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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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Law and the Gospell and inwardly the Spirit of Christ. The instrument of receiving it in respect of the generall will of God is the understanding or in respect of the promise of grace it is faith The Law is a light Prov. 6.23 of the light of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 2 Cor. 4.6 Knowledge is light Act. 26.18 and of the light of faith Ioh. 8.12 Eternall light is the light of heaven where the inheritance of the Saints lieth Col. 1.12 Revel 18.19 It is the spirituall light upon the soules of men the light of knowledge and faith is here specially meant which is conveyed and increased by the Gospell Doct. The point then hence is cleare That Gods servants in comparison of their former condition are brought into great light The spirituall light shineth upon every one that is to be converted Act. 26.18 God hath promised light to every penitent sinner Iob 33.28 30. Esa. 42.16 and Christ was given to be the light both of Jewes and Gentiles Esa. 42.7 and 49.6 Hence it is that Christians are said to bee the children of light Luk. 16.18 Io● 12.36 yea light it selfe Eph. 5.6 the lights of the world Phil. 2.15 And thus they are so by reason of the light of Jesus Christ shining in their hearts through the knowledge and beliefe of the Gospel All the world is like unto Egypt 〈◊〉 with darknesse and the godly are like the children of Israel in Goshen Use. The use may be first for instruction to the godly since they are called to such light by Christ they should First beleeve in the light since they see now what they doe they should establish their hearts in the first place in the assurance of Gods love since his shining favour sheweth it selfe in the Gospel Secondly they should doe the workes that belong to the light they may now see what to doe and therefore ought not to bee idle but to worke while they have the light 1 Ioh. 2.8 And to that end they should daily come to the light that it may be manifest that their workes are wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 And they should now abound in all goodnesse and justice or righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.8 9. proving what that acceptable will of God is vers 10. Thirdly they should therefore cast away the workes of darknesse and have no fellowship with the children of the night but rather reprove them Eph. 5.7 to 14. For what fellowship betweene light and darknesse 2 Cor. 6.17 Fourthly they should in all difficulties and ignorances pray to God to shew forth his light and truth seeing they are called to light Psal. 43.3 Use 2. Secondly godly men should hence bee comforted and that in divers respects First though they may have many distresses in their estates yet light is risen to their soules though they may for a season suffer some eclipse of their comfort yet light is sowne for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart Psalm 97.11 and the more they should be glad of their portion in light when they bebold the daily ruines of ungodly men The light of the righteous rejoyceth when the lampe of the wicked is put out Prov. 13.9 In 2 Corin. 4.4 6. there are three reasons of consolations assigned First the light wee have should comfort us if wee consider how many men have their mindes blinded by the god of this world and of those many of them great wise and learned men Secondly if we consider what darknesse we have lived in God hath done as great a worke upon our hearts as hee did when he commanded the light to shine out of darknesse in the beginning of the world Thirdly if we consider what glorious things are revealed unto us for by the Gospel he hath caused to shine in our hearts the knowledge of the glory of God c. Finally it is the more comfortable in that the Apostle calls this light marvellous light which is now in the next place to be opened Marvellous light The spirituall light which shines in the hearts of the godly by the Gospel is a marvellous light either because it is such as the godly doe marvell at or because it is such as they ought to marvell and wonder at When men first enter into the truth that is when they are first converted Christians being for the most part full of affections as they that have scaped lately singular danger and as they that never before saw the Kings Court they are frequently stirred up with admiration at the glory of the Gospel they wonder at and are vehemently affected with the new discovery of the riches of Christ shewed them in the preaching of the Gospel and thus it is a marvellous light in this sense Esa. 30.26 But I rather consider of it in the other sense It is a marvellous light though wee should not have the heart to bee so affected towards it it is marvellous I say First because it is a light that needed the Mediator to procure it none but Christ can give us this light Other light is free wee pay nothing for it but this is carried in the hand of the Mediatour to us and for us Esa. 42. 4● Secondly because it commeth after so long a night of ignorance and sinne they must needs account the light precious that have not seene it a long time as blind men when they receive fight Esa. 9.2 Matt. 4.16 Thirdly and more because it is a light commanded to shine out of darkenesse 2 Cor. 4.6 That God should call light out of such darknesse as wa● in our hearts is marvellous Fourthly in comparison with the times of the Law and the shadows of the Old Testament Fifthly because it is a light comes not from any creature but from God the Creator God is our light Esa. 6.19 And in this respect this light is like the light that shone about Paul Act. 22.6 Sixthly because it is a light that shines at the time of the evening of this world That the Sunne should shine in the day time is no wonder but that it should shine in the night or at evening were a dreadfull wonder even so it is in this last age of the vorld Zech. 14.7 Seventhly because it is a knowledge above the reach of reason it is the light of faith Eighthly because it shines onely to the godly It is light in Goshen when there is no light in Egypt that was marvellous and so is it when we see the light shining all abroad and many men sit in darknesse even in the same place in the same congregation city or family When the godly see clearly the wicked discerne nothing light is with-held from the wicked Ninthly because it hath more force than any other light for it is the light of life it quickens the soule and enlives it Ioh. 8.12 Lastly because it is an everlasting light it is such a day as no night followeth it The consideration of all this should worke divers things in us
our spirits though it be true that the glory of Gods image shines through the body of man as the light doth through the lanthorne in respect whereof the outward man is said to bee made after Gods image but else properly onely the man of the heart is capable of that preferment to be made like God For the fourth point The man of the heart by nature is in a most wofull condition though in those general things before mentioned he excels the outward His miserie will appear if we throughly consider either what he is in his qualities or what he doth in his worke or what he suffers in that estate If you inquire after his qualities by nature first he is vaine Ephes. 4.18 yea so vaine as the outward man dares not act what the man of the heart entertaines Secondly he is foule as Solomon saith Who can say I have made my heart cleane Yea he is so foule that it is as hard a worke to make the he art of one man cleane as to create a world anew Hence David said O Lord create in me a cleane heart Psal. 51. Thirdly he is uncircumcised and altogether indisposed to matters of religion he is slow and hard to beleeve uncapable and unteachable and makes not use of the very first businesse in the entrance into religion Ier. 9.26 1 Cor. 2.14 Fourthly hee is deceitfull above all things hee can bee trusted in nothing Ier. 17.9 Fiftly he is verie unquiet and never enjoyes any sound peace nor is pleased with any condition and oftentimes hee is like the raging Sea Isa. 57. These are his qualities some of them His workes he doth are most abominable for 1. Hee is alwaies imagining mischiefe the whole frame of his thoughts is onely evill continually Gen. 6. There is a world of wickednesse in him ev●ry day 2. That hee may bee wicked the more securely he imprisons the truth and laies hold upon all the principles in his head that might any way disturbe his course in sin and locks them up in restraint Rom. 1.18 3. He resists the spirit and proclaimes enmitie to God and gets out of the way that so the heart may be farre from God and further the more to provoke God he chooseth strange gods which he daily entertaines and gives unto them what is due unto God These are they are called by the Prophet the Idols of the heart Ezech. 14. And finally he is the authour of all the mischiefes are done by the outward man for it is he that gives wicked lawes to the members and makes the outward man doe all the villanies we see are done in the world Mat. 15. Rom. 7. And as he is most wretched in what he is and doth so is hee in what he suffers for first he is smitten with a most wofull Lethargie alwaies given to sleeping and in danger to go to Hell in any of these sleepes And besides he lives in the darke it is alwaies night with him he never sees day Rom. 13.11 and besides the Divell possesseth him and hath raised strong Holds and fortified himselfe within him 2 Cor. 10.4 and lastly he is an abomination to the Lord. As nothing is more esteemed of God than the man of the Heart if hee bee right so nothing is more loathsome to God if he be wicked Prov. 11.20 Now for the fifth point If any aske what must be done that the man of the Heart may be mended and made right I answer 1. The heart most be prepared prepared I say to returne to God 1 Sam. 7.3 Now the heart is prepared two waies first by a sound confession of the sinnes of the heart when a man acknowledgeth the plague of his evill heart before God 1 Kings 8.38 secondly b● earnest prayer to God to direct the heart and set it in order and bow i● and incline it to goodnesse 2 Thes. 3.5 Now it is certaine that even these workes of preparation are not neglected of God for hee heareth the preparations of the heart Psal. 10.17 2. It must bee stored with sacred notions and knowledges out of the Word of God The Law must bee written in the heart the Word of God in the sound knowledge of it must be hidden there Psal. 119.11 Ier. 31.33 Esay 51.7 for these sacred notions have a power to master and order the heart 3. It must bee washed and purified It must bee soundly rinsed in the teares of true repentance and then it will become very acceptable to God through the merits of Christ a●d his mediation Iames 4.8 Ier. 4.14 God greatly delights in the heart when it is broken and contrite Psal. 34.19 147.3 51.17 Now for the last point The man of the heart is then right when 1. It is true Heb. 10.22 that is when it is without the guile of fraud and dissimulation when it is as it seemes to be in religion when it had rather be good than seeme so 2. It is cleane for Blessed are the pure in heart Mat. 5. Psal. 51.12 24.4 It is a signe the man of the heart is right when it is freed from the liking and residence of naturall filthinesse it was given to and when that continuall frame of vile thoughts and lusts is dissolved especially when it strives after inward purity as well as outward 3. When it is sound in Gods Statutes Psal. 119.80 And so it is first when it is carefull to get warrant for every action from the Word and seeketh doctrine and instruction and to that end comes to the light Pro. 15.14 18.15 Secondly when it submitteth it selfe to the forme of doctrine into which it is delivered The heart is sound in the Word when a man doth from his heart consent to obey and striveth to follow the directions daily given out of the Word Rom. 6.17 especially when it is perfect with God and so it is when it is a willing heart and hath respect to all Gods Commandements and desires to live in no sin 1 Chron. 28.9 4. When the full purpose of the heart is to cleave to God for ever Acts 11.23 And thus of the man of the heart or what is to be apparelled and adorned With what it must be adorned followeth and in generall it must be adorned with that which is incorruptible In that which is not corruptible Foure things may be noted in these words two of them are implied two of them more expresse Doct. 1. That the things belonging to the outward man are corruptible All things that concerne him are ●o for first his substance is corruptible All flesh is grasse 1 Pet. 1.24 so Iob 14.1.2 and besides all his glory is as th● flower of the field His riches pleasures honour strength beauty health and all he any way accounts his glory it all will corrupt for either vanitie will consume it or violence will take it away 1 Pet. 1.24 1 Iohn 2.17 Mat. 6.19 20. All earthly things are vanity and vexation of
preservation of life we have need of many things as first we need meat drinke raiment sleep marriage physicke the light of the Sun by day and the Moone by night Yea the life of grace though it consist not in these things yet in a remote consideration hath need of these that we may be the better able to serve God in body and soule But in heaven we shall need none of these we shall be as the Angels of heaven and God himselfe shall there be all in all and shall fill us with his goodnesse 1 Cor. 15.28 Our life shall subsist in God himselfe who shall satisfie us out of the plenty of his owne glory In that Citie there will be no need of the Sun to shine by day or of the Moone to give light by night for the glory of the Lord doth lighten it and the Lamb shall be the light thereof and there shall bee no night there Rev. 21.23 22.5 Secondly in this world wee need the helpe of superiours as Kings Rulers Parents Husbands Teachers c. But in that world inferiority and subjection shall cease when we shall sit downe with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the kingdome of God Mat. 8.11 and so all the first things shall then be done away Rev. 21.4 Thirdly in this world we need spirituall meanes for our soules and the help of divers gifts in the Spirit which serve for our furtherance in the way to eternall life Our soules cannot live without a Temple on earth without the Word and Prayer and Sacraments but in that new Jerusalem St. Iohn saw no Temple in it there is no preaching nor praying there we shall not need any nor have cause to mourne for the want of it as many times we doe now for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the Temple thereof● from God we shall have an infinite supply in stead of all these things Rev. 21.22 Here we treat with God by meanes at a great distance there we shall enjoy him immediately yea those gifts of the Spirit that suppose imperfection in us or misery in others shall there be done away The gifts that suppose imperfection in us are faith and hope and repentance we shall not need promises to imply either faith or hope because all shall then be performed and we shall have actuall possession 1 Cor. 13. ult Nor shall we need sorrow for our sins because all our iniquities shall then be done away The gifts that suppose misery or sin in others are such as these holy feare anger jealousie care hatred griefe pitie or such like now all these shall then be put off for ever because in that kingdome shall be nothing that is either uncleane or wretched or in danger to fall away Yet notwithstanding this hinders not but that God may delight the soules of his people by wayes unknowne to us after a most glorious maner which seemes to be shadowed out by eating of the tree of life which beares so often fruit and by drinking of the water of life which runs like a river pure as chrystall and proceeds from the Throne of God Rev. 21.6 22.1 For the third There is great difference betweene the company with whom we live here and those with whom we shall live there and that in seven things As first in the sorts of peoples Here our life is made grievous by the evill ones that either molest us with their oppositions or grieve us with their wickednesse or infect us with their evill examples but there shall be no wicked ones no Divels to tempt us no divellish mento slander us or persecute us no abominable persons either to grieve or pollute us All these enemies shall be cast into the Lake of fire Rev. 11.8 20.4 22.14 wee shall never be troubled with them more and the people there are all righteous Esay 60.23 Secondly in the dignity of the friends we shall finde in heaven They are usually but meane persons we must sort withall here but there they are such as exceed all the glory of this world our friends and companions shall be glorious Angels and blessed Patriarkes and Kings and Prophets and Apostles and the Martyrs of Jesus and in generall all weare Crownes of glory Thirdly in respect of the number of our friends Here we have scarce one friend we have reason much to admire or can safely relie upon there we shall have an innumerable company of Angels of the spirits of just men a huge congregation of the first borne even the generall assembly of all Gods elect Heb. 12.22 23. Fourthly in respect of disposition both theirs and our owne Here our life with our friends is made often grievous by reason of envie suspition offence passion pride forgetfulnesse and private discords or our owne indisposition at some times to take delight in the presence of our friends but in heaven the spirits of just men are made perfect Heb. 12.23 and charity will be enflamed on all hands to performe exactly all those properties mentioned 1 Cor. 13. Fiftly in respect of constancy Our friends her● are not only mortall and must leave us but mutable and may forsake us but there all the company is immortall and being perfec●ly sanctified are as God himselfe immurable and so their love is not only perfect but everlasting charity there will abide for ever 1 Cor. 13. ult Sixtly in power to content us and satisfie us Alas here on earth many things befall us wherein our friends though they would yet they cannot help us but in heaven there is all-sufficiency of power to solace and content one another ●o all eternity Lastly in their relation to us On earth we lose daily such as are neere and d●●re to us in heaven we shall have them all and it is very probable we shall know them all and one by one Adam in his innocency knew his wife and could call her by her name without any body to tell him And Peter and Iohn in the Transfiguration on the Mount knew Moses and Elias and yet had never seene them how much more in heaven shall our knowledge be perfected to know and to be knowne perfectly and as it were by name For the fourth Our knowledge which is our life differs greatly now from that it shall be both in respect of the ground of it and in respect of the manner of it and in respect of the measure of it The ground of it is our union with God by which we partake of his light Psal. 36.8 Now in heaven we shall be made one with God after an unspeakable manner in such a neerenesse as we cannot conceive of now This is that which our Saviour praies so earnestly for Ioh. 17.20 21. Secondly in respect of the manner of it Now God treate with us by meanes as by the Word and Sacraments c. but then without meanes immediately Now we see by the help of a glasse or as an old man doth by Spectacles but
verse 7 this effect is both propounded and amplified propounded in those words The tryall of your faith amplified 1. by comparison with go●d tri●d in the f●rnace 2. by the event it will be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The second objection might be made thus Wee know not whether the former comforts belong to us to which the Apostle answers by giving three signes by which men may try themselves 1. The love of Christ whom they have not seene 2. Beleeving 3. The unspeakable and glorious joyes of the Holy Ghost verse 8. The end of all which is the salvation of their soules verse 9. Thus of the Prolepsis the testimonie of holy men fo●●owes where consider five things 1. Wh●●e s●●i fie In generall Prophets In speciall those Prophets which were app●●●●ed to testifie of the grace that should come unto us Christians 2. 〈…〉 prec●●●nes to furnish themselves for the knowledg of the things they testified They searched inquired diligently 3. The question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall 〈…〉 of salvation verse 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. The 〈…〉 them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the Holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow 5. The successe and that is that they were answered of God where observe two things 1. The manner of the giving the answer it was by revelation Unto whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which concernes both Persons and Things The persons are considered negatively and so they were resolved that they themselves were not the men to whom those glories did belong and affirmatively that they did minister those things unto us Christians Now the things promised are not onely propounded but commended and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes which were lesse principall the Apostles and more principall the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels which things the Angels desire to looke into Hitherto of the consolation The exhortation followes from ver 13. to the end where observe 1. The things unto which they are exhorted verse 13. 2. The reasons by which the exhortation is inforced The things to which he doth exhort are three 1. The first concernes the renovation of the mind Girde up the loynes of your minde 2. The second concernes the moderation of life be sober 3. The third concernes the confirmation of their hope Trust perfectly upon the grace to be brought c. ver 13. The reasons follow and they are 6. in number taken from the consideration 1. Of the Image of God verses 14 15 16. 2. Of the judgement of God verse 17. 3. Of the redemption in Christ verses 18 19 20 21. 4. Of the relation to the godly verse 22. 5. Of the immortality of the soule verse 23. 6. And sixtly of the mortality of the body verses 24 25. The first reason taken from the Image of God is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children expounded two waies 1. by description 2. by testimonie By description 1. negatively shewing what they should sh●nne Not fashioning your selves to the lusts of your former ignorance ver 14. 2. He sets it out affirmatively both by shewing the patterne to be imitated viz the holinesse of him that called them and also the manner of imitation viz to be holy in all manner of conversation ver 15. In the testimonie two things are to bee noted 1. Whence the proofe was fetched in these words As it is written and 2. what was alledged viz Be yee holy as I am holy ver 16. The second reason is taken from the judgement of God where note 1. The proposition of the reason viz Hee that yee call upon as Father c. 2. The inference or use of the same viz Passe the time of your sojourning in feare In the proposition consider 1. Who shall be judge viz he that was called upon as a Father 2. How he shall judge viz without respect of persons 3. Whom he shall judge viz every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz according to their workes verse 17. The third reason is taken from the consideration of our redemption and this reason should move the more 1. Because all the precious things in the world could not redeeme man verse 18. 2. Because the deliverance from our vaine conversation was one of the maine ends of our redemption verse 18. 3. Because our redemption was effected by a matchlesse price viz the passion of Christ which is increased 1. In that it was a suffering even to the effusion of blood 2. that it was a suffering of one that was so infinitely pure without spot or blemish verse 19. 4. Because our redemption was ordained in Gods counsell ver 20. 5. Because the honor of manifesting Christ in the cleare preaching of the Gospell is done now to us Christians and not to the Fathers of old verse 20. 6. Because our redemption was ratified by God the Father and that two waies 1. By raising Christ from the dead 2. By giving him glory verse 21. 7. Because all this was done that our faith and hope might be in God verse 21. The fourth reason is taken from our relation to the godly ver 22. In which reason observe 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. An exhortation by way of use The proposition in it selfe properly concernes sanctification which is described 1. By the nature of it imported in the m●ta●horicall terme purified 2. The subject of it your soules 3. the forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it the spirit 5. The end of it which was brotherly love amplified by the property of it unfained The exhortation is therefore to love one another with a pure heart fervently The first reason is taken from the immortalitie of the soule which is considered two wayes 1. In respect of the fountaine of it which is the new birth 2. In respect of the meanes of it which is set downe 1. negatively not of corruptible seede 2. affirmatively where consider what the meanes is and by what it is What it is viz incorruptible seede By what it is the word which is praised for three things 1. It is of God 2 ●t liveth 3. It abideth for ever ver 23. The sixt reason is taken from the mortality of the body compared with the eternity of the word of God ver 24 25. Of the vanity of man ver 24 which is ●●th propounded and repeated propounded as it concernes either the person of man All flesh is grasse or the condition of man All the glory thereof is as the flower of grasse The rep●tition ●s it concerns both is in these words the grasse withereth and the flower falleth away The eternity of the word of God is propounded in
sleep in the strength of that it hath sucked and further if it be a true desire it is after the word as it is milke and sincere it affecteth plainenesse and acknowledgeth no wisdome like Gods nor effectualnesse of speech more powerfull then the words of sacred scripture and lastly it is such a desire as intends growth in knowledge wisdome utterance prayer grace and holy duties Thus much of the signes The consideration of the glory and necessity of the worke of our new birth may exceedingly reprove the wretched and wilfull neglect of it in thousands of people especially of such as be continuall hearers and cannot be ignorant of the doctrine of it how many are the souls that like the blackamoores will not be made white the spots of whose sinnes are like the spots of the Leopard which will not be gotten out These have had promises to allure them and precepts to divert them and threatnings to humble them and yet are never a whit the better woe unto them they have not sought their peace in the day of peace yea are there not many who heare their own lets opened and yet goe away unreformed Oh the depth of the deceitfulnesse and wickednesse of mans heart Vnto a lively hope c. Foure things may be here noted three of them I will but touch First that there is hope unto the righteous He can be in no such estate or distresse but there is hope the poorest Christian hath his hope and if hee were inclosed with crosses yet he is a prisoner of hope and therefore wee should pray God to shew us the hope of our calling and should the more willingly suffer afflictions rejoycing in hope Secondly none have hope but converted Christians For all carnall men are without hope in the world I meane without true hope For the hope that wicked men have though they leane upon it is but as the house of a spider and therefore woe unto them for their hope when they shall most need it will be as the giving up of the ghost Thirdly there is one hope unto all Gods children they hope for the same glory as they have the same faith and therefore we should live and love so together as they that hope to raigne together in heaven But the fourth thing is the chiefe and that is that there is a lively hope and a dead hope For the one is expressed and the other is manifestly implied There is in godly men a lively hope there is in wicked men but a d●ll and a dead hope Now if any aske what difference there is between a lively hope and a dead hope or between the true hope and the false I answer that they differ in six things First in the use of the meanes for a lively hope will use all the meanes that are appointed of God and not that only but it seeketh and expresseth the affections requisite to the right use of the meanes and it will be painefull and patient Now the common hope of carnall men betrayes it selfe in this that they thinke to g●e to heaven though they never use the 〈◊〉 or 〈…〉 nor with any paines or patience Secondly in adversity a lively hope plainely shewes it selfe For it will make a man to runne to God and powre out his heart before him resting satisfied if it can get comfort and a promise from God whereas the dead hope is of no use when miseries and adversity comes It delights not in prayer and will not brooke to come in Gods sight it runs to carnall and devillish helps and if it faile in them it excites impatient murmuring or despaire Thirdly a lively hope is attended with lively joyes when God workes the hope of heaven he workes also at some time or other more or lesse the joyes of heaven which hee utterly denies to wicked men Fourthly mans hopes may be tryed by ●he object A●ke a wicked man what is the thing he would have in heaven and he must answer it is the joyes and happinesse of heaven But aske a godly man what he would have in heaven and he soon answers it is the holinesse of heaven hee would be there because he would sin no more but the wicked would be there because they would suffer no more it is righteousnesse that hope waiteth for Fifthly the true hope will acknowledge the truth which is according to godlinesse but the false hope thinkes it enough to know it it will not adventure it selfe to be so forward as to professe it Lastly whosoever hath the true hope purgeth himselfe that he may be pure as Christ is pure but the dead hope cannot abide much mortification The use of all this may be to instruct both carnall men and godly men Carnall men should take notice of this difference that so they might addresse themselves to seeke this true and lively hope which that they may obtaine or attaine they must shun hypocrisie and deny all ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and labour for true grace for the hypocrites hope shall perish and we can never attaine unto the blessed hope unlesse we resolve to live soberly and righteously and religiously in this present world and this everlasting consolation and good hope is had onely by grace and the godly should here learne to hold fast their lively hope as one of the excellentest fruits of their regeneration and their daily refuge should be to nourish and strengthen themselves in it and to that end acquaint themselves constantly with the comforts of the scripture which were penned especially to that end that they might have hope And thus much of the third thing By the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead Concerning the resurrection of Christ as it may here be considered of ● propound foure things 1. In what sense it is here to be understood 2. How his resurrection hath relation to us in that our new birth is here ha●●ed upon it 3. I answer a question or two which here may be moved and then I make use of all For the first Some have understood by the resurrection of Christ here synecdochically the whole worke of redemption Some understand the words of his spirituall resurrection in our hearts by faith through the operation of the spirit of grace for as he dyeth in us by infidelity so he riseth in us by faith But I ●ake it here as it is commonly taken even for the resurrection of his own person even for that work by which he did shake off the power of death and quicken his dead body restoring the soule to it and receiving to himselfe in his humane nature a blessed celestiall and glorious life In the beleefe of this we differ from Pagans They can beleeve that he dyed but we must beleeve that he rose againe This was solemnly foretold by David and foreshewed by Io●ah manifested by an Angell recorded by the
or in us There shall be no war no unquietnesse no violence no fraud no sicknesse paine weaknesse old age no terrors no sorow 3. Because this happinesse shall never expire it is immortall there is no death there hence the word is rendred by some immortall 4. Because it is an estate of all perfection and blessednesse and so some thinke it is the genus to the two other words The second thing affirmed of this inheritance i● 〈◊〉 ●●defiled and so it may be said to be in five respects 1. Because there we shall live separate from all polluted things such as are the devill the grave hell and wicked men all things that might offend shall then be removed from us no temptations no tares shall be there left 2. Because there we shall bejoyned to God that most undefiled essence the fountaine of all holinesse whence will flow two admirable felicities First the continuall Vision of God in respect of which we shall behold him immediately we shall converse with him no more by scriptures creatures signes or other meanes but by an admirable way not now revealed unto us There shall the pure in heart he perfectly blessed when they shall see God face to face as he is in his glory Secondly the participation of the divine nature not by a powring out of the divine essence but by the communication of divine qualities such as are immortality wisdome glory justice vertue c. Thirdly because we shall there enjoy the fellowship with unspotted Angells and blessed soules and that after an undefiled maner with all purity concord and quietnesse 4. Because we our selves shall be cloathed with perfection of nature being made like unto Christ-man and that both in soule and body In soule Gods image in undefiled graces being perfected without mixture either of defects or corruptions yea our very bodies shall be made like the Christ● For they shall be without death shame weaknesse or trouble some drowsinesse or unweildinesse For so the Apostle to the Corinthians excellently sheweth by opening foure dissimilitudes betweene the sowing and the raising of the body It was sowen 1. in corruption 2. in dishonor 3. in weaknesse 4. a naturall body but it is raised 1. in incorruption so as it cannot putrifie or die any more 2. in glory so as it shall never be shamed or dishonoured either through deformity or reproch they shall ● shine as the sun in the firmament 3. in power being delivered from all weaknesse or infirmities 4. a spirituall body because in divers respects they shall be as the spirits or angells as 1. in continuing without meat or mariage 2. in swiftnesse or agility able with unconceivable nimblenesse to passe through the ayre or heaven 5. Because as our natures so our service shall be perfect we shall serve and worship and praise God day and night without either weaknesse or wearinesse The third thing affirmed of this inheritance is that it withereth or fadeth not and well is this happinesse praised for this For how should it wither 1. if we respect the presence of God and the Lambe who will be all in all Can the Sun in nature refresh the creatures and shall not the brightnesse of Gods presence doe it much more Was it such a priviledge to eate at Davids table or to sit downe in the kingdome with Abraham Isaac and Iacob what then shall it be to be refreshed with the fulnesse of the sweete presence of God 2. If we respect the fulnesse of all joyes and contentment which shall for ever support the hearts of the Elect their joyes shall never be dryed up nor grow into loathing as all earthly joyes doe 3. If we respect the perfection of all things round about them they shall inherit all things and those made new also The use is first for information For here is implyed the wretchednesse of our earthly condition there is nothing here in this world but it will corrupt and is defiled and will lose his glosse and beauty An estate that is incorruptible undefiled and that withers not wee shall never have till wee come to heaven Secondly for reproofe Oh doe not men now know what a kinde of place heaven is why then doe they turne the glory of such an incorruptible estate into the similitude of corruptible things while they prefer the thing● of this world before the glory of that which is to come and why do● 〈…〉 they not that the un 〈◊〉 shall not enter into heaven and this corruption shall not inherit incorruption Oh why doth silly man suffer himselfe so to be bewitched as with incurable doting to pursue these withering earthly things and neglect those immarcess●ole felicities in heaven Thirdly for instruction and so the thought hereof should esp●●ially affect us with a desire to seeke this immortall and undefiled happinesse and to this end we should first begin our separation here from the wicked ● 2. we should subject our selves to the incorrupt ordinances of Jesus Christ if we would have God to be a father of immortality we must acknowledge him first the king of all ages and let him make us and frame us by his ordinances 3. we must mortifie our corrupt natures and refraine from all things that may any way corrupt us 4. we must put on Christ for he onely hath immortality 5. and lastly we must continue in well-doing as the Apostle shewes Rom. 2.7 we must begin our incorruption hereby sincerity of life for so this word is ●endred Ephes. 6.24 Lastly it may serve for singular comfort to a Christian in all distresses but to thinke what a wonderfull glorious estate is provided for him yea even the more he hath experience of the vanity and wretchednesse of this world the more he should admire the happinesse he lookes for yea it may be one reason that the Lord will have his servants throughly tryed with the miseries of this life that so they might know the worth of that rest and glory they looke for in the life to come Oh what reason have men to desire to dye and to hast to the comming of Iesus Christ to long for it to pray for it to be even impatient in the fervent expectation of it to sigh after it But before I passe from this point one thing may in generall be noted that is that all these properties doe equally belong to all the Elect the whole inheritance and every part of it hath these praises which hinders not but there may be a proper reward unto every man but it is sure that the wor●t lot in this inheritance shall have the fulnesse of the perfection of these praises Which is reserved c. We have the right and title in this world but the inheritance it selfe is in the fathers keeping and possessed as yet by some of our elder brethren wee are in our minority in this world if
power can keepe us to salvation His worke it is to preserve whose will it is to save Mans naturall life stands not in the abundance of the things he doth possesse neither is our spirituall life sustained by the bare having of abundance of meanes Thirdly it may serve for instruction and that divers wayes 1. First we should beg of God the spirit of wisdome and revelation to shew the exceeding greatnesse of his power that we might discerne it and beleeve it by faith seeing we doe not observe it by sense and reason 2. Secondly we should daily ascribe power unto God even acknowledging continually his power in keeping us from day to day as our Saviour Christ teacheth us in the Lords prayer when hee teacheth us to ascribe kingdome power and glory to him and with Peter wee should learne to put off praise from our selves unto God as hee did in the cure of the Cripple saying not by our power is this man made whole 3. Thirdly wee should particularly of God seeke the experience of his power As for example we should not rest in the forme or shew of godlinesse but seeke the power of it wee should not only get a little faith but strive with God by prayer till he fulfill the worke of faith with power we should not thinke it enough to pray but we should seeke the spirit of prayer and to doe it with power even to be made by the annointing of Christ Priests after the power of endlesse life so we should seeke the power of conference and utterance in the confession of the truth in admonition instruction consolation or propounding of our owne doubts for the kingdome of God is not in word but in power 4. Fourthly we should hence learne to be undaunted in afflictions though it were to adventure all even life it selfe for the Gospell seeing we are kept by Gods power we may say in any distresse as Paul did I know whom I have beleeved and he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him till the day of Iesus Christ. If God keep our soules it matters not what else be in danger 5. Fifthly Ministers should hence learne to preach with power and strive after it For it is not the ordinance of God but the power of God that preserves the hearers It is not preaching but powerfull preaching that keepes the soules of men till the day of Christ. 6. And lastly the people should learne to place their faith not in the wisdome learning paines or graces of men but in the power of God Lastly this serves for consolation to all Gods servants against all their feares troubles adversaries temptations or what else might make them doubt their perseverance For God is able to doe above all that they can aske or think according to his power which worketh in them The divine Power gives us all things needfull to life and godlinesse and though they have but a little strength yet the Lord can open a doore of knowledge and grace and comfort unto them which no man nor devill can shut and therefore let us from our hearts give praise unto the onely wise and strong God that is able to support us from falling and to present us faultlesse before the presence of his glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ By faith or through faith The meanes in us to preserve us is our faith and that this will keepe us through the power of God is apparant by the scriptures Hee that beleeveth on the sonne of God hath everlasting life he is as sure of it as if he had it and he shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life Christ is the bread of life for nourishment and he that commeth to him by faith shall never hunger nor thirst He that commeth to Christ shall in no wise be cast out Christ will be so far from losing any one soule that beleeveth in him that not so much as his flesh or any part thereof shall bee lost but the whole body that is delivered to the grave shall be raised at the last day whosoever beleeveth in Christ shall never die For hee that confesseth with his mouth and beleeveth with his heart shall be saved God will keep that which by faith is committed to him and Christ will bee at the last day made marvellous in all that beleeve but that this point may bee more plainly understood I propound three things 1. First what faith doth for our preservation 2. Secondly how it doth it 3. What kinde of faith doth it and then the uses For the first there are tenne things which faith worketh by all which and every of which wee are greatly helped and furthered in our preservation First it inflames in God a singular tendernesse of care to remove out of the way what might be an occasion of falling and therefore our Saviour Christ shewes that God so loveth the weakest Christian that is truely humble and beleeveth that if any whosoever shall offend him that is cast any stumbling block in his way in respect of the sore judgements of God upon those by whom such offences come it were better a milstone were hanged about their neckes and they cast into the bottome of the Sea 2. Secondly as it procureth the healing of the soule of temptations even of all the wounds of the serpent quenching his fiery darts by shewing us Christ the true brazen Serpent of our recovery 3. As it is the daily hand and mouth of the soule by which we feed upon Christ the bread of life and so are by the strength of that precious nourishment kept to life everlasting 4. As it lighteth us the way to heaven For as there is a light apprehended by sense and a light of reason so there is a light of faith by vertue of the promise of Christ who said I am come a light into the world that whosoever abideth in me should not abide in darknesse 5. As it bringeth us within the compasse of Christs intercession For when hee prayed the father to keepe them from evill hee expounds his meaning to be to extend that his intercession not onely to his Apostles but to all that should beleeve through their word 6. As it procures the pardon of all sins according to that of Peter to him gave all the Prophets witnesse that through his name whosoever beleeveth in him shall receive remission of their sins 7. As it will excite and compell a Christian in all suits to seeke his owne help If a man beleeve his faith will make him speake both by confession and prayer to God and by inquiry and counsell and reproof to men 8. As it procures the seale of the holy spirit of promise and the earnest of the inheritance purchased Faith opens such a fountaine of joy and incouragement within a
God in the day of Christ. But I rather choose to understand it of the Christian. Some think the three words should note the three waies of exalting Christians and so they should have praise in words honor in gesture and glory in deeds but I think they are but severall words to expresse joyntly one and the same thing Before I come to the maine doctrine here are divers things to be noted which are implyed both concerning Honor and the appearance of Christ. Concerning Honor these thing● may be noted First that faith and sincerity in this world for the most part want praise and honor and glory from men and therefore he promiseth them that howsoever it goe yet in the day of Christ saith shall not want praise c. It is here no wonder to be made as a signe or wonder even in Israel Esay 8. If men refraine from evill one beast or other will prey upon them Esay 9 15. To be reviled with all man●r of evill sayings is ●upposed by our Saviour M●t 5.11 They that are after the flesh have done it and ever will persecute those that are after the spirit Gal. 4.29 Secondly it seemes the Lord taketh a power unto himselfe and his word even to judge and determine the cases of Honor. It is a fond conceit that our great Gallants have that they think that in defence of their Honor they are not bound to the word but they are deceived and they doe well perhaps to shun the sentence of Scripture in the case of their monomachies or single fights for it yeelds them but small comfort to embolden their great spirits For these are the words of the holy Ghost It is a mans honor to cease from strife but every foole will be medling Prov. 20.3 Thirdly perfect Honor will never be had till the day of Judgement which should the more confirme us in a contempt of the honor of this world In this world they are many times praised whom God abhorreth and men say to the wicked thou art righteous It is an usuall thing that they that forsake the law themselves praise the wicked Psal. 10.3 Prov. 24.24 Secondly earthly honor is wonderfull deceitfull many get it by ill meanes and men may be praised by them that curse them in their hearts and besides earthly Honor will not abide nor can man continue here to enjoy it long Eccl. 8.10 Psal. 49. 13. neither will it content the mind of man if it be had Eccles. 6.2 and for the most part it makes men sensuall man in honor understands not but they live and die many times as the beasts that perish Psal. 49. ult Now concerning the revelation of Jesus Christ we must know that it is taken sometimes actively and sometimes passively Actively and so for that work of Christ by which hee reveales his Father and his will to his members so Mat. 11.23 Gal. 1.12 Now passively there is a threefold revelation of Christ 1. In his flesh 2. In his spirit 3. In his glory In his flesh for so godlinesse is a great mysterie in that God was revealed in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 In the spirit so Christ was revealed in Paul in that by the spirit the grace of Christ was revealed in him Gal. 1.16 Thirdly Christ shall be revealed at the last day in his glory from heaven and this revelation is meant here as it is also 1 Cor. 1.7.2 Thes. 1.7 The doctrines implyed are three First that Christ shall come againe and be revealed from heaven and therefore woe to those mockers that walk after their lusts and aske when his comming shall be Secondly that Christ is as it were hid till his second comming and so he is in sixe respects 1. First in respect of the sense of our mortall eyes the heavens like a curtaine hide him from us Act. 1. 2. Secondly in respect of the admirable glory of his person For at that day his glory shall be revealed which now is as it were hidden 3. Thirdly in respect of the estate of his members our life is hid with Christ. He is not glorious in the outward glory of his members Col. 3.3 4. In respect of the manifestation of his love he hath not shewed himselfe to wicked men Ioh. 14.22 nor fully revealed himself to the faithfull it doth not yet appeare what they shall be 1 Ioh. 2.3 5. Fiftly in respect of the secrets he shall then break open little doe we know or heare of what he will then discover when hee shall break open the everlasting counsels of God and discover the depths of Gods providence and the deeds of all both good and bad and the glory of the Elect and the eternall misery of the damned 6. Sixtly in respect of the suddennesse of his comming Luk. 17.30 All which should make us the more to long for his appearing for that shall be such a time as never was The third thing implyed is that the thought of the day of Judgement is a sure refuge to a Christian minde when many other comforts for the present faile But the maine doctrine is that faithfull and patient Christians shall have a great deale of praise and honor and glory in the day of Christ. Christ will be made marveilous in them 2 Thes. 1.11 they shall shine as the stars of heaven and as the sun in the firmament Dan. 12. Mat. 13. they shall appeare in singular glory when Christ appeares Col. 3.4 But shall Christians have no glory till that day Yes For first there is a naturall glory stamped upon their very persons Col. 2. ult Secondly they are already vessels of glory in Gods decree Rom. 9. Thirdly true honor is restored them in the kingdome of gra●e for God acknowledgeth them so doe the Angels of God and they have honorable priviledges and such graces as will bring to glory And lastly God many times doth honor them with speciall Honor before men Hest. 8.16 Psal. 64. 3. to the end Act. 28.10 The Uses follow And first the consideration of this great praise and honor and glory in the revelation of Christ should serve for instruction in divers respects For it should quicken us to faith and good works seeing our labour shall not be in vaine 1 Cor. 15. ult Men will say in that day Oh blessed was he or she that beleeved It may also perswade us to cheerfulnesse and patience under afflictions and the scornes of the world we shall then have praise enough what need we care for a little disgrace in the meane time and shall we ever be ashamed of Christ and his truth that will thus honor us at the last day Finally we may here learne of Christ how to esteem of tryed Christians we should learn of him to praise them and honor them Secondly this doctrine should wonderfully comfort Gods servants How should they exult in the glory and honor they hope for They shall then have so much honor as the Kings of the earth
may hence note one excellent pledge of Gods love and goodnesse he is not bound to give us any wages till the end yet see his mercy he doth recompence us every day 4. Fourthly woe unto wicked men their end is shame and confusion even the fruit of all their evill waies or as the Apostle saith their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 The salvation of your soules The soule is a spirituall substance within us by which we resemble God it can subsist of it selfe it hath neither matter nor end it was created of God of nothing and united to the body that God might be rightly knowne and worshipped The soule is a kind of picture of God within us that can live though the body were not when I say it is void of matter I meane it is not made of any other thing as our bodies be there is no metall as I may say of which it may consist and it is such a divine creature as it cannot die as the body doth and it was of purpose put into the body that so amongst the visible creatures God might be known and worshipped For if we had not a soule within us we could never attaine to any knowledge of God more than the bruit beasts For God cannot be knowne by bodily senses Now for the union how the body and soule are knit one to another I cannot expresse it Salvation notes especially that estate of excellency and glory which the faithfull have in another world though properly the word notes but onely what we are delivered and saved from in heaven This salvation excludes all misery and includes all happinesse All misery may be referred to foure heads 1. Sinne. 2. Infirmities 3. Adversaries And 4. Death none of these shall be in heaven All happinesse likewise may be referred to foure heads 1. Perfection of nature 2. Communion with the blessed viz. God Christ Angels and just men 3. And a glorious inheritance in the heaven of the blessed And 4. Immortality all these shall be enjoyed in that other world Now though the soule be taken synecdochically for the soule and body yet the salvation of the soule is principall and more glorious The use may be threefold 1. For information 2. For instruction 3. For reproofe 1. There are three things we may be informed in from the consideration of the salvation of the soules of the faithfull 1. First that godly men are in a wonderfull happy case whatsoever their outward estate be because their soules shall be saved there are springs of joy in the very hope of this immortall happinesse this salvation is so great a mercy as we may truely say his reward is with him 2. Secondly that there is a matchlesse love in God to man not onely in that he provides such an estate but first that he doth it freely without all respects of merit Tit. 3.4 and secondly because he sends up and downe the world to offer this salvation From hence ariseth the Phrase my salvation is gone forth 3. Thirdly that faith is wonderfull precious that brings us such a salvation 2. Further for the second there are divers instructions may be deduced from this doctrine as 1. First it should teach us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts Tit. 2.12 the very thought of going to heaven should extinguish the desire of sinning 2. Secondly we would make God all our trust and our expectation Psal. 62.5 We should resolve to rest upon God For none else either will or can doe so much for us as he can Hee is well said to be the hope of Israel none have so great hopes as the faithfull 3. Thirdly we should labour for the assurance of salvation and lay hold upon it striving to get evidence for it Heaven should suffer violence seeing it may be had we should never be quiet till we can get it 4. Fourthly and lastly such as have attained some assurance of their salvation should looke to foure things 1. First they should strive for large affections to expresse the sense of so great salvation It is such an incomparable benefit as wee should be alwaies praising c. 2. Secondly it should quicken them to good works the remembrance that we shall be saved should be like a fire within us to inflame us to all possible care to please God and to be fruitfull in all well-doing Salvation should be as a burning lamp within us a Christian should never be without fire in his heart in respe●t of his care to maintaine good works 3. Thirdly shall wee not be content with any condition in this world seeing wee are so well-provided for in a better what should trouble us if we can remember that after a short time our soules must be saved 4. Fourthly shall we be so glorious in heaven why then our conversation should be in heaven we should be alwaies thinking of heaven our mindes should run upon it 3. Now as this doctrine may informe and teach so it may reprove whole troops of carnall Christians that never labour after this glorious estate that scarce ever aske what they should doe to be saved but sleepe it out in a Lethargie and never aske after nor remember their latter end Thus of the 9. Verse and so of the confirmation by prolepsis or the answer of their objections Verse 10. Of which salvation the Prophets searched and inquired diligently which prophesied of the grace that should come unto you THe consolation propounded verses 3 4 5. is confirmed first by Prolepsis or the answering of Objections verses 6 7 8 9. secondly by testimony of worthy and holy men verses 10 11 12. So that these words make good the consolation of Christians by setting before us what witnesse holy men of old have given of our happinesse that live now under the Gospell In the words five things are particularly to be noted 1. First who testifie or who are Gods witnesses and these are described 1. first more generally and so they were Prophets 2. secondly more specially and so they were those Prophets that were appointed of God to prophesie of the gracious priviledges should come unto us Christians 2. Secondly their adjunct paines and endeavors to furnish themselves in the knowledge of those things that concerne us They searched and inquired diligently 3. Thirdly the question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall it was of salvation ver 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. Fourthly the occasion that fiered them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow Now they rightly conjectured that this glory did import some excellent estate of the Church then and that they would faine have knowne 5. Fiftly the successe and that was they were answered by revelation which answer is set downe verse 12. Prophets God hath revealed his will three waies 1. First
had informed themselves in some good sufficiency of knowledge herein and therefore they might not neglect his exhortation that might be proved by such a known reason For as much This word notes a dependance with the doctrine of the former reason and shewes that these reasons are linked in a chaine you cannot pull the one but you draw the other also And from hence wee may note 1. The sacred combination of holy truth in the mysteries of religion they hang all as in one chain● and 〈…〉 as in one body there is a wonderfull agreement amongst them they point one to another whereas in the writings of men by reason of their imperfection they are oftentimes discording not from other men but from themselves also their assertions sound as if they were afraid one of another or ready to fight one against another 2. That the right knowledge of Christs first comming to redeeme us serves generally to inflame our hearts to a desire after and care of his second comming to judge us For by his first comming 1. We know he hath satisfied for our sins and therefore need not feare the sentence of condemnation or Gods anger 2. We know how dearly he paid for our sins and therefore we should for ever hate sinne 3. We know that he cannot but doe us honor then since for our sakes he himselfe was judged on earth and did shed his owne bloud for us 4. We know that at that day we shall be fully redeemed and receive all the inheritance prepared for us What shall I say if this his first comming were so full of love pitty care grace and profit for us how then should we long for his second comming when he shall give himselfe not for us but to us for our eternall delight and happinesse The Use may be for tryall of the truth of our faith in his first comming if we can stirre us up with care and cheerfulnesse to provide for his second comming then we doe effectually beleeve it else it is very doubtfull whether we doe indeed know Christ crucified Thus of the coherence the insinuation followes Yee know From hence foure things may be noted 1. That we may be profitably put in mind of the things wee know yea we need to be put in mind of them for thereby wee may know things the better and more fully but especially wee need it for the use of knowledge This is true in rebu●es for sinne in consolations in affliction in directions for our lives and as here in the doctrine of the mysteries of our religion they and we know the doctrine of redemption perhaps but the powerfull use of that doctrine we are altogether wanting in besides what we know we know but in part The Use is for great reproofe of those vaine persons that neglect hearing reading admonition c. upon pretence they know it already if that were true yet this doctrine shewes we need to be put in mind even in the things we know yea wise men will receive commandments yea and rebukes too Prov. 9. It is a discreet commendable charity sometimes the better to perswade and winne affection to insinuate the praises of others as here the Apostle so did Paul to Agrippa Act. 26.3 It is certaine that by nature we are pleased highly with others opinions of our knowledge and contrariwise the a●pe●sion or ignorance is wonderfull hatefull there be some sins that vexe us more then others to have them imputed as lying and divers others so ignorance the devill knew this well in Eves case the intimation of ignorance made her ruine her selfe and her prosterity and so doth the devill still What makes many goe to hell for want of direction how to be saved even this they will not have their ignorance seene What makes many leap from the cradle of religion to the throne of censure so as to think themselves fit to judge whole Nations when troops of learned men are extreamly toyled with advising Is it not this opinion of knowledge Now as the devill useth it for hurt so may the godly make advantage of the weaknesse of our natures herein the better to direct us to good 3. Of all doctrines we must be sure to know the doctrine of our redemption for this is the most fundamentall doctrine of all others It is impossible to be saved without the knowledge of this 2. Of all doctrines this is most clearly taught in Scripture 3. Of all doctrines wee have most need of this against the discomforts of temptations infirmities afflictions and death it selfe 4. This most exalts the glory of Gods grace and mercy and all others are in a manner built upon this 5. Lastly this hath exceeding great force to perswade us to holinesse of life for it both shews us to whom wee belong and what reason we have to obey him and withall implyes how vile we are in our selves First so labour for knowledge herein that thou mistrust thy own nature and the policie of the devill even the slower thou findest thy disposition to it the more strive after it let not the devill rob thee of this knowledge above all other We are not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold In these words is contained the first principall point namely the invalidity of all earthly things to redeeme us they containe the disabling of the riches of this world and as the words lye two things are said against the treasures of this world First that we are not redeemed by them Secondly that they are corruptible things That they cannot redeeme the soule of man is evident 1. By proofe Psal. 49.6 7. 2. By experience we see wicked men abound in these things and yet goe to hell Psal. 17. ult 73.12 Eccles. 9.11 3. This may appeare by a distribution of the parts of redemption for they cannot appease Gods anger Prov. 11.4 they cannot restraine the devils power they cannot buy us a righteousnesse answerable to that the law requires they cannot be a ransome to keepe the soule from hell Iob 29.9 19 20. they cannot cover our imperfect work● they cannot buy us a better nature but rather choke the word of God Mat. 13. and make men carelesse of repentance and conceited of the●●elves and wilfull to entertaine sinne Prov. 28.11 Hosea 12.8 and drowne men in noysome lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 yea how hard is it for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 19. Lastly they cannot make us immortall Iam. 1.10 11. Thus it is cleare they cannot redeeme us For the second they are corruptible This is manifest Solomon saith they have wings Prov. ●7 they vanish subject to violence or vanity Mat. 6.13 yea many times they goe away with an ill loose it may be the ruine of the owners Iob 20.18 Eccles. 5. Ier. 17.11 nor can they goe with their owners when death comes Psal. 49.17 The Use may be 1. For information It should raise the price of true grace and
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is much adoe about the word here rendred Contained among Interpreters The word sounds actively in the Originall as if it were rendred doth containe or hee containeth But the Translators and many Interpreters think the active is put for the passive He containeth for It is contained If we read it actively then the Name of God must be supplied thus He that is God contained it ●n Scripture noting that as a singular treasure God hath placed this Testimony in Scripture concerning Christ and faith in him and sure it is a great treasure that wee may have places in the sure Word of God that so plainly testifie of Christ and our happinesse in him wee should take great notice of them and be much thankfull to God for giving us such sentences so briefly and yet so plainly and fully to informe us Some supply the name of Christ and so they say Christ containeth that Is excelleth as the word may signifie Hee is had fully and excellently in Scripture and in particular in this testimonie of Scripture The word rendred Contained signifies sometimes barely to be had sometimes to be possessed as Luke 5.9 They were possessed with feare And so wee possesse a great treasure in Scripture when wee have such Testimonies as these There is a Nowne derived of this Verbe which is thought by the exactest Divines to meane a speciall Section or portion and when it is applied to a place in Scripture it signifies such a Scripture as is divided from the rest as a principall matter either to be meditated of or expounded Such was that speciall portion of Scripture which the Ennuch had to meditate of and Philip expounded to him Acts 8.32 where the word is used And so whether the word be used actively or passively it commends unto us this place of Scripture and withall shewes us a way how to enrich our selves namely by singling out such choise places throughout the Scripture as may most fittingly furnish our thoughts for meditation in the maine matters of Religion We may here note what cause we have of thankfulnesse to God for the helps we have in teaching seeing we have the Chapter and verse quoted to us which they had not in the Primitive Church and withall wee may observe that one may have the profit of the Scriptures though he cannot quote Chapter and verse And thus of the second thing concerning this testimony Thirdly the third followes which is the matter testified which concernes either the giving of Christ or the safety of the Christian in beleeving in him In the words that describe the giving of Christ observe First The wonder of it in the word Behold Secondly The Author of it God I lay or put Thirdly The manner of it He laid him downe as the stone of a foundation in a building Fourthly The place where In Sion noting that this gift of Christ belongs onely to the Church Fifthly What Christ was unto the Church viz. a chiefe corner stone elect and precious Behold This word is used in Scripture sometimes to note a thing that is usually knowne or ought to be knowne so David saith Behold I was conceived in sinne Psalm 51. Sometimes to note that some great wonder is spoken of and must be much attended In this place it may note both For it is certaine that the testimonies of Scriptures concerning Christ ought to be familiarly knowne of us and this as an especiall one But I rather think it is used to note the wonder of the worke here mentioned and so the word may import divers things unto us First It was a mervailous worke that God should give us his owne Sonne to be our Saviour and the fountaine of life to us Hence it is that we may observe throughout the Scripture that God doth set this note of attention and respect both upon the generall and upon many particulars that concerne Christ as it were by the Word to pull us by the eares to make us attend or to give us a signe when wee should specially listen Thus God brings out Christ to the Church and tells how he loves him and hath resolved upon it by him to save both Iewes and Gentiles and wills them to behold him and wonder at him Isaiah 42.1 So when hee promiseth the comming of Christ And of the ends of his comming he makes a proclamation all the world over that hee hath appointed a Saviour unto Sion Thus he would have us wonder at the service of the Angels about the time of his birth Math. 1.20 Luke 2.9 10. and at the miracle of his conception that he should be borne of a Virgin Math. 1.21 and at the Wisemen led by a starre out of the East Math. 2.1 9. and at the opening of the heavens when the voice came downe to testifie that Christ was the beloved Sonne of God in whom hee was well pleased Math. 3.16 17. and at the service which the Angels did him and at his wonderfull abasement for our sakes Math. 21.5 and especially that hee should sacrifice his owne body for our sinnes 1 Iohn 1.29 Heb. 10.7 and that hee is alive from the dead and liveth for ever Revel 1.18 and that hee hath opened the secret booke of Gods counsell and made it knowne to the world Revel 5.5 and that after such hard times under the raign of Antichrist he should recollect such troops of Gospellers as stood with him on Mount Sion Revel 14.1 It were too long to number up more particulars Onely thus much wee should learne that the doctrine of Christ is to be received with great affection attention and admiration Secondly This word strikes us like a dart to the heart for it imports that naturally we are extreamely carelesse and stupid in this great doctrine concerning Christ and faith in us For when God calls for attention it implies that we are mervailous slowe of heart to understand or with affection to receive the doctrine Let the use of all be then to strive with our owne hearts and to awake from this heavinesse and sleepinesse and with all our soules to praise God with endlesse admiration of his goodnesse to us in giving us his Sonne Thus of the wonder of it 2. The Author of it followes I lay or put God would have us to take speciall notice of it that it is hee that was the Author of this glorious worke Hee is the vvork-master the chiefe master-builder It is Gods vvorke and the knowledge of this may serve for divers uses For first It should direct our thankfulnesse wee should give glory to God and praise his rich grace He will not lose his thanks for Christ. Hee holds himselfe much honoured when wee praise him for so great a gift as Christ. Secondly It should much strengthen our faith and make us beleeve the love of God and his willingnesse to be reconciled He is the party offended and if he were hard to be pleased hee would never have sought
all worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Sixthly the entertainment which God gives unto his servants in the meanes of communion with God For when we meet with God familiarly and continue in his ordinances that is an infallible signe and note of Election as when a man findes constantly the pleasures of Gods house Psal. 65.4 power and much assurance in hearing the Word 1 Thess. 1.4 5. an inward sealing up of the comforts of the covenant in receiving of the Sacraments testified by the secret and sweet refreshing of the heart in the time of receiving the conscience being comforted in the forgivenesse of sinnes past Matth. 26.28 an answer and assurance that God hath heard our prayers and beene with us in his service Ioh. 15.15 16. and the like Use 2. The second use should be to worke in us a care to live so as may become the knowledge remembrance and assurance of our Election and so wee shall doe First if we stirre up our hearts to a continuall praising of God for his rich and free grace herein Ephes. 1.3 6. Secondly if we strive to joy and glory in it continually Psal. 106.5 6. Thirdly if we love one another Ioh. 15.17 and chuse as God chuseth Eph. 1.4 not despising the poorest Christian Iam. 2.5 Fourthly if we set up the Lord to be our God to love him with all our heart and to serve him and in all things to shew our selves desirous to please him and to be resolved to please him and his truth and to his glory c. Deut. 26. Esay 44.1 5. Fifthly if we confirme our selves in a resolution to have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darkenesse nor to suffer our selves to be unequally yoaked but since God hath chosen us out of the world to keepe our selves from needlesse society with wicked men Sixthly if we continue in the Word and be patient in afflictions and shew contentations in all estates as knowing that it is our Fathers pleasure to give us a Kingdome Luk. 12.32 and that all shall worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 and that the very haires of our heads are numbred Matt. 10. and that nothing can be laid to our charge to condemne us Rom. 8.33 and that God will never cast away his people whom before he knew Rom. 11.2 because his foundation remaineth sure and hee knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 Seventhly if we strive to live without blame and offence that God may no way suffer dishonour for our sakes Eph. 1.4 Thus of the election The next thing by which they are commended is their kinred and generation This word generation signifies sometimes an age or succession of men or so many men as live in the world in the age of one man so one generation passeth and another commeth c. Eccles. 1. Sometimes it signifies a progeny or off-spring that is so many as doe descend out of the loines of such a one as the generation from Abraham to David Mat. 1. Sometimes it signifies a kinred or stocke and so not onely carnall but spirituall and thus wicked men are said to be an adulterous and untoward generation Mat. 12.39 faithlesse and perverse Mat. 17.17 so it is no priviledge to be one of that generation but we are called upon to save our selves from this untoward generation Mat. 12.40 so that it is a priviledge to be one of this sort or kinred They are the generation of vipers Mat. 3. Now there is another kind of spirituall alliance and that is it whereby all Christians are a-kin one to another through the blood of Christ as they all descend of the second Adam and of this it is that the Prophet speaketh Esay 53.8 when admiredly he faith of Christ Who can tell his generation And thus the godly are begotten of the best blood in the world because they are begotten of the blood of Christ Ioh. 1.13 The doctrine then is That godly men are the happiest men in the world in respect of their kinred and alliance None come of so good a kinred as godly Christians which may appeare by divers reasons First because they descend of the best blood being the generation of Christ the second Adam and so are better borne than they that can tell of their great Nobility and Blood both by the fathers and mothers side Ioh. 1.13 Secondly because they are a chosen picked chilren or kinred all the kinred culled out of all mankind and so is no kinred in the world For in all other kinreds are all sorts of persons to be found good and bad vertuous and vicious but of this kinred are none but good Thirdly because the whole kinred is royall they enjoy all great preferments whereas there be few kinreds in the world but there are some poore in it but this generation hath not one poore man in it all the kinred are Kings Fourthly because all are fit for imployment all the kinred are Priests and can sacrifice which was not true of the very Tribe of Levi. There is not one Christian but he can perform the worke of the Priesthood doth in his order Fifthly because there are so many of the kinred The meanest Christian is a-kinne to all the Saints in heaven and to all the godly in earth or on earth and there is no kinred in the flesh that can attaine to the like number of kinsfolkes in any degree of comparison worth the speaking of Sixthly because they are all accepted into high favour with the King of Kings Though a King on earth out of his love to one person would do much for many of his kinred yet it is never seen that all the kinred universally are preferred and entertained into speciall favour with the King yet so it is with all the godly it is true of all of every one that they are his peculiar treasure Seventhly because all our kinred will doe for us there is none of them but are able to pleasure us whereas in carnall kinred one may bee a-kinne to so great persons that they will do nothing for them Eightly because other kinred may and will die and leave us but all this generation lives for ever Uses The consideration whereof may serve for divers reasons First hence godly Christians may gather comfort against the best of their kinred in the flesh whether they be lost by displeasure or by death for God here makes a supply of better kinred It should not therefore be grievous to the godly to forsake their fathers house Psal. 45. Secondly hence we should learne how to esteeme of godly Ministers for hereby is implyed that they are the Fathers and Princes of the Tribes in this holy Nation Thirdly it should teach us many duties concerning the godly to whom we are allied First to study our genealogie and get the knowledge of as many of our kinred as we can Secondly to glory in our kinred to joy in our happinesse herein Thirdly to do all good we
maintaine good workes Tit. 2.8 They must shew their faith by their workes and so they are justified before men by the workes which they behold Iam. 2. They are the expresse words of S. Iames also in his third chapter vers 13. Let him shew by good conversation his workes And the Apostle Paul saith If there be any praise thinke on those things that may get praise Phil. 4.8 Yea some Christians are charged to be patterns of good workes Tit. 2.7 Now for explication of this point I would consider first what workes may bee shewed and then secondly what workes may not bee shewed For the first I will only now instance in the Apostles catalogue in the second of Titus Old men may safely shew sobriety gravity temperance soundnesse of their faith love and patience Old women may safely carry themselves in a holy behaviour and be teachers of good things especially to the younger women Young women must shew their sobriety love and obedience to their husbands discretion chastity care of their children and houshold affaires Young men may shew that they be sober-minded Ministers offend not by teaching uncorrupt doctrine with gravity and sincerity nor when in conference they speake soundly and things that cannot be justly taxed Servants offend not by shewing obedience to their masters and all good faithfulnesse and desire to please them well in all things For the second the shew is condemned in divers sorts of workes as 1 Secret duties of what kind soever must not be done to the beholding of others thus to pray or fast that others may see or heare is not lawfull Mat. 6. 2 Such workes as are done deceitfully are justly taxed for the shew of them as when Ananias and Sapphira will make a shew of bountie which was not performed as they pretended Act. 5. 3 All workes that are done with affectation when the praise of men is simply and onely sought are Pharisaicall and ill done 4 All the workes that are done about the use of the meanes of godlinesse if practice bee not joyned with them are rejected of God and the shew of them is condemned Thus to make a shew of hearing Sermons reading the Scriptures frequent and long prayers strict observing of the Lords day and the like when there is not a sound care of a holy life are not good workes n●r is the shew of them commended Esa. 1. Mic. 6. 5 To shew care of lesser duties and live in the carelesse and manifest neglect of greater and more necessary duties is likewise Pharisaicall and condemned Mat. 23. Thus of the beholding of good workes They may glorifie God To glorifie God is in the etymologie of the word to make God glorious Now the glory of God is the excellencie of God above all things as is by way of exposition added Esa. 35.2 The question then is How can God be made glorious or excellent seeing his excellencie is as infinite as his nature is and to that which is infinite nothing can be added For the resolving of this question we must understand that if Gods nature be considered in it selfe it is so excellent as nothing can be conceived or done that should bring glory to it But when the Scripture speakes of glorifying of God it meanes it of such an excellencie as to our capacity by reflexion and resemblance some way expresseth the similitude of Gods excellencie which we call his glory And so God is glorified by himselfe or by us God hath made divers impressions of his owne excellencie and set it out by way of image or similitude as First in the divine nature of Christ. For Christ as the Sonne of God is said to be the splendor and brightnesse of his Fathers glory Heb. 1.2 Secondly in the humane nature of Christ. For in his humane nature did the God-head dwell and shine as the candle in the lanthorn and so the glory of God appeares amongst men for when Christ was incarnate and came to dwell amongst men they saw his glorie as the glorie of the onely begotten Sonne of God Iob. 1.14 Thirdly in his workes for the invisible things of God as his power and wisedome in the excellencie of them are made visible unto our observation in the creation and government of the world in the great booke of the creatures is the glory of God written in great letters Rom. 1. Thus the heavens declare the glory of God Psalm 19.1 And in this great booke the glory of the Lord is said to endure for ever and the Lord will alwaies rejoyce in this impression of his glory in his workes Psalm 104.31 and as all the workes of God are his glory in that they do some way set out his excellencie so especially miracles are in a high degree resemblances of Gods glory and therefore are these workes of wonder called the glory of God Thus the power of God in raising Christ is called his Glory Rom. 6.4 and so the marvellous workes mentioned Psal. 97.4 5 6. so Christ in working the miracle in Canaan of Galile is said to shew his glory Ioh. 2.11 And as workes of miracles are called the glory of God because God hath in them stamped some lively resemblance of his excellencie so also workes of speciall justice done upon Gods enemies are called his glory also as the se places shew Exod. 14.14 Num. 14.21 Esa. 13.3 So also Gods mighty working in delivering his servants is called his glory also Psal. 105.5 6. and 57.6 and 85.9 Fourthly in man God hath imprinted his glory and so in all sorts of mankind they are called the glory of God in respect of their resemblance of Gods soveraignty man is as it were a visible God in this visible world and in respect of his superioritie over the creatures resembles God 1 Cor. 11.17 And as God hath imprinted his glory upon all men in generall so in a speciall manner upon some men as 1 Upon such men as shine in the outward dignity and preeminence of their places in this world above other men their glory is said to bee Gods glory 1 Chron. 29.11 12. 2 Upon such men as are indued with the grace of God and the vertues of Jesus Christ these beare Gods Image and are therefore called his glory Esa. 46.13 2 Cor. 3.18 Psal. 90.17 3 In a more principall manner upon such as be received up to glory in heaven Thus God will be glorified in his Saints at the day of Judgement 2 Thes. 1.10 This is that glory of God which the godly doe hope for with so much joy Rom. 5.2 Fifthly in certaine visible signes and testimonies of his presence Thus the consuming fire on mount Sinah is called the glory of God Exod. 24.6 16 17. So also the cloud that filled the Temple Exod. 40.34 and the cloud that rose upon the Tabernacle in the wildernesse And so the signes of Gods presence in heaven are in a speciall respect called his glory Thus Stephen saw the glory of God and
high in our unworthy conceptions of his Justice Power Eternity Wisedome and Mercy For the second way of glorifying God What heart could stand before his holy presence if he should examine us in justice 1 For our language What man is hee that hath not cause to mourne for his want of language daily in expressing of the praises of God! When did we make his praise glorious have our mouthes been filled with his praise all the day long 2 For our extreame unthankfulnesse when wee meet with God himselfe we have beene healed with the nine Lepers but which of us have returned to give glory to God in the sound acknowledgment of his goodnesse to us It is required we should in all things give thankes and yet we have scarce used one word of praise for a thousand benefits 3 Our slight acknowledgments of sin our backwardnesse to search our waies our carelesnesse when wee know divers grievous faults by our selves either avoiding Gods presence and making confession for fashions ●ake neither out of true griefe for our sinnes and in a speciall manner doe we faile in those cases of trespasse or sinne that com● to the knowledge of others Do we knowledge our sinnes one to another Oh how hard it is to bring us to bee easie to give glory to God herein What man is hee that liveth and hath not failed of the glory of God about the Sabbath Do wee delight in Gods work Have we consecrated that day as glorious to the Lord Have not our mindes run upon our own waies After what an unspeakable manner have we slighted God in his Ordinances Lastly what shall we answer to the Lord for our neglects of Jesus Christ Have we glorified the Son or rather have we not shamefull wants still in our faith Which of us can say that he lives by the faith of the Sonne of God And are not our affections to the Lord Jesus extreamly dull and adverse Where is the longing desire after him and the fervent love of his appearing And for the last way of glorifying God by effect How unprofitably and unfruitfully doe the most of us live Who hath praised God in our behalfe Whom have we won to the love of God and the truth Where are our witnesses that might testifie that our good works have caused them to glorifie God But especially woe be to scandalous Christians that have either caused wicked men to blaspheme or Gods little ones to take offence and conceive ill of the good way of God if they repent not it had beene better for them they had never beene borne And as for wicked men that are openly so to give a touch of them and their estate they have reason to repent in sackcloth and ashes if their eyes were but open to see what terrour is implied in this doctrine and how God will avenge himselfe upon them both for their not glorifying of him and for changing his glory and for the opposing of his glory 1 In not glorifying God they have spent their daies without God they have either not conceived of him at all or in a most meane and vile manner they have not honoured him in his ordinances or in his Sabbaths they never loved the Lord Jesus in their hearts c. 2 In changing the glory of God they have done shamefully Some of them have turned Gods glory into the similitude of an Oxe or a Calfe that eareth hay Some of them have given his praise to Images and the workes of their hands Some of them have fixed the glory of their affections upon riches pleasures and favour of men Some of them have made their belly their god and some have given their bodies to harlots Thirdly in opposing Gods glory they have likewise offended grievously they have spoken evill of the good way of God they have abused his servants and so despised him they have set themselves against his Sabbaths c. to omit that they have opposed Gods glory in their hearts by setting up Idols there by allowing striving to maintain Atheisticall conceits against God The second use should be therefore to beget in us a care to use all means to dispose of and fit our selves that we might make God glorious and so amend and redresse our waies herein and that wee may the more effectually bee wrought upon herein I will consider of two things First I will briefly shew the reasons should stirre us to all possible care and diligence herein Secondly I would shew how wee may distinctly attaine to the glorifying of God in all the three waies before mentioned For the first Divers considerations should move us to the care of magnifying or glorifying of God by all the waies we can First it is a great honour that God doth unto us to account himselfe to receive glory any way from our endeavours Shall the creature be admitted in any sense to that glory to make his Creator to make him I say in his excellencie or glory God doth account himselfe to receive a new Beeing as it were by those inward conceptions of his glory and by those outward honours done unto him Shall the King of glory vouchsafe to dwell in our hearts and shall we not be exceedingly desirous to entertaine him Secondly not to glorifie God is to sinne grievously it is not arbitrary but most dangerous to allow our selves either in inward neglects of God or in outward unfruitfulnesse Shall wee attribute so much every day to the creatures we deale with and shall we know or acknowledge so little of the Creator It cannot be safe to slight God Thirdly it is one of the first things that breakes out in the new Converts so soone as any of the Gentiles are visited of God in the same day they glorifie him by conceiving gloriously of him and by magnifying God in himselfe and his servants and service c. And therefore without singular danger of losing our evidence of our calling we must attend to this Doctrine how hard soever it seeme Fourthly wee are bought with a price and are Gods and therefore now both in soule and body we should be wholly devoted to his glory 1 Cor. 6 ult as God hath glorified us in our creation and the many treasures he hath given us in Jesus Christ and we hope the accomplishment of ma●chlesse glory in heaven and shall wee not bee zealous for the glory of the Lord Many glorious things bee spoken of us through his grace and shall wee thinke or speake meanely of God Fifthly the Lord our God exceeds all things in glory and therefore wee should extoll his praise above the heavens and the whole earth should shew it selfe to be full of his glory Sixthly he is our heavenly Father and can we thinke too well of him or doe too much to win him praise Matth. 5.16 Lastly thinke with our selves What make wee in Gods Vineyard or Orchard If we be trees of his planting ought we not to be filled with the
without punishment they may bring downe the judgements of God upon the place where they live Uses Which may serve for terrour to other offenders First the very sight of Magistrates should affright them considering that God sent those very Magistrates to punish them It importeth that though they escape the hands of men they shall not escape the hands of God Secondly it should teach men if they would live out of the danger of the Magistrates punishment to take heed they be not evill doers Quest. Now if you aske who are evill doers Ans. I answer Such as live in notorious offences such as are swearers drunkards whore-mongers railers theeves idle persons murtherers Sabbath-breakers sowers of discord and the like The originall word doth point at some speciall sort of offendours For naming evill doers such especially must not escape as 1. Invent evill where it is not 2. Or sinne not out of ignorance but wilfully 3. Or are leaders of other men to evill 4. Or make a trade of offending by custome in sinne 5. Or study how to doe mischief gathering together as things might further their evill courses All this may be included in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. Thirdly there are from hence many to be blamed that speake evill of such as take any course to reforme abuses 4. Fourthly Magistrates must looke to their calling and Gods Commandement to see abuses amended or else they must account to God for it 3. The third doctrine which may be noted from hence is That all evill doers are to be punished without respect of persons they are to looke upon mens works and not on their persons great men must be punished if they be evill doers as well as poore men many men as well as one man yea if good men doe evill they must beare the punishment of their sinne Christians as well as Pagans 4. That evill doers are not accounted safe members of any society and therefore are distinguished from good subjects as not fit to be of that order 5. That such as transgresse the lawes of men are accounted by the Apostle evill doers as well as such as transgresse the Lawes of God for hee here speakes especially of such as are evill doers in respect of humane ordinances which may be a warning to such as securely live in the transgression of the commandements of Christian Magistrates and withall it may impaire the honour of their condition that live in the breach of the Lawes of God without repentance For if it be so hatefull a thing to bee a breaker of the lawes of men in what case are they in that have so grossely broken the Lawes of God 6. That punishment of evill doers is in the power of the Magistrate private men cannot reforme publike abuses they may pray for reformation they are not to execute it but by authority 7. That there are divers evils which men cannot punish for the Magistrate can onely punish evill doers that is such as offend in word or deed evill thinkers they cannot meddle withall Which may warne Magistrates to bee wary how they punish men onely upon suspition or presumption without proofe that they are evill doers and withall it shewes that God hath reserved th● judgement of mens works also to himselfe For God hares the sinnes of the heart as well as the sinnes of life and therefore since for these evils men answer not to men they must provide to answer before God 8. That a Magistrate that punisheth sinnes doth but execute the commission he received from God hee was sent of God to that end and therefore may comfort himselfe in the Lord how ill soever his execution of justice bee spoken of among men Thus of the punishment of evill doers The second end of the sending of Magistrates is for the praise of them that doewell For the praise of them that doe well By such as doe well hee meanes such as in publike societies live without offence and carry themselves honestly in their places especially such as are profitable and doe good to others whether it be to the mindes of men by instructing or reproving or to the bodies or estates of men by works of mercie or righteousnesse and among these he meaneth especially such as 1. Are Inventers of good the first Authors of the publike good 2. That doe good daily and frequently 3. That study how they may doe all the good they can and doe imploy all the helps and furtherances of good they can Here may many things be noted from hence First that all that are members of publike societies are bound to be carefull to doe good to others and to live so that the Church and Common-wealth may be the better for them Which should much humble such Christians as live and doe little or no good and should quicken in all sorts of good Christians a desire to serve the publike wee are not set here to doe good to our selves onely but also to others Secondly that in this world it is not to be expected from men that all that doe well or deserve well should bee rewarded by them hee saith For the praise not For the reward as importing that many a man may deserve well that shall never have recompence from men And this ariseth partly from the corruption of Magistrates that are not carefull to dispose preferments or recompence to such as are worthy and partly from the insufficiencie of any earthly greatnesse to doe it For great men can reward all their servants or friends but no King can give the honour or preferment that is due to all his subjects that deserve well Which should teach us partly to doe good without hope of reward from men and partly to quicken our hearts to the admiration of the reward that God gives in heaven wee should provide to be his subjects and then wee are sure to have a full reward of well-doing in heaven Thirdly that to be praised or to have a good report among men is a great blessing of God and therefore in the Old Testament blessing and praise i● expressed by one word Prov. 28.20 And this may appeare to be so 1. Because God himselfe seekes praise from his creatures and accounts himselfe honoured by it Psal. 50.23 Ephes. 1.6 12 14. 2. Because praise is a part of the glory of God shining upon a man 3. Because it is in Scripture preferred before things of great price as great riches Prov. 22.1 and pretious ointment Eccles. 7 c. 4. Because it so much refresheth a mans heart it makes his bones full Prov. 15.35 5. Because an ill name is noted as an extreme curse Iob 18.17 and in many other places Uses The use is first to comfort godly men and to make them thankful if God give them a good report here but especially it should comfort them to thinke of the praise they shall have at the last day For if it be a blessing to be praised of men what is it to
delay but with heart and readinesse finish his worke This is to seeke righteousnesse and to haste to it Esay 16.5 Amos 5.14 Thus he must observe to doe as the phrase was Deut. 5.22 Eighthly it will be a great helpe unto him if he get into the way of good men and walke with the wise sorting himselfe with discreet and sincere Christians Pro. 2.20 Ninthly he must keep his heart with all diligence for thereout commeth life He must carefully resist the beginnings of sinne within and avoid those secret and spirituall dalliances of the soule with inward corruptions and temptations and withall take heed of secret hypocrisie in suffering his heart to be absent when God is to be served Pro. 4.23 For thereby hee may lose what he worketh if his spirit be not without that guile Tenthly all that know the happinesse of a righteous life should strive to amend those defects which are found even in the better sort of people that so their life at length may answer to the end of Christs death and therefore wee should examine our selves throughly The defects and faylings found in the lives of righteous men may be referred to two heads First for either they faile in the parts of righteousnesse Secondly or in the manner of well-doing In the parts of righteousnesse there are great failings whether we respect the first or second table I will briefely touch the principall defects which are observed and complained of in Christians in both tables In the first table men faile either in the knowledge of God or in the affections to God or in the service to God First for knowledge how little do many men know of Gods praises and glory that might be knowne and how farre are many from a right con●eit of God when they come to thinke of him or to worship him Secondly in the most there is a great want in the exercise both of the fear of God and trust in God men have not such awfull thoughts of God as they should have nor doe they tremble so as they should at his judgements that are in the world Psal. 4.4 Heb. 2. ult Dan. 6.26 And for the trust in God men are specially faulty that they doe not commit their waies daily to God for assistance and successe in all estates resting upon him alone as they ought to doe Thirdly joying and delighting our selves in God is hardly found in any and yet no wife should take such continuall delight in her husband to solace her selfe with him as a Christian ought to doe with God Psal. 37.4 and 68.3 4. Phil. 4.4 Fourthly in the service of God there are divers defects as 1. Some neglect the private reading of the Scriptures who ought to exercise themselves therein day and night Psal. 1.2 2. In prayer some have not the gift of prayer nor seeke it and prayer for others is extremely neglected contrary to Gods expresse commandement that enjoynes us to pray one for another in many Scriptures 3. Praising of God in our discourses as becommeth his great glory in his workes where is this found and yet required at our hands and at the hands of all people and that which we should doe with a whole heart and while we live Psal. 96.6 7 8. and 63.4 and 9.1 and 67.2 4. Where is that walking with God required in Scripture Who doth alwayes set the Lord before him Where are those soliloquies betweene the soule and God Are not many content to goe weekely and monthly without speaking to God And thus of the defects concerning the first table In the second table divers things may be noted as were defective in the parts of righteousnesse as First there is a generall defect of mercy men doe exceedingly faile in that liberality to the distressed and poore servants The bowels of mercy are every-where shut up either altogether or in the neglect of many degrees and duties of mercy Secondly in many Christians there is a fearfull want of meekenesse they being guilty of daily sins of passions and worldly vexations and that many times with a kind of wilfulnesse against knowledge and conscience Thirdly the car●● of life and worldlinesse doe strive and blemish the conversation of many and discover a strange defect of that contempt of the world should be in them Fourthly domesticall disorders doe even cry to heaven against many husbands for want of love and of most wives for want of obedience and of servants for want of diligence and faithfulnesse in their places And thus men faile in the parts of righteousnesse In the manner of well-doing many things are wanting first both in the generall well-doing of good duties secondly and in speciall affection to God thirdly and in the manner of Gods service In generall First zeale of good workes is exceeding defective in the most Tit. 3.14 Men shew not that willingnesse and fervency of affection should be shewed in all parts of righteousnesse men doe not lift up their hearts in Gods waies Gods commandements are usually grievous and tedious Secondly there ought to be a holy feare in the practice of their good duties 1 Pet. 3.2 which is u●ually wanting men doe so much trust upon themselves and doe duties with such boldnesse and neglect of their wayes whereas they should feare alwayes Pro. 28.14 Oh that meeknesse of wisedome required Iames 3.9 where is it to be found Thirdly men are not circumspect to make conscience even of the least duties as they ought and to observe to doe them even to watch for the opportunity of well-doing and to looke to the meanes of the performance of every duty and to abstaine from the very appearance of evill and to be discreet in looking to the circumstances of time place persons c. Eph. 5.15 Deut. 5.32 Fourthly there is great want of moderation in Christians for either they are just over-much in conceiving too highly of themselves for what they doe or else they are wicked over-much in thinking too vilely of their workes Eccles. 7. Fiftly men are strangely negligent in the growth of grace and knowledge men stand still and doe not prosper and strive to increase in every good gift as they ought 2 Pet. 3.18 Many graces are not strengthened and many workes are not finished Secondly in mens affections to God how are men defective Where is he that loves the Lord with all his heart and all his might and all his soule Deut. 30.6 and 6.3 Thirdly in Gods worship these things are in many wanting 1. Reverence and that holy feare which should be shewed when we appeare before the Lord Heb. 12.28 2. Men usually forget to doe all worship in the Name of Christ Colos. 3.17 3. The care of praising of God that is of looking to Gods acceptation in all service is much forgotten Heb. 12.28 4. The desire of unity and consent in judgement among our selves when we worship God is miserably neglected and rejected by divers wilfull Christians Zeph.
not in judgement only acknowledge it as due but with wonderfull affection doth easily and with great love give that title to Abraham 2. That it is one part of the subjection of wives to carry themselves reverently towards their husbands and to give them such titles as may shew that they doe heartily honour them 3. Wee may here observe the wonderfull goodnesse of God towards his servants that in a great heape of sinne can see and accept of a little sparke of true grace The whole sentence of Sarah was vile and profane only that word was good God praiseth her for that was good and passeth by the great fault she committed Yea we may note that God is so well pleased with her loving subjection to her husband that he is content to forgive her great sinne of unbeliefe against him Yea it is probable that her great respect of her husband made her the more willingly to beleeve Gods promise afterwards for Heb. 11.11 she is commended judging God to be faithfull who had promised her a child though at first she laughed at it Whose daughters yee are Godly women may be said to be the daughters of Sarah three waies 1. If Sarah be taken mystically for the new Jerusalem as Gal. 4. 2. In respect of inhe●iting the love and blessing of God which Sarah had they shall be her daughters that is they shall have the same portion from God as if they had come in Sarahs roome as in the case of Abraham is said Rom. 4.11 16. 3. In respect of spirituall kindred and alliance Christian women are as neere a kin to Sarah as if they were her owne daughters So that the maine doctrine from hence is That there is a spirituall kindred and consanguinitie betweene the godly about which from this place we may observe divers positions 1. That all the godly are a kinne and the reason is because they are all the children of one father that is God and all borne of the immortall seed of the Word 2. That they are neere a kin as neere as mothers and daughters or as brothers and sisters as Christ said of his kindred Mat. 12.49 50. Here are no cousins removed 3. That this kindred doth conferre a reall honour upon every Christian so as the Christian wives are as truely great as if they were immediately descended out of Sarahs womb 4. That God himselfe doth seriously acknowledge this kindred and looks upon the meanest Christian as truely allied to the greatest Worthies have ever beene in the world 5. That this neerenesse of consanguinitie is not a jot altered by the distance of hundred of yeeres as in the Apostles time the glory of alliance with Sarah did shine in Christian women the reason is because the root of this consanguinitie is ever alive which is Christ. 6. That Christians are not borne to this kindred but made so Godly women were not borne daughters of Sarah but became so after their new birth 7. That that which breeds this spirituall kindred is not being Gossips at the Fon● nor no carnall propagation Rom. 9.8 but faith Rom. 4.16 and well-doing as this Apostle saith in this Text. The Use may be first to comfort godly Christians against the want and losse of carnall kindred and to teach us all to honour su●h as are truely godly for they are the onely excellent ones and have the greatest and best kindred in the world Yea we should preferre our godly kindred before our carnall in the dearenesse of our love and the godly should shew all dueties of love one to another as they that are mothers and daughters brothers and sisters in the Lord and so should stand one for another as men would doe for their carnall kindred A second doctrine may be noted from hence That all Christians are not alike in gifts some are mothers ●ome are daughters as it is in the body of a man all the members are not of like honour or use though all serve for the good of the bodie 1 Cor. 12. Which should teach those of greater gifts not to despise those of lesser gifts and those of lesser gifts to honour those of greater gifts and both sorts to praise God for the gifts they have having nothing but what they have received and to be a daughter of Sarah being sufficient to get the blessing that Sarah had her selfe So long as you doe well Observe hence 1. That Christians obtaine not the proper priviledges of communion of Saints unlesse they doe well None but Christians that leade a holy life have the honour of true spirituall kindred with Christ and the Saints Mat. 12.49 50. Wicked Christians are a kin to the Divell 2. That we are bound only to imitate that which is good in the Saints not their sins They must follow Sarah in her well-doing they must not imitate her in her frowardnesse Gen. 16.5 nor in her bold adventuring of her chastitie though it were upon pretence of saving her husbands life Gen. 12.11 12. And this condemnes those women that so wilfully alledge the example of others to uphold them in such behaviour as their owne consciences tell is naught 3. It is imported here that some women may doe well for a time and yet prove very naught afterwards Some begin in the spirit and end in the flesh Some women are at first quiet sober loving to their husbands good housewives c. and yet after a time they grow froward excessive in apparell dyet and the like imperious such as sleight their husbands idle and wastfull and carelesse of the duties they should doe in the family They are condemned of themselves and shall rise in judgement against themselves their first works condemne their last 4. In generall we may here note That it is not enough to doe good but we must see to it that what we doe be well done Quest. What can come to a good action to make it ill Answ. Impenitencie in any sin will staine any action though it be in it selfe never so good Esay 1.13 16. 2. An ill end will defile a good action to doe it of purpose to be seene of men Mat. 6. or as men pleasers in the case of wives or servants or subjects c. 3. Unbeliefe makes all actions ill Whatsoever is not of faith is sin when we either know not the warrant of it or beleeve not Gods acceptation 4. Rashnesse and indiscretion mars good actions Pro. 19.2 when men have not respect to the circumstances of well-doing or the provision should goe to it when good duties are done rudely and without respect of due time and place c. We should be wise to doe good Rom. 16.19 5. Unwillingnesse defiles a good action when it seemes evill to us to serve God Iosh. 24.14 when our workes are dead workes Hebr. 9.14 Deut. 28.47 6. When the fruit men beare is not their owne fruit as if a King will offer sacrifice or women preach or the like And so when wives doe
brought to light none can reach to it but such as God endues with speciall wisedome for Solomon long since had observed that life is above to the wise only Pro. 15.24 The things I would consider of about this life are these 1. The degrees of it 2. The originall of it 3. A ghesse at the nature of it 4. The things that nourish it 5. The differences betweene this life on earth and as it is in heaven 6. The meanes to attaine it or what we must doe if wee would enter into life 7. The signes to know whether it be in us 8. The properties of it 9. Lastly the Uses of it 1. For first we must understand that this life hath three degrees into which we enter in at three gates as it were The first degree of eternall life begins at the first spirituall acquaintance with God in this life when his favour is made knowne to us in Jesus Christ by the Gospel so as we are truely justified and sanctified being reconciled unto God having all our sins forgiven us and our natures made new and into this degree we enter by the gate of regeneration Thus our Saviour saith This is eternall life to know God and whom he hath sent Iesus Christ Iohn 17.3 Thus he that heareth Christs words and beleeveth is passed from death to life Iohn 5.24 The second degree begins at our death and continueth the life that the soule separated from the body enjoyes till the resurrection at the last day And concerning the estate of the soule in this degree of life we have no absolute revelation but yet are taught in Scripture that it returnes to God that gave it to the body at first Eccles. 12.7 and that it is with Christ Phil. 1.23 that it is in the hands of God and in Paradise Luke 23.43 and lives in unspeakable joy Luke 16.25 and is freed from all miseries of this life and enjoyes the honour of all good workes Rev. 14.13 the bodie resting in the grave from all paine and labour as in a bed of rest till the resurrection Esay 57.2 And into this degree of life eternall we enter in by the gate of death The third degree of life eternall begins at the resurrection of our bodies at the last day and is enjoyed by body and soule for ever comprehending all possible consummation of felicity and glory in the heavens And into this we enter by the gate of resurrection which is a kind of new begetting of us and therefore is called the resurrection of life Iohn 11.25 and so the blessed in heaven are called the children of the resurrection and by that way the children of God Luke 20.36 In the first degree life is imperfect in the second it is perfect in the third it is consummate And the Use of this first point should be to warne men to looke to it that they enter into the first degree of eternall life while they are in this world or else they shall never get to heaven when they die and therefore should strive for saving knowledge and to become new creatures or else it is in vain to hope for heaven 2. For the second which is the originall of life it is greatly for the praise of it that it flowes from that life which is in God himselfe which is an unspeakable glory to the creatures that enjoy it With thee is the fountaine of life saith David Psal. 36.9 So he calls him the God of his life Psal. 42.8 Naturall life is but a sparkle that flowes from the life of our Parents but spirituall and eternall life is kindled from that infinite light and life of God but yet not as Christ received we this life for he had it by naturall generation we have it by a way unspeakable from God but yet by Jesus Christ. In him was life as the life was the light of men Iohn 14. He that hath the Son hath life Iohn 5.12 and he it is that is eternall life viz. to us ver 20. As there is no light in the visible world but from the Sun in the firmament so there is no life in the spirituall world but from God in heaven which hath caused it to shine in our hearts by the Son of righteousnesse Christ Jesus Thus our life is called the life of God Ephes. 4.18 and Christ is said to live in us Gal. 2.20 Which should teach us greatly to admire and adore the excellency of Gods goodnesse and make us to rest our selves for ever under the shadow of his wings Psal. 36.7 8 9. But that this point may be more cleerely understood we must consider of the originall of this life from God three waies First in respect of ordination and so it flowes from Gods decree he hath ordained us unto life Acts 13.48 and our names are written in the booke of life Phil. 4.3 Secondly in respect of merit it was bought of God by the death of the flesh of Christ. I give my flesh for the life of the world Iohn 6.51 This life will not be had without his death that we might live in eternall life he must die a temporall death And shall not this greatly inflame our hearts to love the Lord Jesus that gave himselfe for us that we should not perish but have everlasting life Thirdly in respect of operation or inchoation and so the fountaine of life is either without us or within us without us is the Word of Christ that is the immortall seed by which we are begotten unto life 1 Pet. 1.24 and so is called the Word of life Phil. 2.15 And the Word is so as it is the Word of Christ that is Gospel My words saith he are spirit and life Iohn 6.63 And that Word considered as it is preached to the dead soules of men the dead shall heare the voice of Christ and live Shall heare it note that Iohn 5.25 which should make us greatly to esteeme the preaching of the Gospel Within us the fountaine of life is the Spirit of Christ which is called the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.2 Now the Spirit of Christ that we may live doth two things viz. it quickens the seed of the Word and unites us unto Christ as members of the mysticall body and then looke how the soule of man doth give life to every member of the body so doth the Spirit of Christ to every soule as a severall member of the mysticall body 3. For the third Wee shall not exactly know what the nature of eternall life is still it be perfected in us or consummate yet by divers words God hath let fal in Scripture we may ghesse at the nature of this life and in generall I thinke it is a kind of celestiall light falling into the soule that doth to it that which naturall life doth to the body This Saint Iohn shewing how Christ was the life of men saith he was the light of men Iohn 1.4 And David having said
With thee is the fountaine of life adds And in thy light we shall see light Psal. 36.8 And so the promise to the penitent sinner was that his life should see the light Iob 33.28 So Christ saith he that followeth him shall have the light of life Marke it the Light of life Iohn 8.12 So that the life of our minds is knowledge in generall and in particular it is the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ as our Saviour saith expresly Iohn 17.3 This is eternall life to know God and whom he hath sent Jesus Christ. And the reason why this knowledge doth most inlive and quicken our hearts is because God in Christ is the most glorious subject of contemplation as being that highest good a very Ocean of goodnesse only able to fill and ravish the heart of man and besides because God as our chiefe good can alone make the ravishment of the heart perpetuall and so last for ever which nothing else can doe But because every knowledge of God hath not this effect to breed everlasting life in the heart of a man therefore I will distinctly set downe what kind of knowledge it is that hath this effect and what is required that it may be right 1. It must be such a knowledge as discernes God to be the only true God and this rule excludes the Pagans from eternall life who though by the light of nature they might discerne the invisible things of God by the workes of the creation yet they so shut up those principles of naturall truth in unrighteousnesse that they set up creatures as God and gave the glory of the true God to them Rom. 1. 2. It must be such a knowledge as ascribes unto the Nature of God such an excellencie as can be exprest by no likenesse of any creature in heaven above or earth beneath or the waters under the earth God must not be conceived of by any Images Images in the Church shut out the Papists from eternall life and Images in the heart to conceive of God by exclude the ignorant and carnall Protestants In the right conceiving of Gods nature we must adore him that is like nothing in heaven or earth 3. It must be such a knowledge or vision of God as discernes him to be the chiefe good and only happinesse to be desired and so all those persons that behold any thing in this life to be sought after as the chiefe felicity of their lives are excluded from eternall life And the things so esteemed the Scripture calls their gods so some make their bellies their gods some their riches some honour and the favour of men 4. It must be such a knowledge of God as conceives of him in Jesus Christ that is that sees the way how Gods infinite justice provoked by many sins is pacified by the attonement made by Jesus Christ as the Mediatour betweene God and man Iohn 17.3 else the knowledge of God in respect of the contemplation of Gods justice will be so far from inliving our hearts that it would kill them if they had life And this rule excludes all such from eternall life as live in despaire of Gods mercy as Cain and Iudas These knowledges are such as without which life cannot be had but yet in themselves doe not quicken the soule and inspire it with life 5. It must be such a knowledge as doth not only discerne aright the doctrine of the nature of God and of the person and offices of Christ but doth discerne that God is ours in particular in Jesus Christ and fully reconciled to us and our portion for ever To know God to be our God in Christ is the very life of our soules Now because we discerne this in God two waies viz by the light of ●aith beleeving the promises of the Word though we see him not and by the light of vision when we shall see him in his goodnesse face to face therefore is the former light called the light of faith and belongs to this life and the latter light belongs to another world Hence our justification which is by faith is called the justification of life Rom. 5.18 This is a point which should be of unspeakable comfort to the weake Christians that have attained to this knowledge for certainely this is eternall life in them as true as if they had the glory of heaven already But now that true Christians may be the more infallibly settled in the knowledge of their interest in eternall life as it lieth in the right knowledge of God ●o be ours i● Jesus Christ I will add certaine effects of this knowledge which shew not only that it is right but also that it is very eternall or spirituall for if it be a right knowledge 1. It raiseth in the dead heart of man spirituall senses that were never there before it makes the soule of a man able to heare Gods Word that could never doe it before it gives sight in spirituall things and sense and feeling and spirituall tastes of Gods goodnesse and a savouring of spirituall things more than earthly 2 Cor. 2.15 Rom. 8.5 Psal. 36.8 Phil. 1.9 2. It is a knowledge with admiration it sets a mans heart upon a constant wondering at the glory of the things revealed He that hath this knowledge sees in a Mirrour hee sees and wonders Nothing more ravisheth the heart than doth the word when it shewes him the glorie of Gods grace to him 2 Cor. 3.18 Wicked men see but they see not in a Mirrour 3. It is a knowledge that workes transformation it changeth a man into the likenesse of that it sees even from glory to glory by the power of the spirit of Christ. The light comes into wicked men but leaves them the same men it found them for disposition and conversation but this light humbles the heart of a man for his sins and purifieth him from his most secret sins Acts 15.9 and besides prints upon him the image of God and stirs him u●to all the motives of life in doing good workes 2 Cor. 3.18 Col. 3.10 1 Iohn 2.3 3.24 4. It is such a light as is indeleble and will abide the triall of manifold afflictions and gives life and joy still to the soule it doth not only comfort in Gods house but will support us when we are gone home under the miseries of this present life 1 Pet. 1.7 The Use should be to teach us all to blesse God for the Gospel that brings life to light and shewes us the love of God to us in Christ and for all the meanes by which the Gospel is preached to us in the life of it Oh how should we be beholding to them that help us to eternall life by leading us unto God this Ocean of goodnesse And withall we should be wonderfully thankfull to God and for ever comforted if we can finde that we have attained to the assurance of Gods love to us in Christ. Though our knowledge here be but small and weake
then we shall see God by direct vision Moses that saw as much of God as a mortall man then could saw but his backe parts he saw God as we see a man going from us but then we shall see him face to face as he is comming to us yea as he is possessed by us Wee shall not need helpe to shew God to us as we doe now for God himselfe shall be our everlasting light as was shewed before There is a foure-fold vision of God the one is natu●all as when wee see him in the creatures the other is speculous or Symbolicall when we see God in certaine signes of his presence as in the burning fire in the Bush or in the Cloud or Pillar of fire at the Tabernacle The third is the vision of Faith when we know how good God is by the promises of his word to us in Christ. The last is the vision of ●lory which differs from all the former in a way of seeing unknowne to us Thirdly our knowledge will differ in the measure Now wee know b●t in part there are many things wee know not and what wee doe know wee know but obscurely and darkly then wee shall know perfectly even as wee are now knowne perfectly of God 1 Cor. 13.10 11. c. and so wee shall know both God and the Creat●res There is a world of most delightfull and rare knowledge of the Creatures which wee attaine not to in this life but the chiefe glory of our knowledge then shall bee in the perfect vision of God and those unspeakable beauties of his nature when wee shall behold perfectly the glory of every propertie or attribute in God which will be sufficient to breed everlasting wonder and delight In a word the knowledge of the meanest Christian in heaven shall be above the knowledge of Prophets or Apostles on earth The first difference is in the effect of our knowledge for from our knowledge and this celestiall light flowes righteousnesse peace and joy in the holy Ghost which the Apostle Paul makes to be the parts of the Kingdome of God and so both in this life and in heaven Rom. 14.17 And unto these three heads may bee referred all things that concerne the glory of eternall life and all these are held with great difference in each degree of eternall life For though we have righteousnesse and peace and joy now in the truth of them yet wee have ●hem not as we shall have them in heaven as will appeare if we consider of them distinctly First for righteousnesse Here it is the greatest burthen of life unto the godly that they are not able to serve God as they desire the imperfections of their gifts the corruption of their natures the daily infirmities that discover themselves in their conversations make life many times more bitter than death would be to them as appeareth by St. Paul Rom. 7. But there all that is imperfect shall be done away there shall be no danger of displeasing God for we shall be made perfect in all parts and degrees of holinesse our nature shall be perfect like the nature of God our members shall never more be servants unto unrighteousnesse and our soules shall exactly resemble God in all perfection of goodnesse and gifts Here the glory of mans inheritance lieth in the goodnesse of things without them there it shall consist principally in an everlasting goodnesse confirmed upon themselves We shall be without spot and wrinkle Eph 5.27 We shall be as he is in holinesse 1 Iohn 3.2 Here is our griefe that our hearts cannot be so filled with the love of God and the godly as they should be there our hearts shall burne with an eternall inflammation of affections towards God and the blessed ones without any interruption or decay we shall never mor● be troubled with hardnesse of heart discouragement feare distractions inordinate desires and perturbations Yea our holinesse shall be better than Adams in Paradise for he had a power not to sin but we shall have no power at all to sin Yea in relation to Christ it shall be better with us then than it is now for now we are reckoned just men only by the benefit of Christs righteousnesse imputed to us but then we shall be made so perfectly holy by inherent righteousnesse that we shall stand everlastingly righteous before God by the righteousnesse that is in us Imputation shall there cease for ever when Christ hath delivered up the kingdome to God the Father and when faith shall be done away Lastly the difference in this point may further appeare in the freedome of our wills In this life many times our wills are not free to desire to doe the good we should doe and most an end want power to execute what we desire but there shall be all libertie so as we shall never want either desire or power to accomplish what may be for Gods everlasting glory or our owne felicity Secondly for peace there is great difference for first in this life we have but little peace in respect of the miseries of life Sometimes we have but little inward peace our hearts being unquiet with feare or griefe or discouragement or passions or else our consciences are unquiet either because God fights against us to trie us or to humble us or we fight against our selves through ignorance and unbeliefe or distresse for sin Sometimes when our spirits are quiet and there is a truce from inward war we then want out vard peace either men are unreasonable and molest us without cause in our estates or names or else God afflicts us in body with paine and weaknesse or in estate sometimes with easie crosses like small rain sometimes with greater crosses like some fierce storms Now in heaven there shall be an eternall cessation of all miserie there shall be no curse and affliction shall be cast into the Sea Rev. 22.23 Secondly our Sabbaths or dayes of rest which G●d hath consecrated and blessed to us as the chiefe joy of our lives prove many times daies of sorrow affliction because either our bodies are molested with pain or our soules distressed for want of powerfull meanes or for want of abilitie to keepe a Sabbath unto God or for want of joy in our soules but in heaven we shall have an eternall Sabbath not one day in seven but all our dayes rest without labour and solace of heart without any difficultie in our selves or interruption without us God and the Lamb will be an eternall Temple to make our rest for ever glorious Wee shall be freed from all the labours of life and from all paine and difficultie in serving God and our works shall be all easie and full of delight even the praising of God for ever Rev. 14.12 Heb 4.9 Thirdly for joy There is great difference both in the causes and in the measure and in the continuance of it The causes of our joy shall be the highest can befall a
16.8 Or else in respect of the second table 2. Defects in the manner of doing righteously and so 1. In generall 5. waies Many defects in Gods worship How the 〈◊〉 com● 5 to be diseased The diseases of the soule are grievous many wayes Why many feel not the diseases of their soules Wherein Christs healing excels for our com●ort Ezek. 36. H●s 14.2.3 Esay 19 2● Jer. 17.14 What we must do● to be healed of Christ. Psal. 147.3 Esay 57.15 18. Gal. 6.14 Rules for such as desire Christ to heale or help their bodily griefes What is meant by going astray The misery of such a● goe astray ●ppears in divers r●spects Aggravations of their misery 〈…〉 mens 〈◊〉 as●ray Esay 16 1● Job 12.28 Signes of a l●s● sheep● Divers things that give hope of curing to such as be out of the way 〈…〉 〈…〉 The time of returning 〈…〉 returning 〈…〉 against d●vers the 〈◊〉 aggravations against divers that returned 〈…〉 of lost 〈◊〉 do 〈…〉 The meanes of returning 〈…〉 〈…〉 Q●●st 〈…〉 What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepheard Christ is one Shepheard He is the true Shepheard He is the good Shepheard 1 Tim. 1.13 16 1 Cor. 9 10 11 Hee is the great Shepheard and that in divers respects The happinesse of such as live under this Shepheard appeares in ten particular priviledges Cant. 1.7 Zach. 11 9.10 Explanation of the tearme Bishop Christ excels all other Bishops in ten respects Such are happy that live under the charge of this Bishop Duties of such as be under the charge of this Bishop Generall scope Note Sixteene motives f●r man and wife to live quietly and comfortably together Use. Five speciall causes of disorder betweene man and wife Helps for man and wife to attain an orderly and quiet life Reasons to prove that women ought to be taught their duties as well as men Why the Apostle is so large in setting down wives duties What thing● are imported by often repeating of them Note Eight reasons why Wives ought to be subject Why the Apostle chargeth wives only with subjection In what things they are to be subject The maner how they must submit In what cases the wife ought not to subj●ct her selfe Particular sins of the wife again subjection Divers waies of winning men Note Causes o● revolting in many are divers Nine signes to know whether we be won effectually Sixe things required to sound obedience Divers kinds of winning Note What a Minister must doe to win soules To be won what it imports Note Why all are not converted at once Divers waies from God to further our salvation Doct. 1. By what meanes we may win wicked men in our conversation What things a wife must especially practise to win her husband Note Use. In what respects godly men are said to be pure Note Motives to chastity Preservatives of ch●stity How a chaste wife may be discerned Reasons why wicked men are sinitten with a servi●e feare Feare two 〈…〉 Reasons why we ought to expresse this f●●re of God in our conversation By what waies we must shew this feare of God By what waies we are to expresse this feare of God towards men What sorts of men have not Gods feare Wherein wives shew their fear of their husbands El●v●n rea●o●● against v●ine ●tt●re in ●omen Foureteene waies by which app●r●ll or dressing our s●l●●s becomes vicious Wh●t the man of the ●eart i● His originall Wh●r●in he e●cells the outward man His naturall condition very miserable many wayes Especially in his workes which are abominable By what means the man of the ●eart may be men●ed How we may know when the man o● the heart is right Not● 〈…〉 Note What things are requisite to me●knesse Motives to meeknesse O●iousnesse of frowardnesse from the cause and effects of it Helps for the attaining of quietnesse and meeknesse Rules for our practise so as God may bee pleased with 〈◊〉 Two singular vertues in a good example When an example binds In what things Antiquity is ill pleaded In what cases respect is to be bad unto old times Use. Signes of such as trust in God Reasons proving the excellency of this trusting in God Admirable effects of this trusting in God Helps to attain this grace of trusting in God Rules to be observed in our right trusting in God Vid 1 Tim. 5.5 Ier. 49.11 Note Doct. Ga●ly women da●g●ters of Sar●h three wa●es What things mar a good action How we are said to do well Reasons why we 〈◊〉 alwaies to be doing well Causes of amazement in wives Why Husbands duties are noted in the last place Mo●●v●● 〈◊〉 pers●ade Husbands to be carefull of their duties What things cohabitat●●n doth import In what cases it is 〈◊〉 full for the husband to be absent Whether separation from bed and brood be lawfull Cases of nullitie Concerning divorce what rule is to be observed Excellency of divine knowledge in many respects Means to give power to our knowledge What this dwelling with knowledge imports How many waies husbands honour their wives In what things women are more fraile than men H●w godly men come to be heires Wherein the greatnesse and glory of our adoption appeareth What kind of persons we must be to attaine this adoption Marks of Gods heirs and adopted children How Gods ●eires must carry themselves Naturall life but a meane thing in divers respects Degrees of spirituall life The originall of this life It hath its originall from God three waies The nature of it consists in a saving knowledge or celestiall light Which knowledge must have these properties and effects in it Divers things nourish this life This life differs from eternall life many waies 1. In respect of place 2. In respect of the means that preserve this life 3. In respect of the company 4. In respect of the quality of the life it selfe 5. In resect of the effects of life in ●●ch degree 1. For righteousnesse 2. ●●r peace 3. For joy Wh●t men must d●e to attaine this life A Christian hath many helps to attaine it Signes of this life are six Properties of this life are five What duties this doctrine should compell godly men to practise Grace manifold What is meant here by grace Two wayes considered What it excludes What it includes What priviledges follow on such as enjoy Gods grace Men tr●nsgresse against the grace of God many wayes Godly men and women are heires together many wayes The excellency of prayer appeares in many respects F●om whence the sorts and difference of Prayer doth arise Prayer may be hindred seven waies in the hearing of it How it is interrupted in the making of it Five things of singular use to keep us quiet in trouble Note For what reasons we ought to be all of one mind Helps unto unity of mind 2 Pet. 1. ult Aggravations against discord in opinion Many are the ill causes of dissenting In what things we may not be of one minde with the Church of Rome Wherein ●e expresse our compass●on The motives or reasons to perswade us to it Who are brethren Reasons to perswade us to love as brethren With what kind of love we are to love the brethren Rules to be observed that brotherly love many continue Either such things we are to avoid Or such things we are to practise How to order our selves towards our brethren in case of sinne against God or trespasse against us Three caveats to be looked unto in our loving of them What things bowels of compassion or mercy import When our bowels of mercy are right Motivés to be pitifull What things are comprehended under courtesie Divers kinds of blessing When we blesse in deed Wherein particularly For what reasons ● Christian should be much affected with the con●ideration of his calling Reasons proving the necessity of knowing our calling and assurance By what means a Christian comes to know his calling Divers sorts of Christians Causes why many weake Christians know not their calling Note Godly men doe inherit blessing many wayes 1. From men 2. From their own consciences 3. From God and that divers wayes In this life godly men have Gods blessing three wayes What we must doe to get Gods blessing How godly men may grow in the comforts of Gods blessing Note Note For what reasons men ought to take off their affections from the love of this life In what respects the vanity of earthly things appeare Men have no reason to be in love withearthly commodities and that for divers causes In what cases it may be lawfull for some persons to be in love with this life What such must doe to prolong their life What daies are evill in respect of wicked men Wherein godly mens daies are evill Great difference between● the evill daies of wicked and godly men Evill daies common to wicked and godly men 2 Sam. 19.36 What are good daies in generall In particular there are divers sorts of good daies to the godly Mans life is short In what respect it is short Causes why most mens lives are so short Uses