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A39669 The method of grace, in bringing home the eternal redemption contrived by the Father, and accomplished by the Son through the effectual application of the spirit unto God's elect, being the second part of Gospel redemption : wherein the great mysterie of our union and communion with Christ is opened and applied, unbelievers invited, false pretenders convicted, every mans claim to Christ examined, and the misery of Christless persons discovered and bewailed / by John Flavell ... Flavel, John, 1630?-1691. 1681 (1681) Wing F1169; ESTC R20432 474,959 654

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it appear that there is such a Union betwixt Christ and believers it is no Ens rationis 1. empty notion or cunningly devised fable but a most certain demonstrable truth which appears First From the Communion which is betwixt Christ and believers in this the Apostle is express 1 Joh. 1. 3. truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his son Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It signifies such fellowship or Copartnership as persons have by a joynt interest in one and the same enjoyment which is in common betwixt them So Heb. 3. 14. we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ipse venit in sortem nostrae mortalitatis ut in fortem nos adduceret suae immortalitatis clarum autem est hic agi de consortibus unctionis quales sunt omnes fideles qui unctionis participes fiunt Rivet partakers of Christ and Psal. 45. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here the Saints are called the companions consorts or fellows of Christ and that not only in respect of his assumption of our mortality and investing us with his immortality but it hath a special reference and respect to the Unction of the Holy Ghost or graces of the Spirit of which believers are partakers with him and through him Now this Communion of the Saints with Christ is entirely and necessarily dependant upon their Union with him even as much as the branches participation of the sap and juice depends upon its Union and coalition with the stock take away Union and there can be no communion or communications which is clear from 1 Cor. 3. 22 23. All is yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods where you see how all our participation of Christs benefits is built upon our Union with Christs person Secondly The reality of the believers Union with Christ is evident from the Imputation of Christs righteousness to him for his Justification That a believer is justified before God by a righteousness without himself is undeniable from Rom. 3. 24. being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus and that Christs righteousness becomes ours by Imputation is as clear from Rom. 4. 23 24. but it can never be imputed to us except we be united to him and become one with him which is also plainly asserted in 1 Con. 1. 30. But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousness sanctification and redemption he communicates his merits unto none but those that are in him hence all those vain cavils of the Papists disputing against our Justification by the righteousness of Christ and asserting it to be by inherent righteousness are solidly answered When they demand how can we be justified by the righteousness of another can I be rich with another mans money or preferr'd by anothers honours Our answer is Yes if that other be my surety or husband indeed Peter cannot be justified by the righteousness of Paul but both may be justified by the righteousness of Christ imputed to them they being members joyntly knit to one common head principal and surety are one in obligation and construction of Law head and members are one body branch and stock are one tree and it 's no strange thing to see a graff live by the sap of another stock when once it is ingraffed into it Thirdly The Sympathy that is betwixt Christ and believers proves a Union betwixt them Christ and the Saints smile and sigh together St. Paul in Colos. 1. 2 4. tells us that he did fill up that which is behind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the remainders of the sufferings of Christ in his Flesh not as if Christs sufferings were imperfect for by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. but in these two Scriptures Christ is consider'd in a twofold capacity he suffered once in Corpore proprio in his own person as mediator these sufferings are compleat and full and in that sense he suffers no more he suffers also in Corpore m●…tico in his Church and members thus he still suffers in the sufferings of every Saint for his sake and though these sufferings in his Mystical body are not equal to the other either pondere mensura in their weight and value nor yet designed ex officio for the same use and purpose to satisfie by their proper merit offended Justice nevertheless they are truly reckoned the sufferings of Christ because the head suffers when the members do and without this supposition that place Acts 9. 5. is never to be understood when Christ the head in Heaven crys out Saul Saul why persecutest thou me when the toe was trod upon on earth how doth Christ sensibly feel our sufferings or we his if there be not a Mystical Union betwixt him and us Fourthly and Lastly The way and manner in which the Saints shall be raised at the last day proves this Mystical Union betwixt Christ and them for they are not to be raised as others by the naked power of God without them but by the vertue of Christs resurrection as their head sending forth vital quickening influences into their dead bodies which are united to him as well as their souls For so we find it Rom. 8. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you even as it is in our awakening out of natural sleep first the animal spirits in the head begin to rouze and play there and then the senses and members are loosed throughout the whole body Now it 's impossible the Saints should be raised in the last resurrection by the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them if that Spirit did not knit and unite them to him as members to their head So then by all this it is proved that there is a real Union of the Saints with Christ. Next I shall endeavour to open the quality and nature of this Union and shew you what it is according to the weak 2. apprehensions we have of so sublime a Mystery and this I shall do in a General account of it and Particular First More generally it is an intimate conjunction of believers to Christ by the imparting of his Spirit to them whereby 1. they are enabled to believe and live in him All divine Spiritual life is originally in the Father and cometh not to us but by and through the son Joh. 5. 26. to him hath the Father given to have an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickening enlivening power in himself but the Son communicates this life which is in him to none but by and through the Spirit Rom. 8. 2. the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death The Spirit must therefore first take hold of us before we can live in Christ and
when he doth so then we are enabled to exert that vital act of faith whereby we receive Christ all this lyes plain in that one Scripture Joh. 6. 57. As the living Father hath sent me and I live by the Father so he that cateth me that is by faith applys me even he shall live by me So that these two namely the Spirit on Christs part and Faith his work on our part are the two ligaments by which we are knit to Christ. So that the Spirits work in uniting or engrassing a soul into Christ is like the cutting off the graff from its native stock which he doth by his illuminations and convictions and closing it with the living stock when it is thus prepared and so enabling it by the infusion of faith to suck and draw the vital sap and thus it becomes one with it Or as the many members in the natural body being all quickened and animated by the same vital Spirit become one body with the head which is the principal member Eph. 4. 4. there is one body and one Spirit More particularly we shall consider the properties of this 2. Union that so we may the better understand the nature of it And here I shall open the nature of it both negatively and affirmatively First Negatively by removing all false notions and misapprehensions 1. Negatively of it And we say First The Saints Union with Christ is not a meer mental 1. Union only in conceit and notion but really exists extra mentem whether we conceit it or not I know the atheistical world censures all these things as fancies and idle imaginations but believers know the reality of them Joh. 14. 20. At that day you shall know that I am in my father and you in me and I in you This doctrine is not phantastical but scientifical Secondly The Saints Union with Christ is not a Physical Union such as is betwixt the members of a natural body and 2. the head our Nature indeed is assumed into Union with the person of Christ but it is the singular honour of that blessed and holy flesh of Christ to be so united as to make one person with him that Union is hypostatical this only Mystical Thirdly Nor is it an Essential Union or Union with the divine nature so as our beings are thereby swallowed up and 3. lost in the divine being Some there be indeed that talk at that wild rate of being Godded into God and Christed into Christ and those unwary expressions of Greg. Naz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do but too much countenance those daring Spirits but oh there is an infinite distance betwixt us and Christ in respect of nature and excellency notwithstanding this Union Fourthly The Union I here speak of is not a foederal Union or an Union by Covenant only such a Union indeed 4. there is betwixt Christ and believers but that is consequential to and wholly dependent upon this Fifthly and Lastly It is not a meer Moral Union by love and affection thus we say one soul is in two bodies a friend 5. is another self the lover is in the person beloved such a Union of hearts and affections there is also betwixt Christ and the Saints but this is of another nature that we call a Moral this a Mystical Union that only knits our affections but this knits our persons to Christ. Secondly Positively and First though this Union neither 2. Positively makes us one person or essence with Christ yet it knits our persons most intimately and nearly to the person of Christ 1. the Church is Christs body Coloss. 1. 24. not his Natural but his Mystical body that is to say his body in a Mystery because it is to him as his natural body the Saints stand to Christ in the same relation that the natural members of the body stand to the head and he stands in the same relation to them that the head stands in to the natural members and consequently they stand related to one another as the members of a natural body do to each other Christ and the Saints are not one as the Oak and the Ivy that clasps it are one but as the graff and stock are one it is not a Union by adhesion but incorporation Husband and Wife are not so near soul and body are not so near as Christ and the believing soul are near to each other Secondly The Mystical Union is wholly supernatural wrought by the alone power of God So it 's said 1 Cor. 1. 30. 2. but of him are ye in Christ Jesus we can no more unite our selves to Christ than a branch can incorporate it self into another stock it is of him i. e. of God his proper and alone work There are only two ligaments or bands of Union betwixt Christ and the Soul viz. the Spirit on his part and Faith on ours but when we say faith is the band of Union on our part the meaning is not that it 's so our own act as that it springs naturally from us or is educed from the power of our own wills no for the Apostle expressly contradicts it Eph. 2. 8. it is not of your selves it is the gift of God but we are the subjects of it and though the act on that account be ours yet the power enabling us to believe is God's Eph. 1. 19 20. Thirdly the Mystical Union is an immediate Union Immediate I say not as excluding means and instruments for 3. several means and many instruments are employ'd for the effecting of it but immediate as excluding degrees of nearness among the members of Christs mystical body Every member in the Natural body stands not as near to the head as another but so do all the mystical members of Christs body to him every member the smallest as well as the greatest hath an immediate coalition with Christ. 1 Cor. 1. 2. To the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus called to be Saints with all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord both theirs and ours Among the factious in this Church at Corinth those that said I am of Christ as arrogating Christ to themselves were as much a faction as those that said I am of Paul 1 Cor. 1. 30. to cure this he tells them he is both theirs and ours Such inclosures are against law Fourthly The Saints Mystical Union with Christ is a 4. fundamental Union it 's fundamental by way of Sustentation all our fruits of obedience depend upon it John 15. 4. As the branch cannot bear fruit except it abide in the Vine no more can ye●… except ye abide in me It 's fundamental to all our priviledges and comfortable claims 1 Cor. 3. ult all is yours for ye are Christs And it is fundamental to all our hopes and expectations of glory for it is Christ in you the hope
spirit of holiness compared here with oyl of which there was a double use Oleum ipsum est limpidum pellucidum flammis fomentum alimoniam suppeditat inde sumpta metaphora ungere in scriptura saepe significat spiritu sancto intus a●…imum illustrare accendere in eo veram-agnitionem dei motus congruentes cum deo Mollerus in Loc. under the Law viz. a Civil and a Sacred use it had a sacred and solemn use in the inauguration and consecration of the Jewish Kings and High Priests it had also a civil and common use for the anointing their bodies to make their limbs more agile expedite and nimble To make the face shine for it gave a lustre freshness and liveliness to the countenance it was also used in Lamps to feed and maintain the fire and give them light these were the principal uses of oyl Now upon all these accounts it excellently expresseth and figuratively represents to us the Spirit of grace poured forth upon Christ and his people For First By the spirit poured out upon him he was prepared for and consecrated to his offices he was anointed with the holy Ghost and with power Acts 10. 38. Secondly As this precious oyl runs down from Christ the head to the borders of his garments I mean as it is shed upon believers so it exceedingly beautifies their faces and makes them shine with glory Thirdly It renders them apt expedite and ready to every good work non tar dat unctarota Fourthly It kindles and maintains the flame of divine love in their souls and like a lamp inlightens their minds in the knowledge of Spiritual things the anointing teaches them And this oyl is here call'd the oyl of gladness because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicitur id quod causam dat summi gaudii Grotin Heb. 1. v. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 OEcum the cause of all joy and gladness to them that are anointed with it oyl was used as you heard before at the instalment of soveraign Princes which was the day of the gladness of their hearts and among the common people it was liberally used at all their festivals but never upon their days of mourning whence it becomes excellently expressive of the nature and use of the Spirit of grace who is the cause and author of all joy in believers Joh. 17. 13. And with this oyl of gladness is Christ said to be anointed above his fellows i. e. to have a far greater share of the Spirit of grace than they for to every one of the Saints is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Eph. 4. 7. but to him the Spirit is not given by measure Joh. 3. 34. It hath pleased the father that in him should all fullness dwell Col. 1. 19. and of his fulness we all receive grace for grace Joh. 1. 16. The Saints partake with him and through him in the same Spirit of grace for which reason they are his fellows but all the grace poured out upon believers comes exceeding short of that which God hath poured out upon Jesus Christ. The words being thus opened give us this note Doct. That all true believers have a real communion or fellowship with Doct. the Lord Jesus Christ. From the Saints Union with Christ there doth naturally and immediately result a most sweet and blessed communion or fellowship with him in graces and spiritual priviledges Eph. 1. 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places or things in Christ in giving us his Son he freely gives us all things Rom. 8. 32. so in 1 Cor. 1. 30. of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdome righteousness sanctification and redemption and once more 1 Cor. 3. 22 23. all are yours and ye are Christs what Christ is and hath is theirs by communication to them or improvement for them and this is very evidently carried in all those excellent Scripture metaphors by which our Union with Christ is figured and shadowed out to us as the Marriage Union betwixt a man and his wife Eph. 5. 31 32. You know that this conjugal union ●…bi ego Cajus tu Caja Uxor clarescit in radiis mariti gives the wife interest in the estate and honour of the husband be she never so meanly descended in her self the natural Union betwixt the head and members of the body by which also the mystical union of Christ and believers is set forth 1 Cor. 12. 12. excellently illustrates this fellowship or communion betwixt them for from Christ the whole body fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth according to the effectual working in the measure of every part maketh increase of the body as the Apostle speaks Eph. 4. 16. The Union betwixt the graffe and the stock which is another embleme of our Union with Christ Joh. 15. 1. imports in like manner this communion or partnership betwixt Christ and the Saints For no sooner doth the graffe take hold of the stock but the vital sap of the stock is communicated to the graffe and both live by one and the same juice Now that the scope of this discourse be not mistaken let the Reader know that I am not here treating of the Saints communion or fellowship with God in duties as in prayer hearing Sacraments c. but of that interest which believers have in the good things of Christ by vertue of the Mystical Union betwixt them through faith there is a twofold communion of the Saints with Christ. The first is an Act. The second is a State There is an actual fellowship or communion the Saints have with Christ in holy duties wherein Christians let forth their hearts to God by desires and God lets forth his comforts and refreshments again into their hearts they open their mouths wide and he fills them this communion with God is the joy and comfort of a believers life but I am not to speak of that here It is not any act of communion but the State of communion from which all acts of communion flow and upon which they all depend that I am now to treat of which is nothing else but the joynt interest that Christ and the Saints have in the same things as when a ship an house or estate is among many partners or joynt-heirs every one of them hath right to it and interest in it though some of them have a greater and others a lesser part So is it betwixt Christ and his people there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. a fellowship or joynt interest betwixt them upon which ground they are call'd co-heirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. This communion or participation in Christs benefits depends upon the Hypostatical Union of our nature and the mystical union of our persons with the Son of God in the first he partakes with us in
God The heart of God is so propense and ready to grant the desires of Believers that it is but ask and have Mat. 7. 7. the dore of grace is opened at the knock of prayer that is a favourite indeed to whom the King gives a blank to insert what request he will If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you John 15. 7. Oh blessed liberty of the sons of God! David did but say Lord turn the Counsel of Ahitophel into foolishness and it was done as soon as asked 2 Sam. 15. 31. Joshua did but say Thou Sun stand still in Gibeon and a miraculous stop was presently put to its swift motion in the Heavens nay which is wonderful to consider a prayer in the womb yet unborn I mean conceived in the heart and not yet uttered by the lips of Believers is often anticipated by the propenseness of free grace Isai. 65. 24. And it shall come to pass that before they call I will answer and whilst they are yet speaking I will hear The prayers of others are rejected as an abomination Prov. 15. 8. God casts them back into their-faces Mal. 2. 3. But free grace signs the petitions of the Saints more readily than they are presented we have not that freedom to ask that God hath to give 't is true the answer of a Believers prayers may be a long time suspended from his sense and knowledge but every prayer according to the will of God is presently granted in Heaven though for wise and holy ends they may be held in a doubtful suspense about them upon earth Fourthly The free discoveries of the secrets of Gods heart to Believers speaks them to be his special favourites men open not the counsels and secrets of their own hearts to enemies or strangers but to their most inward and intimate friends The secret of the Lord is-with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant Psal. 25. 14. When God was about to destroy Sodom he will do nothing in that work of judgement till he had acquainted Abraham his friend with his purpose therein Gen. 18. 17. And the Lord said Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do for I know him c. So when a King was to be elected for Israel and the person whom God had chosen was yet unknown to the people God as it were whispered that secret unto Samuel the day before 1 Sam. 9. 15. Now the Lord had told Samuel in his ear a day before Saul came according to the manner of Princes with some special favourite Fifthly The Lords receiving every small thing that comes from them with grace and favour when mean while he rejects the greatest things offered by others doth certainly bespeak Believers the special favourites of God There was but one good word in a whole sentence from Sarah and that very word is noted and commended by God 1 Pet. 3. 6. She called him Lord. There were but some small beginnings or buddings of grace in young Abijah and the Lord took special notice of it 1 Kings 14. 12. Because in him there is found some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel in the house of Jeroboam Let this be an encouragement to young ones in whom there are found any breathing desires after Christ God will not reject them if any sincerity be found in them a secret groan uttered to God in sincerity shall not be despised Rom. 8. 26. The very bent of a Believers will when he hath no more to offer unto God is an acceptable present 2 Cor. 8. 11. The very intent and purpose that lies secretly in the heart of a Believer not yet executed is accepted with him 1 Kings 8. 18. Where as it was in thine heart to build an house to my name thou didst well that it was in thine heart Thus small things offered to God by Believers find acceptance with him whilst the greatest presents even solemn assemblies Sabbaths and prayers from others are rejected They are a trouble unto me saith God I am weary to bear them Isai. 1. 14 15. Incense from Sheba the sweet Cane from a far Country are not acceptable nor sacrifices sweet unto God from other hands Jer. 6. 20. From all which it appears beyond doubt that the persons and duties of Believers are accepted into the special favour of God by Jesus Christ which was the second thing to be spoken to and brings us to the third general viz. Thirdly How Christ the Beloved procures this benefit for 3. Believers And this he doth four ways First By the satisfaction of his blood Rom. 5. 10. When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son No friendship without reconciliation no reconciliation but by the blood of Christ therefore the new and living way by which Believers come unto God with acceptance is said to be consecrated for us through the veil of Christs flesh and hence believers have boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10. 19 20. Secondly The favour of God is procured for Believers by their mystical union with Christ whereby they are made members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 5. 30. So that look as Adams posterity stood upon the same terms that he their natural head did so Believers Christs mystical members stand in the favour of God by the favour which Christ their spiritual head hath John 17. 33. I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me Thirdly Believers are brought into favour with God by Christs becoming their Altar upon which their persons and duties are all offered up to God the Altar sanctifies the gift Heb. 13. 10. And this was typified by that legal rite mentioned Luke 1. 9 10. Christ is that golden Altar from whence all the prayers of the Saints ascend to the throne of God perfumed with the odours and incense of his merits Rev. 8. 34. And another Angel came and stood at the Altar having a golden Censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar which was before the Throne and the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand And thus you see how the persons and duties of Believers are brought into favour and acceptance with God by Jesus Christ. The Uses follow Inference 1. If all Believers be in favour with God how great a mercy is Inference 1. it to have the prayers of such ingaged on our behalf Would we have our business speed in Heaven let us get into favour with God our selves and engage the prayers of his people the favourites of Heaven for us vis unita
mortification regenerate souls are daily using and applying in order to the death of sin And so much of the first particular what the mortification of sin or Crucifying of the flesh implies Secondly In the next place we shall examine the reasons 2. why this work of the spirit is expressed under that Trope or figurative expression of Crucifying the flesh Now the ground and reason of the use of this expression is the resemblance which the mortification of sin bears unto the death of the cross and this appears in five particulars First The death of the cross was a painful death and the mortification of sin is very painful work Matth. 25. 29. 't is the cutting off our right hands and plucking out our right eyes it will cost many thousand tears and groans prayers and strong cries to heaven before one sin will be mortified Upon the account of the difficulty of this work and mainly upon this account the Scripture saith narrow is the way and strait is the gate that leadeth unto life and few there be that find it Matth. 7. 14. and that the righteous themselves are scarcely saved Secondly The death of the cross was universally painful every member every sense every sinew every nerve was the seat and subject of tormenting pain So is it in the mortification of sin 't is not this or that particular member or act but the whole body of sin that is to be destroyed Rom. 6. 6. and accordingly the conflict is in every faculty of the soul for the Spirit of God by whose hand sin is mortified doth not combat with this or that particular Lust only but with sin as sin and for that reason with every sin in every faculty of the soul. So that there are conflicts and anguish in every part Thirdly The death of the cross was a slow and lingering death denying unto them that suffered it the favour of a quick dispatch Just so it is in the death of sin though the Spirit of God be mortifying it day by day yet this is a truth Mortificatio peccati non fit uno momento sed opus est lucta assiduâ p●…ccatum languescit ab initio mortificationis nostrae in progressu tabescit ad extremum i. e. in ipsa morte nostra abolebitur Origen in Epist. ad Rom. sealed by the sad experience of all believers in the world that sin is long a dying and if we ask a reason of this dispensation of God among others this seems to be one corruptions in believers like the Canaanites in the Land of Israel are left to prove and to exercise the people of God to keep us watching and praying mourning and believing yea wondering and admiring at the riches of pardoning and preserving mercy all our dayes Fourthly The death of the Cross was a very opprobrious and shameful death they that dyed upon the cross were loaded with ignominy the crimes for which they dyed were exposed to the publick view after this manner dyeth sin a very shameful and ignominious death Every true believer draws up a charge against it in every prayer aggravates and condemns it in every confession bewailes the evil of it with multitudes of tears and groans making sin as vile and odious as they can find words to express it though not so vile as it is in its own nature O my God saith Ezra I am ashamed and even blush to look up unto thee Ezra 9. 6. So Daniel in his confession Dan. 9. 7. O Lord righteousness belongeth unto thee but unto us confusion of faces as at this day Nor can it grieve any believer in the world to accuse condemn and shame himself for sin whilest he remembers and considers that all that shame and confusion of face which he takes to himself goes to the vindication glory and honour of his God as David was content to be more vile still for God so it pleaseth the heart of a Christian to magnifie and advance the name and glory of God by exposing his own shame in humble and broken hearted confessions of sin Fifthly In a word the death of the Cross was not a natural but a violent death such also is the death of sin sin dyes not of its own accord as nature dyeth in old men in whom the Balsamum radicale or radical moisture is consumed for if the Spirit of God did not kill it it would live to eternity in the souls of men 't is not the everlasting burnings and all the wrath of God which lies upon the damned for ever that can destroy sin Sin like a Salamander can live to eternity in the fire of Gods wrath so that either it must dye a violent death by the hand of the Spirit or never dyeth at all And thus you see why the mortification of sin is Tropically expressed by the crucifying of the flesh 3. Thirdly Why all that are in Christ must be so crucified or mortified unto sin and the necessity of this will appear divers ways First From the inconsistency and contrariety that there is betwixt Christ and unmortified lust Gal. 5. 17. these are contrary the one to the other There is a threefold inconsistency betwixt Christ and such corruptions they are not only contrary to the holiness of Christ 1 John 3. 6. Whosoever abideth in him sinneth not whosoever sinneth hath not seen him neither known him i. e. whosoever is thus ingulphed and plunged into the lust of the flesh can have no communion with the pure and holy Christ but there is also an inconsistency betwixt such sin and the honour of Christ 2 Tim. 2. 19. Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity as Alexander said to a Soldier of his name recordare nominis Alexandri remember thy name is Alexander and do nothing unworthy of that name And unmortified lusts are also contrary to the Dominion and government of Christ Luke 9. 23. If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross daily and follow me these are the self-denying terms upon which all men are admitted into Christs service and without mortification and self-denial he allows no man to call him Lord and Master Secondly The necessity of mortification appears from the necessity of conformity betwixt Christ the head and all the members of his mystical body for how incongruous and uncomely would it be to see a holy heavenly Christ leading a company of unclean carnal and sensual members Mat. 11. 29. Take my yoak upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly q. d. it would be monstrous to the world to behold a company of Lions and Wolves following a meek and harmless Lamb men of raging and unmortified lusts professing and owning me for their head of government and again 1 John 2. 6. He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk even as he walked q. d. either imitate Christ in your practice or never make pretensions to Christ in your
place why all that profess Christ are bound to imitate his example and then apply the whole Now the necessity of this imitation of Christ will convincingly appear diverse ways First From the established order of salvation which is fixed and unalterable God that hath appointed the end hath also 1. established the means and order by which men shall attain the ultimate end Now Conformity to Christ is the established method in which God will bring souls to glory Rom. 8. 29. For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son that he might be the first-born among many brethren The same God who hath predestinated men to salvation hath in order thereunto predestinated them unto Conformity to Christ and this order of heaven is never to be reversed we may as well hope to be saved without Christ as to be saved without Conformity to Christ. Secondly The nature of Christ mystical requires this Conformity 2. and renders it indispensably necessary Otherwise the body of Christ must be heterogeneous of a nature different from the head and how monstrous and uncomely would this be This would represent Christ to the world in an image or Idea much like that Dan. 2. 32 33. The head of fine gold the breast and arms of silver the thighs of brass the legs of iron the feet part of iron part of clay Christ the head is pure and holy and therefore very unsuitable to sensual and earthly members And therefore the Apostle in his description of mystical Christ describes the members of Christ as they ought to be of the same nature and quality with the head 1 Cor. 15. 48. As is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly and as we have born the image of the earthy so we shall also bear the image of the heavenly That image or resemblance of Christ which shall be compleat and perfect after the Resurrection must be begun in its first draught here by the work of regeneration Thirdly This resemblance and conformity to Christ appears 3. necessary from the communion which all believers have with Christ in the same Spirit of grace and holiness Believers are called Christs fellows or copartners Psal. 45. 7. from their participation with him of the same spirit as it is 1 Thes. 4. 8. God giveth the same spirit unto us which he more plentifully poured out upon Christ. Now where the same spirit and principle is there the same fruits and operations must be produced according to the proportions and measures of the spirit of grace communicated and this reason is farther enforced by the very design and end of God in the infusion of the spirit of grace for it is plain from Ezek. 36. 27. that practical holiness and obedience is the scope and design of that infusion of the spirit The very inna●… property of the spirit of God in men is to elevate their minds and set their affections upon heavenly things to purge their hearts from earthly dross and fit them for a life of holiness and obedience its nature also is assimilating and changeth them in whom it is into the same image with Jesus Christ their heavenly head 2 Cor. 3. 18. Fourthly The necessity of this imitation of Christ may be argued from the design and end of Christs exhibition to the 4. world in a body of flesh For though we detest that doctrine of the Socinians which makes the exemplary life of Christ to be upon the matter the whole end of his incarnation yet we must not run so far from an error as to lose a precious truth We say the satisfaction of his blood was a main and principal end of his Incarnation according to Mat. 20. 28. We affirm also that it was a great design and end of the Incarnation of Christ to set before us a pattern of holiness for our imitation For so speaks the Apostle 1 Pet. 2. 21. He hath left us an example that we should follow his steps And this example of Christ greatly obliges believers to his imitation Phil. 2. 5. Let this mind be in you which also was in Christ Jesus Fifthly our imitation of Christ is one of those great Articles which every man is to subscribe whom Christ will admit 5. into the number of his disciples Luke 14. 27. Whosoever doth not come after me cannot be my disciple And again John 12. 26. If any man serve me let him follow me To this condition we have submitted if we be sincere believers and therefore are strictly bound to the imitation of Christ not only by Gods command but by our own consent But if we profess interest in Christ when our hearts never consented to follow and imitate his example then are we self-deceiving hypocrites wholly disagreeing from the scripture character of believers Rom. 8. 1. They that are Christs being there described to be such as walk not after the flesh but after the spirit and Gal. 5. 25. If we live in the spirit let us walk in the spirit Sixthly The honour of Christ necessitates the conformity of Christians to his example else what way is there left 6. to stop detracting mouths and vindicate the name of Christ from the reproaches of the world how can wisdom be justified of her children except it be this way by what means shall we cut off occasion from such as desire occasion but by regulating our lives by Christs example The world hath eyes to see what we practise as well as ears to hear what we profess Therefore either shew the consistency betwixt your profession and practice or you can never hope to vindicate the name and honour of the Lord Jesus The uses follow For 1. Information 2. Exhortation 3. Consolation 1. Use for Information Use 1. Inference 1. If all that profess interest in Christ be strictly bound to imitate his holy example then it follows that Religion is very unjustly charged Inference 1. by the world with the scandals and evils of them that profess it Nothing can be more unjust and irrational if we consider First That Christian Religion severely censures loose and scandalous actions in all professors and therefore is not to be censured for them 'T is absurd to condemn Religion for what it self condemns Looseness no way flowes from the principles of Christianity but is most opposite and contrary to it Titus 2. 11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Secondly It is an argument of the excellency of Christian Religion that even wicked men themselves covet the name and profession of it though they only cloak and cover their evils under it I confess it is a great abuse of such an excellent thing as Religion is but yet if it had not an awful reverence paid it by the consciences of all men it would
the soul from the body James 2. 26. The body without the spirit is dead Spiritual death is the privation of the principle of spiritual life or the want and absence of the quickening spirit of God in the foul the soul is the life of the body and Christ is the life of the soul the absence of the foul is death to the body and the absence or want of Christ is death to the soul. Eternal death is the separation both of body and soul from God which is the misery of the damned Now Christless and unregenerate men are not dead in the first sense they are naturally alive though they are dead while they live Nor are they yet dead in the last sense eternally separated from God by an irrevocable sentence as the damned are but they are dead in the second sense they are spiritually dead whilst they are naturally alive and this spiritual death is the fore-runner of eternal death Now spiritual death is put in scripture in opposition to a two-fold spiritual life Viz. 1. The life of Justification 2. The life of Sanctification Spiritual death in opposition to the life of Justification is nothing else but the guilt of sin bringing us under the sentence of death Spiritual death in opposition to the life of sanctification is the pollution or dominion of sin In both these fen ses unregenerate men are dead men but it is the last which I am properly concerned to speak to in this place and therefore Secondly Let us briefly consider what this spiritual death is which as before was hinted is the absence of the quickening 2. spirit of Christ from the soul of any man That soul is a dead soul into which the spirit of Christ is not infused in the work of regeneration and all its works are dead works as they are called Heb. 9. 14. For look how it is with the damned they live they have sense and motion and an immortality in all these yet because they are eternally separated from God the life which they live deserves not the name of life but is every where in scripture stiled death So the unregenerate they are naturally alive they eat and drink they buy and sell they talk and laugh they rejoyce in the creatures and many of them spend their days in pleasures and then go down to the grave This is the life they live but yet the scripture rather calls it death than life because though they live yet it is without God in the world Eph. 2. 12. Though they live yet it is a life alienated from the life of God Eph. 4. 18. And therefore while they remain naturally alive they are in scripture said to remain in death 1 John 3. 14. and to be dead while they live 1 Tim. 5. 6. And there is great reason why a Christless and unregenerate state should be represented in scripture under the notion of death for there is nothing in nature which more aptly represents that miserable state of the soul than natural death doth The dead see and discern nothing and the natural man perceiveth not the things that are of God The dead have no beauty or desirableness in them Bury my dead said Abraham out of my sight neither is there any spiritual loveliness in the unregenerate True it is some of them have sweet natural qualities and moral excellencies which are taking things but these are as so many flowers decking and adorning a dead corpse The dead are Objects of pity and great lamentation men use to mourn for the dead Eccles. 12. 5. Man goeth to his long home and the mourners go about the streets But unregenerate and Christless souls are much more the Objects of pity and lamentation How are all the people of God especially those that are naturally related to them concerned to mourn over them and for them as Abraham did for Ishmael Gen. 17. 18. O that Ishmael might live before thee Upon these and many other accounts the state of unregeneracy is represented to us in the notion of death Thirdly And that this is the state of all Christless and unsanctified persons will undeniably appear two ways 3. 1. The causes of spiritual life have not wrought upon them 2. The effects and signs of spiritual life do not appear in them and therefore they are in the state and under the power of spiritual death First The causes of spiritual life have not wrought upon them There are two causes of spiritual life 1. Principal and internal 2. Subordinate and external The principal internal cause of spiritual life is the regenerating spirit of Christ Rom. 8. 2. The law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death 'T is the spirit as a regenerating spirit that unites us with Christ in whom all spiritual life originally is John 5. 25 26. Verily I say unto you that the hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live for as the father hath life in himself so hath he given to the son to have life in himself As all the members of the natural body receive animation sense and motion by their Union with their natural head so all believers the members of Christ receive spiritual life and animation by their Union with Christ their mystical head Eph. 4. 15 16. Except we come to him and be united with him in the way of faith we can have no life in us John 5. 40. Ye will not come unto me that ye may have life Now the spirit of God hath yet exerted no regenerating quickening influences nor begotten any special saving faith in natural unsanctified men whatever he hath done for them in the way of natural or spiritual common gifts yet he hath not quickened them with the life of Christ. And as for the subordinate external means of life viz. the preaching of the Gospel which is the instrument of the spirit in this glorious work and is therefore called the word of life Phil. 2. 16. this word hath not yet been made a regenerating quickening word to their souls Possibly it hath enlightned them and convinced them it hath wrought upon their minds in the way of common illumination and upon their consciences in the way of conviction but not upon their hearts and wills by way of effectual conversion To this day the Lord hath not given them an heart opening it self in the way of faith to receive Jesus Christ. Secondly The effects and signs of spiritual life do not appear in them for First They have no feeling or sense of misery and danger I mean no such sense as throwly awakens them to apply Christ their remedy That spiritual judgment lies upon them Isa. 6. 9 10. And he said go and tell this people Hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not make the heart of this people fat and their ears heavy and
least of these mercies but I will not insist here your duty lyes much higher than contentment Be thankful as well as content in every state blessed be God saith the Apostle the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ O think what are men to Angels that Christ should pass by them to become a Saviour to men and what art thou among men that thou shouldst be taken and others left and among all the mercies of God what mercies are comparable to these confer'd upon thee O bless God in the lowest ebb of outward comforts for such priviledges as these And yet you will not come up to your Duty in all this except you be joyful in the Lord and rejoyce evermore after the receipt of such mercies as these Philip. 4. 4. Rejoyce in the Lord ye righteous and again I say rejoyce for hath not the poor Captive reason to rejoyce when he hath recovered his liberty the Debtor to rejoyce when all scores are cleared and he owes nothing the weary traveller to rejoyce though he be not owner of a shilling when he is come almost home where all his wants shall be supplied Why this is your case when Christ once becomes yours you are the Lords freemen your debts to Justice are all satisfied by Christ and you are within a little of compleat redemption from all the troubles and inconveniencies of your present state Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ. The Second SERMON Serm. 2. JOHN 17. 23. Wherein the believers Union with Christ is stated and opened as a principal part of Gospel Application I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one THE design and end of the Application of Christ to Sinners is the Communication of his benefits to them but seeing all Communications of benefits necessarily imply Communion and all Communion as necessarily presupposes Union with his person I shall therefore in this place and from this Scripture treat of the Mystical Union betwixt Christ and believers this Union being the principal act wherein the Spirits application of Christ consists of which I spake as to its general nature in the former Sermon In this Verse omitting the Contexture we find a threefold Union One betwixt the Father and Christ a second betwixt Christ and believers a third betwixt believers themselves First Thou in me this is a glorious ineffable Union and is fundamental to the other two the Father is not only in Christ in respect of dear affection as one friend is in another who is as his own soul nor only essentially in respect of the identity and sameness of nature and attributes in which respect Christ is the express Image of his person Heb. 1. 3. but he is in Christ also as Mediator by communicating the fulness of the godhead which dwells in him as God-man in a transcendant and singular manner so as it never dwelt nor can dwell in any other Col. 2. 9. Secondly I in them here is the Mystical Union betwixt Christ and the Saints q. d. thou and I are one essentially they and I are one mystically thou and I are one by the communication of the Godhead and singular fulness of the Spirit to me as Mediator and they and I are one by my communication of the Spirit to them in measure Thirdly From hence results a third Union betwixt believers themselves that they may be made perfect in one the same Spirit dwelling in them all and equally uniting them all to me as living members to their head of influence there must needs be a dear and intimate Union betwixt themselves as fellow members of the same body Now my business at this time lying in the second branch namely the Union betwixt Christ and believers I shall gather up the substance of it into this Doctrinal proposition to which I shall apply this discourse Doct. That there is a strict and dear Union betwixt Christ and all true believers The Scriptures have borrowed from the book of Nature four elegant and lively Metaphors to help the Nature of this Mystical Union with Christ into our understandings Namely that of two pieces of timber united by glew that of a graff taking hold of its stock and making one tree that of the husband and wife by the marriage Covenant becoming one flesh and that of the members and head animated by one soul and so becoming one Natural body Every one of these is more lively and full than the other and what is defective ●…in one is supplied in the other but yet neither any of these singly or all of them jointly can give us a full and compleat account of this Mystery Not that of two pieces united by glew 1 Cor. 6. 17. he that 1 Cor. 6. 17. is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glewed to the Lord. For though this cementeth and strongly joyns them in one yet this is but a faint and imperfect shadow of our Union with Christ for though this Union by glew be intimate yet it is not vital but so is that of the soul with Christ. Nor that of the graff and stock mentioned Rom. 6. 5. for Rom. 6. 5. thought it be there said that believers are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implanted or ingraffed by way of incision and this Union betwixt it and the stock be vital for it partakes of the vital sap and juice of it yet here also is a remarkable defect for the graff is of a more excellent kind and nature than the stock and upon that account the tree receives its denomination from it as from the more noble and excellent part but Christ into whom believers are ingraffed is infinitely more excellent than they and they are denominated from him Nor yet that Conjugal Union by marriage Covenant betwixt Eph. 6. 32. a man and his wife for though this be exceeding dear and intimate so that a man leaves father and mother and cleaves to his wife and they two become one flesh yet this Union is not indissolvable but may and must be broken by death and then the relict lives alone without any Communion with or relation to the person that was once so dear but this betwixt Christ and the soul can never be dissolved by death it abides to eternity Nor Lastly That of the head and members united by one Eph. 4. 15 16. vital Spirit and so making one Physical body mentioned Eph. 4. 15 16. for though one soul actuates every member yet it doth not knit every member alike near to the head but some are nearer and others removed farther from it but here every member is alike nearly united with Christ the head the weak are as near to him as the strong Two things are necessary to be opened in the doctrinal part of this point 1. The reality of this Union 2. The quality First For the reality of it I shall make
of glory Col. 1. 27. So then destroy this Union and with it you destroy all our fruits priviledges and eternal hopes at one stroke Fifthly The Mystical Union is a most Efficacious Union for through this Union the divine power flows into our 5. souls both to quicken us with the life of Christ and to conserve and secure that life in us after it is so infused Without the Unition of the soul to Christ which is to be conceived efficiently as the Spirits act there can be no Union formally considered and without these no communications of life from Christ to us Eph. 4. 16. And when there is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or effectual working of the spirit of life in every part which he there speaks of as who should say the first bublings up of the new life a spiritual vitality diffused through the soul which ere while was dead in sin yet still this Union with Christ is as necessary to the maintaining as before it was to the producing of it For why is it that this life is not again extinguished and wholly suffocated in us by so many deadly wounds as are given it by temptations and corruptions surely no reason can be assigned more satisfying than that which Christ himself gives us in John 14. 19. because I live ye shall live also q. d. whilst there is vital sap in me the root you that are branches in me cannot wither and dye Sixthly The Mystical Union is an indissoluble Union there is an everlasting tye betwixt Christ and the believer and herein also it is beyond all other Unions in the world death dissolves the dear Union betwixt the husband and wife friend and friend yea betwixt soul and body but not betwixt Christ and the soul the bands of this Union rot not in the grave what shall separate us from the love of Christ saith the Apostle Rom. 8. 35 38 39. he bids defiance to all enemies and triumphs in the firmness of this Union over all hazards that seem to threaten it It is with Christ and us in respect of the Mystical Union as it was with Christ himself in respect of the hypostatical Union that was not dissolved by his death when the Natural Union betwixt his soul and body was nor can this mystical Union of our souls and bodies with Christ be dissolved when the Unions betwixt us and our dearest relations yea betwixt the soul and body are dissolved by death God calls himself the God of Abraham long after his body was turned into dust Seventhly It is an honourable Union * Apex cap●…t vertex ●…obilitatis est Christus sine quo nibil est i●… toto ho●… sublunari orbe terraru●… nobile cujus solium est coelum cujus scabellu●… est terra terra ●…nquam in qua h●…rum omnis cognatio nobilitas sita-est collocata divinis illius pedibus substernitur Laurent Hum●…redus de no●…ilitate lib. 2. p. 176. yea the highest honour 7. that can be done unto men the greatest honour that was ever done to our common nature was by its assumption into Unity with the second person hypostatically and the highest honour that was ever done to our single persons was their Union with Christ mystically To be a servant of Christ is a dignity transcendent to the highest advancement among men but to be a member of Christ how matchless and singular is the glory thereof and yet such honour have all the Saints Eph. 5. 30. we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eighthly It is a most Comfortable Union yea the ground 8. of all solid comfort both in life and death whatever troubles wants or distresses befal such in this is abundant relief and support Christ is mine and I am his what may not a soul make out of that If I am Christs then let him take care for me and indeed in so doing he doth but care for his own he is my head and to him it belongs to consult the safety and welfare of his own members Eph. 1. 22 23. he is not only an head to his own by way of Influence but to all things else by way of dominion for their good how comfortably may we repose our selves under that cheering consideration upon him at all times and in all difficult cases Ninthly It is a fruitful Union the immediate end of it is 9. fruit Rom. 7. 4. we are married to Christ that we should bring forth fruit to God all the fruit we bear before our ingrafture into Christ is worse than none till the person be in Christ the work cannot be Evangelically good and acceptable to God we are made accepted in the beloved Eph. 1. 6. Christ is a fruitful root and makes all the branches that live in him so too Joh. 15. 8. Tenthly and Lastly It is an enriching Union for by our 10. Union with his person we are immediately interessed in all his riches 1 Cor. 1. 30. how rich and great a person do the little arms of Faith clasp and embrace All is yours 1 Cor. 3. 22. all that Christ hath becomes ours either by communication to us or improvement for us his Father Joh. 20. 17. his promises 2 Cor. 1. 20. his providences Rom. 8. 28. his glory Joh. 17. 24. it's all ours by vertue of our Union with him Thus you see briefly what the Mystical Union is Next we shall improve it Inference 1. If there be such a Union betwixt Christ and believers oh then what transcendent dignity hath God put upon believers Infer 1. Si vis vir virtutis appellari indue te Christum qui est Dei virtus sapientia in omnibus adjung●… te domino ita ut 〈◊〉 c●…●…o spiritus fias tunc vir virtutis essicieris Orig. Hom. in Numb 31. Well might Constantine perfer the honour of being a member of the Church before that of being head of the Empire for it is not only above all earthly dignities and honours but in some respect above that honour which God hath put upon the Angels of glory Great is the dignity of the Angelical nature they are the highest and most honourable species of creatures they also have the honour continually to behold the face of God in Heaven and yet in this one respect the Saints are preferr'd to them they have a Mystical Union with Christ as their head of influence by whom they are quickned with spiritual life which the Angels have not It is true there is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or gathering together of all in heaven and earth under Christ as a common head Eph. 1. 10. he is the head of Angels as well as Saints but in different respects to Angels he is an head of dominion and government but to Saints he is both an head of dominion and vital influence too they are his chief and most honourable subjects but not his Mystical members they are as the Barons and
poured out many prayers and tears to the Lord for them you have cryed for them as Abraham for his Son O that Ishmael might live before thee O that this poor husband wise child brother or sister might live in thy sight and still you see they contain at one rate carnal dead and senseless well but yet give not up your hopes nor cease your pious endeavours the time may come when the Father may draw as well as you and then you shall see them quit all and come to Christ and nothing shall hinder them They are now drawn away of their own lusts they are easily drawn away by their sinful Companions but when God draws none of these shall withdraw them from the Lord Jesus What is their ignorance obstinacy and hardness of heart before that mighty power that subdues all things to it self Go therefore to the Lord by prayer for them and say Lord I have laboured for my poor relations in vain I have spent my exhortations to little purpose the work is too difficult for me I can carry it no farther but thou canst O let thy power go forth they shall be willing in the day of thy power Infer 6. If none can come to Christ except the Father draw them then surely none can be drawn from Christ except the Father leave Infer 6. them that power which at first drew them to Christ can secure and establish them in Christ to the end Joh. 10. 29. my Father which gave them me is greater than all and no man is able to pluck them out of my Fathers hand When the power of God at first draws us out of our natural state to Christ it sinds us not only impotent but obstinate not only unable but unwilling to come and yet this power of God prevails against all opposition how much more is it able to preserve and secure us when his fear is put into our inward parts so that we dare ●…t depart we have no will to depart from him Well then if the world say I will ensnare thee if the Devil say I will destroy thee if the flesh say I will betray thee yet thou art secure and safe as long as God hath said I will never leave thee nor for sake thee Heb. 13. 5. Infer 7. Let this engage you to a constant attendance upon the ordinances Infer 7. of God in which this drawing power of God is sometimes put forth upon the hearts of men Beloved there are certain seasons in which the Lord comes nigh to men in the Ordinances and Duties of his worship and we know not at what time the Lord cometh forth by his Spirit upon this design he many times comes in an hour when we look not for him when we think not of him I am found of them that sought me not Isa. 65. 1. it's good therefore to be found in the way of the Spirit had that poor man that lay so long at the pool of Bethesda reasoned thus with himself so long have I lain here in vain expecting a cure it 's to no purpose to wait longer and so had been absent at that very time when the Angel came down he had in all likelihood carryed his disease to the grave with him How dost thou know but this very Sabbath this Sermon this prayer which thou hast no heart to attend and art tempted to neglect may be the season and instrument wherein the Lord may do that for thy soul which was never yet done upon it Infer 8. To conclude how are all the Saints engaged to put forth all the Infer 8. power and ability they have for God who hath put forth his infinite almighty power to draw them to Christ God hath done great things for your souls he hath drawn you out of the miserable state of sin and wrath and that when he let others go by nature as good as you he hath drawn you into Union with Christ and Communion with his glorious priviledges O that you would henceforth imploy all the power you have for God in duties of obedience and in drawing others to Christ as much as in you lies and say continually with the Church Draw me we will run after thee Cant. 1. 4. Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ. The Fifth SERMON Serm. 5. EPHES. 2. 1. And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses Opening that work of the Spirit more particularly by which the soul is enabled to apply Christ. and sins IN the former Sermons we have seen our Union with Christ in the general nature of it and the means by which it is effected both external by the preaching of the Gospel and internal by the drawings of the Father We are now to bring our thoughts yet closer to this great mystery and consider the bonds or ligaments by which Christ and believers are knit together in a blessed oneness And if we heedfully observe the Scripture expressions and ponder the nature of this Union we shall find there are two bands which knit Christ and the soul together viz. 1. The Spirit on Christs part 2. Faith on our part The Spirit on Christs part quickening us with spiritual life whereby Christ first takes hold of us and faith on our part when thus quickened whereby we take hold of Christ accordingly this Union with the Lord Jesus is expressed in Scripture sometimes by one and sometimes by the other of these means or bonds by which it is effected Christ is sometimes said to be in us so Col. 1. 27. Christ in you the hope of glory and Rom. 8. 10. And if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin and other times it is expressed by the other bond on our part as 1 Joh. 5. 20. we are in him that is true even in his son Christ Jesus and 2 Cor. 5. 17. if ●…ny man be in Christ he is a new creature The difference betwixt both these is thus aptly expressed by a late Author Christ is in believers by his Spirit 1 Joh. 4. 13. the believer is in Christ by faith Joh. 1. 12. Christ Mount Pisga●… p. 22 23. is in the believer by inhabitation Rom. 3. 17. the believer is in Christ by implantation Rom. 6. 35. Christ is in the believer as the head is in the body Col. 1. 18. as the root in the branches Joh. 15. 5. believers are in Christ as the members are in the head Eph. 1. 23. or as the branches are in the root Joh. 15. 1 7. Christ in the believer implyeth life and influence from Christ Col. 3. 4. the believer in Christ implyeth Communion and fellowship with Christ 1 Cor. 1. 30. when Christ is said to be in the believer we are to understand it in reference to Sanctification when the believer is said to be in Christ it is in order to Justification Thus we apprehend being our selves first apprehended by Jesus Christ Phil. 3. 12. we cannot take hold of Christ till first he take
frame may by the assistance of the spirit of God for which therefore they are bound to pray discern his indwelling and working in themselves Evidence 1. In whomsoever the spirit of Christ is a spirit of sanctification to that man or woman he hath been more or less a spirit of conviction and humiliation this is the order which the spirit constantly observes in adult or grown converts Joh. 16. 8 9. and when he is come he will reprove the world of sin and of righteousness and of Judgement of sin because they believed not on me This you see is the method he observes all the world over he shall reprove or convince the world of sin Conviction of sin hath the same respect unto sanctification as the blossoms of trees have to the fruits that follow them a blossom is but fructus imperfectus ordinabilis an imperfect fruit in it self and in order to a more perfect and noble fruit where there are no blossoms we can expect no fruit and where we see no convictions of sin we can expect no conversion to Christ. Hath then the spirit of God been a spirit of conviction to thee hath he more particularly convinced thee of sin because thou hast not believed on him i. e. hath he shewn thee thy sin and misery as an Unbeliever not only terrified and affrighted thy conscience with this or that more notorious act of sin but sully convinced thee of the state of sin that thou art in by reason of thy unbelief which holding thee from Christ must needs also hold thee under the guilt of all thy other sins This gives at least a strong probability that God hath given thee his spirit especially when this conviction remains day and night upon thy soul so that nothing but Christ can give it rest and consequently the great inquisition of thy soul is after Christ and none but Christ. Evidence 2. As the spirit of God hath been a convincing so he is a quickening spirit to all those to whom he is given Rom. 8. 2. The law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death he is the spirit of life i. e. the principle of spiritual life in the souls whom he inhabiteth for uniting them to Christ he unites them to the fountain of life and this spiritual life in believers manifests it self as the natural life doth in vital actions and operations When the spirit of God comes into the soul of a man that was dead and senseless under sin O saith he now I begin to feel the weight and load of sin Rom. 7. 24. now I begin to hunger and thirst after Christ and his Ordinances 1 Pet. 2. 2. now I begin to breath after God in spiritual prayer Acts 9. 11. Spiritual life hath its spiritual senses and suitable operations O think upon this you that cannot feel any burthen in sin you that have no hungerings or thirstings after Christ how can the spirit of God be in you I do not deny but there may at some times be much deadness and senselesness upon the hearts of Christians but this is their disease not their nature it is but at some times not alwayes and when it is so with them they are burthened with it and complain o●… it as their greatest affliction in this world their spirits are not easie and at rest in such a condition as yours are their spirit is as a bone out of joint an Arm dislocated which cannot move any way without pain Evidence 3. Those to whom God giveth his spirit have a tender sympathy with all the interest and concernments of Christ this must needs be so if the same spirit which is in Christ dwelleth also in thy heart if thou be a partaker of his spirit then what he loves thou lovest and what he hateth thou hatest this is a very plain case even in nature it self we find that the many members of the same natural body being animated by one and the same spirit of life whether one member suffer all the members suffer with it or one member be honoured all the members rejoice with it now ye are the body of Christ and members in particular 1 Cor. 12. 26 27. For look as Christ the head of that body is touched with a tender sense and feeling of the miseries and troubles of his people he is persecuted when they are persecuted Acts 9. 4. so they that have the spirit of Christ in them cannot be without a deep and tender sense of the reproach and dishonours that are done to Christ this is as it were a sword in their bones Psal. 42. 3. If his publick worship cease the assemblies of his people scattered it cannot but go to the hearts of all in whom the spirit of Christ is they will be sorrowful for the solemn assemblies the reproach of them will be a burthen Zeph. 3. 18. Those that have the spirit of Christ do not more earnestly long after any one thing in this world than the advancement of Christs interest by conversion and reformation in the Kingdoms of the earth Psal. 45. 3 4. Paul could rejoice that Christ was Preached though his own afflictions were increased Phil. 1. 16. 18. and John could rejoice that Christ encreased though he himself decreased yet therein was his joy fulfilled Joh. 3. 29. so certainly the concernments of Christ must and will touch that heart which is the habitation of his spirit I cannot deny but even a good Baruch may be under a temptation to seek great things for himself and be too much swallowed up in his own concernments when God is plucking up and breaking down Jer. 45. 4 5. but this is only the influence of a temptation the true temper and spirit of a believer inclines him to sorrow and mourning when things are in this sad posture Ezech. 9. 4. Go through the midst of the City through the midst of Jerusalem and set a mark upon the foreheads of the men that sigh and that cry for all the abominations that be done in the midst thereof O Reader lay thine hand upon thine heart is it thus with thee dost thou sympathize with the affairs and concernments of Christ in the world or carest thou not which way things go with the people of God and Gospel of Christ so long as thine own affairs prosper and all things are well with thee Evidence 4. Where ever the spirit of God dwelleth he doth in some degree mortifie and subdue the evils and corruptions of the soul in which he resides this spirit lusteth against the flesh Gal. 5. 17. and believers through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body Rom. 8. 13. this is one special part of his sanctifying work I do not say he so kills and subdues sin in believers as that it shall never trouble or defile them any more no no that freedom belongs to the perfect state in heaven but its dominion is taken away though its
Nobels in his Kingdome but the Saints as the dear Spouse and wife of his bosome this dignifies the believer above the greatest Angel And as the Nobles of the Kingdome think it a preferment and honour to serve the Queen so the glorious Angels think it no degradation or dishonour to them to serve the Saints for to this honourable office they are appointed Heb. 1. 14. to be ministring or serviceable spirits for the good of them that shall be heirs of salvation the chiefest servant disdains not to honour and serve the heir Some imperious Grandees would frown should some of these persons but presume to approach their presence but God sets them before his face with delight and Angels delight to serve them Infer 2. If there be such a strict and inseparable Union betwixt Christ Infer 2. and believers then the graces of believers can never totally fail immortality is the priviledge of grace because sanctified persons are inseparably united to Christ the fountain of life your life is bid with Christ in God Coloss. 3. 3. Whilst the sap of life is in the root the branches live by it thus it is betwixt Christ and believers Joh. 14. 19. because I live ye shall live also see how Christ binds up their life in one bundle with his own plainly intimating it is as impossible for them to dye as it is for himself he cannot live without them True it is the spiritual life of believers is encountred by many strong and fierce oppositions it is also brought to a low ebb in some but we are always to remember there are some things which pertain to the essence of that life in which the very being of it lyes and some things that pertain only to its well-being all those things which belong to the well-being of the new creature as manifestations joys spiritual comforts c. may for a time fail yea and grace it self may suffer great losses and remissions in its degrees notwithstanding our Union with Christ but still the essence of it is immortal which is no small relief to gracious souls when the means of grace fail as is threatned Amos 8. 11. whem temporary formal professors drop away from Christ like withered leaves from the trees in a windy day 2 Tim. 2. 18. and when the natural Union of their souls and bodies are suffering a dissolution from each other by death when that Silver cord is loosed this Golden chain holds firm 1 Cor. 3. 23. Infer 3. Is the Union so intimate betwixt Christ and believers how great Infer 3. and powerful a motive then is this to make us open-handed and liberal in relieving the necessities and wants of every gracious person for in relieving them we relieve Christ himself Christ personal is not the object of our pity and charity Qui respectu fratris in Ecclesia non movetur vel Christi contemplatione moveatur qui non cogitat in labore egestate conservum vel dominum cogitet in ipso illo quem despicit constitutum Cyprian de opere eleemosynis he is at the fountain head of all the riches in glory Eph. 4. v. 10. but Christ mystical is exposed to necessities and wants he feels hunger and thirst cold and pains in his body the Church and he is refreshed relieved and comforted in their refreshments and comforts Christ the Lord of heaven and earth in this consideration is sometimes in need of a penny he tells us his wants and poverty and how he is relieved Mat. 25. 35 40. A Text believed and understood by very few I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in Then shall the righteous answer Lord when saw we thee an hungred c. And the King shall answer and say unto them Verily I say unto you in as much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it to me It was the saying of a great Divine that he thought scarce any man on earth did fully understand and believe this truth and he conceives so much hinted in the very Text where the righteous themselves reply Lord when saw we thee sick c. intimating in the question that they did not throughly understand the nearness yea oneness of those persons with Christ for whom they did these things And indeed it is incredible that a Christian can be hard hearted and close handed to that necessitous Christian in refreshing and relieving of whom he verily believes that he ministers refreshment to Christ himself O think again and again upon this Scripture consider what forcible and mighty Arguments are here laid together to engage relief to the wants of Christians Here you see their near relation to Christ they are Mystically one person what you did to them you did to me Here you see also how kindly Christ takes it at our hands acknowledging all those kindnesses that were bestowed upon him even to a bit of bread he is you see content to take it as a courtesy who might demand it by authority and bereave you of all immediately upon refusal Yea here you see this one single branch or act of obedience our charity to the Saints is singled out from among all the duties of obedience and made the test and evidence of our sincerity in that great day and men blessed or cursed according to the love they have manifested this way to the Saints O then henceforth let none that understand the relation the Saints have to Christ as the members to the head or the relation they have to each other thereby as fellow members of the same body from henceforth suffer Christ to hunger if they have bread to relieve him or Christ to be thirsty if they have to refresh him this Union betwixt Christ and the Saints affords an Argument beyond all other arguments in the world to prevail with us methinks a little Rhetorick might perswade a Christian to part with any thing he hath to Christ who parted with the glory of heaven yea and his heart blood to boot for his sake Inference 4. Do Christ and believers make but one Mystical person how unnatural Infer 4. and absurd then are all those acts of unkindness whereby believers wound and grieve Jesus Christ this is as if the hand should wound its own head from which it receives life sense motion and strength When Satan smites Christ by a wicked man he then wounds him with the hand of an enemy but when his temptations prevail upon the Saints to sin he wounds him as it were with his own hand as the Eagle and Tree in the Fable complain'd the one that he was wounded by an Arrow winged with his own Feathers the other that it was rived asunder by a wedge hewen out of its own limbs Now the evil and disingenuity of such sins is to be measured not only by the near relation Christ sustains
them and communicates his favour to them as they are in Christ he is all and in all The gifts and blessings of the Spirit are given to men as they are in Christ and without respect to any external differences made in this world among men hence we find excellent treasures of grace in mean and contemptible persons in the world poor in the world rich in faith and heirs of the Kingdome and as all believers without difference receive from Christ so they are not debarr'd from any blessing that is in Christ all is yours for ye are Christs 1 Cor. 3. ult with Christ God freely gives us all things Rom. 8. 32. Position 5. The Communion believers have with Christ in spiritual benefits Position 5. is a very great mystery far above the understanding of natural men There are no footsteps of this thing in all the works of creation therefore the Apostle calls it the unsearchable riches of Christ Eph. 3. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifies that which hath no footsteps to trace it by yea 't is so deep a mystery that the Angels themselves stoop down to look into it 1 Pet. 1. 12. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit 1 Cor. 2. 9 10. Thirdly and Lastly I shall in a few particulars open the dignity and excellency of this fruit of our Union with Christ and shew you that a greater glory and honour cannot be put upon man than to be thus in fellowship with Jesus Christ Joh. 17. 22. The glory which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one as we are one and therefore more particularly let it be considered First With whom we are associated even the Son of God with him that is over all God blessed for ever Our association with Angels is an high advancement for Angels and Saints are fellow servants in the fame family Rev. 19. 10. and through Christ we are come to an innumerable company of Angels Heb. 12. 22. but what is all this to our fellowship with Jesus Christ himself and that in another manner than Angels have for though Christ be to them an head of dominion yet not an head of vital influence as he is to his mystical body the Church this therefore is to them a great mystery which they greatly affect to study and pry into Secondly What we are that are dignified with this title the fellows or copartners with Jesus Christ not only dust by nature dust thou art but sinful dust such wretched sinners as by nature and the sentence of the Law ought to be associated with devils and partakers with them of the wrath of the almighty God to all eternity Thirdly The benefits we are partakers of in and with the Lord Jesus Christ and indeed they are wonderful and astonishing things so far as they do already appear but yet we see but little of them comparatively to what we shall see 1 Joh. 3. 1 2. Now are we the sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is O what will that be to see him as he is and to be transformed into his likeness Fourthly The way and manner in which we are brought into this fellowship with Christ which is yet more admirable The Apostle gives us a strange account of it in 2 Cor. 8. 9. For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that though he was rich yet for your sakes he became poor that ye through ●…is poverty might be rich he empties himself of his glory that we might be fill'd he is made a curse that we might enjoy the blessing he submits to be crown'd with thorns that we might be crowned with glory and honour he puts himself into the number of worms Psal. 22. 6. that we might be made equal to the Angels O the unconceivable grace of Christ Fifthly The reciprocal nature of that communion which is betwixt Christ and believers we do not only partake of what is his but he partakes of what is ours he hath fellowship with us in all our wants sorrows miseries and afflictions and we have communion with him in his righteousness grace sonship and glory he takes part of our misery and we take part of his blessedness our sufferings are his sufferings Col. 1. 24. O what an honour is it to thee poor wretch whom a great many would not turn aside to ask how thou doest to have a King yea the Prince of all the Kings of the earth to pity relieve sympathize groan and bleed with thee to sit by thee in all thy troubles and give thee his Cordials to say thy troubles are my troubles and thy afflictions are my afflictions whatever toucheth thee toucheth me also O what name shall we give unto such grace as this is Sixthly and Lastly Consider the perpetuity of this priviledge your fellowship with Christ is interminable and abides for ever Christ and the Saints shall be glorified together Rom. 8. 17. while he hath any glory they shall partake with him 'T is said indeed 1 Cor. 15. 24. that there shall be a time when Christ will deliver up the Kingdome to his father but the meaning is not that ever he will cease to be an head to his Saints or they from being his members no no the relation never cease Justification Sanctification and Adoption are everlasting things and we can never be devested of them Infer 1. Are the Saints Christs fellows what honourable persons then are Infer 1. they and how should they be esteemed and valued in the world If a King who is the fountain of honour do but raise a man by his favour and dignifie him by bestowing some honourable Title upon him what respect and observance is presently paid him by all persons but what are all the vain and empty Titles of honour to the glorious and substantial priviledges with which believers are dignified and raised above all other men by Jesus Christ he is the son of God and they are the sons of God also he is the heir of all things and they are joynt-heirs with Christ. He reigns in glory and they shall reign with him he sits upon the throne and they shall sit with him in his throne O that this vile world did but know the dignity of believers they would never slight hate abuse and persecute them as they do and O that believers did but understand their own happiness and priviledges by Christ they would never droop and sink under every small trouble at t●…t rate they do Infer 2. How abundantly hath God provided for all the necessities and wants of believers Christ is a storehouse fill'd with blessings Infer 2. and mercies and it 's all for them from him
to believers as their head but more particularly from the several benefits they receive from him as such for in wounding Christ by their sins First They wound their head of influence through whom they live and without whom they had still remain'd in the state of sin and death Eph. 4. 16. Shall Christ send life to us and we return that which is as death to him O how absurd how disingenuous is this Secondly They wound their head of government Christ is a guiding as well as a quickening head Col. 1. 18. the is your wisdome he guides you by his counsels to glory but must he be thus requited for all his faithful conduct what do you when you sin against him but rebel against his government refusing to sollow his counsels and obeying in the mean time a deceiver rather than him Thirdly They wound their consulting head who cares provides and projects for the welfare and safety of the body Christians you know your affairs below have not been steered and managed by your own wisdome but that orders have been given from heaven for your security and supply from day to day I know O Lord saith the Prophet that the way of man is not in himself neither is it in him that walks to direct his own steps Jer. 10. 23. It 's true Christ is out of your sight and you see him not but he sees you and orders every thing that concerns you And is this a due requital of all that care he hath taken for you Do ye thus requite the Lord for all his benefits what recompence evil for good O let shame cover you Fourthly and Lastly They wound their head of honour Christ your head is the fountain of honour to you this is your glory that you relate to him as your head you are on this account as before was noted exalted above Angels Now then consider how vile a thing it is to reflect the least dishonour upon him from whom you derive all your glory O consider and bewail it Infer 5. Is there so strict and intimate a relation and Union betwixt Christ and the Saints then surely they can never want what is good for Infer 5. Qui misit filium immisit spiritum promisit vultum quid tandem denegabit their souls or bodies Every one naturally cares and provides for his own especially for his own body yet we can more easily violate the law of nature and be cruel to our own flesh than Christ can be so to his Mystical body I know it 's hard to rest upon and rejoyce in a promise when necessities pinch and we see not from whence relief should arise but oh what sweet satisfaction and comfort might a necessitous believer find in these considerations would he but keep them upon his heart in such a day of straits First Whatever my distresses are for quality number or degree they are all known even to the least circumstance by Christ my head he looks down from heaven upon all my afflictions and understands them more fully than I that feel them Psal. 38. 9. Lord all my desire is before thee and my groaning is not hid from thee Secondly He not only knows them but feels them as well as knows them we have not an high priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4. 15. in all your afflictions he is afflicted tender Sympathy cannot but flow from such intimate Union therefore in Matth. 25. 35. he saith I was an hungred and I was a thirst and I was naked For indeed his Sympathy and tender compassion gave him as quick a resentment and as tender a sense of their wants as if they had been his own yea Thirdly He not only knows and feels my wants but hath enough in his hand and much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enough to supply them all for all things are delivered to him by the Father Luk 10. 22. all the storehouses in heaven and earth are his Phil. 4. 19. Fourthly He bestows all earthly good things even to superfluity and redundance upon his enemies they have more than heart can wish Psal. 73. 7. he is bountiful to strangers he loads his very enemies with these things and can it be supposed he will in the mean while starve his own and neglect those whom he loves as his own flesh it cannot be Moreover Fifthly hitherto he hath not suffered me to perish in any former straits when and where was it that he forsook me this is not the first plunge of trouble I have been in have I not found him a God at a pinch how oft have I seen him in the Mount of difficulties Sixthly and Lastly I have his promise and engagement that he will never leave me nor forsake me Heb. 13. 5. and Joh. 14. 18. a promise never crackt since the hour it was first made If then the Lord Jesus knows and feels all my wants hath enough and more than enough to supply them if he gives even to redundance unto his enemies hath not hitherto forsaken me and hath promised he never will why then is my soul thus disquieted in me surely there is no cause it should be so Infer 6. If the Saints are so nearly united to Christ as the members to Infer 6. the head O then how great a sin and full of danger is it for any to wrong and persecute the Saints For in so doing they must needs persecute Christ himself Saul Saul saith Christ why persecutest thou me Acts Agesilaus dic●…re solitus est se v●…hementer admirari eos non haberi in sacrilegorum numero qui laederent eos qui Deo supplicarent vel Deum venerantur quo i●…nuit eos non tantum Sacrilegos esse qui deos ipsos aut templorum ornatum spoliarent sed eos maxime qui deorum ministros praecones contumeliis afficiunt Aemyl Prob. 9. 4. The righteous God holds himself obliged to vindicate oppressed innocency though it be in the person of a wicked man how much more when it is in a member of Christ He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of mine eye Zech. 2. 8. And is it to be imagined that Christ will sit still and suffer his enemies to thrust out the very Apples of his eyes no no He hath ordained his arrrows against the persecutors Psal. 7. 13. O it were better thy hand should wither and thine arm fall from thy shoulder than ever it should be lifted up against Christ in the poorest of his members Believe it Sirs not only your violent actions but your hard speeches are all set down upon your doomes-days book and you shall be brought to an account for them in the great day Jud. 15. Beware what arrows you shoot and be sure of your mark before you shoot them Infer 7. If there be such a Union betwixt Christ and the Saints as hath been described upon what comfortable terms then may believers Infer 7. part with their bodies at Death Christ your
head is above water therefore you cannot be lost nay he is not only risen from the dead himself but Templum Dei in quo spiritus inhabitat patris membr●… Christi non participare sa●…utem sed in perditionem redigi dicere quomodo non maximae est blasphemiae Iren. lib. 5. is also become the first-fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15. 20. Believers are his members his fulness he cannot therefore be compleat without you a part of Christ cannot perish in the grave much less burn in hell remember when you feel the Natural Union dissolving that this Mystical Union can never be dissolved the pangs of death cannot break this tye as there is a peculiar excellency in the believers life so there is a singular support and peculiar comfort in his death to me to live is Christ and to dye is gain Phil. 1. 21. Infer 8. If there be such a Union betwixt Christ and believers how doth it concern every man to try and examin his Estate Infer 8. whether he be really united with Christ or not by the natural and proper effects which alwayes flow from this Union As First The real Communication of Christs holiness to the soul we cannot be United with this root and not partake of the vital sap of sanctification from him all that are planted into him are planted into the likeness of his death and of his resurrection Rom. 6. 5 6. viz. by mortification and vivification Secondly They that are so nearly united to him as members to the head cannot but love him and value him above their own lives as we see in nature the hand and arm will interpose to save the head the nearer the Union the stronger always is the affection Thirdly The members are subject to the head Dominion in the head must needs infer subjection in the members Eph. 5. 24. in vain do we claim Union with Christ as our head whilst we are governed by our own wills and our Lusts give us law Fourthly All that are United to Christ do bear fruit to God Rom. 7. 4. fruitfulness is the next end of our Union there are no barren branches growing upon this fruitful root Infer 9. Lastly how much are believers engaged to walk as the members Infer 9. of Christ in the visible exercises of all those graces and duties which the consideration of their near relation to him exacts from them As First How contented and well pleased should we be with our outward lot however providence hath cast it for us in this world O do not repine God hath dealt bountifully with you upon others he hath bestowed the good things of this world upon you himself in Christ. Secondly How humble and lowly in spirit should you be under your great advancement It 's true God hath magnified you greatly by this Union but yet don't swell You bear not the root but the root you Rom. 11. 18. You shine but it is as the Stars with a borrowed light Thirdly How Zealous should you be to honour Christ who hath put so much honour upon you Be willing to give glory to Christ though his glory should rise out of your shame Never reckon that glory that goes to Christ to be lost to you when you lye at his feet in the most particular heart-breaking confessions ofsin yet let this please you that therein you have given him glory Fourthly how exact and circumspect should you be in all your wayes remembring whose you are and whom you represent Shall it be said that a member of Christ was convicted of unrighteous and unholy actions God forbid if we say we have fellowship with him and walkin darkness we lye 1 Joh. 1. 6. and he that saith he abideth in him ought also himself to walk even as he walked 1 Joh. 2. 6. Fifthly how studious should you be of peace among your selves who are all so nearly united to such a head and thereby are made fellow-members in the same body The heathen world was never acquainted with such an Argument as the Apostle urges for Unity in Eph. 4. 3 4. Sixthly and Lastly how joyful and comfortable should you be to whom Christ with all his treasures and benefits is effectually applyed in this blessed Union of your souls with him This brings him into your possession oh how great how glorious a person do the little weak arms of your faith embrace Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ. The Third SERMON Serm. 3. 2 Cor. 5. 20. Opening the nature and use of of the Gospel Ministry as an external means of applying Christ. Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God THe Effectual Application of Christ principally consists in our Union with him but ordinarily there can be no Union without a Gospel tender and overture of him to our souls for how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard and how shall they hear without a Preacher and how shall he preach except he be sent Rom. 10. 14. IF God be upon a design of marrying poor sinners to his Son there must be a treaty in order to it that treaty requires interlocution betwixt both the parties concerned in it but such is our frailty that should God speak immediately to us himself it would confound and overwhelm us God therefore graciously condescends and accommodates himself to our infirmity in treating with us in order to our Union with Christ by his Ambassadors and these not Angels whose converses we cannot bear but men like our selves who are commissionated for the effecting of this great business betwixt Christ and us Now then we are Ambassadors for God c. In which words you have First Christs Ambassadors commissionated Secondly Their Commission opened First Christs Ambassadors commissionated Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ. The Lord Jesus thought it not sufficient to print the law of grace and blessed terms of our Union with him in the scriptures where men may read his willingness to receive them and see the just and gracious terms and conditions upon which he offers to become theirs but hath also set up and established a standing office in the Church to expound that Law inculcate the precepts and urge the promises thereof to wooe and espouse souls to Christ I have espoused you to one husband that I may present you as a chast virgin to Christ 2 Cor. 11. 20. and this not simply from their own affections and compassions to miserable sinners but also by vertue of their office and Commission whereby they are authorized and appointed to that work We then are Ambassadors for Christ. Secondly Their Commission opened wherein we find 1. Their work appointed 2. Their Capacity described 3. And the manner of their acting in that Capacity prescribed First The work whereunto the Ministers of the Gospel are appointed is to reconcile the world to God to work these sinful vain rebellious