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A95855 The way to true happinesse, or, the way to heaven open'd. In a sermon before the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London, Jan. 28. 1654/5 / By Ralph Venning. Venning, Ralph, 1621?-1674. 1655 (1655) Wing V232; Thomason E830_8; ESTC R207438 31,836 56

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Lord Lord by way of appeal yet I professe unto you I never knew you I never approved of you I know the way of the righteous but the way of the wicked shall perish Depart from me ye workers of iniquity So that 't is not Profession nor Prayer nor Appeal that will give a man entrance into the Kingdome of Heaven Not every one that saith Lord Lord c. By the Kingdome of Heaven is to be understood that state of blessednesse after this life called elsewhere salvation glory and eternal life Which indeed is begun in this life for * Joh. 17.3 This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent and therefore the dispensation of grace by Jesus Christ is often called the Kingdom of Heaven Repent for the Kingdome of Heaven is at hand but I think the future state to be here principally if not only intended For Then shall the righteous shine forth as the Sun in the Kingdome of their Father Matth. 13.43 But I purposing to speak to the latter clause shall wave this first having given you two or three Observations from the text and context 1. From the connexion of this text with the foregoing verse I shall observe That men are better known by what they do then by what they say Even a childe saith Solomon Prov. 20.11 Even a childe is known by his doings whether his work be pure and whether it be right So saith Christ By their fruits ye shall know them Not every one that saith c. Men are better known by their doings then by their sayings If a man speak well and do ill Charity it selfe cannot speak well of that man as to men God indeed judgeth of their words and their works by their hearts * God judgeth the out-side by the in-side but man judgeth the in-side by the out-side but men cannot judge of men but by their works By their fruits ye shall know them Not by their Profession for they may professe like Saints nor by their Prayers for they may pray like Saints nor by their Appeales for they may appeal like Saints they may say Lord Lord but by their fruits ye shall know them 'T is not the words but the works of men that tell us what they are Indeed saith he they come to you in sheepes cloathing but they are ravening wolves They have as one sayes on the place Jacobs smooth tongue but Esaus rough hand Audi nemo meliùs specta nemo pejùs They speak like Angels of light but they act like Angels of darknesse They defie the devil in words but deifie the devil in works they deifie Christ in words but defie him in works God likes not this Court-holy-water of faire Professions and deep Protestations when mens hearts are not with him when there is not the power of Religion and the practice of Godlinesse By their fruits ye shall know them Not every one that faith c. 2. Good words without good works will never turne to a good account holy sayings without holy doings will never admit into the holy place Not every one that saith Lord Lord c. there will little come of that 3. God is a very curious observer of what men say and of what men do in the world Jesus Christ here observes that they say Lord Lord but withal he observes that they do not the Will of his Father but are workers of iniquity Men indeed may but God will not God cannot be put off with complements Shall not he that made the eye see shall not he that made the eare heare shall not he that made the heart know what is therein Surely saith David Psal 139. thou understandest my thoughts and there is not a word in my tongue but lo thou knowest it altogether And as for the works as he saith to the Church of Ephesus I know thy works But I proceed to the second clause He that doth the Will of my Father which is in Heaven Whence I lay down this Conclusion That they and none but they who do the Will of God shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven For the clearing of this there is this Querie to be made as to the termes What are we to understand by the Will and by the doing of the Will of God which being answered we may more safely proceed to prove the truth of the Proposition But before I can do this 't is requisite to premise these two things 1. That the Will of God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ are one The Father and he are one and agree in one and indeed 't is in him and by him that we know the Will of God No man saith John chap. 1.18 hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him And as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2.16 Who hath known the minde of God but we have the minde of Christ wherein and whereby we have the minde of God The Father saith of the Son as Pharaoh did of Joseph Gen 41.55 Go unto Joseph what he saith unto you do And as his Mother said to the servants at the wedding Iohn 2.5 Whatsoever he saith unto you do it Just so his Father saith This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased heare ye him So that whatever Christ saith unto you is his Fathers Will and therefore verse 24. he calleth them his sayings and pronounceth them blessed that hear and do them for they are his Fathers Will. 2. As to the termes I premise this also That these phrases the Will of God the Word of God the Work of God the Commands of God c. are all equivalent and signifie the same thing So then I answer that by the Will of God we are to understand 1. The Credenda Faith 2. The Agenda Holinesse Good works or the * Rom. 16 26. obedience of faith not either but each of them not one or the other but both one and the other the doctrine of faith or things to be believ'd and the doctrine of holinesse or things to be done and practised As faith excludes not doing with respect to salvation so doing excludes not faith for as faith without works is dead so works without faith are dead also as 't is impossible that faith without works can please God so no lesse impossible for works without faith to please God and therefore what God hath joyn'd together man should not put asunder Yea you shall finde that believing is expressely called the Will of God John 6.27 c. Labour not saith Christ for the meat which perisheth but for that which endureth unto everlasting life which the Son of man giveth you Whence by the way observe that Gods giving and mans labouring are not inconsistent free grace and full duty may joyne hearts and hands But say they ver 28. What shall we do that we may work the works of God Jesus answered v.
his Will is done Go to now then ye that say as James 4.13 c. To day or to motrow we will go into such a City whereas ye should say for ye ought to say If the Lord will we shall live and do this or that Wo to them that say as Psal 12. With our tongue we will prevail our lips are our own who is Lord over us Alas poor soules you are not your own your soules are not yours your bodies are not yours they are bought with a price and therefore 't is not self-will but Gods Will that you and they are to obey 1 Cor. 6.19 20. Man must not make his own will but Gods Will his Counsellour and his Rule Do nothing but by leave and approbation when therefore they stand in competition we should tell temptations and corruptions 'T is Gods will that I should not do mine own Will The great strife between God and man is about the Will and men are enemies to God because they cannot have their wills but alas we see that if our will be done Gods will not and then wo unto us for we reward evil to our own souls 7. If it be so that they and none but they which do the Will of God shall inher it the Kingdom of Heaven How sad then will it be then with them that die in their sin that go out of the world as having done nothing in it but wrought iniquity Oh the doleful dismal condition of sinners at the last day when they shall hear their doom Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his Angels Oh that the hearing of it now may prevent the hearing of it hereafter Will it not be sad to be turned into hell with loads of wrath and vengeance on your backs for what have you you workers of iniquity treasur'd up but wrath against the day of wrath you shall have your portion with hypocrites and be torne in pieces and none to deliver have your dwelling with everlasting burnings where there will be nothing but weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth Consider this ye workers of iniquity and kisse the Son lest his wrath be kindled and ye perish everlastingly Oh that sinners would but lend their eare and listen at the hole the mouth of the bottomlesse pit * They might hear sinners crying like Cardinal Woolsey Oh if we had but taken as much care to please God as we did to please our own and other mens lusts he would not have left us to this both shame and endlesse misery there they might hear Dives crying out I am tormented in this flame and have not so much as one little drop of water to cool my tongue there they may hear poor damned souls cursing themselves for their madnesse that for the pleasures of sin which are but for a moment they should lose the pleasures of Heaven and be under the torments of hell which are for evermore Alas 't is not for expressions to expresse the unspeakable the unconceivable miseries which the fearful and unbelieving which the workers of iniquity will be in when they shall be cast into and have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone where they shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever This is the second death Rev. 20.10 with 21.8 Oh that men would heare and feare and do no more so wickedly 8. And lastly if it be so how happy shall they be who when their Lord cometh shall be found doing the Will of God Well doing wil meet with a Well-done good and faithful servant enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. Saints are called to Gods Kingdome and Glory here and called upon to walk worthy of answerable to or becoming that Kingdome and when they have thus walked with God they shall be called into the Kingdom and glory they shall hear the joyful sound saying Their Masters joy enters into them here and they into their Masters joy hereafter Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared for you they shall then sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob at the wedding dinner which is yet to be kept in Heaven when all the Saints come together Oh what a glorious and blessed time will that be when they that are now laugh't at and scorned for being so precise for doing the Will of God shall then be crowned with everlasting glory Then shall ye return and discern between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not now indeed too too many say in works and in their hearts if not in words 'T is in vain to serve God what profit is there that we keep his Ordinances the proud are happy c. But behold the day cometh that shall burn like an Oven and all the proud and all that do wickedly shall be as stubble but a book of remembrance is written before him for them that fear the Lord and think on his Name and to them shall the Sun of righteousnesse arise with healing in his wings and they shall be mine in that day when I make up my Jewels saith the Lord. Yea the beloved of their soules and he that loves their soules will speak and say Rise up my love my faire one and come away for lo the Winter is past and the raine is over and gone the flowers appear on the earth the time of singing is come and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land the fig-tree putteth forth her green figs and the vines with the tender grapes give a good smell Arise my love my faire one and come away Oh my Dove that art in the clefts of the rock in the secret places of the stairs let me see thy countenance and hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance comely Though ye have lain among the pots yet shall ye be as the wings of a Dove covered with silver and her feathers with yellow gold This and much more then this shall be their glory Indeed eye hath not seen nor eare heard nor can it enter into the heart of man to conceive the things which God hath laid up for them that do love him The second word or head is for examination and self-trial and I could wish that this sort of catechizing were more in use hereby we may know whose we are and what will become of us to all eternity whose we are while we live and whose we shall be and whither we shall go when we die This methinks should take up mens thoughts and possesse their reines day and night till they were in some measure assured thereof And oh that men would often ask their soules whose work whose Will they do for hereby they may conclude what will be their eternal state Look as men sowe in the seed-time of their lives they shall reap in the harvest of eternity Can men expect to gather grapes of thornes or figs of