55.3 and by consequence on the sure mercies of David it may be it is not always alike sure to thee the love of God as the shining of the Sun doth not always in the fruits of it shining out so gloriously but the Sun keeps his course in a steady way what though it be sometimes clouded what though at times it shine not so gloriously as at high-noon yet the purpose of God according to Election must stand All the Devils in Hell cannot frustrate Gods purpose concerning only one soul John 6.39 this is the Fathers will which sent me saith Christ that of all which he hath given me I should lose none 5. Consider Gods decree concerning thy souls salvation and the means to it As the purpose of God so the decree of God speaks the stability and certainty of the thing decreed The foundation of God standeth sure 2 Tim. 2.16 i The decree of God touching mans Salvation is unchangable If the Laws of the Medes and Persians were so absolute that they could not be reversed then much less can the decrees of God be reversed no man that is not Elected can be Elected and no man that is Elected can possibly be damned My sheep hear my voice saith Christ and I give unto them eternal life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck tâââ out of my hand And it must needs be so for Gods decree is grounded on the Eternal and unchangable will of God and hence we say that there is a certain number of the Elect known only to God which cannot possibly be encreased or diminished John 13 18 I know whom I have chosen saith Christ And yet thou canst not O my soul hence infer that thou mayest be secure for in this decree the end and the means are joyned together of God and they cannot be separated by any man if thou beest not godly never expect to be happy Gods decree of Predestination is as well for the giving of grace as for the giving of glory 6. Consider the Covenant struck betwixt God and Christ for thy salvation If thou wouldst fain be acquainted with the very Articles of it go on then take Scripture along and first on Gods part thou mayest observe and meditate and consider of these particulars 1. That there was a designation and appointment of Christ from all Eternity to the office of Mediatorship John 6.27 Isa 42 1 whence Christ is said to be sealed by the Father for him hath God the Father sealed and chosen of the Father behold my servant whom I uphold mine Elect or chosen one 2. There was a commandment from the Father to the Son which he must obey and submit unto As first he had a command what to teach his people as the Prophet of the Church John 12.49 for I have not spoken of my self saith Christ but the Father which sent me he gave me a commandment what I should say and what I should speak Secondly he had a commandment to lay down his life fore those that were given him John 10.18 no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again this Commandment have I received of my Father 3. There was a Promise from the Father to the Son the Father covenants with him in these things Isa 42.1 first that he will give him the Spirit in abundance Behold my servant whom I uphold I have put my Spirit upon him he shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles Isa 11.1 2 And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and might the Spirit of knowledg and of the fear of the Lord. Secondly that he will give him assistance and help in this great work of Redemption I the Lord have called thee in righteousness Isa 42.6 and will hold thy hand what 's that why I will strengthen thee with my power I will so hold thy hand that thou shalt not be discouraged in the work Isa 42.4 He shall not fail nor be discouraged tell he have set judgment upon the Earth Thirdly that he will give him a blessed success that he shall not labour in vain Isa 53 10 11 he shall see his seed he shall prolong his days and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hands he shall see of the travail of his soul and shall be satisfied Christs suffering were as a womans travail though she suffer many pains and pangs yet she sees her Child at last so shall Christ see many believing on his Name they are the promise made by the Father to the Son Isa 55.5 that Nations that know him not shall run unto him Fourthly that he will give him and his Redeemed ones everlasting glory to Christ himself there is a promise of glory he hath gloryfied thee And to the Members of Christ there is a promise of glory and this promise of glory to them was made known to Christ from everlasting it was one of the secrets of God and Christ brings out that secret from the bosome of his Father Luk. 12.32 and reveals it to his Disciples It is my Fathers pleasure said he to give you the Kingdom Christ knew his Fathers will by the Covenant passing betwixt his Father and him and this will of the Father concerning glory promised to the Saints Christ doth bring forth to light These were the Articles of the Covenant on Gods part now O my soul see them on Christs part in these particulars 1. There was an acceptation of the office to which he was designed by the Father he did not take the office of Mediatorship upon himself but first the Father calls him to it Heb. 5.5 Heb. 1.10.7 and then the Son accepts it Christ glorified not himself to be made an high Priest but he that said unto him thou art my Son to day have I begotten thee he called him and then the Son answered Lo I come 2. There was a promise on Christs part to depend and trust upon God for help And again I will put my trust in him they are the words of Christ to his Father And Isaiah brings in Christ as looking for help from God
for the Lord God will help me Heb. 2.13 Isa 50.7 8 9 Isa 59.5 therefore shall I not be confounded And behold the Lord will help me who is he that shall condemn me whereto agrees that other passage and my God shall be my strength 3. There was a promise of submission to his Fathers will in bearing the reproaches and injuries that should be done to him and to lay down his life for those that were given to him by the Father the Lord God opened my ear and I was not rebellious Isa 50.5 6 neither turned away back I gave my back to the smiters and my cheeks to them that plucked off the hair I hid not my Face from shame and spitting John 10.17 and therefore my Father loves me because I lay down my life Christ first thus Covenanted with his Father and then he was careful to discharge the same and at last he tells God John 17.4 I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do 4. There was an earnest expectation of that glory which the Father promised Christ and his members And now O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self John 17.5 John 17.24 with the glory which I had with thee before the World was And Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the Foundation of the World These were the Articles of the Covenant on Christs part and hence it is that God is called the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ viz. by reason of the Covenant Ephes 1.3 O my soul with what delight mayest thou consider muse and ponder on these Articles what that God should make a Covenant and enter into these and these Articles with his own Son for thy good and for thy Eternal good what that God should bring in the second person in the Trinity to be the head of the Covenant as on thy part what a mercy is this O run over and over this meditation a thousand and a thousand times O consider thy hope of Eternal life which God that cannot lye Tit. 1.2 promised before the world began If thy soul question what promise was there made before the World began to whom was the promise made who was there before the World began for God to make any promise to why now thou hast learned it was only to the Son of God the second person in the Trinity There was a most blessed transaction between God the Father and God the Son before the world began for thy everlasting good and upon that transaction depends all thy hope and all thy salvation O this is worthy of thy deep and sad and serious and inmost meditation I have been particular and large in this passage of Looking unto or considering Jesus but I shall be brief in the rest SECT III. Of desiring after Jesus in that respect 3. VVE must desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation in that Eternity It is not enough to know consider but we must desire Now desire is a passion looking after the attainment of some good which we enjoy not and which we imagine to be fitting for us In this respect we cannot desire after Jesus as now to carry on that work of our salvation before the World began for that work is already perfectly done But these things we may desire after as 1. After the manifestation of that work in us 2. After God and Christ the complotters and actors of that great work for us 3. After the full and utmost execution whereby God effectually works in time according to all his workings or decrees before time 1. We must desire after the manifestation of this work in us We have heard of marvellous excellent glorious things done by Jesus Christ for his Saints from all Eternity oh what desires now should be in us to know that we are of that number when I hear and consider that there was such a project and such counsels and such love and such a purpose and such decrees and such a Covenant betwixt God and Christ for salvation of souls and withal that they are but few in comparison concerning whom God and Christ hath all this care will not this whet on my desires and make me cry and cry again Oh that these loves were mine how happy were I if I had a share in these eternal thoughts of God Methinks we should not hear of such transactions but it should stir up our hearts in infinite desires methinks we should pant after assurance and still be wishing Oh what is truth and what is Christ and what did Christ for me before I was or before the World was I would I knew him I would I could enjoy him I would I were assured that he had one good thought of me in that Eternity Christians if you have any share in those transactions sooner or later you will feel these desires nay if my sinful heart deceive me not upon the very consideration of these things I feel my self another creature in my desires then I was before Tell me you that have took a full view of God Christ and of all these wonders of Eternity do you not sensibly differ from your selves in your affections Is not the world worldly pleasures worldly profits and worldly honours fallen too yea ten in an hundred with you have they not lost their price would you not rather be assured that your names are written in the Book of Life then to have all the world yours yea and all the Devils in Hell subject to your commands Certainly if these revelations work nothing in your hearts if your affections be so strong and hearty to the world and the vanities of it if your desires be so impure and strongly working downwards that Gods ancient loves and everlasting workings have no power on your hearts it is a very sad condition If David may have his wish it runs thus Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us he would have the manifestation of Gods Eternal love Psa 4.6 one smile of his countenance as an image of that countenance which God had towards him before the world began was more gladness to his heart then all that which the men of the world had in the time that their corn and their wine increased 2. We may and must desire after God and Christ the complotters and actors of that great work for us what hath the Gospel revealed this truth that before the Creation God and Christ were busied about our good yea and hath Christ especially that came out of the bosom of his Father brought the treasures of his Fathers counsel to the world discovered such love to men how then should our desires be after God in Christ Whom have I in heaven but thee Psa 73.35 there is none upon earth that I
Devil and man as well as betwixt the Devil and the woman but because the woman had more tampered with Satan and being deceived by Satan was first in the transgression therefore is she onely named I will put enmity between thee and the woman 2. Betwixt Satans seed and the seed of the woman I will put enmity not onely between thee and the woman but also between thy seed and her seed q.d. This enmity shall not cease with the death of the woman but it shall continue to her seed and to her seeds seed even to the end of the World We see to this day how the Serpent and Serpents seed are striving and warring against the Church and a wonder it is considering the malice of the enemy that there is a Church upon Earth but onely that we have Christs promise The gates of Hell shall not prevaile against it and lo I am with you alwayes even to the end of the World 3. Betwixt Christ and the Serpent O this a bloody conflict on both sides he shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel 1. He shall bruise thy head Christ shall break thy power thy power i.e. the power of the Serpent or of the Devil himself he fights not so much with the seed as with the Serpent if Satan be overthrown his seed cannot stand 2. Thou shalt bruise his heel thou shalt afflict him and his thou shalt cast out of thy mouth a flood of persecutions thou shalt make warre with him Rev. 12.17 and all them which keep the Commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ I have held you a while in the explication of this first promise and the rather because of the darkness of it and the much sweetness that is contained in it it is full of Gospel-truths strike but the flint and there will fly out these glorious sparkles 1. That a Saviour was promised from the beginning of the world 2. That this Saviour should free all his Saints from sin death and hell the head and power of the Devil 3. That to this end this Saviour should be a Mediator for God would not grant an immediate pardon but the promised seed must first intervene 4. That this Mediator should be of the seed of the woman that is a man and yet stronger then the Devil indued with a Divine power and so he is God 5. That this Man-God should according to his Priestly office be a Sacrifice for sin the Serpent should bruise his heel he should suffer and dye for the people and yet accordingly to his Kingly office he should overcome Satan for he should bruise his head overthrow his Kingdom and make us more than Conquerors in him that loved us 6. That this promise of Christ and of our justification is free God of meer mercy and free-grace brings forth this promise there could be now after the fall no merit in man and even now he promiseth remission of sins and life Eternal in for and through the Lord Jesus Christ No question but in belief of this promise the Patriarchs and Fathers of old obtained life glory and immortality By faith the Elders obtained a good report by faith Abel obtained witness that he was righteous by faith Enoch was translated that he should not see Death by faith Noah became heir of the righteousness of Christ how should it but revive us in these last times to hear that the first thing that ever God did after the World was fallen it was this act of mercy to make a promise of Christ and to reconcile lost man to himself through the same Jesus Christ surely he began to do that soon which he meant to be alwayes a doing even to the end of the World Thus far of the promise as it was manifested from Adam to Abraham SECT III. Of the Covenant of promise as manifested to Abraham THe second breaking forth of this gracious Covenant was to Abraham and now it shines in a more glorious light then it did before at first it was propounded in very dark and cloudy termes not easie to be understood and most things sparingly expressed but in this second rise and manifestation we have it laid down in plainer termes I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generation Gen. 17 1â for an everlasting Covenant to be a God to thee and to thy seed after thee For the right understanding of this we shall examine these particulars 1. What a Covenant is 2. What is the establishing of this Covenant 3. Betwixt whom is the Covenant to be established 4. For what time is the established Covenant to endure 5. What are the priviledges of this Covenant 6. What is the condition of this Covenant 7. Who is the head both as undertaker and purchaser and treasurer upon whom this Covenant is established 1. What is a Covenant It is a contract of mutual peace and good will obliging parties on both hands to the performing of mutual benefits and offices Thus was the Covenant betwixt God and Abraham there was a mutual stipulation in it on Gods part to performe his promises of temporal spiritual and Eternal grace and on Abrahams part to receive this grace by faith and to performe due obedience and thankfulness to God Hence a little nearer we say the Covenant is a mutual compact or agreement betwixt God and man whereby God promiseth all good things especially Eternal happiness unto man and man doth promise to walk before God in all acceptable free and willing obedience expecting all good from God and happiness in God according to his promise for the praise and glory of his grace Others describing the Covenant of grace for with the Covenant of works we will not meddle they give it thus The Covenant of grace is a free and gracious compact which God of his meer mercy in Jesus Christ hath made with sinful man promising unto him pardon of sins and eternal happiness If he will but repent of sin and embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfeigned and walk before God in willing faithful and sincere obedience In this description many things are considerable As 1. That the Author of this Covenant is God not as our Creator but as our merciful God and Father in Christ Jesus 2. That the cause of this Covenant is not any worth or dignity or merit in man but the meer mercy love and favour of God 3. That the foundation of this Covenant is Jesus Christ in and through whom we are reconciled unto God for since God and man were separated by sin no Covenant can pass betwixt them no reconciliation can be expected nor pardon obtained but in and through a Mediator 4. That the party Covenanted with is sinful man the fall of our first Parents was the occasion of this Covenant and God was pleased to permit the fall that he might manifest the riches of his mercy in mans recovery 5. That the form of
the Covenant are said to be everlasting forgiveness of sins is everlasting being once forgiven they are never remembred any more peace and joy is everlasting your heart shall rejoyce and your joy no man taketh from you Jer. 31.13 Joh. 16.22 Isa 45.17 salvation is everlasting Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation decretal Covenant-mercy was not a lease but a making the fee-simple as we call it of grace and glory to the Saints for ever death may put an end to other Covenants as betwixt man and man or betwixt man and wife but this Covenant betwixt God and us stands fast for ever though Abraham be dead yet God is Abraham's God still and by vertue of this Covenant Abraham shall be raised up at the last day 5. What are the priviledges of the Covenant I answer the priviledges of the Covenant are many as they are great things and great blessings which our great God promiseth so they are very many and numerous the Covenant is full of blessings it is a rich store-house replenished with all manner of blessings it is not dry nor barren but like the fat Olive or fruitful Vine it is a Well of salvation a fountain of good things a treasure full of goods or unsearchable riches which can never be emptied nor come to an end Hence it is that our finite narrow capacities can never apprehend the infinite grace that this Covenant contains yet as we may see things darkly in a Map so let us endeavour as we are able to view them in some Map or brief compendium that by the little we do see we may be raised up to the consideration of things not seen which shall be revealed in due time The priviledges of the Covenant are folded and wrapped up in the promises of it every promise contains a priviledge but the time of unfolding every promise is not yet come then only shall the promises of all sorts be unfolded when the heavens as a vesture shall be folded up Heb. 1.12 In the mean time we have a right interest in the priviledges of eternity by vertue of the promise and hence the very terms of Covenant and promise are taken for the same Ephes 2.12 Rom. 9.4 I shall for the present confine my self only to those promises and priviledges of the Covenant which were manifested to Abraham And they were Of things Temporal Spiritual Gen. 12.2 3 7. 1. Of things Temporal Thus we read God promiseth Abraham I will make of thee a great Nation and I will bless thee and make thy name great and thou shalt be a blessing I will bless them that bless thee and curse him that curseth thee and unto thy seed will I give this Land We may add hereto the repetitions that God makes of these promises over over Gen. 13.14 15 16. lift up now thine eyes and look from the place where thou art North-ward and South-ward and East-ward and West-ward for all the Land which thou seest to thee will I give it and to thy seed for ever And I will make thy seed as the dust of the Earth so that if a man can number the dust of the Earth then shall thy seed also be numbered And the Lord brought forth Abraham abroad and said look now towards Heaven and tell the stars if thou be able to number them and he said unto him so shall thy seed be And the Lord again appeared to Abraham Gen. 15.5 Gen. 17.2.4 5 6. and said I will make my Covenant between me and thee and will multiply thee exceedingly and thou shalt be a Father of many Nations neither shall thy name any more be called Abram but thy name shall be Abraham for a Father of many Nations have I made thee and I will make thee exceeding fruitful and I will make Nations of thee 8. and Kings shall come out of thee and I will give unto thee and thy seed after thee Gen. 22.16 17. the Land wherein thou art a stranger all the Land of Canaan for an everlasting possession By my self have I sworn saith the Lord that in blessing I will bless thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the Stars of the Heaven and as the sand upon the Sea-shore and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies See here the temporal blessings that God promises Abraham Gen. 12.2 3 7. they are heaped together in Gen. 12.2 3. As 1. I will make of thee a great Nation and this he promiseth once and again it seemed a thing incredible because Abraham was old and Sarah was barren and old it ceased to be with Sarah after the manner of women yet for all this God is all-sufficient Abraham shall have his desire he shall be a Father not only of a few Children but of a numerous Nation yea of many Nations Ishmaelites and Midianites and that famous Nation of the Jews of whom it is said Deut. 4.7 8. what Nation is so great must all descend from Abraham Scripture and heathen Authors use three things proverbially to signifie an huge and exceeding great number the dust of the Earth the sands of the Sea and the Stars of Heaven and all these are brought in to resemble the number into which the Seed of Abraham should break forth 2. I will bless thee saith God and this blessing had relation to his wealth and riches Abraham was very rich in cattel in silver and in gold Gen. 13.2 No question those riches came from this blessing the blessing of the Lord it maketh rich and he addeth no sorrow with it This was Gods care of the children of Abraham that he would give them riches but lest their hearts should be lifted up and they should forget the Lord in the midst of their riches he learns them and bids them remember this lesson Deut. 8.17 18 say not in thine heart my power and the might of my hand hath gotten me this wealth but remember the Lord thy God for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth that he may establish his covenant which he sware unto thy fathers as it is this day True riches come from God and by vertue of this covenant O that none of us had any wealth but such as comes by vertue of a promise and of the covenant of grace 3. I will make thy name great saith God no Monarch was ever so famous in conquering nations or the whole world as Abraham for his faith and obedience God hath magnified his name amongst the Hebrews who for these three thousand years and upwards have acknowledged none except Moses greater than Abraham the Jews could say to very Christ art thou greater then our father Abraham John 8.53 whom makest thou thy self and God hath so magnified his name amongst Christians that all believers look upon it as a glory to be called children of Abraham nay we cannot be Christs we have no part in Christ
to God You see now what we mean by this writing of the Law within us 5. How are we taught of God so as not to need any other kind of teaching comparatively I answer 1. God teacheth inwardly In the hidden part thou hast made me know wisdom Psal 51.6 Psal 16.17 saith David and again I thank the Lord that gave me counsel my reins also instruct me in the night season The reins are the most inward part of the Body and the night season the most retired and private time both express the intimacy of divine teaching man may teach the brains but God only teacheth the reins the knowledge which man teacheth is a swimming knowledge but the knowledge which God teacheth Cathedram habet in coelis qui corda doces Aug. is a soaking knowledge God who commanded light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts Mans light may shine into the head but Gods light doth shine into the heart His Chair is in Heaven that teacheth hearts saith Austin 2. God teacheth clearly Elihu offering himself instead of God to reason with Job he tells him My words shall be of the uprightness of my heart Job 33.3 and my lips shall utter knowledge clearly If ever the Word come home to an heart it comes with a convincing clearness So the Apostle Our Gospel came unto you not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost and in much full assurance The word hath a treble Emphasis 2 Thes 1.5 assurance full assurance and much full assurance here is clear work 3. God teacheth experimentally the soul that is taught of God can speak experimentally of the Truths it knows I know whom I have believed saith Paul 2 Tim. 1.12 I have experienced his faithfulness and all-sufficiency I dare trust my all with him I am sure he will keep it safe to that day Common knowledge rests in generals but they that are taught of God can say As we have heard so we have seen they can go along with every truth and say It is so indeed I have experienced this and that Word upon my own Heart In this case the Scripture is the Original and their Heart is the Copy of it as you have heard they can read over the Promises and Threatnings and say Probatum est David in his Psalms and Paul in his Epistles speaks their very Hearts and feels their very temptations and makes their very objections they can set to their Seal John 3.33 that God is true they can solemnly declare by their lives and conversations that God is true and faithful in his word and promises 4. God teacheth sweetly and comfortably Thou hast taught me saith David Psal 119.102.103 and then it follows How sweet are thy words unto my taste Yea sweeter than the Honey to my Mouth He rolled the word and promises as Sugar under his Tongue and sucked from thence more sweetness than Sampson did from his Honey-comb Luther said he would not live in Paradise if he must live without the Word Cum vârbo in iâsârrââe ââe est âieâre Luth 4. tom opâr âaâ but with the Word said he I could live in Hell When Christ put his hand by the hole of the door to teach the heart her bowels were moved and then her fingers drop upon the handles of the Lock sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.5 The teachings of Christ left such a blessing upon the first motions of the Spouses heart that with the very touch of them she is refreshed her fingers drop myrrhe and her bowels are moved as the very monuments of his gracious teachings So in Cant. 1.3 Cant. 1.3 Because of the savour of thy Oynement thy Name is as an Oyntment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Christ in Ordinances doth as Mary open a Box of Oyntments which diffuseth a spiritual savour in Church-Assemblies and this oâly the spiritual Christian feels Hence the Church is compared to a Garden shut up a Fountain sealed Cant. 4.12 wicked men are not able to drink of her delicacies or smell of her sweetness a spiritual Sermon is a Fountain sealed up the spiritual administration of a Sacrament is a Garden enclosed Sometimes O Lord thou givest me a strange motion or affection said Augustine which if it were but perfected in me Aug. l. 16. Confes c. 40. I could not imagine what it should be but eternal life Christians these are the teachings of God and in reference to this we shall no more teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying know the Lord. Gods teaching is another kind of teaching than we can have from the hands of men there is no man in the world can teach thus and therefore they whom God teacheth need not any other kind of teaching respectively or comparatively 6. What is the universality of this knowledge They shall all know mâ from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord The meaning is that all that are in the Covenant of grace shall be so taught of God as that in some measure or other they shall every one know God inwardly clearly experimentally sweetly and savingly I know there are several degrees of this knowledge God hath several Forms in his School there are fathers for experience 1 Joh. 2.12 young men for strength and babes for the truth and being of Grace as one Star differeth from another in glory so also is the School of Christ But here I am beset on both sides 1. Many are apt to complain alas they know little of God! sweet babes consider 1. It is free grace you are stars though you are not stars of the first and second magnitude it is of the Covenant of grace that God hath let into your souls a little glimmering Case Correc instruct though not so much light as others possibly may have in point of holy emulation as one notes well we should look at degrees of grace but in point of thankfulness and comfort we should look at the truth and being of grace 2. If you know but a little you may in time know more God doth not teach all his lessons at first entrance Psal 119.130 it is true The entrance of thy Word giveth Light but this is as true that God lets in his Light by degrees it is not to be despised if God do but engage the heart in holy desires and longings after knowledge so that it can say in sincerity My Soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times Psal 119.20 Others on the contrary ground themselves so learned from this very promise that they exclude all teachings of men The anointing say they teacheth us all things and we need not that any man teach us and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother 1 Joh. 2.27 Jer. 31.34 saying know the Lord for they shall all c. I
fire which hath a most vehement flame SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that Respect WE must hope in Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation in a way of Covenant now what is hope but a good opinion of enjoying its object indeed a good opinion is so necessary for hope that it makes almost all its kinds and differences as it is greater or lesser so it causeth the strength or weakness the excess or defect of this passion hope This good opinion is that which renders hope either doubtful or certain if certain it produceth confidence or presumption presumption is nothing but an immoderate hope without a ground but confidence is that assurance of the thing hoped for in some measure as if we had it already in hand Hence it is that we usually say we have great and strong and good hopes when we would speak them assured which hath occasioned some to define it thus Hope is a certain grounded confidence that the desired good will come not to insist on this all the question is Whether those promises contained in the Covenant of grace belong unto me and what are the grounds and foundations on which my hope is built If the grounds be weak then hope is doubtful or presumptuous but if the grounds be right then hope is right and I may cast Anchor and build upon it In the disquisition of these grounds we shall only search into those qualifications which the Scripture tells us they are qualified with with whom the Lord enters into a Covenant of grace and these we shall reduce 1. To the condition of the Covenant 2. To the promise of the Covenant As 1. If thou art in Covenant with God then hath God wrought in thee that condition of the Covenant Acts 16.31 Rom. 10.9 a true and lively and soul-saving and justifying faith Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved If thou believest thou shalt be saved The promise of life contained in the Covenant is made onely to believers This is so sure a way of tryal 2 Cor. 13.5 that the Apostle himself directs us thereunto Examine your selves whether ye be in the Faith Ay But how shall I examine for there are many pretenders to faith in these dayes Why thus 1. True faith will carry thee out of thy self into Christ Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me a faithful man hath not his life in himself but in Christ Jesus he hath his spiritual being in the Father and in his Son Jesus Christ he is joyned to the Lord and is one Spirit he seeth the Father in the Son and the Son within himself and also the Father within himself through the Son 2 Cor. 13.5 John 14.20 Joh. 17.22 23. Know ye not that Christ Jesus is in you except ye be reprobates Ye shall know me saith Christ that I am in the Father and you in me and I in you By faith we enjoy the glory of union The glory which thou hast given me I have given them that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me though we have not the glory of equality yet we have the glory of likeness we are one with Christ and one with the Father by faith in Christ 2. True faith will carry thee beyond the world a believer looks on Christ over-coming the world for him and so by that faith he overcomes the world through him 1 John 5.4 Rev. 1.12 This is the Victory that overcometh the world even your faith Hence it is that the Saints are said To be cloathed with the Sun and to have the Moon under their feet when through faith they are cloathed with The Son of Righteousness the Lord Jesus then they trample upon all sublunary things as nothing worth in comparison of Christ 3. True faith is ever accompanied with true love if once by faith thou apprehendest Gods love and Christs love to thee thou canst not but love that God and love that Christ who loved thee and gave himself for thee 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us he that loveth not God hath not apprehended Gods love to him if ever God in Christ be presented to thee for thy justification 1 John 4.8 it is such a lovely object that thou canst not but love him He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love 4. True faith purifies the heart and purgeth out sin When God discovers this that he will heal back-sliding and love freely and turn away his anger then Ephraim shall say What have I any more to do with Idols Hos 14.8 if ever Christ reveal himself as the object of our Justification he will be sure to present himself as the pattern of our Sanctification the knowledge of Gods Goodness will make us in love with holiness they shall fear and tremble for all the goodness and for all the prosperity Jer. 33.9 that I procure unto them saith the Lord The golden chain of Mercy let down from Heaven doth bind us faster to the service of our God 5. Above all observe the rise true faith if it be true it is ever bottomed upon the sense and pain of a lost condition spiritual poverty is the nearest capacity of believing this is faiths method be condemned to be saved be sick and be healed Faith is a flower of Christ's own planting but it grows in no Soul but onely on the margin and bank of the Lake of fire and brimstone in regard there 's none so fit for Christ and Heaven as those who are self-sick and self-condemned to Hell They that be whole need not a Physician saith Christ but they that are sick Mat. 9.13 This is a Foundation of Christ that because the man is broken and hath not bread therefore he must be sold and Christ must buy him and take him home to his fire-side and cloath him and feed him there I know Satan argues thus Thou art not worthy of Christ and therefore what hast thou to do with Christ but Faith concludes otherwise I am not worthy of Christ I am out of measure sinful I tremble at it and I am sensible of it and therefore ought I and therefore must I come to Christ this arguing is Gospel-logick and the right method of a true and saving-faith for what is faith but the act of a sinner humbled weary laden poor and self-condemned Oh take heed of their doctrine who make faith to act of some vile person never humbled but applying with an immediate touch his hot boyling and smoaking Lusts to the bleeding blessed Wounds and Death of Jesus Christ 2. If thou art in Covenant with God then hath God fulfilled in some part the promises of this Covenant to thy Soul As 1. Then hath God put the Law into thy inward parts and writ it in thy heart look as Indenture answers to Indenture or as a face in the glass answers to a
Wine without Money or Money-worth Isa 55.2 Rev. 22.17 come and drink of the Waters of Life freely 2. The extent of the Promise in this Covenant of Grace I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh hence the Gospel is compared to a Feast and God invites universally As many as you find Mat. 22.9 bid to the Marriage As persons are in estate so they invite and so they feast now Christ is a great King over all the Earth he hath one House that will hold all he hath one Table that will hold all yea he hath one Dish that will serve all and answerably he invites all Ho every one that thirsteth 3. The forwardness of Christ that gives to every one that asketh according to his Promise John 4.10 Hadst thou but asked said Christ to the Samaritan VVoman I would have given thee living water Mark here the occasion of Christ's words Christ being weary and thirsty by reason of his Journey he asked of the Woman a Cup of water to drink no great matter he asks but a Cup of water and the Woman stands at the Well-side where was water enough yet she gives not but stands wondering that he being a Jew should ask water of her that was a Samaritan well saith Christ thou deniest me a Cup of cold water being weary and thirsty but hadst thou asked of me I would have given thee water of Life Wonderful Christ is more ready to give water of Life the very Spirit of God to a poor sinnner than we are to give a cup of common water to a thirsty Soul Go then thou that hast denied the least mercy and kindness to Christ in any of his Members yet seek Grace from him O look up unto Jesus ask his Spirit intreat him to make thy heart new within thee plead the promise of his Covenant and wait in hope 2 We must praise 1. If we would have the blessing let us seek it with the same mind that God offers it i.e. with a purpose and desire to have Grace exalted thus Moses sought pardon to this very end that his mercy might appear If thou wilt pardon their sin thy mercy shall appear and we shall be thankful unto thee for it Exod. 32.32 so the words are made out by expositros which in the text are either passionately or modestly suspended These are prevailing requests with God when we plead for the Glorifying of his own Grace Father Glorifie thy Name said Christ and presently there comes a voice out of the Cloud I have Glorified it and I will Glorifie it again John 12.28 2. If we have the blessing already then be sure to ascribe the Glory unto him that hath made good his promise unto us who is a God like unto thee Micah 7 18. who passest by the transgressions of the remnant of thy Heritage We should make the praise of his grace to ring through the world that Heaven and Earth might take notice of it and wonder at the grace that hath been shewed us I will mention the loving kindness of the Lord Isa 63.7 and the Praises of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great goodness towards the House of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his Mercies and according to the multitude of his loving Kindnesses See how the Prophet mentions the kindnesses the loving kindnesses the multitude of his loving kindnesses the goodness and the great goodness of God he could hardly get off it he would have God and Grace to have all the Glory O my Soul hath God entered thee into a Covenant of Grace why then bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy Name Psal 103.1 But of this more anon SECT IX Of Conforming to Jesus in that respect 9 WE must conform to Jesus in reference to this Covenant of Grace We are changed by beholding into the same Image 2 Cor. 3.18 If we look unto Jesus in this respect this Look will have such an influence upon us that we shall conform to Jesus But wherein consists this Conformity I answer in these several perticulars 1. God in Christ offers his Covenant to us so we through Christ should embrace his Offer 2. God in Christ keeps Covenant with us so we through Christ should be careful to keep Covenant with him 3. God in Christ hath highly honoured us as we are his People so we through Christ should highly honour him as he is our God 1. God in Christ offers a Covenant of Grace to us so we through Christ should embrace this gracious Offer His Offers have appeared from first to last as 1. To Adam 2. To Abraham 3. To Moses 4. To David 5. To Israel and to Judah Take notice of it in that great promise of the Covenant I will be thy God q. d. Come Soul if thou wilt but have me I am thine here I offer my self my son my spirit Justification Sanctification Adoption Salvation whatsoever I am or whatsoever I have all is thine if thou wilt but accept of me Look over all this wide wide world and if there be any thing in it that can please thy soul and when thou hast gone through all the world then come and take a view of me and see me in my glory beauty and excellency view me in my Attributes and see if thou findest not enough in me worthy of thy acceptance all this and more than this nay more than eye can see or ear can hear or heart can conceive I offer to thee if thou wilt but have me Loe I will he thy God So Christians God is first with us he is the first mover he begins with us before we begin with him I will bring them saith God into the bond of the Covenant Now in this let us conform doth he offer O let us embrace the offer doth he lead the way O let us follow him step by step in that very way as he goes before us Let us not prescribe unto God let not us presume to appoint the Conditions of the Covenant let us not seek to wind about the Promise of Grace to our own Mind and Will let us not say We will have it thus thus and thus it shall be or else we will admit of no conditions of peace But O come take God and Christ upon his own Terms submit to that way of the Covenant and to those conditions of peace which the Lord prescribeth why this is to conform to his gracious offers There is much of this offer of Christ and conforming to Christ and therefore give me leave to enlarge As in the offer God usually scatters some little seeds of Faith in the hearts of those that he will bring to himself so it is worth the while to observe the work of Faith in receiving and accepting of this gracious offer only I shall not herein limit the Lord but I will shew what some
the Spirit of our God As every man is so is he affected so he speaks and so he lives if thy life be supernatural so is thy affections so is thy words so is thy conversation Paul lived a life once of a bloody persecutor he breathed out threatenings against all the Professors of the Lord Jesus but now it is otherwise The life which I now live in the flesh Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me O my soul Hast thou the old conversation the old affections the old discourse the old passions thou used to have What Is thy heart a den of lusts a cage of unclean imaginations Then fear thy self there cannot from a sweet fountain come forth bitter streams there cannot from a refined spirit as refined come forth corrupted actions or imaginations a Thorn cannot send forth Grapes saith Christ so neither can a Vine send forth Thornes say we I know there is in the best something of flesh as well as of the spirit but if thou art new born then thou canst not but strive against it and wilt endeavour to conquer it 1 Pet. 3.4 2 Pet. 1.4 Rom. 7.22 2 Cor. 5.17 3. Where this new birth is there is a new nature a new principle Peter calls it the hidden man of the heart the divine nature Paul calls it the inward man the new creature it is compared to a root to a fountain to a foundation and for want of this foundation we see now in these sad times so much inconstancy and unsetledness in some professors themselves many have gotten new and strange notions but they have not new natures new principles of grace if grace were but rooted in their hearts though the winds did blow and storms arise they would continue firm and stable as being founded upon a Rock Never tell me of profession shew outward action outward conversation outward duties of Religion all this may be and yet no new creature you have some bruits that can act many things like men but because they have not an humane nature they are still brutish so many things may be done in a way of holiness which yet come not from this inward principle of renovation and therefore it is but copper and not gold mistake not O my soul in this which is thy best and surest evidence though I call the new birth a new creature my meaning is not as if a new faculty were infused into him that is new born a man when he is regenerate hath no more faculties in his soul than he had before his regeneration only in the work of regeneration those ablities which the man had before are now improved and made spiritual and so they work now spiritually which before wrought naturally As in the resurrection from the dead our bodies shall have no more nor other parts and members than they had before only those parts and members which now are natural shall then by the power of God be made spiritual 1 Cor. 15.44 It is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body there is a natural body and there is a spiritual body so the same faculties and the same abilities which before regeneration were but natural are now spiritual and work spiritually they are all brought under the government of the Spirit of Christ a lively resemblance of this change in the faculties of the soul we may discern in those natural and sensitive faculties which we have common with beasts as to live to move to desire to feel the beasts having no higher principle than sense use them sensually but a man enjoying the same faculties under the command of a reasonable soul he useth them rationally so is it in a regenerate man his understanding will and affections when they had no other command but reason he only used them rationally but now being under the guiding of the Spirit of Christ they work spiritually and he useth them spiritually and hence it is that a regenerate man is every where in Scripture Rom. 8.1 Gal. 5.18 25. said to Walk after the Spirit to be led by the Spirit to walk in the Spirit the Spirit by way of infusing or shedding gives power an ability a seed a principle of spiritual life which the soul had not before and from this principle of spiritual life planted in the Soul flows or springs those spiritual motions and operations as the Spirit leads them out according to the habit or principle of the new creature the divine nature the spiritual life infused Come then look to it O my soul What is thy principle within consider not so much the outward actions the outward duties of Religion as that root from whence they grow that principle from whence they come they are fixed ones setled ones by way of life in thee Clocks have their motions but they are not motions of life because they have no principles of life within Is there life within then art thou born again yea even unto thee a Child is born This is one evidence 2. From the latter words I lay down this position unto us a Son is given if we are Gods Sons The best way to know our Interest in the Son of God it is to know our selves to be Gods Sons by grace as Christ was Gods Son by nature Christians to whom Christ is given are coheirs with Christ only Christ is the first-born and hath the preheminence in all things our sonship is an effect of Christs sonship and a sure sign that unto us a Son is given Say then O my soul Art thou a Son of God Dost thou resemble God according to thy capacity being holy even as he is holy Why then Christ was incarnate for thee he was given to thee If thy sonship be not clear enough thou mayst try it further by these following Rules 1. The Sons of God Fear God If I be a Father Where is my Honour Mal. 1.6 saith God if I be a Master Where is my Fear If I be a Son of God there will be an holy Fear and Trembling upon me in all my approaches unto God I know there is a servile mercinary Fear and that is unworthy and unbeseeming the Son of God but there is a filial Fear and that is an excellent check and bridle to all our wantonness What Son will not Fear the frowns and anger of his loving Father 1 Pet. 1.17 I dare not do this will he say my Father will be offended and I whether shall I go Agreeable to this is the Apostles advice If ye call on the Father pass your sojourning here with Fear 2. The Sons of God Love God and Obey God out of a principle of Love Suppose there were no Heaven or Glory to bestow upon a regenerate person yet would he Obey God out of a principle of Love not that it is unlawful for the Child of God to have an Eye unto the recompence of reward Heb.
Saints now have or which the Saints shall have unto the end of the World it is to be conveyed through that flesh yea the Spirit it self dwells in it and is conveyed through it and therefore if they had so much Gospel-Spirit in the time of the Old Testament which indeed was rare how much more should we go to Christ as God in the flesh and look upon it as a standing Ordinance and believe perfectly on it 3. Faith must go and lye at the feet of Christ faith must fix and fasten it self on this God in our flesh some go to Christ and look on Jesus with loose and transient glances they bring in but flashy secondary ordinary actings of faith they have but course and common apprehensions of Jesus Christ Oh but we should come to Christ with solemn serious spirits we should look on Jesus piercingly till we see him as God is in him and as such a person thus and thus qualified from Heaven we should labour to apprehend what is the riches of this glorious mystery of Christ's Incarnation we should dive into the depths of his glorious actings we should study this mystery above all other studies nothing is so pleasant and nothing is more deep that one person should be God and Man that God should be man in our nature and yet not assume the person of a man that blessedness should be made a curse that Heaven should be let down into Hell that the God of the world would shut himself up as it were in a body that the invisible God should be made visible to sense that all things should become nothing and make it self of no reputation that God should make our nature which had sinned against him to be the great Ordinance of Reconciling us unto himself that God should take our flesh and dwell in it with all his fulness and make that flesh more Glorious than the Angels and advance that flesh into oneness with himself and through that flesh open all his councels and rich discoveries of love and free-grace unto the Sons of men that this Man-God God-Man should be our Saviour Redeemer Reconciler Father Friend Oh what mysteries are these no wonder if when Christ was born John 1.14 the Apostle cryes we saw his glory as of the only begotten Son of God noting out that at first sight of him so much glory sparkled from him as could appear from none but a God walking up and down the world O my soul let not such a treasury be unlookt into set faith on work with a redoubled strength surely we live not like men under this great design if our eye of faith be not firmly and stedfastly set on this O that we were but insighted into these glories that we were but acquainted with these lively discoveries Gal. 2.20 how blessedly might we live by the Faith of the Son of God who loved us and gave himself for us 4. Faith must look principally to the end and meaning of Christ as God coming in the Flesh Now what was the design and meaning of Christ in this The Apostle answers Rom. 8.3 Rom. 8.3 God sent his Son in the likeness of sinful Flesh to condemn sin in the Flesh i.e. God the Father sent into the World his eternal and only begotten Son whom in his eternal counsel he had designed to the Office of a Mediator to take away or abolish in the first place Original Sin Mark these two words he condemned Sin in the Flesh the first word condemned is by a Metonymy put for that which follows Condemnation namely for the abolishing of sin as condemned persons used to be cut off and to be taken out of the World that they may be no more so Christ hath condemned or abolished this Sin For the second word in the Flesh is meant that Humane Nature which Christ assumed he abolished sin altogether in his own nature and that Flesh of his being perfectly holy and the holiness of it being imputed unto us it takes away our guilt in respect of the impureness of our Nature also Some may object if this were so then were we without Original sin I answer the Flesh or the Nature which Christ took upon him was altogether without sin and by imputation of it we are in proportion freed from sin Christ had not the least spot of Original sin and if we are Christs then is this sin in some measure abolished and taken out of our hearts But howsoever the filth of this sin may remain in part yet the guilt is removed in this respect the purity of Christs Humane Nature is no less reckoned to us for the curing of our defiled Nature than the sufferings of Christ are reckoned to us for the remission of our actual Sins O my Soul look to this end of Christ as God in the Flesh if thou consider him as made Flesh and Blood and laid in a Manger think withal that his meaning was to condemn sin in our Flesh there flows from the Holiness of Christs Nature such a power as countermands the power of our Original sin and acquits and discharges from the condemnation of the same Sin not only the Death and Life but also the Conception and Birth of Christ hath its influence into our Justification Oh the sweet that a lively Faith may draw from this Head 4. The Encouragements to bring on Souls to believe on Christ Incarnate we may draw 1. From the excellency of this Object This very Incarnation of Christ is the Foundation of all other actings of God for us it is the very Hinge or Pole on which all turn it is the Cabinet wherein all the Designs of God do lie Election Redemption Justification Adoption Glorification are all wrapt up in it it is the highest pitch of the Declaration of Gods Wisdom Goodness Power and Glory Oh what a sweet Object of Faith is this I know there are some other things in in Christ which are most proper for some Acts of Faith as Christ dying is most proper for the pardon of actual sin and Christ rising from the dead is most proper for the evidencing of our Justification but the strongest purest Acts of Faith are those which take in Christ as such a Person laid out in all this Glory Christs Incarnation is more general than Christs Passion or Christs Resurrection and as some would have it includes all Christs Incarnation holds forth in some sort Christ in his fulness and so it is the full and compleat subject of our Faith or if it be only more comprehensive why then it requires more comprehensive Acts of Faith and by consequence we have more enjoyments of Christ this way than any other way Come poor Soul I feel I feel thy eyes are running to and fro the World to find comforts and happiness on Earth O come cast thy eyes back and see Heaven and Earth in one Object look fixedly on Christ Incarnate there is more in this than in all the variety
two but one person so must our natures and persons though at greatest distance from God be inseparably joyned and united to Christ and thereby also to God John 17.21 I Pray saith Christ that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us That union of Christs two natures we call a personal hypostatical union and this union of Christ with us we call a mystical and Spiritual union yet though it be mystical and Spiritual this hinders not but that it is a true real essential substantial union whereby the person of the believer is indissolubly united to the glorious person of the Son of God For our better understanding we may consider if you please of a threefold unity either of persons of one nature or of natures in one person or of natures and Persons in one spirit in the first is one God in the second is one Christ in the third is one Church with Christ our union unto Christ is the last of these whereby he and we are all spiritually united to the making up of one mystical body O what a priviledge is this a poor believer be he never so mean or miserable in the eye of the world yet he is one with Christ as Christ is one with the Father our fellowship is with the Father 1 John 1.3 and with his Son Jesus Christ every Saint is Christs fellow there is a kind of analogical proportion between Christ and his Saints in every thing if we take a view of all Christ what he is in his Person in his Glory in his Spirit in his Graces in his Fathers Love and in the access he hath to the Father in all these we are in a sort fellows with Christ only with this difference that Christ hath the preheminence in all things all comes from the Father first to Christ and all we have is by Marriage with Jesus Christ Christ by his union hath all good things without measure but we by our union have them only in measure as it pleaseth him to distribute But herein if we resemble Christ whether in his union with the Father or in his union of the two natures in one Person of a Mediator if by looking on Christ we come to this likeness to be one with Jesus Christ Oh what a priviledg is this had we not good warrant for so high a challeng it could be no less than a Blasphemous arrogance to lay claim to the Royal blood of Heaven but the Lord is pleased to dignifie a poor worm that every believer may truly say I am one with Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ is one with me To sweeten this union to our thoughts I shall acquaint you with the priviledg flowing from it and let the same stir you up to conform Hence it is that Christ lives in us and that Christ both gives life and is our life When Christ which is our life shall appear Christ is to me to live and I live yet not I Col. 3.4 Phil. 2.21 Gal. 2.20 but Christ liveth in me There is a spiritual and natural life for the natural life what is it but a bubble a vapour a shaddow a dream a nothing but this Spiritual life is an excellent life it is wrought in us by the Spirit of Christ there is a world of difference betwixt the natural and the spiritual life and that makes the difference betwixt what I do as a man and what I do as a Christian as a man I have eyes ears motions affections understandings naturally as my own but as a Christian I have all these from him with whom I am spiritually one the Lord Jesus Christ as a man I have bodily eyes and I behold bodily and material things but as a Christian I have spiritual eyes and I see invisible and eternal things as it is said of Moses that he endured Heb. 11 27. as seeing him who is invisible as a man I have outward ears and I hear outward sounds of all sorts whether articulate or inarticulate but as a Christian I have inward ears and so I hear the voice of Christ and of Gods Spirit speaking to my soul as a man I have bodily feet and by them I move in my own secular wayes but as a Christian I have spiritual feet and on them I walk with God in all the wayes of his Commandments as a man I have natural affections and so I love beauty and fear pain and hate an enemy and I rejoyce in outward prosperity or the like but as a Christian I have renewed affections and so I loved goodness and hate nothing but sin and I fear above all the displeasure of my God and I rejoyce in Gods favour which is better than life Surely this is a blessed life and as soon as ever I am united to Christ why then I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me First Christ is conceived and then Christ is formed and then Christ is born and then grows in me to a blessed fulness Gal. 4.19 My little Children of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you formation follows conception and travail implies a birth then after this we are babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3.1 1 John 2.14 Eph. 4.13 or Christ is as a babe in us from thence we grow up to strength of youth I have written unto you young men because ye are strong and at last we come to Gospel perfection even towards the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Is this all nay if my union be firm and Christ live in me why then I go on Rom. 6.8 Rom. 6.4 1. Col 3 1. Rom. 8.17 and in this condition I am dead with Christ and I am buried with Christ and I am alive again unto God through Christ and I am risen with Christ and I am glorified with Christ Nay yet more my sufferings are Christs Col. 1.24 and Christs sufferings are mine Rom. 8.17 I am in Christ an âeir of Glory Rom. 8.17 and Christ is in me the hope of Glory Col. 12 7. O my Christ my life what am I or what is my Fathers house that thou shouldest come down into me that thou shouldest be conceived in the womb of my poor sinful heart that thou shouldest give my soul a new and spiritual life a life begun in Grace and ending in eternal Glory I shall not reckon up any more priviledges of this union me-thinks I should not need if I tell you of Grace and Glory what can I more Glory is the highest pitch and Christ tells you concerning it the Glory whicâ thou gavest me John 17.22 I have given them that they may be one even as we are one Ah my brethren to be so like Christ as to be one with Christ it is near indeed O let us conform to Christ in this he is one with our nature in an hypostatical personal union let us
is taken for the Preaching of the Gospel or for the preaching of the Kingdom of Grace and Mercy of God in Christ unto men q. d. O Sirs look about you there 's now a discovery made of the Glory and Grace of God in another way than ever formerly and therefore prepare for it Repent 5. Sometimes it is taken for the Gosspel of Christ as it is Published and Preached unto all Nations Observe I do not only say for the Gospel as it is Preached but as it is Preached to the Gentiles or among all Nations and this shews how proper and pregnant an Argument this was to inforce the Doctrine and Practice of Repentance upon the Jews because the calling of the Gentiles was near at hand which would prove their rejection and casting off if they did not repent Oh how seasonable is this Sermon to us Christians hath not the Kingdom of Heaven approacht unto us Take the Kingdom of Heaven for the Kingdom of Glory are we not near to the door of Glory to the Confines of Eternity What is our Life but a Vapour that appeareth for a little time and after it vanisheth away We know not but ere the Sun have run one Round our souls may be in that World of souls and so either in Heaven or Hell Or take the Kingdom of Heaven for the Church of Christ and what expectations have we now of the flourishing state of Christ's Church here upon Earth Then shall the Children of Israel and Judah be gathered together for great shall be the day of Jezreel Hos 1.11 A time is at hand that Israel and Judah shall be called together that the fulness of the Gentiles shall come in and what is this but the great day of Jezreel Oh then what manner of Persons ought we to be How Spiritual How Heavenly-minded Arise arise shake off thy dust for thy Light is coming and the glory of the Lord is rising upon thee Or take the Kingdom of Heaven for the Preaching of the Gospel of Grace Mercy and Goodness of God in Christ what Preachings are now in comparison of what have been formerly How doth the Lord set forth his free Love and free Grace in the Churches of Christ No question but many former ages have enjoyed their discoveries in some sweet measure and yet after-ages wonder that they have known no more and how much of the Kingdom of Heaven do Saints find in this Age as if there were a new manifestation of God unto the World And yet I must tell you that the Ages to come shall know more of this Kingdom there shall be further and further openings of this great Mystery of Grace unto the Sons of Men. Mark the Apostle That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his Grace in his kindness towards us through Jesus Christ Eph. 2.7 Eph. 2.7 How is this Had not God revealed grace enough in the former ages Or had not God revealed Grace enough in that present Age Did he not then call in the Gentiles were not many thousands converted at one only Sermon What a deal of that Grace had Paul himself received He tells us that the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ was exceeding abundant to him-wards 1 Tim. 1.14 and is there yet more Grace to be revealed O yes herein lies the Mystery of Grace that he hath reserved exceeding riches of Grace for the Ages to come Grace that never saw Light before and I believe there is yet a fuller Magazine of the Riches of his Grace for latter Ages even for the Ages to come to be discovered that ever was yet Oh then repent repent Why For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand The very openings of Gods Love and Grace unto Souls is a Way and Motive to draw our Souls unto God Or take the Kingdom of Heaven for the preaching of the Gospel to all Nations Jews and Gentiles what fears and jealousies may this breed in us as well as the Jews O boast not against the Branches it may be thou wilt say The Branches were broken off that I might be graffed in well because of unbelief they were broken off and thou standest by Faith be not high-minded but fear For if God spared not the natural Branches take heed lest he also spare not thee Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God on them which felt severity but towards thee goodness if thou continue in his goodness otherwise thou shalt be cut off But I will not dwell on this my design is to consider of Jesus and of the transactions of Jesus in reference to our souls health now John's Sermons were only a preparative to the manifestation of Jesus he was only the Forerunner of Christ and not Christ himself as himself witnesseth SECT III. Of the Baptisme of Jesus 2. FOr the Baptism of Christ He that formerly was circumcised would now be baptized he was circumcised to sanctifie his Church that was and he was baptized to sanctifie his Church that should be we find him in both Testaments opening a way into Heaven This was the first appearing of Christ in reference to his Ministerial Office he that lay hid in the counsel of God from all eternity and he that lay hid in the womb of his Mother for the space of forty weeks and he that lay hid in Nazareth for the space of thirty years now at last he begins to shew himself to the World and He comes from Galilee to Jordan Mat. 3.13 to John to be baptized of him The day was but a little broke in John the Baptist but Christ the Son of Righteousness soon entred upon our Hemisphere indeed now was the full time come that Jesus took his leave of his Mother and his Trade to begin his Fathers work in order to the Redemption of the World For the clearer understanding of Christs Baptism we shall examine these Particulars 1. What Reason had Christ to be Baptised 2. How was it that John knew him to be Christ 3. Wherein was the glory of Christs Baptism 4. What was the Prayer of Christ at or after his Baptism 5. Why was it that the Holy Ghost descended on Jesus 6. Upon what account was it that the Holy Ghost should reveal himself at this time and why in the form of a Dove rather than some other form 1. What reason had Christ to be Baptized we find John himself wondering at this I have need to be Baptized of thee Mat. 3.15 and comest thou to me Many Reasons are given for Christs Baptism As 1. That by this symbole he might enter himself into the Society of Christians just like a King to endear himself to any City of his Subjects he condescends to be made a free-man of that City 2. That he might bear witness to the Preaching and Baptism of John and might reciprocally receive a Testimony from John 3. That by his own Baptism he might sanctifie the water of Baptism to his own Church 4.
That he might give an example himself of the performance of that which he enjoyned others 5. That he might receive Testimony from Heaven that he was the Son of God 6. That he might fulfil all Righteousness not only the Moral but the Figurative Ceremonial and Typical Some think that the Ceremony to which our Saviour looked at in these words was the washing of the Priests in water when they entred into their Function Exod. 29.4 Lev. 8.6 And Aaron and his Sons thou shalt bring to the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and shalt wash them with water And surely this was the main reason of Christs being Baptized that by this Baptism he might be installed into his Ministerial Office 2. How did John know him to be Christ It is very probable he had never seen his Face before they had in their Infancy been driven to several places and they were designed to several imployments and never met as we may well conceive till now besides the Baptist speaks expresly I knew him not John 1.33 but he that sent me to Baptize with water the same said unto me on whomsoever thou shalt see the Spirit descending and abiding on him the same is he that Baptizeth with the Holy Ghost Now this descent of the Holy Ghost was not till after Baptism how then did he know him to be Christ The Answer is given by some thus that John knew Christ in some measure before his Baptism but he knew him not so fully as after when the Holy Ghost had descended on him Others thus that John knew Christ before his Baptism by a present revelation and after Baptism by a present sign it is not unlikely but John knew Christ at his first arrival by revelation for if whiles he was in his Mothers womb he knew Christ being yet unborn how much more might he know and acknowledg him now at his Baptism Thus Samuel knew Saul and thus John might know Christ But for that knowledg he had after Baptism it was a further confirmation of that same knowledg that he had before Baptism and that not so much for his own sake as for the Peoples John 1.34 I saw and bear record that this is the Son of God 3. Wherein was the Glory or excellency of Christs Baptism The Ancients give many Encomiums to it and in some respects prefer it to the Birth of Christ Aug. Serm. 36. thus Augustine Many great Miracles were at Christ's Birth but they were far greater at his Baptism the Holy Ghost overshadowed him in the Womb but he brightly shone on him in the River then was the Father silent not a word from him but now a loud voice is heard from Heaven This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased then was the Mother under suspition because she was found with Child without a Father but now is the Mother greatly honoured in that the Holy Child is Fathered by God himself then was Christ hid to the world and this made John the Baptist say there stands one amongst you whom ye know not He was before his Baptism as the Sun in a Cloud or a Pearl in a shell or a Gold-mine in a Field but now he appears in publick and to manifest his Glory the Heavens open and from the Heavens the Holy Ghost descends and alights upon his sacred head and God the Father gives a voice from Heaven declaring his Divinity to the world If the Jews require a sign here is not one but many signs at once which as Beams do discover a Sun so they discover this Sun of Righteousness to be risen amongst them and herein was the Glory of Christ's Baptism 4. What was the Prayer of Christ at or after his Baptism The Evangelist Luke Luke 3.21 speaks of his Prayer It came to pass that Jesus being Baptized and Praying the Heavens were opened This was the manner of those that were Baptized assoon as they were Baptized to come out of the water and Pray and some think that these words Mat. 3.36 they were Baptized of him in Jordan confessing their sins hath reference to this if so then Christ having no sins to confess of his own the tenour of his prayer must needs be to some other purpose But to what purpose some say to the same purpose as his Prayers were usually as in John 17. that his Father would preserve his Church in Vnity and Truth and that he would Glorifie his Church that they also might be one even as he and his Father are one and especially that many might be converted by his Ministry which he was now beginning Others think that this Prayer at this time was for that which followed upon his very prayer i.e. that the Holy Ghost might descend and that the Father would Glorifie the Son by a Testimony from Heaven Indeed the Text hath laid his Prayer and the opening of the Heavens so close together as that it seems to point out what was the tenour of his Prayer by the consequent of it Before the Heaven was mured up no Dove to be seen no Voice to be heard but streight upon it as if they had but waited the last word of his prayer all of them follow and in another place we find the like return upon the like prayer John 12.28 Father Glorify thy Name then came there a voice from Heaven saying I have both Glorified it and I will Glorifie it again one reason more if we consider that Christ was now to enter upon the great Work of our Redemption and the preaching of the Gospel it will be no less strange to conceive that he prayed for the visible sealing of him to that Work and Office by the coming of the Holy Ghost John 6.27 To this purpose is that of the Evangelist for him hath God the Father sealed it is a Phrase borrowed from them who give their Commissions under hand and seal and this is certain that upon his Prayer God sent the holy Spirit who sealed him or allowed and confirmed him to the Office of our Redemption and therefore very probable it is that his Prayer might tend to that purpose but herein take heed of excluding what was mentioned in the former opinion for my part I suppose Christs prayer was both for himself and all Believers that the holy Ghost might now be joyned to the water and that all others as should ever after believe in his Name as afterwards he enlargeth his Prayer might have the Holy Ghost descend upon them John 17.20 5. Why was it that the Holy Ghost descended on Jesus I answer for these reasons 1. That John the Baptist might be satisfied for this Token was given John when he first began to preach John 1.33 that upon whom he should see the Spirit descending and remaining on him the same is He which Baptizeth with the Holy Ghost It was a sure sign to the Baptist whereby to know the Christ whose Harbinger and
pray not to run into temptation before we are led and yet for the comfort of God's people if it be so that we are led if by divine permission or by an inspiration of the holy Spirit we are engaged in an action or in a course of life that is full of temptations and empty of comforts let us look upon it as an issue of divine Providence in which we must Glorifie God but no argument of disfavour or dislove of God and why because Christ himself who could have driven the Devil away by the breath of his mouth yet was by the Spirit of his Father led to a Tryal by the Spirits of Darkness My Brethren count it all joy saith James James 1.2 when ye enter into divers temptations knowing that the trial of your Faith worketh Patience 3. The end of the Spirits leading Christ into the wilderness it was either immediate or remote 1. For the immediate end it was to be tempted of the Devil to this purpose was Christ brought thither that Satan might tempt him One would think it a very strange design that the Son of God should be brought into a wilderness to be set on by all the Devils in Hell but in this also God had another remote end i.e. his own Glory and our good 1. His own Glory appeared in this had not Satan tempted Christ how should Christ have overcome Satan The first Adam was tempted and vanquished the second Adam to repay and repair that Foil doth vanquish in being tempted now herein was the Power of Christ exceedingly manifested the Devil having the Chain let loose he lets flie at Christ with all his might and Christ that without blows could not have got a Victory by this furious assault of Satan he both overcomes him and triumphs over him And herein were the Graces of Christ exceedingly manifested how was the Faith Patience Humility Zeal and Valour of Christ set forth which they could not have been if he had alwayes lain quietly in Garrison and never had come into the Skirmish Who could have felt the Odoriferous smells of those Aromatical Spices if they had not been punned and bruised in this Mortar of Temptation It was by this means that the Graces of Christ clearly shined forth to his eternal Praise 2. As it was for his Glory so also for our Good Now we see what manner of Adversary we have how he fights and how he is resisted and how overcome now we see the dearer we are to God the more obnoxious we are to a trial of temptation now we see that the best of Saints may be tempted or allured to the worst of evils since Christ himself is solicited to Infidelity Covetousness and Idolatry now we see that we have not a Saviour and High Priest Heb. 4.15 16. that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but such a one as was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sin and therefore we may go boldly to the Throne of Grace that we may receive Mercy and find Grace of help in time of need 4. The time and occasion of the Devils Onset it was at the end of forty dayes Fast and when he was an hungred Some say as you have heard that all those forty dayes when Christ was in the Wilderness he was tempted only invisibly for Satan during that time assumed not any visible or conspicious shape which it the end of forty dayes say they he did my meaning is not to controvert these points Howsoever for his tempting yet for his fasting forty dayes and forty nights there is no controversy and of that we had some Types before Christ came into the World thus Moses fasted forty dayes at the delivery of the Law and Elias fasted forty dayes at the restitution of the Law and to fulfil the time of both these Types Christ thinks it fit to fast forty dayes at the accomplishment of the Law and the promulgation of the Gospel In fasting so long Christ manifests his Almighty Power and in fasting no longer Christ manifests the truth of his Manhood and of his weakness that he might approve that there was no difference betwixt him and us but sin he both fasted and was an hungred we know well enough that Christ could have lived without meat and he could have fasted without hunger it had been an easy matter for him to have supported his Body without any means of nourishment or Life but to shew that he was man as well as God and so fit a Mediator betwixt God and Man he would both feed and fast make use of the Creature and withall suffer hunger And now our Saviour is an hungred this gives occasion to Satan to set upon him with his fierce and violent temptations he knows well what baits to fish withall and when and how to lay them he hath Temptations of all sorts he hath Apples to cozen Children and Gold for Men he hath the Vanities of the World for the intemperate and the Kingdomes of the world for the ambitious he considers the temper and constitution of the Person he is to tempt and he observes all our exterior Accidents Occasions and Opportunities but of this hereafter 5. The Temptations themselves are in number three whereof the first was this If thou be the Son of God command that these stones be made bread What an horrible Entrance is this if thou be the Son of God no question Satan had heard the glad tidings of the Angel he saw the Star and the Journey and the Offerings of the Sages he could not but take notice of the gratulations of Zachary Simeon Anna and of late he saw the Heavens open and he heard the Voice that came down from Heaven This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased and yet now that he saw Christ fainting with hunger as not comprehending how infirmities could consist with a Godhead he puts it to the question if thou be the Son of God Oh here 's a point in which lies all our happiness how miserable were we if Christ were not indeed and in truth the Son of God Satan strikes at the root in this supposition If thou be the Son of God Surely all the work of our Redemption and all the work of our Salvation depends upon this one necessary Truth that Jesus Christ is the Son of God If Christ had not been the Son of God how should he have ransomed the world how should he have done or how should he have suffered that which was satisfactory to his Fathers wrath how should his Life or Death have been valuable to the sins of all the world If Christ be not the Son of God we are all gone we are lost we are undon we are damned for ever O alas farewell Glory farewel happiness farewell Heaven If Christ be not the Son of God we must never come there well Satan thou beginnest thy assault like a Devil indeed if thou be the Son of God but
what then Command that these stones be made Bread He knew Jesus was hungry and therefore he invites him to eat Bread only of his own providing that so he might refresh his Humanity and prove his Divinity Come sayes he break thy fast upon the expence of a Miracle turn these stones into Bread and it will be some Argument thou art the Son of God There is nothing more ordinary with our Spiritual enemy than by occasion of want to move us to unwarrantable courses If thou art poor then steal if thou canst not rise by honest meanes then use indirect means I know Christ might as lawfully have turned stones into Bread as he turned water into Wine but to do this in a distrust of his Fathers Providence to work a Miracle of Satans choice and at Satans bidding it could not be agreeable with the Son of God And hence Jesus refuseth to be relieved he would rather deny to manifest the Divinity of his Person than he would do any act which had in it the intimation of a different spirit O Christians it is a sinfull impious wicked care to take evil courses to provide for our necessities Come it may be thou hast found a way to thrive which thou couldst not do before O take heed was it not of the Devils prompting to change stones into Bread sadness into sensual Comforts if so then Satan hath prevailed alas alas he cannot endure thou shouldst live a life of austerity or self-denial or of mortification if he can but get thee to satisfie thy sences and to please thy natural desires he then hath a fair field for the Battle it were a thousand times better for us to make stones our meat and tears our drink than to swim in our ill-gotten Goods and in the fulness of Voluptuousness But what was Christ's Answer why thus it is written man shall not live by Bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the month of God 1. It is written He easily could have confounded Satan by the Power of his Godhead but he rather chuses to vanquish him by the Sword of the Spirit surely this was for our Instruction by this means he teacheth us how to resist and to overcome nothing in Heaven or Earth can beat the Forces of Hell if the Word of God cannot do it O then how should we pray with David Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and take not from me the words of truth let them be my songs in the house of my pilgrimage so shall I make answer to my blasphemers 2. Man shall not live by bread c. Whiles we are in Gods work God hath made a promise of the supply of all provisions necessary for us now this was the present case of Jesus he was now in his Father's work and promoting of our interest and therefore he was sure to be provided for according to God's Word Christians are we in God's service God will certainly give us bread and till he does we can live by the breath of his mouth by the light of his countinance by the refreshment of his promises by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God every word of God's mouth can create a grace and every grace can supply two necessities both of the body and of the Spirit I remember one kept straitly in prison and sorely threatened with famine he replied That if he must have no bread God would so provide that he should have no stomach if our stock be spent God can lessen our necessities If a Tyrant will take away our meat God our Father knows how to alter our faint and feeble and hungry appetites The second temptation is not so sensual the Devil sees that was too low for Christ and therefore he comes again with a temptation something more spiritual Ver. 5 6. He sets him on a Pinacle of the Temple and saith unto him if thou be the Son of God cast thy self down for it is written he shall give his Angels charge concerning thee c. He that was content to be led from Jordan into the Wilderness for the advantage of the first temptation he yields to be led from the Wilderness to Jerusalem for advantage of the second the Wilderness was fit for a temptation arising from want and Jerusalem is fit for a temptation arising from vain-glory Jerusalem was the glory of the World the Temple was the glory of Jerusalem the pinacle was the highest piece of the Temple and there is Christ content to be set for the opportunity of temptation O that Christ would suffer his pure and sacred body to be transported and hurried through the air by the malicious hand of the old Tempter But all this was for us he cared not what the Devil did in this way with him so that he might but free us from the Devil Methinks it is a sweet contemplation of an Holy Divine He supposed as if he had seen Christ on the highest Battlements of the Temple and Satan standing by him with this Speech in his mouth Well then since in the matter of nourishment Dr. Hall thou wilt needs depend upon thy Fathers providence take now a further tryal of that providence in thy miraculous preservation cast down thy self from this height behold thou art here in Jerusalem the famous and holy City of the World here thou art on the top of the Pinacle of that Temple which was dedicated to thy Father and if thou beest God why now the eyes of all men are fix'd upon thee there cannot be devised a more ready way to spread thy Glory and to proclaim thy Deity than by casting thy self headlong to the Earth all the World will say there is more in thee than a man and for danger if thou art the Son of God there can be none what can hurt him that is the Son of God and wherefore serves that glorious Guard of Angels which have by Divine Commission taken upon them the Charge of thy Humanity Come cast thy self down here lies the temptation Come cast thy self down saith Satan but why did not Satan cast him down He carried him up thither and was it not more easie to throw him down thence O no the Devil may perswade us to a fall but he cannot percipitate us without our own act his malice is infinite but his power is limitted he cannot do us any harm but by perswading us to do it our selves and therefore saith he to Christ cast thy self down To this Christ answers Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God Though it is true Ver. 7. that God must be trusted in yet he must not be tempted if means be allowed we must not throw them away upon a pretence of God's protection we read of one Heron an Inhabitant of the Desert that he suffered the same temptation and was overcome by it he would needs cast himself down presuming on God's promise and he sinfully died with his fall Christ knew well
his descent from Heaven of his Passion and Ascension and of the Mercy of Redemption which he came to work and effect for all that believe of the Love of the Father the Mission of the Son the Rewards of Faith and Glories of Eternity and this was the Sum of his Sermon to Nichodemus which was the fullest of mystery and speculation that ever he made except that which he made immediately before his death 3. Now was it that the throng of Auditors forcing Christ to leave the shore he makes Peter's ship his Pulpit Luke 5.1 2 3 4 never were there such Nets cast out of that Fisher-boat before whiles he was upon land he healed the Sick bodies by his touch and now he was upon Sea he cured the sick souls by his Doctrine he that made both Sea and Land causeth both to conspire to the opportunities of doing good to the souls and bodies of men Luke 4.18 4. Now it was that he Preached that blessed Sermon on that text The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to Preach the Gospel to the Poor no question but he Preached both to poor and rich Christ Preached to all but for the Power and Fruit of his Preaching it was only received and entertained by the poor in spirit In the following particulars his Office is set out still in an higher tenour To heal the broken hearted to Preach deliverance to the Captives and recovering of sight to the blind or as it is in Isa 61.1 the opening of the Prison to them that are bound a sad thing to be in captivity but sadder to be bound in chains or lockt up in a prison there but 't is most sad of all to be imprisoned having ones eyes put out as it was the case of Sampson and Zedekiah Now the Evangelist willing to render the Prophet to the highest comfortable sence that might be he useth an expression that meets with the highest mystery that is when a man is not only shut up in a blinded Prison when he himself also hath his eyes put out and to such Christ should Preach Preach what not only deliverance to the Captives Luke 4.48 but also restoring of Light to Captive Prisoners nay yet more recovering of sight to blinded Prisoners as the Evangelist renders it 5. Now it was that he delivered the admirable sermon called The Sermon upon the Mount It is a breviary of all those Precepts which are truly called Christian it contains in it all the moral Precepts given by Moses and opens a stricter sence and more severe exposition than the Scribes and Pharisees had given it holds forth the Doctrines of meekness poverty of spirit Christian mourning desire of Holy things mercy and purity peace and patience and suffering of injuries he teacheth us how to pray how to fast how to give Alms how to contemn the world and how to seek the Kingdom of God and its appendent righteousness And thus Christ being entred upon his Prophetical Office in these and the rest of his sermons he gives a clear testimony that he was not only an interpreter of the Law but a Law-giver and that this Law of Christ might retain some proportion at least with the Law of Moses Christ in his last sermon went up into a Mountain and from thence gave the Oracle I cannot stand to paraphrase on this or any other of his sermons but seeing now we find Christ in the exercise of his Prophetical Office let us observe first his Titles in this respect 2. The reasons of his being a Prophet 3. The Excellency of Christ above all other Prophets and then we have done SECT III. Of Christ's Prophetical Office 1. THe Titles of Christ in respect of his Prophetical Office were these 1. Sometimes he is called Doctor or Master Be ye not called Masters Mat. 23.10 for one is your Master even Christ The word is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifies a Doctor Moderator teaching-Master a guide of the way 2. Sometimes he is called a Law-giver James 4.12 There is one Law-giver who is able to save and to destroy the Apostle speaks of the internal Government of the Conscience in which case the Lord is our Judge Isa 33.22 The Lord is our Law-giver the Lord is our King he will save us we must hear no voice in our Consciences but Gods no Doctrine in the Church but Christs No Offices institutions and worship must be allowed but such as he hath appointed and therefore when men brought in Forreign Doctrines it is said that they did not hold the head 3. Col. 2 19. Isa 9.6 Prov. 8.14 Sometimes he is called a Councellor and his name shall be called Wonderful Councellor Counsel is mine and sound Wisdom saith Christ I am understanding and I have strength Christ by his Office counsels men how to fly sin and how to please God and how to escape Hell Heb. 3.1 and how to be saved 4. Sometimes he is called the Apostle of our profession Wherefore holy brethren partakers of the Heavenly calling consider the Apostle and High Priest of our profession Christ Jesus God sent him as an Embassadour to make known his will he came not unsent the very word imports a Mission a sending Rom. 10.15 How shall they preach except they be sent let all those who run before they be sent take notice of this for this would not Christ do he was sent he was the Apostle of our profession 5. Sometimes he is called the Angel of the Covenant Mal. 3.1 even the Angel of the Covenant whom ye delight in Christ was the publisher of the Gospel-Covenant he declared the Gracious purpose of God towards the Elect held forth in the Covenant and in this respect he is called a Prophet Acts 3.22 and the Prophet John 7.40 and that Prophet John 6.14 John 6.14 this is of a truth that Prophet that should come into the World whose Office it was to impart Gods will unto the Sons of Men according unto the name Angel 6. Sometimes he is called the Mediatour of the New-Covenant Heb. 9.15 for this cause he is the Mediatour of the New-Testament saith the Apostle now a Mediatour is such a one as goes betwixt two parties at variance imparting the mind of the one to the other so as to breed a right understanding and thereby to work a complyance betwixt both and thus Christ is a Mediatour betwixt God and us By him it is that the mind and will of God is imparted to man no man hath seen God at any time John 1.18 the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him and by him it is that we impart our mind unto God The smoak of the incense which goes with the prayers of the Saints ascends up before God out of the Angels hand This was typified in Moses Rev. 8.4 I stood between the Lord and you at that time to
shew you the Word of the Lord. Deut. 5 5. The Vulgar renders it thus Ego sequestor medius I was a Mediatour a Midler betwixt God and you and so Christ Jesus he is a Mediatour a Midler an Interpreter an Inter-messenger betwixt God and his People 2. The Reasons of Christs being a Prophet were these 1. That he might reveal and deliver to his people the will of his Father 2. That he might open and expound the same being once delivered 3. That he might make his Saints to understand and to believe the same being once opened 1. As a Prophet he delivers to the people his Fathers will both in his own Person and by his Servants the Ministers In his own Person when he was upon earth as a Minister of the Circumcision Rom. 15.8 Heb. 2 3. and by his Servants the Ministers from the beginning of their mission till the end of the World Thus the Gospel is called A great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him Christ in his own personal preaching is said but to have begun to teach Acts 1.1 and the consummate publication was the sending of the holy Ghost to these Select Vessels who were to carry abroad this Treasure unto all the world it was begun by the Lord and it was confirmed by them that were the Disciples of the Lord. In this respect we cannot look on the publishing of the Gospel to the world but as very glorious was there not a resemblance of state and glory in the preaching of Christ You have heard how a forerunner was sent to prepare his way as an Herald to proclaim his approach and then was revealed the glory of the Lord but because the publication was not consummate till afterwards Eph. 4.8 Christ carries it on in greater state afterwards than he did before When he ascended up on high he then led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men as Princes in time of their solemn inauguration do some special Acts of magnificence and Honour they proclaim Pardons open Prisons Create Nobles fill Conduits with wine so Christ to testifie the glory of his Gospel at the day of his instalment and solemn readmission into his Fathers glory he proclaims the Gospel gives gifts unto men for the perfecting of the Saints Ver. 12. for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ 2. As a Prophet he opens and expounds the Gospel Thus being in the Synagogue on the Sabbath-day Luke 4.17 18 21. he opened the book and he found the place where it was written the Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor c. and then he closed the book and said Luke 24.27 this day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears And thus joyning himself with two of his Disciples going towards Emmaus he begun at Moses and all the Prophets and he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself the Prophesies of Christ were dark and hard to be understood and therefore Christ came down from Heaven to discover such truths John 3.13 No man hath ascended up to Heaven i.e. to be acquainted with Gods secrets but he that came down from Heaven the gracious purpose of God towards lost mankind was a secret locked up in the breast of the Father and so it had been even to this day had not Christ who was in the bosome of the Father and one of his Privy Council revealed it unto us hence Christ is called the Interpreter of God Mat. 11.27 no man knoweth the Father save the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him by his interpretation Luke 24.45 Acts 10.14 3. As a Prophet he gives us to understand and to believe the Gospel Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures and thus was the Case of Lydia whose heart the Lord opened he that first opens Scriptures at last opens hearts He is that true light which enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world John 1.9 he enlightens every believer not only with a common natural light but with a special supernatural light of saving spiritual and effectual knowledge now there is no Prophet can do this save only Jesus Christ he only is able to cause our hearts to believe and to understand the matter which he doth teach and reveal other Prophets may plant and water Paul may plant and Apollo may water but he and only he can give the increase other Prophets may teach and Baptize but unless Christ come in by the powerful presence of his Spirit 1 Pet. 2.5 Psal 127.1 they can never be able to save any one poor soul We as lively stones are built up a spiritual house saith Peter but except the Lord do build this house they labour in vain that build it O alas who is able to breath the Spirit of life into these dead stones John 5.25 but he of whom it is written The hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear it shall live Who can awaken a dead soul out of a dead sleep And who can give light unto these blind eyes of ours but he of whom it is written Eph. 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light 3. The Excellencies of Christ above all other Prophets are in these respects 1. Other Prophets were but Types and shadows of this great Prophet even Moses himself was but a figure of him Acts 7.37 A Prophet shall the Lord God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me saith Moses these words Like unto me do plainly shew that Moses was at the best but an image and shadow of Christ now as substances do far excel shadows so doth Christ far excel all the Prophets they were but shadows and forerunners to him 2. Other Prophets revealed but some part of Gods will and only at sometimes God saith the Apostle at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time-past unto the Fathers by the Prophets Heb. 1.1 i.e. he let out his light by little and little till the Day-star and Sun of Righteousness arose Ver. 2. but in these last dayes he hath spoken by his Son i.e. he had spoken more fully and plainly in this respect saith the Apostle the heirs of Life and Salvation were but children before Christs incarnation Gal. 14.1 2. As now we see but through a glass darkly towards what we shall do in the life to come so did they of old in comparison of us their light in comparison of ours was but an obscure and glimmering light Christs discovery of himself then was but a standing behind the wall a looking forth of the window Cant. 2.9 a shewing of himself through the
revelling and dishonouring of God hath made them so pensive Why sinners your carriage grieves the very Spirit of God Gen. 6.6 You grieve God at the heart as it is expressed Gen. 6.6 and therefore no wonder if the godly cannot rejoyce in your sinful society you are the cause of their sadness but admit them once into the company and fellowship of the Saints and they know how to be joyful 4. If it be so that usually they are pensive and sad it is not because of Religion but because they are not more Religious because they find so much want of godliness in their own hearts Rom. 7.24 this was the cause of Pauls heaviness O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death And yet know that all these sadnesses are true preparatives to joy and therefore in the very next words the Apostle breakes out into that sweet Doxology I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Never was true sorrow for sin but it ended in rejoycings and praises and thanksgiving to God Why then be convinced Ah deceived souls say not that God is an hard Master reaping where he sowed not and gathering where he strawed not say not that his wayes are tedious and irksome and uncomfortable wayes but rather taste and see and try how good the Lord is experience the truth of these words My Yoak is easie and my Burthen is light What is lighter than that Burthen which instead of burthening Chears up the party on which it is laid Just like those burthens of Cinnamon that refresh those that carry them through the deep sands of Arabia An holy Divine once endeavouring to convince men of the sweetness and pleasantness of Gods wayes by his own experiences I call Hâaven and Earth to Record saith he that these things are truths of God they are not notions or conceits but certain realities Another flyes somewhat higher If men would in earnest sayes he abandon the Devils service and give up their names to Christ in truth and try I dare assure them in the Word of Life and Truth they would not exchange the saddest hour of all their life afterward with the prime and flower of all their former sensual pleasures Prov. 3.17 might they have ten thousand worlds to boot her wayes are wayes of pleasure saith Solomon Vse 2. Psal 1.1 2. Psal 119.1 Psal 40.8 2. You that are so convinc'd I beseech you carry on the work of God sweetly comfortably and with delight the Psalmist sayes Blessed is the man that delights in the Law of the Lord. And Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk chearfully in the Law of the Lord. And blessed is the man that delighteth greatly in his Law And it is written upon the heart of Christ I delight to do thy will O my God yea they Law is within my heart as God loves a cheerful giver so a chearful server Come take my Yoak upon you saith Christ for my Yoak is easie it is not an Iron Yoak of Bondage but a Chain of heavenly Pearls to adorn your souls Quest 1 Oh but how should we carry on the Work the Yoak the Duty the Practise of Piety and of Religion pleasantly I answer Answ 1. Be sure to keep the heart right and upright within let all we do be in sincerity and let all we are in respect of the inner man be at peace within sence and reason can tell us that according to the tempter within so there is the relishing of things without he that acts in sincerity and hath peace within can easily go through the duties that are required without with joy and comfort 2. Exercise saith in the work and office of the Holy Ghost I mean that work and office to which the Holy Ghost is designed by the Father and the Son both to help his people and to be the Comforter of his people 1. The holy Ghost is designed to help his people Likewise the Spirit helpeth our infirmities the word in the Original â ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã John 14.26 and 15.26 doth properly imply such an help Rom. 8.26 as when another man of strength and ability steppeth in to sustain the burthen that lyeth upon weak shoulders why this makes Christs Burthen light we do not bear all the weight for the holy Ghost puts under his shoulder 2. The Holy Ghost is designed to comfort his People Christ calls him the Spirit the Comforter because he brings in a kind of spiritual joy and spiritual comfort Mark it is not a natural but a spiritual joy Oh what a vast difference is there betwixt the comforts of a carnal heart and the comforts of the godly The one comes from a little meat or drink or creature vanity but the other comes from the exercise of Faith about the office of the Holy Ghost who is designed to this work surely here is the way to carry on duty sweetly and comfortably and with delight i.e. to be in the exercise of faith on the work and office of the Holy Ghost as he is our Helper and Comforter 1 Pet. 2.9 1 Pet. 2.9 3. Understand what is in Christian Religion and in the practise of it to cause delight As. 1. In every duty and gracious acting of it there is more of the Glory of God than in the whole frame of Heaven and Earth besides Herein is my Father glorified that you bear much Fruit John 15.8 Oh if we but thus looked at the profession and practice of Christian Religion we could not but take pleasure in it 2. In every duty and gracious acting of it there is the seed of glory and eternal life sometimes there breaks out in the very exercise of duty a joy in the Holy Ghost a foretast of Glory but howsoever there is the seed of Glory and though the seed of Glory be not seen but lye as it were under ground dead and unseen yet in time it will spring up unto eternal life why thus look at the practice of Religion and it will be sweeter to us than Honey and the Honey-Comb it will be more precious than Gold yea than much fine Gold But how should we know the difference betwixt the natural pleasantness and this Quest 2 spiritual pleasantness in Religion I know Christians may put a lustre upon the wayes of God by their natural pleasantness and chearfulness of spirit but because we speak of a spiritual joy and comfort and not of a natural wherein lies the difference I answer 1. If it be a spiritual pleasantness it will be serious I have said of laughter it is mad Answ Eccles 2.2 and of mirth what doth it There is much lightness and vanity in such breakings out of natural pleasantness but in spiritual pleasantness all is grave and sober and exceeding serious 2. If it be a spiritual pleasantness it can stand with repentance and humiliation and the fear of God rejoyce with trembling saith the Psalmist
with Christ nevertheless I live c. he conjoins the death of Christ and the life of Christ in one and the same soul q. d. no man knows the benefit of Christs death but he that feels the virtue of Christ's life there 's no assurance of Christs dying for us but as we feel Christ living in us if the power of Christs death mortifie my lusts then the virtue of Christ's life will quicken my soul but what means he by this I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me It seems some Paradox I live yet not I but a right interpretation reconciles all as this I live to God and not unto my self I live to Christ and not unto the World I live according to the Will of God and not after my own lust and fancy or as some would have it I live under grace and not under the Law q. d. Sometimes I lived wholly under the Law which made me a persecutor of the Church of God which wrought in me all manner of Concupiscence and slew me and then I found my self to be dead in sin but now I have embraced Christ and am no more the man I was now I feel Christ quickning ruling guiding and strengthning me by his Spirit now I live spiritually and holily not of my self but from another The very whole of Christians is from Christ Christ is both Fountain-filling and Life-quickning I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Christs life hath an influence infusion transmission into our selves in reference to spiritual life Look as the Heavens by an influence into the Earth do quicken and enliven the Earth and make all the seeds and roots hidden in the Earth to revive and put forth themselves Matth. 4.2 so there is an influence that goes forth from the Sun of Righteousness into the Souls of men reviving and quickning them and making them of dead to become living and of barren to become fruitful To you shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in his wings and ye shall go forth and grow up as the Calves of the Stall O my Soul question thy self in these few particulars dost thou live to God and not to thy self dost thou live to Christ and not to the World dost thou derive thy life from Christ and hath that life of Christ a special influence into thy soul dost thou feel Christ living in thy understanding and will in thy imagination and affections in thy duties and services 1. In thy understanding by prizing the knowledge of Christ by determining to know nothing in comparison of Christ 2. In thy will by making thy will free to chuse and embrace Christ and by making his will to rule is thy will 3. In thy imagination by thinking upon him with more frequency and delight by having more high and honorable and sweeter apprehensions of Christ than of all the Creatures 4. In thy affections by fearing Christ above all earthly powers and by loving Christ above all earthly persons 5. In thy duties and services by doing all thou dost in his Name by his assistance and for his glory why then here 's another ground of thy hope surely thou hast thy part in Christs Life Away away with all dejecting doubts and perplexing fears while Christ was in Augustines eye he said I dare not despond I know who hath said it and I dare build upon it this Anchor of hope thus cast out and fastning upon Christ it would be admirably useful when Billows of Temptation beat upon Souls this Helmet of Hope thus used would keep off many blows whereby the comforts of distrustful spirits are many times sadly battered O my Soul look to the grounds of thy hope if thou findest the power of sin dying in thee if thou walkest as Christ walked if thou admirest adorest believest and obeyest thy Christ if thou livest and livest not but in deed and in truth it is Christ that lives in thee why then thou maist comfortably hope and assure thy self that Christs habitual righteousness and actual holiness is imputed to thy justification thou maist confidently resolve that every passage of Christs Life so far as Legal or Moral belongs unto thee What would ever Christ have come with his power against thy power of sin if he had not meant to rescue thee Would Christ ever have set thee a Copy and have held thy hand and thy heart to have writ legibly after him if he had not meant thee for a Scribe instructed unto the Kingdom of Heaven Mat. 13.55 would Christ in his several actings have set himself before thee as the Object of Admiration Adoration Belief and Obedience if he had not meant to own thee and to be owned by thee would Christ ever have come so near to thee as to have lived in thee to have been the soul of thy soul and the life of thy life the All of thy understanding and will imaginations and affections duties and services if he had not purposed to have saved thee by his life Rom. 5.10 Lam. 3.26 Surely it is good that I both hope and quietly wait for the Salvation of God I cannot hope in vain if these be the grounds of my hope SECT V. Of Believing in Jesus in that respect 5. LEt us believe in Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation in his Life Many Souls stand aloof not daring to make a particular application of Christ and his Life to themselves but herein is the property of Faith it brings all home and makes use of whatsoever Christ is or does for himself To ponder Christ's actions during his Life and the influence of his actions to all that are his what is this to me unless I believe my own part in all this Oh I dare not believe cries many a poor soul is it credible that Jesus Christ the Son of God the brightness of his Fathers Glory the express Image of his Fathers Person should be incarnate for me and lead such a life upon Earth for my soul What! to be baptized to be tempted to manifest himself in the form of man to whip the Buyers and Sellers out of his Temple to preach up and down the Gospel of the Kingdom to work miracles among men to send abroad his Apostles with a commission to preach to invite sinners to ease the burden of duties and in a word to publish the righteousness of his Nature and Life and all this and a thousand times more than all this for my soul O what am I or what is my Fathers House If God should let me live one year in Heaven it were infinite mercy but that the God of Heaven should live so many years on Earth and that all that while he should empty himself in watching fasting praying preaching for my sake Oh the depth Oh the depth I cannot believe Sweet Soul be not faithless but believing I know it is an hard and difficult thing but to help on a trembling soul I shall first
affections will often break out at the window when the door is closed Thus Stephen look'd up to Heaven he sent a Post a greedy pitiful and hungry look up to Jesus Christ out at the window Acts 7.55 at the nearest passage to tell him that a poor friend was coming to him why thus let us look up to Jesus by calling on him now this calling on him contains Prayer and Praise 1. We must pray that all these transactions of Jesus during his Life or during his Ministry upon earth may be ours we hope it is so and we believe it to be so but for all that we must pray that it may be so There is no contradiction betwixt Hope and Faith and Prayer but rather a concatenation Lord I believe yet help my unbelief or Mark 9.24 be it to me according to my Faith how weak soever it will bear that sense 2. We must praise God for all those passages in Christ's life Thus did the multitude they praised God with a loud voice Luke 19.37 38 for all the mighty works that they had seen saying blessed be the King that comes in the name of the Lord peace in heaven and glory in the highest What my Soul hath Christ done all this for thee was he made under the Law to redeem thy soul and adopt thee for his Son to the inheritance of Heaven came he down from heaven and travelled he so many miles on earth to woo and win thy heart spent he so many Sermons and so many Miracles to work thee into Faith O how shouldest thou bless and prize and magnifie his Name how shouldest thou break out into that blessed Hymn To him that loved us Rev. 1.5 6. and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be Glory and Dominion for ever and ever Amen SECT IX Of conforming to Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus as he acted for us in his Life Looking to Jesus intends this especially we must look as one looks to his Pattern as Mariners at Sea that they may run a right course keep an eye on that Ship that bears the Light so in the Race that is set before us we must have our eye on Jesus our blessed Pattern This must be our constant Query Is this the course that Jesus steered Or that I may enlarge In this Particular I shall examine these three Queries 1. Wherein we must conform 2. Why we must conform 3. How we must conform to this Life of Jesus For the first wherein we must conform I answer 1. Negatively we must not cannot conform to Christ in those works proper to his Godhead as in working Miracles I deny not but that the works of Miracles were by way of priviledge and temporary dispensation granted to the Apostles and some others but this was but for Ministry and Service not for their Sanctity or Salvation nor must we conform to Christ in those works of mediation as in redeeming souls in satisfying Divine Justice for our sin No man can redeem his Brother Psal 49.7 nor give to God a ransom for him There is but one Mediator between God and man the man Christ Jesus Nor must we conform to Christ in those works of his Government and influence into his Church as in dispensing of his Spirit in quickning of his Word in subduing of his enemies in collecting of his Members all these are personal honours which belong unto Christ as he is Head of the Church and to these works if we should endeavour to conform we should Crack our Sinews dissolve our silver cords and never the nearer Nor need we to conform to Christ in some other Particulars in his voluntary poverty he became poor for our sakes 2 Cor. 8.9 In his Ceremonial performances as in going up to Jerusalem at the Feasts in his perpetual grave deportment we never read that Jesus laughed and but once or twice that he rejoyced in spirit Alas the declensions of our Natures cannot come up to this Pattern nor do I look at these passages as any acts of moral obedience at all 2. Affirmatively or positively we must conform to Christ's life 1. In respect of his Judgment Will Affections Compassions Look we at his Spirit observe what mind was in Jesus Christ and therein do we endeavour to conform Let the same mind be in you saith the Apostle which was in Christ Phil. 2.5 Phil. 2.5 And we have the mind of Christ saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 2.16 1 Cor. 2.16 2. In respect of his Virtues Graces habitual Holiness Mat. 11.29 Learn of me saith Christ for I am meek and lowly in heart Christ was of a meek and gentle Spirit 2 Cor. 10.2 I beseech you by the meekness and gentleness of Christ saith Paul And Christ was of an humble and lowly Spirit Being in the form of God Phil. 2.6 7. he thought it no robbery to be equal with God yet he made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a Servant I might instance in all other Graces for he had them all in fulness John 1.16 And of his fulness have all we received Grace for Grace 3. In respect of his words talk spiritual and heavenly Language The very Officers of the Priests could say of Christ Never man spake like this man John 7.46 and sometimes they all wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth Luke 4.22 He never sinned in word neither was guile found in his mouth who when he was reviled 1 Pet. 2.22 23 reviled not again The Apostle speaking thus of Christ he tells us that herein Christ left us an example that we should follow his steps Ver. 21. 4. In respect of his Carriage Conversation Close-walking with God The Apostle sets forth Christ as an high Priest who was holy harmless undefiled Heb. 7.26 1 Pet. 2.9 and separate from sinners and in like manner saith Peter Ye are a chosen generation a royal Priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people that ye should shew forth the virtues of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light that ye should shew forth the virtue i.e. that in your lives and conversations you should express those graces and virtues which were so eminent and exemplary in Jesus Christ that you should not only have them but that you should hold them forth ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the word signifies properly to preach so clearly should we express the virtues of Christ as if our lives were so many Sermons of the life of Christ In respect of all his acts practises duties of moral obedience we find in the life of Christ many particular carriages and acts of obedience to his heavenly Father whereof some were moral and some ceremonial now all these are not for our imitation but only such moral acts as concerning which we have both his pattern and precept Come let us
life his way on earth was a continual lecture of humility a little before his death he gave such an example of humility as never was the like He poured water into a bason John 13.5 and began to wash the disciples feet O ye Apostles why tremble ye not at the wonderful sight of this so great humility Peter what dost thou wilt thou ever yield that this Lord of Majesty should wash thy feet methinks I hear Peter saying What Lord wilt thou wash my feet art not thou the Son of the living God the Creator of the world the beauty of the heavens the Paradise of Angels the Redeemer of men the brightness of the Fathers glory and I what am I but a worm a clod of earth a miserable sinner and wilt thou notwithstanding all this wash my feet leave Lord O leave this base office for thy servants lay down thy towel and put on thy apparel again beware that the heaven or the Angels of heaven be not ashamed of it when they shall see that by this ceremony thou set'st them beneath the earth take heed least the daughter of King Saul despise thee not when she shall see thee girded about with this towel after the manner of a servant and shall say that she will not take thee for her beloved and much less for her God whom she seeth to attend upon so base an office Thus may I imagine Peter to bespeak his Master but he little knew what glory lay hid in this humility of Christ it was for us and our example an humble Christ to make humble Christians 3. In him was patience O when I think of Christ's labours in preaching weariness in travelling watchfulness in praying tears in compassionating and then I add to all these his submission of Spirit notwithstanding all the affronts injuries and exprobrations of men how should I but cry out O the patience of Christ 1 Pet. 2.23 the Apostle tells us that when he was reviled he reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously I have already given a touch of these graces in Christ which now I may set before me In him was wisdom and knowledge and justice and mercy and temperance and fortitude and every vertue or every grace that possibly I can think of A bundle of Myrrh is my Beloved unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi 3. I look at the conversation of Christ in word and deed for his words they were gracious Not an idle word ever came out of the lips of Christ himself tells us that of every idle word we must give an account O then how free was Christ of every idle word Mat. 12.36 he knew the times and seasons when to speak and when to be silent he weighed every word with every Circumstance time and place and manner and matter Eccles 3.7 There 's a time to keep silence and a time to speak said Solomon when he returned again to his wisdom and hence we read that sometimes Jesus being accused he held his peace Mat. 26.63.27 12. and when he was accused of the chief Priests and Elders he answered nothing but other whiles he pours out whole Cataracts of holy instructions he takes occasion of vines of stones of water and sheep to speak a word in season he is still discoursing of the matters of the Kingdom of Heaven and he speaks such words as give grace unto all the hearers round about him so for his deeds and actions they were full of grace and goodness the Apostle Peter gives him this character which I look upon as a little description of Christ's life who went about doing good Acts 10.38 it was his meat and drink to do all the good he could it was as natural to him to do good as it is for a fountain to stream out he was holy and heavenly unspotted every way O the sweet conversation of Christ how humbly carries he it amongst men how benignly towards his Disciples how pitiful was he towards the poor to whom as we read he made himself most like 2 Cor. 8.9 He became poor that we might be made rich he despised or abhorred none no not the very Leapers that were eschewed of all he flattered not the rich and honourable he was most free from the cares of the world his prescriptions were Care not for the things of the morrow and in himself he was never anxious of bodily needs above all he was most solicitous of saving souls Much more I might add if I should go over the particulars in the Gospel but by these few expressions of Jesus Christ we may conceive of all the rest 2. Let us be humbled for our great inconformity to this copy what an excellent pattern is here before us and how far how infinitely do we come short of this blessed pattern O alas if Christ will not own me unless he see his Image written upon me what will become of my poor soul why Christ was meek and humble and lowly in spirit Christ was holy and heavenly Christ ever went about doing good and now when I come to examine my own heart according to this original I find naturally a meet antipathy a contrariety I am as opposite to Christ as Hell and Heaven 1. For my thoughts within I am full of pride and malice I am full of the spirit of the world what is there in my heart but a world of passions rebellions darkness and deadness of spirit to good and 2. If the fountain be so muddy can I expect clear streams what words are these that come many a time from me Christ would not speak an idle word but how many idle evil sinful words come daily flowing from my lips Out of the abundance of the mouth the heart speaketh and if I may guess at my heart by my words where was my heart this Sabbath and the other Sabbath when my discourse was all on my calling or on the world or it may be on my lusts or on my Dalilah's on my right-hand-sins or on my right-eye-sins and 3. What actions are these so frequently performed by me if I must read my state by my conversation Whose image and superscription is this the last oath I sware the last blasphemy I belched out the last act of drunkenness idolatry adultery I committed or if these sins are not fit to be named the last piece of wrong I did my neighbour the last prank of pride I played on this stage of the world the last expence of time when I did no good in the world neither to my self nor others the last omission of good as well as commission of evil O my soul whose Image is this is it the Image of Christ or of Sathan If the worst Scholar in the School should write thus untowardly after his copy would he not be ashamed if in my heart and life I observe so many blots and stains so
great inconformity and dissimilitude to the life of Christ how should I but lie in the dust O woe is me what a vast disproportion is betwixt Christ's life and mine why thus O my soul shouldst thou humble thy self each morning each prayer each meditation each self examination shouldst thou fetch new fresh clear particular causes occasions matters of humiliation as thus loe there the evenness gravity graciousness uniformity holiness spiritualities divineness heavenliness of Jesus Christ loe there the fragrant zeal dear love tender pity constant industry unwearied pains patience admirable self-denial contempt of the world in Jesus Christ loe there those many yea continual devout divine breathings of soul after God his Fathers glory after the spiritual and immortal good of the precious souls of his redeemed ones Oh all the admirable meekness mercifulness clemency charity with all other excellent temperance rare composure wonderful order of his blessed soul O the sweet expressions gracious conversation O the glorious shine blessed lustre of his divine Soul Oh the sweet countenance sacred discourse ravishing demeanour winning deportment of Jesus Christ and now I reflect upon my self on alas Oh the total wide vast utter difference distance disproportion of mine there from I should punctually answer perfectly resemble accurately imitate exactly conform to this life of Christ but ah my unevenness lightness vanity Ah my rudeness grossness deformity odiousness sleightness contemptibleness execrableness Ah my sensuality brutishness devilishness how clearly are these and all other my enormities discovered discerned made evident and plain by the blessed and holy life of Jesus so true is that rule Contraria juxta se posita magis elucescunt Psal 103.1 3. Let us quicken provoke and incense our sluggish drousie souls to conform to Christ If we will but strictly observe our hearts we shall find them very backward to this duty and therefore let us call upon our souls as David did Bless the Lord O my soul Rom. 8.29 and let all that is within me bless his holy Name let us work upon our souls by reasoning with our own hearts as if we discoursed with them thus O my heart or O my soul if in the deep counsels of eternity this was Gods great design to make his Son like thee that thou also mightest be like his Son how then shouldest thou but endeavour to conform and what sayes the Apostle For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Son this was one of his great purposes from eternity this law God set down before he made the world that I should conform to his Son and what O my soul would'st thou break the eternal bands of predestination O God forbid Again if this was one of the ends of Christ's coming to destroy the works of the devil to deface all Sathan's works especially his work in me his Image in me and to set his own stamp on my soul how then should I but endeavour to conform I read but of two ends of Christ's coming into the world in relation to us whereof the first was to redeem his people and the other was to purifie his people He gave himself for us Tit. 2.14 that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works the one is the work of his merit which goeth upward to the satisfaction of his Father the other is the work of his Spirit and grace which goeth downwards to the sanctification of his Church in the one he bestoweth his righteousness on us by imputation on the other he fashioneth his Image in as by renovation and what O my soul would'st thou destroy the end of Christ's coming in the flesh or would'st thou miss of that end for which Christ came in relation to thy good O God forbid Again consider the example of the Saints before thee if this was their holy ambition to be like their Jesus emulate them in this for this is a blessed emulation it is observable how the heathens themselves had learnt a rule very near to this Seneca Senec. Ep. 11. advised that every man should propound to himself the example of some wise and vertuous personage as Cato or Socrates or the like and really to take his life as the direction of all their actions but is not the life of Jesus far more precious and infinitely more worthy of imitation we read in history of one Cecilia a Virgin who accustomed her self to the beholding of Christ for imitation and to that purpose she ever carried in her breast some pieces of the Gospel which she had gathered out of all the Evangelists and thereon night and day she was either reading or meditating this work she carrried on in such a circulation that at last she grew perfect in it and so enjoyed Christ and the Gospel not only in her breast but also in the secrets of her heart as appeared by her love of Christ and confidence in Christ and familiarity with Christ Cant. 1.13 as also by her contempt of the world and all its glory for Christ his sake There is some resemblance of this in the Spouse when she resolved of Christ He shall lye all night betwixt my breast q. d. he shall be as near me as near may be my meditation of him and by consequence my imitation of him shall be constant and continual not only in the day but He shall lye all night betwixt my breasts What O my soul was this the practise of the Saints and wilt thou not be of that communion O God forbid thus let us quicken and provoke our souls to this conformity let us excite rouze incense awake and sharpen up our wretched sluggish drouzy lazy souls our faint feeble slâgging faultering drooping languishing affections desires endeavours let us with enlarged industry engage and encourage our backward and remiss spirits to fall upon this duty of conformity again and again let us come up higher towards it or if possibly we may compleatly to it that the same mind and mouth and life may be in us that was in Jesus Christ that we may be found to walk after Christ that we may tread in the very prints of the feet of Christ that we may climb up after him into the same hââven Kingdom that we may aspire continually towards him and grow up to him even to the measure of the statuâe of the fulness of Christ 4. Let us regulate our selves by the life of Christ whatsoever action we go about let us do it by this rule what Would Christ have done this or at least Would Christ have allowed this It is true some things are expedient and lawful with us which were not sutable to the Person of Christ Marriage is honourable with all men and the bed undefiled but it did not befit his Person who came into the world only to spiritual purposes to beget sons and daughters writing of books is commendable with
last throughout all his body why all these now came into his mind and all these were put into the Cup of which he must drink 2. The great shame that he must undergo this was more than pain as a good name is better than precious Oyntment and loving favour better than silver and Gold so is shame a greater punishment to the mind than any torture can be to the flesh Now came into his thoughts his apprehending binding judging scorning reviling condemning and Oh what a bloody blush comes into the face of Christ whilst in the cup he sees these Ingredients 3. The neglect of men notwithstanding both his pain and shame I look upon this as a greater cut to the heart of Christ than both the former when he considered that after all his sufferings and reproaches few would regard O this was a bitter Ingredient naturally men desire if they cannot be delivered yet to be pittied it is a kind of ease even to find some regard among the Sons of men it shews that they wish us well and that they would give us ease if they could but Oh when it comes to this that a poor wretch is under many sufferings and great shame and that he finds none so much as to regard all this now verily it is an heavy case and hence was Christ's Complaint Have ye no regard Lam. 1.12 O all ye that pass by the way Consider and behold if ever there were sorrow like unto my sorrow which was done unto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the dayes of his fierce anger Christ complains not of the sharp pains he endured but he complains of this Have ye no regard He cries not out Oh deliver me and save me but Oh consider and regard me q. d. All that I suffer I am contented with I regard it not only this troubles me that you will not regard why it is for you that I endure all this and do you so look upon it as if it nothing at all concerned you Suppose a Prince should pay some mighty price to redeem a slave from death and the slave should grow so desperate as after the price paid to throw himself upon his death yea with all the strength and might he hath to offer a death upon his very Redeemer would not this trouble Why thus it was Christ is willing to redeem us with his own precious blood Heb. 10.29 but he saw many to pass by without any regard yea ready to trample his precious blood under their feet and to account the blood of the Covenant as an unholy thing Oh this was another Spear in the heart of Christ or a bitter Ingredient in this Cup. 4. The Guilt of sin which he was now to undergo upon him was laid the iniquity of us all Isa 53.6 All the sins of all Believers in the world from the first Creation to the last Judgment were laid on him Oh what a weight was this Surely one sin is like a Talent of Lead Oh then what were so many thousands of millions The very earth it self groans under the weight of sin until this day David cried out that his iniquities were a burden too heavy for him to bear Psal 38.4 Amos. 2.13 Nay God himself complains Behold I am pressed under you as a Cart is pressed that is full of sheaves Now then no wonder if Christ bearing all the sins of Jews and Gentiles bond and free cry out My Soul is heavy for sin was heavy on his soul In that I say all the sins of all Believers were laid on Christ understand me soberly my meaning is not that Believers sins were so laid on Christ as that they ceased to be Believers sins according to their physical and real in-dwelling but only that they were laid on Christ by Law-imputation or by legal-obligation to satisfactory punishment I make a difference betwixt sin and the guilt of sin for sin it self is macula the blot the defilement and blackness of sin which I conceive is nothing but the absence and privation of that moral rectitude and righteousness which the Law requireth but the guilt of Sin is somewhat issuing from this blot and blackness according to which the Person is liable and obnoxious to eternal punishment Some indeed give a distinction of the guilt of sin there is reatus culpae the guilt of sin as sin and this is all one with sin being the very essence soul and formal being of sin they call it a fundamental or potential guilt and there is reatus poenae reatus personae reatus actualis the guilt or obligation to punishment the actual guilt or actual obligation of the person who hath thus sinned to punishment and this guilt is a thing far different from sin it self and is separable from sin yea and is removed from sin in our justification Now this was the sin or guilt which was laid on Christ in which sense the Apostle speaks who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Isa 53.6 2 Cor. 5.21 how bare our sins on the Tree but by his sufferings And he hath laid on him the iniquity of us all how laid on him but by imputation And he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin how made sin for us surely there was in Christ no fundamental guilt no no but he was made Sin by imputation and Law-account he was our surety and so our sins were laid on him in order to punishment as if now in the Garden he had said to his Father Thou hast given me a Body as I have taken the debts and sins of all believers in the world upon me Come now and arrest me as the only pay-Master lo here I am to do and suffer for their sins whatsoever thou pleasest Psal 40.6 7 8. Heb. 10.4 5 6 7 8 9. Or as if he had said to his Father thus I am the sinner O Father I am the surety all my friends wants and all their debts let them be laid on me my life for their life my soul for their souls my glory for their glory my heaven for their heaven Now this was no small matter little do we know or consider what is the weight and guilt of sin And this was another ingredient in Christs Cup. 5. The Power and malice of Satan the devill had a full leave and license not as it was with Job Do what thou wilt Satan but save his life no no he had a commission without any such restriction or limitation the whole power of darkness was let loose to use all his violence and to afflict him as far as possibly he could and this our Saviour intimates when he saith that the Prince of this world cometh Now was it that the Word must be accomplished Thou shalt bruise his heel John 14.30 Gen. 3.15 the Devil could go no higher than the heel of Christ but whatever he could do he was sure to
marvellous that Jesus Christ by these means should overthrow the Kingdom of pride and yet that there should remain in me the relicks of pride consider all those night-sufferings of Christ O cruel night O unquiet night now was the season that all creatures should take their rest that the senses and members wearied with toils and labours should be refreshed but on the contrary Christ's members and senses were then tormented they struck his body they afflicted his soul they bound his hands they buffetted his cheeks they spit in his face O my soul thou sinnest in the dark in covert in secret when no eye is upon thee when the Sun that eye of the world is set or hid and therefore all the night long is Christ thus tormented by thy sins not one jot of rest hath Christ not a wink of sleep must seize on him whom thou by the alarm of thy sins disquieted both at evening at mid-night and at the Cock-Crow and at the dawning 4. Consider the hurryings of Jesus from Caiphas to Pilate now he stands before Pilate where he was accused of sedition seduction and usurpation Not only Jews but Gentiles have their hands imbrewed in the blood of Christ Pilate was delegated from Cesar Luke 18.31 both of them Gentiles yet not without a prophesie Behold we go up to Jerusalem and all things that are written by the Prophets concerning the Son of man shall be accomplished for he shall be delivered unto the Gentiles at the Gentile-tribunal being questioned of his Kingdom and he answers both the Jews and Gentiles that they need not fear his usurpation John 18.36 My Kingdom is not of this world He gives Kingdoms that are eternal but he will take away none that are temporal Christ came not into the world to be Cesar's or Pilate's or Herod's successor but if they had believed to have been their Saviour Look through the Chronicles of his life and we find him so far from a King that he was the meanest servant of all men where was he born but at Bethlehem a little City where did the Shepherds find him but in a poor cottage who were his Disciples but a deal of Fishermen who his Companions but Publicans and sinners is he hungry where stands his table but on plain ground what are his dainties but bread and a few Fishes where is his lodging but at the stern of a Ship Here 's a King without either presence-chamber or bed-chamber The Foxes have holes and the Birds of the air have nests but the Son of man hath not whereon to lay his head Come fear not Pilate the loss of thy diadem it may be the people would sometimes have made him a King but see how he flies from it My Kingdom is not of this World saith Jesus Oh that I could but contemn the World as Christ did O that first and above all I could seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness Oh my soul I feel it I feel it unless I can be free from the affection of all creatures I cannot with freedom of mind aspire unto divine things unless I be willing with Christ to tread on Crowns and Scepters to be despised and forsaken of all and to be esteemed nothing at all I can have no inward peace nor be spiritually enlightned nor be wholly united to the Lord Jesus Christ 5. Consider the hurryings of Jesus from Pilate to Herod there is he questioned of many things but justly is the Lamb of God dumb and opened not his mouth to him that not long before had taken away his voice upon this he is mocked Luke 23.11 and arrayed in a gorgeous robe Wisdom is taken for Folly Vertue for Vice Truth for Blasphemy Temperance for Gluttony the Peace-maker of all the World for a seditious disturber of the World the reformer of the Law for a breaker of the Law and the justifier of sinners for a sinner and the follower of sinners See how he emptied himself and made himself of no reputation that he might fill thee with goodness and make thee spiritually wise unto salvation 6. Consider the hurryings of Jesus from Herod back again to Pilate O my Saviour how art thou now abused new accusations are forged and when Pilate sees that nothing will do but Christ must dye he delivers him to be stripped whipped cloathed in Purple crowned with Thorns and Sceptred with a Reed He that with spittle cured the eyes of the blind is now blinded with their spittle who can number those stripes wherewith they flea and tare his body one wound eating into another that there is no health in his bones by reason of my sins O Jesus was that frothy spittle the Ointment those Thorns thy Crown that Reed thy Scepter that Purple-dyed and imbroidered with blood thy Royal Robes or because Adam's sin brought forth Thorns must it therefore be thy pennance to wear them unthankful people thus watered with his blood that bring forth nothing but Thorns to crown him But Oh that the Lord of Heaven the Creator of the World the Glory of the Angels the Wisdom of God should for my sake be punished with whips and scourges O my heart how can I think on this without tears of blood O joy of the Angels and Glory of Saints who hath thus disfigured thee who hath thus defiled thee with so many bloody blows certainly they were not thy sins but mine it was love and mercy that compast thee about and caused thee to take upon thee this so heavy a burthen love was the cause why thou didst bestow upon me all thy benefits and mercy moved thee to take upon thee all my miseries 7. Consider that sad spectacle of Jesus when he came forth wearing the Crown of Thorns and the Purple Robe and Pilate saying unto them behold the Man John 19.5 O my soul fix thy eyes on the sad object suppose thy self in the case of Jesus what if in so sensible and tender a part as thy head is men should fasten a number of Thorns yea and those so sharp that they should pierce into thy scull why alas thou canst hardly abide the prick of a pin much less the piercing in of so many Thorns O but thy Jesus was crowned with Thorns and Sceptred with a Reed and that Reed was taken out of his hands to beat the Crown of Thorns into his head and besides thy Jesus was whipped with cords and rods and little chains of iron that from his shoulders to the soles of his feet there was no part free and being now in this plight thou art called on to behold the Man dost thou see him is thy imagination strong canst thou consider him at present as if thou hadst a view of this very man methinks it should make thee break out and say O brightness of thy Fathers glory who hath thus cruelly dealt with thee O unspotted glass of the Majesty of God who hath thus wholly disfigured thee O river that flows out
of the paradise of delights who hath thus troubled thee it is my sins O Lord that have so troubled thee my sins were the Thorns that pricked thee the lashes that whipped thee the purple that cloathed thee it is I Lord that am thy tormentor and the very cause of these thy pains 8. Consider Pilate's sentence that Jesus should be Crucified as the Jews required Now they had him in their will and they did to him what seemed them good Follow him from Gabbatha to Golgotha see how they lay the heavy Cross upon his tender shoulders that were so pitifully rent and torn with whips accompany him all the way to the Execution and help to carry his Cross to Mount Calvary And there as if thou hadst been frozen hitherto thaw into tears see him lifted up on that engine of torture the bloody Cross he hangs on nails and as he hangs his own weight becomes his own affliction O see how his arms and legs were racked with voilent pulls his hands and feet boared with nails his whole body torn with stripes and gored with blood And now O my soul run with all thy might into his arms held out at their full length to receive thee Oh weigh the matter because sin entred by the senses therefore the head in which the senses flourish is crowned with searching thorns because the hands and feet are more especially the instruments of sin therefore his hands and feet are nailed to the Cross for satisfaction O marvellous what King is he or of what Countrey that wears a Crown of Thorns what man is he or where lives he whose hands and feet are not only bored but digged into as if they had been digging with Spades in a ditch surely here 's matter for a serious meditation be enlarged O my thoughts and dwell upon it consider it and consider it again 9. Consider the darkness that spread over all the Earth now was the Sun ashamed to shew his brightness considering that the Father of lights was darkned with such disgrace the Heavens discoloured their beauty and are in mourning robes the Lamp of Heaven is immantled with a miraculous Eclipse the Sun in the firmament will simpathize with the Sun of Righteousness it will not appear in glory though it be mid-day because the Lord of Glory is thus disgraced And now hear the voice that comes from the Son of God My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Christ in the Garden tasted the bitter cup of God's fierce wrath but now he drunk the dregs of it he then sipped off the top but now he drunk all off top and bottom and all O but what 's the meaning of this My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Surely 1. This was not a total but a partial dereliction this was not a perpetual but a temporary forsaking of him the Godhead was not took away from the manhood but the union remained still even now when the Manhood was forsaken 2. This was not a forsaking on Christ's part but only on the Father's part the Father forsook Christ but Christ went after him God took away the sense of his love but the Son of God laid hold upon him crying and saying My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 3. This forsaking was not in respect of his being but in respect of the feeling of God's favour love and mercy certainly God loved him still Oh but his sense of comfort was now quite gone so as it never was before In his agony there was some inklings of God's mercy now and then at least there was some star-light some little flash of lightning to cheer him up but now all the sense and feeling of God's love was gone and not so much as any little star-light of the same appeared Christ now took the place of sinners and God the Father shut him out as it were amongst the sinners he drew his mercy out of sight and out of hearing and therefore he cryed out in a kind of wonderment My God my God why hast thou forsaken me After this he speaks but a few words more and he gives up the Ghost He dyes that we might live he is dissolved in himself that we might be united to his Father O my soul see him now if thou canst for weeping his eyes are dim his cheeks are wan his face is pale his head is bowing his heart is panting himself is dying come come and dye with him by a most exact mortification look pale like him with grief and sorrow and trouble for thy sins 10. Consider the piercing of his side with a spear whence came out a stream of blood and water O Fountain of everlasting waters methinks I see the blood running out of his side more freshly than those golden streams which ran out of the Garden of Eden and watered the whole World Consider the taking of his body down by Joseph the burying of it by Joseph and Nicodemus O here 's excellent matter for our meditation O my spirit go with me a little Christ being dead it is pitty but he should have a funeral according to the letter let Joseph and Nicodemus bear his corps let the blessed Virgin go after it sighing and weeping and at every other place looking up to Heaven let Mary Magdalen follow after with a box of precious Ointment in her hand and with her hair hanging ready if need were to wipe his feet again or that in this meditation I may be more spiritual let the Usurer come first with Judas's bag and distribute to the poor as he goes along let the Drunkard follow after with the spunge that was filled with gall and vinegar and check his wanton thirst let the young Gallant or voluptuous man come like his Master with bare foot and with the cown of thorns set also upon his head let the wanton person bear the rods and whips and wiers wherewith Christ was scourged and fright his own flesh let the ambitious man be cladin the purple robe the angry Person in the seamless coat my meaning is let every sinner according to the nature of his sin draw something or other from the passion of Christ to the mortifying of his sin yea let all turn mourners let all bow their heads and be ready to give up the Ghost for the Name of Christ and let not Christ be buried without a Sermon neither and let the Text be this John 10.11 The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep and in the end of the Sermon whether it be in use or no let the Preacher take occasion to speak a word or two in the praise of Christ let him say with the Spouse that he was the chiefest among ten thousands that he was altogether lovely Cant. 5.10 16. that being God above all Gods he became man beneath all men that when he spake he began ordinarily with verily verily I say unto you that he was an holy man that he never sinned in all his
life neither in thought word or deed that being endowed with the Power of Miracles he lovingly employed it in curing the lame and blind and deaf and dumb in casting out devils in healing the sick in restoring the dead to life that as he lived so he dyed for being unjustly condemned mocked stripped whipped crucified he took all patiently praying for his persecutors and leaving to them when he had no temporal thing to give them a legacy of love of life of mercy of pardon of Salvation When the Sermon is done and the Burial is finished let every Mourner go home and begin a new life in imitation of Jesus Christ O my soul that thou wouldst thus meditate and thus imitate that so thy meditation might be fruitful and thy imitation real I mean that thy life and death might be conformable to the life and death of Jesus Christ But of that hereafter SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that Respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the work of our salvation in his death Jesus Christ to a fallen sinner is the chief object of desire but Jesus Christ as crucified is the chief piece of that object Humbled souls look after the remedy and they find chiefly in Christ crucified and hence are so many cryes after bathings in Christ's blood and hiding in Christ's righteousness active and passive Indeed nothing doth so cool and refresh a parched dry and thirsty soul as the blood of Jesus which made the poor woman cry out so earnestly I have an husband and Children and many other comforts but I would give them all and all the good that ever I shall see in this world or in the world to come to have my poor thirsty soul refreshed with that precious blood of the Lord Jesus Christ But what is there in Christ's blood or death that is so desirable I answer 1. There is in it the person of Christ he that is God-man man-God Heb. 1.3 The brightness of his father's Glory and the express Image of his Person it is he that dyed every drop of his blood was not only the blood of an innocent man but of one that was God as well as man God with his own blood purchased the Church Acts 20.28 now surely every thing of God is most desirable 2. There is in it a worth or price Christ considered under the notion of a sacrifice is of infinite worth now this sacrifice saith the Apostle he offered up Heb. 9.28 Heb. 9.28 He offered up not in Heaven as the Socinians would have it in presenting himself before God his Father but upon earth viz. in his Passion upon the Cross No wealth in heaven or earth besides this could redeem one soul and therefore the Apostle sets this against all corruptible things as silver and gold the things so much set by amongst the men of this world Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver 1 Pet. 1.18 and gold but with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot 3. There is in it a merit and satisfaction the Scripture indeed doth not expresly use these words but it hath the sense and meaning of them As in that text Ephes 6.7 He hath made us accepted in the beloved to whom we have redemption through his blood I know there is a different notion in these words for merit doth properly respect the good that is to be procured but satisfaction the evil that is repelled but in Christ we stand not on these distinctions because in his merit was satisfaction and in his satisfaction was merit A great controversie is of late risen up Whether Christ's death be a satisfaction to Divine justice But the very words redeeming and buying do plainly demonstrate that a satisfaction was given to God by the death of Jesus Tit. 2 14. 1 Cor. 6.20 Rev. 5.9 He gave himself for us that he might redeem us ye are bought with a price and what price was that why his own blood Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood i.e. by thy death and Passion Mat. 20.28 1 Tit. 2.6 This was the ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that ransome which Christ gave for his Elect The Son of man came to give his life a ransome for many or as the Apostle He gave himself a ransome for all the word is here ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifies an adequate price or a counterprice as when one doth or undergoeth something in the room of another as when one yields himself a Captive for the redeeming of another out of Captivity or gives up his own life for the saving of another man's life so Christ gave himself ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a ransome or counterprice submitting himself to the like punishment that his redeemed ones should have undergone The Socinians tell us that Christ's sufferings and death were not for satisfaction to God but in reference to us that we might believe the truth of his Doctrine confirmed and sealed as they say by his death and that we might yield obedience to God according to the pattern that he hath set before us and that so believing and obeying we might obtain the remission of Sins and eternal Life But the Scripture goes higher in that mutual compact and agreement betwixt God and Christ we find God the Father imposing and Christ submitting to this satisfaction Isa 53.6 1. The Father imposeth it by charging the sins of his Elect upon Jesus Christ The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all not the sins themselves not the evill in them or fault of them but the guilt and penalty belonging to them this God laid upon his Son and charged it upon him he charged it as a Creditor chargeth the debt upon the Surety requiring satisfaction 2. Christ undertook it He was oppressed Ver. 7. and he was afflicted or as some translate It was exacted and he answered i.e. God the Father required satisfaction for sin and Jesus Christ was our Surety answered in our behalf Ver. 12. He bear the Sins of many he bear them as a porter that bears the burthen for another which himself is not able to stand under he bear them by undergoing the punishment which was due for them he bear them as our Surety submitting himself unto the penalty which we had deserved and by that means he made satisfaction to the justice of God Surely Christs death was not only for confirmation of his Doctrine but for satisfaction to God 4. There is in it not only a true but a copious and full satisfaction Christ's death and blood is superabundant to our sins The grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant 1. Tim. 1.14 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã it was over-full redundant more than enough Many an humble soul is apt enough to complain Oh if I had not been so great a sinner if I had not committed such and such transgressions there might have been
bottomless they pass our understandings yet they recreate our hearts they give matter of admiration yet they are not devoid of consolation O God raise up our souls to thee and if our Spirits be too weak to know thee make our affections ardent and sincere to love thee Surely the death of Christ requires this and calls for this many other motives we may draw from Christ and many other motives are laid down in the Gospel and indeed the whole Gospel is no other thing than a motive to draw man to God by the force of God's love to man in this sense the holy Scriptures may be called the book of true love seeing therein God both unfolds his love to us and also binds our love to him but of all the motives we may draw from Christ and of all the arguments we may find in the Gospel of Christ there is none to this the death of Christ the blood of Jesus is not this such a love-letter as never never was the like read the words For his great love wherewith he loved us Ephes 2.4 or if you cannot read observe the Hyeroglyphicks every stripe is a letter every nail is a capital letter every bruise is a black letter his bleeding wounds are as so many rubricks to shew upon record Oh consider it is not this a great love are not all mercies wrapt up in the blood of Christ it may be thou hast riches honours friends means Oh but thank the blood of Christ for all thou hast it may be thou hast grace and that is better than corn or wine or oyl Oh but for this thank the blood of Jesus surely it was the blood of Christ that did this for thee thou wast a rebellious soul thou hast an hard and filthy heart but Christ's blood was the fountain opened and it took away all sin and all uncleanness Christ in all and Christ above all and wilt thou not love him Oh that all our words were words of love and all our labour labour of love and all our thoughts thoughts of love that we might speak of love and muse of love and love this Christ who hath first loved us with all our heart and soul and might what wilt thou not love Jesus Christ let me ask thee then whom wilt thou love or rather whom canst thou love if thou lovest not him if thou sayest I love my Friends Parents Wife Children Oh but love Christ more than these a friend would be an enemy but that the blood of Christ doth frame his heart a Wife would be a trouble but that the blood of Christ doth frame her heart all mercies are conveyed to us through this channel Oh who would not love the Fountain consider of it again and again our Jesus thought nothing too good for us he parts with his life and blood he parts with the sense and feeling of the love of God and all this for us and for our sakes Ah my soul how shouldst thou but love him in all things and by all means It is reported of Ignatius that he so continually meditated on the great things Christ suffered for him that he was brought entirely to love him and when he was demanded why he would not forsake Christ rather than suffer himself to be torn and devoured of wild beasts he answered that he could not forget him because of his sufferings Oh his sufferings said he are not transcient words or removable objects but they are indelible characters so engraven in my heart that all the torments of earth can never raze them out And being commanded by that bloody Tyrant Trajane to be ript and unbowelled they found Jesus Christ written upon his heart in Characters of Gold Here was an heart worth Gold Oh that it might be thus with us If my hands were all of love that I could work nothing but love if my eyes were all of love that I could see nothing but love if my mind were all of love that I could think of nothing but love all were too little to love that Christ who hath thus immeasurably loved me if I had a thousand hearts to bestow on Christ and they most enlarged and scrued up to the highest pitch of affection all these were infinitely short of what I owe to my dread Lord and dearest Saviour Come let 's joyn hands He loved us and therefore let us love him if we dispute the former I argue from the Jews when he shed but a few tears out of his eyes at Lazarus's grave then said the Jews John 11.36 behold how he loved him John 11.36 how much more truly may it be said of us for whom he shed both water and blood and that from his heart Behold how he loved us why then if our hearts be not Iron yea if they be Iron how should they chuse but feel the magnetical force of this Loadstone of love for to a Loadstone doth Christ resemble himself when he saith of himself And I if I be lifted up from the earth John 12.32 will draw all men unto me SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that Respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of Salvation in his sufferings and death what hath Christ suffered for us hath he drunk off all the cup of God's wrath and left none for us how should we be but cheered Precious souls why are you afraid there is no death no hell Rom. 8.1 no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus There is no divine justice for them to undergo that have their share in this death of Christ Oh the Grace and Mercy that is purchased by this means of Christ Oh the waters of comfort that flow from the sufferings and obedience of Christ Christ was amazed that we might be cheered Christ was imprisoned that we might be delivered Christ was accused that we might be acquitted Christ was condemned that we might be redeemed Christ suffered his Fathers wrath and came under it that the victory might be ours and that in the end we might see him face to face in glory is not here matter of Joy It may be the Law and sin and justice and conscience and death and hell may appear as enemies and disturb thy comforts but is there not enough in the blood of Christ to chase them away Give me Leave but to frame the objections of some doubting souls and see whether Christ's death will not sufficiently answer and solve them all 1. One cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me my sins are ever before me against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight Psal 51.3 4. I have sinned against a most dear and gracious and merciful God and Father in our Lord Jesus O the aggravations of my sins are they not sins above measure sinful It may be so but the blood of Christ is a fountain opened for sins and for uncleanness in him we have redemption through his blood
making Christ 's death of none effect O come and with joy draw water out of this well of Salvation Isa 12.3 5. Another cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me the very thoughts of hell seem to astonish my heart methinks I see a little peep-hole down into hell and the devil roaring there being reserved in chains under darkness untill the judgment of the great day and methinks I see the damned flaming and Judas and all the wicked in the world and they of Sodom and Gomorrah there lying and roaing and gnashing their teeth now I have sinned and why should not I be damned Oh why should not the wrath of God be executed on me yea even upon me I answer the death of Christ acquits thee of all Rom. 20.6 Blessed is he that hath a part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power Christ's death hath took away the pains of the second death yea pains and power too for it shall never oppress such as belong to Christ If Hell and Devils could speak a word of truth they would say Comfort your selves ye believing souls we have no power over you for the Lord Jesus hath conquered us and we have quite lost the cause Paul was very confident of this and therefore he throws down the Gauntlet and challengeth a dispute with all commers Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Rom. 8.33 34. it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed let sin and the law and justice and death and hell yea and all the Devils in Hell unite their forces this one argument of Christ's death it is Christ that dyed will be enough to confute and confound them all Come then and comfort your selves all believers in this death of Christ what do you believe and are you confident that you do believe why then do you sit drooping What manner of communications are these that you have as ye walk and are sad Luke 24.17 Away away dumpishness despair disquietness of spirit Christ is dead that you might live and be blessed in this respect every thing speaks comfort if you could but see it God and men heaven and earth Angels and devils the very justice of God it self is now your friend and bids you go away comforted for it is satisfied to the full Heaven it self waits on you and keeps the dores open that your souls may enter We have boldness saith the Apostle to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10.20 by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the veil that is to say his flesh Christ's death hath set open all the golden gates and dores of glory and therefore go away chearily and get you to heaven and when you come there be discouraged or discomforted if you can O my soul I see thou art pouring on sin on thy crimson sins and scarlet sins but I would have thee dwell on that crimson scarlet blood of Christ Oh it is the blood of sprinkling it speaks better things than the blood of Abel it cryes for mercy and pardon and refreshing and salvation thy sins cry Lord do me justice against such a soul but the blood of Christ hath another cry I am abased and humbled and I have answered all Methinks this should make thy heart leap for joy Oh the honey the sweet that we may suck out of this blood of Christ come lay to thy mouth and drink an hearty draught it is this spiritual wine that makes merry the heart of man and it is the voice of Christ to all his guests Eat O friends Cant. 5.1 drink yea drink abundantly O beloved SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus 1. We must pray that all these Transactions of Christ in his sufferings and death may be ours if we direct our prayers immediately to Jesus Christ let us tell him what anguish and pains he hath suffered for our sakes and let us complain against our selves Oh what shall we do who by our sins have so tormented our dearest Lord what contrition can be great enough what tears sufficiently expressive what hatred and detestation equal and commensurate to those sad and heavy sufferings of our Jesus And then let us pray that he would pity us and forgive us those sins wherewith we crucified him that he would bestow on us the vertue of his sufferings and death that his wounds might heal us his death might quicken us and his blood might cleanse us from all our spiritual filth of sin and lastly that he would assure us that his death is ours that he would perswade us That neither death nor life nor Angels Rom. 8.38 39. nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature should be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 2. We must praise the Lord for all these sufferings of Christ Hath he indeed suffered all these punishments for us Oh then what shall we render unto the Lord for all his benefits upon us what shall we do for him who hath done and suffered all these things but especially if we believe our part in the death of Christ in all the vertues benefits victories purchases and priviledges of his precious death oh then what manifold cause of thankfulness and praise is here be enlarged O my soul sound forth the praises of thy Christ tell all the world of that warmest love of Christ which flowed with his blood out of all his wounds into thy spirit tune thy heart-strings aright and keep consort with all the Angels of Heaven and all his Saints on earth sing that Psalm of John the Divine Rev. 1.5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen SECT IX Of conforming to Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus in respect of his sufferings and death looking unto Jesus is effective of this objects have an attractive power that do assimulate or make like unto them I have read of a woman that by fixing the strength of her imagination upon a Blackamore on the wall she brought forth a black and swarthy child And no question but there is a kind of spiritual-imaginative of power in faith to be like to Christ by looking on Christ come then and let us look on Christ and conform to Christ in this respect In this particular I shall examine these Queries 1. Wherein we must conform 2. What is the cause of this conformity 3. What are the means of this conformity as on our parts For the first wherein we must conform I answer we must conform to Christ
in his graces sufferings death 1. In the graces that most eminently shined in his bitter passion his life indeed was a gracious life John 1.16 he was full of grace And of his fulness have all we received and grace for grace but his graces shined most clearly and brightly at his death as a Lilly amongst the Thorns seems most beautiful so his graces in his sufferings shew most excellent I shall instance in some of them As 1. His humility was profound what that the most high God that the only begotten and eternal Son of God should vouchsafe so far as to be contemned and less esteemed than Barabbas a murtherer that Christ should be crucified upon a cross betwixt two thieves as if he had been the ring-leader of all malefactors O what humility was this 2. His patience was wonderful in respect of this the Apostle Peter sets Christ as a blessed example before our eyes If when ye do well and suffer for it ye take it patiently 1 Pet. 2.20 21 23. this is acceptable with God for even hereunto were ye called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that ye should follow his steps Who when he was reviled he reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously O the patience of Christ 1 John 4.10 3. His love was fervent Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins This love is an examplar of all love it is the fire that should kindle all our sparks Be ye followers of God saith the Apostle as dear children Eph. 5.1 2. and walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given himself for us an offering and sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Some observe that in the Temple there were two Altars the brazen and the golden the brazen Altar was for bloody Sacrifices the golden Altar was for the offering of Incense now the former was a type of Christ's bloody offering upon the cross the latter of Christ's sweet intercession for us in his glory in regard of both the Apostle tells that Christ gave himself both for an offering and sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour unto God O what love was this 4. His mercy was abundant he took upon him all the miseries and debts of the world and he made satisfaction for them all he acted our redemption immediately in his own person he would not intrust it to Angels but he would come himself and suffer nor would he give a low and base price for our souls he saw the misery was great and his mercy should be more great he would buy us with so great a ransome as that he might over-buy us and none might out-bid him in the market of our souls O we under-bid and under-value the mercy of God who over-valued us we will not sell all to buy him but he sold all he had and himself too to buy us indeed if he had not done it we had been damned and to save our souls he cared not what he did or suffered O the mercy of Christ 5. His meekness was passing great in all the process of his passion he shewed not the least passion of wrath or anger he suffered himself gently and quietly to be carried like a sheep to the Butchery and as a Lamb before shearer is dumb so opened he not his mouth a Lamb is a most meek and innocent creature John 1.29 and therefore is Christ called the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world And he was a brought as a Lamb to the slaughter why a Lamb goes as quietly to the shambles Isa 53.7 as if it were going to the fold or to the pasture-field where its Dam seedeth and so went Christ to his Cross O the meekness of Christ 6. His contempt of the world was to admiration he tells them John 18.36 John 6.15 his Kingdom was not of this world When a Crown was offered him and forced upon him he refused it but above all behold the Bed where the Bridegroom lieth and sleepeth at noon-day here 's but an hard flock and narrow room O blessed head of a dear Redeemer how is it that thou hast not a pillow where to rest thy self He hangs on the Cross all naked few Kings do so he hath no Crown for his head but one of thorns he hath no delicates but Gall and Vinegar he is leaving the world and he hath no other Legacies to give his friends but spiritual things Peace I leave with you John 14.27 my peace I give unto you not as the world giveth give I unto you He had so contemned the world that he had not a Legacy in all the world to give Not as the world giveth give I unto you 7. His obedience was constant He became obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 John 5.30 even the death of the Cross He sought not his own will but the will of him that sent him There was a command that the Father laid on Christ from all eternity O my Son my only begotten Son thou must go down and leave Heaven and empty thy self and die the death even the death of the Cross and go and bring up the fallen sons of Adam out of Hell Mankind like a precious Ring Glory fell off the Finger of Almighty God and was broken all in pieces and thereupon was the command of God that his Son must stoop down though it pain his back he must lift up again the broken Jewel he must restore it and mend it and set it as a Seal on the heart of God all which the Lord Jesus did in time he was obedient till death and obedient to death even to the death of the Cross Son thou must die said God why Father I will do it said Christ and accordingly he freely made his Soul an Offering for sin Now in all these Graces we must conform to Christ Learn of me Mat. 11.29 Eph. 5.2 for I am meek and lowly And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us It is as if Christ had said mark the steps where I have trode and follow me in humility in patience in love in mercy in meekness in contempt of the world in obedience unto death in these and the like Graces you must conform unto Christ 2. We must conform to Christ in his sufferings if he call us to them Phil. 3.10 this was the Apostle's Prayer that I may know him and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings it was his desire that he might experimentally know what exceeding joy and comfort it was to suffer for Christ and with Christ Concerning this the other Apostle speaks also Christ suffered for us 1 Pet. 2.21 leaving us an example that we should follow his steps But the Text that seems so pertinent and yet so difficult
cancelling of the bond so the payment was wrought by Christ's death and the cancelling of the Bond was at his resurrection I shall not disprove either of these I am sure this is without all controversie that Christ rose that it might fully appear that now the Bond was cancelled and Gods Justice satisfied 4. That he might overcome and conquer sin death and devil and hence the Apostle cryes victory upon the occasion of Christ's resurrection 1. Cor. 15.55 O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now was the day that he broke the prison and carryed the keys of death and hell at his own girdle now was the day that he spoiled Principalities and Powers that he troad on the Serpents head and all-to-bruised it that he came upon him took from him his armour wherein he trusted and divided his spoyles now was the day that the Jew lost his rage and death his sting and the grave his corruption and Hell his purchase now was the day of his victory over all his enemies now was the day that the Phaenix sprung up out of its own ashes that Jonas came safe out of the belly of the whale that the Tabernacle of David that was fallen was raised again that the Son of righteousness covered with a cloud appeared and shone with greater lustre than before that Sampson took the gates of the City and carryed them away He arose even upon that account 1 Cor. 15.20 5. That he might become the first-fruits of them that slept Christ is called the first-fruits in a double respect 1. In respect of the day whereon he rose Paul was an excellent critick the very feast carryed him to the word as the day of his passion was the day of the passeover and the Apostle thence could say Christ is our passeover 1 Cor. 15.7 1 Cor. 5.7 1 Cor. 15.20 Lev. 22.10 11. So the day of Christ's rising was the day of the first-fruits and the Apostle thence could say Christ is our first-fruits Concerning this feast of the first fruits we read Lev. 22.10 11. It was their first harvest of their basest grain Barley but the full harvest of their best grain of Wheat was not till pentecost Now upon this day the morrow after the Sabbath the beginning of their first harvest when the sheaf of their first-fruits was brought unto the Priest and waved before the Lord Christ arose from the dead and in this respect Paul calls him the first fruits of them that sleep of all the Saints 1 Cor. 15.20 He arose first as on this day for the full Harvest is not till doomes-day the general Resurrection day 2. he is called the first-fruits in respect of them whom he thereby sanctified for as an handful of the first-fruits sanctified the whole Field of corn that was growing so Jesus Christ the first-fruits of the dead sanctifies all those who are lying in the grave to rise again by his Power even when they are in the dust of death 1 Cor. 15.17 28. If Christ be not risen saith the Apostle ye are yet in your sins But now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep 6. That being formerly abased as a servant and crucified as a sinner he might thus be declared to be the Son of God and exalted to be a Prince and Saviour of men and so his name might be glorified of all the World He was made of the Seed of David according to the flesh Rom. 1.3 4. and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of Holiness by the resurrection from the dead It was of necessary consequence that he that was so humbled must be thus exalted therefore will I divide him a portion with the great Isa 53.12 and he shall divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his soul unto death agreeable to which is that of Christ Thus it is written and thus it behooved Christ to suffer Luke 24.46 and to rise from the dead the third day When Peter was Preaching Christ to the high Priest and councel that condemned him to death he told them that the God of our Fathers hath raised up Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a tree him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour Act. 5.30 31. Phil. 2.8.9 and suitable to this is that of Paul he humbled himself and became obedient to the death even to the death of the Cross wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name It was for his own glory and his Fathers glory that he should rise again from the dead 1 Pet. 1.21 Phil. 2.11 God raised him up from the dead and gave him glory and he was therefore exalted that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Of all the reasons of Christ's resurrection we must look upon this as the main for as he hath made all things for himself so he hath done all things for his own glory Rom. 6.4 Christ was raised up from the dead saith the Apostle by the glory of the Father By the glory or to the glory or for the glory of himself and of his Father SECT III. Of the manner of Christ's Resurrection 3. HOw he rose for the manner of his resurrection we may consider in it these particulars 1. That Christ rose again as a common Person he stood in our stead and therefore when he rose from death we and all the Church of Christ rose together with him and in him We have formerly observed that Christ took upon him the Person of no man he took only the nature of man into the union of the second Person that so he might dye and rise again not as a Particular but a common Person that he might be as a representative in our room and stead that he might be as a Spiritual head and as the second Adam who could infuse life into all his members In this respect the Apostle makes comparison betwixt Adam and Christ now Adam we know was reckoned before his fall as a common publick Person not standing singly or alone for himself but as representing all mankinde to come of him so Jesus Christ is reckoned to us both before his death and in his death and after his death as a common publick Person not living dying or rising again singly or alone for himself but as representing all the believers in the world and hence it is that Adam is called the first man 1 Cor. 15.47 and Jesus Christ is called the second man as if there never had been nor ever should be any more men in the world save only these two and why but because these two between them had all the rest of the Sons of men hanging at their girdles Adam had all the Sons of men born into this world called
the flesh made under the Law 4. Faith must go to Christ not only as made under the directive part of the Law by his life but under the penal part by his death of all these before 5. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh made under the directive and penal part of the Law and as quickened by the Spirit He was put to death in the flesh saith Peter and quickened by the Spirit 1 Pet. 3.18 And accordingly must be the method and order of our faith after we have looked on Christ as dead in the flesh we must go on to see him as quickened by the Spirit 1 Cor. 15.17 if Christ was not raised or quickened saith the Apostle your faith were in vain q. d. to believe in Christ as only in respect of his birth life death and to go no further were but a vain faith and therefore shore up your faith to this pitch that Christ who dyed is risen from the dead to this purpose all the Sermons of the Apostles represented Christ not only as crucified but as raised In that first Sermon after the mission of the holy Ghost ye have crucified Christ said Peter to the Jews and then it follows whom God hath raised up having loosed the pains or chains of death Acts 2.23 24. because it was not possible that he should be holden of it In that next Sermon Peter tells them again ye have killed the Prince of life and then it follows whom God hath raised from the dead whereof we are witnesses In the next Sermon after this be it known unto you all said Peter and to all the people of Israel Acts 3.15 that by the Name of Jesus Christ of Nazzareth whom ye crucified and whom God raised from the dead is this man whole And in the next Sermon after this the God of our Fathers raised up Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a tree Acts 4.10 And as thus he preached to the Jews so in his first Sermon to the Gentiles he tells them we are witnesses of all things which Jesus did both in the land of the Jews Acts 5.30 and in Jerusalem whom they slew and hanged on a tree him God raised up the third day and shewed him openly And as thus Peter preached so in that first Sermon of Paul at Antioch Acts 10.39 40. Acts 13.30 he tells them of the Jews crucifying Jesus and then it follows but God raised him from the dead And as concerning that he raised him up from the dead now no more to return to corruption he said on this wise I will give you the sure Mercies of David Ver. 34 35. and thou shalt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And after this Paul as his manner was went into the Synagogue at Thesalonica and three Sabbath days reasoned with them out of the Scriptures opening and alledging that Christ must needs suffer and rise from the dead This was the way of the Apostles preaching they told them an history I speak it with reverence of one Jesus Christ that was the word of God and that was become man Acts 17.2 3. and how he was crucified at Jerusalem and how he was raised from the dead and all this in a plain simple spiritual way and manner and while they were telling those blessed truths the Spirit fell upon the people and they believed and had faith wrought in them Faith is not wrought so much in the way of ratiocination as by the Spirit of God coming upon the souls of people by the Relation or representation of Jesus Christ to the soul And this our Lord himself hints as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness even so must the Son of man be lifted up John 3.14 that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life When the people were stung God so ordered that the very beholding of the brazen Serpent should bring help though we know not how to those that were wounded and stung by those fiery Serpents so God hath ordained in his blessed wisdom that the discovery of Jesus Christ as crucified and raised as humbled and exalted should be a means of faith come then set we before us Christ raised not only Christ crucified but Christ raised is the object of faith and in that respect we must look up to Jesus 6. Faith in going to Christ is raised from the dead or as quickned by the Spirit it is principally and mainly to look to the end purpose intent and design of Christ in his resurrection very devils may believe the history of Christ's resurrection Jam. 2.19 they believe and tremble but the Saints and people of God are to look at the meaning of Christ why he rose from the dead now the ends are either supream or subordinate 1. The supream end was God's Glory and that was the meaning of Christ's prayer Father John 17.1 Rom. 6.4 the hour is come glorifie thy Son that thy Son also may glorifie thee with which agrees the Apostle he rose again from the dead to the glory of the Father 2. The subordinate ends were many As 1. That he might tread on the Serpents head 2. That he might destroy the works of the Devil 3. That he might be the first fruits of them that sleep 4. That he might assure our faith that he is the word and that he is able to keep that which we have committed to him against that day 5. That he might be justified in the Spirit as he was begotten in the womb by the Spirit led up and down in the Spirit offered up by the eternal Spirit so he was raised from the dead by the Spirit and justified in the Spirit at his resurrection Christ was under the greatest attainder that ever man was he stood publickly charged with the guilt of a world of sins and if he had not been justified by the Spirit he had still lyen under the blame of all and had been liable to the execution of all and therefore he was raised up from the power of death that he might be declared as a righteous person 6. That he might justifie us in his justificaon when he was justified all the elect were vertually and really justified in him that act of God which past on him was drawn up in the name of all his Saints as whatever benefit or priviledge God meant for us he first of all bestowed it on Christ thus God meaning to sanctifie us he sanctified Christ first and God meaning to justifie us he justifies Christ first so whatever benefit or priviledg he bestowed on Christ he bestowed it not on him for himself but as he was a common Person and one re-resenting us Thus Christ was sanctified instead of us for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also might be sanctified through thy truth and thus Christ was justified in stead of us for as by the offence of one judgment came upon all
Ascension he triumphed now it was that he led sin death and devil in triumph at his Chariot wheels And this is the meaning of the Psalmist and of the Apostle Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive He vanquished and triumphed over all our enemies he overcame the world he bound the devil he spoiled hell he weakened sin he destroyed death and now he makes a publick triumphal shew of them in his own Person he led the captives bound to his chariot-wheels as the manner of the Roman triumphs was Col. 2.15 when the conqueror went up to the Capitol It is to the same purpose that the Apostle speaks else-where Having spoiled Principalities and Powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in himself it is a manifest allusion to the manner of triumphs after victories amongst the Romans first they spoiled the enemy upon the place ere they stirred off the field and this was done by Christ on the Cross and then they made a publick triumphal shew they rid through the streets in the greatest state and had all their spoils carried before them and the Kings and Nobles whom they had taken they tied to their chariots and led them as captives and this did Christ at his Ascension Then he openly triumphed ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã in himself i.e. in his own Power and strength other Conquerors do not thus they conquer not in themselves and by themselves but Jesus Christ conquerâd ãâã himself and therefore he triumphed in himself And yet though he triumphed in himself and by himself it was not for himself only but for us which made the Apostle to triumph in his triumph 1 Cor. 15.55 56 57. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory the sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law but thanks be to God which giveth us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ If I may speak out what I think was this victory of Christ I believe it was that honour given to him after his Resurrection by the conversion of enemies by the amazements of the world by the admiration of Angels and especially by his sitting down at the right hand of Majesty on high for therein is contained both his exaltation and his triumph over all his enemies to the utmost 2. That he might lead us the way and open to us the doors of glory It is a question whether ever those doors of Heaven were opened to any before Christs Ascension Christ tells us John 14.2 3. In my Fathers house are many mansions if it were not so I would have told you but I go to prepare a place for you and if I go and prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you unto my self that where I am ye may be also Some infer hence as if there should be many outer courts and many different places or states in glory and yet there is one place whither the Saints should arrive at last which was not then ready for them and was not to be entred into until the entrance of our Lord had made the preparation Again the Apostle tells us that the Fathers received not the promises Heb. 11.40 God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect Whence some infer that their conditions after death was a state of imperfection and that they were placed in an outer court on this side Heaven called Paradise or Abraham's bosome and thither also Christ went when he dyed and was attended with the blessed Thief For my part I shall not joyn with such who think all souls of Saints shall go to paradise where they must remain till the day of judgment and then and not till then must enter into that heaven called the third heaven or the Kingdom of Heaven Indeed some of the ancients make heaven and the immediate receptacles of souls to be destinct places both blessed but hugely differing in degrees And a modern writer is very confident Dr. Tayl. great Exemplar Multas dicit non varias aut dispares sed quae pluribus sufficiant acsi diceret non sibi uni sed omnibus etiam discipulis locum illic esse Calvin i. loc Heb. 6.20 That no soul could enter into glory before our Lord entred by whom we hope to have access and to that purpose he cites those texts John 14.2 3. Heb. 11.40 But I see no ground why the souls of Saints should be excluded heaven either before or after Christ As for that text of John 14.2 Christ saith In my Fathers house are many mansions not many outer courts nor many different states and as for the Fathers mentioned Heb. 11.40 Surely they without us shall not be made perfect and we without them shall not be made perfect in some sense until the day of judgment But our Perfection is not in respect of a more glorious place but in respect of that perfection whereof all the faithfull shall be made partakers as well in body as in soul at the resurrection of the just Thus far I grant that no soul ever entred into Heaven but by the vertue and power of Christ's Ascention and that no soul and body joyntly ever ascended except Christs types before Christ himself opened those doors and lead the way and in this respect he is called The forerunner of his People 3. That he might assure us that now he had run through all those Offices which he was to perform here on earth for our redemption He that hath entred into his rest Heb. 4.10 hath also ceased from his own works as God did from his He was first to execute his Office and then to enter into his rest Though he were a Son Heb. 5.8 9. and so the inheritance were his own yet he was to learn Obedience by the things which he suffered before he was made perfect and so to become the Author of eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him This was the argument which Christ used when he prayed to be glorified again with his Father I have glorified thee on the earth John 17.4 5. I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O Father glorifie thou me with thy own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was This was the order of the dispensation of Christ's Offices his first work was a work of ministry and Service in the Office of obedience and suffering for his Church and this next work was the work of power and majesty in the protection and exaltation of his Church and there was a necessity in this order 1. In respect of God's Decree who had so fore-appointed it Acts 2.23 24. 2. In respect of God's justice which must first be satisfied by obedience before any entrance into glory Luke 24.26 3. In respect of Christ's infinite Person which being equal with God could not possibly be
exalted without some preceding decent and humiliation Ephes 49. That he ascended saith the Apostle what is it but that he descended first into the lower parts of the earth 4. In respect of our evidence and assurance this is the sign that Christ hath finished the work of our redemption upon the earth first he was to act as our Surety and then he was to ascend as our Head our Advocate as the first-fruits the Captain the Prince of life the Author of salvation the forerunner of his people 4. That he might throughly convince the world of believers of their perfect righteousness The Spirit when he comes saith Christ shall convince the world of sin and righteousness and of judgment of sin because they believe not on me of of righteousness because I go to my Father and ye see me no more John 16.8 9 10. If Christ had not fulfilled all righteousness there had been no going to heaven for him nor remaining there certainly God would have sent him down again to have done the rest and the disciples should have seen him with shame sent back again but his ascension to heaven proclaims openly 1. That he hath compleatly finished the work he had to do for us here that no more was to be done in this world for us that the satisfactory work to justice was in it self finished 2. That God was well pleased with Jesus Christ and with what he had done and suffered for us yea God was so infinitely taken with him and his oblation after his sufferings as that he thinks it not fit to let him stay above forty days longer in this world he cannot be without him in heaven but he takes him up into glory and gives him a name above every name 3. That we have our share in heaven with him he went not up as a single person but vertually or mystically he carried up all the Elect with him into glory or otherwise how should the Spirit convince the world by his ascension of their righteousness or otherwise how should the Son of God convince his Father by his Ascension of his righteousness I look upon Jesus Christ going into Heaven as a confident Debtor after payment going into a Court and saying Who hath any thing to lay to his charge all is paid let the law take his course when Christ entred into heaven he seemed thus to challenge Justice Make room here for me and mine who should hinder hath the law any thing to say to these poor souls for whom I dyed if any in heaven can make objection Rev. 8.1 here I am to answer in their behalf Methinks I imagine a silence in heaven as John speaks at this speech only Mercy smiles and Justice gives in the Acquittance and God sets Christ down at his right hand 4. That he hath a new design to be acted in heaven for us he is taken up into glory that he may act gloriously the second part of out righteousness I mean that he might apply it and send down his Spirit to convince us of it He acted one part in the flesh in the habit of a beggar cloathed with rags but now he is gone to act the person of a Prince in robes of glory and all this to manage our salvation in the richest way that may be Three great things Christ acts for us now in glory First he is in place of an advocate for us He liveth to intercede for us Heb. 7.25 He is always begging of favour and love for us he lyes there to stop whatever plea may be brought in against us by the devil or Law yea he is there to get our fresh pardons for new sins Secondly he is the great provider and caterer for us John 14.2 he is laying in a great stock and store of glory for us against we come there In my Fathers house are many mansions I go to prepare a place for you Jesus Christ went before to take up God's heart for us and now he is drawing out the riches of love from God his Father and laying them in bank for us Phil. 4.19 which made the Apostle say My God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus Thirdly he sends down his Spirit to convince us that Christs righteousness is ours indeed the means of procuring this was the life and death of Christ but the means of applying this righteousness are those following acts of Christ's Resurrection Ascension Session Intercession c. By his death he obtained righteousness for us but by his Ascension he applies righteousness to us now it is that in especial manner he convinceth us of righteousness Because he is gone to his Father and we shall see him no more 5. That he might receive his Kingdom over us in the place appointed for it look as Kings are crowned in the chief Cities of their Kingdoms and keep their residence in their palaces near unto them so it was decent that our Saviour should be Crowned in Heaven and there sit down at Gods right hand which immediatly follows after his Ascension to which we now come SECT IV. Of God's right hand and of Christ's Session there 2. FOr the Session of Christ at God's right hand which is a consequent following after his ascension into Heaven I shall examine 1. What is God's right hand 2. What is it to sit there 3. According to what nature doth Christ sit there 4. Why is it that he sits at the right hand of God his Father in Glory 1. What is this right hand of God I answer 1. Negatively it is not any Corporal right hand of God if we speak properly God hath neither right hand nor left hand for God is not a body but a spirit or spiritual substance 2. Positively the right hand of God is the Majesty Dignity Dominion Power and âlâây of God The right hand of the Lord is exalted Psal 118.15 Exod. 15.6 Psal 89.13 Isa 48.13 the right hand of the Lord doth valianity Thy right hand O Lord is become glorious in Power thy right hand O Lord hath dashed in pieces the enemy Thou hast a mighty arm Strong is thy hand and high iâ thy right hand Mine hand hath laid the foundations of the earth and my right hand hath spanned the Heavens I know some of our Divines make this right hand of God something inferior to God's own power but others speak of it as every way equal and I know no absurdity to follow on it 2. What is it to sit at the right hand of God I answer it is not any corporal Session at Gods right hand as some picture him with a crown of gold on his head sitting on a Throne as if he had no other gesture in Heaven but sitting still which Stephen contradicts Acts 7.56 saying I see the heavens opened and the Son of man standing on thâ right hand of God The words sitting or standing are both metaphorical and borrowed
Christ was not David's Lord meerly as man but as God And 2. He sits at God's right hand as man too hereby his Humanity was exalted and a Power is give to Christ as man He hath given hiw power to execute judgment John 5.27 in as much as he is the Son of man In the administration of his Kingdom the man-hood of Christ doth concur as an Instrument working with his God-head Hence this Session at God's right hand is truly and properly attributed to Christ as ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and not only to the one nature of Christ whether Divine or Humane Or it is attributed to Christ as Mediator in which respect he is called an high Priest Heb. 8.1 We have such an high Priest who is set on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in the heavens And in which respect he is called a Prince Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour Now Christ is not a Priest and a Prince meerly according to one Nature whether Divine or Humane I deny not but Christ had a natural Kingdom with his Father as God before the foundation of the world but this Kingdom as God-man Christ had not before his Asension into heaven So then Christ sitteth at the right hand of God by a mediatory action which he executeth according to both natures the word working what pertaineth to the word and the flesh what appertaineth to the flesh Christ is Mediator as God and man and glory hath redounded unto him as God and man and living in this glory he ruleth and governeth his Church as God and man he ascended indeed into heaven in his humanity only but he sitteth at the right hand of God as Mediator in respect of both natures The Lutherans attribute this Session at God's right hand only to the humane nature of Christ they say this Session is nothing else but the elevating of his humane nature to the full and free use of some of the divine properties as of omnipotency omniscience omnipresence the ground of this error is that they suppose upon the union of the two Natures in Christ a real communication of the divine properties to follow so that the humane nature is made truly omnipotent omniscient omnipresent not by any confusion of properties nor yet by any bare communion and concourse of it to the same effect each nature working that which belongeth to it with commuion of the other for this we grant but by a real donation by which the divine properties so become the properties of the humane nature that the humane nature may work with them no less than the Divine nature it self for the perfecting of it self Against this opinion we have these Reasons 1. The union cannot cause the humane nature to partake more in the properties of the Divine than it causeth the Divine to partake in the properties of the humane 2. If a true and real communication did follow of the Divine Attributes it must needs be of all the Attributes as of eternity and infiniteness seeing these are the Divine Essence which can no way be divided 3. Infinite perfections cannot perfect finate natures no more than reasonable perfections can make perfect unreasonable creatures 4. To what end should created gifts serve which Christ hath received above measure if now more noble properties should enter and be conferred on Jesus Christ other reasons are given in but I willingly decline all controversal points SECT VI. Of the Reasons why Christ doth sit on God's right hand 4. WHy doth Christ sit at the right hand of God his Father in glory I answer 1. On Christ's part that He might receive power and dominion over all the creatures Math. 28.18 All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth he speaks of it as done because it was immediatly to be performed Christ at his Session received a power imperial over every Creature that he hath Power over the Angels is plain both by the reverence they do him and by their obedience towards him at the name of Jesus every knee must bow good Angels and evil Angels must yield signs of subjection to Jesus Christ if the Saints shall judge the Angels how much more shall Christ Oh what Power hath Christ himself this way and as for the excellencies on earth they all receive their power from Christ and are at his dispose it is Jesus Christ that is Crowned with Glory and Honour and all things are put under his feet Heb. 27.8 And hence it is that when the Apostle speaks of Christs session at the right hand of God he tells us he is far above all Principalities and Powers on earth Eph. 1.21 and Mights and Dominions in Heaven yea that Angels and Authorities 1 Pet. 3.22 and Powers are made subject unto him 2. On our part many reasons may be given As 1. That he might be the Head of his Church I mean not head in a large sense for one who is in any kind before another for so Christ is the head of Angels and God is the head of Christ and to this we have spoken before But in a strict sense for one that is in a near and communicative sort conjoyned with another as the Head is conjoyned with the Body and Members and so is Christ the head of his Church Look as the King hath a more intimate and amiable Superiority over the Queen then over any other of his Subjects so is it here in Christ our King he is more amiably tempered and more nearly affected to his Spouse and Queen the Church of God then to any other whomsoever And to this purpose he sits at Gods right hand that having now fulness of Grace and Glory in himself he might be ready to communicate the same to his Church who are as the members of his body that he might give them Grace here and Glory hereafter when he shall deliver up his Kingdom to his Father and be all in all 2. That he might be the object of divine adoration then especially it was said and accomplished Let all the Angels of God Worship him Heb. 1.6 and let all men Honour the Son as they Honour the Father After Christ's Session John 5 23. Stephen looken up into Heaven and saw the Glory of God and Jesus standing on the right hand of God and then he Worshipped and called upon God saying Lord Jesus receive my Spirit It is true Acts 7.59 that the ground of this divine adoration is the Union of the two natures of Christ and therefore the Magi worshipped him at his Birth and as soon as ever he came into the World the Angels of God Worshipped him but because by his Session at God's right hand the Divine Nature was manifested Heb. 1.6 and the Humane Nature was exalted to that dignity and glory which it never had before therefore now especially and from this time was the honour and
dignity of Worship communicated to him as God and man And hence Divines usually make this one ingredient of Christ's sitting at the right hand of God viz. That Christ God and Man is the object of Divine adoration O it is a great thing and admirable and full of wonder that the man Christ should sit above at God 's right hand and be adored of Angels and Archangels Chry. Hom. 5 in Heb. Before this was the grace of Union conferred on Jesus and so he was adored before he suffered but after he had humbled himself and was made obedient unto death even to the death of the Cross then yea and therefore God highly exalted him and gave him a Name Phil. 2.8 9 10 11. which is above every Name that at the Name of Jesus every knee shall bow of things in Heaven and things in Earth and things under the Earth and that every tongue shall confess that Jesus is Lord to the glory of God the Father He was Lord before in that he is the Son of God but now he is Lord again by vertue of his humiliation and Session at God's right hand Trouble not your selves with their objection who say That if adoration be due to Christ as God and man that then the humane nature is to be adored the Person adored is man but the humanity it self is not the proper object of that Worship There is a difference betwixt the concrete and the abstract though the man Christ be God yet his manhood is not God and by consequence not to be worshipped with that worship which is properly and essentially Divine Certainly if adoration agree to the humanity of Christ then may his humanity help and save us but the humanity of Christ cannot help and Save us because omnis actio est suppositi whereas the humane nature of Christ is not suppositum a subsistance or personal being at all 3. That he might intercede for his Saints Heb. 8.1 2. Now of the things which we have spoken this is the Summe we have such an high Priest who is set on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in the Heavens and a Minister of the sanctuary and of the true Tabernacle which the Lord pitched and not men he is set on the right hand of God as an high Priest or Minister to intercede for us For as Christ is not entred into the holy Place made with hands which are the Figures of the true Heb. 9.24 but into Heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us This appearing is an expression borrowed from the custome of human Courts for as in them when the Plaintiff or Defendant is called their Attorney appeareth in their names so when we are summoned by the justice of God to answer the complaints which it preferreth against us we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous John 2.1 Exod. 28.9 10 11 12. and he standeth up and appeareth for us or it may be this appearing hath a respect to the manner of high Priests in the time of the Law for as they used to go into the most holy place with the names of the Children of Israel written in precious stones for a remembrance of them that they might remember them to God in their Prayers so Jesus Christ being gone up to Heaven he there presents to his Father the Names of all his chosen and he remembers them to his Father in his Intercessions Certainly Christ is not gone to Heaven and advanced to the right hand of God only to live in eternal joy himself but also to procure happiness for his Saints it is to excellent purpose and to the great good of his Church that he sits at the right hand of his Father for thereby he governs and protects his people and he continually executes the Office of his Priesthood presenting himself and the sacrifice of himself and the infinite merit of that sacrifice before the eyes of his Father in their behalf 4. That true Believers may assuredly hope by vertue of Christs Session to sit themselves in the Kingdom of Glory Heb. 1.5 It is true that Christ and only Christ hath his seat at the right hand of God to which of the Saints or of the Angels did he ever say sit thou at my right hand It is a prerogative above all Creatures and yet there is something near it given to the Saints Rev. 3.21 for him that overcometh I will grant to sit with me in my Throne even as I also am set down with my Father in his Throne There is a proportion though with an inequality we must sit on Christ's Throne as he sits on his Fathers Throne Christ only sits at the right hand of God but the Saints are to sit at the right hand of Christ Psal 45.9 and so the Psalmist speaks upon thy right hand did stand the Queen in Gold of Ophir It is enough to greaten the Spirits of Saints how should they tread on earth and contemn the World when they consider that one day they shall judg the World 1 Cor. 6.2 do you not know that the Saints shall judg the World nay 2 Tim. 2.12 when they consider that one day they shall reign with Christ if ye suffer with him ye shall reign with him Christ sitting in Heaven is a very Figure of us Christ's person is the great model and first draught of all that shall be done to his Body the Saints therefore he is said to be the Captain of our Salvation that leads us on he is said to be our fore-runner into Glory he breaks the clouds first he appears first before God he sits down first and is glorified first and then we follow Christ wears the Crown in Heaven as our King and he is united and marryed to God as our proxy And yet there is another ground of hope not only shall we sit with Christ in Glory but even now do we sit with him in Glory Christ is not only gone to heaven to prepare a place for us but he sits in Heaven in our room and God looks on him as the great picture of all that body whereof he is Head and he delights himself in seeing them all Glorified as in his Son To this purpose the Saints are said to sit down with Christ at very present Ephes 2.6 he hath made us to sit together with him in Heavenly places in Christ Jesus Christ in our nature is now exalted this is that admirable thing which carried up Chrysostom into an extasie that the same nature of which God said dust thou art and to dust thou shalt return should now sit in Heaven at God's right hand but not only the human nature but Christ in person sits there as a common person in our stead he is in his Throne and we sit with him in supercelestial places O what structures and pillars of hope are raised up here 5. That he might defend
in his first Sermon after the Spirits mission Act. 2.17 18. In which we read of two pourings of the Spirit one upon their sons and the other upon his servants the former concerned only the Jew they should have Prophesies Visions and Dreams the old way of the Jews but the latter concerns us we are not of their sons but of his servants to whom visions and dreams are left quite out and therefore if any now pretend to those visions and dreams we say with Jeremy Jer. 23.28 The prophet that hath a dream let him tell a dream but he that hath my Word let him speak my Word Faithfully what is the Chaffe to the wheat But of all the prophesies concerning the mission of the Holy Ghost our Saviour gives the clearest and the most particular two great Prophesies we find in the Bible the one is of the Old Testament and the other of the New that of the Old Testament was for the coming of Christ and this of the New Testament was for the coming of the Holy Ghost and hence we say that the coming of Christ was the fulfilling of the Law and the coming of the Holy Ghost is the fulfilling of the Gospel In this respect let us search and see those Prophesies of Christ the great Prophet in the New Testament I will pray the Father Joh. 14.16 17. John 15.26 Luke 24.49 John 16.7 and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the Spirit of truth But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father he shall testifie of me And behold I send the prâmise of my Father upon you but tarry ye in the City of Jerusalem untill ye be endued with Power from on high It is expedient for you that I go away for if I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you Why it was of necessity that all these Prophesies and promises must be accomplished and therefore was the Holy Ghost sent amongst us 2. That the holy Apostles might be furnished with gifts and graces suitable to their estates conditions stations places To this purpose no sooner was the Spirit sent Acts 2.3 but they were filled with the Holy Ghost and began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance They were filled with the Holy Ghost not that they were before empty but now they were more full of the spirit than ever they were before and they speak with other tongues other than ever they had Learned probably they understood no Tongue but the Syriack till this time but now on a sudden they could speak Greek Latine Arabick Persian Parthian and what not the Wisdom and Mercy of God is very observable herein that the same means of diverse Tongues which was the destroying of Babel should be the very same means here conferred on the Apostles to work the building of Syon that the curse should be removed and a blessing come in place that confusion of Tongues should be united to God's Glory that this should be the issue of Tongues that neither Speech nor Language should be upon all the Earth but his praise and glory and the Gospel should be heard amongst them And here is something more observable in that they spake with other Tongues As the spirit gave them utterance the word utterance is in the Original ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã you have heard of Apothegmes i.e. wise and weighty sententious speeches now such as these the spirit gave them to utter magnalia Dei v. 11. as in the eleventh verse the wonderful works of God they spake of those singular benefits God offered to the world by the death of his Son they spake of the work of our Redemption of the merits of Christ of the glory and riches of his Grace of the praises due to his Name for all his Mercies others add that they spake of those admirable works of the Trinity as of our Creation Redemption and Sanctification and of whatsoever generally concerned the Salvation of mankind their speeches were not crudities of their own Brain trivial base or vulgar stuff but magnalia great and high Points Apothegmes or Oracles as the spirit gave them utterance But these reasons are remote to us 3. That he might fill the hearts of all the Saints and make them Temples and receptacles for the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6.19 know you not that your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which ye have of God and ye are not your own It is said here that after the mighty rushing Wind and cloven fiery Tongues Acts 2.4 they were all filled with the Holy Ghost and began to spake with other Tongues First they were filled with the Holy Ghost and then they spake with other Tongues the Holy Ghost begins inward and works outward it first alters the mind before it change the speech it first works on the Spirit before on the phraze or utterance this was the first work of the Spirit it filled them And thus for the daily ministration such must be appointed as were full of the Holy Ghost Acts 6.3 Acts 7.55 Acts. 11.24 and Stephen is said to be full of the Holy Ghost and Barnabas is called a good man and full of the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost is usually said to fill the Saints only whether it be the person of the Holy Ghost or the impressions of the Holy Ghost is a very great question for my part I am apt to incline to their mind who say not only the impressions of the spirit the qualities of holiness the gifts and graces of the Holy Ghost or as some think habitual grace in a special manner but that the Holy Ghost himself doth fill and dwell and reign in the hearts of all regenerate men And this seems clear to me 1. By Scriptures 2. By Arguments 1. The Scriptures are such as these He that believeth on me as the Scripture saith out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water but this spake he of the Spirit John 7.38 39 which they that believe on him should receive for the Holy Ghost was not yet given because that Jesus was not yet glorified for those words out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water by living water is meant grace by rivers of living water is meant the manifold graces of the Spirit by the flowing of these rivers is meant the abounding and communicating of those graces from one to another and by the belly out of which those rivers should flow is meant the heart indued or filled with the Holy Ghost Now the spring and rivers the fountain and streams are diverse things and to be distinguished the one is the cause and the other the effect the one is the tree and the other the fruit it is the holy Ghost filling the hearts of beleivers that is the spring and fountain
his praise and bidding him welcome into glory and am I sinning here on earth and by my sins crucifying again and again the Lord of glory O that I might ascend with Christ O that I were now on the wing towards heaven Oh what is it that hinders my ascension but this clog of clay so long as this body remains a natural body I cannot ascend oh therefore that the change were come Oh that this natural body were spirituall that this corruptible had put on incorruption and this mortal had put on immortality then could I move upwards as well as downwards such is the supernatural property of a glorified body that it ascends or descends with equal case or if this be not possible for my present condition if this body if mine must first descend before it ascend if it must down into the grave before it go up into glory why yet Oh that my better part were on the wing Oh that my soul were mounting upwards Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver my soul from this body of death or if the union be so strong for a while that neither soul nor body can really or substantially ascend Phil. 1.23 yet O that I were still ascending in a spiritual way O that my affections were still on things above and not on things beneath yea I could wish a nearer union even by a dissolution why Christ is ascended and I would fain be where Christ is though it cost me dear I desire to be dissolved I desire to depart and to be with Christ which is for better 2. Let us see Christ sitting down at the right hand of God and so desire to sit with him when Christ sate down it was not in his own pure Personal right simply as it is his inheritance Eph. 2.5 6. but with relation to his Saints and Members He hath quickened us together wtth Christ and hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus I confess Christ's sitting at God's right hand as taken for the sublimity of his power is not communicable unto us for that is Christs own prerogative to which of the Angels said he at any time Heb. 1.13 Sit on my right hand Yet his sitting in heaven as it is indefinitely expressed is in some sort communicable unto us for he sate down as a common person thereby shewing that we were to sit down with him in our proportion Rev. 3.21 Him that overcomes I will grant to sit with me in my Throne even as I also overcame and am set down with my Father in his Throne Christ sits in his Fathers Throne and we sit in Christ's Throne Christ sits at the right hand of God and wâ sit at the right hand of Christ Oh how desirable is this The Mother of Zebedees Children understood this mystery very darkly Mat. 20.21 22 23. yet worshipping Jesus she desired a certain thing of him what thing why grant saith she that these my two Sons may sit the one at thy right hand and the other on thy left hand in thy Kingdom Christ blamed them because they know not what thy asked and yet he tells them that to sit on his right hand and on his left is given to them for whom it is prepared of his Father O my soul desire after this for this is worthy of thy desire this is a great thing an high exaltation another manner of honour than any that this world affords Courtiers desire no more but to sit at the Princes right hand but O the vertue of Christ's Session that thereby thou shouldst sit at the right hand of God! this is the very height and excellency of heavens glory only take heed of apprehending it after a carnal and natural way this very exaltation consists in the Image of God and communion with God it is the spiritual part and power and glory of heaven if any thing be desirable above another surely this above all Eph. 1.20 21. what that Christ should be exalted above all Principalities and Powers and mights and dominions and every thing that is named in this world and in the other what that Christ should sit down in his Fathers Throne Eph. 4.10 in the highest part of Heaven far above all heavens and that I a poor worm dust and ashes should sit with him in Heaven should be one with him in glory should be as near him in honour and happiness as such a poor creature is possibly capable of Oh how should I but hunger and thirst after this if I might have a wish I would not wish low things why this is the very top and height and quintessence of Heaven Christ in his Fathers Throne and I in Christ's Throne in desiring this I desire all and therefore whatever thou givest or denyest Lord give me this and I have enough for ever 3. Let us see Christs mission of his holy spirit and so desire a share in that gift we cannot expect to sit with Christ but we must first have the spirit of Christ and therefore as we would have that let us desire after this The greatest gift we can expect in this world is the spirit of Christ Consider O my soul all things here below are either temporal or spiritual things and of things spiritual this is the sum the in-dwelling of the Spirit O Lord give me thy self and that contains all gifts O give me the spirit Psal 4.6 and thou canst not but with him give me all things there be many that say saith the Psalmist Who will shew us any good earthly things are desired of many but is any thing on earth to be compared with this gift from heaven if it were only the beauty of holiness it were certainly a most desirable thing if we rightly understand it holiness though but one effect of the spirit is a most rare thing holiness fills the soul with joy peace quietness assurance holiness entertains the soul with feasts of fat things and of refined wines holiness carries the soul into the banqueting-house of apples and flaggons holiness gives the soul a dear communion with God and Christ holiness brings the soul into a sight of Christ an access to him a boldness in his presence holiness admits the soul into the most intimate conferences with Jesus Christ in his bed-chamber in his galleries of love and that which is an argument of more beauty than all the creatures in the world have besides holiness attracts the eye and heart and longings and ravishments the tender compassions and everlasting delights of the Lord Jesus and if holiness be thus lovely Oh what is the holy spirit it self what is the Rise the Spring the Fountain of holiness what O my soul that not only grace but the spirit of Christ should dwell in thy spirit that thou shouldst be God's building and that not as the rest of the world is for his creatures to inhabit 1 Cor. 3.9
with men and he will dwell with them Surely it was a miraculous mercy that heaven should come down upon earth and that God should come down to men but Oh what is this that Earth should go up to Heaven that men should ascend up to God yea that my soul with Christ and by Christ should ascend to God and sit down with God in heavenly places yea that my soul should have for its inmate the very same spirit that Christ himself hath Oh I cannot I will not I dare not believe Scrupulous souls be not faithless but believing there is none of these particulars for which we have not a warrant out of the Word of God and therefore believe But that I may perswade to purpose I shall lay down 1. Some directions and 2. Some encouragements of faith 1. For directions of Faith observe these particulars As 1. Faith must directly go to Christ 2. Faith must go to Christ as God in the Flesh 3. Faith must go to Christ as God in the Flesh made under the Law 4. Faith must go to Christ not only as made under the directive part of the Law by his life but under the penal part of the Law by his death 5. Faith must go to Christ not only as put to death in the Flesh but as quickned by the spirit of all these before 6. Faith must not only go to Christ as quickened by the spirit but as going up into glory as sitting down at God's right hand and as sending the holy Ghost Faith should eye Christ as far as he goes if he be ascended so should faith if he go into glory and sit down there and act there for his people so should faith and so should we in a way of believing follow after him and take a view of all his transactions where he is we have heard before how faith should go to Christ as dying and as rising again but yet faith is low while it doth not go within the vail and see him in glory it is not enough to have only a faith of Justification but of Glorification O come let us see Christ in Heaven and we can have no less than a glorious saith how many are there that never yet came to act saith in Christ as a glorified Christ we are yet still in the lower form many of us take in no more of Christ than what was done on the cross or what some natural and common resemblances of him can hold forth we seldom follow Christ into Heaven to see what he is doing these for us O my soul and O my faith mount up and be on the wing Christ is gone up to heaven Christ is set down at God's right hand Christ hath sent down his holy spirit to this purpose it was expedient that he should go away and now he is gone away to do something that remains to be done for thee in his Kingdom he had still some glorious piece to frame for thy salvation and therefore he left this world and went to his Father that he might act it in glory and now he is invested with all the riches of Heaven he hath all the keyes of Heaven and Hell he hath all power to command he hath received all the promise to himself and all that he hath to do it is to let out of himself again unto his Saints he hath not only got his Fathers heart for them but he hath got all his riches to bestow upon them when he came to Heaven the Father bid him sit down at his right hand and take what he would and bestow what he would upon his Saints and thereupon he gave gifts unto men yea he gave the gift of gifts even the Holy Ghost himself What art not thou a partaker of this gift O then Look up unto Jesus in reference to all these actings set him before thee Christ in all these particulars is a right object for thy faith to act upon 7. Faith in going to Christ his ascension session and mission of the holy spirit it is principally to look to the purpose intent and design of Christ in each of these particulars Christ did nothing but he had an end a meaning in it for our good and here is the life of Faith to eye the meaning of Christ in all his doings Now the ends of Christ's ascension session and mission of his spirit were several I shall instance onely in these few As 1. Christ ascended that we might ascend look whatever God acted on Christ's person that he did as in our behalf and he means to act the same on us was Christ crucified so are we is Christ risen again so are we risen together with him is Christ gone up into glory so are we Heaven is now opened and possessed by Jesus Christ for us and at last we shall ascend even as he ascended Christ cannot be content with that glory he hath himself John 17.25 until we be with him Father I will that those also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold or enjoy my glory which thou hast given me Christ as our head is in glory and so we are there already with him and Christ as our advocate is in glory and there he is pleading and praying for us that we may actually be received and brought up to him Father I will that these whom thou hast given me may be with me Christ's crown of glory is as it were a burthen on his own head untill it be set on the heads of all his âaints O the blessed end of Christ's Ascension how should faith pry into this Believers you see your object you know his person never be quiet untill ye come into his condition as we must go through all ordinances and creatures till we come to Christ so through all conditions of Christ untill we come to glory 2 Christ sate down that we might sit with him in heavenly places what is the end of Christ's Session but âhat we mâghâ invest all his âaints with the same priviledge In this height of glory Christ is the pattern and plat-form and Idea of what we shall be surely this is the very top of Heaven Chriât is exalted above the Heavens that we might in our measure and proportion be exalted with Christ it was Christ's Prayer that his Father and he and we might all be one As thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Oh how should faith stand John 17.21 and gaze on Jesus Christ in this respect âhât is he on Gods right hand and is he there preparing a room a seat a mansion for my soul What shall I sit at the right hand of Christ shall I sit as an assessor on his udgment-seat to Judge the world wiâh Jesus Christ when the Son of man shall sit oâ the Throne of his Glory Mat. 19.28 ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel O what
his holy Spirit and thou mayest go singing to thy grave a lively saith in such particulars would set a soul in heaven even whilest yet on earth SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars much hath been said already of Christ's Conception Birth Life Death Resurrection such Arguments of love as are enough to swallow up souls in love to Christ again O the treasures of love and wisdom that have been opened in former passages but as if all those were not enough for God see here new Gold mines new found out Jewels never known to be in the world before opened and unfolded in Jesus Christ Here are the incomes of the beams of light most inaccessible here are the veins of the unsearchable Glories of Jesus Christ as if we saw every moment a new heaven a new treasure of love the Bosom of Christ is yet more opened the new breathings and spirations of love are yet more manifested See! Christ for us and for our salvation is gone up to Heaven is set down at God's right hand and hath sent down the holy Ghost into our hearts in the pouring out of these Springs of Heavens love how should our souls but open the mouth-wide and take in the streams of Christ's Nectar Honey and Milk I mean his sweet and precious and dear love-breathings We have heard of Christ's invitations Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden but suppose Christ had never outed his love in such a love-expressing Come to me Mat. 11.28 yet Christ himself in these glorious particulars is such a drawing object the very beauty of Christ the very smell of the Garments of Christ very capacious and wide Heaven of Christ's exaltation are intrinsecally and of themselves such drawing ravishing winning objects that upon the apprehension of them we cannot chuse but love Christ as Gold that is dumb and cannot speak yet the beauty and gain of it cryeth aloud Come hither poor creature and be thou made rich so if Christ should never open his lips if he should never gently move Open to me my sister my love my dove my undefiled Cant. 5.2 for my head is full of dew and my locks with the drops of the night yet the Glory the Power the Soveraignty of Christ the exaltation of his Person and the magnificence of his Gifts should even change our souls into a Globe or mass of Divine Love and Glory As it were by the Spirit of the Lord. 2 Cor. 3.18 Two things I shall instance in which may be as the Load-stones of our love to Christ the first is his glory and the second his bounty 1. For his Glory no sooner was he ascended and set down at God's right hand but John the Divine had a sight of him and oh what a glorious sight Rev. 1.13 14 15 16. He was cloathed with a garment down to the feet and girt about the paps with a golden girdle his head and his hairs were white like wooll as white as snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire and his feet like unto fine brass as if they burned in a furnace and his voice as the sound of many waters and he had in his right hand seven stars and out of his mouth went a sharp two edged sword and his countenance was at the Sun that shineth in his strength when John saw him thus he swoons at his feet but Christ for all his Glory holds his head in his swoon saying fear not I am the first and the last I am he that liveth and was dead ver 17 18. and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and hath the Keys of hell and of death A glorious Christ is good for swooning dying sinners would sinners but draw near and come and see this King in the chariot of love and come and see his beauty the uncreated white and red in his sweet countenance he would certainly draw their souls unto him Nay say that all the damned in hell were brought up with their burning fiery chains to the utmost door of Heaven could we strike up a window and let them look in and behold the Throne and the Lamb and the Troops of glorified spirits cloathed in white with Crowns of gold on their heads and Palms in their hands singing the eternal praises of their glorious King oh how would they be sweetned in their pain and convinced of their foolish choice and ravished with the fulness of those joyes and pleasures that are in Christ's face for evermore surely much more may this glory of Christ warm thy heart O my soul what an happiness were it to see the King on his Throne to see the Lamb the fair Tree of Life the branches which cannot for the narrowness of the place have room to grow in For the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain him What an happiness were it to see love it self and to be warmed with the heat of immediate love that comes out of the precious heart and bowels of this princely and royal Standard-bearer as yet thou canst not must not see these sights there 's no seeing the King thus in his beauty till thou comest to glory for then and then only must thou see him face to face and yet the Idea and Image of this glory is seen and may be seen of every true believing soul enough may be seen by an eye of faith to kindle in thine heart a flame of love to the Lord Jesus Christ Oh who can think of the glory that is in this dainty delightful One and not be swallowed up in love Who can think of Christ's sitting at God's right hand and sparkling in this glory round about and casting out beams of glory through East and West and North and South through Heaven and Earth and Hell and not love him with the whole heart soul and might I remember one dying and hearing some discourse of Jesus Christ Oh said she speak more of this let me hear more of this be not weary of telling his praise I long to see him how should I but long to hear of him Surely I cannot say too much of Jesus Christ in this blessed subject no man can possibly hyperbolize had I the tongues of Men and Angels I could never fully set forth Christ it involves an eternal contradiction that the creature can see to the bottom of the Creator Suppose all the sands on the Sea-shore all the Flowers Herbs Leaves twigs of Trees in Woods and Forrests all the Stars of Heaven were all rational creatures and had they that wisdom and tongues of Angels to speak of the loveliness beauty glory and excellency of Christ as gone to Heaven and sitting at the right hand of his Father they would in all their expressions stay millions of miles on this side Jesus Christ O the loveliness beauty and glory of his Countenance can I speak or you
I need not doubt of my acceptance at the Throne of Grace when Jesus Christ is accepted for me and that I stand in such a relation to Jesus Christ Oh what joy is in this 2. How should it heighten my joyes and enlarge my comforts when I do but consider that Christ is set down at God's right hand Why now he hath the keys of Heaven delivered into his hands Mat. 28.18 All power is given unto him in heaven and in earth and now he can do what he will God the Father hath given away as it were all his Prerogatives unto Jesus Christ John 5.22 All judgment is committed to the Son for the Father judgeth no man Now he is in a Capacity of acting out all his love and the Father's desire to me in the most glorious way he is highly advanced and thereby he hath the advantage to advance me and to glorifie me God hath given into his hands all the treasures and riches of Heaven in bidding him sit down at his right hand he told him that he would have no more to do with the world but that Christ should have all and that Christ should bestow all he had amongst his Saints and that this should be the reward of his death and when once his Saints were come about him and sate with him in his glory 1 Cor. 15.24 why then Christ should resign up again his place And deliver up the Kingdom to God even the Father Oh what joy may enter into this poor dark dungeon disconsolate soul of mine whiles I but think over these glorious passages of my Christ in glory 3. How should it heighten my joyes and fill me with joy unspeakable and full of glory when I do consider that Christ hath sent down his holy Spirit into my heart when sorrow had filled the Apostles hearts John 16.7 because he had told them I must go away he comforts them with this If I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you The spirit is the Comforter and where he comes he fills souls with comforts O what comfort is this to know that the spirit of Christ is my Inmate that my soul is the Temple the Receptacle the House and dwelling of the spirit of God that Christ is in me of a truth and that not only by the infusion of his grace but by the in-dwelling of his spirit surely it is some comfort to a sickly man that he hath a Physitian alwayes in the house with him and to a woman that is near her travail that the Midwife is in the house with her but what comfort is it to a poor soul that the spirit of Christ is alwayes in him John 14.16 I will send you another Comforter said Christ that he may abide with you for ever Christ in his bodily presence went away Mat. 28.20 but Christ in his spirit continues still Lo I am with you alwayes even unto the end of the world he is with us and which is more he is in us for our comfort Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory Not Christ in Sermons which we hear nor Christ in Chapters which we read nor Christ in Sacraments which we receive nor Christ in our heads by high notions nor Christ in our mouths by frequent glorious expressions but Christ in our hearts by his spirit is unto us the hope of Glory The grounds of our comforts in this respect is 1. Christ's Presence it is said of Paul that after a sad shipwrack the sight of some Christian brethren so cheated him Act. 28.15 that upon the sight of them he thankâd God and took courage it is said of Caesar that he cheared the drooping Mariners in a storm by minding them of his presence You carry Caesar how much more should the in-being of Christ solace Saints Lo I am with you O my soul was it not a cordial to the Disciples in a storm that Christ was with them whom the winds and waves obeyed chear up now for if the Spirit be in thee Christ is with thee 2. Christ's Complacency if his Spirit dwell in us how should he but be well pleased with us a man cannot properly be said to dwell in a prison in which he taketh no delight Psal 132.14 the Spirits in-dwelling imports a delight of Christ in such a soul Here will I dwell for I have desired it or delighted in it saith God of Zion though many times drooping Christians viewing their own beggarliness and vileness judge themselves worthy to be detested and deserted and would relinquish themselves if they possibly could yet Christ looketh to the poor and contrite soul as a meet habitation for himself to dwell in Isa 57.15 I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble Spirit 3. Christ's Communications union is the ground of our communion with Christ and the nearer our union the greater is our communion if Christ were only in a believer by the habit of grace the union would not be so great but if Christ be in us by his spirit the union is nearer and therefore the communion will be greater O my soul remember this in all thy straits there can be no creature-want or danger whatsoever wherein the improvement of this in-dwelling of the Spirit may not refresh thee art thou sick the Physitian both of soul and body is within thee art thou sad the Comforter himself that supplies the stead and room of Christ inhabits in thee art thou in exile in banishment imprisonment at greatest distance from thy dearest Friends see Paul's refreshment when they were ready to pull him in pieces and threw him into the Castle even the night following the Lord stood by him and said be of good chear Paul Acts 23.11 Christ will stand by thee nay Christ by his Spirit dwelleth in thee and will speak to thee comfortable words in thy greatest pressures 4. Christ's Witnessings if his Spirit dwell in us we may then be assured of future glory Christ in you the Hope of Glory 'T is a sweet note of a Divine upon it Col. 1 27. Mr. Ash in his Sermon of Christ the riches of the Gospel Acts 8.13 Mat. 27.3 Heb. 12.17 Heb. 6.5 6. Heb. 10.29 The existency of Christ's Spirit in Believers giveth existence to their hopes of Glory The Spirit in us is God's earnest of Glory the Spirit in us doth prepare us for participation in that Glory I look upon this in-dwelling of the Spirit as that which no Hypocrite in the World can lay any claim unto as for gifts or graces an Hypocrite may attain them or somthing like them it is said of Simon Magus that he believed it is said of Judas that he repented and of Esau that he sought his birth-right with tears it is said of some that they partook of the Heavenly Gift and of the Powers of the
Prayers and Incense then he went out of the holy of holies and laid aside his Garments again but our great high Priest is ascended into the holy of holies never to put off his princely-priestly garments nor does he only once a year sprinkle the mercy-seat with his sacrifice but every day he lives for ever to intercede Oh what comfort is this to a poor dejected Soul if he once undertakes thy cause and get thee into his prayers he will never leave thee out night nor day he intercedeth eyer till he shall accomplish and finish thy Salvation the smoak of his incense ascends for ever without intermission 6. The high-Priests then interceded not for sins of greater instances if a man sinned ignorantly there was indeed a Sacrifice and Intercession for him but if a man sinned presumptuously Numb 15.30 he was to be cut off from among his people no Sacrifice no Intercession by the high Priest then but we have such an high Priest as makes Intercession for all sins every sin though it boyl up to blasphemy so it be not against the holy Ghost shall by the vertue of Christ's intercession be forgiven In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David Zach. 13.1 and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness i.e. for sins of all sorts Verily I say unto you all sins shall be forgiven unto the Sons of Men Mark 3.28 i.e. Scarlet sins or crimson sins sins of the deepest dye shall by Christs Intercession be done away the voice of his blood speaks better things than the Blood of Abel it intercedes for the abolition of bloody sins 7. The high Priests then interceded not without all these materials viz. A Temple an Altar a Sacrifice of a young Bullock for a sin-offering Levit. 16.3 and a Ram for a burnt offering a Censer full of burning coals of fire taken off the Altar a putting the incense upon the fire that the cloud of the incense might cover the mercy-seat a sprinkling the mercy-seat with the blood of the Bullock and of the Goat with their finger seven times such materials they had and such actions they did which were all distinct as from themselves but Jesus Christ in his Intercessions now needs none of these materials but rather he himself and his own merits are instead of all As 1. He is the Temple either in regard of the Deity the gold of the Temple being sanctified by the Temple or in regard of his humane body destroy this Temple saith Christ and I will build it again in three dayes it was destroyed and God found it an acceptable Sacrifice and smelt in it a sweet savor as in a Temple 2. He is the Altar according to his Deity for as the Altar sanctifies the gift so doth the God-head sanctifie the man-hood The Altar must needs be of a greater dignity than the oblation and therefore this Altar betokens the Divinity of Jesus Christ 3. He is the Sacrifice most properly according to the Man-hood for although by communication of properties the blood of the Sacrifice is called the blood of God Acts 20.28 yet properly the human Soul and flesh of Christ was the Holocaust or whole burnt-offering roasted in the fire of his Fathers wrath 4. His merits are the cloud of Incense for so the Angel Christ is said to have a golden Censer and much Incense Rev. 8.3 4. that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar which was before the Throne and the smoke of the Incense which came with the Prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand the merits of Christ are so mingled with the prayers of his Saints that they perfume their Prayers and so they find acceptance with God his Father We see now the difference betwixt Christs Intercessions and the Intercessions of the high Priests of Old SECT VII What the Properties of this Intercession of Christ are 7. WHat are the properties of this Intercession of Jesus Christ I answer 1. It is heavenly and glorious and that appears in these particulars 1. Christ doth not fall upon his knees before his Father as in the days of his humiliation for that is not agreeable to that glory he hath received he only presents his pleasure to his Father that he may thereto put his Seal and Consent 2. Christ doth not pray out of private charity as the Saints pray one for another in this life but out of publick Office of mediation there is one God 1 Tim. 2.5 and one Mediator between God and man the man Christ Jesus 3. Christ prayes not out of humility which is the proposing of requests for things unmerited but out of authority which is the desiring of a thing so as withall he hath a right of bestowing it as well as desiring it 4. Christ prays not merely as an advocate but as a propitiation too Christ's Spirit is an advocate but only Christ is advocate and propitiation Christs Spirit is our advocate on earth but only Christ in his Person applyeth his merits in heaven and furthers the cause of our salvation with his Father in heaven In every of these respects we may see Christs intercessions is heavenly and glorious 2. It is ever effectual and prevailing as he hath a power to intercede for us so he hath a power to confer that upon us for which he intercedes John 14 16. John 16.7 I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter If I go not away the comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you If Christ prayed on earth he was ever heard but if Christ prayed in heaven we may be sure the Father ever heareth and answereth there when Christ as man prayed for himself he was heard in that which he feareth but now Christ as Mediator praying for us he is ever heard in the very particular which he desireth James 4.3 We sinful men many a time ask and receive not because we ask amiss that we may consume it upon our Lusts but Jesus Christ never asks amiss nor to wrong ends and therefore God the Father who called him to this Office of being as it were the great Master of Requests in behalf of his Church John 11.41 42. he promiseth to hear him in all his requests Father I thank thee that thou hast heard me and I know thou hearest me alwayes saith Christ 3. It is of all other the transactions of Christ till the very end of the World the most perfective and consummate indeed so perfective that without it all the other parts of Christ's Mediatorship would have been to little purpose As the Sacrifices under the Law had not been of such force and efficacy had not the high Priest entred into the holy place to appear there and to present the blood there unto the Lord so all that ever Christ did or
suffered upon earth it had been ineffectual unto us had he not entred into heaven Heb. 9.24 to appear there in the presence of God for us Surely this Intercession is that which puts life into the death of Christ this Intercession is that which strikes the last stroak during this World in the carrying on of our souls Salvation Goodwin Christ set forth Rom. 8.34 and makes all sure It is a witty observation that one makes of these several steps of Christs actings for us as first there was an all-sufficiency in his death who shall condemn it is Christ that dyed 2. A rather in his Resurrection yea rather that is risen again 3. A much rather in his life and session at God's right hand for if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of Christ much rather being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Rom. 5.10 4. The Apostle riseth yet higher to a saving to the utmost and puts that upon his intercession wherefore he is able to save us to the utmost Heb. 7.25 seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for us If in the former were any thing wanting this intercession of Christ supplies all it is the Coronis which makes all effectual it saves to the uttermost for it self is the uttermost and highest step on earth Christ begins the execution of his office in heaven he ends it in his life and death Christ was the meritorious cause but by his intercession Christ is the applying cause of our souls salvation In this very Intercession of Christ is the consummation and perfection of the Priest-hood of Christ O then how requisite and necessary must this needs be 4. It is gracious and full of bowels Christ his intercession and indeed Christ's Priestly office is erected and set up on purpose for the relief of poor distressed sinners There is no mixture of terror in this blessed office of Jesus Christ and this doth distinguish it from his other offices Christ by his Kingly office rules over the Churches and over the World but all obtain not mercy whom he thus rules over Christ by his prophetical office comes to his own but many of his own received him not but now wherever the Priestly office of Jesus Christ is let forth upon a Soul that soul shall certainly be saved for ever O this Priestly office of Christ is an office of meer love and tender compassion Heb. 4.15 Christ saith the Apostle is such an high-Priest as cannot be but touched with the feeling of our infirmities Oh he is a merciful Heb. 2.17 and a faithful high Priest in things partaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the People He is mercifull and exceeding compassionate in all our afflictions he is afflicted Isa 63.9 and in his love and in his pity he Redeemed us and in his love and pity he intercedes for us SECT VIII Wherein the Intercession of Christ consists 8. WHerein more especially doth the Intercessions of Jesus Christ consist some suppose that Christs very being in heaven and putting God in mind of his active and passive obedience by his very presence is all that intercession that the Scripture speaks of But I rather answer is these particulars As 1. Christs intercession consists in the presenting of his Person for us he himself went up to heaven and presented himself the Apostle calls this an appearing for us Christ is not entered into the holy place made with hands but into heavân now to appear in the presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 I believe there is an Emphasis in the Word appearing for us But how appears he for us I answer 1. In a publick manner whatsoever he did in this kind he did it openly and publickly he appears for us in the presence of God the Father he appears for us in the presence of his Saints and Angels heavens eyes are all upon him in his appearing for us 2. He appears for us as a Mediator he stands in the middle betwixt God and us hence it is that he is God-man that he might be a Mediator betwixt God and man 3. He appears for us as a Sponsor and a pledge surely it is a comfort for a man to have a friend at Court at the Princes elbow that may own him and appear for him but if this friend be both a Mediator and Surety a Mediator to request for him and a Surety to engage for him Phil. 9.10 ver 18 19. Oh what comfort is this thus Christ appeared in every respect he is a Mediator to request for us and he is a Surety to engage for us as Paul was for Onesimus a mediator I beseech thee for my Son Onesimus and a Sponsor if he hath wronged thee or owe thee ought put that on my account I will repay it So is Jesus Christ for his Saints he is the Mediator of a better Covenant Heb. 8.6 Heb. 8.6 and he is a Surety of a better Testament Heb. 7.22 Heb. 7. â2 4. He appears as a Solicitor to present and promote the desires and requests of his Saints in such a way as that they may find acceptance with his Father He is not idle now he is in Heaven but as on earth he ever went about doing good so now in glory he is ever about his work of doing good he spends all his time in Heaven in promoteing the good of his people as from the beginning it was his care so to the Worlds end it will be his care to solicite his Father in the behalf of his poor Saints he tells God thus and thus it is with his poor Members they are in want in trouble in distress in affliction in reproach and then he presents their sighs sobs prayers tears and groans and that in such a way as that they may become acceptable to his Father 5. He appears as an Advocate if any man sin 1 John 2. â we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous An Advocate is more than a Solicitor an Advocate is one that is of Counsel with an other and that pleadeth his Case in open Court and such an advocate is Jesus Christ unto his people 1. He is of Councel with them that is one of the Titles given him by the Prophet Isaiah Wonderful Councellour Isa 96. He councells them by his Word and Spirit 2. He pleads for them and this he doth in the high Court of Heaven at the Bar of God's own Justice there he pleads their case and answereth all the accusations that are brought in by Satan or their own Consciences but of this anon 6. He appears as a publick agent or Ledger-Embassadour what that is some tell us in these particulars 1. His work is to continue peace and surely this is Christ's work he is our peace saith the Apostle that is the author of our peace Eph. 2.14 he purchased our peace and he maintains our peace with
I will not say that the very blood which Christ shed on the Cross is now in heaven nor that it speaks in heaven these cryings are merely Mataphorical yet this I maintain as real and proper that the power merit and vertue of Christ's blood is presented by our Saviour to his Father both as a publick satisfaction for our sin and as a publick price for the purchase of our glory 3. Christ's Intercession consists in the presenting of his will his request his interpellation for us John 17.24 grounded upon the vigor and vertue of his glorious merits Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me This was a piece of Christ's prayer while yet he was on earth and some say it is a summary of Christ's Intercession which now he makes for us in his glory he prayed on earth as he meant to pray for us when he came to heaven he hints at this in the beginning of his Prayer for he speaks as if all his work had been done on earth John 17.4 5. and as if then he were even beginning his work in heaven I have glorified thee on earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do and now O Father glorifie thou me with thy own self with the glory which I had with thee before the World was I know it is a question whether Christ now in heaven do indeed and truth and in right propriety of speech pray for us some able Divines are for the Negative others for the Affimative For my part leaving a liberty to those otherwise minded according to their light I am of opinion that Christ doth not only intercede by an interpretative Prayer as in the presenting of himself and his merits to his Father but also by an express prayer or by an express and open representation of his will and to this opinion methinks these Texts agree I will pray the Father John 14.16 John 16.26 27. and he shall give you another Comforter and at that day ye shall ask in my Name and I say unto you that I will pray the Father for you when he saith I say not that I will pray for you it is the highest intimation that he would pray for them as it is our phrase I do not say that I will do this or that for you no not I when indeed we will most surely do it and do it to purpose Austin confirms this orat pro nobis orat in nobis oratur a nobis c. He prays for us he prays in us and he is prayed to by us he prays for us as he is our Priest Aug. Prefat in psalm 85. and he prays in us as he is our Head and he is prayed to by us as he is our God Ambrose tells us That Christ so now prays for us as sometimes he prayed for Peter that his faith should not fail Amb. super ad Roman 8. Methinks I imagine as if I heard Christ praying in heaven in this Language O my Father I pray not for the World I will not open my lips for any one Son of perdition but I imploy all my blood and all my prayers and all my interests with thee for my dear beloved precious Saints it is true thou hast given me a personal glory which I had with thee before the World was and yet there is another glory I beg for and that is the glory of my Saints O that they may be saved why I am glorified in them they are my joy John 17.10 13 24. and therefore I must have them with me where I am thou hast set my heart upon them and thou thy self hast loved them as thou hast loved me and thou hast ordained them to be one in us even as we are one and therefore I cannot live long asunder from them I have thy company but I must have theirs too I will that they be with me where I am If I have any glory they must have part of it this is my prayer that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Why thus Christ prayed while he was on Earth and if this same prayer be the summary of Christ's intercession or interpellation now he is in heaven we may imagine him praying thus it were too nice to question whether Christ's prayer in heaven be vocal or mental certainly Christ presents his gracious will to his Father in heaven some way or other and I make no question but he fervently and immoveably desires that for the perpetual vertue of his sacrifice all his members may be accepted of God and crowned with glory nor only is there a cry of his blood in heaven but Christ by his prayer seconds that cry of his blood an argument is handed to us by Master Goodwin thus As it was with Abel Goodwin Christ set forth so it is with Christ Abels blood went up to heaven and Abels soul went up to heaven and by this means the cry of Abels dead blood was seconded by the cry of Abels living soul his cause cryed and his soul cryed as it is said of the Martyrs that the souls of them that were slain for the Testimony which they held cryed with a loud voice saying how long Lord Holy and True dost thou not judge and avenge our blood that dwell on the earth Rev. 6.9 10. even so it is with Christ his blood went up to heaven and his soul went up to heaven yea his body soul and all his whole person went up to Heaven and by this means his cause cryes and he himself seconds the cry of his cause Jesus Christ in his own person ever liveth to make Intercession for us he ever liveth as the great Master of requests to present his desires that those for whom he dyed may be saved 4. Christ's Intercession consists in the presenting of our persons in his own person to his Father so that now God cannot look upon the Son but he must behold the Saints in his Son are they not members of his body in near relation to himself and are not all his Intercessions in behalf of them and only of them but how are all the Elect carried up into heaven with Jesus Christ and there set down before his Father in Jesus Christ I answer not actually but mystically when Christ intercedes he takes our persons and carries them in unto God the Father in a most unperceiveable way to us for the way or manner I leave it to others for my part I dare not be too inquisitive in a secret not revealed by God only this we say that Christ presents our persons to his Father in his own person and this was plainly shadowed out by that act or office of the high Priest who went into the holy of holies Exod. 28.12 with the names of all the Tribes of Israel upon his shoulders and upon his breast
at his own girdle if he but say Father I will that this man and that woman shall inherit Heaven the Father cannot but reply my Son I have no power to deny thy suit Thou hast the keys of Heaven in thine own hands be it even as thou wilt 7. I shall only add this on the Fathers part that God is Christ's Commander to this office as well as Christ is God's Commander in this office O why should we have hard thoughts of God the Father more than of God the Son is he not as willing of our salvation as Jesus Christ surely 't was the Oath of God I mean of God the Father As I live saith the Lord I would not have the death of a sinner Ezek. 33.11 but that the wicked turn from his sin and live Was not this the first salute of God to Christ when he first entered into heaven Sit thou here on this throne Psalm 2.7 8. and ask what thou wilt of thy Father nay did not the Father prevent the Son in laying his commands upon him to ask before the Son opened his mouth to speak a word by way of any requests to God his Father Thou art my Son this day even this day of thy resurrection ascension session have I begotten thee ask of me and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possessions q. d. Come Son thou art my Son this day I have begotten thee and though I have begotten thee from all eternity yet this day and every day I am begetting thee still I said to thee at thy resurrection this day have I begotten thee and I said to thee at thy ascension this day have I begotten thee and now ask and be not shy or modestly backward in petitioning I command thee to this Office I make thee here the great Master of requests in Heaven others may pray out of charity but none but thy self in a way of Justice Authority and Office and therefore ask boldly and largly open thy mouth wide and I will fill it O what a demonstration of love is this not onely to Christ but to us in Christ that when man had offended his God broke covenant with God and turned enemy to God that then God the Father should seek peace with man offer conditions of peace to man and for that purpose should appoint a Mediator an Intercessor and call his Son to that office and now he is in Heaven that he should bid him do his office and ask freely so that if the Elect be not saved it should be laid on the score of Christ Goodwin Christ exalted for the Father is most willing Surely here 's more than intimation of the Father's inclination to accept of Christs intercessions on our behalf we may read here that the Fathers heart is as much towards us as Christs own heart Oh he is full of bowels he is gentle and easie to be intreated Christ needs not much a do to get his grant Christ adds not by his intercession one drop of love to the heart of God onely he draws it out which otherwise would have been stopt nor doth he broach it before his Father command him to it Oh then how Powerful and prevailing must Christ's intercessions be SECT X. Of the reasons of Christ's Intercession 10. WHat are the reasons of this great transaction of Christ's intercession for his people I answer 1. It is the Fathers will that it should be so he called Jesus Christ to this office Ezek. 36.36 37. the command of God is upon Jesus Christ Ask what thou what wilt for thy redeemed ones I willingly engage my self to grant onely it is my pleasure thou shouldst ask as sometimes he said to the house of Israel I the Lord have spoken and I will do it notwithstanding I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them so saith God to Christ I the Lord have spoken and I will do it only my Son I will be enquired of by thee I look upon this as the main reason of Christ's intercession Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight it 's God's will that Christ should intercede 2. It is the Father's love to engage his Son for his own people O the comfort of a sound Christian in this respect what art thou in temptation or desertion surely Christ is engaged by God to petition for thee thou hast put up many petitions to Christ and he hath put them all up unto God he could do no otherwise for he is in place an Advocate to mention and plead such cases as are moved to him Methinks I imagine God thus bespeaking his Son See thou do this poor soul good my Son here is for him according to all his needs only ask according to what thou knowest will make him happy must he have my Spirit my comforting Spirit will no less no cheaper thing serve his turn then here it is Oh how is Christ engaged now to petition for them whom God loves and for whom he gave himself surely if Christ should leave to intercede for such he would displease his Father which we know he would not do he would undergo Hell first 3. It is Christ's own inclination to do his Office the power that Christ hath for the good of Sinners is necessarily acted as the Sun shines upon all the World and it cannot do otherwise so Christ the Son of righteousness shines or intercedes for all his Saints and he can do no less what is the will of the Father is the will of Christ I mean the will of Christ naturally not artificially in a way of self-denial as God's will it is said to be our will so that what the Father would have Christ own he cannot but own for the same Spirit is in Christ which is is in the Father and in the self-same measure As God is captivated with love towards all captives so am I saith Christ as God would have all be saved and to come to the knowledg of the truth so would I too saith Christ The very same bottomless sea of love that fluctuates in my Father's brest John 10.30 it is in my brest For I and the Father are one 4. It is Christ's honour to intercede hereby is the Crown set on Christ's head much honour and glory redowns to Jesus in this very respect I believe all the work that 's done in Heaven it is Christ interceding and the Saints and Angels praising Christ intercedes for ever and the four beasts and four and twenty-Elders sing for ever Rev. 4.8 9 10 11. an argument of Christ's honour by Christ's intercession is given in thus by Master Goodwin if it were not for Christ's intercession Goodwins Christ set forth how would the Office of Christ's Priesthood be out of work And this reason is more than intimated Heb. 7.24 25. Heb. 7.24 25. This man because he
in reading pardons for his redeemed ones or in presenting petitions from them and pleading for them Surely he is still interceding every day it is his present work for our souls O desirable work 2. In this present transaction lies the application of all Christ's former actings whether of his habitual righteousness or of his active and passive obedience All those passages of Christ's incarnation conception circumcision birth life and death which more especially we look upon as the meritorious causes of our salvation had been nothing to us if they had not been applyed by Christ they were the means of impetration but Christ's intercession is the means of application Christ purchased salvation by those precedaneous acts but he possesseth us of our salvation by this perfective and consummate act of his intercession The order of this is laid down by the Apostle Heb. 5.8 9 10. in that first He learned obedience by the things which he suffered and then being made perfect he became the Author or applying cause of eternal salvation to all them that obey him being to this purpose called of God an High-Priest after the order of Melchizedeck Now is not this the desirable act above all other acts Alas what am I better for a Mine of Gold in such or such or such a field in which I have no propriety at all I am throughly convinc'd that Christ's merits are most precious merits but oh that they were mine Oh that Christ's intercessions would bring the salve and lay it to my sore Oh that I could hear that voice from Heaven My son I was incarnate for thee and conceived for thee and born for thee and circumcised for thee and I did the Law and suffered the penalty for thee and now I am interceding that thy very soul may have the benefit of all my doings and of all my sufferings Why if Christ's intercessions be the applying cause if it bring home to my soul all the former transactions of Christ saying All these are thine even thine oh how desirable must this intercession be 3. In this application lies that communion and fellowship which we have with the Father and the Son John 17.21 I pray for these that as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Understand this soberly we cannot think that there should be that oneness in equalitie betwixt God and us as betwixt God and Christ no no but there is oneness in similitude and reallity even in this life by vertue of Christ's intercession we have oneness with God and Christ not onely in comforts but also in graces I pray you mark this when I speak of communion with God in this life I mean especially the communication of grace between God and the soul on God's part there 's a special influence of grace and favour to man and on man's part there is a special return of grace and honour to God Some trembling souls are apt to think that all communion with God and Christ consists only in the comforts of the holy spirit whereas Christians may as really and advantagiously have communion with God in secret conveyances of grace inward supports in a concealed acceptation of service in the hidden drawings of the soul God-ward as in the more open and comfortable manifestations of God unto the soul communion with God is a familiar friendship I speak it in an holy humble sence now do we not as usually go to a friend for councel and advice as for comfort and cheering in a friends bosom we intrust our sorrows as well as our joys Suppose a soul even spiritually overwhelmed and ready to break be taking it self unto God and venting it self before the Lord now if afterwards the soul hath no more case than by the bare lanching of the sore if God pours in no balm at all but only gives support shall we say that this soul in this case hath no communion with God O yes in God's secret visits of the soul and in the souls restless groping after God though nothing but darkness be apprehended yet that soul lives in the light of God's countenance the Sun shines though a cloud interposeth God smiles though the soul do not perceive it or certainly thou hast his strengthening-supporting presence if not his shining John 17.23 now this is the fruit of Christ's blessed intercession and this is the subject-matter of Christ's intercessions O my Father that these may be one in us I in them and thou in me I in them by the influence and power of my Spirit and thou in me by the fulness and power of the Godhead And is not this a most desirable thing 4. In this communion lyes the vision and fruition of Jesus Christ in glory grace brings to glory If communion here we shall have communion hereafter and this also is a part of Christ's prayer and intercession Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am John 17.24 that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Jesus cannot be in Heaven long without his Saints indeed it is impossible that Christ should be in Heaven and that pieces and bits of Christ-mystical should be in Hell or yet long on Earth Christ will draw in his Legs and Members on earth up nearer to the Head certainly Christ and you that are believers must be under one roof ere long Is not he gone before to prepare a place yea many mansions for you John 14.2 we think them happy on earth that have their many stately Halls and Palaces their summer and their winter-houses O Christians how happy will you be when you come to be Lords and Heirs of many stately Mansions in the streets of Heaven but what speak I of Mansions now I am naming Christ Mansions are nothing many Mansions are but little yea many Mansions in Christ's Fathers house are but created chips of happiness in comparison of that communion which by vertue of Christ's intercession we shall have with Christ It is the saying of an eminently learned holy Divine Sam. Rutherford I should refuse heaven saith he if Christ were not there take Christ away from Heaven and it 's but a poor dark heartless dwelling Heaven without Christ would look as the direful land of death And therefore after Christ had spoke of many Mansions and of a place that he would prepare for his Saints he adds further to increase their joy John 14.3 I will come again saith he and receive you unto my self that where I am there ye may be also Mansions are but as places of bryers and thornes without Jesus Christ and therefore I would have Heaven for Christ and not have Christ for Heaven O this communion with Christ is above all desirable and this is the subject-matter of Christ's prayer Father I would have the Saints to be with me where I am that they may behold my glory Why this is the
will in the ears of God Surely this is the fruit the effect of Christ's intercession and therefore thou mayest comfortably conclude Christ's intercession is mine 2. If at any time in the midst of duties I am savingly affected then is Christ's intercession mine Sometimes it pleaseth God to appear in ordinances and the soul is comforted quickened enlarged affected why now I look on this as the efficacy of Christ's Blood and as the power of Christs intercession at that very instant that I feel any good in any ordinance of Christ why then even then is Christ prevailing with God his Father for what I feel then even then may I boldly say Now is the Lord Jesus who is at God's right hand in heaven remembring me a poor worm on earth Oh now I feel the fruit of his intercession Oh what is this spirit power grace comfort sweetness I drink of but a tast of the hony-comb with the end of my rod dropping from the intercessions of Jesus Christ and if this presence of Christ's Spirit be so sweet what is himself then I know we had need to be wary in laying down this sign it is clearly proved by an eminent Divine Mr. Burges of Assurance Mat. 13.20 Mark 16.20 John 5.35 that sweet motions of heart in holy things are not infallible Evidences of grace the third kind of hearers are said to receive the Word with joy they found some sweet and power in the Ordinances of Christ and Herod heard John gladly and many for a season rejoyced in John's light and Ministry Certainly affections in holy administrations with delight and joy may be in those who yet have no true grace so it may be that the novelty and strangeness of a doctrine may much affect and delight or the nature of the doctrine as it is comfortable without any respect to spiritual operation may exceedingly affect or the Ministers abilities because of his parts eloquence elocution affectionate utterance may much delight and stir up the hearers affections fine head-notions may produce some affectionate heart-motions but what symptome of grace in all this The sign therefore I lay down of my propriety in Christ's intercessions is not every sweet motion or every excited affection but that which is holy spiritual heavenly saving I may discern much of this if I will but look into the grounds and effects of my excited or stirred up affections if the ground thereof be fetched from Heaven and in their effect they tend towards Heaven if they wean my heart from the world if they elevate and raise up my affections to things above if they form and frame my conversation heaven-wards then may I be assured these motions and affections are of the right stamp for all such motions are but sparks of that heavenly fire the the flame whereof is mindful of its own original they are the fruits of Christ and they go back to Christ they work towards their center they tend towards the place from whence they came and in this respect O that I could never hear a Sermon without a savory affection of what I hear O that I could never go to prayer without some warmth and heat and life and fervency Oh that in every duty I were savingly affected that I felt the savour of Christ's ointments whose name and whose intercession is as an ointment poured forth in times of the Old Testament if they offered up a sacrifice and a material fire came down from Heaven and burnt up the sacrifice to ashes it was a certain testimony that the sacrifice was accepted Now in the time of the Gospel we must not expect material fire to come down upon our duties but hath the Lord at any time causâd an inward and spiritual fire to fall down upon thy heart warming thy spirit in duty and carrying it up heaven-ward Surely it so thou mayest safely conclude these are the very effects of Christ's intercession his intercession is mine 3. If in my heart I feel a holy frame disposition inclination to pray and cry and intercede for others especially for the miseries and distresses of the Church of God then is Christ's intercession mine We should as near as we may in every thing conform to Christ and this conformity is an evidence or sign to us of our interest in Christ O my soul go down into the inmost closet of thy heart look what disposition there is in it towards the members of Christ and thou mayest conclude there is in Christ's heart the very same disposition towards thee Ah! do I think there is love in my bosom towards the Saints and that there is no love in Christ's bosome towards me what can I think that my narrow straitened sinful bowels are larger than those wide compassionate tender bowels of Jesus Christ as a drop of water is in comparison of the Ocean and as a gravel-stone is in comparison of the sand so is my heart to Christ's and my love to Christ's and my bowels to Christ's Come then and try by this sign Hereby we know that we are translated from death to life if we love the brethren he that loveth not his brother abideth in death Hereby perceive we the love of God 1 John 3.14.16 because he laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren is not this plain if I love the brethren Christ loveth me if I feel in my heart an holy disposition to go to God and to pray and cry and intercede for a Saint in misery surely the Lord Jesus hath as much bowels towards me to go and intercede for me and to present my prayers unto God the Father his intercession is mine 4. If I am called justified sanctified then is Christ's intercession mine are not these the subject matter of Christ's intercession I pray saith Christ that thou shouldst keep them from the evil I pray that thou wouldst sanctifie them through the truth John 17 15 17 20 24. neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me through their word or preaching Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be with me in glory He first prayes that we may be called and justified and then he prayes that we may be sanctified and saved he holds at both ends of this golden chain of our salvation the one end is hanged at his breast where the names of all his Saints are written and the other end is at his heart that he may be the Author and finisher the first and last the beginning and ending of our souls salvation alas there is nothing in us in our reach here below the first stirrings of grace is up in Heaven at the right hand of the Father and the far end of any gracious thought is as far above us as the heart of Christ is above the earth Come then sith all hangs on this great pin of Christ's intercession let us search and try are we called do we
believe on the Son are we sanctified in some measure are we kept from the evil that sin may not have dominion over us hath Christ put up these prayers in our behalf that now we feel as it were and experience the truth of Christ's prevailings with his Father in our hearts and lives O sure signs that Christ's intercession is ours away away all diffidence doubting wavering fluctuating hopes a soul thus grounded may with Paul cast the ganlet and bid defiance to all the world Rom. 8.34 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God and who also maketh intercession for us SECT V. Of believing in Jesus in that respect 5. LEt us believe in Jesus as carrying on this great work of our salvation in his intercession wounded spirits are full of scruples and thus they cry My sins will never be forgiven have not I sinned against God and Christ and the Spirit of Christ had I not my hands imbrued in the blood of his Son and have not I trodden under foot the blood of God and will that blood that I have shed and trod on intercede for my pardon Had I but gone so far as the Jews did who indeed killed and crucified Christ I might have had some hopes because they knew not what they did and therefore Christ prayed Father forgive them for they know not what they do But alas I sinned 1 Cor. 2.8 and I knew well enough what and wherein I have sinned had they known saith the Apostle they would not have crucified the Lord of glory but alas I knew it and I was fully convinced that the commission of every sin is a crucifying of Christ and yet against knowledge and judgment and light and checks of my own conscience I have crucified the Lord of glory Heb. 6.4 6. and is not the Apostle express it is impossible for those who were once enlightened and have tasted of the heavenly gift if they fall away to renew them again unto repentance seeing they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame Oh I fear my name is not in the roll of those for whom Christ intercedes I have crucified him afresh and will he intercede for such a dead dog as I am I cannot believe Silence unbelief be not tyrannical to thy self for Christ will not sin shall do thee no hurt nor Sathan no nor God himself for Jesus-Christ can work him to any thing if he but open his wounds in heaven he will so work his Father that thy wounds on earth shall close up presently O but I have sinned against light and what then I hope thou hast not sinned willfully maliciously despightfully against the light the Apostle tells us that if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth Heb. 10.26 27. there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins but a certain looking for of judgment and fiery indignation These two Texts in Heb. 6.4 and 10.26 are parallel and give light to each other and therefore unless thy sin be the unpardonable sin unless willfully maliciously and despightfully thou hast crucified Christ as some of the Jews did never pass a doom of final condemnation on thy soul what is there no difference betwixt a sin done willfully or purposely of malice with delight and aginst the feeling of thy own conscience and a sin done of meer ignorance inconsideracy infirmity or through a strong temptation though against light it self I know there is a light given in by God's Word and some beam of the Holy Ghost which yet never penetrated so far as to transform and regenerate the soul wholly to God's Image and in such a case a man may fall away even into an universal fall a general Apostasie but dost thou not hope better things of thy self than so I suppose thou dost O then believe O believe thy part in Christ's intercession and for the directions of thy faith that thou mayst know how or in what manner to believe observe these particulars in their order As 1. Faith must directly go to Christ 2. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh 3. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh made under the Law 4. Faith must go to Christ made under the directive part of the Law by his life and under the penal part of the Law by his death 5. Faith must go to Christ as put to death in the flesh and as quickned by the Spirit 6. Faith must go to Christ as quickened by the Spirit and as going up into glory as sitting down at God's right hand and as sending the Holy Ghost of all these before 7. Faith must go to Christ as interceding for his Saints this act of Christ is for the application of all the former acts on Christ's part and our faith closing with it is for the application of this and all other the actings of Christ on our part Now is our faith led up very high if we can but reach this we may say our faith stands very lofty when it may at once see earth and heaven when it may see all that Christ hath acted for it here and all that Christ doth act and will act in heaven for it hereafter It is not an ordinary single particular act of faith that will come up to this glorious mystery no no it is a comprehensive perfective act it is such an act as puts the soul into a condition of glorious triumph Who shall condemne Goodwin Christ set forth it is Christ that will save me to the uttermost seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for me That same word to the uttermost is a good word and well put in it is a reaching word and extends it self so far that thou canst not look beyond it let thy soul be set on the highest mountain that ever any creature was yet set on and there let thy soul take in and view the most spacious prospect both of sin and misery and difficulties of being saved that ever yet any poor humbled soul did east within it self yea joyn to these all the objections and hinderances of thy salvation that the heart of man can suppose or invent against it self lift up thy eyes and look to the utmost thou canst see and Christ by his intercession is able to save thee beyond the horizon and furthest compass of thy thoughts even to the utmost and worst case the heart of man can possibly suppose it is not thy having lain long in sin or long under terrors and despairs it is not thy having sinned often under many enlightnings that can hinder thee from being saved by Christ Do but remember this same word to the uttermost and then put in what exception thou wilt or canst O the holy triumphs of that soul that can but act its saith on
alledge that this priviledge was granted to Peter as an Apostle but we say that if it was granted to Peter as an Apostle then it was common to Peter and Judas in that both were Apostles They alledge further that Christ prayes not for the absolute perseverance of Believers but after a sort and upon condition But we say the Prayer of Christ is certain and not suspended in this Prayer his desire is not for Peter that would presevere but his desire is for Peter that he should persevere the object of the thing for which Christ prayes is distinct from the thing it self prayed for 9. That we might have the salvation of our souls in the day of Jesus John 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they might behold my glory Why this is the main end in respect of us our glory and indeed herein is the main piece of our glory to behold this glory Oh to see the Lord Jesus Christ glorified as he shall be glorified must be a glorious thing What is it to see his glory but to behold the lustre of his Divinity through his humanity In this respect our very eyes shall come to see God as much as is possible for any creature to see him we may be sure God shall appear through the humanity of Christ as much as is possible for the Divinity to appear in a creature and therefore Men and Angels will be continually viewing of Christ I know there is another glory of Christ which the Father will put upon him Because he humbled himself therefore God will exalt him Rev. 14.4 and give him a name above every name and we shall see him in this glory O the ravishing sight of Saints Christ is so lovely that the Saints cannot leave but they must and will follow the Lamb wheresoever he goes there shall be no moment to all eternity wherein Christ shall be out of sight to so many thousand thousands of Saints now this is the glory of the Saints above as a Queen that sees the Prince in his glory she delights in it because it is her glory so the Church when she shall see Christ her Husband in his glory she shall rejoyce in it because she looks upon it as her own Is not this a blessed end of Christ's intercession why hither tend all the rest all the other ends end in this and for this above all Christ intercedes to his Father Father Cant. 3.11 I would have my Saints with me O that all the daughters of Zion may behold King Solomon with the Crown wherewith thou hast crowned him in the day of his Espousals and in the day of the gladness of his heart Only one Question and I have done how should I set my faith on work to act on Christ's intercession for these ends I answer 1. Faith must perswade it self that here is a vertue in Christ's intercession Certainly every passage and acting of Christ hath its efficacy and therefore there is vertue in this it is full of juyce it hath a strong influence in it 2. Faith must consider that it is the design of God and the intendment of Christ that this intercession should be for the good of those that are given to Christ O there 's enough in Christ enough in Christ's intercession to convey communion the Spirit protection free access to the Throne of Grace a Spirit of prayer pardon of sins continuance in grace salvation of souls to the Saints and people of God through all the world and this is the design of God that Christ's intercession should be as the fountain whence all these streams must run and be conveyed unto us 3. Faith must act dependantly upon the intercession of Christ for these very ends this is the very nature of Faith it relyes upon God in Christ and upon all the actings of Christ and upon all the promises of Christ so then Is there a desirable end in Christ's intercession which we aim at O let us act our Faith dependantly let us rely stay or lean upon Christ to that same end let us roul our selves or cast our selves upon the very intercession of Jesus Christ Saying O my Christ there is enough in thee and in this glorious intercession of thine and therefore there will I stick and abide for ever 4. Faith must ever and anon be trying improving wrestling with God that vertue may go out of Christ's intercession into our hearts I have heard Lord that there is an Office erected in heaven that Christ as Priest should be ever praying and interceding for his people O that I may feel the efficacy of Christ's intercession am I now in prayer O that I could feel in this prayer the warmth and heat and spiritual fire which usually falls down from Christ's intercession into the hearts of his Lord warm my spirit in this duty give me the kisses of thy mouth O that I may now have communion with thee thy Spirit upon me thy protection over me O that my pardon may be sealed my grace confirmed my soul saved in the day of Jesus In this method O my soul follow on and who knows but God may appear e're thou art aware howsoever be thou in the use of the means and leave the issue with God SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that Respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on this great work of our salvation in his intercession Now two things more especially will excite our love 1. Christ's love to us 2. Our propriety in Christ For the first many acts of Christ's love have appeared before and every one is sufficient to draw our loves to him again As 1. He had an eternal love to man he feasted himself on the thoughts of love delight and free-grace to man from all eternity since God was God O boundless duration the Lord Jesus in a manner was loving and longing for the dawning of the day of the Creation he was as it were with child of infinite love to man before he made the world Some observe that the first words which ever Christ wrote were Love to Believers and these were written with glory for it was before gold was and they were written upon his bosom for then other books were not 2. In the beginning of time he loved man above all creatures for after he had made them all he then speaks as he never did before Let us make man in our image after our likeness Gen. 1.26 and let him have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowl of the air and over the cattel and over all the earth and though man at that very instant unmade himself by sins Christ's love yet was not broken off but held forth in a promise till the day of performance The seed of the woman shall bruise the Serpents head and in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed 3. In the fulness of time his
love was manifested the seed then blossomed and the birth came out in an high expression of love the man-child the love of Christ was born Tit. 3.4 and saw the light After that saith the Apostle the kindness and love of God our Saviour towards man appeared I shall not need sure to instance in succeeding passages so far as we have gone we have clearly seen Christ's life was a perfect mirror of his love as there is no beam in the Sun in which there is no light so there was no act in the life of Christ but to a spiritual eye it shines with the light of love But above all O the love of Christ in his death ask a Malefactor if the Princes Son should go to his Father and say Father I confess this wretch hath deserved to dye but I see a willingness in thee that he should live only I perceive it sticks with thy justice why for that Father here I am and to satisfy thy justice I will dye my self only let this poor wretch live to the glory of thine and my free grace Ask I say the Malefactor what kind of love were this Surely Christ dyed for our sins and Christ rose again for our justification and he ascended and sate down at God's right hand and sent down his holy Spirit and all for us there was not one passage in all these transactions but held forth the breakings and breathings out of a strong fire of love 4. At this time there is a coal of burning love in the breast of Christ this fire was indeed from everlasting but the flames are as hot this day as ever now it is that Christ loves and lives And wherefore lives but only to love us and to intercede for us Christ makes our salvation his constant calling he is ever at his work Yesterday and to day and for ever there is not one hour in the day nor one day in a year nor one year in an age wherein Christ is not busie with his Father in this heavenly imployment of interceding for us He loved us before he died for us his love being the cause why he died for us and he loves us still in that now he intercedes for us it is as much as to say Christ hath loved us and he repents not of his love love made him dye for us and if it were to do again he would dye over again yea if our sins had so required that for every elect person Christ must have dyed a several death Love love would have put him willingly upon all these deaths O the loves of Christ towards our poor souls If I might but stay and take some turns in this large Field of love How many thousands of particulars might I draw out of Scripture expressing Christ's love to us in this respect though he be in Heaven yet by vertue of his intercession he bears us in his hands yea he leads us by the hand and arms too I taught Ephraim to go taking them by their arms but they knew not that I healed them he dandles us on his knees Isa 40 11. Hos 11.3 Deut. 32.11 12. he bears us on his wings As an Eagle stirreth up her nest fluttereth over her young spreadeth abroad her wings taketh them and beareth them on her wings so the Lord alone doth lead us he carries us on his shoulders as the man found his sheep and laid it on his shoulders rejoycing Nay I must yet come nearer Luke 15.5 for Christ by his intercession sets us nearer yet His left hand is under us Cant. 2.6 and his right hand doth imbrace us he wears us in Heaven as a bracelet about his arms which made the Spouse cry out O set me as a seal upon thine arm Cant. 8.6 he stamps and prints us on the palms of his hands Behold I have graven thee on the palms of my hands Isa 49.16 as if our names were written in letters of blood upon Christ's flesh he sets us as a seal upon his heart that is the expression of the Spouse too O set me as a seal upon thine heart Nay Cant. 8.6 so precious are the Saints to Jesus Christ that they lodge in Heaven in his bowels and in his heart for they dwell in Christ Hereby we know that we dwell in him 1 John 4.13 1 John 4.16 and they dwell in God and dwell in love For God is love and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God I know not what more to say you know the manner of the high Priests was to carry the names of the children of Israel into the Holy of Holies on their shoulders and on their breasts but was it ever heard that any high Priest besides the great high Priest of our profession should carry the names of thousands and millions on his shoulders and on his arms and on his hands and on his wings and on his bosom and on his heart nay in his heart and in his bowels as a memorial before the Lord O unmatchable love Methinks this love of Christ should now change my soul into a Globe or Mass of Divine love towards Christ as it were by the Spirit of the Lord. Methinks a sight of Christ in his presenting himself and his sacrifice to his Father for me should so enamour my soul as that I should delight in no other sight but this then is a Christian sweetly exercised when as the golden Ball of Divine Love is tossed to and again betwixt Christ's bosom and his and in this respect it is a wonder that before this I am not sickned and overcome with love and ready to cry out with the Spouse O stay me with flaggons Cant. 2.5 and comfort me with apples for I am sick of love O I am wounded with the arrows of love so as neither grave nor death nor hell neither Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come can ever lick these wounds or enbalm or bind them up O my Christ my Lord my Jesus What should I do but yield over my self as a Spouse under the power of her husband what should I do but lose my self in such a deep Ocean of loves stronger than wine hotter than coals of Juniper which hath a most vehement flame 2. Another motive of our love to Christ it is our propriety in Christ 1 Cor. 6.19 Ye are not your own said the Apostle of us and he is not his own may we say of Christ If any ask how may this be I answer That the soul in loving Christ is not her own and in regard of loving Christ is not his own every one makes over it self to another and propriety or interest to it self on both sides ceaseth My Beloved is mine and I am his Cant. 2.16 saith the Spouse not as if Christ should leave off to be his own or to be a free God when he becometh ours no no but he so demeans himself in respect
the forehead of such favours I have a merciful and compassionate Mediator in heaven O I am much tempted sayes another that I cannot pray had I now the key of prayer I could then unlock the cabinet where all God's treasures lye and take out what I pleased but alas my prayers are dull and weak and dry and without spirit and life I cannot pray If so be humbled for it and yet know this that when thou canst not pray Christ then prayes for thee and he prayes that thou mayst pray And tell me hast thou no experience of this truth hath not sometimes thy spirit been enlarged in prayer hast thou not sometimes felt thy heart warmed or savingly affected hast thou not sometimes in prayer been lifted up above thy self and above the world conclude then My Intercessor above hath sent me this gift and Spirit it is not I but Christ's Intercession that by an admirable and secret operation hath given me the Spirit to help my infirmity these are the intercessions of the Spirit of Christ and they are the very Eccho of the intercessions of Christ in his own person O but I labour under such and such corruptions sayes another and the Devil is busie exceeding busie and he exceedingly prevails how am I overcome with these corruptions and with these and these sins It may be so and yet do not altogether despond for Jesus Christ is at God's right hand and there he sits till all his enemies be made his foot-stool and what are not thy sins his enemies O be of good comfort for Christ will prevail it is one piece of his prayer that he puts up for thee John 17.15 To keep thee from evil and surely he will either keep thee from it or keep thee in it that in the issue thou shalt have the victory Ver. 12. Isa 55 3. Those that thou gavest me I have kept saith Christ and none of them is lost if he undertake for thee thou art safe and sure His Covenant is everlasting even the sure mercies of David and therefore if yet thou dost not certainly thou shalt feel the vertue of Christ's intercession sin must be subdued hell-gates shall not prevail against thee he will not quench thy sparks until he bring forth judgment unto victory Oh but I am in a suffering condition sayes another and there is none that regards or takes pity on me all my friends have dealt treacherously with me among all my Lovers there is none to comfort me they have heard that I sigh and there is none to refresh me I stand for Christ but there is none stands by me I own him but there is none owns me Bleeding Christian bear up is not Christ's intercession a sufficient answer to this case alas thou wouldst be pitied for all thy weaknesses why know that compassion is natural to Jesus Christ he is a merciful high Priest and can be no other to thee God ordained him to officiate in such a Tabernacle as wherein thou dwellest he was in all things like unto thee sin only excepted it may be thou art in want and so was Christ he had no house thou art persecuted and so was Christ sin loads thee and so it did Christ A Christians condition needs compassion and Christ knows how much and it is his work continually to lay it open above O my Father thus and thus it is with the Militant Church not a Member in it but he is under sin and affliction see here the tears hearken to the sighs and groans and chatterings and mournings of my Doves below I present here their persons and performances and oh that they may find acceptance through my merit Some speak of Heavens Musick some tell us of Saints and Angels singing and warbling in lively notes the praises of Christ in Heaven and if any such thing be certainly it is ear-tickling heart-ravishing musick O the melody O the joy of Saints to hear such heavenly ayres with heavenly ears but be it as it will be of this I am confident that Heaven it self yields no such musick as is the intercession of Jesus Christ this if any thing in Heaven do it makes melody in the ears of God and of all celestial Spirits Saints or Angels And O my soul suppose thy self within the compass if now thou couldst but hear what thy Jesus is saying in thy behalf Is not this a brand newly pluck'd out of the fire was not this poor soul but the other day in a state of nature defiled with sin within a step of hell and did not I send my Spirit to recall him was not this precious blood shed for the redemption of him and what though sin stick and cleave to him to this day yet have I not given thee charge to take away his filthy garments from him and to cloath him with changes of rayment even with the shining robes of mine own righteousness O my Father let this soul live in thy sight O cast him not away for whom I have suffered and done all this I cannot rest satisfied without his society I am not right till he is with me in glory he is my darling my purchase my portion my delight and therefore let him be saved Is not this enough to cause thy very heart to leap in thy bosom Bonaventure fondly reports that Francis hearing an Angel a little while playing on an Harp he was so moved with extraordinary delight that he thought himself in another world O but suppose thou shouldst hear the voice of Jesus thy Intercessor thus pleading for thee wouldst thou not be cast into an extasie would not this fill thee with joyes unspeakable and full of glory Come realize this meditation certainly if thou art Christ's he is thus or in some other manner interceding for thee as sure as Christ is in Heaven he is pleading with his Father in Heaven on thy behalf O the joyes the joyes the joyes that I should now feel Tell me is it not a comfort for a poor beggar to be relieved at a rich man's door we are all beggars in regard of Heaven and Jesus Christ doth not only come forth and serve us but he takes us poor beggars by the hand and leads us in to his heavenly Father Oh what comfort is here SECT VIII Of praying to and praising of Jesus in that respect 8. LEt us pray and praise our Jesus in this respect 1. Let us pray or sue our interest in this intercession it is a question amongst the Schools whether we may conveniently pray to Jesus to pray to his Father in our behalf And thus far is granted that we may pray to Christ to make us partakers of his intercessions and to mingle our prayers with his prayers that they may find acceptance with God his Father 1 Cor. 11.6 But that we may use such a form as ora pro nobis O Christ pray for us it is looked upon as inconvenient in this respect 1. Because cause we have no
of earth other and wept so will this discovery in the appearances of Christ bring a sweet confusion upon the Spirits of Saints then shall a Saint fall at the feet of his Saviour and weeping say O my Jesus thou art my Father Brother Husband Self while there were other things I loved other things besides thy self but alas they are everlastingly gone and have left me alone yet now thou ownest me O my Jesus thou breakest my heart oh I cannot but weep out tears of love and tears of joy at this appearing O welcome welcome sweet Jesus into these clouds oh welcome welcome sweet Jesus into this neather world In these Clouds I must leave our Saviour for a while and the rather because I believe he will descend no lower onely before I pass one word of Use to all his Saints Vse You see him still upon his old design though the world now end yet hitherto there is no end of his great transaction his first coming and his second coming is to save your souls his first coming was to purchase his second to give you the possession of Salvation What are you not glad of this Gospel-news that Christ will come at last from this Empyreal Throne to his judgment-seat to give you the possession of salvation is not the promise of his coming comfortable is it not comfortable to believe in him and to hope for him why muse then what comfort will it be to see his person with all his glorious train coming for you Psal 50.1 2 3 4. The Mighty God the Lord hath spoken and called the Earth from the rising of the Sun to the going down thereof out of Zion the perfection of beauty hath God shined our God shall come and shall not keep silence a fire shall devour before him and it shall be very tempestuous round about him he shall call to the heavens from above and to the earth that he might judge his people It is indeed a most terrible day unto the wicked but oh how sweet and pleasant and comfortable to his Saints Christians do we not long to have Christ's Spirit come into our souls with life do we not droop while Christ is absent from our souls are not the feet of them beautiful that bring glad tydings of peace and of salvation by Jesus Christ Oh then what will it be to see the King not in his Embassadors but in his own person coming for us to fetch us into Heaven if we have but a dear friend returned from some far Country how do all run out to meet him with joy Oh saith the child my father is come saith the wife my husband is come and shall not we when we see our Father our Husband our Head our Saviour returning with great glory and glorious Majesty cry out he is come he is come shall not we at the first view of him in his clouds cry out O yonder is he whose blood redeemed us whose Spirit cleansed us whose prayers prevailed for us whose Law did govern us yonder comes he in whom we trusted and now we see he hath not deceived our trust yonder is he for whom we waited long and now we see we have not waited in vain I verily believe thus it will be with us one day we shall have comfort then oh let us comfort our selves with these words and ever and anon cry Come Lord Jesu come quickly Cant. 8.14 make hast my beloved and be thou like to a Roe or to a young Hart upon the Mountain of spices SECT III. Of Christ's summoning of the Elect to come under judgment 3. FOR Christ's summons of the Elect to come under judgment no sooner is he in the clouds his Throne of judicature but there he stands and thence he sends his holy Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds from one end of the heaven to another Christ's summons are effectual if he will have the elect to meet him they must come to this purpose he sends his Angels and they return with his Saints back again to the judgement-seat In the carrying on of this affair we shall discuss these particulars 1. His mission of the Angels 2. The manner of the mission 3. The resurrection of the world 4. The collection of the Saints wherein 1. whence 2. whither they are gathered 1. For Christ's mission of his Angels he shall send his Angels This was their office from their first creation they were still sent of God this way and that way and indeed herein is one difference betwixt Christ and the Angels he was to fit on God's right hand but they were sent abroad to Minister to the Saints and people of God Heb. 1.13 14. To which of the Angels said he at any time sit on my right hand until I make thine enemies thy foot-stool are they not all Ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation Now according to their office Christ puts them upon imployment at this day q. d. O my Angels you that wait upon me that excel in strength Psal 103.20 Psal 50.5 that do my commandments and hearken to the voice of my Word go your wayes now into all the four winds of the World gather all my Saints together unto me those that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice search into all the dusts of the earth and leave not behind one dust that belongs unto any Saint search into the bottom of the Sea see what becomes of those drowned bodies of my dear ones if either worms have eaten those in graves or fishes have devoured them in the deep why now restore them am not I as able to recover them as I was to create them is it not as easie for me to raise the dead as to make Heaven and Earth and all of nothing go then and gather together all those dusts and let every dust be brought home to its own proper body and compact those dusts as soft as they are into solid bones and prophesie upon those bones and say unto them O ye dry bones hear the word of the Lord thus saith the Lord behold I will cause breath to enter into you and ye shall live Ezek. 37.4 5 6. and I will lay sinews upon you and cover you with skin and put breath in you and ye shall live and ye shall know that I am the Lord why this is my will and pleasure and therefore be gone O my Angels do your office what have not I commanded you 2. The Mission or commission or dismission given the Angels swift messengers of his will fall on the execution and to that purpose immediately they sound the Trumpet so it follows And he shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Here is the manner of their mission they go and as they go they give a shout what this shout is or how it is
us close to Christ and to the Banner of Christ who would not march under this Banner and adhere to him that but reads over these summons of souls at the last dreadful day SECT IV. Of Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day 4. FOR Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day no sooner are the Saints lifted up and set before the Judge but these things follow 1. They look and gaze and dart their beams and reflect their glories on each other Oh the communications Oh the darting of beams betwixt Christ and his Saints look as when two admirable persons two lovers meet together their eyes sparkle they look on as if they would look through one another So Christ and his Saints at first meeting they look on as if they would look through one another And such is the effect of these looks that they give a lustre to each other by their Looks Did not Moses face shine when he had been with God and shall not the faces of the elect glitter and shine when Christ also looks on them nor stays it there but as they shine by Christ so shall their shine reflect on Christ and give a glory to Christ and this I take it to be the meaning of the Apostle That when Christ shall come 2 Thes 1.10 he shall be glorified in his Saints not onely in himself but in his Saints also whose glory as it comes from him so it redounds also to him For of him and through him Rom. 11.36 and to him are all things 2. They admire at the infinite glory and beauty and dignity and excellency that is in Christ The glory they reflect on him is nothing to the glory that is in him Oh when these Stars the Saints shall but look upon Christ the Son of righteousness they exceedingly admire So the Apostle When he shall come 2 Thes 1.10 he shall be glorified in his Saints and he shall be admired in all them that believe All that believe shall break out into admiration of Jesus Christ they shall at the first sight observe such an excellency in Jesus Christ as that they shall be infinitely taken with it here we speak of Christ and in speaking we admire but how will they admire when they shall not onely speak or hear but see and behold him who is the Express image of God Heb. 1.3 and the brightness of his Fathers glory O the lustres that he casts forth each way is not his very body more sparkling than the Diamond before the Sun yea more than the Sun it self now shining at noon-day how should the Saints but wonder at this sight Oh there is more beauty and glory in Jesus Christ than ever their thoughts or imaginations could possibly reach there is more weight of sweetness joy and delight in Jesus Christ than either the seeing Eye or hearing Ear 1 Cor. 2.9 or the vast understanding Heart which can multiply and add still to any former thoughts can possibly conceive every soul will cry out then I believed to see much glory in Jesus Christ when ever I saw him I had some twilight or Moon-light glances of Christ on Earth but O blind I O narrow I that could never have faith opinion thought or imagination to fathom the thousand-thousand part of the worth and incomparable excellency that I now see in him Why this causeth admiration when we see more than ever we could expect the Saints shall then cry out and say I see more ten thousand times more than ever I expected I see all the beauty of God put forth in Christ I see the substantial reflection of the Fathers light and glory in Jesus Christ I see thousands of excellencies in Jesus Christ that never were revealed to me before This is the very nature of admiration it is eveâ wondering or admiring at some new and strange thing the glory of Christ will then exceed all former apprehension O they admire to see the King in such a beauty they admire to see the Judge in such a glittering and glorious Robe of Majesty they admire and they cannot but admire 3. They adore and magnifie the grace and glory of Jesus Christ as it is said of the twenty four Elders that they fell down before him that sate on the Throne and worshipped him that liveth for ever and ever and cast their Crowns before the Throne saying thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory Rev. 5.10 and honour and power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created So all the Saints now advanced to come up to Christ and to stand before the Throne they fall down before Christ and they worship him that lives for ever shouting and singing about Jesus Christ and setting out his glory Rev. 7.9 10 11 12. grace and goodness After this I beheld saith John and lo a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations and kindred and people and tongues stood before the Throne and before the Lamb and cryed with a loud voice saying salvation to our God which sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lamb and all the Angels stood round about the Throne and about the Elders and the four Beasts and fell before the Throne on their faces and worshipped God saying Amen blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honour and power and might be unto our God for ever and ever Amen Saints and Angels will both give glory to Jesus Christ that day every elect man will then acknowledge here is Christ that shed his blood for me here is the Saviour that laid down his life for me here is the Sacrifice that gave himself a propitiation for me here is the Person that mediated and interceded and made peace for me here is the Redeemer that delivered and redeemed me from the wrath to come Rev. 19 7. and then they begin those Hallelujahs that never shall have end Hallelujah and again Hallelujah and Amen Hallelujah for the marriage of the Lamb is come and his wife hath made herself ready 4. Christ welcomes them into his glorious presence if the Father could receive his Prodigal but repenting with hugs and kisses how will Christ now receive his Saints whân they come as a Bride to the solemnization of the marriage his very heart springs as I may say at the sight of his Bride no sooner he sees her and salutes her but he welcomes her with such words as these O my love my dove my fair one come now and enjoy thy Husband Hos 2.19 20. many a thought I have had of thee before I made the world I spent my infinite eternal thoughts on thy salvation when the world began I gave thee a promise that I would betroth thee unto me in righteousness and in judgment in loving-kindness in mercy and in faithfulness It was I that for thy sake was incarnate and lived and died and rose again and ascended and since my
Christ 2 Cor. 11 2. And after this when Christ takes the bride home brings her into Heaven and leads her by the hand into his Fathers presence then is his last presentation then he presents her faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy The word signifies leaping springing exalting joy O what springing leaping exalting is in heaven when Christ takes the hand of his Bride and gives her into the hand of his Father q. d. O my Father see what a number I have brought home to thee thou knowest what I have done and what I have suffered and what offices I have gone through to bring these hither and now my Mediatourship is done I resign all my charge to thee again see what a goodly Troop what a noble Army I have brought thee home why all these are mine and all mine are thine and all thine are mine Joh. 17.10 12. and I am glorified in them all those that thou gavest me I have kept and none of them is lost see here is Adam and Abel and Noah and Sem and every Saint from the beginning to the end of the World the Nuptial between them and me is solemnized and whither should I lead them but to my Father's house and into my Father's presence I have already pronounced them blessed and the glory which thou gavest me I have given them Joh. 17.22.23 that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one Here take them from mine hands now give them a welcome into glory and let them know that thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me 2. He presents all his Commissions to his Father as he is a Mediatour at least by Destination from all Eternity Eph. 1.4 were not the Saints chosen in Christ before the foundation of the World then was he a Mediatour in the business of Election and then was he Predestinated to be a Mediatour of Reconciliation Prov. 8.23 I was set up from Everlasting i.e. I was appointed and designed to be a Mediatour from all Eternity Howsoever he was a Mediatour virtually and inchoatively from the Fall of Adam then did he undertake that great Negotiation of reconciling God to man and man to God and actually he was a Mediatour after his Incarnation for then was he manifested in the flesh then was he manifested to be what before he was then did he act that part visibly upon earth which before he had acted secretly and invisibly in heaven then he entred upon the work of his active and passive obedience then he discharged his Prophetical and Priestly office here on Earth which having done then he entred upon his Kingly Administration in Heaven Now as to this work he was called by God him hath God the Father sealed John 6.27 it pleased the Father by him to reconcile all things to himself Colos 1.19 And as to these offices severally he had Commission from God the Lord hath annoynted me to Preach good tydings unto the meek and the Lord hath sworn Isa 61.1 Psal 110.4 Psal 110.1 and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever and the Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand until I make thine enemies thy foot-stool So now he comes with all his Commissions in his hand and he delivers them all up unto his Father again In this case it is with Christ as with some General whom the King sends forth with Regal Authority to the War who having subdued the Enemy he returns in Triumph and all being finished he makes a surrender of his place thus Christ having discharged all his offices imposed on him now the work is finished he leaves his function by delivering up his Commissions to his Father Rev. 21.23 In Heaven there is no need of Sun or Moon that is as some interpret there is no need of Preaching or Prophesying of the Word or Sacraments for the Lamb is the light thereof Christ is the only means of all the communication that the Elect there shall have and as for his Regal Office 1 Cor. 15.24 the Apostle is express then shall he deliver up the Kingdom to God even the Father Only here is the question how is Christ said to resign his Kingdom to God the Father Luk. 1.33 Heb. 1.8 for saith not the Scripture that Christ's Kingdom shall have no end and that Christ's Throne is for ever and ever for answer I see no contradiction but that Christ may both resign his Kingdom and yet reserve it See a like case Mat. 28.18 All Power saith Christ in heaven and earth is given to me of my Father shall we say now that the Father himself was quite stript of it no but as the Kingdom which the Father gave the Son is nevertheless called the Father's Kingdom or the Kingdom of God so Christ shall return it yet retain it also Two things we say are contained in the Term of Reign sci Dominion and Execution to wear the Crown and to bear the Scepter now Christ in the former sense shall reign for ever the honour of dominion and of wearing the Crown he shall never resign up to his Father for his Fathers Throne disturbs not his there are both their Thrones at once Rev. 7.11 but the functions of a King to sit in Judgment to reward deservers to punish evil-doers to rescue the oppressed to fight with the enemy Christ in this sense shall cease to reign and shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father More particularly Christ is said to deliver up the Kingdom in three respects 1. Because he ceaseth to execute that Authority which nevertheless he hath as a Judge that goeth from the Bench is a Judge still although he giveth no judgment but imployeth his time about other occasions so Christ is said to resign his place not that his Authority is subject to Diminution but in that he makes no shew for when his enemies are all put under there is no need that any more blows should proceed from his Kingly power 1. Because the manner of his Kingdom after the judgment day shall be wholly changed he shall not Reign in the same fashion that he did before there 's no need in heaven of good Laws to keep men from starting into wickedness the orders of this life are changed into a new kind of Government and in that respect he is said to give over the Kingdome 3. Because he ceaseth to increase his Dominion In this World Christ was still gaining more souls to his Kingdom by the Preaching of his Word and so he spread his dominion further and further but when the Lord shall have made up the number of his Servants to his mind then he will end the World and give up the Kingdom i.e. he will cease to enlarge his confines any more he will be content with the number of his Subjects that he hath already Here is
glory which Christ hath as God this he never laid aside but as the Sun in a dark gloomy day may not send forth its beams so Christ the Son of righteousness in the time of his abode upon earth except a little glimps only in his transfiguration did not send forth his glorious beams but hereafter the body or humanity of Christ shall not hinder the breaking forth of all his divine glory No sooner the Son subject and his Mediatory office discharged but Christ as God will manifestly put forth his more immediate glory to all his Saints Behold now we are the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know when he shall appear we shall be like him 1 John 3.2 for we shall see him as he is Mark it when he shall appear at and after the Resurrection day we shall see him as he is i.e. we shall see the very essential glory of Jesus Christ Quest But what is the essential glory of Christ I cannot answer it is a question not to be resolved by all the men in the World we know little of the glory of Saints how should we know any thing of the essential glory of Christ as God Answ The Scriptures say that God spake to Moses face to face yet God tells him thou canst not see my face and he favours him so far as to tell him the reason for there shall no man see my face and live Exod. 33.11 20. q. d. No man in this life he must first dye and be changed and then he shall have a peculiar revelation of the divine Majesty then he shall see him as he is but how that is I cannot tell come let us question this no further surely it is a mercy that this infinite glory is not discovered to us for as a weak eye is not able to behold the Sun or to see in it rota as the School-men speak in that wheel or circle wherein the Sun doth run but only in the beams of it no more can we see Christ as God in his glorious essence or in his essential glory but only in the beams thereof in his Word and Effects if now we know so little of spirits and spirituals oh then how little do we know of him who is the Father of Spirits I shall say no more therefore let us be content to be ignorant of these things till we enter into the confines of Eternity But whether shall this glorious Essence or Essential glory of Christ be more seen or manifested at or after the day of judgment then ever it was before Quest I answer I believe it will Answ Dr. Annesly Communion with God Some tell us of several periods wherein the glory of Christ is still more and more seen as 1. In this life we may see it in part thus David speaks of himself my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee to see thy power and thy glory as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary but this sight is very dim we see onely now as through a glass darkly The second period is betwixt our dissolution and resurrection 1 Cor. 13.12 and then shall we see the essential glory of Christ more immediately and fully our creeping apprehension of God shall then be elevated and our distance from God shall then be shortned and all the riddles of grace and of Jesus Christ shall then be opened This sight is so great that if a soul should come from heaven to declare it neither could that soul express it nor we understand it we read of Lazarus whose soul Christ returned into his body whom much people of the Jews came purposely to see that they might hear stories of the other World but not a word from him of any such matter Paul's rapture may satisfie with the reason of it he heard there ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã wordless words 2 Cor. 12.4 such words as could not possibly be repeated on earth and yet all this is but a second step to the full vision of Christ's essential glory The third period is at the Resurrection and during the time of the last Judgment and then we shall see more of his glory Camero affirms that 't is no curiosity to say that the Saints and Angels in heaven had a new glory by the exhibition of Christ the great mystery of the Incarnation being thereby better known and we may as safely affirm that the Saints shall have a new glory by new visions of the glory of Christ at the day of Resurrection they shall then see the solemnity of heavens glory carried on by Christ in his glorious actings and all that ever the soul saw before in being with Christ in Heaven till the Resurrection shall be swallowed up with the sight of this glory of Christ at the Resurrection-day The last period is after the Resurrection and that shall continue even to all Eternity now all the manifestations of Christ's glory before this are but as a few green ears rubb'd in our hands so that the full crop or the full harvest is yet behind But this is that which as we told you before we cannot tell though we had the tongues of men and Angels Thus far of the first point what is the glory of Christ 2. How shâll the Saints behold this glory I answer As Christ hath a twofold glory so there is a twofold manner of beholding it i.e. ocular and mental 1. There is an ocular vision a sight of Christ with our very eyes Job 19.27 whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold him with these eyes in our heads we shall one day behold the human glory of Christ I doubt not we shall behold the beauty of Heaven the shining bodies of the Saints but above all our very eyes shall delightfully contemplate Christ's glorious body and indeed this shall drown all the other sights if any think that Christ's glorious body shall be too intensive and too extraordinary a brightness for our weak eyes let such consider that 1. The eye in heaven shall be glorified now glorification adds a singular excellency to the faculties it advanceth the faculties and raiseth them to an higher pitch of excellency glorification adds a greater capacity to the eye then ever it had before In this world there is a difference in our eyes and sight a man of a clear sight sees more things and more of every thing then a dark sight doth so a glorified eye sees more of things then our eyes now can see it shall be enlarged exceedingly to take in objects which now it cannot receive glorification adds strength to the faculties both internal and external so that the eye shall be able to look on the glory of Christ not with difficulty but with contentment in this World every sense we have is apt to be destroyed by excellent Objects and the more excellent and transcendent the object is the more it hurts
the creation of the World and what is Six thousand years to Eternity certainly the truth of Origen's opinion touching the existency of other worlds before this Orig. l. de Prin cipiis 3. c. 5. and the future succession of other Worlds after this will then be known If no worlds before this yet if God in Christ hath done such great things in only Six thousand years what he may do in the next Six thousand years and so in the next Six thousand years who now can tell we see not these things but the Saints in seeing the face of Christ shall see all things 4. They shall see Christ in all his glory ways counsels decrees executions transactions as working for their happiness Now this ãâã more then the former there 's a great deal of difference in seeing an object as excellent in it self and in seeing an object as conducing to my happiness As one that is a stranger and another is an heir rides over such a demesgne the stranger rides over it and takes delight to see the situation rivers trees and fruits but the heir looks upon it after another manner this saith he is the land for which my Father laid out so much and all to enrich me and all to bestow it on me as my Inheritance So the Saints admitted into the glorious sight of Christ they take not only a view of Christ of the Essential glory of Christ of the transactions of Christ things excellent in themselves but they see all these as to make them happy they say of Christ and of all his actings these are mine and for my happiness A stranger may look upon a King and see beauty and Majesty and glory and honour in him but the Queen looks upon the King and his beauty as her own so the Saints look upon the King of Heaven they see Christ and all in Christ as their own to make them happy for ever and ever 5. They shall see Christ as he is but what do we not see him now as he is oh no 1 John 3.2 we now see him not as he is indeed and truth but only as he is in hear-say and report we now see him only as he is shadowed out to us in the Gospel of peace and what is the Gospel but the pourtraiture of the King which he sent to another Land to be seen by his Bride so Kings and Queens on earth wooe one another whilst the Bride is on earth she never seeth him as he is in his best Sabbath-Royal Robe of immediate glory she seeth him rather by the second hand i.e. by messengers words mediation he rather sends his pourtraiture then comes himself but in heaven the Saints see him as he is they see Christ himself in his own very person they see the red and white in his own face they see all the inside of Christ and thousands of excellencies shall then be revealed that we see not now the mysteries of that glorious Ark shall then be opened his Incarnation his two Natures in one person his Suffering as Man and his sitting in the seat of God as God all these shall be seen 6. They shall see Christ without interruption and without intermission to all Eternity If once the eye be set on the face of Jesus Christ it will never be taken off again Some conceive this to be the reason why the Saints in heaven can never fall away because they shall have a continual view of Christ as God Surely to have but one glimpse of Christ in this respect though it were gone presently it were a great happiness beyond all that the World affords it was sometimes the desire of a Philosopher to see the nature of the Sun though he were to be burnt by it so if Christ should but grant us this happiness you shall come to see me but the sight of me will destroy you this were a desirable thing but to have such an excellent glorious sight as shall never end that Christ should not only pass by but stand still so as the soul shall never lose his sight O how glorious is this if a man do but look upon a delightful Object he is loath to have his eye drawn from it surely the eye of Saints shall be eternally opened to see the divine nature of Christ turn them which way they will they shall never turn aside the busied eyes of their understanding from off the Deity of Christ he fills heaven he is that fair Tree of life the branches whereof in all that huge and capacious borders of heaven have not room to grow in for the heaven of heavens cannot contain him O the wonders of heaven There is Abraham Moses Elias the Prophets the Apostles and the glorified Martyrs but the Saints have neither leisure nor hearts to feed themselves with beholding of creatures no no all the eyes of heaven which are a fair and numerous company are upon only only upon the Lord Jesus Christ the Father hath no leisure to look over his shoulder to his Son the Husband hath no leasure to look over his shoulder to his Wife Christ takes all eyes off from such created things surely 't is enough for the Saints and Angels in heaven to study Christ for all Eternity it shall be their only labour to read Christ to smel Christ to hear see and taste Christ to love joy and enjoy Jesus Christ for ever and ever Thus far of the second point how the Saints shall behold the glory of Christ 3. Wherein is the comprehensiveness of this expression that the beholding of Christ is our all in all I answer 1. It comprehends the immediate seeing and looking upon all that Majesty and Glory which Jesus Christ hath 2 Cor. 5.7 In this sense Paul took it when he complained we walk by faith not by sight q. d. on earth we have faith and in heaven we have sight it is some comfort that now I see Jesus Christ by faith but comparatively to that sight which the Saints have in heaven it is as no comfort at all alas I am not I cannot be satisfied so long as I am absent from the Lord I look upon my self as one from home And as a Prince in a strange Land sits down sadly because he hath not the sight of his Father so I am forced to complain O I cannot see my Lord I would fain behold him I am a stranger on earth a Pilgrim in this world I am not where I would be I am absent from him whom I most desire O I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ I walk with him here on earth by faith but to walk with him in the streets of heaven by sight is far better O I long I pant I breath I desire I think every day a year and every year an age till I be in heaven at home in my Father's arms that I may behold and see him and that immediately I say immediately in his glory This
is one way of beholding Christ it is an immediate sight 2. It comprehends the fruition and enjoyment of Christ in his glory Surely the Saints shall not be meer idle spectators of the glory of Christ but they shall enjoy him and be taken into fellowship with him it was said of Moses that he did see the Land of Canaan but he was not admitted into it it is otherwise with the Saints they shall see heaven and they shall enter into heaven come thou faithful servant and enter into thy Master's joy not only behold it but enter into it they must behold Christ and take possession of Christ and enjoy them as their own And thus the word to see or behold is often used in Scripture except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God i.e. he cannot enjoy it John 3.3 John 17.24 and Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory i.e. that they may enjoy my glory for Christ is not only glorious in himself but he is the spring of glory unto others now in this respect more especially is Christ our all in all he is all in himself and if we enjoy him he is all in all unto us To see a little into the state and condition of the Saints in glory in this enjoyment of Christ 1. They possess Christ as their own they go to Christ and they lay hold on him saying thou art mine It was indeed the language of the spouse whilst yet on earth I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine there 's a right and a propriety made over to her in her betrothing unto Christ but after the solemnity of the marriage is over the possession is then more full when once the spouse comes to behold Christ in his Kindgom she may then go boldly to her beloved and say all I see is my own I had thee in hope but now hope is vanished and actual enjoyment comes in place lo now I have thee in my eye and in my heart and in my hands and in my arms and as nothing shall separate us now for all our enemies are trod underfoot so never will I part with thee so far as to be out of my eye I will still behold thee and in beholding I will still possess thee for thou art mine own 2. They have the use of what they possess and this is an infinite good to the Saints they shall not only possess Christ but they shall have what use they will of Christ and of all in Christ they shall as they please make use of his humanity and of his Deity of his glorious Essence and of his glorious attributes O wonder that a Saint should come to Christ and say O my Lord thou art mine and my pleasure is to make use of thy wisdome power and mercy and that Christ should reply and say welcome sweet soul use me and all my glory as thou pleasest why thus it is even as a friend will say to his friend make use of all I have as your own so will Christ come to his Saints and bid them make use of all his riches glory excellency even as they will even to the utmost that they are capable of 3. They have the sweet and comfort of all they use and this makes up a compleat enjoyment In things below we may have the possession of them and the use thereof but if we have not the sweet and comfort of that we use we cannot be said truly or fully to enjoy those things what is the possession and use of meat and drink if we taste not the sweet of them Hence God is said to give us all things richly to enjoy no creature can give us richly to enjoy another one may give us such and such things wherein there may be comfort but he cannot give us comfort in such things it is only God that can give us that it is so with the Saints in glory God gives them all things yea Christ gives himself to them as all in all to enjoy him richly fully sweetly to the very uttermost This another way of beholding Christ it is a fruition or enjoyment of Christ wherein and whereby he is our all in all 4. It comprehends all the effects and consequents of such a beholding of his glory which are infinite delight and complacency in the will and all praise and thanksgiving in the mouthes of his Saints For the first It is disputed whether Eternal happiness be more in the acts of the understanding or if the Will and some conclude that it is principally in the will because that is an active appetite arid predominant in a man indeed the whole of a man oh the joy delight and complacency that will arise in the will upon the seeing and beholding of Jesus Christ they shall delight infinitely in the Essential glory of Christ and in the declared glory of Christ they shall delight in all that glory that is reflected upon Christ by all his creatures in heaven they shall delight in his presence and in his love Christ is all delights and how then should they but delight in Christ for the second as they delight in their wills so will their mouthes be filled with praises we read of Saints and Angels continually praising God in heaven there shall be none of our duties of mourning fasting praising humbling the acts of patience and justifying faith shall cease in heaven but the duty of praising and glorifying God will contiuue to all Eternity Methinks I see the Saints following the Lamb methinks I hear the familiar converses betwixt Christ and them as Christ opens himself to them so they to him first he begins Oh my dearest Saints you are they for whom before all time I decreed this heaven and now you see the execution of my decrees whiles the world stood I was still carrying on the work of your salvation either in doing or suffering or in successive works applying my doings and sufferings my active and passive obedience to your persons and now the World is at an end you see the end of my work and the end of your faith which is the Eternal Salvation of your souls Oh how I have my wish and you have your happiness here you and I will live together that I may for ever behold you and that you may for ever behold me and my glory which no sooner said but methinks I hear all those innumerable Saints in heaven to answer worthy is the Lamb that was slain Rev. 5.12 to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing and therefore unto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Rev. 1.6 Amen Yea methinks I hear every creature in heaven say blessing honour glory and power be unto him
Paradise Oh what a goodly sight is here In this meditation I may see with John Rev. 21.2 The new Jerusalem coming down from God out of heaven prepared as a Bride adorned for her husband Down comes Christ and down come the Angels and down come the spirits of the just made perfect and as they come along see how they shake the Heavens and dim and dark the very lights of Heaven see what a flood of fire goes before them see how they pass into the cloud where Christ makes a stand and erects a Throne for himself to sit on Sure 't will be a guilded glorious cloud when Christ with all his celestial servants shall sit upon it a mornings cloud guilded with the beams of the Sun is admirably fair and shining but what a shining cloud is that where the Sun of righteousness with all his morning stars do sit and shine here 's enough to dazzle my eyes and to take up my thoughts O my soul think on it 3. Consider Christ's summons of the Elect to come under judgment no sooner in the cloud but He shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds from the one end of heaven to another Will not this be a strange sight to see Christ a coming with Trumpets sounding before him causing all the dead to awaken out of their sleeps of death the very sound of this Trumpet was ever in Jerom's ears Arise ye dead and come to Judgment and no question but thy ears shall be filled with the blast thereof the Trumpet shall found that shall bp heard over all the World and then shall the dead arise out of their graves and every Saints soul shall re-enter into his own body by vertue of the resurrection of Christ their Head Can I pass this meditation without some reflection on my self O my soul how joyfully wilt thou greet thy body when thou shalt enliven it again how wilt thou say O my dear Sister whom I left behind me in the dust when I went to Heaven how sweet is thy carcass how comely is thy countenance how do I enter into thee and animate thee and I will never more leave thee thou wast my yoke-fellow in the Lords Labours and my companion in persecution and wrong now shall we enter together into our Masters joy see lift up thy head behold Jesus Christ yonder sitting in the cloud and lo here the Angels waiting on us and coming to take us with the rest of the Saints into the Air to meet our Redeemer there Could I but realize this summons this resurrection this meeting of the soul and body and going with the Angels into the judgment-seat oh how would it work and what work would it make within 4. Consider Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day oh how shall the Saints look and stare and gaze at the beauty of Jesus Christ oh how will they break out into admiration at the first view of those glories which never before appeared on this side Heaven is not this he will they say of whom we read so often that he was fairer than the sons of men that he was white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousands that his countenance was as Lebanon excellent as the Cedars glorious as when the Sun shineth in his strength but was ever the half told us of what now we see and behold O the super-excellent transcendent beauty of this Son of righteousness O the treasures of loveliness in this Jesus Christ never seen before And thus as they admire so they adore now they begin those Hallelujahs that never never shall have end they fall at the feet of Christ and the Lord Christ takes them up with his hands and folds them in his arms oh what mutual reciprocal salutations are these betwixt Christ and his members oh my head and oh my body oh my husband and oh my spouse oh my dear and oh my darling never two lovers met with such heat of love as Christ and his Saints come saith Christ and sit you down here at my right hand and let the world be on my left hand it was otherwise with you in your life-time my gold and my jewels were then cast in the dust you were then cloathed with infamy and the vilest of men were then guilded with honour but now I will set all right now the dust shall be swept away and the jewels of my Kingdom shall be gathered up now the Goats shall be driven into the desart and you who are the Sheep shall be brought into my fold Oh my soul what a meeting is this what a sight will this be to behold the Saints in this condition and thy self amongst them couldst thou but realize this one very passage it were enough to quench thy lust and to kindle a flame of pure love in thy heart to Jesus Christ it is a quickning rouzing rising rejoycing consideration 5. Consider Christ sentencing the Saints for eternal glory then shall the books be opened and all the good works of the Saints shall be revealed and made known and then shall the Judg from his Throne of Majesty in the sight and hearing of all the world pronounce that sentence Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world Mat. 25.34 q. d. Come my Saints come with me into glory come now from labour to rest from disgrace to glory from the jaws of death to the joys of eternal life for my sake ye have been railed on reviled and cursed but now it shall appear to all those cursed Esaus that you are the true Jacobs that shall receive the blessing and blessed shall you be come now and possess with me the inheritance of Heaven where you shall be for love Sons for birth-right heirs for dignity Kings for holiness Priests come you may boldly enter in for my Father hath prepared and kept it for you ever since the first foundation of the World was laid O my soul dost thou not remember when sometimes thou hast been at the feet of Christ in the beauty of holyness and there tookest in those droppings of his spirit which were better to thee than the feasts of Kings dost thou not remember when sometimes thou hast had the very beams of light darted from the face of Jesus Christ when he whispered to thy soul the forgiveness of thy sins saying Fear not thy sins shall not hurt thee I am thy salvation oh what joy was then what meltings movings stirrings leapings of heart were then in thy bosom but was that joy any thing to this or to be compared with this that was a drop but here 's an Ocean here 's fulness of joy oh what leapings of heart what ravishments will be within when thou shalt see thy self in the arms of Christ and shalt receive words of life from the mouth of Christ in the face of
excellencies meet together rest in Christ and Christ is all good things to all his Saints in Heaven he is Beauty to their Eyes Musick to their Ears Honey to their mouths Perfume to their Nostrils Health to their Bodyes Joy to their Souls Light to their Understandings Content to their Wills he is Time without sliding Society without loathing Desire without fainting Alpha and Omega the beginning and ending wanting both needing neither yet the Author of them both he is All in all from one not all Even all the Strength Wit Pleasure Vertues Colours Beauties Harmony and goodness that are in Men Beasts Fishes Fouls Trees Herbs and all Creatures are nothing but sparkles of those things which are in Christ Christ himself will then supply their use so that the best Creatures which now serve the Saints shall not have the honour to serve them then Rev. 21.23 There will be no need of the Sun nor of the Moon to shine in that City for the glory of God doth lighten it and the Lamb is the light thereof And hence the beholding of Christ is the All in all to his glorified Saints this was Christ's Prayer Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be with me where I am to what end John 17.24 that they may behold my glory Christ's heavenly presence is conspicuous he is not present as some things that are not seen and yet are present but his presence is or certainly shall be conspicuous to all his Saints when he was in the world his glory was covered under a mean outside he was like a bright light in a dark-Lanthern and there were very few that knew him then but in Heaven he shall be as a Cabinet opened or as the Sun in his full glory We shall know him as we are known and behold him face to face 1 John 3.2 and we shall see him as he is Nor only will he be conspicuous but his presence shall be vital a stone may be with us and seen clearly but there 's little in the sight of that in the beholding of Christ there will be an acting of kindness upon the Saints there will be visions with life and dear refreshing O the influences that the sight of Christ will have on his Saints in Heaven nor onely will he be conspicuous and vital but his presence shall be fixed he shall abide with the Saints that they may for ever behold him Oh if there was such running after Christ in this world some getting on hills and others on trees that they might behold him when he passed by what will the sight of Christ in Heaven be when he shall be alwayes in the eye of his Saints and never out of sight when they shall be alwayes viewing of him and be alwayes satisfied with that view nor only will he be conspicuous vital fixed but his very presence shall transform They shall see his face and they shall reign for ever and ever O the influence of this sight Revel 22.4 5. it is of such a transforming Nature that to see the King will make Kings this vision of glory amounts unto a fruition of glory if ever thou art a spectator of Christ thou art sure to be a partaker of Christ in all his glory I shall be satisfied Psal 17.15 1 John 3.2 when I awake with thy likeness It doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him why so for we shall see him as he is And no wonder for if the imperfect beholding of his glory in the glass of his Gospel change the soul into the same image from glory to glory how much more shall the full view of his glory in Heaven transform both the souls and bodies of his Saints into a fulness of glory 1 Cor. 13.12 Here then is the top of Heaven here is the All in all here is the satisfaction of souls to the very uttermost if Christs glory in his transfiguration was so satisfactory to Peter as that he desired his sight of it might never have end or interruption O it is good to be here let us here build Tabernacles and yet Peter was onely a spectator of this glory for he had himself no share in it O then what infinite satisfaction mayst thou expect in the beholding of Christ's Glory in Heaven which will be accompanyed with an everlasting enjoyment the lusture of his glory will be diffused unto all so that some shall enjoy the glory of the Sun others of the Moon and others of the Stars O my soul if thou art but a Star there yet if thou art filled with that light that comes from the Sun of righteousness it is enough O remember oh consider oh never forget this Looking unto Jesus as it is thy duty on Earth so it is thy priviledge and highest happiness in Heaven for ever and ever SECT III. Of desiring after Jesus in that respect 3. LET us desire after Jesus carrying on this work of man's Salvation at his second coming It is true many shrink at the thoughts of death and judgment and 't is an high pitch to desire the dissolution of our selves and of this world the best Christians are compounded of flesh and spirit and if the spirit long to be in Heaven yet the Flesh is loath to leave this Earth Speak out of my soul thou prayest daily Come Lord Jesus let thy Kingdome come but is not the Flesh afraid lest God should hear thy Prayers Oh that we could loath our loathness in that respect oh that we could long for this second coming of Christ to Judgment And Christians this is attainable or otherwise I should not perswade you to it Phil. 1 2â I am in a strait said Paul between two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better And this is the voice of the desolate Bride Come for the spirit of Christ within her saith come The Spirit and the Bride say come Yea the whole Creation saith come Rev. 12.17 Rom. 8 21 23. Waiting to be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God and not onely they but our selves also which have the first-fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body Oh that we could groan oh that we could come up to this high pitch even to sigh out not our breath but our spirits even to groan out not some vapours but our hearts I know it is suitable to flesh and blood to tremble at the thoughts of judgment When Paul reasoned of righteousness temperance and of Judgment to come Felix trembled Acts 24.25 Weak Christians as well as Heathens may have many terrible fancies and notions of that day Oh to think of a time When there shall be a great earthquake Rev. 6.12 13 14 15 16 17 when the Sun shall become
shall thy God rejoyce over thee look how the joy of a Bridgroom is over his Bride upon the wedding-day surely then if ever all is love and joy so is Christ's joy over his Saints at the last day then begins that joy that never never shall have end there shall be no moment of time wherein Christ will not rejoyce over his Saints for ever after 9. It is the day of Christs perfection Christ as Mediator is not fully perfect till all his members be in glory united to him As an head that wants an arm or hand or leg we say is lame so it is a kind of mistical lameness that Christ our head hath not with him all his members the Saints are little pieces of mystical Christ and it shall not be well till Christ gather in his arms and thighs and pull them nearer to himself in glory and is not this desirable to see the Lord Jesus Christ as Head of the Church in his perfection to see the Son of righteousness with every beam united to him O desirable day Hos 2.18 10. It is Christ's Wedding-day or the Marriage day of the Lamb. The Saints are betrothed to Christ when first they believe in Christ that is Christ's word I will betroth thee unto me Cant. 4.10 and thou art my sister my spouse not my Wife thou art not yet married onely contracted here but at that day the marriage of the Lamb will be compleat and then will the voyce be heard Rev. 19.7 Let us be glad and rejoyce and give honour to him for the marriage of the Lamb is come and his Wife hath made her self ready O the joy that Christ and Saints and Angels and all that belong to Heaven will make at this marriage Blessed are they that are called to the Marriage-supper of the Lamb. One of the seven Angels that came to John in visions Rev. 21 9. talked with him saying Come hither and I will shew thee the Bride the Lambs Wife If the espoused Virgin be willing to be married how is it that we cry not Come Lord Jesus come quickly 1 Cor. 5.24 11. It is Christ's day of presenting his Saints unto his Father he delivers up the Kingdom to God even the Father Then shall he take his Bride by the hand and bring her to his house and present her in all state and solemnity to the Father Is not this a desirable day surely Christ rejoyceth and his very heart even springs again to present his Church unto his Father Father here behold my Bride that I have marryed unto my self It is true a Child may sometimes marry such a one as he may be ashamed to think of bringing to his Fathers house but how mean and sinful soever we are of our selves when once we are marryed unto Christ he will not think it any dishonour no not before his Father that he hath such a bride Father will he say lo here all my Saints of all that thou hast given me I have lost none but the children of perdition these are mine dearly bought thou knowest the price O welcome them to glory 12. It is the day of Christ's glory What glorious descriptions have we in scripture of Christs coming to Judgment The Son of man shall come from heaven with power and great glory and the work no sooner done Math. 24.30 but he shall return again into Heaven with power and great glory Not to mention the essential glory of Christ O the glory of Christ as Mediator all the glory that Ahashuerus could put upon his favourites was nothing to this spiritual and heavenly glory which the Father will put upon the Son it is a glory above all the glories that ever were or ever shall be it is an eternal glory not but that Christ shall at last give up his Kingdom to his Father he shall no more discharge the acts of an Advocate or intercessor for us in heaven onely the glory of this shall alwayes continue it shall to all eternity be recorded that he was the Mediator and that he is the Saviour that hath brought us to life and immortality and upon this ground the tongues of all the Saints shall be imployed to all eternity to celebrate this glory This will be their everlasting Song Vnto him that loved us Rev. 1.5 6. and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen Now is not this a desirable thing do we believe there is such a thing as Christ's mediatory glory and Christ's essential glory as Christ's humane glory and Christ's divine glory and have we no desires to behold this glory surely Christ himself desired it of God he would have his Saints with him where he is that they might behold his glory and shall not we desire it whom it most concerns O the sweet temper of the spouse when she cryed out Cant. 8.14 Make haste my beloved and be thou like a Roe or to a young Hart upon the mountains of spices Come now and run over these particulars surely every one is motive enough to desire this day it is a day of refreshing a day of restoring a day of manifestation of the sons of God a day of adoption and of the redemption of our bodyes a day of Christs coming of Christ's revealing of Christ's appearing of Christ's joy of Christ's perfection of Christ's Wedding of Christ's presenting of his Saints of Christ's glory what are we not yet in a longing frame the wife of youth that wants her husband for some years and expects that he should return from over Sea-lands she is often on the shore her very heart loves the wind that should bring him home every Ship in view that is but a drawing near the shore is her new joy and new reviving hopes she asks of every passenger O saw you my husband what is he a doing when will he come is he not yet Shipped and ready for a return souls truly related to the Lord Jesus Christ should methinks long no less O what desire should the Spirit and the Bride have to hear when Christ shall say to his Angels Make you ready for the journey let us go down and divide the skies and bow the Heavens I 'le gather my prisoners of hope unto me I cannot want my Rachel and her weeping Children any longer behold I come quickly to judge the Nations Methinks every spouse of Christ should love the quarter of the sky that being rent asunder should yield unto her husband methinks she should love that part of the heavens where Christ puts through his glorious hand and comes riding on the Rain-bow and Clouds to receive her to himself I conclude this with the conclusion of the Bible He that testifieth these things saith surely I come quickly Amen Even so Rev. 22.20 come Lord Jesus SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that
in a peculiar and eminent manner the day of redemption And grieve not the holy spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption Eph. 4.30 1 John 3.2 3. They must be adopted It is true they are adopted in this life We are now the Sons of God saith the Apostle yet it doth not appear what we shall be the glory which Christ will put upon us at the last day is so far transcendent and superlative to what now we are that we know not what we shall be sons and more than sons and therefore the Apostle calls the last day Rom. 8.23 the day of adoption 4. They must be justified I know they were justified by Faith before and this justification was evidenced to some of their consciences but now shall they be justified fully by the lively voice of the Judge himself now shall their justification be solemnly and publickly declared to all the world The Syriack word to justifie is also to conquer because when a man is justified he overcomes all those bills and indictments which were brought in against him now this is manifestly done in the day of judgment when Christ shall before Men and Angels acquit and absolve his people oh what a glorious conquest will that be over Sin Death and Hell when the judge of the whole World shall pronounce them free from all Sin and from all those miserable effects of Sin Death Hell and Dominion 5. They must inherit the Kingdom prepared for them so is the sentence at that day Come ye Blessed Mat. 25.34 inherit the Kingdom Not only are they freed from Hell but they must inherit Heaven Now herein is an high step of salvation and a great part of the design of Christ's coming to bring his Saints into Heaven he went thither before to prepare it for them and now he comes again to give them the possession of it come enter into heaven Heaven what is Heaven surely it is not one single Palace but a City a Metropolis a Mother-City the first City of God's creation When the Angel carried John in the spirit to a great and high Mountain Rev. 21.10 11. he shewed him the great City the holy Jerusalem descending out of heaven from God having the glory of God But a City is too little Luke 12.32 therefore it s more it s a Kingdom Fear not little Flock it s your Fathers good pleasure to give you the Kingdom and at this last day he bids his Saints to inherit the Kingdom Luke 20.34 35 36. Or if a Kingdom be too little it is called a World the Children of this world marry and are given in marriage but they which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection from the dead neither marry nor are given in marriage neither can they dye any more There 's another world besides this and for eminency it is called the world to come O the bredth and largeness of that world as the greater circle must contain the less Heb. 6.5 so doth that world contain this alas all our dwellings here are but as caves under the earth and holes of poor clay in comparison In the bosome of that Heaven is many a dwelling place John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many mansions there lodges many thousand of glorious Kings O what fair fields and mountains of roses and spices are there surely gardens of length and bredth above millions of miles are nothing in comparison O the Vines the Lillies the Roses the precious Trees that grow in Immanuel's land an hundred harvests in one year are nothing there The lowest stones in every mansion there are precious stones Rev. 21.18 the very building of the wall about it is Jasper and the City is pure gold like unto clear glass O glorious inheritance Tell me Christians in what City on Earth do men walk upon gold or dwell within the walls of Gold though none such here yet under the feet of the inhabitants of Heaven there is Gold All the streets and fields of that City Kingdom World Rev. 21.21 are pure gold as it were transparent glass But alas what speak I of Gold or Glass all these are but shadows indeed and in truth there is nothing so low as Gold or precious Stones there is nothing so base in this high and glorious Kingdom as Gardens Trees or Roses comparisons are but created shadows that come not up to express the glory of the thing I shall therefore leave to speak this because unspeakable 6. They must live with Christ in heaven they must see and enjoy Christ there to all eternity This is a main end of Christs coming I will come again John 14.3 John 17.24 and receive you unto my self that where I am there ye may be also And Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold the glory which thou hast given me O let faith eye this above all the former what will my Saviour come again and shall I see his face Oh what a pleasant sight will this same be if Heaven if the inheritance be such a wonder to the beholders what a beauty is that which is in the samplar oh what an happiness to stand besides that dainty precious Prince in Heaven to see the King on his Throne to see the Lamb the fair Tree of life the flowre of Angels the spotless Rose that Crown the Garland the joy of Heaven the wonder of wonders for eternity oh what a life to see the precious Tree of life to see a multitude without quantity of the Apples of glory to see love it self and to be warmed with the heat of immediate love that comes out from the precious heart and bowels of Jesus Christ Oh what a dearness to see all relations meet in one to see the Saviour the good Shepheard the Redeemer the great Bishop of our souls the Angel of the Covenant the Head of the body of the Church the King of ages the Prince of peace the Creator of the ends of the Earth the Song of Angels and glorified Saints Not only must they see Christ but they shall enjoy him whom they see they fly with doves-wings of beauty after the Lamb and in flying after him they lay hold upon him and they will not leave him they can never have enough of the chaste fruition of the glorious Prince Immanuel and they never want his in-most presence to the full they suck the honey and the hony-comb they drink of the floods of eternal consolations and fill all empty desires and as if the souls of Saints were without bottom a fresh they suck again to all eternity Now ãâã is salvation indeed the soul that attains this full enjoyment is saved to the uttermost 3. In respect of Christ himself that he may be glorified Now in two things more especially will he be glorified at that day 1. In his justice 2.
be one person and in that person he was born and lived and died and rose again and ascended into Heaven there now he hath been sitting sending down the Holy Ghost and interceding for his Saints for above one thousand six hundred years And in this last work he will continue till the end of the World and then he will come again to judge the World and to receive his Saints to himself that where he is they may be with him to see and enjoy him to all eternity This is the epitome of all I have said onely in every particular I have set down Christ's actings towards us and our actings towards Christ in various formes and out-goings of his love he hath acted towards us and in various formes and out-goings of our souls we have been taught fitly and suitably to act towards him Now in all these actings How doth the free grace of God in Christ appear Ye are saved by grace Ephes 2.5 saith the Apostle Eph. 2.5 the decree the means the end of our salvation is grace and onely grace The decree is grace and therefore it is called the election of grace Rom. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 3.24 Rom. 6.23 Eph. 1.7 Eph. 2.7 the means are of grace and therefore we are called according to his grace and we are justified freely by his grace And the end is of grace for eternal life is the gift of God both beginning and progress and execution is all of grace This is the riches of his grace the exceeding the hyperbolical riches of his grace the conclusion of all is this God's free grace which was first designed will at last be manifested and eternally praised by Saints and Angels the same free grace which from the beginning of the age of God from everlasting drove on the saving plot and sweet design of our salvation will at last be glorified to purpose when Heavens inhabitants will be ever digging into this golden-mine ever rolling this soul-delighting and precious stone ever beholding viewing enquiring and searching into the excellency of this same Christ and this free grace Now all is done shall I speak a word for Christ or rather for our selves in relation to Christ and so an end if I had but one word more to speak in the World it should be this Oh let all our spirits be taken up with Christ let us not busie our selves too much with toyes or trifles with ordinary and low things but look unto Jesus Surely Christ is enough to fill all our thoughts desires hopes loves joys or whatever is within us or without us Christ alone comprehends all the circumference of all our happiness Christ is the pearl hid in the large field of God's Word Christ is the scope of all the Scriptures all things and persons in the old World were Tipes of him all the Prophets foretold him all God's love runs through him all the gifts and graces of the Spirit flow from him the whole eye of God is upon him and all his designs both in Heaven and Earth meet in him Eph. 1.10 the great design of God is this That he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him All things are summed up in one Jesus Christ if we look on the creation the whole world was made by Christ if we look on providences all things subsist in Christ they have their being and their well-being in him Where may we find God but in Christ where may we see God but in this essential and eternal glass 2 Cor. 4.6 Heb. 1.3 Christ is the face of God the brightness of his glory the express image of his Fathers person the Father is as it were all Sun and all Pearl and Jesus Christ is the substantial rayes the eternal and essential irradiation of this Sun of glory Christ outs God as the seal doth the stamp Christ reveals God as the face of a man doth reveal the man so Christ to Philip He that hath seen me hath seen the Father q. d. I am as like the Father John 14.9 as God is like himself there is a perfect indivisible unity between the Father and me I and the Father are one one very God he the begetter and I the begotten Christ is the substantial Rose that grew out of the Father from eternity Christ is the essential wisdom of God Christ is the substantial Word of God the intellectual birth of the Lord 's infinite understanding Oh the worth of Christ compare we other things with Christ and they will bear no weight at all cast into the ballance with him Angels they are wise but he is wisdom cast into the ballance with him men they are lyars lighter than vanity but Christ is the Amen the faithful witness cast into the scales Kings and all Kings and all their glory why he is King of Kings cast into the scale millions of tallents-weight of glory cast in two Worlds and add to the weight millions of Heavens of Heavens and the ballance cannot down the scales are unequal Christ out-weighs all Shall I yet come nearer home what is Heaven but to be with Christ what is life eternal but to believe in God and in his Son Jesus Christ where may we find peace with God and reconciliation with God but onely in Christ God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 where may we find compassion mercy and gentleness to sinners but onely in Christ it is Christ that takes off infinite wrath and satisfies justice and so God is a most lovely compassionate desirable God in Jesus all the goodness of God comes out of God through this golden pipe the Lord Jesus Christ It is true those essential attributes of love grace mercy goodness are onely in God and they abide in God yet the Mediatory manifestation of love grace mercy and goodness is onely in Christ Christ alone is the Treasury Store-house Magazene of the free goodness and mercy of the God-head In him we are Elected Adopted Redeemed Justified Sanctified Saved he is the ladder and every step of it betwixt Heaven and Earth he is the way the truth and the life he is honour riches beauty health peace and salvation he is a suitable and rich portion to every man's soul that which some of the Jews observe of the Mannah that it was in taste according to every man's pallate it is really true of Christ that he is to the Soul whatsoever the soul would have him to be All the spiritual blessings wherewith we are enriched are in and by Christ God hears our prayers by Christ God forgives our iniquities through Christ all we have and all we expect to have hangs onely on Christ he is the golden hinge upon which all our salvation turns Oh how should all hearts be taken with this Christ Christians turn your eyes upon the Lord Look and look again unto Jesus Why stand ye gazing on the toyes of this World when such a Christ is offered to you in the Gospel can the World dye for you can the World reconcile you to the Father can the World advance you to the Kingdom of Heaven As Christ is all in all so let him be the full and compleat subject of our desire and hope and faith and love and joy let him be in your thoughts the first in the morning and the last at night Shall I speak one word more to thee that believest Oh apply in particular all the transactions of Jesus Christ to thy very self remember how he came out of his Fathers bosom for thee wept for thee bled for thee poured out his life for thee is now risen for thee gone to Heaven for thee sits at God's right hand and rules all the World for thee makes intercession for thee and at the end of the World will come again for thee and receive thee to himself to live with him for ever and ever Surely if thus thou believest and livest thy life is comfortable and thy death will be sweet if there be any Heaven upon Earth thou wilt find it in the practise and exercise of this Gospel-duty in Looking unto Jesus A Poem of Mr. George Herbert in his Temple JESV JESV is in my heart his sacred Name Is deeply carved there but th' other week A great affliction broke the little frame Ev'n all to pieces which I went to seek And first I found the corner where was J After where ES and next where V was graved When I had got these parcels instantly I sate me down to spell them and perceived That to my broken heart he was I ease you and to my whole is JESV FINIS