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A88417 England faithfully watcht with, in her wounds: or, Christ as a father sitting up with his children in their swooning state: which is the summe of severall lecvtures painfully preached upon Colossians 1. / By Nicho. Lockyer, M.A. Published according to order. Lockyer, Nicholas, 1611-1685. 1646 (1646) Wing L2794; Thomason E321_1; ESTC R200573 432,053 511

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Christ hath the same life and the same felicities of life he hath the same meate the same habite and the same dwelling one Sunne hath as many raies as tother and riseth as high as tother they move both in one spheare they dwell in the same house they have the same traine and attendance where one goes tother goes My Father and I will come and sup with him Christ and his Father sup together lodge together Esse radiatum esse is communicated Glory is communicated the very glory which God personally weares is communicated to Christ Glorifie me with thine owne selfe with the glory which I had with thee before the world was All Christs is Gods and all Gods is Christs All mine are thine and thine are mine The very glory that God weares himselfe the glory which he weares in heaven that which he wore before all the world was is Christs Whatsoever is under the whole Heaven is Christs Job 41.11 Yea whatsoever is above the whole Heaven whatsoever is in Heaven is Christs glory is his thine is the kingdome power and glory What glory Why that glory which is at the right hand of God The choicest glory in Heaven in the Heaven of Heavens is Christs and at his dispose Vse What is so compleat and yet not gaine the heart speakes that heart very naught and yet this is very common though Christ have all fulnesse yet emptie creatures care nothing for him When cost is liberally laid out and when all laid out will bring nothing in againe that 's sad when all in stocke is out and brings in nothing this goes to the heart of God I planted a goodly vine a noble plant a right seede and yet that trampled under foote said God Fulnesse runs out Mens cisternes are broken so that fulnesse can fill nothing such broken cisternes must be mended or else they will be broken to pieces 'T is wonderfull that Christ is so full and we are so emptie the fault is not in him 't is in us it must be found out and laid to heart it cannot goe well with us else I must speake to three sorts of men some have nothing and some have but a little not one of a thousand full with the fulnesse of Christ all have their fault and must be told on 't Some have no grace nor no good nature farre from righteousnesse as the Prophet speakes full of pride and full of malice Solomon spied it in his time so doe I now The heart of the sonnes of men is full of evill and madnesse Eccles 9.3 Men watch not their hearts and they please themselves in it as loving ease and are undone ere they are aware Evill is a growing thing but when dunged a little by remisnesse the heart will grow full of it presently and then the next step is madnesse as Solomon saith full of evill and madnesse The heart full of evill and the man grows mad to maintaine it and to spread it Alas for thee England thou art in a sad condition full of mad-men men whose hearts are full of evill and mad to maintaine it men emptie their chests of gold yea they emptie their veines of bloud to fill their soules and lives full of wickednesse which they love The heart full of evill cannot hide it selfe the curse of God is upon sin in strength to cut off the sinner that is white to Harvest Things will struggle for life though they die for it full streames have their adventitious occurrences which make overflowings Were you at Oxford you would see spring-tides every day hearts full of evill and over-flowing and running out at their mouth in blasphemies as blacke as hell 'T were well if such a great plague were at such a great distance from us as Oxford but alas for us Oxford is full London is full England is full scarce a heart amongst us but is full of evill and mad to maintaine it What will become of us all Hearts are full of sinne God is full of wrath the Land is full of bloud Ah Lord are we not in hell on earth And yet emptie hearts consider nothing Delusions destroy thousands men full of pride their eyes are swelled out till they feele much they can see nothing amisse in their owne wayes The Land is full of wrath not a man of you almost but full of distresse in one kinde or other and what 's this but Gods broad demonstration that your hearts and lives are full of sin yet can you see this sense is the first step to remedie where this is not notwithstanding all meanes ruine not remedie is neere ah England I feare thy condition but yet still will pray your hearts are full of sin your lives full of miseries are your eyes full of teares O that my heart were full of grace Christ fills the hungry c. Grace in fulness is the felicitie of life bend not after this heighth and you cannot be fully happie Set God his distance and be but never so little and he cannot kisse you unlesse you take him fully into your armes he will be jealous of your love and set you at a distance every day more then other till he hath shaken you off for ever Times square mens course yea mens grace affection and action must rise but so high lest it set all afire names state fortune if love burne so strong as some Ministers would have it 't will burne us out of all The Lord be mercifull to mens basenesse this earth will not beare us long else hell will be full of such soules ere such soules will be full of grace Let times be what they will truth must be pursued to the full this fils the soule with grace neglect this and 't is impossible your hearts should be full of grace how full soever you get your purses of money Great things in the world cut the throats of men they will rather have emptie spirits then emptie purses leane soules then leane cheekes Ah Lord how do the dead bury the dead in earth now Fill one anothers mouths with earth Little of the world must serve if wee would be full of grace This gold lies not in earth but in Heaven not in the world but in truth dig these mines throughly and you will find all treasure and be filled with all the fulnesse of God Consolation springs from this point a word of this and I have done Wee have said much of Christs fulnesse and yet too little Christians comfort your selves 't is all yours Christ hath all and is full so have you in him claime your proprietie and comfort your selves with it in all your distresses in this life as Paul did Phil. 4.18 I have all and am full saith he and yet had nothing in the world The Apostle had Christ which hath all heaven and earth Qui habet habentem omnia habet omnia He that hath Christ hath all formally or eminenter i. whatsoever is wanting in the creature at
judge your selves unworthy of the Kingdome of God Spirits deeply ingaged to their lusts have desperate reasonings against free grace when they can say nothing to stop the mouth of men and their conscience to keep on in their course they alledge the decree of God and if I be decreed to life I shall do better one day if not all you say or that I shall do will do me no good Ah that so much of hell should flame out of any mans mouth upon earth What hath any soul to do with the Decree of God Gods secret will doth not contradict his revealed What latitude of love doth his revealed will hold forth consider that and know that God is reall Doth he reconcile all things then thou art bound to believe it and to put in for a share in that grace which is so large which no soul ever did and missed COLOSSIANS 1.21 And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mindes by wicked workes yet now hath he reconciled c. A Double condition is here mentioned what these Colossians are and what they once were They were alienated in their mindes naught at heart soules sinfull and this they expressed in life by wicked workes very doingly evill and yet these though thus bad made very good hell-fire in the soule quenched two spirits burning one against another reconciled by an act of love and man and God made one in the bodie of Christs flesh to be presented blamelesse in the exactest eye And you that were sometimes alienated c. yet now hath he reconciled in the bodie of his flesh c. How ever condition change yet it 's a good thing to consider what once wee were And you which were sometimes so and so The heart is naught it forgets its own worst and Gods best acts You were so sinfull you are now otherwise you need be hinted and minded of both as if the Apostle had said Sin slips out of our minds transgression makes lasting impression upon Gods Spirit though little upon ours I remember what once you were though yee have forgotten Doctr. Wee are apt sinfully to forget sin Some glory in their shame that 's a sinfull remembring of sin so some die in their shame this also is a sinfull remembring of sin Evill past thought of with joy or thought of with despaire are both displeasing to Christ My sin is ever before me they are a load too heavie this was not commended by God though loved by a wounded spirit There are two extreames and both naught broken hearts ever thinke of their sins and hard hearts never a stone as oft sighes as they The text and point I am upon points at a third thing though distinct from either of these i sin remembred with godly sorrow this godly hearts are backward to 't is intimated in the text Yee were enemies in your minds by wicked workes doe yee remember it Some acts awaken conscience he speakes the saddest of any facultie a carnall creature willingly neglects sad worke To call to minde what I was at such a place and at such a time is to throw sparkles of fire upon a sleepie dog which will make him start up flie out and barke and bite fiercely Man loves his flesh yea he loves his spirit he doth not love to be bit in either if he can tell how to shift it The best are bad though not starke naught good spirits are apt to play the slugge in those duties that are dolorous and painfull I remembred God and was troubled and complained and my spirit was overwhelmed To remember what God is and how unsutable wee have been to him will trouble yea overwhelme the stoutest spirit we doe not care to meddle with troublesome works When sin revives we die remembring what we were reviveth sin 't is terrible to the flesh to wound and kill it selfe 't is so spiritually we had rather any should wake and sit up then conscience we had rather goe quietly to hell then conscience should torment us before the time Man is a lazie creature examination of ones former state is hard worke flesh and bloud shunnes this quite yea grace neglects this oft till losse be great I call to remembrance my song in the night I commune with mine own heart and my spirit made diligent search But 't was long first so long till he stood in feare of being cast off for ever as you may see in the next verse Psalm 77.6 7. A string slackened or broken in play and 't is laborious to be winding up the pin still to keepe tune to the song one sings to take notice how many notes too flat or too loud in play requires a diligent eare the labour of it makes one willing to passe by and forget many false stroakes If the examination of small things be so laborious much more to examine things of weight our spirituall state when all is naught Man doth not love hard worke nor terrible worke Transgression multiplies and young children make one forget old ones Present transgressions harden or wound much the heart hardened becomes uncapable to consider any sin the sin of last yeare or of this yeare or of this houre A stone melts under no consideration a stone thinkes of nothing neither of things past present or to come Multiplication of sin makes stonie hearts Their hearts are as hard as an adamant You cannot beat things into a stone no words nor blowes will make hard hearts thinke of their wayes Though a man eate of the evill of his way weekes moneths yeares yet will not this make him bethinke himselfe what steps he trod in all that while to call his way evill and his person wicked Present sin if it harden not much it wounds much and wounded persons thinke altogether of their present paine Dolour distracts crazie braines are weake at any thing but worst at recollection specially if things of weight When wounds are deep much bleeding inwardly makes much faintnesse Languishing dying soules thinke of nothing but going to hell 'T is with sins as 't is with mercies when a man goes about to number them one can finde no end of them and this makes a bleeding heart leave looking backward and look forward to fix his eyes upon that blacke place whither all sin lookes he leaves multiplying number rises so innumerably and turnes himselfe to consider where all will end the sum of all will come to this saith he the death of my soule for ever because the sinner can make a kinde use of no sin he gives up the consideration of all and lays down his soule at the foot of Justice for lost I am sure all sin centers whither my soule is going saith the sinner and closeth his eyes though I cannot tell their number yet I know their nature All runs into this Wee are all apt sinfully to forget sin Vse God certainly hath espied this and he is rousing up our memory Wrath doth much when love can do but little
no matter what the instrument be so that it hath but the advantage of divine ordination to such an end All the means that God useth are effectuall to his end because he hath appointed them and not for any cause or reason naturally in themselves If there be no likely power in an instituted means yet it shall accomplish its end because instituted I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ 't is the power of God unto salvation To speak a few plain words of a despised person and think by this to convert the souls of men from their wicked wayes and to bring them to heaven and to wave a lofty strain of humane wisdome more likely to take I am not ashamed to do this this course may seem folly yet certainly it shall accomplish its work 't will be the power of God to salvation because the will of God hath instituted it That Christ should have such a frail instrument and no other to wit a body of flesh a substance capable of death to conquer death withall was of Gods appointment a body hast thou prepared for me and therefore effectuall to such an end God eyes himself in all he doth by us He doth so order action and instrument as may most advance his own glory When the instrument is great God is little we cannot see much of Christ when he takes up much of any thing here below to do his will by Mans argumentation generally is very destructive to the glory of God That hand which is most visible still that did all Saul hath slain his thousand David his ten thousand God none God therefore leaves all which we so much look upon and goes alone and doth work with poor despised ones which we cast off The Stone which the builders refused he must be head Weak and unlikely things to sense are trampled upon by us Can death bring about heaven Can base things bring about glory Thus we reject and refuse things and then God uses them and then he is seen as God The humanity of Christ was the fittest medium in the world to demonstrate the Divinity of Christ by to all the world For such an organ as ours to be made do mighty things made beholders put that question What manner of man Christ was We admire power wisdome and every attribute else when they put forth themselves by poore and unlikely things and not else If means be likely to such an end according to our reason we usually never look at God but bury the glory of all that is done in instruments Enemies to Christ should tremble at this point The kingdome of the Devill is strong men are confident and rage Round-heads shall not live a man of them God suddenly blast this pride with a little power Men despised for valour and skill God makes to drink the blood of despisers so he will do 't is his way Great men and great spirits should abase themselves if they will not weak things Worms Flies Frogs shall devoure a king The heart secretly riseth but the man is openly puld down the ruine of the stout-hearted is very notorious by two circumstances in that it is done openly and utterly that God useth weak means to overthrow strong and so as never to rise more They sank as a stone saith the Text. Doth a stone rise again Jael nails Sisera to the ground could he rise again Ah! what is become of many thousands of the Lords enemies in this Land which were mighty in battell Are they not sunk as a stone pinned to the ground gone to their center to their place whence they cannot return and this by poor despised means With weake instruments God doth through work David strikes down the Philistine and that is not all he is used to make sure work with him he runs and cuts off his head which shadowed out the utter ruine of the kingdome of the Devill by Christ a despised man God is upon a design the world will not believe not a man shall stand before him that stands against him The baiers of the Lord shall be destroyed that is all of them If any ask how this shall be because things are so unlikely I answer The Lord creates evill he can take any thing a hailstone a wounded man and form them into deadly instruments for his enemies The fan in Christs hand 't is but a weak thing a despised company yet he will throughly purge his floore he will out with all that offends When some bad humors are let out they gather and swell again there is no end of action in an evill heart till there be an utter end of the man 'T is sad to behold how enemies gather ino a head again when blasted from heaven we shall prevaile we shall prevaile The Devill befools wise men How can ye prevaile and cannot conquer the weaknesse of God Poor weak things if you cannot conquer an army of men how will you conquer a legion of Angels God hath a reserve which you are not aware of you choose out your stoutest for a forlorn but God his weakest and yet these are too hard for you and yet you feed your fancy that you shall prevaile The Devill is in this would bloody wretches were aware of it that he may have all he would not have a man sit down in an evill way till he come to his journeys end which is Hell the destruction of the body and soul Christ hath many sorts of enemies all should tremble at this point that God doth great things with small means There is a corporall war and a spirituall war in England and both bloody in both Christ will conquer how weak and poor and despised soever his instruments be which he useth When Christ drew out a party to go out against the kingdome of the Devill observe how he furnished him with munition Go saith he and take neither sword nor staffe nor money yet these carried it in the businesse they went about Externall advantages about internall works are much lookt at and much sway with sense what power what honour and wealth goes along with the wayes which are profest Christ takes neither and yet raiseth up his Kingdome in the world sends out men not a whit seconded from secular advantage no power from man but the sword of men against them no honour from men but the frownes of all against them and yet turnes the world thus opposite with two or three upside down These are they which turn the world upside down The world is a vast body and holds very hard in its way and yet this turned upside down by two or three despised ones Thus hath Christ done thus doth Christ do and thus will he Choller is a scurvie humor it burns black mens throats and tongues The Devill hath shot thousands in the mouth if not in the heart in this war between Presbyterians and Independants O how wickedly do some good men talk now and yet Christ will live and every
simply considered never ceases they in heaven do Gods will and are proposed as our pattern on earth they are so exact in the observation of it but the painfull observation of Gods will which is by reason of corruption within us and wicked spirits without us this ceases as soon as we step out of this vile body but not before They move to Christ above as Christ doth to them with the same spirit of freedome joy triumph and glory That they may be one as we are There is no sighing and groaning mourning dying to accomplish Gods will above all move there as the Angels with delight every one milks out love from the breasts of Christ and sings over the Pail to behold how full 't is and how free it comes and yet though it cost all these to obey any truth of God here we are not to cease our course Every childe is brought forth with pain but some with more then others it costs life to bring forth some yet it 's horrible wickednesse for any to strangle the birth to prevent the pain Benjamin must be born though it cost Rachel her life She was a shadow of the Church which must bring forth Christ in all his will though we die in travell if you abide throughly of the faith Vse You see how heaven bears break truth and break your back and what groaning will that make no groaning so sad to do as that which is by not doing Gods will Heaven and Gods will are linked together break the link if it be but one link and the jewel falls and is lost Heaven is a Jewel hanged in a golden chain break one link of the golden chain and you lose the Jewel 'T is nothing to desperate souls to make void Gods Law I wonder at them Is it nothing to lose heaven to untwist the golden chain upon which your eternall treasure hangs Transgression stupifies this is the killing quality of sin Sinners mind not what they do when they throw off the will of Christ any part of the will of Christ you throw away your life Heaven lies wrapt up in truth in that truth which you will not submit to Would something would work upon wicked hearts upon the desperate wicked hearts of this age that sin might abate amongst us or else the sword of Gods wrath is like to eat us out Alas for us all I know not what hand of God is upon us wrath findes a great deale of matter among us to work upon and we can finde none When we presse love to Christ and observation of his will every man washeth his hands I do it saith one and I do it saith another Will you lie before the face of the Judge of all the world now he sitteth upon the bench upon the life and death of the kingdome Men are worst which think themselves best if there be any plague that kill thee England 't will be thy Laodicean temper that thou thinkest thou art clean and art not washed from thy filthinesse that thou needest nothing and yet observest nothing Euangelically that looks like a lovely State Our point sets us too high a great deal to speak to this generation it calls for exact observation and we are by the hand of God upon us cast into the quite contrary a generation that had a little conscience but now have none Loosnesse and lewdnesse overspread the multitude brawniness and benummedness the more ingenious good men become bad bad stark naught and stink above ground 'T is worse then blood and death to heare and see in every place where one comes what mire and dirt our troubled waters cast up as if war were a ticket under Gods own hand to dispence with all wickednesse O the oaths the execrations whoredoms oppressions outrages of all sorts that the very highwayes and villages are filled with where ever one comes The stink of your camps enough to kill a good heart at a great distance 'T is sad that the blood and bodies of the dead should taint and poison the living that we should die swearing and blaspheming If there be any tender hearts among you carry these things home and mourn for I am fearfull what they presage The work of this point is not only to winde you off from prophanenesse but wind you up to exactnesse to through walking with Christ We halt the fruit of it is upon us the hand of God will not yet cure it what it may Christ only knowes The heart must have its latitude 't is every ones saying this To hit the white is not needfull one may shoot well that doth not this But can one shoot well that aimes not at this I presse towards the mark I forget what is behinde if by any means I may obtain the resurrection Here is the property of grace in life it owns nothing but perfection makes at nothing else 't is in aim and industry all Christs Men are charmed with their own unsoundnesse the heart secretly sinfully ingaged aim and industry are really correspondent hereunto what ever verball flourish be made to better spirits and persons that stand by here is a man strangling himself in his bed which is a condition that makes little noise every thing is so artificially managed to destruction yet alas it is the common profession of this time How far will these times beare with a profession of Gods will How far will Christs honour and mine consist Here the soul wasts its strength If there be any intense through action now on foot it lies here so to shape the course and posture to the right and left that the man may take in all worldly advantages of both sides along as he ●●es There is much art in this but 't is all cursed 't were well if the man had lesse policy and more integrity There is much advange in this but it comes to nothing the plague of an hypocrite is upon this condition which will eat a man out if he had all the world There is more of heaven in a plain heart in a moment then this man sees in all his dayes The advantage of through action is this A man gets much of Christ much grace much glory Some mens religion is a principle of jugling with conscience and the world 't is a temptation upon thousands at this day these lose what they seem to have Christ and all grace quite Christ kicks off every Judas quite that kisseth him and kisseth enemies to him too for his own advantage but a soul that cleaves throughly to Christ hath much of him the dispensations of Angels Stephen shined like an Angel owning Christ in the face of deadly and bloody opposers Externall dispensations cannot be stood upon how Christ appears to honour the persons of men that will go to the grave with him is more uncertain they have the face the tongue and the food of Angels when it may do them good and torture devils that vex them Externall concurrence is sure
be cleane why thou art clean Shall Christ doe all this for so little and wilt not thou hope and chearfully expect the sweet of that which he so freely gives Finally Doe but thinke what a double miserable life thou wilt have in these times if this grace of hope lie ruinous in thee through any wile of Satan Thou wilt be as a Ship without an anchor tossed terribly and no possibilitie of staying thee Which hope we have us an anchor of the soule both sure and stedfast If a man cannot stay upon God in distresse he can stay no where a soule that can stay no where will hardly stay in his wits when stormes grow very great What is by ordination a center and rest for such and such a bodie a light body or a heavie bodie that and no other thing will give rest to it Christ is by divine ordination the center of soules were there a thousand rockes to cast anchor upon yet no rocke like this the soule will not rest upon any else Their rocke is not as ours themselves being judges All men finde this by experience that what ever they pitch upon besides God to stay and relieve themselves it doth not doe it O that the war were ended that the war were ended Fearfull soule if this war were ended thou hast a war within thee which will never end till thy despaire end fighting without and fighting within others killing my bodie and my selfe killing my soule what a wofull life is this Hope alive this is the sweet course of the soule to wit when all is black deadly and dismall without then the soule drawes the curtaine and withdrawes from all these lower roomes and walkes in upper chambers where no noise is views the Citie and Country above and the inhabitants and priviledges thereof Hope enters within the vaile Heb. 6.19 Yet I know a Country where no war is an inheritance where no plundering is neighbours and Citizens that doe not kill one another but love one another dearely that have not their swords in one anothers breasts but each other Christ there I shall be quickly and the sooner that these miseries below are so heavy on mee COLOSS. 1.23 From the hope of the Gospel WEE have considered the grace of hope in it selfe and have found it a sweet flower as any grows in the garden of God wee are now to consider the stocke out of which it springs the mold that likes it The English word Gospel notes Good speech spel formerly signified speech Gospel quasi God spel God speech and that is glad speech indeed and out of which it growes is the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifies a glad word or message When God smiles upon the soule then the soule smiles in its course our death or life sits upon the lips of Christ as Christ speaks the soule opens or closes lifts up or hangs downe the head Thou hast made my mouth like a sharp sword a polished shaft saith Christ of the Father Esa 49.2 What a wombe the Gospel is it brings forth twinnes two and the greatest that can be thought on death and life 't is a polished shaft not simply a shaft to kill but a polished shaft to make death in order to life The Gospel is a wombe that brings forth twinnes indeed earth and heaven heaven here 't is like the Hebrew women quicke of delivery They were Gospel-words which God spake to Adam after his fall when he spake about the seed of the Woman and these words re-instated him in earth and in heaven he had lost both else His soule sunke within him which made him hide and run away and these words fetcht life againe to the soule and the man againe to his place Doct. The Gospel is a grand blessing a glad word a God-speech Our Sun was set at noone and yet no more to have risen in this Horizon God after our sin had shut up his loving kindnesse in displeasure and all this world was to lie under all the wrath of God to all eternitie without one good word without one good look man the glory of the world was proclaim'd a Traytor Absaloms doome was upon him Let him see my face no more in this case no Mediator durst appeare not one of all the Angels in Heaven would know man after his fall for any favour the King had withdrawne himselfe and all his traine he had bounded himselfe in universally like Abasuerus that none might come to speake to him for favour in mans behalfe upon paine of death no not concerning any matter of mercy towards man he that should come about any such thing came upon perill of eternall death yet in this desperate strait Christ like Esther puts forth and takes his life in his hand pleads with wrath it selfe for a few that they might be kindly entertain'd againe kindly thought of and kindly spoke to if thou must have bloud take my bloud onely write downe with it a few names in the booke of life a small company to be kinde unto for ever to looke pleasantly upon them and to speake sweetly to them here and for ever hereafter That which cost Christ so deare surely is no small favour he gave his bloud for a good word from God to man a good word therefore from God is certainly a great favour for Christ lays not out his bloud for trifles as sometimes we doe It s price its property speakes it a grand blessing The Gospel is light prime light it makes exact discretion it shines into the heart that 's the expression of it which the Apostle gives 2 Cor. 4.6 But God which commanded the light out of darknesse hath shined into our hearts You may discerne a moate a haire the smallest thing that is by a shining light the Gospel discovers beames moats yea these perfectly Then shalt thou see perfectly the moat that is in thy brothers eye Take in but Gospel-light and lay aside thine own conceited light and thou shalt see every thing exactly in thy spirituall state The light of the Gospel discovers thoughts and intentions of the heart it divideth between the marrow and the bones it shews how the soule is joynted marrowed how every sinew and string lyes and what oyle is in the vessels to supple them and make them last whether any or none The heart is call'd the hidden man and 't is hid indeed from all creatures in the world from the man himself that 's a notable light that gets into a dungeon a vault deep under ground that is full of damps and makes discovery there of all the mud and dirt of all the frogs and toads that lie there and yet such is the light of the Gospel where ever it comes though into never so dark a soule it lays open all very exactly that is to conviction He that is unlearned cometh in and he is convinced of all and fals downe saith the text it tels a man all that ever he did and
great world over all the little world into every roome of the soule into joynts and marrow and set downe himselfe where he will in conscience in affection in what inward part he sees good in some one part or in all parts that is the greatest good in the world when truth is in the inward parts i. not in one faculty but in all not onely in the understanding but in the conscience in the affection in every faculty this Christ loves mightily and what hee loves hee can accomplish there is no torture upon him affection larger then power as t is usually with us All power is given to him to worke without to worke within in Earth in Heaven that is in the more internall and heavenly part Hee giveth wisdome to the heart I will give my Lawes into your mind By Lawes is meant all grace and yet all this made a gift and given into the soule that desires it Christ gives things into the hand yea into the heart all precious things and derives them into all parts and when all this is done in us and the like laboured for to be done by us in all others then is internall operation in power or then Christ workes in us mightily which terme pointing onely at a gradation in the same operation hath raveld out it selfe according to what is difficult in unfolding the former A concluding Speech WHich worketh in me mightily The concurrence of this power wee have had in our measure all along our labour which I would should be much acknowledged to Christ by vertue of which wee are now come to our period of this Verse and of the whole Chapter Our pace in this long journey hath been slow that you might all goe along with mee in the well understanding and imbracing of weighty things and yet how many notwithstanding our double industry are left behind in the blindnesse and mis-beliefe of their soules I know not If our Gospell be hid after all pains fully to lay it open such soules have great reason to feare themselves Child-bearing is no easie worke to any but doubly hard to some so that life out of death may that which comes forth betweene the legges be called This birth though but a hard-favoured child hath beene hard travell to us 'tas made many a sigh and groane many a heart pang and crying out to God What you will doe with the child now borne whither you will be a Pharaoh or a Pharoahs Daughter to it murther it or keepe it alive in your hearts I know not This I know that no man can spill all the blood of any child of God some will stick upon you doe what you can to tell the murtherer at the great day Sighes and groanes are the teares of the heart the heart venting it selfe at the mouth when it cannot at the eyes and other lesser pores every drop that hath fallen from our heart and head from our Eye-lids or Eye-brows shall be all gathered up and put as marginall notes along by all our labours and all put in one Volumne together and this volumne put in your hand at the great day and opened Leafe after Leafe and read distinctly and exactly to you and your soules made to attend regard and remember better then here many of you have done and when all is thus read over this booke shall be closed and this question solemnly put to you all now O soules what have you profitted by all Words Prayers Teares Sighes Groanes As Conscience can answer to this for nothing else may then speake so shall your sentence be and I shall be called out to give witnesse to the justice of it and say Amen Lord Jesus righteous is all that thou hast pronounced upon these soules Our labours lost if this were simply all truly 't were nothing but our labours lost and your soules are lost and yet what is losse to you shall be gaine to us for wee are a sweete savour to God both in them that are saved and in them that perish As wee dresse and as wee water Trees in the Lords Vinyard so shall wee have our wages and not as these Trees beare if Trees be dressed and watered well though they never beare well wee shall have a good Vintage You Londoners are Trees watered choisely indeede 'T is storied of the Plane Tree that at its first transplanting into Italie 't was watered with Wine to make it take and prosper in those parts of the World you are Trees watered with Wine I cannot say that you have beene so watered by mee I dare not but this I can humbly and truly say that if our choisest strength and spirits may bee nam'd in steade of Water Wine or if the blessing which hath gone along with these Waters at any time have turned them into Wine in vigour upon your soules then hath God by mee watered your Rootes with Wine and yet if after such costly watering you grow not nor beare not certainly such Trees are neere unto cursing which sad effect that my Ministey should be an instrument to hasten to this place or to any soule will make mee to continue mourning still in secret for you all and so spend and end my dayes * ⁎ * FINIS TABLE MAn is in soule misery page 1 So naturally judicially universally p. 2 3 Whether sensible of soule misery moved and what demonstrates insensibility p. 3 4 5 Christ snatcheth soules out of Hell P. 7 Christ moves swiftly throughly preventingly ravishingly to save p. 7 8 9 Whom Christ hath snatcht out of Satans power p. 10 11 12 That power which workes irresistibly to save the soule with much ease can save our body p. 13 Ignorance makes prophanenesse p. 14 Ignorance pollutes will the practicke understanding the conscience and is the Divels element p. 15 16 The darke Church of England spoken to p. 16 17 Christ carries soules to Heaven p. 18 Christ saves laboriously fatherly surely p. 19 20 Satan carries soules to Hell and how p. 22 23 Demonstrations of Christs Kingdome in this world p. 25 26 Some not far from the Kingdome of God and yet never come there p. 30 31 Love gives forth preferment to all Gods children p. 32 God gives orderly purely solacingly p. 32 33 The folly of men that looke after humane favour to rise p. 34 35 The blessednesse of them which are beloved of God p. 36 37 What redemption meanes p. 38 39 40 41 Bodily bondage lookt after but not soule bondage p. 42 43 What a spirit of bondage and a state of bondage are p. 43 44 What men in bondage and those which are out of bondage should doe p. 45 46 The choicest mercies come through the greatest miseries p. 47 48 Grounds to give God the glory of his way let it be how t will p. 50 51 52 53 Great things comming to us in way of hardship exhorted to prepare for hardship p. 54 What sin meanes p. 55 56 What reconciliation notes p. 56 57 What
of love be to thee what I shall further do beside setting mine own weak house and heart in order to go home I know not more then breath out my dying breath in the bosome of Christ for thee that thou and all thy Worthies in thee may do well and worthily from generation to generation till Christ come Nicho. Lockyer To the READER T Was a very Christian expression that once a very Learned and worthy friend of another Nation and of another judgement to mine own wrote unto me Sir though there be two opinions between us yet I desire there may be but one heart to which my desire doth so concur that my requests to Christ are that this Spirit may be powred out amongst all his people in all the world There are many and I think too many opinions amongst the godly already but if there were as many more I hope I should be one in heart with them all which are in Christ and walk in him Variety of faces is not an affliction but matter of much admiration to behold to such as are but humanely ingenious So truly variety of judgements simply considered is not a grief but a glory to me to behold when one Spirit of grace and heavenlinesse is in them all for I account it a glasse of Gods own making wherein to behold his manifold Wisdome and I further think that he is setting many nobler spirits then mine own at work to dig up some pearle and precious truth for me which yet I have not I differ Reader with none but them that differ with Christ As for them that vary in judgement from me whose lives are holy I am jealous that they are better acquainted with Christ then I and so I lay my hand on my mouth and leave them alone to their Master and mine believing that we are as Laban said to Jacob * Chinissather ish meregnehu Because we are hid a man from his friend Gen. 31.49 but hid from one another neither hid from Christ Our light is so dark that a man a Christian man is hid from his Christian friend in matter of judgement but there is a Mitspah one God watching between us both which will bring us to see one another and himself plainly in heaven Let this be my Apologie for my spirit and opinion to thee Christian Reader and to all the people of God that so Satan by no spirit of prejudice hinder the profitable participation of this work which speaks of no controversie between Christian and Christian betweeen King and Parliament or between man and man but of that controversie which is between God and I fear all men in these Dominions under which we are and how this controversie will end give him that loves Christ and thee leave longer yet to study and pray ere he give thee in an answer under his hand As for errata's the Author Scribe and Presse are too full there need the lesse in the Reader or else things will be too bad A childe wrote from Christs mouth and another from mine which truly I had hardly ease or life to overlook and then when to be printed as hasty in this by other hands I cannot say by other ends then mine own for the undertaker I take to be truly godly as slow in the finishing of it three Presses were employed at once two in the City one in the Countrey and he hardly one that should review them so that doubtlesse many things will displease others more then my selfe who expect to suffer much in preaching and printing by them that have little in them and as for others they will be candid noble and do like themselves take in good part parts and fragments of him whom they honour more then I NICHO LOCKYER COLOS. 1.13 Who hath delivered us from the power of darknesse and hath translated us into the kingdome of his dear Sonne FItnesse for heaven is generally acknowledged in the foregoing verse and particularly and fully explain'd in this and that which follows and put into two branches Deliverance from the power of darknesse and translation into the kingdome of Christ Who hath made us meet for the inheritance of saints in light c. What is that meetnesse He hath delivered us from the power of darknesse and hath translated us into the kingdome of his dear Sonne Deliverance undergoes a double acceptation it means temporall deliverance sometimes Attend unto my cry for I am brought very low deliver me from my persecutours for they are stronger then I Psal 142.6 Sometimes it means eternall deliverance soul-salvation deliverance from sinne it self and the dominion of it and not barely from such domineering evils as sinne sets up to make this life miserable Deliver me from all my transgressions Psal 39.8 Deliver me from bloud-guiltinesse Psal 51.14 These expressions speak soul-deliverance eternall deliverance and of this nature is that deliverance here mentioned in my Text as the words themselves explain Doctr. Man now is in soul-misery our eternall estate is undone our eternall life slain the bloud of our souls is spilt upon the earth There is death and death with Emphasis Who shall deliver me from the body of this death Soul-death is here meant man is spiritually slain stabbed at heart undone inwardly he needs a deliverance from this death So there is wrath and wrath to come wrath that works hereafter upon spirits when then they have laid aside the bodies of flesh in which they dwelt here Even Jesus who hath delivered us from the wrath to come 1. Thess 1.10 That deliverance and this in my Text mean one thing soul-deliverance which every soul stands in need of but some onely enjoy Who hath delivered us from the power of darknesse Naturally Man is in soul-misery naturally we are children of wrath by nature wrath works against us in the very wombe Jacob have I loved Esau have I hated and this ere they had seen the world Corruption is got into the bloud generation is marred man the noblest creature cannot beget a happy creature when he goes about this work he layes the first foundation in sinne In sinne was I conceived c. David was marred from the beginning and made miserable as soon as crudled in the wombe as soon as any matter was laid together for such a form Treason stains the bloud the first man proves a traytour and never since any otherwise but one The first man poisoned his nature and then begat as he made himself and not as God made him and so doth all the posterity to this houre and this makes so many men so many worms and no men so many base miserable things and not one worthy of the name of a blessed creature but the name of an uncreated thing a piece of mere putrifaction a worm so in body and so in soul mere putrifaction in all Judiciarily Man is in soul-misery judiciarily Justice hath traced sinne to its rise and plagued it at the fountain head Man
the desire of that company of men I would not have them now imitated by any other to throw down light every where and keep the kingdome in darknesse and so in loosnesse that every one might rise up one against another to accomplish their will even children against father to cut the throat of purity and Puritans through the land To you more particularly let me speak from this point See here the spring of your neutrality you are dark you can do any thing because you know nothing Truth hath the power of God in it your hearts bend any way because you cannot set up God before them Sinners how have ye heard and what have you learn'd Your course speaks you loose to Christ and to many Christians what does it to your own consciences Have ye light what and live loosely Then you withhold the truth of God in unrighteousnesse and you will suffer doubly namely for the abuse of light and conscience A Libertine against light fights desperately against conscience or else hath kill'd it quite God is very angry with a man that is a sinner in the day O that thou hadst known in this thy day sinners in the day provoke God much and will be beaten with many stripes The prophet Esay speaks of darkning light in the heavens thereof Esay 5 30. Libertines against light darken the sunne in the heavens thereof they can snuff out the sunne that shines in their souls as one snuffs out a candle they pull the sunne out of heaven to make pleasure to themselves in the dark and make as if they knew nothing what they do Your hypocrisie is reigning and if not lookt to t will be ruining quickly these do not perish for want of knowledge but for want of conscience Coloss 1.13 And hath translated us into the kingdome c. WE have been at the border of hell and now we are come to the borders of heaven nature is as near hell as grace is heaven From nature to grace and from grace to glory is lost mans journey home again this journey is long and mans legges weak and not able to go it and therefore doth God bear him from one to another and transferre him along Transferring notes motion from one place to another but upon some bodies shoulders or in some bodies arms by bearing Observe the road to heaven and you shall see none going that way but in Christs arms you will see the way narrow and full of cripples carried along from tithing to tithing from sinne to grace from one grace to another till they come home to glory which is their kingdome Doctr. Grace is Gods carrying the soul to Heaven Christ carries souls in his arms unto eternall blessednesse Fallen man can neither stand nor go his fall hath killed him and the dead stirre not but as they are carried When the Angel stirres the water I have no body to put me in said the cripple if some bodie would take me in their arms or take me upon their backs and carrie me in I might come to health and happinesse The emblem speaks our state we are born from a miserable condition to a blessed from sinfulnesse which is soul cripplednesse to holinesse which is soul soundnesse and blessednesse Some can prevail with their wounds and weare them out but man is not so slightly wounded nature is deeply wounded and lies by it The Samaritan put the wounded man upon his own beast and brought him to an Inne and took care of him saith the Evangelist Luke 10.42 We are born from wounds to health from nature to grace from the kingdome of Sathan to the kingdome of Christ by Christs own power we are transferred into the kingdome Things have their nature and the result of this is their will man moves not heaven-ward nor will not things that will not go to such a place must be carried thither or they will never come there Christ puts himself to no more pains then needs must They will not come to me saith he of some which is true of all I must go to them and fetch them or they will never come to me else Christ speaks all our conditions in these words There is not bare indisposition but opposition resolute and in cases of this nature all must be carried by superiour power or nothing is done 'T is a hell to man to come out of hell and they are as devils tormenting before the time that meddle about this matter you chain and carry distracted creatures to means of remedie corruption hath its destructive haunt They are a perverse and a crooked generation Deuteronomie 32.5 they will not go Gods way and that they may not they wreath up their legges like a Tortoise contorti so saith the originall when a Tortoise wreaths in his legges under it you must carrie him if you will have him Christ saves laboriously he makes a sea of his bloud so deep as to bear the soul he makes arms and shoulders chariot wheels carriages to bear a sinner heaven-ward which is wonderfull heavy A sinner is a heavier burthen then all the creation he sinks all but Christ he makes the creation grone and crack under him he presses a world to nothing with his weight and yet Christ shoulders him The bearing up of the world is not so much burthen as the bearing up the soul of man he does the one with his word but to the doing of the other goeth word person bodie soul arms shoulders heart bloud all and yet Christ submits all these and becomes a porter a servant a slave and bears till his back and and heart break Labour if honourable helps to bear it self the labour it self lends one shoulders and gives one legges but base labour loads it self the servility and basenesse of it is more burthen then the burthen and pulls away all shoulders from it who will put himself to drudgings base service that is of any qualitie And yet Christ did this Drowning waters are up in this low world and Christ strips himself and wades and carries over poore souls upon his back and weaklings in his arms some one way and some another as may be best ease to them though most pain to him Christ saves fatherly Parents know no pains nor cost for children knees arms bosome soul all open to bear them Jacob wrapt up Joseph in his soul and carried him up and down in his bosome Christ is a father and moves just so to his children for every one of his children is a Joseph to him he takes up a child when complaining like the Shunamite and sets him in his lappe and keeps him their till he die all Christs children die in his arms like the Shunamites sonne If a child of God live an hundred years his father never sets him down out of his arms but carries him unto death beyond death as the Psalmist speaks Christ wraps us up in his soul and carries us there alwayes he is ever mindfull of us You
make him become bloudy God is love fury is not in him naturally but love he delights not in the death of any God is nothing but life and so is his motion naturally and therefore called a fountain of life nothing runnes from him naturally but life if death runne out of the fountain of life 't is because of poyson cast in by you Generation in bloud one mercy to die to bring forth another is such a generation as was not known in the beginning God never appointed things thus to generate but life to bring forth life and such a happy creature to bring forth such a happy creature all happinesse to live each speak out fully the vastnesse of the fountain and the similitude of the stream to it The sinne of the first Adam cost the bloud of the second and all the bloud that ever since hath been shed to keep any good alive in the world Murmuring souls you are blind justice steres the ship when it sails in bloud with jewels to you you would never open your mouths at all the bloud that is shed in the land no nor at all the bloud that ever hath been shed in the world if your eyes were but open to see this first thing God makes his way most sure to such an end let the means proposed to it be what they will through bloud and death or hell I will surely do thee good saith God to Abraham and yet they must into hardship so much and so long and yet still the end sure and this hart-bleeding condition the onely sure way to it and no other way would have been sure to such an end Certainty of an end with us depends upon the standing or falling of such a thing but the certainty of Gods end which he proposeth doth not stand upon the standing or falling of this or that but upon the resolution of his will I will certainly do thee good One may die another may die and yet whilest the will of God remains resolute to such an end the end will live and the dying of such prime persons is onward to it and without which it could not be Heaven and earth shall passe away but not one tittle of Gods will shall fall to the ground The certainty of Gods intention you see depends upon his will heaven and earth may die which are greater bodies then man and yet Gods intention live because his will lives I must say again that murmuring spirits are blind they can see nothing certain in these uncertain times they think that all that God intends must bleed and die because all that men intend bleed and die and the very men too Blind creatures the certainty of what God intends doth not depend upon any of these when all is in bloud and dead God is alive and on in his way to his end the unspeakable good of many God alwayes makes his way most honourable to such an end let difficulties in the way be what they will though God may cast much hardship upon us yet he casteth no disgrace upon himself nor upon his way His way is honourable and glorious saith the Psalmist all his wayes are so when he goes in bloud for he speaks of the execution of justice there when he goes in the death of one thing to the life of another he goes in in state and glory God is alwayes tender of his name when he seems not tender of any person his sonne his onely sonne scoffed crowned hanged used in all the cruellest and basest manner that men and devils could devise and yet this sonne so used by men was so managed by God and all his hardship that the name of God was made wonderfull honourable in all Noble persons stand not upon losse but upon their honour they value not life they will step every step in bloud rather then prosecute their designes basely An honourable spirit is naturall to God he bringeth nothing about basely he eyes not the bloud of men nor the bloud of his sonne nor the bravest bloud that ever ran in bloud vessels but what he eyes is the accomplishment of his will honourably Murmuring spirits you are blind and you are base so you may but have your own ends the fafety of your lives and states you care not how God brings this about whether honourably or dishonourably Unruly hearts are unfit to order weightie matters such spirits must be guided by better then their own what is done with dishonour to God saves a little bloud and forfeits a great deal God will manage his way with honour though he drown and burn worlds and turn all the creation into bloud Our spirits should move like Gods that his will may be done by me to his honour What is my bloud What is God break my back with standing upon it and squeez out my bloud so that it may but colour his garments scarlet and honourable Finally God makes his way most beneficiall when most bloudy and difficult Who can expresse the benefit that redounds to the Church by the bloud of Christ the like I may say of the bloud of Christians the benefit which redounds to God and to man is not to be expressed The like I may say of the bloud that is now shed in England Truth by fiery trialls is made famous Christ is clothed with scarlet and crowned with glory here a mans life is his glory and this given to Christ in flames is double glory put upon Christ a mans bloud veins are the lowdest trumpets on earth to sound out any thing What a noise hath Christs bloud made all the world over And so the bloud of Martyrs is it dried up yet What virtues and graces smell so sweet and look so glorious as those that are died rose-colour with bloud with the bloud of that earthen breast in which they grow Bloud hath a very crying voice it cries up guilt to heaven and so it cries up grace in heaven and earth it makes Christ terrible holinesse immortall truth eternall what is written in bloud never goes out and all that reade wonder I have but one thing more to say and that is for as much as great things come in a way of hardship to fallen man that you would all prepare for hardship London dost thou not see England dost thou not feel that thy mercies come in bloud that thy redemption is likely if ever to be through much bloud but through much more then yet is shed who can say Men die dayly bloudy clouds go up and down and fall upon this citie and that and shalt thou London escape the storm Londoners Londoners are you prepared to welcome in your mercies in bloud You have had a Thames of water bringing in wealth to you for a great while are you prepared to have a Thames made of your bloud to bring in brave wealth to you for another while God hath stirred up some brave spirits amongst you I would all were such and yet I see many
unworthy spirits amongst you tell such from me their doom is coming your bloud is dear your money dear but how dear Dearer to you then Christ then Christ will trample upon both Christ is lavish because we are nigardly he spoils all money goods bloud because men have no heart to offer all to bring him in all to this blind land yet this men will not do this men cannot do till better qualified in heart The heart must have precious principles ere it will part with its bloud like Christ to bring great favours into the world for others How noble spirited was Christ he had principles which if you labour after will make you as he ready and able to part with your bloud to bring more of truth into the world he onely eyed and magnified the truth of God and the glory of God he sought not his own will nor his own glory and therefore so easily parted with all that was his own to bring in God and his love to us let him be your pattern in this and you will do likewise Coloss 1.14 Even the forgivenesse of sinne THe essence of Christianity and the foundation of all felicity providence now puts me plainly to speak of to you This last clause of the verse is an application of the former what is first borrowedly is here properly expressed if you understand not spirituall redemption 't is forgivenesse of sinne In whom we have redemption through his bloud the forgivenesse of sinne Forgivenesse notes two things and so doth sinne which shall be touched in their order Forgivenesse necessarily notes transgression and therefore are they here both joyned together forgivenesse of sinnes Sinne is transgressio legis man out of his way his action is trespasse he eats forbidden fruit his life is disallowed by truth and his person abhorred by God Man in his best state was an inferiour inferiority is minority and hath alwayes some observation upon it to speak it out to beholders the will of God was mans law and his felicity the observation of this was was the acknowledgement of his distance and yet his fellowship with God and his heaven upon earth The state of inferiority though so blessed yet disliked man would be no inferiour but equall another god Dislike of condition made transgression the soul did sinne as that expression in Ezekiel is as well as the body the eye changed its object and carried the heart with it fruit forbidden was looked upon and then pleasant to the eyes and to be desired to make one wise That heart which had the will of God perfectly written upon it and the glorious presence of God as the daily majesty of it broke out against both to the prosecution of its own private will as such an absolute being venturing its prerogative to raise or ruin his condition which made Adams transgression without similitude as the Apostle speaks who had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression Our transgression is the transgression of the law written in books his was the transgression of the law written in his heart sinnes of the latter sort the Apostle did mean here forgivenesse of transgression against the externall written word of Christ Sinne notes transgression and it notes guilt sin is an abiding thing the act dies as soon as done but the obliquity of the act lives as long as the soul is Miscarriage of the hand in making a blot that 's over presently but the blot abides as long as the paper is Now you say We see therefore your sinne remains saith Christ These words materially considered died assoon as spoken but the wickednesse of these words lives remains Where upon record in the breast of God which is beyond all record to meet the man when he goes out of this world Sinne hath two things in it obliquity and obligation transgression of truth and obligement to wrath God layes sinne to heart and keeps it there though we do not Trespasse makes debt obligation to Gods displeasure is the debt of sinne this is bloud upon the man that shed it the spots of the bloud sticking fast upon the murtherer to detect him and bring him to the gallows His bloud be upon us said they that is whatsoever it obliges to in this world or in the world to come let that fall on us Sinne in the text notes three things act obliquity obligation and forgivenesse takes off all these and I will now tell you what that is Forgivenesse notes remission which is the term in the originall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remissio remittere quasi retromittere which signifieth the sending of a thing back again from whence 't was taken the unravelling and undoing of a thing misdone the nullifying of a disallowed and unlawfull action As sinne makes void the law and nullifies it so doth forgivenesse nullifie and make void sinne obliquity and obligation not onely nullified but the very act that bare these all nullified by forgetfulnesse and therefore is forgivenesse called forgetfulnesse I will remember their iniquities no more Iniquity notes the crookednesse of the action and the incongruity of it to rule and this is as if it had never been remembred no more And not onely iniquity is blotted out but the very act that bears this obliquity therefore as you read of subduing so of destroying the work of the devil and therefore is pardon elsewhere called blotting out iniquity as a cloud a cloud is by superiour power of the heavens nullified neither form nor matter to be found not any circumstance like it to note that ever such a being was and this is our state in Christ we are remitted we are retromissi sent back again to our first condition as when we were in Paradise no more mentioned nor no more thought os rhen of Adam before his fall What we were in our own person then that we are now in the person of Christ which lived and died for us Forgivenesse notes reconciliation reconciliation notes acceptation to favour and acceptation to favour notes peace of conscience joy in the holy Ghost and fruition of glory as many blessings as heaven and earth can hold as many blessings as a God can hold which is greater then heaven and earth Sinne separates God and man are out and God-man interposeth with his life and gives up this wholly to the last drop of bloud in this quarrell and in this is justice satisfied and all truth fulfilled and Christ as a generall person designed so to act in the person of many and so hath reconciled two in one body God and man and hath slain the enmity that was between them And that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the crosse having slain enmity thereby Ephes 2.15 16. that is Jews and Gentiles one unto another and borh unto God by the expiration of such a noble life in such a cursed death as the Crosse The summe of all is this Forgivenesse of sinne is an act of God putting
notion Idlenesse maketh profanenesse profanenesse putteth all powers under the black rod to wit the devill A soul under the power of Satan and the world cannot imploy it self well Poore bond-slaves seek your freedome by Christ or you will be condemned You whose soul-powers are under no power but Christs from you is this expected that you make full imployment to your selves about the various works of God that you travell this world over and the next above it as farre as you can into visible and invisible things and if you loose your souls this way you will find them in Heaven the soul getteth his perfection by much travell Bees fill not their hives from one flower nor in one journey they are fain to go farre and near from garden to garden from field to field from flower to flower so must we from visible to invisible things to fill our souls with the sweetnesse of Christ 1. Coloss 16. For by him were all things created that are in Heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers c. INvisible things are here named by visible for our sakes thrones dominions principalities and powers are all terms used amongst us and we know what they mean some chief in place and office superiority and rule over others and so have Angels over this lower world at the appointment and pleasure of Christ therefore called chief Princes in Daniel The Prince of the kingdome of Persia withstood me one and twenty dayes but loe Michael one of the chief Princes came to help me Daniel 10.13 Greek tearms here sound the same with the Hebrew word Shinan a Shanach to second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 next to the first as these which have the prime office and command under a King are said to be next to him Hester 10.3 Mordecay was next to king Ahasuerus so Angels they are next to Christ in ruling the visible world and therefore called Shinan in the Hebrew and principalities and powers in the Greek that is chief governours next to Christ in reference to all the creation beside Tearms are here multiplied synonymically which when they are so 't is for our weaknesse there being no tearm comprehensive enough below to expresse things above Angels being so transcendent in all eminences both of nature and office Multiplication like to this you shall find in the first to the Ephesians 21. Farre above all principalities powers might dominion c. There is variety of offices amongst the Angels as appeareth by that place forecited in Daniel but this is not pointed at here in my text as I think by the variety of tearms which are used because they are all of the same signification according to the letters and point joyntly at one main thing which Christ would have all his know That the worlds are subordinate that the visible world is under the dominion of the invisible world that Christ hath an unexpressable power and strength by him at command to over-rule this world and all things in it thrones dominions c. that is transcendent powers which all the powers in this world call them what you will will not fully expresse I will demonstrate this truth unto you by some angelicall properties Angels are unexpresseable for number the visible world is populous but the invisible world much more populous they live not one upon another as we do which makes great consumption here and yet live near together much nearer then we can do who are corporeall beings The chariots of God are twenty thousand even thousands or many thousands of Angels His meaning is that God hath more for number then any generall can muster up here if he should muster up all the creatures in the world You begin to number here from tennes and twenties they do not begin to number above so low thousands and twentie thousands are Gods units there he doth but begin to number If men will go to numbring God will out-number them for his number is innumerable Ye are come to an innumerable company of Angels Hebr. 12.22 Our Saviours expression doth plainly demonstrate it that the invisible world is very populous and that God hath a mighty vast command thereof souldiery to still tumults here with ease or to do what else service he will When one of Christs company pull'd out his sword to fight for him Put it up said Christ think'st not that I can now pray to my Father and he shall presently give me more then twelve Legions of Angels and every Legion according to the Romanes was six thousand twelve six thousands and more His meaning is innumerable numbers and all these raised presently at a word sighed out Certainly they are very populous above You are here along while of raising an army of tenne thousand and when you have done it 't is longer ere you can raise such another and when you have done it you cannot spare so many to wait up one person about this poore creature and that poore creature and yet this is an ordinary thing with God When Jacob went from Laban Angels met him innumerable and he admires it This is Gods host saith he and calls it Mahanaim that is two hosts or two camps Gods host one is as bigge as two of ours ten of ours and yet these imployed every where about this and that Saint of God Certainly the invisible world is unspeakable populous Angels are unexpresseable for number Angels are unexpresseable for majesty the sight of their face is death to us A man of God came to me and his countenance was like the countenance of an Angel of God very terrible said Manoahs wife to him Judg. 13.6 it was so terrible that it would have killed her and her husband too if God had not mightily upheld they are so fearfully made to flesh and bloud He hath made his Angels spirits and his ministers a flame of fire What is more terrible then a flame of fire it conjures naturall spirits and makes them all croud in upon the heart ready to croud the heart to death 'T was the presence of an Angel that rendred the bush as a flame of fire to Moses it was a multitude of Angels which rendred mount Sinai a burning mount which was a terrible sight so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake Hebr. 12. Fire is a supreme element for dread it s an element that sits nearer God then all others do and goes forth with more of his majesty when it descends Angels have the advantage of a perfect image this advantage when it was upon man rendred him very terrible to all the creation They have not defiled their scarlet robes as God did put them on at first so they wear them still which render them full of majesty Man hath but a little of God in him and with him now and yet this holds him up and holds him out as a creature of much state but Angels
shadow of eternitie he is said to be without beginning of dayes and end of life You may call eternity life for 't is an essentiall attribute to the highest life but then you cannot measure this life by dayes and years no not by beginning nor endding for 't is without both saith the holy Ghost Without beginning of dayes or end of life Eternitie is a life of and to it self without term or dependance any denomination from any thing without it self You may denominate some things by some accidents that belong to them as long short great little but eternity is without all accident and can be called by none of these neither long nor short great nor little but what it is essentially within it self a life without all term a life everlasting a life from everlasting to everlasting and such a life did Christ live whilest on earth a life that had no term that was before all things and after all things Eternall life is consistent with humanity though not with iniquity with humane nature though not with sinfull nature The God-head dwelt bodily with us that is in our nature dwelt that life which is eternall that is of and to it self without any term dependance or denomination but from it self There is principium ordinis principium temporis a beginning of order and this is competent to Christ as the Sonne of God First the Father and then the Sonne There is a beginning of time and this is competent to Christ as the Sonne of man but principium essentiae a beginning in regard of that essence and life which is the same in all the three Persons so there is none The Father is eternall the Sonne eternall and the holy Ghost eternall without termination or denomination known to us The Sunne is appointed for times and seasons for dayes and moneths and years Gen. 1. 'T is a long met-yard to measure the Heavens which is wonderfull spacious and it doth it speedily 't is mensura motus the measure of all motion above and below but there is no measure for eternity but it self but the Sonne of righteousnesse who fully comprehendeth his own being in all the properties of it it can be put under no definition in our terms and so consequently into no humane conception and therefore when spoken of 't is very brokenly and yet as may best reach to your apprehension as calling it something before the eldest thing you can think of He is before all things As Christ is in being so in office the one giveth fitnesse to the other He is a King eternall a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck Every being hath proper action as Christ is he doth he hath eternall life and doth eternall actions he blesseth for ever curseth for ever he blotteth out sinne for ever and writeth down sinne for ever Now go write it before them in a table and note it in a book that it may be for the time to come for ever and ever that this is a rebellious people lying children that will not heare the Law of the Lord. Esay 30.8.9 If thou forsake him he will cast thee off for ever 1. Chron. 28.9 The works I do they bear witnesse of me saith Christ when he would convince them of what a being he was As things are so they act such a life generateth such a life Whosoever shall drink of the waters that I shall give him shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up to everlasting life Our dutie must be suited to Christs being and moving both which are for ever and so must our obedience be I will extoll thee my God O King and I will blesse thy Name for ever and ever Psalm 145.1 the being and moving of Christ should not be separated his Person and Office should go joynt and answerablely be observed in conversation God and King are here coupled together by the Psalmist and Christ as God and King lifted and extolled I will extoll thee O God my King Christ is eternall in both and in all other attributes he is God-King and God-Priest and God-Prophet that is of suitable action in all these Offices to the nature of an eternall life of a God-life I may so speak and therefore ought joyntly still to be considered and observed Naughty hearts suspend duty at pleasure they consider not with whom they have to do to day they will be holy to morrow they will not and in this undoe themselves for ever as falling under an eternall stroke Beings and Offices over us must be acknowledged as they are they are eternall and must be obeyed eternally Ever follow that which is good Thes 5.15 Religion if it cost you money or if it cost you bloud yet you must obey for he that liveth for ever will otherwise make you die for ever O England take heed of eternall blows if thou wave thy fidelity to Christ to wave temporall strokes thou wilt have eternall stroakes thou wilt be judged as Elies house for ever and as the Churches in the East with a perpetuall desolation and Ziim and Ochim shall dance here and thou shalt heare the voyce of the Turtle no more for ever Esay 13. Thy bending affrighteth me more then thy bleeding but I spare thee O weak England Truth should be managed according to its nature and according to its Father 't is eternall and so must we cleave to it if thou canst not receive this the Lord have mercy upon thee England I leave generalls and speak to particulars 't is an eternall God ye have to do with he is before all things and will be after all things wherefore tremble and consider your state every one what eternall things are done upon you An eternall agent hath an eternall subject to work upon your souls are everlasting and there Christ specially worketh as most suitable to him little is to be heeded what is done without in comparison of what is done within you complain of many strokes upon your states names bodies but is there not a stroke of strokes an eternall stroke upon your souls Hence forth let fruit never be on thee more Ah Lord here is an eternall God striking a stroke like himself Barren souls is not this eternall stroke strucken upon you You of this congregation let me wash my hands of your bloud ere my glasse amongst you be quite out what hath my eternall master done in your eternall souls by the eternall words which he hath spoken by me since the day I came amongst you Are not your hearts the same as sowre as bitter as cold as carnall as worldly as ever Are not these symptomes of an eternall stroke that God hath cursed you for your barrennesse under brave means which you a long while have had never to be otherwise then you are Take time to give me an answer till I come to this place again Christ being eternall eternall mercy may be
to nothing but bloud Fearfull hearts pursue your Saviour that you may do well or he will pursue you help not on the ruine of a brave kingdome will neglect of the wayes of the Lord keep up you or this tottering kingdomes Coloss 1.18 And he is the head of the body c. CHrist hath many titles and every one speaketh much but this speaketh all head noteth all the offices of Christ As a Priest Christ is head as a Prophet Christ is head as a King Christ is head of the most beautifull body the Church One word of God needeth many words of man to open it Manna lieth of a heap here and if Christ wait to be gracious we shall gather much We must begin with that which is the foundation of office fulnesse Head noteth officium basin officii office and that which maketh sufficience to office Christ is called head quòd omnia in capite sunt ferè dupla as one saith bini oculi binae aures binae nares because all things in the head are as it were double there are two eyes and two eares and two nostrils c. that is a great fulnesse of all exquisite sence and ability for organisation and under this notion I purpose first to handle this tearm Rule is a noble thing Sun-beams weaved into a crown he must be higher by the head then the rest of Israel that is called out to wear this person must be beautifull and parts double and so were Christs he is head 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 kaphal duplicavit cùm omnia in capite sunt ferè dupla the head hath two eyes two eares two nostrills doubly organised to act it self and all the rest to supply it self and all the rest so is Christ double endowed not onely for himself but for all that shall need him Leviticall unctions were by pouring and not by dropping enough was poured upon the head to run down to the feet so is Christ anointed as head that is double grace is powred into his lips Doctr. There is store in Christ for all spirituall necessity if any want an eare if any want an eye our head hath two one for himself and another for us if any want an eare Christ hath two he is our head If any man want any other abilitie Christ can furnish for he is head and anointed so Giving is made in order to receiving receptivitie is very vast in Christ Christ can receive what ever God can give the fulnesse of the God-head dwelleth in him God can do no great things in our spirits they are so little In Christ there is proportionable capacity to infinite greatnesse and there God dwelleth furnisheth and moveth as he is double and treble donation is made without end Infinite capacitie will hold infinite fulnesse Giving is made in order to an ultimate end Christ is not the ultimate end of divine donation Christ is not given unto merely to retain but he is given unto to give There is reciprocation in divine donation every thing is given unto to give back again the sea is filled with water to fill the earth with springs and showers things must have much which are to supply many Christ is anointed to anoint Ye have received an unction from the holy one Christ hath what he hath in order to abide and therefore called head Use Necessitous creatures consider your condition and where your supplies lie 't is sad to see how poore many of you are If there were no soul riches to be had your poverty were no sinne but now your poverty is sinfull misery and sinfull misery is sinking misery your poverty will judge you because there is wealth to be had that you have no oyl will shut you out quite because there is oyl to be gotten were you wise to look after it oyl enough to fill your lamps to keep you burning and shining till you go into that place where you shall shine for ever Men in want lay to heart nothing that maketh want utterly undoing thousands live and die damnable poore do I not unawares speak the condition of some of you do soul wants lie heavie upon you Yes the nature of such a condition should be considered soul-pressures are from severall apprehensions all are not kind if this be not looked to fulnesse in Christ will not be looked after though the heart be ready to die with load there is soul-pressure from conscience enlightned guilt by divine ordination looketh back upon the soul dayly howerly and the soul would look away from it and think of no sinne nor no such thing but cannot visions of wrath so haunt him and here lieth his load if any company if any musick would cheere and charm away this evill spirit that so haunteth the man he would get it what ever it did cost life though bad not at all disliked by the man but horribly disliked of God and conscience that the man cannot do what he would he is so plagued within and here lieth the burden that the man cannot keep his sinne and not that he cannot leave his sinne Let such men know that that that arrow which is shot into the heart shall abide and how able and full soever Christ be to power oyl into wounded souls he will power none into these wounds these shall gangrene and destroy the man for they are diaboli ulcera this is the burden of the damned that they cannot prosecute their will but are tormented Pressures are pittied which spring from love to Christ and hatred of sinne I am sick of love Christ is my life more then my life but I cannot enjoy him therefore I sinne sink grone and die such bleeding is staid such wounds have mercy powred into them Oppressed harts do you prize the fulnesse that is in Christ O nothing dearer then blessed are ye for dispensation to you shall be full you shall have flaggons Previous dispositions speak the mercy coming certainly the heavens glimmer in the east the sunne is certainly rising affections stirre the beloved is not farre off the way is strewed the king is coming there will be crying Hosanna and triumphing anon Panting hearts let the king come his own pace and he will get home to you by night he will sup with you and feast with you and what ever he hath to refresh and revive the soul you shall have it ere any temptation shall destroy you Christ feasting is usually at supper his full communications are ordinarily late but never too late fulnesse of mercy comes in fulnesse of time Let passions burn strong but not turbulent if any thing make your beloved make haste and come skipping to you like a young Roe it will be this Christ comes in a still voice and unto still souls that long earnestly but wait patiently for him Simeon waited for the consolation of Israel and he had his bosome full Deep waters come slowly infinite fulnesse is long a emptying it self That which works exactly must have time
Christ is spirituall he is head in the heart The kingdome of God is within you there are his Laws written and there is his throne Aarons rod and the tables of the covenant were in the inner Court and the Manna in the golden pot The command of the purse may serve a man but it doth not Christ he commands the heart My sonne give me thy heart You suit your seats so doth Christ he makes his throne in that which is nearest him to wit the spirit Christs rule is one soul bound up in another Paul bound in the Spirit and that bond bound all to good behaviour Christs rule is perpetuall Some heads may be cut off this head my text speaks of cannot Death hath slain many commanders but Christ hath slain death and him that had the power of death Satan is the executioner of Justice and therefore said to have the power of death as well as in other respects Christ hath destroyed all and hath his life in jeopardy by none he liveth and reigneth for ever he ruleth by his power for ever Psalm 66.7 He shall rule till he hath put down all rule and all power and all authority 1. Cor. 15.24 Untill he and his be one as he and his father are one till the kingdome be resigned up There be now many powers against Christ but he must reign till they be all down yet not any to help him The rule of Christ is Monarchicall there may be many lords over the body but there is but one Lord over the soul The government is upon his shoulders that is upon his alone Christ had none suffered with him and he hath none to reign with him here Christ hath trod the wine-presse alone he slew Goliah alone and is that stone alone that sunk into his brain he maketh his kingdome alone and ruleth it alone He shall build the Temple of the Lord and he shall bear the glory and shall sit and rule upon his throne Zacharie 6.13 Vse This point is irksome most hearts can bear no rule contradiction is death though it be the word of life that maketh it Office destroyed the soul destroyeth it self where Christ can be no King he will be no Jesus such as stumble at this chief corner stone are crushed by it that soul that killed Christ is killed by him his bloud is upon every heart that nullifieth him The Lord be mercifull to the souls of men do ye know what ye do when you secretly say this lust shal reign and Christ shal not reign over me You commit Adoniahs treason treason against the crown that you may put by Solomon from the throne your bloud and your life will go for this When Adam committed treason against the crown would become a God God cutteth him off presently though there were no more men in the world Justice hath its heights and depths as mercy hath treason against the King hath exquisite torture such a death as hath many deaths in it so 't is in this case spirituall treason hath double death By dying thou shalt die thou traitour against the crown of Heaven said Christ to Adam and in him to all that do as he did There is death unto death and this the punishment of every traitour against Christ This is too generall a more particular application shall be made Your souls are under command you have a spirituall head You have fathers of your flesh and you obey them you have a father of spirits and why do ye not obey him Most men look least at their hearts all the care is to order the tongue and the outward man Hypocriticall creatures you overlook the kingdome of Christ you look at the outside Christ looketh at the heart who ruleth within all is under command body and soul the soul principally and yet this principally neglected must needs be the death of all thoughts must be brought into subjection to Christ as well as words Loose hearts have their plague upon them their holinesse is painted but their judgement will be reall they have sould their souls to do wickedly and will be paid in hell The behaviour of the heart is all dethrone Christ and he will fight it out with you to the death a disloyall soul shall never have the sword depart from him not a quiet day as long as he liveth Our temporall king which ruleth in this land doth but imagine that you go about to dethrone him or take off some flowers from his crowns and you see and feel that he fights it out with you to the death and seemeth resolved not to give England a quiet day as long as he lives Make spirituall application of this ye Hypocrites ye painted toombs that come here and professe Christ and go out like Judas and betray him you dethrone Christ in your hearts you destroy the flowers of his crown the rule of the soul is the onely flower of his crown and taking away this from him he will fight it out with you to the death the sword shall never depart from your souls you shall not have a quiet day for the hypocrisie which you know Tremble Hypocrites fearfulnesse will surprise you your secret basenesse will generate a secret hell justice shall rule where truth and love cannot the rottennesse of your hearts shall have a corasite to feed upon it for ever let every one lay these things to heart and consider whether Christ be head there yea or no. Two things demonstrate the heart indeed ruled by Christ sin universally hated and truth universally loved Passions are false strength speaketh out their truth and who ruleth in the heart Some spirits are indifferent for truth or errour and hold a virtue to be hot for neither but to stand in all times of contradiction so as to keep the skinne whole Hypocrisie ruleth in this heart and not truth and this temper is the plague of this generation neither hot nor cold Cold sweats are death pangs the soul is near his end that thus liveth If God be God worship him halting between many things is nothing this speaketh the prince of darknesse yet ruling affections which break through obstacles to discharge duty speak Christ head in the heart I will not stand on qualities themselves but at what every quality maketh and this will be more plain to you to demonstrate who ruleth in your hearts Fire encounters all opposites so doth every element from a naturall instinct and so doth grace where it reigneth Sinne is the proper object of hatred and every sinne is made so where Christ indeed is head Dominion speaketh all subdued if any sinne reign Christ doth not Weak hearts must not here wrong themselves the being of sinne and the stirring of sinne which the Apostle calleth the motion of sinne do not necessarily speak the reign of sinne Many precious hearts when they feel sinne strong in them conclude it reigneth in them and censure their souls exceedingly and so make their life a hell they
please themselves in this but Christ is not pleased Sinne maketh motions that is nothing how is it harkned to This denominateth dominion or not doth every stirring make thee grone wretched man c. Dost thou carry sinne to Christ when it is about to carry thee to the Devil Lord this is the plague of my heart heal it this universally practiced speaketh the reign of Christ some of you are by pangs plaintifes against corruption and then another while defendants and plaintifes against one corruption upon some more then ordinary evil that falleth out upon it and then defendants in reference to another that taketh better to your designes this mans eyes are out and Satan hath him by the hand and the Lord knoweth whither he will lead him You that cannot so well understand this may consider the next Sinne universally hated Truth universally loved speaketh Christs dominion indeed in the soul Truth is homogeneall and is all sweet to a sweet soul the heart conquered by Christ all his Lawes are holy just and good Christs yoke is easie and burdensome things light Truth is no pressure not simply as a truth I think where the soul is sincere the pressure is if any that it cannot love enough nor obey enough things of such a noble nature One of the first things Christ taketh is love here he fortifieth till he hath taken all other parts here he mounteth cannons against all that is naught and issueth out from hence and taketh in all that is truth Love is Christs fort-Royall in the soul mighty vast and holdeth play on all sides for all truth and against all sinne A soul under the command of Christ loveth much though he can do but little loveth all truths though he can scarce practice one Christ is a King of glory into whatsoever everlasting doores he cometh every line in Christs book is glorious every hair upon Christs head glorious where he is a head Christs head is bushy and black as a Raven lines of truth are black hairs of that head that ruleth and they are all beautifull in that heart that is married to Christ The summe of all is this as Christ ruleth in the heart so is the life you may look without and see who ruleth within a through conversation speaketh a through dominion of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Having spoke to discover a few things more I would deliver to draw your hearts to come under the rule of Christ Whom Christ ruleth he defendeth power attendeth truth Christ upholdeth goings in his paths men may justle against us but Christ will uphold Christ will make his own way and lead bravely if men would but follow him this is all that Christ calls for that men will but follow him Follow me saith he often and I will make you this and make you that Christ will make his way rhrough the blond of thousands through the bloud of Towns Cities Kingdomes but he will have his own Kingdome stand Malice strikes craftily and desperately yet this head will ward as well no evil shall accomplish its end as long as Christ reigneth Why do the Heathen rage and the people imagine a vain thing The wrath of God maketh the wrath of man vain in its hottest pursuit He is dead that seeketh thy life saith the holy Ghost Kings and great men rage against us but they will burn to death with the flame that is in their breasts a bad spirit beats out it self to death The cannons which malice mounts are double loaded and recoyl and kill the cannonee●s and that is Christs way of destroying those that would destroy his Christ delighteth those which he ruleth through obedience takes Christ Christ taken expresseth it This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased Christ did throughly obey and he fed upon the sweet of it here he had meat to eat in this world which none knew of There is no straight when a man doth his duty Christ maketh enlargement in bonds joy in sorrow life in death Christ doth counterwork the world there desire is to rob us of peace and rob us of joy but it shall not be saith Christ In me you shall have peace what ever you meet with in the world Wisdomes wayes are pleasant when bloudy when men are froward Christ is kind the churlishnesse of Laban made God speak often and very sweetly to Jacob Christ smileth upon tender consciences when the world frowneth his bosome is open to give rest when the sighing spirit breatheth out it self to him What is thy request Hester will pride trample thee under foot It shall not As no time is unseasonable to shew duty to Christ so no time unseasonable for an obedient soul to find favour with him Finally whom Christ ruleth he crowneth obedience maketh losse and Christ thinketh of this and worketh it to gain in another world Duty maketh laying out and yet laying up laying out of name state strength life on earth and laying up of other guise things then these in Heaven Hence forth is laid up for me a crown c. What you lose in earth Christ layes it up in Heaven and when you come home you shall have it again with advantage your name again your estate again your life again all that you loose in obedience to your heavenly head and soveraign Christ doth nothing in order to merit but much in order to bounty If you suffer with him you shall reign with him Spiritually fight and maintain Christ a King and he will crown you Kings Troubles affright much but alas what is man Call upon flesh and bloud upon your weak hearts to think of eternity you and all that quarrell with you shall move before the King whom you obey 1. Coloss 18. and he is the head c. MAnna lies in a heap in this word as I have formerly told you Head speaks every office of Christ as King Christ is Head as Priest he is Head he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 head-priest Prince-Priest as the Greek word notes both and as the authour to the Hebrews useth the word Christ bears office to the creature but no inferiour office he doth officiate to rule the body but 't is as the chief Commander he doth officiate to save the body but 't is as chief-priest as head-priest as prince-priest as king of Salem There was a principalitie in the priest-hood under the Law there was a holy crown put upon the mitre Exod. 29.6 I will demonstrate the principality of Christs Priesthood or Priests office The designation of Christ to his Priestly office is noble we are sacrificers according to the law of a carnall commandment our ordination is from men but his from God the Counsel of State above sets out this embassadour of peace called of God an high priest Heb. 5.10 Christ had princely ordination ordination as noble as his person the Father ordain'd the Sonne He testifieth thou art a Priest c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contestatur so
Mediatour this is talked of as possible but if it were done indeed it would soon set thy soul in a better condition 'T is hard to convince men that they trust in their works though the thing speaks it self in most mens consciences Two things will discover this ruining cheat First consider what doth move you to duty some persons would never pray nor never do any holy duty were it not for mere fear they open their mouths heaven-ward now and then to stop the mouth of hell that is justice in their own conscience This man makes his holinesse his high priest his own action his intercessour to bring him to heaven which if it do then I will answer for him at the great day Observe are spring of action and nothing will more plainly speak whether you make a Jesus of action I am afraid there are souls very ignorant amongst you blind wretches so they be but doing something that is called holinesse 't is enough to them here they rest and look their souls when affrighted by a sremon by the word or the rod of God then they down upon their knees and howl and cry like the mariners in the ship that Jonah sailed in A tossed condition is the onely mother of most mens devotion tossed without or tossed within and therefore so good and yet alas all is stark naught Christ is no priest to this man no chief priest no prince-priest his own action is his prime priest because 't is trusted in Blind wretches consider what kindles your zeal your conscience will be burnt else in your offering your fire is an ignis fatuus a strong foolish fire You that get no satisfaction in this consider the next namely what upholds in duty and this will speak out whether you trust in it Sence is some souls onely relief if duty oyl not its own wheels the soul stands still they can find no sweet in prayer therefore pray no more duty will not conjure their consciences quiet and therefore they will to the alehouse and see whether carnall devils will drive out uncarnall whether one hell will swallow up another the pleasures of the flesh must take off the terrours of the spirit Ah Lord what a black priest is here used This soul is desparate the devil hath ordination to priesthood and the alehouse or whore-house must be his tabernacle to officiate in hands are laid on him suddenly and this made the last remedie to ease and quiet the soul Here is a sad condition O that I could cease preaching and weep now in the face of such a forlorn wretch Will that which dames you save you Will sinne blot out sinne Will adding to transgression plead for mercy in heaven to quiet your consciences and save your souls The devil is Abaddon a destroyer no saviour so is sinne When your souls are wounded will you give them to sinne and the devil to heal the spirit of God will finally leave you for this so it did Saul for the like practise Rebellion makes wounds and when wounds heighten rebellion God will have no more to do with that man Let the soul bleed and bleed and ordain what priest it will Christ will not bleed for him Hardned hearts think on these things the bloud of a mediatour will be charged upon you for trampling it under foot Tender hearts let me turn to you the sweet of this point is your portion Double consolation springs from the priesthood of Christ first in regard of infirmitie You would be pitied concerning your weaknesses and compassion is naturall to Christ he is a mercifull high priest and can be no other to you God hath ordained him to officiate in such a tabernacle as wherein you dwell he is in all things like to you you are in want and so was Christ he had no house you are persecuted so was Christ sinne loads you and so it did Christ A Christians condition needs compassion and Christ knows how much and 't is his work continually to lay it open above There are infirmities distinct from a wounded spirit you know the Scripture makes such a distinction Common distresses have their weight and 't is more then the best soul can bear these if it maintain not an eye to the compassion of Christ men are wolves dogs they have no bowels and the soul beats it self to death with this till it remember the bowels of Christ When good hearts have no compassion on earth they are ready to conclude they have none in heaven but you cannot injure Christ and your souls more then by such conclusions Christ lets men be mercilesse that you may look up and behold how mercifull he is and that he needs not this channell or that to convey compassion in to you Weeping eyes sight fails them oft but compassion never fails 't is mercy that a man can weep to God and do no worse when he can get no mercy from man Doth not relief strangely come in now and then Why write upon the forehead of such favours I have a mercifull and compassionate mediatour in heaven my intercessour above sent me this and he will send me more Christ hath sounding of bowels Where are the sounding of thy bowels you may heare them from heaven to earth in the most distressed condition if you listen and observe diligently in all passages about you Consolation springs from the priestly office of Christ as in regard of conditions which are distinct from a wounded spirit so in regard of a wounded spirit it self Christ is able to save to the uttermost the dolefull cry of the wounded is my sinnes will never be forgiven Silence unbelief be not tyrannicall to thy self for Christ will not sinne shall do thee no hurt nor Sathan no nor God for Christ can work him to any thing if hel but open his wounds in heaven he will so work his father that thy wounds on earth will close presently Christ is a perfect mediatour and being made perfect he became the Authour of eternall salvation unto all them that obey Hebr. 5.9 Either the wound of a Christian lies in the greatnesse of the evill which he hath done or in the fear of what he shall do against God and God against him to all which I say onely this that Christ is a perfect mediatour and being a perfect mediatour no condition can be desperate Coloss 1.18 He is the head of the body c. FRom Christ as head we have gathered many things and I trust sweet to your heart and yet there are more As King Christ is head as Priest Christ is head and of these we hove spoken as Prophet Christ is head Christ ruleth none like him Christ sacrificeth none like him Christ teacheth none like him He spake as never man spake Learned men were astonished at his doctrine Whence hath this man these things and what wisdome is this given unto him Mark 2.6 Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Prophet a Prophet indeed aboundantly
But I am afraid he will be gone If Christ do go will he leave his dear ones behind him Doth not the eagle carrie her young so doth Christ I carried you upon eagles wings Coloss 1.18 The first born from the dead THere are two first-born mentioned in this chapter the first-born of every creature verse 15. and the first-born from the dead the one respects being the other respects well-being and Christ is first in both these first in being in reference to all the creation and first in well-being in reference to the new creation the first that came forth from under the power of sinne alive which is the first-born from the dead here meant which the Apostle calls the first-born amongst many brethren elsewhere that is the first in our nature in the state of divine favour Christ broke the ice as we speak in reference to that body of death under which the state of mankind lay and so the first that came forth alive from under the guilt of sinne and the killing justice of God This time is sad so is our text it leads us to behold a world of dead men From the dead c. The term is indefinite and speaks our condition universally We are all by sinne dead without power to please God and liable to wrath for ever and Christ the first that made way out of this condition the first that broke through that displeasure which spoild us all Bodily death is sad soul-death a thousand times more sad we must walk amongst the tombes for an houre we are to rip up the dead to set out the nature of soul-death Demonst 1. Breath is gone the spirit of God is not in a dead soul Union speaks life Sathan not Christ lies in a sinners heart he is alive to sinne affection strong action that is evil action free among the dead Such light hath such motion ghosts walk in the dark wayes of death dead souls walk in Spirituall death is a soul cast out from God a soul cast out from God casts out God the word of God the operations of God a dead soul fights against life quicknings are as stabbings sermons which stirre are conjurings his eyes stare his heart quakes let Paul be gone Felix will be in hell else before the time the words of life are death to a dead soul Felix soul is in departing whilest a world of life was imparted to him nothing will keep life in a dead soul but the departing of Christ and his quickning spirit The dead deny the resurrection they would not be raised out of their grave means that are used this way are to them as conjuring from the dead gastly Christs yoke is easie wisdomes wayes are pleasant so the devils yoke is easie and his wayes are pleasant the dead are at rest in sinne they feel no pain though in the way to hell till they come there Eyes closed this also belongs to the dead in sinne The dead see nothing godlinesse is a mystery and the word of life a parable to a dead soul Confusion covers the dead reason is rebellion doing is undoing and yet the soul thinks all is well Light is darknesse sweet is bitter life is death to a dead soul Jacob is Esau the blind miscall every person and every thing O that thou hadst known in this thy day The sunne brought out of heaven and set at the doore and yet not discerned the dead see nothing in the day time day is night to the dead sunshine darknesse Christ close by yet not apprehended by the dead Christ knocks at the doore the voice though just behind or just before yet not heard our Gospel is hid though this be light more sparkling more shining then all other light Pride buds as the Prophet speaks sinne spreads God frowns hell gapes yet the dead see nothing Spirituall death 't is spirituall understanding quite lost one not able to discern divine things however externally advantaged hold a torch to the eye of the dead yet he sees nothing and if ye could hold the sunne close to the eyes of a dead man yet could he apprehend nothing the wisdome of the world is foolishnesse in it self the wisdome of the Scriptures is even also the same to a dead soul he knows nothing as he ought not the things he gathers and looks upon in wisdomes house Carcase stinking The dead smell lothsome the dead in sins do so Malignity hath got victory the whole state is corrupted all the bloud black and filthy in the dead Temptations overcome what Sathan saith is law and Gospel imaginations evil and all so and onely so evil the whole bulk and carcase of Christianitie stinking to Christ Christians The dead are all dead all filthy from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot full of sores plague-sores and all run and bloud filth is wallowed in Spirituall death is the soul under the rule of sinne sinne ruling the heart sleights truth the heart sleighting truth life is evil and yet pleaded for as good this stinks abominably in the nostrils of God Havvoth pravitates wickednesses Spirituall death is the inward parts very wickednesse the heart given to a harlot a strumpet is base and stinking Affection false and your lungs are rotten the opening of your mouth to God is as the opening of a sepulchre Spirituall death 't is a man abominable to God person action in life in death the dead stink alwayes God hates a wicked soul forever Sinne is everlasting so is justice the soul that lies in it is an abomination from generation to generation The grave and hell do not purifie the dead Spirituall death is a soul eternally lothing and lothed Stretched out coffin'd and buried this is the last property of the dead Dead in sinne are stretched out with a witnesse conscience is racked Conviction is the proper divine operation in a dead soul men under the power of sinne are under the power of wrath here spirituall death is a heart under the mere sence and guilt of wrath Worms eat the dead conscience gnaweth souls that lie in their sinnes The dead are stretched out and buried the dead bury the dead There be black bearers below and they are fetched up when wicked souls depart and thousands of them stand ready to carry the dead to their place This night they shall take away thy soul A dead soul is stretched out carried forth and buried in the night saith the Text This night they shall take away thy soul Dead souls are all buried in the night in utter darknesse The summe of all is this Spirituall death is a soul seperated from God under pollution and conviction untill condemnation Vse 'T is a time of slaughter fields cities towns dipped and dyed in bloud Dead bodies are many but dead souls are more the dead are in every house yea almost in every bed and yet no Lord have mercy at the doore Husband dead wife dead child dead and
he will be at peace with you and you should plead it and build upon it COLOSSIANS 1.20 And having made peace by the bloud of his Crosse c. CHrist had dispensation made to him in order to use God meant to doe much by him and therefore gave much to him Christ had full reception and full imployment of the one you have heard and of the other you are now to heare Christ had all fulnesse all in Heaven and all in earth to reconcile all that are in heaven and that are in earth as full as Christ was God emptied out all he drew out grace he drew out nature to the last drop of bloud that was in him And having made peace by the bloud of his Crosse c. Doct. Observe the condition of this world here God gives and God takes Every condition in this world hath mutation A man weares a Jewel in his breast twentie thirtie yeares fortie fiftie yeares and then 't is snatched away againe The spirit returnes to God that gave it Yea Christ and all that Christ hath return to God that gave him Christ lives and then dies dies and then rises Where is Christ now and all the fulnesse that he hath but in that bosome from whence he came forth Hath not Christ bled out all into the hand of the first Doner 't is a brave condition which they have above there is all giving and no taking away every ones life is everlasting and as the silver coard is so are the Jewels that are hung upon it Above all things are everlasting but here nothing is so no not Christ whilst in this world Yet a little while and the world seeth me no more This world hath and then loseth the biggest blessings seeth me no more This world is a little while rich and hath all and then a great while poore and stript of all Seeth me no more Thou shalt see an enemy in my habitation said God to Eli 1 Sam. 2.32 Christ is Gods habitation his speciall habitation yet is an enemy there Sin of man whilst Christ is here The noblest life dies Sin hath brought death over all over Christ Felicitie at first was fixed no mercy Adam had died transgression hath made mutation this is the worme that lies at the roote and gnawes and killes the greenest and pleasantest Goard that growes over us here The sin of the first Adam hath sucked the bloud of the second and not onely his bloud but the bloud of all things else That which followes in the place forecited is here applicable Thou shalt see an enemy in my habitation and in all the wealth which God shall give Israel c. Much was made in a little time and marred in lesse Sin hath subjected the whole creation to vanitie the fall of the body of Christ which was so firmly knit is the liveliest demonstration of it in the world Saul slew his thousands and David his ten thousands but sin hath slaine its millions hath wounded every thing to the heart Christ not excepted he together with all the creation groanes bleeds dies Some things are venemous and deadly within such a limited compasse the destructive propertie of sin is universall it poysons and killes all the world over it changes times seasons Kingdomes worlds hath swept one world away and 't will sweepe another world away Sin makes the Heavens waxe old and passe away yea that which is more firme then the Heavens Christs glorious and heavenly bodie which was not as the Apostle saith of this creation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sin hath its influence into the mutation of things so hath the will of God Mutation speakes affliction Will of God affliction springs not out of the dust but from the will of God God sets one thing against another and makes fighting between creature and creature between man and man unto death I set all men every one against his neighbour Zach. 8.9 10. I set all men c. That there were men against Christ and took away his life that there were such men against Christ neighbours one in his owne familie c. God set them against him Christ was delivered by the determinate counsell of God Things are set their course divine determination byasseth every state to such an end conditions can be no otherwise then they are Knowne to the Lord are all his workes from the beginning The age of a man is set the age of the world is set it shall be an hundred and twentie yeares saith God Sin provokes justice decrees this makes condition vary necessarily every thing shall die rather then divine justice this overturnes all to keepe up it selfe Angels men the world he which is greater and better then the world Christ The will of God the wisdome of God Wisdome of God hath its influence into the mutation of things here below The being of all things is such that no man may be secure Mutation moulds up time into opportunitie and duty presses hard upon a mans spirit under such a notion it did upon Christ I have but a day to worke in saith Christ things will change quickly night will come and then there will be no opportunitie to worke If Christ made use of motive from the changeablenesse of his condition fallen man may much more God is wise condition is squared to quicken dutie God would have any thing die rather then your grace Were nothing dying holy action would not be lively Man is confident if not powred out from vessel to vessel he settles upon his lees Because they have no changes therefore they feare not God saith the Psalmist Fallen man is pursued in his own way to wit with the falling of things now one thing crackes and anon another thing crackes and these all eccho to one another and speake joyntly and lowdly to the soule that all will crack anon and fall Wherefore looke about thee sinner not a thing not a person comes into thy bosome but breakes there to breake the heart You mourne at the funerall of things groanes beget groanes The bloud and death of things when that cryes and preaches to us if there be any grace if there be any nature the heart cannot but stirre Wisdome hath ordered every thing to preach it selfe to death to you plants brutes men the choicest man that ever was that ever came into the world went out of it againe in his bloud to move and so to save the world Having made peace by the bloud of his Crosse All runs into this All conditions here below have mutation Vse This point preaches submission It hath been a long time of giving and receiving now 't is a time of taking away and peoples hearts rise at it God is dishonoured much by discontentednesse Had we said nothing to prove the point that all things here below are mutable the times in which wee live are a sad demonstration of it View how like himselfe God still moves this shall be our use
made peace by the blood of his crosse The blood of the crosse notes the very strength of cruelty malice heightened by art contriving many deaths into one a death for the head a death for the foot a death for the arms a death for the sides an army of tortures divided into parties to go their severall wayes in the body and to meet all at the heart to make as many torments as members and as many hels as drops of blood A forlorn state is here sadly hinted men of parts first rejected Christ and then imploy'd all to cut his throat Apostasie generates tyrannie Doctr. The greatest cruelty is among persons hypocritically professing Christianity The death of the crosse was inflicted upon Christ by them that sate in Moses chaire Christ among his own loseth all friends honours blood betray'd and butcher'd in his own family amongst his own He came to his own but could not get off without the losse of his life Profession is a thing of course light drawes out this where it makes no inward change the heart abiding naught action will be answerable first or last what ever the tongue say Some do worse then they meant a Chieverall heart stretches when reacht further then thought of Morality is too weak to resist sin Divinity is too weak to resist sin if it reach not the soul A man is as the temptation that assaults him that hath not the sword of the Spirit in his spirit if it be to kill to kill cruelly to crucifie Christ if a mans heart be not crucified by his light he will crucifie his Father his Saviour when temptation lies this way Sin is so far from lessening that it heightens it self by notionall light accidentally though not naturally What light takes not hold of the heart the heart can take hold of it to make its own way the stronger by Light is a crutch to help Satans criples to go well Low persons get a stoole and become high light makes men otherwise weaponlesse armed strong and wise to do evill The justice of God also is in this point Conviction makes conversion or hardeneth If Christ come neer a city and cannot get open the gates and get in he throwes in granadoes and sets consciences afire when affection opens not Instructed persons have raging consciences mad men are bloody they will kill any rather then they will be whipt themselves this was the case in reference to the Jews Christ was as John a burning and shining light the light he held forth to hypocrites did burn their consciences and to quench this they cared not what they did to Christ open his own veins and take his own blood to quench his own Spirit Hypocrites will take the blood of Christ out of every member of Christ to quench the Spirit of Christ that burns within them Vse This point is very usefull and very seasonable Count not your externall felicity very secure nor your persons free from barbarism because you live amongst professors of Christianity The Word of God is a draught-net it brings up of all sorts whole Christians half Christians a man almost a Christian will quite condemn you and all out torture you and yet wash his hands as innocent of your blood Truth may do much upon the tongue yea much upon the heart of your neighbour and yet not enough to secure your skin the lives next to him Felix trembled Pilate suffered much in his spirit yet did they make Christ suffer much in his flesh and Spirit The Word is of much power upon conscience when of none at all upon affection affrights sometimes but not reforms an affrighted heart recovers it self and becomes by so much the more resolute and hardened to desperate work You that tremble under our ministry now you will recover many such pangs and be hard-hearted to our death to our crucifixion when times turn another way Let no man promise himself immunity from any misery because he lives where profession is rife The best hearts are oftentimes soonest deceived much goodnesse is ready to trust it self where there is but little and receives a wound A Lark hath but a bad eye to discern a true Sun from a false she sees a Sun in a glasse and comes down to delight in it and is ensnared Sweet spirits know this time you have a double disadvantage now You think all are good because they speak well you will be taken with a Sun in a glasse ensnared with something like a Sun Integrity goes with an open breast Hypocrisie makes advantage of this and stabs to the heart There was never more need of this caution Some out of sweetnesse others out of courage are over credulous Gedeliah lost his life this way England hath almost lost its life through over-much credulousnesse but from whence our credulity hath sprung I know not We have had fair words shews of goodnesse and would not heed reall badnesse and look to our selves 'T was told Gedeliah again and again that such sought his life so ' thath been told us again and again that such and such have been false and base and yet because they have been specious for this and that we have been incredulous and ruiningly venturous Courage degenerates into stupidity when faith builds altogether upon fancy Stupidity speaks destruction decreed all is destroy'd that should prevent destruction Understanding swallows fancies judgement builds its welfare upon these now the heart is asleep amongst Serpents Write Lord have mercy upon this soule he will certainly be stung to death ere he awake I have spoken Englands case ere I was aware Stupidity is a common glague our head is broke our wounds are many and we lay our bleeding state in the bosome of such as have served the times to fetch life in us again Ah Lord may it not make a tender heart shake to see how much we lean upon many that a little while since bended any way Where wealth and advantage abound trust may be venturous with lesse perill because much will bear out a little losse and do well but when all is almost gone then one must be double wary how one trusts in weighty matter This is our case we are at last cast upon the brink of death and ruine making our will in order to all priviledge civill and divine and yet have not that mercy from the Lord to take double heed and care whom we make executors to whom we leave the hope of posterity We look at parts honours more then at truth of grace in those that manage our affaires so there be but profession and specious pretences some court divinity to paint persons over to look fair in the eye of men and something like the Cause we manage we venture all upon them Naked profession is not to be trusted the characters of this I will give you that no man may deceive himself nor others Meer profession is vain-glorious light souls paint words actions their faculty lies this way They do
the bloud of his Crosse Hanging was used under the old Covenant onel● for some notorious crimes as blasphemie sacrificing to Devils c. and was used as a second death first life was taken away by some other punishment as stoning or the like and then the body hanged up to render the person as well as the fact abominable to all to God and man which is the meaning of that expression He that is hanged is accursed of God Deut. 21.23 his person as well as his fact is execrable greatly abhorred Thus David commanded Rechab and Barzillah to be punished with a double death for that foule fact of murthering Ishbosheth he slew them and then he hanged them up 2 Sam. 4.12 Such a one was Christ judged to be a notorious malefactor a blasphemer one that had a devill c. and therefore hanged on a tree not slaine first but tortured to death upon the Crosse which was a Romish variation from the rule as in matter so in forme and served in this case onely to vend the height of malice against innocency making not two deaths but a thousand deaths in one The bloud of the crosse speakes three things Divine wrath fully suffered Infinite Justice was offended answerable displeasure brake forth a sea of wrath in the world and Christ in the bottome of it alive and all the waves passing over him I went downe to the bottome of the mountaines saith Jonah All the waves passed over me yet hast thou brought my life the pit These expressions speake Christ he lay under mountaines seas of displeasure he bore the full weight of divine wrath he paid the utmost farthing God is not extreame to marke what 's done amisse in reference to us but he was so in reference to Christ not a sin not a circumstance of sin overlooked of all those millions of sinners and sins undertaken for but wrath weigh'd out exact in proportion to all and laid on Christ and he bore all He bore the iniquitie of us all Justice mingles her selfe with mercy when shee breakes forth upon us in the middest of Justice God remembers mercie but it did not so in reference to Christ Justice went forth in its full strength against him without a dram of mercy mixed with it He was made a curse for us Which words speake no mercy The strength of sin is the Law and the strength of the Law is the curse all the curses written in Gods book without any mercy mixed and all this did Christ beare upon the crosse The crosse was a grand curse a superlative punishment which wrapt up all the misery in it that ever justice made or any creature felt Christs cup had mixture in it but not one sweet ingredient all corroding and speaking full and pure wrath gall and vineger was given him in the pangs of death The bloud of the crosse speakes justice fully satisfied 't is called for this cause a Lutron a ransome Wee were sold under sin and the bloud of the crosse bought us paid the full demands of that power under which we were The Son of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and give his life a ransome for many The bloud of the crosse is a ransome that which gives full satisfaction to an offended God under whose wrath wee lay Wee are bought with a price this price is not gold nor silver but the precious bloud of Christ The bloud of Christ is bloud of price that this is shed is as much as if the bloud of all the creatures in the world had been shed yea more life is our choicest jewel yet all creatures lives put together and put into one bundle of life and presented to God he would not have taken it to ransome one soule no he would not have taken it as satisfactory for one sin Justice offended is infinite the price given for satisfaction must be proportionable or else no satisfaction the bloud of all the world is finite and not proportionable to infinite and therefore God shed his bloud the bloud of the crosse is the bloud of him that was God-man this made the bloud of the humane nature precious bloud as Peter speakes that is infinitely precious of worth to satisfie for all the sins that are or shall be committed in the world because all will rise but to a finite bulke let it swell as big as 't will 't is of price to satisfie for all the sinnes in the world and if there were so many more then there are therefore is that expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more repeated twice in the fifth of the Romans Not as the offence so is the free gift the price is another gets thing then that in proportion to which it is given for if through the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many The bloud of the crosse speakes guilt fully expiated actually in reference to Christ as an undertaker and so also in reference to us who are actually in him by faith He bore our sinnes in his bodie upon the crosse saith the Apostle Peter The Leviticall bloud was purging it purified the flesh as the Scripture speakes and pointed at Christs bloud which purifies flesh and spirit i takes away the wrath of God liable to both Without bloud there is no remission but with bloud there is remission full remission the bloud of the crosse takes out all spots The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 There is not a spot in Christ consider him as our undertaker as married to our nature he is all faire Thou art all faire my love c. Joshua had filthy garments but he hath washed them white in his owne bloud so have they which are in him by faith their garments are white with the bloud of the Lambe by garments is not meant the outside onely but outside and inside the whole person They that are washed are cleane every whit Christ speakes of the Spouse as the Spouse speakes of him Thou art all faire c. Vse Sinners doe you consider how usefull Christ is and make use of him The chastisement of our peace is upon him that which belongs to any mans eternall welfare is contrived upon the crosse by Christ he hath bought all into his hand with his bloud which tends to any ones good he has the eare of God the hand of God the heart of God he has Earth Heaven he hath eternall life and can give it to whom he will he hath the keyes of David the keyes of those everlasting dores he is the dore to the bosome of the Father he hath by his bloud entered within the vaile bought all under his custodie Christ is furnished to doe us good and we make no use of him Sinners tumble in their sinnes and fall asleepe and wrath cuts them off ere they dreame of a Saviour There is a
and him that loveth violence that loveth violence i that doth aime at it and make it his scope as his life and pleasure this is so wicked that it goes to the soule of God because 't is complacentiall sin Vse Motion is a tickle thing your life is rapt up in it You should not worke at randome with your owne hands you my cut your throats by your works you shall be judged or justified if they be judged wicked so shall you and be made to eate the fruit of your wayes for ever Man is a rude creature 't is too strict to worke by rule any thing done is enough Yea 't is enough well enough to be called wicked enough to judge you Carelesnesse is a graduall thing man begins to be remisse a little about his worke and then a little more at last by divine judgement upon the soule the man throwes off all care and conscience how he doth his dutie to God or man Am I my brothers keeper This spake he who a little before said as much in action to God himself by a carnall offering to him Consider seriously at what pitch and posture of remisnesse in divine action you are if you doe ill tremblingly stop there acknowledge that power within that jogges you to look better to your way if the feare of God be quite gone that you doe wickedly freely merrily thinke of that of Solomon that God will bring every worke into judgement Wicked workes have a double judgement a judgement here and hereafter All motion to well being is succeslesse much gotten comes to nothing because heaped together by wicked workes Name withers state yea strength withers judged without and judged within Conscience lights a fire with some wicked worke or other and no worke so good can be wrought as to quench it They shall feele a paine in their bellies saith the text Job 20.20 What you worke outward God makes to worke inward in the guts to torture there and make roaring You that make nothing to speake wickedly and doe wickedly God makes as light to doe justly You are undone sinners if God ingrave but one wicked worke upon your conscience this will ever be before you and then a devill will ever be behind you and between these two you will erect a gibbet and hang your selves if the Lord be not gracious and what a fatall wicked worke will this be Some heare such things as these and then goe merrily to mending their workes in all post haste and never thinke of their hearts nor Christ The hand goes after the heart doe yee look without look within too if ever you meane to mend things In sin was I borne saith David when he looked upon that bloudy wickednesse against Vriah Alas for me I brought a wicked soule with me into the world this hath brought forth this horrid and bloudy act into the world My misery lies deeper then every one is aware I shall shed bloud againe and againe I shall make Vriahs bloud touch the bloud of many other men if the Lord be not mercifull to my wicked soule Doth thy hand worke naught use it to smite thine heart that 's the first step to get it to move well O if Christ were in my heart I should worke admirable well I can doe all things through Christ yea and I can doe all well There needs many things in the soule to make action holy exact knowledge exact faith c. and Christ is all these In the darke men worke naughtily a blind soule cannot act well Action must be squared by truth but ignorant persons know not the rule Christ is light he is so in the darkest soule as a pearle he sparkles and glisters in a dungeon in what ever breast in what ever darke cell you put him Scales fell from Pauls eyes but 't was Christ in him that did it and he knew Christ presently and to doing good workes he would goe presently Lord what wilt thou have me to doe He understood much in a little while his Master his service and wanted nothing but divine mission as before he had diabolicall Lord what wilt thou have me to do A man is made very knowing with one Tutor Affection tends to make good action If I do this and that and have not love Love alone doth not well If the blinde lead the blind c. Here is a great deal of love but both fall into the ditch and drown both it and themselves Light and love together do well Christ is both he is a light of life in the soul where he is Coldnesse is the property of a stone there is no soul in this body a stone stirs not unlesse it be downward Folly talks to the grief of the wise I do not love sudden pangs some will do great matters presently and what noble works they will perform when in the company of some a little warmer then themselves and no sooner these more lively spirits departed from them but they return to their proper temper as cold as stones and doing nothing but descending downward to their place these mens ears were warmed and not their hearts The heart fired with love to Christ 't will give name state every drop of blood to Christ and these are noble works indeed Noble actions are of severall sorts that 's the noblest that offers up all to Christ that forsakes all to follow him father mother husband wife self love doth this she offers nothing but whole burnt-offerings holocausts Finally faith also bears its proper part to make a good work 'T is the highest art in the world to do a good work a man must pray with the mouth of Christ and then 't is a good prayer a man must give with the hand of Christ and then 't is good almes a man must do all that Christ sayes but then must lean only upon what Christ is to make a good action A man must do all and then undo all to make it throughly good i. deny all and account all my actions nothing my self nothing and make Christ as fully and purely all to rest on as if I had never so much as thought one good thought in all my life A man not himself is but a bad Artificer but a Christian when not himself i. when out of himself is a brave Artist then a Christian works bravely nobly heavenly indeed when quite off himself and wholly in the bosome and armes of Christ in all he doth There go many things to make up this or that secular thing good but one to make a Divine good to wit Christ there is none good but one and there is none that properly does good but one to wit Christ There is as few good Artists for the practick part of Christianity as of any calling many actions go through our hands only and never through the hands of Christ and these are all lost as wicked works All that goes out of our hands must be put by faith into the hands of
tittle of his will shall live though bad and good shoot at it Satan hath as large an army in the field now as ever was known bad men good men Satan is got into Judas yea and he is got into Peter Master drive gently drive warily save your skin and avoid the bloody cup and yet Christ will be too hard for both Christ wants wit and wants learning and many things else in the eyes of standers by and yet though so weak conquers God hath chose the foolish things of the world to confound the wise God should be honoured in his way the Psalmist breaks forth sweetly into blessing God from this ground that God out of the mouth of babes should ordain strength And so Deborah notes it in her song specially and sweetly how Jael a woman did a mans work and used a mans instrument She put her hand to the nail and her righ hand to the work-mans hammer Women are usuall very aucherd at mans work left-handed but Jael is right-handed at it she put her right hand c. and that which was a work-mans hammer is now a work-womans hammer and she blesses God and extols him that ●●us trode down strength by weaknesse and turn'd a woman into a man and a man into a beast and butchered him on the ground So should we now that children are turned into men little prentise boyes made valiant to cut off the mighty and do the great works of the kingdome and little towns and villages to waste great forces Certainly we of this Land are very much behinde hand with God in honouring and praising of him according to this admirable way of working Things that are precious you will lose none of them you save the very dust of gold The manifestations of God are the most precious things in all the world the very dust of Gods feet in every path of his we should carefully keep we should talk of all his doings how much more therefore of his wonderfull doings when he doth much with nothing and much for nothing for worse then nothing to wit sinfull man How God goes in the Sanctuary and how he goes out of the Sanctuary in the family in the city in the countrey in the army upon what weak legs and with what little toes should be all written down in the heart first and then carried up to heaven for God to reade Our father loves to have his children brought home to him often to see them and their Nurse how well they prosper together You cannot present God with a more taking sight in all the world then with one of his own actions with its speciall circumstances They were under the Law to lay their hand of the head of some offerings that was to point out Christ on whom they trusted Bring an offering to God any action of God with its speciall circumstances and you lay your hand on the head of the offering you point out Christ to all the world as he whom you trusted on in your way and as he whom you would have all else to do the like and on none else and this is very sweet to God he loves to lie high in the breast of all God hath done things in England so me thinks as to be crowned for ever in every English heart by a very noise amongst the Mulberry trees he makes the mighty run and fall Not by might nor by power but my Spirit saith God 'T is by how much God gains in your hearts that you are to measure his love to you in his works With little God doth much for you if with much you do little for him in speaking of him and living to him all will end sadly at last If nothing will set an instrument in tune you break it and burn it this makes me feare our state in the midst of hope God is very good to thee England but thou continuest very bad dead inwardly dead spiritually which according to reason one would think should make death corporally Finally this way of God should be trusted in or this God which can thus work should be firmly rested on When extremities are great and little means appearing then our hearts sink now misery is mortall but of our own making for 't is all one with God to save with few as with many Nothing kills the man so long as faith keeps alive and faith can never die if the soul well consider the point in hand that any thing is enough for God to work salvation by I am much in debt but a little oile in the cruce left God can blesse a little to rise to a subsistance and to discharge off all ingagements A little of God is enough to make one very rich very strong very wise very blessed in all conditions let misery be as much as ' twill Some are disheartened from duty because opposites before them are many visible advantages very few these soules lie insnared in their own devices and dye at a distance from God which they have set themselves to keepe their body safe with a little light and an honest heart God can enable to doe much to fight with the Prince of darknesse very learned heads and very malicious hearts Did not God inable many poore women and illiterate men to befoole the bloudy Clergie of the former ages of the world and to hold faith and a good conscience in despight of all Were not them we read of in the Hebrewes out of weaknesse made strong and the point in hand tells us that this is the way of God Resolution should carry on to dutie and then let God alone to carry on in it how weake soever you are or how strong soever your enemies are A great dore was opened to Paul and there were many enemies at it he but one and weake and yet along he would and venter upon Christ to make way through them which makes one weake one stronger then a thousand COLOSSIANS 1.22 In the body of his flesh through death IN severall verses foregoing the extremitie of Christs sufferings is mentioned and yet here againe In whom we have redemption through his bloud vers 14. This is repeated and amplified ver 20. where 't is call'd the bloud of his crosse Here is the same thing repeated but with variation of termes what before was called bloud and bloud of the crosse is here called death Christ did bleed to death for sinners Christ underwent much but it workes but little upon us Often repetition of the same thing is for energies sake that what is not laid to heart at once speaking may be at second often repetition of Christs sufferings speaks lowdly this That 't is a hard thing to be kindly and throughly affected with what others undergoe for us Doctr. Jacob underwent much for Laban so did David for Nabal heat and cold but both coldly remembred such cold carnall wretches they were both Earth hath no sense this is the state of our soules naturally Can a stone
sinful mirth into mourning God will turne it into howling God loves not revenge yet what he is exemplarily eminent in he cannot endure that men should altogether slight God layes to heart all that we undergo for him in all our afflictions he is afflicted so should we lay to heart all that he and his undergoe for us 'T is the grand medium of conversion this that I touch What will melt the heart if that love which bleeds to death for us be forgotten Sinners Christ hath suffered the wrath of God for you he left more wealth then this world is worth and became poore he left a mansion in glory and took a body of flesh a house of clay and in this house dyed and left you all that you might live for ever in the fruition of all Is all this nothing Will you regard your sinnes more then this Christ Shall your lust live though Christ have dyed The death and bloud of the Lord Jesus will be upon you Can you looke upon pierced Christ and not mourne He will shew you your owne hardnesse of heart in a like carriage he will looke upon the wounds and torments of your consciences in the houre when you make your will and not be affected When mercy cannot bring forth justice becomes the mid-wife and this cryes save the womb save the womb let what will become of the childe if this childe die and bee puld to pieces between the legges yet another may live if the womb be preserved God much eyes the meanes he uses to doe us good he will preserve the honour of these though thousands die which trample upon them What Christ hath suffered for us shall gain and save thousands though it destroy you though you lay not Christs love to heart yet Christ will have a great many to do it When I am lifted up I will draw all men unto me Christ makes means and then blesseth them to their end men eye not this and so die without the benefit of them What Christ hath suffered for us he hath promised so to order as to make it drawing and winning of us that his lifting up upon the crosse and from thence to heaven shall lift up our souls from sins and from thence to him and to the place where he is These words should be believingly urged and then the work of our welfare would go on an end As mercy stoops lowest it takes up us for God to make means and blesse them is mercy stooping very low to take up them that are quite down Doct. There is one point more I would willingly touch ere I part from these words and that is The mortality of all earthly and fleshly things Death passeth over all now The body of beasts flesh the body of our flesh the body of Christs flesh dies In the body of his flesh through death Some worms are small to look upon and yet will penitrate and consume an Oak Sin is such a thing small in the account of men and yet gnawes asunder the strongest sinews the body of Christ transcendently compacted not of this creation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 9.11 as the Author to the Hebrews speaks and yet sin dissolves moulders this stately fabrick From the greater to the lesse we may argue safely If the body of Christ cannot live in respect of sin surely no body else can The body of Christ would have born more then all the world and not have cracked Vanity of vanity all is vanity the body of Christ dies the body of all other things die which stand further off from sin then the body of Christ and the body of man do The body of Christ and the body of man stand in a more immediate relation to sin and the fruit thereof then other things of the creation do and yet sin eats out every body of the creation those that stand furthest off from it the whole world waxeth old waxeth languishing ' thath made its will 't will die in a moment the glory of this world passeth away the forehead of this world to wit the heavens will become wrinckled and wax old Wisdome will have no heaven here Death shall gnaw the greenest goard the strongest mans body and every body that bears respect to it We and our best friends die your fathers where are they My father my father the chariots and horsemen of Israel c. and yet this would not hold him his dearest friend in the world must be gone It shadowed out Christ he is our Father our Father twice as good and as dear as all other friends that is he is the dearest friend man hath in all the earth and yet a fiery chariot fetches up this Father from his children here Christ goes away I go away and yee shall see me no more So said Paul to his spirituall children and it did cut to the quick Justice doth retaliate We killed God in all and so doth he us we did run away from God and left him solitary and he makes every thing run from us husband wife children one dearer then all Christ and leaves us alone The spirit of the Angels which fell was in us when we fell pride and malice would have puld down God we shew'd our will but could not accomplish it upon God but he hath upon us not we nor any thing in our similitude can live if God see but our shadow and Image he strikes at it as we did at his Christ fared the worse for us he dyes for having to do with us Vse What God means in all this should be inquired into What every carnall thing dying and yet carnall affection alive There is demonstration enough without of the mortality of all things but no demonstration of this within us our inward thoughts are that our habitation shall indure for ever England all over is a demonstration of this point that all things are bleeding and dying Christ had rather that a thousand thousands of bodies should die then one soul one thing is aimed at that all things die to wit the death of your lust the life of faith and this is your lesson from this Doctrine Can you receive it Every thing shall live for ever when you can love all in Christ and admire all in Christ and make an advantage of love by all to Christ All the ruines you behold in this kingdom or in the whole creation all the seas of blood wherin the world is at this day are but to wash our hearts that 's very foul which must have all without even Christ himself turn'd into blood to cleanse it 'T is long ere carnall affections be slain every thing must die and its blood be thrown in the face of conscience ere the man will spit out what offends God The stability of all about you bears much upon the rectitude of your affection Take heed how you love husband wife children you may hug them to death with a sinfull love You complain of Cavalleers for
brave spirits in his bloud and trades them out all for Christ and Heaven in long voyages to come home rich he hath no hand but to good but to this he hath hand and heart and nothing can fetch off either Then answered I thus and said The God of Heaven will prosper us therefore we his servants will arise and build but you have no portion nor right nor memoriall in Jerusalem Nehem. 2.20 A Christian indeed magnanimous hath truth in one hand and life in the other and this is his Motto Take one take both This is his Motto every where in libertie in bonds and this he speakes and smiles now I joy Vse Wee are put by providence to speake upon a seasonable subject times call us to move bravely every one in our place Furie is abroad and furie is at home nothing but a brave spirit can now kisse Christ and smile in the face of both Greatnesse will over-bear and jostle a weak spirit though otherwise good as a childe from his father and make him cry and take on dolefully for want of that countenance which did smile upon him Power generates pride unlesse it sit in a very sweet breast the effects of this are bloudie and not a man can withstand to any purpose but he that is steele to the backe 'T is said of Vzziah that when he was strong that is externally strong that he was lifted up to his destruction This Prince after his great victories fell upon the worship of God and carried it by his owne greatnesse as he pleased which is a plague proper to pride to be spiritually and desperately wanton to creepe into the Temple and to confront God as highly as may be And the Text tells us of Azariah and fourscore brave Priests of the Lord that withstood him saying It pertaines not to thee O King to burne incense but to the Priests of the Lord which are consecrated goe out of the Sanctuarie thou hast trespassed and it shall not be for thine honour There were fourscore of these magnanimous spirits then would there were fourscore thousand of these now in the Christian world they are much needed to withstand violence against the worship of God against the priviledge of Ministers and people Blindnesse hardens men fooles will as soone strike with a club as with a twig as soone stab with a knife as with a straw every one that bowes not downe to the Idol of their fancie this is stoutnesse to destruction as the forecited Scripture speakes and 't is pitie it should destroy any but such as are guiltie of it and yet it will if not withstood What a dolefull condition would all have come to if those few brave spirits had given way to all that the King in the blindnesse of his heart would have done A Christian indeed magnanimous is he that stands in the gap in a time of wrath and none else this man is a Phinebat an Azariah one that stayes the plague the sword the wrath of God that eates upon us and would eate us out all unlesse some such brave spirits appeared abroad and at home in the field and in the Citie You can doe no service to quench the fire of jealousie that now burnes unlesse you get more fire in your hearts Life and death is in the ballance and the scales stand which scale will weigh downe we cannot tell onely this I can say this grace of Magnanimitie put in that scale where the life of the Kingdome lies would turne the beame presently and life should weigh downe death peace and prosperitie ruine and desolation 'T is pitie that brave spirits are no more smil'd upon some such buddings of hope are now and then but they are blasted againe men are alive a while and then dead Persons which are in such a condition that are pretie well one while and at deaths-dore againe another while men have still feare lest some vitals wast in such a state which is not yet discerned England if death should cure all thy diseases at last for want of a little life what a dolefull giving up the ghost will this be Whither wouldest thou carry thy cold off-spring that they might grow more warme To such and such plantations beyond the Seas Between thee and them is a great gulph and it may be they that would goe to them shall not they that thou wouldest should come to thee will not they that stay in the Citie famine may devoure they that goe to flie out a sword may cut off A Serpent a Lion or a Beare sword famine or plague may divide all between them within dore and without Surely England thy giving up if ever that sad day come which the Lord grant it may not will be with such ghastly groanes with such hideous shreechings with such tabering of breasts and tearing of haire with such weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth as scarce ever any eye saw or eare heard since wrath and desolation began among the Gentiles Wherefore call upon thy selfe O England and call upon thy Physicians for Christian magnanimitie tell them what death thou fearest and what grudgings of it thou feelest alreadie in severall parts Where there be palsies and such diseases which are by cold which be numbe and dead the parts there rubbing is good to fetch heat and agilitie Rub one another frequently exhort one another daily strike fire in one anothers breasts admonish reprove but doe all in love Passion generates passion wild-fire is not magnanimitie this burnes all it doth not save all Magnanimitie springs out of love 't is a stout spirit candid with the sweetnesse of Christ and made a Lamb and a Lion as Christ was a Lamb when among sheep to be led by them but a Lion when among Beares and Wolves to awe and lead them Magnanimitie is the perfectest temper of Christ in all this world 't is a Lion lying downe with a Lamb and doing it no hurt and a Lamb playing upon the hole of an Aspe and receiving no hurt it is one that can doe no hurt but can and will doe much good 't is one that fels himselfe like Christ at a very low rate to doe good to all COLOSSIANS 1.24 Who now rejoyce in my sufferings for you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 SUfferings both externall and internall the word imports such stripes upon the flesh as did affect and afflict the spirit that did make passiones animi soule-passions There is such an affinite between the body and the soule that it is hard to separate them in suffering yet a divine hand of God who is father of spirit and flesh makes burthens pinch more upon the one then upon the other as pleaseth him Pauls cup was eminently proportion'd to Christs 't was to fill up that which was behind of the afflictions of Christ and Christs cup had those ingredients which made his soule heavie to death they did deeply affect not onely his flesh but his spirit Body and soule were
't was to be in strait for his life so unfatherly was his father and therefore he proves a brave spirit for this noble service to save the life of David to raise him and Christ in him to his throne he was all heart and soule in it and God was with him God is doubly present with a man which he hath much exercised which is an incomparable advantage to all divine usefulnesse No man can speake so feelingly so healingly as he that hath much of God speaking in and with him this is the man of a thousand that can speake words in season like apples of gold in pictures of silver that can lend legges to the lame eyes to the blind that can comfort those which are cast downe with the same comforts wherewith he hath been comforted from the Lord. COLOS. 1.24 And fill up that which is behind c. THe afflictions of Christ are twofold in his person in those which hee personates the former are accomplished the latter are yet accomplishing Christs will and himselfe are one such as strike his will any part of this or any lover of this would strike Christ himselfe if hee were now present Christ is plaine hee cals actions as intended not as pretended The second Adam names things as the first when he stood according to their nature what is against truth is in the nature of it against Christ who ever be the professor of it and therefore so accounted yea and so openly called And fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ And fill up the word in the originall is compounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and full of emphasis it signifies re-action or re-passion the doing or suffering of a thing againe to doe over that which some others have done already readimplere as one translates The measure of suffering that tendeth to satisfie for offence and ransome man from the wrath of God Christ hath fild up to the brim the cup was big but Christ poured out blood enough to fill it one would have hoped that all suffering worke belonging to a Christian had been done then No 't is not saith the Apostle I doe iterum implere rursus implere fill up againe the sufferings of Christ Malice lives still Christ is crucified afresh in his members Christ doth bleed in my veines afresh saith the Apostle if there were any drop of blood left behind when he bled upon the crosse now t is fetcht out through my sides How implacable is the fury of man the fury of God was stopped when Christ had bled to death and 't was not his will that ever Christ should die any more or that any one should die more for Christs sake but yet the fury of man lives and that would have Christ die over and over iterum iterumque againe and againe 't would have every house pulled downe and burned that Christ gets into 't would crucifie his image his picture 't would make him bleed as long as this world lasts yea to all eternity therefore doe wicked spirits in hell blaspheme and teare his name a worke which they will never leave though it continually adde to their plague and yet these doe but shew the nature of all malicious men on earth which are everlasting blood-hounds which spend perpetually upon the sent of Christians upon the sent of Christ in any earth Malice should be looked upon as t is an implacable thing and men in whose breast it is should be looked upon as they are fire-shovels fetched from hell to carry everlasting fire from house to house from place to place where ever Christ is to burne him out of this world quite to burne him againe and againe till there be none of him left not a finger not a toe not a haire We are much given to wondring we know the reason of things so little to see a man drinke blood and never be weary of drinking such a fulsome drinke t is strange to us yet t is the property of that fire that burnes in the breast of the man to make an unquenchable thirst after this red Wine t is a damnable disease that the man cannot helpe nor no man upon earth for him every good body must keepe out of his way as well as they can I know no other remedy the man will set abroach any ones blood Pauls Christs any one that lookes like either Christians have a blessed keeper or else how rare would they be in the world Blesse God that there is a good man left in the land at this day in the middest of so many blood-thirsty O how much are good hearts put to it every where by this generation Mourne over both persecutors and persecuted they are both in hell fire Ex 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word may signifie to suffer for another pro-implere to fill up in anothers stead according to his appointment Christ is gone out of this world and he hath left Christians in his stead and all his prime trust and businesse with them to doe it for him to accomplish his will to walke in his steps and to take in good part what befals them in this way Christs businesse left to Christians is comprised in that expression of bearing his crosse he did beare his crosse himselfe when he was on earth now he hath left it to his people to beare it for him to tread in his paths and take such lodging and fare at night as fals out When Christ died he left but one child to keepe for him but that one a precious child to wit Truth and this so to keepe as never to let it die what ever die I can doe nothing against the truth but for it I can doe any thing suffer any thing that truth may live I can die I can drinke off a cup deadly full deadly big which will hold all my blood to fill it This is our president in the Text. I fill into the same cup that Christ did saith Paul and the same liquor red Wine the blood of a brave Grape the blood of an upright heart and this for his sake At what heighth we are to be for Christ is considerable at the same heighth that Christ was at for us we are to rise to the losse of estate honour life Neither count I my life deare Life is the prime Jewell of nature t is the union of two great estates body and soule t is of more worth than rayment i. then all outward things and yet this of no worth and of no price in order to truth I account not my life deare I am about the worke which Christ was filling a cup that is deadly big that will hold my life-blood to fill it and yet it is nothing to me no griefe if it be any matter to me it is matter of joy Now I joy to fill up that which is behind c. Thinke how brave you should be and how neere you are
to plume and prey upon whom they will It doth as the Devill where he raignes there is not a power in Hell but hee makes a fleshhooke on 't to teare and torture and fulfill his bloudy will so not a faculty not an office not any vires within or without but by oppression are all made tormenta killing instruments and to know none no not one like himself a man no not one like God but chaine him and rack him Thy Princes are roaring Lyons thy Iudges are evening Wolfes they know not the bones till the morrow Zephany 3.3 Here are all powers externall and internall combined and seconding one another Vse Matter of caution and matter of admiration may spring from this point Oppression hath beene opened and now wee have seene the nature of it wee should all take heede of so foule an evill especially men of place 't is an Aspe a Frogge that useth to craule up into Princes and great mens bed-chambers where it may lie softest and warmest and be best accommodated Cruelty is nothing without strong instruments it can doe nothing with strawes but vex and burne it selfe The Devill is a great Courtier hee gets among great men and there hee can shew himselfe as hee is play the Devill and make great earthquakes rend and teare whom hee will righteous and wicked what hee will body or soule at what compasse hee will Townes Cities Countries set whole Kingdomes a groaning bleeding dying Parts commend themselves to place place swells the soule too big for any due compass unlesse Christ bee gracious oppression is the first borne of pride in place after it comes to the Crowne 't is that child that will inherit all the outrage of greatnesse They are great mountaines that do crush Who art thou O great Mountaine before Zorubbabell great spirits and parts in great place The Devills children should be all strangled in the wombe or else they prove very long lived we should not have had so many bloudy oppressors at this day if pride had seasonably been bewailed As your naturalia so your praeternaturalia get such nests as to maturate themselves oppression maturates it selfe in high places there it can do all it will strike full blowes home blowes Oppression maturated is the crying'st provocation in a Land and brings downe the cryingest judgement Civill war a body tearing out its owne bowells see Zachary 11.5.6 Thus saith the Lord feede the flocke of slaughter whose possessors sl●y them and hold themselves not guilty and they that sell them say Blessed be the Lord for I am rich and their owne Shepheards pitty them not therefore I will no m●●● pitty the inhabitants of the Land saith the Lord but loe I will deliver the men every one into his Neighbours hand and into the hand of his King and they shall smite the Land and out of their hand I will not deliver them which words meane civill war as the learned interpret which is the greatest judgement of all externall judgement doubly torturing for brother to sheath his sword like those Levites in the bowells of a Brother Father washing hands in the bloud of children and children washing hands in the heart-blood of Fathers wee may guesse our sinne by our punishment oppression set us together by the eares oppression corporall oppression spirituall our possessors to wit Prince Peeres Prelates did slay us as the Prophet speakes body and soule and held not themselves guilty Their steps trod in wrath will continue till it end us all and God will not deliver Matter of admiration also issueth from this point Let 's admire two things the badnesse of men and the goodnesse of God When wee see any praeternatural's any thing that nature did not properly intend any monstrosity in a thing if it bee but in a finger in a hand in a toe much more if in any maine part which maims the shape and almost varies the species wee wonder much as to see a Dove with a Bores tuskes to see a Lambe with a Serpents taile to see a man with a mouth and a throate as wide as a Sepulcher and a Tongue in it a fire of Hell and the spittle under the roofe of this Tongue the poyson of Aspes c. Wee wonder at what nature did never intend should wee not much more wonder at those monsters which grace did never intend such grace as workes toward man We meet a thousand thousand such monsters fore-mentioned in a spirituall sense and never make one thought stand still a jot divinely to consider it Spirituall monstrosity should affect us much to behold so noble a creature as man and his noblest part to wit his heart turned into a beast all his inside like a Wolfe or a Beare and onely his outside and scarce that like a man The worse some are the better others should be to make it up that God may not be altogether a loser in the greatest and costliest workes of his hands A tender heart will admire sigh and bleed over a hard O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets here is a patterne worth the following Christ beholds a company of bloudy tyrants stony-hearted hypocrites and he admires sighs mournes over them 't were but the discharge of our duty to mourne over this malicious bloudy Age wherein we live O England England thou that hast opprest to death many brave Prophets and worthies of other rankes sent unto thee When others kill and crucify Christ we should sit like Mary and weep over them Wee should admire the badnesse of men and the goodnesse of Christ Creatures in our own skin and of our own forme and yet Wolfes and Lyons how great is the power and goodnesse of Christ to preserve his people amongst such These wild beasts differ in their property from all more boundlesse more restlesse every way the more should that power be admired that keepes us Other creatures of prey keepe their place to wit the desert where no noble creatures trade is there range they keepe their time the night is their day Thou makest darknesse and it is night wherein the beasts of the forrests doe creepe forth the Sun ariseth they gather themselves together and lay them downe in Dens Psal 14.22 They are wild creatures and they keepe a wild place and a wild time when and where they may finde prey proper without injury to more noble creatures These wild Beasts before mentioned goe forth at all times when the Sun is downe and when the Sun is up into all places into Cities into Houses up to mens bed-chambers and pull persons out of their beds and sucke their bloud O the providence of God that keepes thee London from these Beasts of prey that hath saved thee and thy little ones from cruel oppressors so long This providence is lengthned and the mercy is by so much the more strengthned upon you the more to be laid to heart How often have these beasts of prey in great droves and with open mouthes
of the best men upon earth This makes longing and panting for full redemption which is the property of the Church of God upon earth 't would be in Heaven There is a voice in Rama and t is all over Rama mourning and lamentation Rachel weeping bitterly if you aske her why She will tell you I have many sonnes and daughters sweet children all and yet not one but very hardly handled sore shot at by deadly archers many are slaine and are not and the rest abused and vilified as the off-scouring of all things torne with Lyons and little wormes gnawing and eating up the carcasse pulled downe by great ones and when down trod to death by base ones Rachel hath not a child but sits like the Shunamites in her armes sighing groaning and mourning because of one wound or other within or without and I cannot remedy any of this saith she and this cuts me to the heart my children are slaine in mine armes slaine with the breast at their mouthes yea ripped out of my wombe Would my children were all in my husbands armes saith Rachel then they would all be safe would he would send and fetch me and all mine out of this plundered countrey into his owne city then all would be well soule well yea and body well The world heares little of this noise t is so inward but t is the panting and beating of every good mans pulse and bowels in a degree We which have the first fruits of the Spirit where these fruits lie is the noise we groane within our selves waiting for the adoption For the adoption This they had already The meaning therefore is for the full fruition of what they were adopted to which is explained in the following words to wit the redemption of our body The soule goes first to the society above the body last all is perfect when this comes therefore is this onely mentioned which notes that the militant Church groanes and pants after a perfect state every one sighing and bleeding inwardly inwardly earnestly willing rather to be absent from the body and present with the Lord 2 Corinth 5.8 This was shadowed by Davids ascent to Mount Oliver And David went up by the ascent of Mount Oliver and wept as he went up and be had his head covered and he went bare-foot and all the people that was with him covered every man his head and they went up weeping as they went up 2 Sam. 15.30 Christ which David typified and all his followers here below are going up sighing and panting and mourning to that mount above Vse We are come to speake of a Militant church in a Militant time surely our course is steered by a supreame hand for speciall good to some of you Christians lay to heart the state of that body whereof yet you are can you Jerusalem which is above above the world and above Satan is the mother of us all that body which Christ hath upon earth groaned travelled with you and brought you forth this wombe which bare you those pappes which gave you sucke are now wounded with a thousand wounds doe you see them The haire of your mother is torne her bowels ript up her blood runnes in every high way O all ye that passe by have ye observed it Dogs licke the blood of Jezabel yea the blood of Rachel the Sword of the wicked sheds the blood of many a gallant man England a great Parke full of deare soules the pales now plucked up the game of Christ shot at by every base person many a brave Hart falne onely a few Fawnes left women and children crying and ringing their hands for their husbands and fathers doe you heare them Mother where is my Father when will he come home Sir where is my husband when will he come home And a lasse for them he is at home already at his long home Heathens rage on one hand mothers children angry on t'other hand the Boare is abroad the Fox at home one puls off the tender Grapes t'other squeeses and suckes their blood the worke is one the tailes of all the wilde beasts in the Land are together though their faces seem to looke severall waies one shoots at the body t'other at the soule both poison their Bullets the venome whereof feeds that Divine justice which now fights against us all as if it were resolved to consume us all for ought any one amongst us all can yet see Is not the Church of Christ in England militant Men Devils yea a God fights against it for the pollution in it Christians you are witnesses of all this what doe you in secret doe you mourne for the tearings and rendings of Joseph can you doe it doe you move according to your condition Military fight with prayers and teares doe you finde any aptnesse this way I aske this because displeasure sinkes deepe sometimes and drinkes up all Divine moisture in the soule the wombe of prayers and teares closes withers and dries up God secretly saith pray not for this people and then good hearts pumpe and pompe and nothing will come Abraham had some such secret checke surely when hee broke off struggling so strangely for Sodome when God seemed to be upon such an yeelding veine secret providence certainely was in it that he might not yeeld so farre as to null peremptory resolution which was to make an end of a generation whose iniquity was full God felt Abraham holding him and cries let me alone but Abraham did not feels God holding him nor cried let me alone Lord let me plucke a brand out of the fire let me quench Hell fire once with my teares Christians I beseech you observe your spirits the welfare of all is in this point I am now upon and not in your great Armies abroad which you so much looke upon if you feele God tying up and straitning your soules in regard of a Sodome which you struggle for a Land that looks as if it were ripe in all wickednesse and farre worse in some circumstances then ever Sodome was cry Lord let me alone let me draw buckets let me make my Study my closet a Bokim a place of teares let me quench a fire that hath almost burnt a brave Kingdome to ashes let me save a Nation a populous Nation thousands and ten thousands thousands of thousands from swimming to hell in their owne blood If I shall not pray out yet let me chatter so in thine eares that fifteene yeeres may be added to the life of three Kingdomes to set themselves in order to goe hence to be pilgrims and wanderers to any other part where thou wilt Thus doe your duty and then submit We should be affected with our condition but not cast down A state of hardship generates discontent and now Satan hath set Heaven and Earth on fire A man may have a Heaven in his soule when a Hell in his body if submissive still to the will of God but when fightings without make fightings within repinings
sang the song of Moses and the song of the Lambe The head triumphs and then all the members Christ triumphs in himselfe and all that glorious company triumph in him Coloss 2.15 And having spoiled Principalities and Powers hee made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in himselfe so is the originall and so 't is translated in your margents Christ viewes all the slaine death and him that had the power of death the old Serpent with all his seed and triumphs in himselfe all the rest of that royall company triumph in him as the jaw-bone stone and sling with and by which they have slaine Goliah and all the Philistians heapes upon heapes Salvation to our God which sits upon the throne and unto the Lambe and all that stood about the throne Angells and Elders c. said Amen blessing and glory and wisdome thanksgiving honour and power and might bee to our God for ever T is a heavenly practice this and spoken of the Church Militant as imitating the Church triumphant and as guided by one and the same Spirit indeavouring to do the Will of God on earth as the tother part of the same company doe in Heaven You know the state of the new Church is shadowed out in the booke of the Revelation by Heaven and all the lineaments of it it comes so neere to it The very first draught and modell Revelation 4. J was in the spirit and a throne was set in Heaven c. As Moses was made to come up to the top of the Mount neere Heaven and God saith the Text talked with him from Heaven to shew him the pattern of the first house so Iohn was taken up into Heaven and God talked with him in Heaven and shaped his patterne of this last house and the affaires of it by Heaven as that which should come neerer to it then any yet had done But this by the way Vse I have opened to you now a brave state but all will not nay all cannot come to it I wish they could Corruption cannot inherit incorruption if it be true corporally it is true spiritually if the uncleane bodies of the Saints cannot come to Heaven surely the uncleane soules of the wicked cannot Satan hath a synagogue too a great one here and a greater below and a great many will go thither few will believe this and this is the seale of death The Congregation above is holy very holy but this is not heeded here but it must or no man shall see God nor that glorious society which is with him Flesh and bloud cannot inherit the Kingdome of God and yet the Lord be mercifull unto the soules of men this is the generall rule by which men walke Above flesh for our bloud we cannot move 't will sink Persons Kingdomes 't will make the society below wonderful big What a Congregation hath the Devill in his house but not one at rest all at worke hard tearing rending and rosting one another and yet have no meate nor drink but the flames and fire in which they worke Have any of you a mind to be of this Congregation No why then doe you pursue your flesh your will sense selfe sinne this sinne that sinne any sinne that will serve your turne in these bad times The temptation of this time is terrible not a soule almost but undone by it Heaven and earth shake Church and State crack the Grave and Hell gape the glory above forgotten the dread of these crush parts brave parts yea that which hath gone for brave grace to nothing to worse then nothing many Christians like Cackarells change colour white all the winter like those fish and spotted at spring what with the bloud and filth of bodies and the bloud and filth of soules ah Lord what a stinke is there in all societies all this Land over and yet no body holds his Nose all is sweet as long as any course may be stumbled on to rise and be but to flea the skinnes of the dead to go fine will this bravery be admitted above Where do you finde a soule that longs and pants because of all these things O that I were of that glorious Church above That I did know to what Officer of that society to speake to helpe me in there If any so inquire I will tell thee go to Christ he is the doore by which all enter hee will serve thee as he was served himselfe he was Baptized and the Heavens opened Christ will Baptize thee with the holy Ghost and with fire and then the Heavens which containe him till the restitution of all things shall open and receive thee Thou must be contented to be Baptized with Christs Baptisme his second Baptisme after both there was a Heaven opening At his first Baptisme the Heavens opened but did not take him up and take him in at his second Baptisme they opened againe and then they received him and containe him Thou must be contented to be Baptized with Christs last Baptisme if neede be to leave all as hee did a very Heaven if thou hast it as Christ did riches honours pleasures blood life to follow after Christ After such a Baptisme the Heavens will open also and take in thee into that glorious society above Christ surely is prized but little therefore his Congregation is so small below and above The sinne of the Jewes is become the sinne of the Gentiles my heart trembles to thinke what will become of us What ever wee talke of Christ and boast of his Temple above and below we bid basely for all Though Christ will take nothing for any thing he hath yet you must come to him with all that ever you have in your hand and lay it at his feete thinke nothing too good for him so you may but have him here is now state wife children yea here is body soule selfe doe with all what thou wilt drowne all burne all if thou wilt onely rake the ashes when thou hast done and finde my soule that Jewell of Jewels which cannot be burnt any where but in thy displeasure and put it in thy bosome for ever This is a Gospell frame of heart and miscaries not all the Jewels which Christ weares in his bosome above are raked out of ashes here below out of meere nothings His beloved is one but one a Phenix and it comes out of ashes learne to lay all in the dust if you would have Christ take up all and lay it in his bosome All that he takes up in his bosome here he sets downe in glory above to triumph with that glorious company there COLOS. 1.25 Whereof I am made a Minister DIaconos a deacon the word is a title given to all sorts of Officers almost in Gods new-house as signifyng that which is behoofull to them all especially them that dispence soule vitall things diligence promptnesse speedinesse Soule dangers are all desperate what 's done for reliefe in this
sizes some bigger some lesser two talents five talents ten talents concerning the glory above t is disputed whether it be graduall but concerning the glory of a Christian here it is a resolved thing that it is graduall there is migration in our glory here going from glory to glory from strength to strength Milke and strong meate babes and full age crums and Flagons love and abounding in love Our Kingdome comes our Kingdome here is a comming Kingdome Mercies are all shaped by Love it is the property of Divine Love to higthen dispensation still till shee hath lifted the soule beloved fully into her bosome Grace t is in the beginning little a grai●● of Mustardseed in progresse great in the end all to wit Heaven which is all now doth Love fully possesse her beloved and now she rests and not till now beyond Heaven there is no gradation no step higher Love hath got her full end which is the full possession of what shee makes out to and now rests Love shapes Mercy so as fully to bring about her end and that is to bring the soule shee loves into her bosome to the full fruition of her selfe of whatsoever shee is you may see this demonstrated in Christ the Father loves him and he gives him mercies greater and greater and never leaves till hee hath lifted him fully into his bosome to his right hand i the fruition of all John 5.20 The Father loveth the Sonne and showeth him all things that himselfe doth and hee will show him greater workes then these that yee may marveile My Father hath given me great things already but hee will give me greater for he loves mee and this will drop and drop till it hath dropped out all it will never rest till it hath brought mee into his bosome The love of God carries the same property and proportion to a Christian and this makes the grouth of a Christian necessarily as the grouth of a Crocadile of which it is written that hee groweth alwayes so doth a Christian till hee bee transplanted into Heaven Vse T is trying this point what truth is in you Your graces are not so great but you may have greater if this be not regarded as you taste not grace what tang it has so you understand not grace what order t 'as Spirituall fulnesse speakes a deluded heart hee that hath goods enough enough for many yeares enough to make his felicity for ever and therefore rests is a foole hee knowes not his state what hee has nor what he wants Blinde men 't is observed do not dreame so much as men that see because fancy in the day hath not so much nor so lively impressive imployment to set it at worke in the night but blinde soules dreame more a great deale then they that see This is one of their dreames among many I have enough grace to bring me to Heaven I hope and I care for no more I love not to be pragmaticall Some make a great deale of stir and run mad t is extreame naught this I like it not Answ this is one extreame but there are two extreames and vertue in the midst of them dost thou eye t'other extreame Some die with heate others die with cold Thou seest others too hot may'st not thou be too cold grace in the true knowledge of it is inviting 't is like some Liquids drinking makes thirstinesse and longing for more drinke every degree of grace possessed makes discovery of greater degrees not possessed One Chamber of Christ hath a window looking into another far bigger and more glorious Thou art entered into one thou sayest dost thou looke into another more glorious and long to enter into it if thou be a stranger to these things thou art a foolish Virgin that possibly hast knocked at the doore of Christs house a little but art yet indeed entered into no roome when Christ had opened the nature of spirituall bread unto his followers that they did indeed understand it they fell a longing presently for more what they had discovered much more behind which they wanted and therefore cryed Lord evermore give us of this Bread Vse This point is upbraiding the light which shines upon us is more glorious then that which shined upon our Fathers that which hath beene hid from Ages and from Generations we have made manifest to us wee have mercies according to externall communication of the biggest what have you according to internall communication this will be looked after This is a day of great things a time wherein Christ brings about great things to our doores our fathers day was a day of small things yet if they were judged for despising their day of small things how much more shall you be judged that despise the day of great things t is the Apostles argument to the Hebrewes and must be mine to you Despite is a spiritull act deliberate disaffection to the loveliest things The posture of our spirits wee least looke at and this Christs Eye is most of all fixed upon Externall carriages are all measured and titled from the heart God rules in the inside of his enemies hee unbowells this Generation and Christens it in blood according to its spirit We offer despite to the spirit of grace we tread under foot the bloud of the Lord Jesus can wee tell whether this iniquity will be blotted out till this Generation die The heart fired against truth abides so t is part of that unquenchable fire below God allowes Satan to bee fueler in such a soule till they both come to burne together in hell Love lost Christ cares not for the person let him be what he will if hee be the greatest man in the World he will burne to death in that fire which burnes in his breast against Christ Our love now to be least when greatest love is tendered can you imagine that this iniquity will be quickly forgotten great heare makes great thunders t is so now the Sun of love shines mighty hot and now wickednesse thunders and so will Justice and righteousnesse too believe it COLOS. 1.26 But now is made manifest c. THe word notes two things appareo et splendeo vision and shining vision that is according to Gospel speech still in the letter and in the spirit the understanding of words which one reads by workes which one feeles a voyce behind one interpreting that before one circumcision outward in the flesh and this explained by circumcision inward in the spirit There is a narrative and an operative light that which makes one talke well and that which makes one walke well that which enables one to produce bookes for his authority in discourse and that which enables one to produce his soule and his life for authority here is my soule and my life reade if it be not so as I say let men and Angells all the World reade if they will The Manifestation which our Apostle speakes of here is the latter for he speakes of such
mens hands are something tyed up now by common distresse but with the tongue we are killed all the day long men spit blood which is a sad signe and they most which pretend most to more then ordinary knowledge and yet are brute beasts as the Apostle Peter speakes in many things and speake evill of things they know not 2 Pet. 2.12 who saith he shall utterly perish in their owne corruption This is so certaine that it is called an evident token of perdition by the Apostle Matter of admiration and thansgiving might also be suckt from this point if we had time to lie longer at the brest though all men forsake Christ yet shall not Christians utterly one might go this way and make sweete Musick Our mercy is eternall our miseries but for a moment Christ doth but hide his face when he seemes most out with us he doth not cast off nor put away he hates that in order to his Spouse though he give her to the Rod yet t is not to the black Rod to a fatall stroake Our prime mercies are married to us which is as sure as the being of any thing will afford a marriage Knot holds we know till the very being molders which thing should take us much it much tooke Solomon that God had spoken well of his house for a great while The eternity of mercies is that which makes them Heaven such is the Sun that shines upon you Saints COLOS. 1.27 To whom God would make known THe title of the Gospell the subject the object the end of it are all in this verse before us to consider some of these other verses have led us to the consideration of already they will be passed by here others present us with fresh entertainment and there we shall sit down a while and feed The Gospell is nam'd according to its nature a mystery Moses vailed to a carnall Jew Christ vailed to a carnall professour a Sunne shining full in the face of thousands and yet onely seen by one or two of them one in a Tribe two in a City one in the midst of many and yet seen but by one There is one in the midst of you whom ye know not whom ye see not that 's the originall John 1.26 This is a mystery indeed this title was given in the verse before and then opened The subject of the Gospell is here specified and amplified specified to wit Christ Which is Christ c. The Gospell hath Moses vertue in her bosome he had one sat in his bosome which did wonders wither and restore Put thy hand into thy bosome saith God and when he tooke it out his hand was leporous as Snow Put thy hand into thy bosome againe saith God and he did so and behold his hand was turned as his other flesh Exod. 4. 6 7. Moses had a notable one which sat in his bosome the same hath the Gospell and can doe as he did to wit put hands and hearts into his bosome and make them leprous and white as Snow that is make persons see their filth and cry out unclean uncleane and then can put these very leprous creatures into his bosome againe and bring them out white and ruddy incarnate Roses as that of Sharon in the Gospell the Gospell is the poole that hath no lesse then an Angell the Angell of the covenant stirring and healing cripled creatures in it t is Bethesda a house of effusion of the bravest liquid blood and spirits in the world to wit Christ crucified this is the subject of the Gospell Christ the subject of the Gospell is here amplified by his Throne and by the revenew belonging to it Christs Throne is in the hearts of his people which is Christ in you and this is a mystery indeed This world lies in wickednesse it lies overflown with the deluge of sinne and wrath the Dove hath an Arke in which she rides and flotes above this deluge to wit the heart of Saints here he abides till this deluge be dried up and the curse of the earth taken away and all things restored again and then hee will resigne his Throne to his father Christ is specified from his Throne and from the revenue of it which is great and honourable a vast estate which is cald here riches to whom God would make known what is the riches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is not from Pluto to note riches which are from beneath of which commonly the divell is in some kind the author but the word notes here heavenly riches of which God is not in some kind but in all kind the authour and therefore called riches of glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of splendour fame the state of a Christian lies in orientall Pearles all his goods lands beds hanging all full of sparkling precious Stones all riches of glory The end of the Gospell is here set down doubly ultimus ultimatus Salvation and that which is necessarily conducing and subordinate to this to wit affection and affiance the one of which is named in the end of the verse hope and set out in state as it fastens upon its highest and last object Christ in Heaven the hope of glory The other is mentioned in the beginning of the verse and called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desire to know affection to divine revelation above all things to be well acquainted with the glorious mystery which belongs to faith and salvation to all which the will of God hath given concurrence in order to us Gentiles after a speciall manner To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery c. Would make known 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifies desirous to know Longing passions stir when the soule is made alive A Christian is a hungry thirsty man Hee bares alwaies and yet travels alwaies ever bearing and yet ever budding and blossoming as some Apple-trees which have buds and blossomes upon them at the same time when full of ripe fruit The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life his affection action his motion Heaven-ward hath life in it everlasting life t is as a tree that is growing above ground or under ground upward or downward in root or branch alwaies T is an expression in opposition to an hypocrite or one which beares much one yeare and dies the next His love withers it doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fall off as the Apostle expresses it as blasted blossomes The affection of a Christian doth not so t is as that tree of life in Eden pleasant fragrant growing alwaies yea t is that tree of life Christ in the soule Christ in you The dishes at Wisdomes table are all very delightfull and all carriage and entertainment there is very drawing which is the ground we run still after him In this mountaine shall the Lord make a feast of fat things a feast of Wine on the lees of fat things full of marrow and to hint to you that
God to save and so is the word translated 2 Thess 2. Where t is used in order to the wicked having 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pleasure in unrighteousnesse c. You may imagine how much the Word doth import being used to set out a sinners love and strongest affection to sinne What a pleasure is a wicked mans sinne to him Can you expresse it why so says God t is to mee now to looke towards poore lost man and to sit downe in his soule The Word is used by the Apostle elsewhere 't is my hearts desire that Israel might be saved c. Just as if the Apostle should have said it would be my Heaven that Jsrael might come to Heaven t is my Heaven to thinke that ever they shall have Heaven and O that they might be called and he speakes there but in the straine and spirit of the Gospell the riches of the glory of this mystery that I am opening the heart of God and the heart of Christ now to man Vse You see now what is the riches of the glory of this mystery t is the proffer of mercy to man with much strength of affection a proffer of Heaven in Heaven i as one in Heaven a proffer of Life in Life or with Life and so are all the dispensations of the Gospell typified Revel 4. A throne was set in Heaven to set out the things of Heaven Let poore sinners know what is the riches of the glory of this mystery and inrich themselves by it Blessed are they that know the joyfull sound which words point at Aarons bells his going into the holiest of all made a joyfull sound to them that could understand it it pointed at Christ offering up his life for us and yet doing it as it were with Musick cheerfully and delightfully You have had this mystery explained all along my discourse do you understand it sinners then inrich your selves with it The Sunne is the riches and glory of all the World such a Sunne is the Gospell of Christ desire that this Sunne may shine into the little World if the Sun did not shine in this great World it could not inrich it nor glorifie it The Apostle speakes of this very thing to wit the Gospell and under this Metaphor of the Sun and he uses such tearmes as signifie in apparition and illustration But after that the kindnesse and gentlenesse of God appeared 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is used to expresse the second comming of Christ and that will be bright and glorious indeed 2 Thess 2.8 i in apparition for otherwise it had beene of no force to those effects which he there mentions a like place 2 Tim. 1.10 But is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ who hath abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospell It is plaine by these following words that the apparition here spoken of meanes in apparition death could not be otherwise destroyed nor immortality be brought to light And the learned agree that the word notes a mighty shining light that searches every corner of the heart is the light that you have of such illustration hath it brought life and immortality to light i a holy life that never end There is a great deale of light now in the World but when wee looke how it illustrates it selfe we are sad because it comes to no more ordinarily then the light of a comet that falles and the matter that bore it resolving it selfe into a filthy stinck to the great disgrace of the Gospel to the death of brave persons and Kingdomes What is it that makes such bloudy worke in the Christian World now but this that the riches of the glory of this mystery doth nothing in men this hath made a long night to our brethren the Iewes and is like to doe the like to the Gentiles The Gospell being riches prize Christ and his Ministers let them be glorious in your eye which bring glorious things Know which way the riches of glory comes to you it comes but by one gate Which puts me in mind of a story In the County of Saba which signifies a mystery when Frankinsence was brought into the chiefe City thereof it was ordered by the Priests that it should come in but at one Gate upon paine of death to wit that which they had consecrated for that purpose T is of lively use the riches of glory come in but one way by Christ and by the Ministry of his Word and therefore keepe open this Cate if all the money in your purses will do it if all the bloud in your veines will do it let all goe rather then this and the Gospel when this departeth the glory departeth the riches of glory departeth There is but one thing that is eminently accessary to the destruction of the riches of glory and that is hardnesse of heart The Balme-Trees when they had wounded them to get the vertue of them to drop forth they laid Wooll upon which the drops might fall that so they might be sure to save it so to gaine the riches of the glory of the Gospel to save the drops that fall from Christs mouth you must lay soft hearts tender and fleshy hearts otherwise you will die poore and miserable notwithstanding all the riches of glory that are amongst you COLOS. 1.27 Among the Gentiles or in the Gentiles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ethnick This is the word in the originall by which we are called it may be from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 two words which signify a minde accustomed to some thing a heart evill and onely evill that is stout enough and such neither can nor will be made otherwise it speakes a nature of sinne a body of death one in the flesh and led by the flesh I will discribe a Gentile to you generally and particularly t is one uncircumcised in flesh and spirit that hath not the externall ordinances of Christ nor the internall efficacy this is to speake properly and fully a Gentile though where the latter is wanting under the fruition of the former such are called Gentiles For that he hath brought into my sanctuary strangers uncircumcised in heart and uncircumcised in flesh to be in my sanctuary to polluate it Ese 44.7 they which are called here strangers were Gentiles and their condition is described they were uncircumcised in heart and flesh and this to speake properly and fully is a Gentile one that is beside all culture that that is without the visible Church and without the invisible grace of such estate There is a Gentile in the flesh and a Gentile in the spirit and a Gentile in both The Apostle makes this destinction and in these termes Wherefore remember that yee being in times past Gentiles in the flesh were called the uncircumcision by that which is called the circumcision in the flesh which is made with hands Eph. 2.11 They were Gentiles in the flesh as well as in the
of convictions make a man fall at the feet of Christ or flee in his face Hast thou found me O mine enemy Wounds that goe to the heart if they let not out corruption and pride they make men desperate and bleed them to death desperately a proud man stab'd to the heart by the word if it be not sanctified to let out his pride he will spet the blood of his soule in the face of him that wounded it Are you Gentiles in heart then be so in name doe not miscall yourselves T is a thousand pities that many are called Christians You doe onely but flatter them that flatter themselves enough and too much you helpe hug soules to death The name of a Christian given to such a one that hath not the nature of a Christian is satans chariot in which he hath carried thousands to hell asleepe Let persons and things be called as they are let us name things according to their nature let Divinity have its name Morality its name Barbarity its name You give men their severall distances as they stand ranked by a common providence one to another but we doe not give men their distance as they stand all rankt by speciall providence in order to God and the highest greatnesse Let us follow Christ in this say some are neere some are far off some are in the Kingdome of God The Kingdome of God is in you saith he to some t is neere you saith he to others t is far off from you saith he to others Let us give all persons and things their due distances in order to God as they discover themselves Doe not waste breath vainely to make a gale a pleasant gale to blow soules faster to hell Iitten gnatsabeth Prov. 10.10 which are sailing thither but too fast of themselves He that winks with his eye causeth sorrow saith Solomon dabit dolorem he will give sorrow he that puts out his owne eyes and others to he will give a great deale of sorrow to others and yet keep a great deale more for himselfe and yet this is common blind lead one another neither knowes whether Make not a bad condition hopelesse t is not so in it selfe here A Gentile simply as a Gentile was without hope because out of roade of God Enter not by the way of the Gentiles and into any City of the Samaritans enter ye not Matth. 10.5 6. but goe rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel said Christ when he sent forth the word The preaching of the word is the meanes of life to whom this is denied death is concluded the people necessarily perish where this vision must not come This was our condition but t is not now the channell of love is turned toward us not from us life is come amongst us as the expression here is the riches of this mystery among the Gentiles or in them saith the originall The expression notes effectuall mercy is now revealed an efficacious proffer a light of life shines amongst us such as makes sight and makes blessednesse to us as much as to the Jewes so is this expression explained Matth. 4.16 t is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a great light and that which they did see they which sat in darknesse saw great light Matth. 4.16 All this was shadowed in giving the promise to Abraham before Circumcision and before the Law to note that the Uncircumcision to wit the Gentiles should be partakers of the promise as well as the Circumcision And the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen through faith preached before the Gospell unto Abraham that is before the Law saying in thee and in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blest Gentiles you that see your selves such Dogs Wolves Lyons effectuall mercy is tendred to you You that lie in the high way and villages blinde lame halt you are invited the others had their excuses some had bought Oxen others Farmes others had married wives the meaning is covetousnesse and voluptuousnesse carnality did cut off the carnall Jew and nothing but this will cut off you too Undervalue every thing in order to Christ which now invites you to him the creature hath our hearts which is a strange act a man stretching out himselfe for the grave The lust of the Gentiles spoyles them t was shadowed by the Prodigall if any of you be come to your selves like him to returne and looke after Christ you may finde grace and mercy as he did If you finde your hearts averse Christ will by his Word if you attend it perswade them And he reasoned in the Synagogue every Sabbath saith the Scriptures of Paul and perswaded the Jewes and the Greekes Acts 18.4 the Spirit of Christ is a Spirit of perswasion now to the Greekes that is to the Gentiles as well as to the Jewes Perswasion notes the power of the Word the Word carried to the heart and this Christ hath engaged himselfe to doe Hosea 2.14 Gnal libbah Therefore behold I will allure thee and bring her into the wildernesse and speake comfortably to her the word is to the heart I will allure her and speake to her heart God in them ingaged himselfe to us and stands obliged now to every poore soule that complains of his aversnesse to Christ to allure these soules and to speake to their heart COLOS. 1.27 Which is Christ in you AS there is an externall society body with body so there is an internall society spirit with spirit God is a spirit and sutes his society he moves about corporeals but holds communion and fellowship onely with spirits drawes out himselfe here his face and his heart that is communion where one drawes out his heart If any fellowship of the spirit if any bowels of mercy Phil. 2.1 the latter explaines the former what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the communion of the Spirit meanes to wit such an internall operation as whereby the spirit of man is made like the Spirit of God for bowels and mercies and so for all other Divine dispositions a drawing out his owne heart and his nature in ours partakers of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a communion of the Spirit and a communion of the Divine nature I thinke the termes are expository and note the Spirit so effectually operating in the soule of man as imparting its owne nature to it such an operation or communication of Christ as this is called Christ in us because he leaves his Image and similitude in us as you say sometimes of children his fathers spirit is in him and this is spoken similitudinaliter not formaliter because of that similitude and onenesse of disposition that is between father and child God was in Christ that expression poynts not at the Divine essence nor cannot be proper speech so applied but at Divine existence noting how the persons in the Trinity doe act one in and by another
gnola an whole ascension holocautomata a whole burnt offering all ascending in a flame to Christ that did so for us to God Divine Light carries Energy with it all tooles and instruments whereby all faculties and organs are made answerable to the eyes it opens it makes not a blinde man open his eyes and lie still but opens eyes in order to legs and armes and all other joynts when God opens eyes he opens cares opens all David is a demonstration of this and Christ Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not Charitha but mine eares hast thou opened digged open Eyes were digged open and eares together when David knew what God would have his Light warmed and opened his heart and made that obedient unto it and so Christ if you apply the words to him when he opened his Commission at his journeys end when come into the flesh and into this world and unto offering age to Priestly maturty for that Office and saw what kinde of offering God expected not such offering as under the Law the bodies of beasts but his own body his Light inflamed his heart and he proclames his Commission what body he might offer a body hast thou prepared me and he longed to give it to its intended use when he knew the intention of God concerning it there is a proportion to this in all the revelations of the same light in our hearts Christ puts his honour here upon us as he doth above as we shall have what he has in heaven so we have in a degree what he had on earth his spirit and his peace his light and his life our life is said to be hid in him t is bravely typified I think Numbers 27.20 Put some of thy honour upon him saith God to Moses concerning Joshua their Unctions were communicative under the Law to shadow that so should Christs Unction under the Gospell be communicative unto us you will be a whole ascension which have a whole light and hee that ascends wholly to Heaven must needs have a sweet and blessed life on 't COLOS. 1.28 Warning every man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word here used may be pursued strictly according to what it signifies as so compounded or it may be considered largely according to what it signifies as so in severall Scriptures used The composition of the word notes a putting of a thing into the mind from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the mind and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to put Divine words reach the heart they put themselves into the minde and into the soule This resolution of the Text makes resolution to that question Job 38.36 Who hath put wisdome into the inward parts or who hath given understanding to the heart The words of Christ doe this and nothing else these doe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put things into the soule wisdome and understanding into the inward parts The words of God have the advantage of their matter they are pure Justice is of Majesty what shines with the beames of this is strongly impressive O how forcible are right words saith Job that is words made up of rightousnesse and thus are all Gods words necessarily his breath is as himselfe pure Breath is a very internall thing this stinking speakes something filthy in the inward parts God is light and in him is no darknesse Satan comes and finds nothing in me No impurity no unrighteousnesse in God he must needs therefore breath purely Purity is of great Majesty when Adam bore the Image of God his words were as thunder to all the creation his words yea his lookes went through and through Purity and Majesty be joynd together Cant. 6.10 Cleare as the Sunne terrible as an Army with Banners what is pure is of great power and Majesty The words of Christ have the advantage of their forme God opens his mouth in righteousnesse and in wisdom Some have good breath but not good braines and gutterals to shape it and utter it Children come to the birth cannot be delivered or else delivered too soon untimely births are not taking to looke upon none lodge such in their bosomes Indiscretion turnes the point and edge of things that otherwise are very penetrating The words of the wise are like goades and nailes they goe into the heart wisdome takes the utmost of all advantage which is very forcible she sits her down in the center of a businesse and takes into her bosome all the small lines that doe circumstance it and so makes her motion in every thing effectuall heart-reaching and heart-working The heart is put for wisdome in the old Testament and I thinke for this reason because wisdome is that which brings in all to the heart words workes that which makes every thing like goads and nayles piercing or like honey dewes so king melting Behold God is mighty and despiseth not any he is mighty in strength and wisdome Choach leb Iob 36.5 t is strength and heart or strength of heart Wisdome is that which brings in things in strength to the heart and so makes it strong upon the heart Strength and wisdome are joynd together here things that we say or doe are of strength as this conjunction is kept which is never separated in order to God No word of God no worke of God but uttered and wrought in wisdome which makes all his words like goads and nayles in entering The words of God have the advantage of their end They are spirit and life that is they are intended above all words to be spiritually forcible they are appointed to be the Sword of the Spirit that by which one spirit should reach another the Spirit of God the Spirit of man e contra And take unto you the Helmet of salvation and the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God The Sword 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith a critick that which fetcheth blood with delight that which joyes to goe into the veines and into the heart the seat of life Things move delightfully to their end to that scope and center to which they are appointed The center of the word is the soule of man the words of God sinke downe into the eares Let these words sinke downe into your eares saith Christ they are directed from one spirit to another they may knocke without but they will be restlesse till they get in into affection or else into conscience into the marrow and joynts which are the inmost things of man an in-roome they will have Spirit will to spirit the Spirit will use the Word which is to be a Sword according to Divine appointment being put into his hand as a sharpe weapon he will joyfully sheath it in the soule in one part or other of it how painfull soever it be to man hee will wound the spirit pricke the heart let it be never so deepe The words I speake saith Christ they are spirit and life that is they are so
instituted to be of spirituall interpretation and spirituall impression to pricke the heart yea to runne it through The weapon in the hand of the Spirit is suted and fitted to its end to its appointed worke t is very sharpe and very long 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 romphaea so t is cald Revel 2.12 jaculum oblongum a very long dart to make through worke save or slay and therefore is this rod of Christs mouth cald a slaying weapon Esay 11.4 Vse T is not safe I see by this poynt to have to doe with sinne any way not to meddle with it in any part neither with hand nor heart there is no hiding place any where for sinne no not within you the word of God will get into you t will ransacke every corner of your soules and discover deepe things out of darknesse t wil strike fire with your bones and kindle a fire in the midst of you bigge enough to discover and lay open all the very secrets of your heart but I purpose not to drive this way That which I would stand on is this this point in hand mee thinks hath not yet demonstration enough I would have you lend me one demonstration more Doe you finde this by experience that the Word of God reacheth your hearts and puts it selfe into your minds and soules our condition is very dolorous t is darke night and yet no man can tell how our night goes away we cannot tell whether it be mid night yet or what I am afraid t is not neere day yet because every ones doores are shut and fast asleepe many ghosts walking which is very affrighting yea the holy Ghost walking and knocking much at mens hearts heads estates ready to knocke downe all and yet cannot get in where he would be England when wilt thou throughly let in the Word of God thy veines are very empty of blood now is there no place yet for truth Some consumptions make the stomacke nauceate as others make it voraminous though all parts be empty yet no desire to take any thing in to any purpose but onely sip a little which notwithstanding the consumption continues and the body decayes and sinkes apace t is so with a body politicke as it takes in Christ and his Word so is it in a languishing or a flourishing condition The civill State and the Divine doe as the soule and body sympathize as the one prospers so doth the other t was noted a great while agoe worthily by good Mr. Fox upon the burning of some Christians in Norwich the same yeere there followed such a fearfull fire as almost burnt downe the City where note saith he that according to the state of the Church so is the Common-wealth in adversity or prosperity burne Saints and Christ will burne Cities Countries Kingdomes t is considerable therefore to observe how we take in or cast out the Word of God The Word is nigh thee England t is very nigh thee t is in thee as that expression is Deut. 30.14 t is so nigh thee England that I may goe on to say to thee as he there doth to Israel The Word is not in Heaven that thou shouldest say who shall goe up for us to Heaven and bring it downe to us that we may heare it and doe it neither is it beyond the Sea that thou shouldest say who shall goe over the Sea and bring it to us that we may heare and doe it but the Word is very nigh thee so nigh thee that in a sence it may be said to be in thee in thy mouth and in thy heart that thou mayst doe it that is formally t is in thee but not really ministerially but not magisterially according to naked aspect not according to energeticall inspect I will open this latter to you The Word of God gotten into the heart magisterially is the heart strong in love with the Word in love with the Word because the voyce of Christ the voyce of a husband The friend of a Bridegroome which standeth and heareth him rejoyceth greatly because of the Bridegroomes voice John 3.19 You may see under what notion Christ and his voice is taken as he is a Husband a Bridegroome and his Word as t is the voice of this Bridegroome The Word got within the heart marries the soule to Christ that is makes love to Christ above all and now ' tould heare more words from his mouth his first words are so sweet could ever heare his voyce and never be tired the friend of a Bridegroome standeth and heareth him No posture is painfull no continuance of time tiresome that is not of the Spirit though possibly it may be of the flesh t would heare him to day to morrow for ever rejoyceth greatly because of the Bridegroomes voyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gaudio gaudet by joying or in joying he joyeth he is in good earnest his joy is a reall joy a joy that takes the whole heart The Greeke word also signifies to bid farewell the Word of Christ got into the heart the Bridgroomes voyce heard in the soule makes such a joy and such a delight that the soule bids farewell to all sinfull mirth and cals it madnesse yea it bids farewell to all other delights comparatively and cals them vanities empty things if not sinfull things vexing things and so polluting at second hand if not downe rightly naught and polluting at first hand as soone as ever toucht He that toucheth pitch is defiled with it some things are so naught as to touch them defiles to thinke of them or speake of them other things may be toucht and handled provided we goe no further but if hearted if they come into the soule they vex or bewitch and so will not out againe without becomming sinne The Word of Christ got into the heart bids farewell to all joyes fading to all joyes that will bid the soule farewell that doth not bid them farewell first it makes a joy transcending other joyes and so no need of them and not onely so but a joy sufficing such a vast being as the soule of man is for the soule doth not cast off old delights upon the meere excellency of some new found out that some of later invention doth something more content not upon this ground nakedly and simply doth the soule cast off old sinnes for there are returnes to the same filth unto mens old sinnes and yet going foreward to new too these two are consistent in a bad state the heart doth worsten it selfe still as it goes forth to any thing more carnally contenting and being made worse t will at last take up its vomit eate againe an old sinne by the strength and punishment of a new and so hold what he hath and goe backe and sinne over former sinnes againe with more senslesnesse and with more presumption than at first he did commit them and the reason is because in old and new delights he misses still something that he aimed at but the soule
enough and nothing but the image could be seised on which would endure wounds enough and then Saul said to Michal why hast thou deceived mee so and sent away mine ememy so when the life of sin is sought for by the word sinners can lay an image in the bed twenty excuses and pretences to conveigh the sinnes which they love out of sight and so save the life of Christs enemy How pleasing soever sinne be to affection 't is ugly to conscience because condemnd by Christ man can baffle one and mock the other We reade of mockers of God and they are such as baffle conscience with an image so double and involve their motion before the pursuit of truth likes a Hare before Hounds deceiving and being deceived deceiving i the force of truth is broken by wile deceived this the author to the Hebrewes explaines the heart is hardened by this practice least any be hardned by the deceitfulnesse of sinne the heart hardned is not easily wrought upon 't is the worst stone that any Artist can meddle with As the old man can delude so hee can collude as one faculty can and oft doth betray another so all faculties joyntly combine to plead an ill cause the old man can bribe every office in the soule understanding will conscience too as stout and as stiffe as this Officer seemes to be above the rest conscience indeed is the longest stander out for God yet at last may be and often is silenced yea seared and then it s not onely passive in sinne but joyntly active with other depraved and corrupted faculties Conscience seard the man is become a devill to convert a devill is difficult indeed Conscience seared darkenesse now is great and the sinner desperate the light that was in the man is beeome darknesse i put out the truth that was taken into judgement into affection and according to some degree approved is now disapproved what was approbated is now reprobated generally so all powers transported into malice and speaking joyntly like that rabble crucify him let the cleane spirit be not onely prisoned and tortured by violent action but quite outed and seven uncleane spirits come in the stead that is a perfection of evill Conscience once feard the sinner is as I may say a perfect sinner As there is a perfection in good perfect as our Heavenly Father is perfect and exhorted to in this life which notes a degree of attainablenesse here so there is a perfection in evill a child of the divill perfect as his hellish Father is perfect now wee know he is according to all powers against Christ and truth understanding will conscience a Creature transported transformed into malice one without all remorse or reluctancy in pursuit of the greatest wickednesse All faculties do lie one to another mutually 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 recriprocally as that expression is and so conscience confirming and making restipulation to all The soule is with much difficulty indeed brought home to Christ t is a great deale of pitty there is facillity enough in the soule otherwise it will take in falshood presently easily in a moment is the soule a convert to sinne to the fowlest sinne Satans births are quick he shewed Christ all the Kingdomes in the World in a moment saith the Text Luk. 4.5 intimating how his children grow very big in a moment the wise man speakes to this likewise that their feet run to evill and make hast to shed bloud Prov. 1.16 evill is terminus inde terminatus its applicable to to any sinne the soule is facile to any thing that is naught blood is a terme that specificates points out the foulest the horridst child of hell Man is easily brought to draw weapons of wickednesse and stab the body yea stab the soule of an other to wash his hands in the heart blood of another and sport himselfe therein Nature is a greater advantage then education in any thing Christ carries it by principles Satan by constitution Engines are needlesse paines needlesse there is a current hellward The soule is of great price but not esteem'd so by it selfe a man will sell his soule for a lie and yet make the bargaine quickly Satan loves a quick change his commodities are deceitfull and off best least considered and therefore you have him shewing Christ all the Kingdomes of the world in a moment saith the Text Luke 4.5 as Satan loves quicke action so doth the deluded soule for hee is whilest deluded upon Satans wings the soule in temptation is lighter then vanity what should poyse to wit judgement is destroy'd by will and impure affections t is in a gawdy chariot of Satans that takes and he may run with it any whither with one horse with ease Vse Sinners we are upon things of great weight consider well to what are you facile to sin or to Christ what you are most inclinable to has your heart if that be sinne you are dead men there are variety of temptations the soule may pick and chuse but what he chuseth is destructive will is in the fact and such crimes cut off without remedy for Christ is deliberately refused in choyce there is debate two objects are in view at once and in competition with affection if the worst carry it by suffrage Christ is cast and given up to be crucifyed which is very bloudy action The rejection of Christ is simul tempore together in time with the election of sinne Sinne is ugly at first like an Harlot but by society and frequenting besots and infatuates and is more facily drawing then the mans owne wife although far more beautifull facility to sinne speakes the wards of conscience broken the lock of the Cabinet spoyled all the Jewells of the soule lying common gifts and abilities the servants of sin at pleasure the heart past feeling a beaten highway to hell The soule is of great price Christ makes this estimate from being we are to make it from property who and how doth the soule love such is the lovelinesse of it The heart of the wicked is nothing worth saith Solomon Prov. 10.20 Aversnesse to Christ is any mans wickednesse if the action be the action of the greatest person in the World 't is his wickednesse persons are not respected with God actions are impartially lookt upon above though not below they are weighed in a ballance as Job speakes nothing scand with more exactnesse then this how much of Christ is in this man and his course if this were but received the soules of some of you which heare me this day would bleed within you Oh what will become of you wanton Londoners which have so much of Christ before you and so little of Christ within you who are quickly any thing but understandingly and sincerely nothing a Harlot is quickly gained there needs not much wooing about her light soules make heavy judgements your spirituall crummes would be feasts abroad you have no minde to that food which thousands as precious with
die under our hands all the solemnitis belonging to our company are for the most part Funerall solemnities going to the Grave with the dead in trespasses and sinnes our invitations are Sir mourne with me I beseech you for such a one that lies upon his eternall Death-bed that hath Plague-spots in his breast that lies raving blaspheming and much a doe to keepe him in his Bed to keepe him from leaping into a worse if worse may be from leaping desperatly into Hell When our Ministrey petrefies turnes hearts into stones and these taken up and throwne at us this kills us the recoiling of our paines kills us when our peace returnes to us as Christ speakes J have laboured in vaine spent my strength for naught saith the Prophet When we spend our strength to make men more naught then they were this wounds our heart which should be considered of sinners to kill ones selfe and ones Minister too which would save him what a bloudy condition is this the bloud of a Minister upon a mans soule is more then the blood of many men stubborne soules lay this to heart When the Poet would cure drunkennesse in the Heathen Emperour he said remember thou drinkest the Blood and the Life of the earth meaning the juyce of the Grape So I say to you stubborne sinners remember when you breake the heart of your Ministers by your stubbornnesse you destroy the Blood and Life of the World I would I could say any thing to breake the Iron sinnew that is in the neck of some sins and sinners Be a friend to us in our worke and be a friend to your selves come off readily and speedily to Christ our work will be easy and your condition safe hold us fight long and I know who will fall at last with a witnesse The warre betweene the house of David and Saul was long saith the Text 2 Sam. 3.1 the issue was answerable had that malitious stubborne man layd downe his Armes and readily yeilded to the Will of God to Christ that came against him in David hee might have found mercy but he would stand it out to the last and weary God and David his servant till at last there was no remedy and then all Davids Teares Prayers and brave services that he had done tooke place and effect with a witnesse Make our life dolefull and Christ will make your death dolefull be as great as you will stay long in the birth and kill Midwife and you will be delivered in hell ease us and ease Christ for Christ striveth in us we strive but according as be striveth in us as saith the following clause in my Text striving according to his working and therefore is Noahs suffering so long in his paynes for that people called the long suffering of God 1 Pet. 3.2 London England the blood of many Prophets is upon thee is this nothing the blood of God is upon thee and God layes this to heart now now he makes inquisition for blood hee makes blood to touch blood your blood to touch the blood of them whom you have kil'd in their labour by your frowardnesse and wickednesse to Christ and them COLOS. 1.29 Striving according to his working c. STriving This word seconds the explanation given of the former that the labour of the Ministery is very painfull t is a putting off all powers externall and internall to it to the utmost t is a strife contention running for a victory a fight so the word is in severall places translated Fight the good fight of faith I have fought a good fight in both places is the same word that here is translated strive fighting running for victory they are acts wherein the whole man intends it selfe as in matters of life and death The worke of our calling is in the former word generally and summarily exprest in this word t is particularly specified as it beares upon its particular and proper cause When we say such a one labours this satisfies not what is his labour this question is answered by this following word in order to our calling Our labour is in some sence the worst the sowrest t is contention spirituall contention i. a contention which hath its rise not from our owne spirit but from the spirit of God and its termination in the spirit of man We strive not according to our own will but according to his Word and Spirit that striveth and worketh in us Contention hath a bad and a good acceptation the spirit lights on fire of Hell sometimes and flames out of the mouth and burnes all that stand neere in name in whatsoever is deare this is bad contention Folly lurkes long in an unmortified soule at last gets a head and then words without wisdome or conscience toumble out one upon anothers backe as if they should toumble downe all that is before them but they throw downe him onely from whom they come A fooles lips enter into contention and his mouth calleth for strokes and in the next verse a fooles mouth is his destruction and his lips are the snare of his soule Prov. 18.6 7. If standers by can keepe off the flame this fire burnes no more houses then into which it comes The flame that comes out of one mans mouth if it be not suckt in by another onely one tenement is consumed folly is full of humour humour disguiseth every person and action and apprehends all for enemies and so fights against yea slayes with the tongue deare friends for deadly foes that is as much as in him lies Folly generates humour humour is a bastard pride now none so beautifull in any proceedings as the man himselfe other folkes children are all untimely births and mishapen brats and deserve all to be murthered with the mouth and bit to death Butchery is some persons trade neighbours children kild quartered and hung out to sale every day for all that come by and will buy pride hardens the heare hardned the man will runne against any one with his tongue till he can get other weapons and spot himselfe all over with the blood of the best mans repute in the world before his face Contention is a murthering of a mans off-spring before his face and throwing the blood of them in his face thou didst say this and thou didst doe that Pride hardens 'tas this property in every soule many hearts quard and become sulpherous stones the divell takes them up and strikes fire with them to burne all Bad contention hath alwaies a diabolicall concurrence more or lesse many things may charge and load the Gun but the Divell gives fire still and makes it off and helpes to fetch out all that is within the man Contention hath a good acceptation good contention is an expliced zeale against sinne Sinnes are of severall sorts some have their tongues cut out of their mouthes by conscience and can nor dare say nothing of their course others have their tongue in their head and can and will say
the heart is vitall or mortall to dispatch the creature for his furthest end To make miserable or blessed here is not the furthest end of internall operation though the furthest end of externall operation Externall donations which are the workes of Gods hand their furthest end is to make a sweet condition here as riches and the like they will availe here Money answers all but they will not availe any further then here for the felicitating of man they will not availe in death much lesse in judgement to doe man any service but the furthest end of internall operation is to make cursed or blessed in death and after death in another world when and where nothing else can There be gifts that be meere Spirit which have not a jot of any carnall thing in them these we call internall these are moulded some by justice some by mercy and you shall see what their end is by an instance or two God hath given them a spirit of slumber Rom. 11.8 Here hee speakes of operations all spirit God hath given them a spiris of slumber internall workes and the Prophet tels the end and issue of these t is decisive to dispatch them they have a spirit of slumber that they may goe away in a slumber Shut their eyes lest they should see with them stop their eares lest they should heare with them and convert and be healed Internall operation wee see dispatches the soule one way or other Into whatsoever house ye enter say peace and if that would not take speak death These were but emblems of Christs internall action Into what house or heart Christ goes to worke by his Word and Spirit hee makes through worke the Axe is then to the root it makes excision or circumcision at least All internall operation is to cut off sinne off the soule He is a Jew that is one inwardly Circumcision is that of the heart When he goes to worke inwardly he doth excise or circumcise and thus I have opened the nature of internall operation The worst evill is curable the greatest good attainable this issues naturally from this point that there is such an engine to be found that can worke inwardly Our greatest maladies are those that are within that one plague that was upon Pharaohs heart to wit the hardning of it was more then the ten plagues upon his outward man Evils are not rightly weighed this is one of the greatest evils they which strip us most of externall things they are accounted greatest no they are not that which gnawes upon the soule after outward things are gone is greater There is death and the bitternesse of death as Agag said the one it is a greater evill then the other by farre The death of husband wife child or the death of estate is nothing if it be but a naked departure of these if their ghost doe not walke afterwards in the soule if there be not after their departure a bitter tang in conscience as evilly got or as evilly kept got with too little conscience and kept with too much affection the cup of affliction fill it as full as the world or as satan can if God doe not put one Ingredient in it or other to make it off with a tang and a touch upon the spirit t is nothing when a malady doth fester inwardly and lights of some blood-vessels that carries it more directly to the heart then it is a malady indeed and yet in these cases there is hope if taken in time because there are things inwardly vertuall and operative so we can say spiritually the strongest poyson that the soule hath taken in cannot render the condition desperate because there are things of an internall vertue operations that can reach the soule Christ can purge the inward man and can let the inward man blood with his Word he can pricke the heart any tumor or swelling in it and let out all the watery or fiery matter that is in it he can wound the spirit and then heale it make clouds and then expell them make darknesse upon the face of the deepe upon the soule that deepe part of man and then make a Sunne rise in this horizon in that more then halfe the little world that lies out of fight when more then halfe the little world is drowned when that in part of man is quite overwhelmed yet then is not the case desperate nor should any soule give it up as so Misery sometimes arises to extremity extremity is darknesse without any light a whole Army engaged and routed without fightings within feares the hand can doe no more the head doe no more all faculties have pumpt themselves dead in the place I cannot thinke a thought to refresh me the waters are come in to my soule and come in so deepe that I give up my selfe for lost This poore soule hath more sorrow then is godly Pressure is unkind when it oppresses oppression is not alwaies from another I may be an oppressor to my selfe and this is when I write death upon my person because Christ hath written death upon all my actions Wher thou canst doe no more wilt thou give up thy soule for lost if this should be generally practised there would not a soule be saved Waters are come into thy soule and thy heart is overwhelmed and yet in this deepe internall distresse a Rocke may be found something higher then thee may appeare for reliefe by a supreame hand From the ends of the earth will I cry unto thee when my heart is overwhelmed lead mee to the Rocke that is higher then I Psalm 61.2 When the water is got in to me and overwhelmes my heart yet then there is one higher and taller then I that can pull mee out of these deepe waters pull body out yea pull soule out and save the heart when it is overwhelmed The worst evill is curable the greatest good attainable I see by this point The greatest good in this world is that which Christ most loves that which he most loves is truth in the inward parts Wee are taken with outward beauty and outward glory Christ is not All the glory of this world was shewed to him by satan at once and yet no temptation to him affection not stird a jot internall glory takes Christ much truth in the heart himselfe seated in the soule is the greatest good in the world to him and to us and this takes him exceedingly If the Divell when hee tooke Christ and set him upon the top of a high place could have taken Christ and set him downe in any mans heart and seated truth in the inward parts of any one though it had been the poorest person in the world this would have taken him indeed but Satan cannot doe this for Christ neither doth Christ need it from him he can doe it himselfe he works inwardly at a greater depth and from a more underived strength then he hee can take Chariot in his Word and ride over all the
have him p. 291 What the word Paul signifies p. 293 The freenesse of God in all dispensations of grace and place should be matter of admiration p. 294 The Land full of mercies and full of nothing but brutes which tread upon them p. 295 The proper worke of Christians to admire the grace of God p. 298 299 Duty at last is sweetest p. 300 Obedience rejected because of its issue a damnable fault p. 301 What magnanimity is p. 302 303 The great need of magnanimity in these times p. 304 The soules of Gods people as well as their bodies suffer in this world p. 306 307 Comfort when paines rage inwardly p. 309 A man should be very long ere he make a positive conclusion upon some workes of God towards him p. 310 Two considerations which may relieve much when trials pinch the soule p. 311 To fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ c. This opened p. 401 The fury of man implacable ibid. Malicious men fire-shovels p. 402 Christ hath left all his prime businesse in this world to Christians ibid. At what height we are to be for Christ p. 403 None should be secure sin and justice will meet any where in a City walled with Brasse ibid. Christ hath drunke of the bloody cup in his turne the next is this Saint or that p. 404 Gods people are not all in prison at once and why p. 404 405 The order of trials to Gods people hints the order of judgements to the wicked p. 407 The sufferings of a Saint but his turne p. 408 A great honour to drinke of the cup that Christ did ibid. All earth beares thernes p. 409 What oppression is p. 410 How many waies oppression is made p. 411 Great men incident to the sin of oppression p. 412 The greatnesse of the evill of oppression the cause of civill war p. 413 The goodnesse of Christ to be admired as delivering from oppressors p. 414 The Church Militant described p. 415 The misery of the Militant Church to be laid to heart p. 419 How Christians finde their hearts moved to wrestle for the land p. 420 The Crosse keeps off some from the Church Militant p. 421 The Church Triumphant p. 423 All cannot be of the Church Triumphant p. 427 The soule that pants for Heaven spoken to p. 428 What 's done for the soules reliefe must be speedy p. 429 Two things incomparably swift in bringing forth p. 430 Of a sudden sinners are undone ibid. Forbidden fruit agrees well enough with some stomacks p. 431 Family distribution mans blessednesse p. 433 We should not content our selves with common mercies p. 434 They that feed on family favours owe much to God ibid. Christ peculiarly applies himselfe in all his dispensations unto his owne people p. 436 Towards whom Christ inclines we should p. 438 The heart of Christ hanging towards his people they should sucke this Honey-combe p. 439 How the heart of God inclines cannot be gathered by his hand p. 441 Not safe to calculate kindnesse by the motion of outward things p. 442 The word of Christ pure pleasant p. 444 The Gospell rejected p. 446 We are spectators of sin and justice in height p. 447 VVho it is within us that speakes and what answers we returne p. 448 There is a power opening and shutting things of eternall consequence in order to man in this life p. 449 VVhat Christ can doe to a perverse soule p. 451 Sweet to consider that sacred concealments are but for a time p. 452 Mercies have their severall demensions p. 453 Love heightens dispensation till the soule be lifted to Heaven ibid. Growth not regarded speaks unsoundnesse of heart p. 454 We have greater things then our fathers and regard them not p. 455 What the demonstrative light of the Gospell is p. 456 Some have Jobs wish they give up the ghost in the wombe p. 458 The most are finally left ibid. Two things hint a soule finally left p. 460 Gods people shall not be utterly forsaken ibid. A Christian is a hungry thirsty soule and the grounds of it p. 464 465 What is a Christians game p. 466 Growing Christians a great blessing to a Land p. 467 Such as would be strong in affection directed p. 469 What the riches of the mystery of the Gospell is p. 470 Heaven proferd as in Heaven p. 474 Christ and his Ministers to be prized p. 475 What a Gentile is p. 477 The danger of conviction stifled p. 461 Gentiles in heart should be so in name p. 480 Mercy for Gentiles p. 481 Christ in man what it is p. 482 Christ chuseth a very forlorne seat in this world p. 483 Our soules are the spirituall grave of Christ and he will be the victory of this grave p. 487 VVhat hope is p. 488 Our felicity lies in Noble principles p. 450 VVhat glory is p. 491 492 Gospell administration makes exact illumination p. 496 Christ slaine his blood cries in conscience p. 498 The vindiction of conscience p. 499 Divine words put themselves into the mind p. 501 VVhere the word is magisterially in the heart p. 504 VVhat to doe when the word is of no spirituall force p. 506 Gospell purification is full p. 508 I am so filthy that I shall never be made clean this objection answered p. 510 The soule of man is with much difficulty brought home to Christ p. 514 The severall waies the heart hath to keep off the power of the word ibid. VVe should consider well to what our hearts are facile p. 516 How we are to put price upon the soule p. 517 All our perfection is in Christ p. 519 Most in their pursuit after a perfect state mistake p. 521 The employment of a Minister of Christ very laborious p. 524 525 The soule very precious to Christ p. 526 How to ease a Ministers labour p. 528 Bad contention what it is p. 531 Good contention what it is p. 532 The divine nature of contention wherein it lies p. 533 The contention of most voyd of divine property p. 535 Efficiency sufficiency alsufficiency in Christ p. 537 Externall inducements nothing to make one truly religious p. 541 Our life beares upon the operation of Christ p. 542 VVhat internall operation is p. 544 Internall operation of eternall force p. 546 Our greatest maladies are internall and yet cureable p. 547 The greatest good is that which Christ loves p. 549 FINIS TABULAE
all God will thus speake within to thy conscience sooner or later If this be the potent remedie of ingratitude you speake of I have had this alreadie I cannot sleepe sometimes these things are so whispered in mine eares Why better want sleepe then want instruction from Christ Doth it not yet doe the thing Why beg him then to seale thy instruction God speakes once yea twice yet man perceiveth it not then he openeth the eares of man and sealeth his instruction Sealing instruction is so much of Christ given forth to the soule in his word or workes as leaves the image of Christ plainly upon the soule A thing is sealed when there is such an impresse made as leaves the image of the seale upon the paper Then can we see the image of God plaine without when 't is plaine upon the soule within when one sees two Sunnes then one wonders 't is so spiritually when one can see Christ within and Christ without such are the soules that admire all the kindnesse of God The Apostle saw two Sunnes he looked upon himselfe as a converted man and then as such an intrusted man with office a man cannot see God without well unlesse he can see him within Christians and here be a sweet company of you this worke I see by the course of things fals to your share look that you discharge it well this is my charge upon you Christ hath no active creatures to gather him honey and to bring it home to his dore but you there be some wild Bees that gather a little honey and of a scurvey wild undigested nature but they goe and hide it in holes of the earth and in hollow trees I know not where How doe you bestir your selves Christians in gathering of honey for Christ The garden in which you are was never fragranter with flowers then now Not a man you meet with but you may wonder he is alive not a stone in the streete you tread upon but you may wonder 't is not coloured with bloud not a limbe you have but you may wonder 't is not cut off not a good Minister not a good Magistrate but you may wonder he is not cut in a thousand pieces how ponderously and warily should we goe up and downe every where in England now after all the great things that have been done in it that wee doe not tread wonders in the dirt What a time what a place doe we live in and what advantages have we to bring in rich treasure to the crowne of Christ and so consequently to our own crowne And thinke then what hearts you have which are frothy and wanton now Fatherly providence hath made every mercy a thousand times bigger then 't was that you may see it as you should doe you doe so Christians Our house is sweeter then 't was husband sweeter then he was every thing is renewed a new glosse from an immediate hand put upon every thing 't is strange that things that are so varnisht and inlaid from Heaven should not divinely take us I am jealous of you Christians I am jealous of you that yet Christ is a great loser by you in the glory of his Name Divine heat is wanting in you though God hath rubbed you so much and so long till he hath rubbed off the skin A man may discerne where ever he comes that the goodnesse of the Lord is not in your mouthes is it in your mindes You froth at mouth and bespatter every one that comes neare you with it that one had need downe upon his knees to God to wash his soule from the filth that comes from you these things are against you Christians but I spare you Thinke but what God hath done and what he is now adoing and then thinke what hearts you have that can be frothie now COLOS. 1.24 Now I rejoyce in my sufferings for you DUtie with its issue lieth here together it brings forth twinnes but not like each other misery in the discharge of it joy in the end The better the instrument workes the worse lik't of the world and the worse used this is sorrowfull but the more blessed of God to a gracious successe this is joyfull The childe that comes last out of the wombe of dutie is a pleasant childe Now I rejoyce in my sufferings for you The instrument that faithfully wrought beaten with these stripes many were healed Paul lived to see this this made him forget misery whilst in it for he was in bonds when he spake these words Dutie at last is sweet it comes off with Heaven though Hell dog it for a time Now I rejoyce Esther sighes mournes groanes and then feasteth and rejoyceth at last 't is a true emblem of Christianitie 't is clothed with sackcloth a great time but changes garments at last Blessed are all that die in the Lord Persons when they end actions when they end though they end in bloud and death yet if in the Lord in the discharge of dutie they are blessed with sweet successe they eate the fruit of their travaile 't was so to Christ 't is so to us Successe is the crown of action a crown from God here Can a soule weare a crown from God here or any where and not joy though a great while a putting on This point must be understood When I say dutie ends well it must be understood dutie faithfully discharged Hypocrites are very doing but action never comes off well what ever joy they have in the beginning they have none in the end how much soever they sit up and worke yet they lie down in sorrow what fires and sparkles soever they kindle goe all out ere they goe out and blast and not blesse the soule at last this is a universall truth made so by the hand of justice Behold all yee that kindle a fire and compasse your selves about with the sparkes this yee shall have of my hand yee shall lie downe in sorrow Esa 50. ult Christ crownes no hypocrite neither here nor hereafter neither action nor person all that is unsound rots They shall not eate of the travaile of their soule how painfull soever their travaile be but die in travaile their hope is cut off an hypocrites livery yea his legacy is nothing but a deaths-head obedience faithfully discharged ends well where ever this ends if it be in a prison or any where else it is with joy Obedience is rejected because of its issue 't is a damnable fault they die in travaile that are married to Christ therefore I will never be married to him he clothes his Spouse with mourning garments and her coate is edged at end still with deaths-heads I will never be married to him then thou canst never come to Heaven he brings none but his Spouse thither Though Christ doe not use his Spouse ill himselfe yet he suffereth others to doe it there is nothing but bloud and death in the way of God I dare not set step in it Many speake
this in their heart their not obeying is a demonstration of it A sad temptation is strongly seized upon you if it hold you you are lost the fearfull of this sort are shut out There be troubles in every course under the Sunne dost thou find none in disobedience Then the more is to come Bloud and death and hell are at the end of thy way Sinner and yet darest thou to keepe on in it Surely thou art not so much fearfull as wilfull Instruction cures distemper when 't is but of meere weaknesse when the soule waits to turne in with Christ and yet cannot but where it is otherwise lay open as much danger in one way pleaded for as in another way pleaded against yet the man will hold on his course which speakes the soule ingaged by will and not so much overborne by weaknesse and then there is no entrance for right principles I would let these alone which have shut themselves up till Christ breake open doores upon them and speake to a generation more ingenuous Men that are candid love to doe things that will end well then set upon the workes of Christ If thou be a Minister preach Christ faithfully who ever oppose if thou be otherwise of any other ranke practise the will of Christ sincerely what ever thou suffer Things may goe harsh a time but Christ will bring about a season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now I rejoyce that ever I did this and that ever I did that for Christ If Christ doe not bring about such a time here he will above O how joyfull are they above that ever they had hearts to suffer for Christ here below Now I blesse God that I lay in such a prison what a mansion have I to make me amends Now I blesse God that ever I was hungry that ever I was naked for Christ what precious meate and what glorious apparell have I to make me amends 'T were enough if the now of a Christians joy did not come till after this life but shall a Christian have one here Let truth and conscience keepe company in stormes and I think I may assure any man a sweet calme here let men and devils doe all what they can but let these two be parted there will never be a season of joy reall joy the soule is betrayed that hath any other opinion or practice The righteousnesse of action should onely be eyed by us as for other things skin and bones and goods and such like lumber should be all ventured in this bottome I am for Christ if I mourne all the dayes of my life and have not one teare wiped off till I come to Heaven all is one so one should set out setting Heaven at the furthest distance that can be thought of and then a man meets with it often long before he accounted in this prison or in that dungeon where one would look for hell rather then heaven so did Paul Now I rejoyce c. COLOSS. 1.24 Now I rejoyce c. PAul was in prison when he spake these words so considered bravenesse of spirit sparkles in every syllable of the expression Now I am in the mouth of the Lion now I am in the belly of Hell now I am in the face of Devils now I own Christ and triumph in all that I undergoe for his Name Divine magnanimitie wee are to stand upon 't is a soule in all conditions openly very stout and very amiable in the pursuit of Gods will Disadvantages are many in a Christian course in none more magnanimitie knowes none 't is one that can make a Trumpet sound admirably where there is no eccho in a pit in a dungeon in his coffin in his grave he will sing and make his chaines Late-strings among the dead he is alive now I rejoyce You have a Latine Proverb of warre Mars communis warre is of various event sometimes against one sometimes with one so I may say of the warre of a Christian 't is Mars communis sometimes we come off well sometimes we are taken and chained sometimes the battaile is so hot that all run away Magnanimitie stands to it then fights alone shee is oft a prisoner but never a run-away one is enough to wit Christ though all else run away or how ever disadvantaged otherwise yet upon this advantage shee stands to it alone and fights with many yea fights and sings thunders and harpes you have the voice of great thunders and of harpes joyned together Revel 14.2 The servants of the Lord fighting and thundring against Antichrist and yet harping and singing Est virtus omnia ad gloriam ferens A vertue that mouldes and shapes all things good things bad things prisons chaines bloud all to divine triumph Magnanimitie is alwayes very stout but alwayes very amiable when shee breaths and collects spirits she doth not curve her brow frowne and fret and the like but smiles in the face of crueltie it selfe Michal scoffed David and stoned him with her mouth but David smiles and dances Paul in chaines at Rome rejoyceth now I joy In the belly of Hell Jonah prayes yea gives thankes I will sacrifice to the Lord with a voice of thankesgiving salvation is of the Lord. And the Lord spake unto the fish and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry land Jonah 2.9 10. As the verses goe and are conjoyned one would thinke they did carry this brave sense that as soone as God did behold Jonah in this brave posture of spirit not onely big with prayer but with praises even in the belly of the Whale that then he spake to the Whale to give him up that then he spake to Hell to give up that person to Heaven whose spirit and action was there before There is an amiablenesse of person and an amiablenesse of action and Magnanimitie hath both shee sets the countenance right the eye right and the hand right when shee is stout 't is in the truth and for the truth shee pursues a noble game and abhorres all evill means to catch it to get Earth to get Heaven shee will not be bribed when there is any base carriage in a businesse none more ignorant of any such thing then a Christian truly magnanimous Christian magnanimitie is borne of humilitie and simplicitie and hunts after nothing more then the incouraging of the parents of which shee came but this shee pursues to the utmost Things that are of the truest and highest glory these doth a magnanimous Christian Nervis cunctis incumbere intend with every sinew all things that are simply sinfull or but of meane account come not into his thought 'T is virtus tendens ad maxima a Christian that struggles to be of all Christians the chiefe for humilitie for integritie for faith for love for fruition for emission for taking in of Christ for laying out for Christ A Christian indeed magnanimous is the greatest Merchant-venturer to the tother world that is he is mightie in stocke he hath many millions of
underwent it set him more in Heaven and made his expiration from more inspiration his breathings forth in this world from stronger gales from that world above and made his last words like the last words of that sweete singer of Israel doubly sweet How transendently sweete are all those expressions in the Gospell of Iohn which hee spake as preparatory to his end Pleasant T is very pleasant t is so to every sense which nothing else is or can be such is the constitution of man and things now It sounds pleasant tasts pleasant lookes pleasant c. The breath of Christ casts a dew thou hast the dew of thy youth that hangs the Locks of man with silver drops The Aire in some Countries doth colour and varnish the haire Words in season are like Apples of Gold in pictures of Silver these are shining things indeed and proper to the sight such are all the words of Christ his last words were very seasonable words without which where would have been this Ordinance and these words which now you partake of the gales that come from Christs mouth are all seasonable let this winde sit which way it will and blow how it will sharply or mildly t is still seasonable Christ is wisdome and wisdome never breathes unseasonably and such words are as the Sun irradiant beyond the glittering of gold or sparkling of Pearles to the internall eye Wisdome makes the Face the Tongue the Lungs yea the breath shine which is a wonder The breath of Christ as it is pleasant to sight so to taste this is another wonder Ephraim is derided for feeding on wind Can one tast or eate winde Yet such is the breath of Christs Lips that one may feede on 't like the Dewes of the holy Land and make a very good meale t is so sweet to the taste and so nourishing to the state of the soule the breathings of Christs Lips are beyond expression pleasant to the taste How sweet are thy words to my taste I cannot expresse it as if the Prophet had said yea sweeter then the Honey to my mouth Psal 119.103 they that write of Honey tell us of severall sorts which the Bee makes at severall seasons and answerably differ in their sweetnesse and goodnesse There is a Honey which they call Flower-honey which is made in the Spring and prime of the yeare from choyce flowers and this is accounted the prime Honey and that which they judge best to nourish young Bees withall when they are first put to worke to put them in heart The breath of Christ is Honey-dew his words are combes full of Flower-honey gathered out of the Garden above and admirable to put yong and old in heart There is a great dispute about Honey-dewes whether they come from the Earth as exhalations from it as other ordinary Dewes do or not some affirme it to be nothing else but a pure sweat of the celestiall bodies an unctuous gelly from the benigne Starres and therefore called a Heavenly liquor and say if it could be taken as purely as it falls from the Heavens before it comes into the corrupt Aire in which we breath 't would be much beyond that which we have it would be a soveraine Nectar to cure all diseases it would fetch from death to life and immortalize men There may be something in all this though not so much as authors would have us think and yet if all this were true t is too short to set out the thing in hand The honey dew wee speake of t is no exhalation from any thing here below t is indeed nothing else but the sweat of Heaven an unctuous gelly dropping downe from that bright morning Star Christ the sweat of his celestiall body and indeed is soveraine for all diseases to fetch man from Death to Life to immortalize men Christs Words are Words of eternall Life Vse Transgression is much aggravated by this point Sinne is heartily loved nothing will turne men Do you consider what you go against you go against the breath of God the dying breath of our Lord Jesus Some mens bowells are all torne out such are past recovery When Satan can serve any soule so the case is very wofull and yet this is common Sinners have you any soule-bowells will not a crying dying groaning voyce work upon you The ministration which is here below is glorious but dying it hath been so t is so 't will be so The Prophets where are they The great Prophet Christ where is he The Apostles where are they they that Preached to your fathers where are they we that now preach to you are we not dying is not every light wasting Is it not warme dying breath that is now breathed in your faces by me Are not the lights of this Generation almost burnt out and yet sinne more alive then ever it was This World worsens apace this Generation the dregs of many past Speake who will cry die who will Christ and many thousands more yet sinne must not die no not open sinne What a Sodome is London and England notwithstanding the Word of God! this aggravation kills us this makes our carcasses now that they cannot reach the Sepulchers of our Fathers but bed horse feet and the wrath of God That place is worthy of note 1 Kings 13.21 and hee cried to the man of God which came from Judah saying Thus saith the Lord for as much as thou hast disobeyed the Mouth of the Lord Observe the circumstance of aggravation and hast not kept the Commandement which the Lord thy God commanded thee but camest back and hast eaten bread and drunk water in the place of which the Lord did say unto thee Eate no bread and drink no water thy carcasse shall not come into the Sepulcher of thy fathers He had cried against the Altar at Bethel and against Jeroboam this hee discharged well but he was also not to eate nor drinke in that place to have nothing to do with any there because of their pollution and this also he observed well a while as appeares by his stout Language to the King If thou wilt give me halfe thy house J will not eate Bread with thee in this place But he was fetched back by a flattering Prophet and did eate and drinke in Bethel and so went against the Mouth of God The Prophets obedience was partiall his carcasse fell for this sadly t is our case at best for the generall Such whom sinne doth not wholly sway neither doth truth Those that are against the Altar at Bethel are for eating and drinking in Bethel for countenancing something forbidden about Gods worship mens carcasses pay for this and will till they know how to account of every tittle of what a God speaks till we become faithfull executors of the will of a dying Saviour we shall die We live in a very unhappy time we are spectators of sinne and justice in height Men prize their sinne above their bloud But as sinne is
feated so it will abide if sinne be feated in the heart it will abide there till all the bloud of the man be spilt on the ground yea till all that which is ten thousand times more noble then this to wit the soule be lost I will tell you the property of the Word of God in order to such a foule as still keepes his sin t is though sweet in it selfe bitter to such searching piercing tormenting The word of God is quick and powerfull sharper then any two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing of soule and spirit and this hee spake in order to them which abode in the stubbornesse of their heart and flighted the promise of perfect rest in that Canaan above The heart strongly ingaged to evill truth is very piercing he that so loves sinne that he slightes the rest above he shall have no rest here You cannot imagine the sad boutes and fearfull expectations that unsound soules have and yet this must continue because the breath of the Lord like a River of Brimstone keeps in this Hell as it doth that below The breath of Christ which you spurne against by your spurning lights a fire and shall serve to burne you though it will not to lead you Christ puts to the sword all they which yeeld not burnes and blowes up all that he cannot take Did not our hearts burne within us whilst he talked with us The breath of Christ is hot it burnes within men according to that degree of unbeliefe and resistance it findes in every one without respect of persons Did not our Hearts burne Sinners consider these things and repent sucke in the dying breath of Christ charge folly upon your selves Who is it that speakes to mee what would he have who is it within me that answers and what answers doth it make There are fleshly reasonings and carnall motions take heede of them Everybody will plead for it selfe the body of death will do so which is the death of the soule but methinks the Word of God should silence all If the voyee that speakes to us were considered as such a voyce surely it would In what posture your soules sit in an ordinance is all in all If you thinke I speake these things as a man as Paul saith that it is onely a mans word you will hush your soules asleepe againe as soone as gone from the presence of a man and yet ingenuity would honour mans voyce The beast that spake to Balaam that beast was honoured to speake with mans voyce and that was throwne in Balaams face that mans voyce from a beast would not calme his madnesse The dumb Asse spake with mans voyce But when man is honored to speak with Gods voyce and to forbid your sin and your madnesse therein will you on for all this how much more will this be throwne in your face Consider with what voyce we speak and for how little while this Oracle speakes in this earthen Tabernacle and see how it will worke To day if you will heare his voyce this Tabernacle in which his voyce is and speakes lasts but a day to day if you will heare his voyce sinners doe to morrow the tent will be removed the vaile will be drawne the Oracle will besilent his voyce and our own too will be gone out of our Mouthes and hid from your Eares COLOS. 1.26 Even the Mystery THe carryage of Christ since the fall is here hinted hee doth worke and speake above our reach when he goeth he maketh a path like a Ship in the Sea that no man can finde any thing after him not a step when hee speakes his words are a great deepe a Sea bottomlesse i of such vastnesse in all noble property that no man can mouth them nor utter them after him but stand dumb and silent they are as the title saith here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they doe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 occludere shut up the Tongue and Lips of man that hee can say nothing Divine prerogative we are to stand upon There is a power opening and shuting things of eternall consequence in order to man in this life This power is purely spirituall action is used to close the Eyes of the dead but it is invissible mans doome is written in the wall and no hand seene nor caracter legible in order to the man concerned though all big and plaine and hee spelled and personated in them because Organs within enervated in which case man hath Eyes and sees not Eares and heares not They that see are made blind but do they know how action is used in this sad worke but can any one explaine it to sence for the time when it was done or for the thing it selfe that is done when went the spirit from me to thee The poore creatures eyes are out but when was it done did the man feele it can he tell the agent or the instrument that did it or what wheele in the Clock is crackt that the motion goes so false The nature of this spirituall occlusive act is this two spirits run their course at last one is finally left and so in the darke and able to see nothing according to the spirituall nature of it so as to stir any noble operation in the soule Faith a Ridle Selfe-deniall a Ridle Regeneration a Ridle a going into ones Mothers belly againe the death of the body of death the Resurrection and the Life all these great things of the Gospell strange things and like the talke of a son to a barren wombe laughed at The s●uting up or the opening of the Kingdome of God in order to any is a transaction onely by the spirit cannot enter into the heart of man to conceive but God hath revealed them to us by his spirit for the spirit searcheth all things the deepe things of God There is an internall caelestiall vertue coacting with the soule the giving or the suspension of which is mans onely advantage or disadvantage to understand Gods Will the suspension of internall influence keepes the soule spiritually darke what ever other advantages it hath and shuts it out from the Kingdome of Heaven This spirituall occlusive power is feated in Christ For Judgement am I come into this World that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blind Concerning spirituall judicature it is proper to me there is none good at this worke but I saith Christ to cast amist before the Eyes of the minde and to darken the light that is in men this onely I can doe to cast a mist before the Eyes of mens bodies this divells may doe and such men as give themselves to them but to cast a mist before the Eyes of mens soules and to darken the light that is in them and to make the things of eternall Life mysteries and meere ridles this is only Christs work Christ can put out the