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A51247 Anōthekrypta, or, Glorious mysteries wherein the grand proceedings betwixt Christ and the soule ... : is clearly laid open ... / by S.M., minister of the Gospel of God. Moore, Samuel, b. 1617. 1647 (1647) Wing M2586; ESTC R9458 79,159 237

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wearie of this world wean'd from this scituation peinched with the coldnesse of this climate for this world alas is a great cooler to the heat of a gracious heart And were they as subject to it as its children are were they as much intangled with it Though now they may have a little heat yet then they would have none at all Secondly 't will free and remove you from all carnall objects then there shall bee no more Gold nor greatnesse to allure you from God no sinne nor sinnes pleasure to intice and bewitch you lie prostrate before you no selfe nor Satan to tempt and intrap you Good Lord what a good case will thine then bee in who or what can expresse those joyous rarities and transcendent verities of such glorious beings Oh! how unsearchable are the riches of such grace and favour Narrow hearts open your selves and the gates of your soules and let the King of glorie come in why should he be unto you as a wayfaring man that staies but for a night and is gone Thirdly 't will alter the nature of all your spirituall distresses there shall bee then no more doubts unresolved no more sins the ' I le be destroi'd no more graces unrevived no more feares of finall falling no more queries about the truth of your high calling no more want of God Christ and the good desired no more dislike of and from unknowne Christians no strangenesse of carriage among knowne members of Christ's bodie mysticall In a word there shall after this change never bee any more hearts hardnesse minds blindnesse wills perversenesse loves coldnesse zeales rashnesse listlesse desires heartlesse prayers tiresome spirit or rebellious flesh But holy hearts you shall be God-like Christ-like in all things 3. Suffer God to dispose you for it sith 't will come and you must be changed Men square wood before they build discipline their Troopes e're they joyne in battell rigg trimme and furnish their ships ere they launch put forth to Sea so God is fitting some every day of life for the day of death Would you know the way by which the Lord effects this blessed fitnesse for so glorious a change so great a worke as is the worke of dying observe then rightly these serious things in the sequell God fits his children for such a decease thus First by making the bodie of sinne irkesome to them There are some who with David have their sinnes ever before them cannot forget them are greevously Psal 51. 3. burden'd with them and their crie is such as this Oh! who shall deliver me from the bodie of this death This even this ha's made some wearie of the world yea and wearie of themselues too all the while longing to be there where they might never see or seele it more Such had rather die a thousand deaths then live dishonouring him in whose favour stands their life and whose loving-kindnesse is better than life as David speakes Hence also everie sanctified sorrow and suffering of this earthlie life puts him upon minding his last and long'd for home every decay of strength dimnes of sight dulnes of hearing and disabilitie of being and doing with all sicknes weaknes aches and pains these I say doe forewarne him of his approaching decease And thus with Job he waites all the dayes of his life untill his appointed change comes Holy hearts you 're well acquainted with the state of this distresse and therefore you must signe and seale to the truth of this experiment yet let not your hearts be troubled for sinnes burthen shall bee remov'd and you your selues certainely secur'd and sav'd Secondly by making death to them desirable this is a deathsweetning way and he acts in the businesse after this manner First suggesting into their thoughts that when death surprizeth them it shall be stinglesse and what 's the sting of death why the Scriptures tell you 't is sinne sinne is deaths Arrow which when 't is shot into the bowells of the soule at the appointed time of change oh how do's it wound with horrour cut with amazement and pierce with dread of a great just and glorious Majestie And then how do's the poore soule fester with despaire whil'st she cannot beleeve or hope to bee well and doe well after death who ha's been and done so ill in time of life And certainely if in life there 's no discharge from sinne in death the soule will greatlie feare if not throughly feel its discharge from Christ But to you that are in Jesus Christ be this word spoken The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made you free from the law of sinne and death The sting of death is sinne and the strength of sinne is the Law viz. sinnes Law Rom. 8. 1.2 1 Cor. 1. 15. for this place seemes to explaine the other Thus you are freed from both the power of sinne and death also I may adde and the victorie of the grave which cannot imprison or infringe your bodies long so long as to retaine you for ever Give thankes then unto God who ha's given you the victorie through your Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and sing with Paul ô death where is thy sting ô grave where is thy victorie For when a poore soule considers within her selfe thus well I am now neere my time of change I must leave the world But Christ ha's promis'd that he 'l bee with me to the end of my course and ha's also assur'd me that my sinnes are forgiven and forgotten I have a discharge from them through the mercie of God Is she not then readie to crie out Come Lord Jesus come quicklie Death doe thy dutie freely and thus the poore drooping doubting Christian lives dying yet ne'r tastes of the second death God acquits the soule in Justification from sinnes guilt and cleanseth the soule through Sanctification from sinnes filth hee that 's washed from his old polutions hath the heavenly ornaments of Christ's Spirit He 's fit to solemnize a marriage with the Lambe God also perswades the soule that he ha's found a righteousnesse as well as a ransome for her Now beleevers may conclude then as the Scripture speakes that Righteousnesse delivers from death And that the righteous hath hope in his end He fits his to be changed by mortification also for when God by his Spirit has crucified sinne that would have slaine the soule Death cannot hurt much in smiring the carcase Hence is that of Christ Feare not them who kill the body but are not able to kill the soule Secondly the Lord makes the change desirable to some by inlightning Heb. 7. 25. their eyes and strengthning their hearts unto a fight and sense of all the al-sufficiencies of Christ to sustaine the soule under the straights of such a death what though sinne upbraids thee Satan affrights thee and thine owne heart trembles within thee that thou art at a stand knowest not what to doe nor how to die Yet beleeve for
workings is that a Christ-knowing Christian seeks most after Some are all for heads fulnesse but a right spectatour of Christ covets hearts fulnesse of Christs holy presence hearty motions towards Christ by Christs power savour more with savorie Christians then headie notions of Christ among acutest wits To discourse of Christ is sweet and good but to seed on Christ is much better Christians doe you feed and eat heartily of this bread of God Is it good to you do's it doe good in you answer for your selves you worthies of the world to come Can you say I behold the Lamb of God that takes away my sinnes as well as the sinnes of others that come to the Father by him Can you say with Job be 's my Redeemer with Mary my God Lord and Saviour my Mediatour my Intercessour and Peace-maker now blessed are you then and the eyes that see the things that you see * Lu. 10. 22 23. You are blessed with Christ's owne sweetest lips Who then can curse when Christ do's blesse Care not then for the worst of foes but be strong in the Lord thy strength and thy redeemer Now to insix this principle on your spirits note these things Experience hath a teaching and teachable vertue in it 't is the best teacher as our Proverb runs For First it strengthens memorie can put on record all the breathings movings and workings of Christ towards a Christian's soule 'T is called by Philosophers Multiplex memoria 't is remembrance upon remembrance mercies flowing into the mind of beleevers experience is the matter of multitudes of thoughts * Psal 94. 19. It makes the thoughts of God many in the minds of the good Secondly it strengthens affection too one that hath a heartie tast of the Lord * Psal 34. 8. Christ from experience ha's a heartie love to him Will you heare the voice of experience 't is this O taste and see how good the Lord is such a one 's well affected and affecting also all that follow Christ the warmth Spirit and life of such his kind of speaking is found verie taking in the hearts of sound Disciples and doth discover whence 't is whether 't would and to what it tends Thirdly it rectifies the judgement One that ha's had a through inward sensible and invisible pledge of Jesus Christ his dearest love and nearest communion with his owne soule that man or woman hath right thoughts of Christ and his owne estate also for the thoughts of the righteous are right * Prov. 12.5 And hence and onely hence 't is that he speak's right words of Christ Job's friends had not Jobs experience were not so much acquainted with God and the nature of his dealings with himselfe and his and what followes God saith they spake not right things of him as did his servant Job * Job 42. 7. All other sorts of sayings of men concerning Christ are the speakings out of a mans selfe more than God Fourthly it strengthens the will to elect Christ and Christ's things One that hath drawne water out of this well of Salvation with the well's owne bucket and ha's drunck a hearty draught of the water of life his will to speake out Christ and his goodnesse goes beyond his power And sad he is with Paul that hee cannot doe the good hee would I speake of one that hath drawne good from Christ with Christ's owne abilities ha's received him in his owne manner suffer'd him to abide in him according to his owne order And now marke well the evill of the contrary state by what a man ha's when he wants experience First 't will be but a borrowed light sight and apprehension that you 'l be proved to have used and the evill of that 's very great in these respects First 't will be your sinne for you are bound to use and improve your owne talents not to build upon another's foundation * a snare which to Rom. 15. 20. the Apostles comfort hee did escape Secondly 't will be your shame you account it a disgrace and are ashamed to be seen on this day in borrowed garments but 't will be greater cause of shame at the last day to be found cloath'd with no better perfections then the borrowed parts and acquired arts of others to have no knowledge of Christ but what is traditionall taken in from creatures like your selves What a great shame and unspeakable blushing will it cause in you then when you shall bee strip't of all your borrowed garments and shall seeme as you are there who would not be as you seem'd here Thirdly 't will bee your Judgement you Mat. 25. 24. 31. shall be judg'd for not using your owne gifts and that in a right manner Wee have a true Proverb every man shall answer for his owne sinnes and 't is as true that every man shall answer for not using his owne graces Every one shall give account of himselfe to God * saith the Scriptures of Rom. 14. 12. himselfe and his owne experiences in the Kingdome of grace Fourthly 't will be your losse you have no more then you use and so use 't is even so with us all we enjoy no more then wee doe experimentally imploy What good wilt be to me to discourse plausibly of a rich mans treasure when the meanesse of my being course of living plainly speaks 't is none of my owne and what good will all thy parts and portion doe thee when thou shalt die of this disease non-experimentall acquaintance with Christ who will know you then as little as you know him The losse will be of these things First losse of time time might be better spent relating to a mans owne benefit and respecting that Secondly losse of labour the Apostle was what hee was by the grace of God which was in him and tells you that grace was not given him in 1 Cor. 15. 10. vaine g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T was not made voyd 't was not lost labour May we not truly say of experimentall sight of Christ as Job did to his friends of speaking out the truth O! how forcible are right Iob. 6. 25. words and we say too O! how forcible is a right sight of Christ Thirdly to see Christ is to see Christ as a man is seen of Christ and for the same reason to the same end 't is to know as you are knowne and to apprehend that for which also you are apprehended of Phil. 3. 12. Christ Jesus h Or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If I may comprehend that for which I am comprehended First Christ sees all the turnings and windings and secrets of his peoples hearts all the first rises motions and conceptions of things within their secret parts There 's nothing in his hid from him so shall Christians see and know Christ one day and that for ever see all he is and ha's what thoughts hee ha's had of them from the beginning what
from our flesh and is' t not grieved vexed and resisted also if men goe one step further which is to despight it they have done their worst against it and their owne soules also These are the steps which reach to Hell Take heed you tread not the first of them quench not the Spirit 'T is a verie sad thing to sinne so fowly that if a man sinne 's but one sinne more he fall's finallie next to resisting comes despighting and then how can you bee renewed by Repentauce Is not this to venture the losse of a precious soule desperatelie and to be unkind to the Spirit immenslie than which what is more dismall the Spirit suffers being quenched And then the flesh that suffers being crossed in all its corruptions In the second birth right Regeneration all who are Christ's have their flesh crucified Gal. 5. 4. with the affections passions and lusts proud flesh is beaten downe and Christ's humble Spirit set on high in such a soule love to sinne is the life of sinnne if you loath it 't will die hatred unto it is a wounding of it who knowes not this that knowes Jesus Christ and hates sinne as 't is hatefull and makes hatefull sinne is or should be to Saints more hatefull then all things and to creatures most hurtfull When nothing else is hatefull or can make so in the sight of God Will you mind what one borne of God ha's said 't was this I hate the evill I doe Love of sinne must die when love of Christ will live and be lively lustings after sinne are lessened too if not whollie mortified one of the Lords births though he sinne yet he hungers not after it doe's not thirst to commit it ha's but listlesse desires towards it and troubl'd he is that he doth at all desire such an undesirable thing hee would faine be and doe better then hee is and does though his flesh be crossed and himselfe made to suffer Secondly in naturall birth 's the bearers bowells yerne towards the babe i' th birth least it should prove abortive right glad's the parent to see the child live and doe well her saying's like his is my sonne safe deale gently with 2 Sam. 18.32 5. him for my sake In spiritual births the bearers bowells yerne too the Lords bowells worke towards babes in Christ least they should miscarrie and loath is hee that poore soules should perish die in sinne and be damned Hence those sayings how shall I give thee up how shall I doe this or that against thee God would rather bring up then give up or cast out any soule will you marke his saying in sacred writ 't is this I desire not the death of sinners I had rather they would repent and live turne you turne you Ier. 31. 20. why will you die Is Ephraim my deare sonne is he a pleasant child for since I spake unto him I doe earnestlie remember him still therefore my bowells are troubled doe sound for him I will surely have mercie upon him O! how glad is God when men doe prove good live the life of Christ and prove godlie Christians Thirdly before the naturall birth the babe in the wombe receives not nourishment in an ordinarie way but in an extraordinarie manner not by the mouth but at the navell is cherisht invisibly yet cherish'd it is and doe's well In spirituall births babes in Christ are fed too but 't is mysteriouslie not in an ordinarie way the ordinarie way is praying reading hearing pondering and conferring of the good things of God but before this babe spirituall can tell how to use his mouth how to improve this ordinarie meanes of life so as to take in nourishment by it God by some extraordinarie way breakes invisiblie and sweetlie upon the soule and gives it a taste of his soule-ravishing Joyes inwardly secretlie And yet although he ha's it hee cannot tell you how he came by it how hee tooke it in so strangely was hee ravish'd he feels much but can speake out little of the Lords goodnesse to his owne soule for is' t not the nature of such things to cause joy in the heart more than in the countenance when other things are wont to make onely outwardly cheerfull The wind bloweth where it list's and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it comes nor whether it goes so is everie one that 's borne of the Spirit Is not the way of the Lord with a soule like the way of an Eagle in the aire the way of a Serpent on the rock neither of which you are able to track the way of a ship in the midst of the Sea which you cannot find out so hidden and mysterious are his workings Saints live the life of their Saviour invisiblie not by bread onely Fourthly before naturall birth 's babes in the wombe void not excrements t is the same in this case before that a man 's borne againe comes out of the wombe of sinne death and Hell Though he have the most refined nature yet voids hee not excrementall sinnes filthie defiled and defiling garments he preferres rags before robes that 's his follie Experience speake thou is' t not true Let the dispencers of the Lords sacred mysteries crie out and crie on ne'r so oft if you live in your sinnes you shall die die the death of Devills themselves yet you 'l never part with your excrimentall sinnes till you are come through the straights and felt the pangs of the new birth O! that men were wise and would consider this thing wisely and well who would not long to be borne againe to have a new nature and name and be made like to Christ Fifthly in naturall birth 's Homo epitome mundi vagiens nascitur babes are borne crying as the Philosopher notes In spirituall birth 's babes of Christ are borne crying too Grace in a Christian will doe like grace lead him to the Throne of grace and acquaint him with the God of Grace through Jesus Christ while he 's living he 's crying and praying to the living God and well-spring of everie good Christians when you were first changed had your eyes first opened did you not as well as now you doe hunger after Christ's Communion was it not verie sweet unto you when in all your wants you were carried out unto the God of supplies and was 't not a great ease to your spirits when you could and did poure out your soules before him Babes of Christ when borne doe eccho to their Father crie for crie When Christ cries out Saul Saul the answer is who art thou ô Lord and what wouldest thou have me to doe then Saul of Tarsus Acts 9. must be sent to for behold hee prayes saith Jesus he prayes God saith to his child seeke my face and the child's heart answers thy face Lord will I seeke ther 's like for like Saints love to retaliate with their God would you heare the heartie crie
spirituall out of troubles into peace In the world babes of Christ shall have trouble but in him they shal have peace which passeth Ioh. 16. understanding Now tell me you wise virgins whether Martha or Mary ha's chosen the better part Whether Heavens quietnesse bee not better then earth's cumbrances whether interest in Christ and by that a right title to the creatures bee not better then a portion in the creatures by usurpation without Jesus Christ By the spirituall birth priviledge you inherit all things by the naturall nothing although you possesse something You have seen what the spirituall birth is by its likenesse and vnlikenesse to the naturall wee 'l now shew you how God brings in and brings up returning sinners Thus. First He principles them Secondly acts them Thirdly builds them And fourthly confirmes them First God is said to principle man when by uniting himselfe to the soule by his Spirit he do's invisiblie sow the seeds of all grace in the heart at once grace is called the seed of God Union disposeth for communion communion corroborates union Ioh. 3. 9. 'T is a passive reception of Christ that now I meane that whereby a principle is begotten in the will Christ joynes the meanes and end together so should the godly doe Election vocation Justification Sanctification Humiliation then comes the end which is glorification Secondly Christ acts them drawes out those principles also First his first act is illumination he shines out from Heaven with a cleare light upon the hearts of men and upon their wayes Light was the first thing that appeared in the old Creation and 't is the first that appears in the new Creation also Light Gen. 1. 1. was the first ornament of the world wherewith the Lord decked it as with a garment * Answ and this light is Christ For yee were once darkn●sse but are now Light in the Psal 104. 2. Eph. 5. 8. Lord Light discovers darknesse Regeneration is a translation from darknesse into light True Converts how like you that his light discovers sinne all the closest secrets of closest hearts and Justice incensed against the sinner Light discovers the unevenesse of a mans way and what it is in the account of Justice it selfe Ioh. 1. 9. This light 's immediate Christ in you the hope of glorie it ha's no meanes of conveyance but acts like it selfe scrutinously the light of this Sunne like the wise mens starre never leaves a soule till 'tas lead it to a Saviour a meanes of escape from all sinnes evill Divine light informs men on whom the Lord hath laid help 2 Cor. 4. 6. even on one that 's mighty and able to save that 's the next act of illumination viz a discovery of the sufficiencies as well as the efficiencies of a Jesus that he 's able to save to the utmost all that come unto God by him and that he can in no wise cast out them that come unto him it brings glad tidings to sad soules sinne may bee mightie but Christ is mightier will subdue it sins may be many but Christ's mercies are more sinnes may be greatlie incensing but Christ is greatlie pleasing unto an offended Majestie and sinners in the Sonne cannot bee displeasing unto the Father he loves light for hee dwells in it this divine light reveales 1 Tim. 6. 16. all Returning sinner why droopest thou Can thy sinne undoe thee when 't is laid on Christ sad soule why weepest thou as one without hope canst thou bee worse then whom God ha's pardoned and Christ ha's purchased cleansed and sav'd Thinke not so least thou sinne against the remedie it selfe Light from Heaven will reveale Christ to thee and thee to thy selfe thou sinking soule thy wants and Christ's supplies shall meet together then doe not distrust of that Secondly Chri'sts second act in man by which hee drawes out his owne principles is humiliation begetting in the subject low thoughts of selfe and all selfes worth shall I tell you what they say sincerelie whom God and Christ by the Spirit ha's humbled 't is this I am a worme and no man I am not worthie to be call'd a sonne make me as a hired servant I am the least of all the Saints yea the least of all thy mercies Oh! that I were but a doore keeper in thy house Christ humbles whom hee will exalt Gods method is first to lay low and after to set aloft yet note you 't is truth in the inward parts he chiefly aimes at some are so graduall in putting upon much that they prove irregular in discouraging little though truth of grace selfe-loathing also for selfe-defilements joynes hands with this grace would you know how Christ humbles breakes the heart kindlie 't is thus by setting himselfe with his wounds open before their eies as peirced by their sinnes I will powre upon my people a spirit of grace and supplication marke that and then they shall looke on him whom they have pierced and mourne for him as one mournes for the losse of a first borne Can you looke on a pierced Zech. 12. 10. Christ you flintie hearts and not be broken pierced your selves if you doe 't is because the Spirit of grace is not poured out upon you When Peter set forth a crucified Christ were not Acts 2 36.37 his hearers pricked at the heart when they beleeved through grace given that they were the verie men the preacher meant Could his lookes fetch teares from Peters eyes and will not his wounds doe the like to others what hinders This is Christ's way to abase men kindlie and who more kindled in love to Christ than such who are so laid low you see his acts and his wayes to effect his blessed will on man Christ ha's his ends too in humbling such as he 'l save we 'l shew what his ends be as briefly as may be First Christ humbles that hee may inhabit he dwells in the highest Heavens with him also that is o● a contrite humble and low spirit to revive him And as it is uncomfortable not Isa 57. 15. to dwell in God so in like manner 't is disconsolate not to have a God dwelling in us are not Cities and Kingdomes without Inhabitants verie solitarie even so is a soule without God verie dismall verie uncheerefull Christ's presence is reviving this Christ knowes and thus hee humbles that hee may inhabit make the heart his mantion dwelling place God dwells in highest heavens and lowest soules Secondly Christians are humbled to make them lovely in the sight of the Lord An humble soule is a comelie one meeknesse is a great inward ornament is in the sight of God of great price a 1 Pet. 3. 4. proud heart is void of Christ's comelinesse weares not his robe of graces Consider Do's God prize greatly prize the meeke in heart the quiet in spirit then you that studie to bee esteem'd of him covet to bee humbled by him Thirdly Christ humbles
then that Glory will be apparant above which is not so apparant here below Three things there are that make everlasting Glory 1. The Lords revealing of himselfe to the soule clearly and immediatly 2ly His communicating of himselfe unto her fully and at once 3. The convolution or turning of the whole soule on God according unto what hee reveales of himselfe in such a manner 1. A clear revelation of God Tunc et enim justi cuncta scient quae Deus fecit scienda tam ea quae praeterita quam ea quae post modum sunt futura Anselm de similitud Cap. 54. Neque sola visio Dei sanctis hominibus in coelo promittitur sed etiam omnium rerum quas fecit Deus c. Greg. ●e aetern felicit l. 3. c. 2. and in him many other secrets Then shal be made evident those sacred secrets and glorious mysteries of the holy Trinity of the unity of Christ's Humanity with the Divine nature and of Christians with Christ then all the causes of God's eternall Councell in Election and Reprobation as also the manner of the Creation of the World with the fall of the Angels and all the mysteries of the work of Redemption together with the spirituall substances offices orders and excellencies of those Angels that stand The nature immortality operations and originall of our owne soules and that after a way unutterarable Visions of God and glory on Earth are darke we see darkely saith the Scripture would we see clearly we must waite then til we are in Heaven * For whilst he talked with God the skin of his face did shine so as that the people were affraid to come nigh him Ex. 34. 29 30. God told Moses hee could not see his face viz. all his Glory live a part he did see But no living man is found capatious enough to take in such a degree of glory as is the fulnesse of Gods face and favour Is' t not the darknesse of the vision and the obscurity of the evidences of Gods grace favour that sometimes makes a child of light sit in darknesse and can see no light what save this very thing made the Church cry out Lord thou Lam. 3.44 hast covered thy selfe with a cloud so that our Prayers should not passe through and Job Loe he goeth by Job 9. 11. me and I see him not hee passeth on also but I perceive him not If it be said the Revelation is not dark in it selfe but to such as it concernes 't is the apprehension which is darke that such have of it It 's granted but still 't is evident we see darkly here and that God and glory are but reveal'd in part whiles we are here so that imperfect revelations are darke comparatively referring to what they shall be How doe some precious souls grieve take on mourn and complaine because they cannot see God to be theirs themselves to be his and abiding in him clearly To such bee it now spoken ere long disconsolate soul thou shalt Gloria habitat rupibus Clem. Alex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where there 's an excellency there 's a great difficulty be in his armes behold his glory and thine own too which he ha's given thee even there where this kind of darknesse nor any other of what nature soever can ever approach Revelations of God in heaven are immediate also as well as cleare there languishing soules you that here mourne after God cry night and day after the Father of Spirits are sick of love there I say you shall not need to be staid with flaggons or comforted with Apples as the Spouse once desit'd for God shal be all unto you then The Greek Poet when he had recited an obscure Poem and all his Auditors had left him except Plato spake thus Plato is to me in steed of al. Plato est mihi pro omnibus So a soule that 's forsaken of all except God findes God in stead of all to her And you also that now take great paines and have many weary fits in prayer hearing reading conference meditations shall then rest from those labours and enjoy God and Christ without any such meanes Others also whose hearts are now full of cares feares and sorrowes about the maner of doing such services one while bewailing badnesse of memory another while coldnesse of affection at another time deadnesse of heart drowsinesse and dulnesse of spirit with all carnall idle wandering thoughts uncheerfulnesse unfitnesse and unsuitablenesse to and for such holy employments even those I say shall then bee freed from all such burthens they shall have nothing there to care for nor shall they have any employment to take paines in for it shall be not a paine but a pleasure to follow the Lamb whither soever he goes with whom is fulnesse of joy and at whose right hand are pleasures for evermore 2ly His communicating of himselfe fully and at once On earth God communicates of his fulnesse but the communication of all fulnesse it selfe is onely in Heaven Besides the communication of fulness which Saints receive here is onely of grace for grace Believers if you 'l receive glory for glory expect till you be where Christ is in whom such fulnesse dwels Father I will that they may be where I am to behold my glory That even that will be their renowne who shall dwell in light marvellous God do's this first to keep under selfe-advancing sins wee Alas are invincibly prone to lift up our selves and let Christ lye low who ne're deserv'd such unkindnesse at our hands we rise in our owne conceits immensly above measure hence wee constraine the Lord to leave thornes in our flesh something or other to beget anguish in us sometimes a Satan a Devil to buffet us beat us out of our high holds If in-comes from heaven abound on mens spirits oh how apt are they to waxe fat and forget the rocke whence they are hewen yea the very brests that gave them suck ran out freely for their nourishment But what a sad and bad thing is this that men should be evill because God is good That God cannot abound in Revelation but man will abate in humiliation Paul sinn'd once thus but it brought him on his knees thrice to the God of pardons God will not communicate all his fulness on earth least men should be full of spirituall tumours on such a bottome hee 'l first have them where they can bee proud no more and then they shall inherite all fullest glory Oh the height and the depth of the wisdome of God! how unsearchable are his Counsells and his wayes past finding out but. 2. God gives not out all his fulnesse here for earthly vessells unglorified Christians cannot hold it all whilst in the body The Widdowes oyle increast whilst her Vessell could receive it but when once the Vessells were straitned its encrease was suspended Christians have had and still have as much of God
here as such Vessels will hold speak experience Are not some so full of Christ at some times as that they can scarce containe themselves in a huge world and hence would faine be with Christ that they may bee more inlarg'd like their object to receive as much of him as can bee given What mortall can tell how much the affections of Saints are inflamed and how much their zeal is kindled when God comes in sweetly and comfort breakes in upon them like a flood Then even then how loose they stick to the Creatures and how much they long to be above them with the Creator I want words to expresse These like the Israelites when once they had got a taste of the grapes of Canaan they cannot be at quiet untill they are caried thither Is not this to keep men longing who would bee found lothing had they all fulnesse here what is' t else God speaks good to the heart but 't is here a little and there a little to keep their stomacks open that he may put in more when he ha's a minde so to doe God communicates all at once in heaven too though some have other thoughts this puts a difference betwixt fruition of his communications on earth the possession of them in heaven for here he gives out himselfe but by degrees now a little and then a little as we said before God serves his children as you deale with yours an heire in his minority is kept under to make him know himselfe and hee receives his substance only by parcels and small pieces but when he comes to be of full yeares then his whole inheritance comes in at once a And in this sence as the Apostle speaks the believing heir while he is a child differs nothing from a servāt though he be Lord of all But when he 's of ripe yeares comes into those heavēly places hee is made a Lord yea a King his Father gives him his portion all at once Gal. 4.1 If discoveries of God in glory bee not full and at once then these absurdities would follow 1. The vision of God then would be but graduall but imperfect and in part there as wel as here and stil the glorified would stand in doubt when the rest should be revealed which kinde of doubting would argue distrust which cannot possibly have place in heaven Nor did it ever enter into the thoughts of the most High that the least occasion should be given to such an evill And certainely when Saints are where they can sin no more from any cause in themselves or without themselves such as urge the Principle must needs be guilty of charging God For by the rules and lawes of such kinde of arguing 't will easily be gather'd that the Lord 's shutting in of himselfe though but for a season makes the soule question the certainty of future discoveries Concerning which persons I had almost said their blasphemie is of a very high nature but. 2. Where then were the Saints cessation from labour would there not then bee a continuall want of the exercise of grace yea even of faith hope patience and long-suffering untill the accomplishment of such a full discovery of God to the soule And who knowes not that those graces shall cease to exist be when once the Saints are made glorious For what need will there be of faith to evidence things visible and such things as are not at a distance from the S t s what need of hope to waite for that which is had already and what an uncomfortable Doctrine will this bee found to dying Christians In a word grace is swallowed up of glory yet I grant that love shall be ever active in those heavenly places The third part of glory is the convolution or turning of the whole soul on God according unto what he reveals of himselfe in such a maner here alas Christians cannot roule themselves on God immediately fully Here the means is cal'd in to help and wee see little is done but by the meanes Faith comes by hearing as the Scriptures speak Besides who can doe it fully when as hee that knowes but in part trusts and believes but in part for how can he assent unto what he knowes not Adde to this that here the thoughts wander from God cannot be kept in in holy employments and the heart is oft absent and afarre off when the person is present as God complains and this either from some defect in the manner of the administration of the word the absence of the spirit and power concurring or some cause subordinate thereunto But in Heaven the presence of God holds the soule close to it selfe so that it cannot wander cannot stir from God and the Majestie and glory with the amiablenesse of the same presence drawes out all the abilities of the whole soul to act answerable unto the lawes nearenesse and dearenesse of such a relation as is betwixt God and her selfe Hence 't is as easie for a glorified soule to bee turn'd on God and to doe for God as to be God having freed her from all power of acting otherwise having also implanted in her an in-written constitution an innate instinct by glory To be compleatly glorified is to be freed from all imperfections of soule and body and to enjoy all perfection in them both joyntly which by reason of Terminus â quo viz. the miseries and evills that Saints are delivered from is fitly call'd in sacred writ Redemption and in regard of terminus ad quem 't is as truely and properly 1 Cor. 1. 30. Gal. 3. 13. Eph. 1. 13 14. Eph. 1. 3. Iohn 3. 36. 1 Pet. 5. 10. Cap. 1. 4. stiled beatification life eternall Glory glorification and an immortall inheritance On which two branches there growes that blissfull fruit which the glorified eate in the midst of the Paradise of God Of these 2. in their order it is that we intend to speake Wee begin first with the immunities of the soule which are a part of her glory The first is glorious liberty such as is peculiar to the children of God viz. freedom from all infringements and soule-straitning powers 1. All power and possibility of sinning against her soveraigne good conceptions of sinne shall then cease to be much more then shall the births of sin which are Death be annihilated There remaines no Condemnation for her because she 's in Christ walkes after the spirit of God and followes the Lambe whither soever hee goes Sin Death Divels and Hell are swallowed up in the victories of her Husband 2. From al spots of sin all spiritual impurity all low thoughts of God and high thoughts of her selfe all irregularity of will as it was rebellious to right reason with greatest opposition Though here she could not elect or reject like the Lord yet in glory shee shall Adde to this her freedome from all unsoundnesse of judgement and taints of error which while she was unglorified she