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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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indeed Some Physicians are onely expert for some one disease but Christ is for every disease Now for thee who art a patient to Christ 1 Thou must come to him Joh. 6.37 So let thy disease be what it will he will not cast thee off He saves to the uttermost them that come to God by him Heb. 7.25 2 Thou must acknowledge thy disease to him as the patient doth to the Physician 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive them Not but that Christ knows them well enough but he will have thee to be sensible whence thy healing comes As in the blind man Matth. 21.33 who begging mercy of Christ in general had it not but being sensible of his blindness and desiring sight Christ gave it him 3 As it is a good help to the Patient to have a good subordinate confidence in the Physician so it 's requisite if thou come to Christ to place all thy confidence in thy Physician Act. 4.12 as knowing salvation is not in any other V. 13. But go ye and learn what that meaneth I will have mercy and not sacrifice for I am not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Christ brings a second argument from the Scripture to justifie his eating and conversing with sinners Go ye and learn what that meaneth Christ upbraids their ignorance and sends these doctors to school So did he Matth. 12.3.5.19.4.21.16.22.31 I will have mercy and not sacrifice That is 1 not outward ceremonies without inward obedience 2 Not sacrifice in comparison of mercy mercy ought to overweigh sacrifice and sacrifice must give place to mercy Among men when two laws are made which interfere that which tends most to righteousness profit and honesty ought to take place So that Christ shews that all the commands of shunning familiarity with wicked men must be so observed that occasions and opportunities of bringing them into the way of holiness must not be neglected And therefore when that Christ endeavoured to bring back these Publicans who were as so many fugitives from God he was not to be blamed herein So that place 2 Thess 3.15 Count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother Lest any man should think that when a man was cast out all coming to him was forbid the Apostle adds they are not to be counted enemies as the Jews counted such but they are to be brotherly admonished When the bond of Church Communion or Christian Communion is dissolved yet there remains a bond of humane nature and the remembrance of former friendship So that Christ by his example and doctrine proposes to the Pharisees to follow mercy as if he should say I had rather have mercy on poor sinners then offer many sacrifices with you and this my practise you may see justified Hos 6.6 Not sacrifice Obj. But did not God command it Answ Yes but God will not have Sacrifice 1 Primarily 1 Sam. 15.22 To obey is better then Sacrifice Psalm 40.8 Sacrifice and Offering thou didst not desire 2 Disorderly he will not have them but in order to Christ 3 Abstractively considered from vvorks of mercy and piety Psal 50.12 13 14. 4 I vvill not have Sacrifice after the offering up of my body for sin 5 I vvill not have Sacrifice as a ransom as Carnal Hypocrites thought to appease God by the vvork vvrought vvhich vvas the great controversie Psal 50.13 asserted by Hypocrites and opposed by the Godly then living Hypocrites alledged Levit. 4.5 c. where Sacrifices vvere to be offered for sins 6 I vvill not have it as the principal vvorship Obs It 's not onely a vvork of mercy to succour persons in their outvvard afflictions but it s also a vvork of mercy to dravv a sinner from his evil vvayes to the true fear of God For I am not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Here 's a third Reason whereby Christ defends his action of conversing with sinners to wit his Office of Mediatour I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance By Righteous he means Pharisaical self-justiciaries who are drunk with the opinion of their own righteousness by sinners are not meant onely excommunicate persons and such as live a loose and dissolute life but also all men out of Christ Again Christ taxes them that they made no distinction betwixt penitent and impenitent sinners It was always lawfull to keep company with penitent sinners though not with impenitent To conclude persons called by Christ are called to repentance Let no man upon pretence of his interest in Christ live in a state of loosness The grace of God that brings salvation teaches us to deny ungodliness Titus 2.12.13 V. 14. Then came to him the Disciples of John saying Why do we and the Pharisees faste oft but thy Disciples faste not Here are two things considerable 1 A Question moved by the Scribes and Pharisees as the authours and Johns Disciples as the actours which was why they fasted oft but the Disciples of Christ fasted not 2 Christs Answer v. 15. Can the Children of the Bride-chamber faste c. which he backs from three Reasons 1 That they had no cause at present of fasting but of rejoycing he the Bridegroom being with them 2 That though at present they did not faste and mourn yet in a short time they should have cause so to do 3 The Disciples being young Converts the duty of fasting was not so sutable v. 16. and that the Gospel-doctrine was not so sutable to them in regard of their old carnal natures and legal customes v. 16 17. Then came to him the Disciples of John saying Why do we c. Mark saith The Disciples of the Pharisees together with them propound this Question Mark 2.18 Luke saith The Scribes and Pharisees asked him Luke 5.33 The reconciliation is easie the Pharisees by their Disciples stirred up the Disciples of John to ask this Question so that both askt the Question the Pharisees as the authours their Disciples and Johns as the actours the Pharisees were affraid to encounter Christ themselves hence they use Emissaries the Devil hath a notable art in sowing contention Why do we and the Pharisees faste oft but thy Disciples faste not The occasion of this Question was some Faste-day which the Pharisees appointed and kept wherein Christs Disciples did eat and drink by which is not meant a publick Faste which was to be kept by all the members of the Jewish Church and so consequently by Christ seeing he acknowledges himself a member thereof John 4.22 All the Jews upon pain of cutting off were to observe the tenth day of the seventh moneth Levit. 16.29 30 31.23.27 this was their onely prescribed Faste but it was some private Faste to gain glory and praise to the Pharisees Luke 18.12 The Pharisee fasted twice a week But Johns Disciples kept it out of some other end but Christs Disciples did use to eat and drink as at other
ought we not to go from life till God call us Hence Simeon asks leave to die Luk. 2.29 Lord let thy servant to depart in peace and Paul I desire to be dissolved Phil. 1.23 the prisoner must not go out till the prison door be open 7 Thou doest not onely murder thy body but hereby thou murderest thy soul which is the most heynous murder 8 Remove outward accidents as knives going near rivers wells c. if inclined to this unless when thou art in thy due calling as if thy journey lye by sea or thou must have a knife to eat thy meat here fight it out by faith that thou mayst not give place to the devil for if a person so tempted be called to go over a bridge over any great river when it is in the compass of his calling let him not fear but fight it out by faith and go on his way that he may not do service to the devil 9 Walk close with God and by degrees the temptation wil vanish thou believing and repenting After the Jaylor believed we read nothing of his former temptation to destroy himself 10 Be much in prayer that God would bridle the tempter lay open the violence and uncessancy of his temptations 11 Take heed of dispondency of spirit as to think that none of Gods children were ever in your condition for the same afflictions are accomplished among the brethren that are in the world 1 Pet. 5.8 12 Use constant resistance and distaste of his temptation Jam. 4.7 Resist the devil and he will flee from you it 's not onely a command but a promise 13 Set faith on work to quench his fiery darts Eph. 6.16 1 Pet. 5.8 Your adversary the devil goes about as a roring Lion seeking whom he may devour whom resist stedfast in the faith Let faith be acted as upon Christ for pardon so upon the power of God that he is able to keep you and upon the promise of God that he will keep you and not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able For it is written He shall give his Angels charge concerning thee We may see Satans malice and craft in abusing Scripture to take away if possible Christs life Christ thus strove with him to warn us to take heed lest by a deceitful pretence or allegation of Scripture we fall into Satans snares Nor must we think worse of Scripture because Satan abuses it no more then we do of meat and drink because Drunkards and Gluttons abuse it And in their hands they shall bear thee up lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone The Angels have no hands unless when they assume bodies by hands he means the help of the Angels as if he should say the help of the Angels in every danger and fall will be so present that thou seems to be carried in their hands Onely Satans deceit is to be noted that in citing Psal 91.11 he leaves out these words To keep thee in all thy wayes that is in the ways of thy calling And Satan applies it to actions done without our calling without command without necessity meerly of presumption Some understand the Angels protection to be from casual evils which we not knowing come upon us but we may rather extend it to all evils that come upon us in the compass of our callings V. 7. Jesus said unto him It is written again Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God Christ shews that Satans strange Interpretation of this Scripture was contrary to other Scriptures Where we see a Rule in interpreting Scriptures so to interpret them that one part may not jar with another Again That is on the contrary in opposition to thy depravement Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God As if Christ should say We are so to hope for help from God in time of Dangers that we do not tempt God 1 To tempt God is to require an Experiment of his Power other than he hath appointed So Psalm 78.18 the Israelites when God gave them Manna to nourish them they not content herewith tempted God by asking Meat for their Lusts 2 To tempt God is to impose a Law upon the Creator and to alter his Appointment when God shall give us such means to maintain and preserve us and we will seek for other 3 To tempt God is when out of presumption or without necessity we seek the experiment of his power wisdom goodness and truth Exod. 17.2 compared with v. 7. they tempted the Lord saying Is the Lord amongst us or not The Israelites had a Promise that God would be present with them in the Wilderness but now when they wanted Water in their thirst they cry out If God do not now give us Water to drink we will not believe he is in the midst of us 4 When we cast our selves into dangers and neglect ordinary means Mal. 3.15 They that tempt God are even delivered 5 When we sin boldly against a manifest Command and yet think the Promises belong unto us so those who walked in the imagination of their own evil hearts adding drunkenness to thirst promised themselves peace Deut. 29.19 20. Num. 14 22. 6 By pressing indifferent things as necessary Acts 15.10 11. They tempted God by pressing Circumcision as necessary to Salvation which was onely an indifferent thing when the Lord had appointed the righteousness and grace of Christ the way of Salvation 7 By desiring a needless Miracle so the Jews would have Christ shew a sign that they may believe on him as Moses gave their fathers Manna in the Wilderness John 6.30 Christ had given them a sufficient sign herein but that would not content them they had seen Christ feed five thousand men with five Barley Loaves and two Fishes yet must they have a sign Divers of these ways if not all the Devil tempts Christ as to work a needless Miracle to throw himself headlong that the Angels might take him up in their hands to cast himself down when there were steps to go down In sum Christ lets Satan see the Promises of God are so to be taken and applied that we do not tempt God V. 8. Again the Devil taketh him into an exceeding high Mountain and sheweth him all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them Here is the third Tentation Satan brings to Christ which is the presentment unto him the glory of the World with which Christ's senses were so delighted that no Lust or inordinate affection was in his heart Satan shewed him all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them in a moment of time Luke 4.5 Satan shewed unto Christ the multitude of Nations the excellency of Cities the riches attendance and glory of Princes Courts that so Christ seeing them might desire them and desiring them might fall down and worship him Sheweth him all the Kingdoms of the World Some think Satan shewed them by pointing at them with his finger and that Satan told Christ by
but not to worship them Gal. 1.23 Neither that divine benefits may descend upon us through their mediation nor as helpers together or workers together with Christ in the work of our salvation or that they plead our cause with God by offering their merits for to obtain our salvation or that they obtain pardon of sin or the grace of God to us which Popish Writers make the ends of invocation of Saints All which ends are blasphemously derogatory to the glory of Christs merits and intercession Thus are men more ready to do all things which either themselves chuse or men have ordained then those things which God hath commanded because in the commands of men the old man is untoucht yea is nourished by the commands of men but in the commands of God it is mortified It were endless to set down the multiplication of this superstition to show all the ends Papists give of calling upon Saints as because Christ is a more hard and just Judge therefore we must have mediators to come to him and because we want deserts that therefore the Saints would apply the deserts which they have more then enough for themselves unto us to interpose them betwixt Gods justice and our unworthiness that so we may be made worthy of the promises of God Moreover they teach that all the benefits we want are bestowed of God upon the blessed in heaven that they being implored may give all things which belong to this life and the life to come Men are taught in their necessities to flye to the grace mercy and help of Saints and to place their faith and hope in them also they think the blessed in heaven know every mans vows and the thoughts of their mindes Now this invocation of Saints 1 is no where in Scripture Hence Christ brands the Samaritans they worshipped they knew not what Now Scripture tells us that God onely in the name of Christ is to be called upon Joh. 14.6 Heb. 4.15 16.7.25.13.15 Now it must needs be dangerous to go from the rule of the word for prayer 2 They invest the Saints departed with those things which are proper to God as to be a refuge a deliverer to give good things which God onely gives Jam. 1.17 to flye to them in prayer for grace and mercy 3 Papists derogate from Christs intercession which is one part of his Priesthood for whereas we for our sins are unworthy to come into the presence of God with our prayers or persons God hath given Christ as a mediator to appear in our behalf Heb. 2.17.7.25.9.24 Papists call upon Saints directly that they would interpose their merits betwixt Gods justice and our unworthiness For 200 years after Christ there was no news of invocation of Saints Justin Apol. 2. Tert. Apol. c 30. Iren. l. 2. c. 58. About the year 240 Origen was the first that began to sow the seeds of invocation of Saints who as Hierom observes brought in many poysonous opinions into the Church of Christ and in that age it began onely to be disputed and Origen from some Apocryphical Scriptures began to think it might be so and after manifestly to affirm it but he affirms these assertions were onely private opinions but not the received opinions of the Church Orig. l. 2. in Roman and in his disputation against Celsus he doth in effect deny it In Cyprians time invocation of Saints about the year 250 took another step for Cyprian and others spoke to the living Saints before they departed out of this life that after death they would be mindfull of them with God Cypr. l. 1. ep 1. ad Cornel. l. 2. de habitu Virg. All this while they were not called upon after death but about the year 370 by occasion of Panegyrical Orations that were made at the decease of friends c. it began to be brought into the Church by Basil Nyssen and Nazianzen bringing it from the private devotions of Monks into open assemblies And in their Panegyrical orations they cald up the souls of them whose memory they celebrated and so Nazianzen calls up the soul of Constantine Yet must we know that these opinions were not received every where and of all for true opinions yea the very Authors hereof in their strains of Rhetorick do not dissemble their doubts that the Saints in heaven pray'd for those here Hence they use these words As I think and As I perswade my self and If it be not a rash thing to say it and so that phrase here Thou soul of Constantine if thou hast any understanding Yea this opinion in that time was strongly opposed by Epiphanius and put into the Catalogue of Heresies and he inveighs against it in his book against the Collyridians And Chrysostome in many places inveighs against the perswasions of the common people who neglecting repentance and godliness cast all the business of hearing their prayers and salvation upon the intercession of others Hom. 44. in Gen. Hom. 5. in Matth c. Moreover the Synod of Laodicca about the year 368 saith It behoves not Christians the Church being left to go away and to make Congregations of Idolatry to Angels all which are forbid whosoever shall be found at this hidden Idolatry let him be accursed because leaving our Lord Jesus Christ the Son of God he goes to Idols Cyril answering the Emperor Julian telling the Christians they worshipped many miserable men that were used by a hard Law meaning Martyrdome Cyril saith I confess the memory and honour of the Martyrs but deny the worship of them For the Latin Church passing by Ambrose who is sometimes for it and sometimes against it Vigila●●us as appears 〈◊〉 of H●er●m maintained these three propositions 1 That the Marty●s or Saints which departed out of this l●●e are not to be worshipped 2 That while we live we may pray one for another but after death no man prayes for another 3 That the souls of the blessed are not present at their graves nor come not betwixt God nor the affairs of the living which first position Hierom doth not deny to the second he saith The Church in another world prayes for the Church of believers in this world from whence it follows not that Saints are to be called upon when dead To conclude Augustine falling into those times wherein all persons were full of presumptions was forced to give way to the times yet did he endeavour to call persons back to call upon the name of God when he durst not freely reprehend the commonly received presumptions l. cont Faustin This presumption then prevail'd that the souls of the blessed heard prayers and brought them to God and bestowed benefits and therefore they came together to their graves to pray to them but he concludes against this that souls departed know not things done here and he was sure that if it were so his mother would no night forsake him which he found otherwise In a word generally Augustine was against invocation of Saints setting aside
shoes Matth. 3.14 Luke 3.22 4 Spiritual conviction that the spirit let us see our worthlesseness Rev. 3.17 q.d. thou art but thou knowest it not that thou art poor and blinde and naked Joh. 16.10 he shall convince of sin so that as the sun gives a light whereby we behold as the gloriousnes of the sun so the loathsomness of the dunghil so the spirit convinces of our own vileness and his own fulness 5 Present to your selves abasing considerations as What was I before I had mercy how unprofitably spent I my time what will these glorious things of the world be in time to come wherein we are apt to be conceited when heaven and earth shall be on fire since we were called how have we discredited our profession how barren and watchless are we how short are we of that we might have been 6 Believe the promises made to souls poor in spirit I will look to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit Esa 66.2 Yea dwell with him and revive him Esa 57.15 yea Christ came to preach glad tidings of the gospel to such Luk. 4.18 Matth. 11.3 Rev. 2.9 I know thy poverty but thou art rich God will feed such souls with grace and comfort Zach. 11.7 Luke 1.53 yea God will be a strength to such in their distress Esa 25.4 Psal 69.33 7 Look upon thy own wants and weakness the more thou seest them the more wilt thou trust in God Zeph. 3.12 From heaven did the Lord behold the earth to hear the groaning of the prisoner Psalm 102.19 20. I am poor and sorrowfull let thy salvation set me up on high Psalm 69.29 For theirs is the Kingdome of heaven That is both kingdome of grace Esai 61.1 For the poor have the Gospel preached to them Mat. 11.3 but especially the kingdome of glory is meant Luke 12.32 Matth. 25.34 though such persons are beggarly in their own feeling being sensible of their lack of faith love joy hope yet have they an interest in the riches of grace and glory We may apply this to comfort the poor in spirit who are full of miseries inward and outward The worlds proverb is Blessed are the rich because theirs is the kingdome of the earth but Christ pronounceth Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heaven V. 4. Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted By mourning Christ means such mourning as is for offending God whether it be by sighs groans or an inward grief of heart such persons though they may seem miserable in the eys of the world yet are they blessed 1 God is wont to make comforts to abound according to their sorrows 2 Cor. 7.6 God comforts them that are cast down and this proportionable to our sorrows 2 Cor. 1.5 7. 2 God is wont to bottle all their tears and sorrows Psa 56.8 Psalm 55. Consider how I mourn in my complaint 3 There 's a time coming when God will turn the mourning of Saints into dancing and their sackcloth into gladness Psalm 30.11 John 16 20. Ye shall weep and lament but your sorrow shall be turned into joy There is not onely a fountain of justification set open for such mourners now but a state of glorification hereafter Zach. 12.10 11 12 13 compared with Chapter 13.1 Hence see 1 The mistake of the world who think happiness to be placed in delights and pleasures and shun those things which may procure any sorrow or cross as confession of persecuted truths against this Christ saith Mourners shall be comforted 2 It 's consolation for distressed consciences If thou canst truly mourn for thy transgressions thou shalt be comforted Let what ever distress come upon an afflicted heart yet if thou canst mourn for offending God thou shalt be comforted 3. It 's consolation to persons who have afflicted estates in this world there 's a day coming when comfort shall come provided that with mourning for thy miseries thou specially mourns for thy sin Luke 16.25 Now he is comforted and thou art tormented Though thy comfort come not yet yet in Gods time it shall come They are not blessed who mourn for the loss of their wealth or death of their friends but they who mourn for offending God 4 In all our confessions and professed humiliations see that you do not declare them onely historically but mourn for them Psalm 38.17 I will declare mine iniquities and will be sory for my sin When thou prayes let thy heart mourn in prayer Psalm 55.2 When thou speaks of sin speak mournfully of it Now to move us hereto consider 1 God hath the joy of the Holy Ghost in store for mourners Esa 61.1 2 3. The spirit of the Lord is upon me to give the oyl of joy for the spirit of mourning and heaviness Saints seldome finde such comfortable revivings as when they are most mournful 2 This mourning is more comfortable then the lowd laughters of the world Properties of Mourning 1 Let it be continued that length of time may not wear it out length of time eats out worldly griefs 2 Universal That King that was sory for his consent to Daniels death Dan. 6.14 was not sory for his denial of the truth in refusing to venture all in a good cause Herod was sory for Johns death but could rejoyce in Herodias 3 After conversion as well as before It 's a vain opinion to think we need not sorrow after conversion and that a Christians state is altogether a state of joy Joy and sorrow may stand together in the soul but not about one and the same object joy in God and sorrow for sin 4 Let thy mourning be not onely in regard of the damning power of sin but principally in regard of the contrariety thereof to the nature of God and to the nature of him that loves thee Luke 7.38 compared with v. 48. Mary having a sense of Gods love weeps bitterly and washes Christs feet with her tears 5 Let it be joyned with faith First Christ looks upon the soul and gives some testimony of his love to it and then the soul looks on Christ with a sad heart Matth. 26.75 Christ first lookt on Peter then he went out and wept bitterly It s the nature of faith to apply the wounds and sorrows of Christ unto it self Esa 53.5 thence follows mourning Zach. 12.10 6 This mourning for sin is the greatest hence resembled to the mourning for an onely son when dead Zach. 12.11 to the drawing of water 1 Sam. 7.6 as if it had been in buckets The ground whereof is because they apprehend sin as the greatest of evils 1 Because it is the cause of all evils Deut. 28. 2 It keeps off the greatest good 3 It cannot be purged away but with the greatest price even Christs bloud 4 There 's more evil in sin then in any thing hence followes 1 A resolution not to meddle with sin as Jehoshaphat when he had smarted by joyning with Ahab in sending out a
nor in that which is to come therefore some sins are forgiven in the world to come Answ Mark expounds it that such a one hath never forgiveness Mark 3.29 Matthew to aggravate the sin against the holy Ghost uses a Periphrasis as if we should speak of a sick man he can sleep neither day nor night that is never or as if we should say the grace of faith can never be bought with mony neither in this life nor in the life to come that is never For that place 1 Pet. 3.18 19 20. Being put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit by which also he went to preach to the spirits in prison which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah therefore say some the Gospel was preached in the world to come for forgiveness there is a misunderstanding of three things in this text 1 the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which they understood the soul of Christ as by flesh his body the body they held to dye but the soul to remain alive in which soul say they he went and preached but by the flesh of Christ is meant his humanity according to this he is said to be put to death but by his spirit is meant his divinity Joh. 4.23 By the power of this spirit and divinity he was raised from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 A second word misunderstood is this to the Spirits in prison Where the Word are is to be understood or the word being they understood were or had been which words are referred to those men that in the time of Noah were unbelievers and were then in the world now in Peters time their souls were in Hell for by the prison is meant Hell Rev. 20.7 There they are kept to the day of judgement The third word which almost deceived all was the word Going or went which they understood of his going out of the world into Hell when it was meant of his going out of Heaven into the world and speaking then by his spirit in the ministry of Noah to these rebells that were now in Hell in Saint Peters time Now that no sins are forgiven in the world to come appears 1 Because in this life onely are tenders of grace 2 Cor. 6.2 Behold now is the accepted time now is the day of salvation When the master of the house hath shut to the door of this life and ye stand without and knock and say Lord Lord Christ will say Depart from me I know you not Luk. 13.25 The gate of grace was wholly shut unto the foolish Virgins Matth. 25.11 2 The time betwixt this and death is the time for repentance patience and constancy and after death is the present receiving of the crown Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life The godly lamented Stephen at his death but never prayed for him Col. 1.14 9 The grievousness of that prison whereinto unpardoned sins will cast us 1 We are afraid to be cast into a stinking prison for debt yet may there be hope one way or other to get out by satisfaction or compounding or the creditours pity but none of these can befall thee if thou dyest in thy sins and be cast into that prison thou canst not come out by satisfaction because that is of force onely by Christ his satisfaction in this life Act. 13.39 40. Col. 1.13 14. nor yet by composition for thou must lye there till thou hast paid the utmost farthing Luk. 12.59 nor by the creditours mercy because after death the wicked shall have judgement without mercy Jam. 2.13 2 There will be no running away from this prison because the prisoner is bound hand and foot Matth. 22.13 Bind him hand and foot and take him away and cast him into outer darkness Kept in everlasting chains Jude 6. Psal 49. Like sheep that are driven into the fold so are they driven into Hell ver 14. Luk. 16.26 3 In other prisons we have friends come to visit us but here not onely friends 2 Thess 1.9 but also all other comforts shall be removed yea the damned shall be deprived of the presence of God If the deprivement of the sight of God by faith be so grievous how grievous will the deprivation of the beatifical sight in glory be 4 The perpetuity of it to be condemn'd to perpetual imprisonment and that in some loathsom dungeon is terrible yet death may set us free thence but from the prison of Hell there 's no getting out The worm never dyes nor the fire never goes out Mark 9.44 45 46 47 48. It s five times set down the fire that never shall be quenched which are not idle repetitions but to ascertain us of the perpetuity of the torment If the damned had hope after some millions of years to have their torments ended it were something but the burnings are everlasting Isai 33.14 Isai 30.33 the Worm everlasting Isai 66.24 the Fire everlasting Revel 20.10 the contempt everlasting Dan. 12.2 Object But by what right will God punish temporary faults with eternal punishments Answ 1. Sin is committed against an infinite Majesty and so deserves infinite punishment now because man is a finite creature and cannot suffer for it at once therefore he must suffer for it successively to all eternity 2 Because in unpardoned sinners so dying there 's a wicked habit that should they live ever they would sin ever the sinner sins in his eternity and God punishes in his eternity 3 Punishment is to be measured not by length of time the offence is in committing but by the greatness of the offence Murder and Adultery are soon committed shall the Offender be no longer punished than the offence is committing 4 As we are to look upon the perpetuity of this Prison so upon the darkness of it Jude 6. the rebellious Angels are reserved under darkness chains of darkness 2 Peter 2.4 to the wicked the mist of darkness is reserved for ever 2 Peter 2.17 Light is most comfortable but in Hell there 's fire without light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the damned see not 10 Together with pardon come all other blessings Ezek. 36.25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water what more the cleansing from filthiness a new heart the putting of the Spirit within us writing the Law in the heart Power over sin follows pardon of sin Rom. 7.15.8.2 yea all good things here Rom. 8.32 and glorification in Heaven hereafter Whom he justified them he gloried Rom. 8.30 11 True happiness consists in forgiveness of sins the World counts them happy that have great Estates that have the Princes ear but the Lord tells us those are happy that have sins pardoned Psalm 32.1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered I am covered under the shadow of the wings of Christ and live secure under the most broad heaven of
assurance of thy pardon get more and more earnest of the Spirit Men that deal in great matters love to get as good earnest as they can the fuller earnest the more security Again people keep and esteem an earnest more then other mony because it hath reference to further matters which other mony hath not So should we esteem the Spirits testimony as sealing us up unto the future inheritance in heaven at which day it shall cease to be any further an earnest as earnest mony ceases to be earnest when the whole sum is paid Mean time till we come into that glory the Spirit though it do not always confirm us to present sence yet doth it confirm us to present experience from the former workings thereof which we have felt as the former movings of the infant in the mothers womb confirm the mother that she is with childe though at the present she feel no moving at all thereof Obj. But the heart is deceitful Ans The Spirit in us is too holy to deceive and too wise to be deceived When there is an object to be seen and an eye to see and light to discover the object to the eye sight must needs follow so in a believer there is grace to be seen and an eye of faith to see it so is there a light of the Spirit discovering that grace to the soul Obj. But some as Papists and others think there can be no assurance of remission of sins and of salvation A. That we may be assured herein appears 1 The Word bids us make our pardon and salvation sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Heb. 6.11.10.22 which were in vain if such a thing could not be 2 The Saints have been assured hereof Job saith c. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth and that I shall stand up with him on the earth at the last day and I shall see him not with other but with the same eys 2 Cor. 5.1 Paul saith We know if our earthly tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God Abraham Rom. 4.21 22. 1 John 3.14 1 John 5.14 15. We know we are translated from death to life we know we have the petitions desired 1 Pet. 5.1 I am also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed Peter speaks of himself in this life Obj. But what these Saints had they had by special revelation Answ No. For the Saints Peter writes to had obtained like precious faith with himself 2 Pet. 1.1 And Paul saith I am perswaded that neither life nor death shall be able to separate us from the love of God See he names other believers as well as himself Rom. 8.38 39. 2 All the Saints have the same Spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 though not in the same degree Timothy saith I know whom I have trusted 2 Tim. 1.12 See there is a certainty in knowledge The Hebrews knew in themselves they had a better and enduring substance which was the ground they not only patiently suffered but also joyfully endured the spoyling of their temporal substance Heb. 10.34 They did not onely conjecture it but knew it in themselves Peter when Christ asked him whether or no he loved him he did not answer Lord thou knowest we cannot tell truly whether or no we love thee but appeals unto Christ saying Thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee John 21.15 16 17. Peter mentions it three times shewing the undoubted assurance he had thereof 3 The Scripture bids us prove our selves as concerning our estate to God ward Gal. 6.4 Let a man prove himself that he may have rejoycing in himself alone 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself and so let him eat 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the faith This bidding us search our conscience according to the rule and the declaring that rejoycing followes thereon doth denote unto us that assurance of remission of sins may be had It is ridiculous to think that the Spirit should bid us search for that which cannot be found 4 That certainty and assurance of salvation may be had appears from the many signes and evidences the word of God sets down of our being in Christ of our having the Spirit of our regeneration uprightness confidence to say that he that hath these graces is not sure whether he have them or no is a great mistake for do not I know that I love the Lord better then any thing that I love my brother yea mine enemies that I combate against all sin hunger after righteousnesse that my heart closeth with every command of God that I hate all sin do not I know that I have comfottable answers from God in prayer when I have them Comfortlesse is the assurance of hope arising from humane conjecture allowed by Papists and differs from Theological or divine hope arising from faith 5 The doctrine of doubting of remission of sins or conjectural hoping for salvation is a comfortlesse doctrine for 1 It kills our joy and thankfulness for how can I joy in or be thankfull to him who for ought I know may damn me another day and how can I joy in a thing which I know not whether I shall have or no 2 This doctrine of doubting stuns and hinders our proceeding in a godly course How can a man have a heart to go on when he cannot tell whether all he doth will come to any thing yea or no The Scripture ordinarily exhorts to duty from the knowledge we have that our labour will not be in vain Gal. 6.9 Be not weary in well doing knowing in due season you shall reap if ye faint not 1 Cor. 15.28 Be ye alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know your labour will not be in vain 3 The doctrine of doubting must needs fill the conscience with much anguish and anxiety A man that is condemned and hath no way to escape but by a pardon must needs be in perplexity of mind till he know of his pardon so must the soul needs be that sees its own lost estate and knows nothing of the pardon of his sins 6 From experimental feeling when I trust to a person promising to give or lend me any thing I know I trust to him and rest on him for what he hath promised and shal I by faith rest on Christ and know no such thing 7 From the testimony of the renewed conscience for our spirits regenerate witness our good estate Rom. 8.16 Yea even this is witnessed even in weak Christians though with some fear of the contrary the poor man cryed out Mark 9 2● Lord I believe help my unbelief How could we say we believe if we could not know it we cannot speak that truly whereof we can have no certainty 8 From the seal of the Spirit witnessing with our spirits Take heed of expecting such inward witness of the spirit as some expect viz. a discovering of your adoption without first discovering the signes of it as if by an