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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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it were high-water in the soul 1. When there are indicia irae tokens of Gods Season 1 wrath breaking forth in the Nation England hath been under Gods black Rod these many years the Lord hath drawn the Sword and it is not yet put up O that our tears may blunt the edge of this Sword when it is a time of treading down now is a time of breaking up the fallow ground of our hearts Isa 22.4 5. Therefore said I look away from me I will weep bitterly for it is a time of treading down Joel 2.2 13. A day of darkness and of gloominess a day of cloud c. therefore turn ye even to me with weeping and with mourning Rain follows thunder When God thunders in a Nation by his judgements now the showres of tears must distil When God smites upon our back we must smite upon our thigh Jer. 31.19 When God seems to stand upon the Threshold of the Temple as if he were ready to take his wings and flie * Ezek. 10.4 then is a time to lie weeping between the Porch and the Altar If the Lord seems to be packing up and carrying away his Gospel it is now high time to mourn that by our teares possibly his Repentings may be kindled Season 2 2. Before the performing solemn duties of Gods Worship as Fasting or receiving the Lords Supper Christian Art thou to seek God in an extraordinary manner seek him sorrowing Luk. 2.48 Wouldst thou have the smiles of Gods face the kisses of his lips set open all the springs of Mourning and then God will draw nigh to thee in an Ordinance and say Here I am Isa 58.9 When Jacob wept then he found God in Bethel Hos 12.4 He named the name of the place Peniel for saith he I have seen God face to face Gen. 32.30 Give Christ the Wine of thy tears to drink and in the Sacrament he will give thee the Wine of his blood to drink Season 3 3. After scandalous relapses though I will not say with Donatus there is no mercy for sins of recidivation or relapse yet I say there 's no mercy without bitter Mourning Scandalous sins reflect dishonour upon Religion 2 Sam 12.14 Therefore now our Cheeks should be covered with blushing and our eyes bedewed with tears Peter after his denying Christ wept bitterly Christian hath God given thee over to any enormous sin as a just reward of thy pride and security go into the weeping Bath Sins of infirmity injure the soul but scandalous sins wound the Gospel Lesser sins grieve the Spirit but greater sins vex the Spirit Isa 63.9 And if that blessed Dove weeps shall not we weep When the Aire is dark then the dew falls when we have by scandalous sin darkned the lustre of the Gospel now is the time for the dew of holy tears to fall from our eyes SECT 7. Setting forth the Degrees of Mourning NEXT to the seasons of Mourning let us consider the degree of it the Mourning for sin must be a very great Mourning the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports a great sorrow such as is seen at the Funeral of a dear friend * Gravissima pe●cata gravissimis lamentis indigent Aug. Zach. 12.10 They shall look on me whom they have pierced and they shall mourn for him as one that mourneth for his only son The sorrow for an only child is very great such must be the sorrow for sin Ver. 11. In that day there shall be great Mourning as the Mourning of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddon In that Valley Josiah that famous and pious Prince was cut off by an untimely death at whose Funeral there was bitter lamentation thus bitterly must we bewail not the death but the life of our sins Now then to set forth the graduation of sorrow 1. Our Mourning for sin must be so great as to exceed all other grief Elies Mourning for the Ark was such that it swallowed up the loss of his two children spiritual grief must preponderate all other We should mourn more for sin than the loss of friends or estate 2. We should indeavour to have our sorrow rise up to the same heighth and proportion as our sin doth Manasseh was a great sinner and a great Mourner 2 Chron. 33.12 He humbled himself greatly Manasseh made the streets run with blood and he made the prison in Babylon run with tears * Ut scilicet peccatum lachrymis lavaret Ambr. Peter wept bitterly ● A true Mourne● labours that his Repentance may be as eminent as his sin is transcendent SECT 8. Shewing the Opposite to holy Mourning HAving shewn the nature of Mourning I shall next shew what is the Opposite to holy Mourning The Opposite to Mourning is hardness of heart which in Scripture is called Cor lapideum an heart of stone Ezek. 36. An heart of stone is far from Mourning and Relenting this heart of stone is known by two symptomes 1. Insensibility A stone is not sensible of any thing lay weight upon it grind it to powder it doth not feel so it is with an hard heart it is insensible of sin or wrath the stone in the Kidneys is felt but not the stone in the heart Ephes 4.19 Who being past feeling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. An heart of stone is known by its inflexibility A stone will not bend durum est quod non cedit tactui so it is with an hard heart it will not comply with Gods Command it will not stoop to Christs Scepter an heart of stone will sooner break by death than bend by Repentance it is so far from yielding to God that with the Anvil it beats back the Hammer it resists the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 Oh Christians if you would be spiritual Mourners take heed of this stone of the heart Hebr. 3.7 Harden not your hearts A stony heart is the worst heart if it were brazen it might be melted in the furnace if Iron it might be bowed with the Hammer but a stony heart is such that only the Arme of God can break and the blood of God can soften Oh the misery of an hard heart 1. An hard heart is void of all grace while the Wax is hard it will not take the impression of the seal the heart while it is hard will not take the stamp of grace it must first be made tender and melting the Plow of the Word will not go upon an hard heart 2. An hard heart is good for nothing but to make fuel for hell-fire Rom. 5.2 After thy hardness of heart thou treasurest up wrath Hell is full of hard hearts there is not one soft heart there there is weeping there but no softness We read of Vessels fitted for destruction Rom. 9.22 Impenitency fits these Vessels for hell and makes them like sere Wood which is fit to burn 3. Hardness of heart makes a mans condition worse than all his other sins besides if one be guilty of great sins yet if he can mourn
then tell me if there be not enough in it to draw forth tears I know not what name to give it bad enough one calls it the Divels excrement sin is malorum colluvies it is a complication of all evil it is the spirits of mischief distilled 1. Sin dishonours God it denies Gods Omnisciency it derides his Patience it distrusts his Faithfulness sin tramples upon Gods Law slights his Love grieves his Spirit 2. Sin wrongs us 1. Sin shames us Prov. 14.34 Sin is a reproach to any people sin hath made us naked it hath plucked off our Robe and taken our Crown from us it hath spoiled us of our glory nay it hath not only made us naked but impure Ezek. 16.6 I saw thee polluted in thy blood Sin hath not only taken off our cloth of gold but it hath put upon us filthy garments Zach. 3.3 God made us after his likeness Gen. 1.26 but sin hath made us like the Beasts that perish Psal 49. ult We are all become brutish in our affections nor hath sin made us only like the Beasts but like the Divel John 8.44 Sin hath drawn the Divels picture upon mans heart 2. Sin stabs us the sinner like the Jaylor draws a Sword to kill himself * Acts 16.27 he is bereaved of his judgement and like the man in the Gospel possessed with the Divel he cuts himself with stones * Mark 5 5. though he hath such a stone in his heart that he feels it not Every sin is a stroak at the soul tot vitia tot vulnera so many sins so many wounds every blow given to the Tree helps forward the Felling of the Tree Every sin is an hewing and chopping down the soul for hell-fire if then there be all this evil in sin if this forbidden fruit hath such a bitter Core it may make us mourn our hearts should be the Spring and our eyes the Rivers 2. If we would be Mourners let us be Orators Beg a spirit of contrition * Da Domine Deus cordi mee poenitentiam oculis lachrymarum fontem Austin pray to God that he will put us in mourning that he will give us a melting frame of heart let us beg Achsahs blessing Josh 15. Springs of water Josh 15.19 Let us pray that our hearts may be spiritual limbecks dropping tears into Gods bottle Let us pray that we who have the poyson of the Serpent may have the tears of the Dove the Spirit of God is a Spirit of mourning let us pray that God would poure that Spirit of grace on us whereby we may look on him whom we have pierced and mourn for him Zach. 12.10 God must inspirare before we can suspirare he must breath in his Spirit * Velle bonum nisi gratiae adminiculo non possumus Aug. de grat lib. arbit before we can breath out our sorrows the Spirit of God is like the fire in a Still that sends up the dews of grace in the heart and causeth them to drop from the eyes 'T is this blessed Spirit whose gentle breath causeth our spices to smell and our waters to flow and if the spring of mourning be once set open in the heart there can want no joy as tears flow out comfort flows in which leads to the second part of the Text they shall be comforted CHAP. XI Shewing the comforts belonging to Mourners Matth. 5.4 They shall be comforted HAving already presented to your view the dark side of the Text I shall now shew you the light side they shall be comforted Where observe 1. Mourning goes before comfort as the launcing of a wound precedes the cure the Antinomian talks of comfort but cries down mourning for sin he is like a foolish Patient who having a Pill prescribed him licks the sugar but throws away the Pill The Libertine is all for joy and comfort he licks the sugar but throws away the bitter Pill of Repentance if ever we have true comfort we must have it in Gods way and method sorrow for sin ushers in joy Isa 57. I will restore comfort to him and to his Mourners That is the true Sun-shine of joy which comes after a showre of tears we may as well expect a crop without seed as comfort without Gospel-mourning 2. Observe that God keeps his best wine till last first he prescribes mourning for sin and then sets abroach the wine of consolation the Divel doth quite contrary he shews the best first and keeps the worst till last First he shews the wine sparkling in the glass then comes the biting of the serpent Prov. 23.32 Satan sets his dainty dishes before men he presents sin to them coloured with beauty sweetned with pleasure silvered with profit and then afterwards the sad reckoning is brought in He shewed Judas first the silver bait and then struck him with the hook This is the reason why sin hath so many followers because it shews the best first first the golden Crowns and then come the Lyons teeth Rev. 9.7 8. But God shews the worst first first he prescribes a bitter potion and then brings a cordial they shall be comforted 3. Observe Gospel-tears are not lost they are seeds of comfort while the penitent doth poure out tears God poures in joy if thou wouldst be chearful saith Chrysostom be sad * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Psal 126.5 They that sowe in tears shall reap in joy It was the end of Christs anointing and coming into the world that he might comfort them that mourn Isa 61.3 Christ had the oyle of gladness poured on him as Chrysostom saith that he might poure it upon the Mourner well then may the Apostle call it a repentance not to be repented of 2 Cor. 7.10 A mans drunkenness is to be repented of his uncleanness is to be repented of but his repentance is never to be repented of because it is the inlet to joy Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Here is sweet fruit from a bitter stock Christ caused the earthen Vessels to be filled with water and then turned the water into wine John 2.9 So when the eye that earthen Vessel hath been filled with water brim full then Christ will turn the water of tears into the wine of joy Holy mourning saith Saint Basil * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil is the seed out of which the flower of eternal joy doth grow The Reason why the Mourner shall be comforted is 1. Because Mourning is made on purpose for this end Mourning is not prescribed for it self but in ordine ad aliud that it may lay a train for comfort therefore we sowe in tears that we may reap in joy Holy mourning is a spiritual medicine now a medicine is not prescribed for it self but for health-sake so Gospel-mourning is appointed for this very end to bring forth joy 2. The spiritual Mourner is the fittest person for comfort When the heart is broken for sin now it is fittest for
with sweet spices the lower it sails the more a Christian is filled with the sweet comforts of the Spirit the lower he fails in humility the fuller a Tree is of fruit the lower the bough hangs the more full we are of the fruits of the Spirit joy and peace Gal. 5.22 the more we bend down in humility St. Paul a chosen Vessel * Acts 9.15 fill'd with the wine of the Spirit * 2 Cor. 5.1 did not more abound in joy than in lowliness of mind Eph. 3.8 Unto me who am less than the least of all Saints is this grace given c. He who was the chief of the Apostles calls himself the least of Saints Those who say they have comfort but are proud they have learned to despise others and are climb'd above Ordinances their comforts are delusions the Divel is able not only to transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.4 but he can transform himself into the Comforter 'T is easie to counterfeit money to silver over brass and put the Kings image upon it the Divel can silver over false comforts and make them look as if they had the stamp of the King of heaven upon them the comforts of God are humbling though they lift the heart up in thankfulness yet they do not puff it up in pride 2. The comforts God gives his Mourners are unmixed they are not tempered with any bitter ingredients worldly comforts are like wine that runs dregs there is that guilt within checks and corrodes in midst of laughter the heart is sad Prov 14.13 Queen Mary once said if she were opened they would find Callis lying at her heart if the breast of a sinner were anatomized and opened you would find a worm gnawing at his heart guilt is a Wolf which feeds in the breast of his comfort a sinner may have a smiling countenance but a chiding conscience his mirth is like the mirth of a man in debt who is every houre in fear of arresting the comforts of wicked men are spiced with bitterness they are worm-wood wine Hi sunt qui trepidant ad omnia fulgura pallent Hor. Cum tonat exanimes primo quoque murmure coelum But spiritual comforts are pure they are not muddied with guilt nor mixed with fear they are the pure wine of the Spirit what the Mourner feels is joy and nothing but joy 3. These comforts God gives his Mourners are sweet Eccles 12.7 Truly the light is sweet so is the light of Gods countenance How sweet are those comforts which bring the Comforter along with them John 14.16 Therefore the love of God shed into the heart is said to be better than wine Cant. 1.2 Wine pleaseth the palate but the love of God chears the conscience the lips of Christ drop sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.13 The comforts God gives are a Christians Musick they are the golden Pot and the Manna the Nectar and Ambrosia of a Christian they are the Saints Festival their banquetting stuffe so sweet are these Divine comforts that the Church had her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fainting fits for want of them Cant. 2.5 stay me with flagons Metonymia Subjecti pro adjuncto the flagons are put for the wine by these flagons are meant the comforts of the Spirit the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies all variety of delights to show the abundance of delectability and sweetnesse in these comforts of the Spirit Comfort me with Apples Apples are sweet in taste fragrant in smell so sweet and delicious are those Apples which grow upon the tree in Paradise These comforts from above are so sweet that they make all other comforts sweet health estate relations they are like sawce which makes all our earthly possessions and enjoyments come off with a better relish So sweet are these comforts of the Spirit that they do much abate and moderate our joy in worldly things he who hath been drinking spirits of wine or Alkermes will not much thirst after water and that man who hath once tasted how sweet the Lord is Psal 34.8 and hath drunk the cordials of the Spirit will not thirst immoderately after secular delights Those who play with dogs and birds it is a signe they have no children such as are inordinate in their desire and love of the creature declare plainly that they never had better comforts 4. These comforts which God gives his mourners are holy comforts they are call'd the comforts of the holy Ghost Acts 9.31 Every thing propagates in its own kind * Omne agens operatur secundum naturam agens the holy Ghost can no more produce impure joys in the soul than the Sun can prduce darknesse he who hath the comforts of the Spirit looks upon himself as a person engaged to do God more service Hath the Lord looked upon me with a smiling face I can never pray enough I can never love God enough The comforts of the Spirit raise in the heart an holy antipathy against sin the Dove hates every feather that hath grown upon the Hawke so there is an hatred of every motion and temptation to evil he who hath a principle of life in him opposeth every thing that would destroy life he hates poison so he that hath the comforts of the Spirit living in him sets himself against those sins which would murder his comforts divine comforts give the soul more acquaintance with God 1 John 1.4 Our fellowship is with the Father and his Sonne Jesus 5. The comforts reserv'd for the mourners are filling comforts Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with joy John 16.24 Ask that your joy may be full When God pours in the joyes of heaven they fill the heart and make it run over 2 Cor. 7.4 I am exceeding joyful the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I overflow with joy as a Cup that is filled with wine till it runs over Outward comforts can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle Spiritual joyes are satisfying Psal 63.5 My heart shall be satisfied as with marrow and I will praise thee with ioyful lips Davids heart was full and the joy did break out at his lips Psal 4.7 Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart worldly joyes do put gladnesse into the face 2 Cor. 5.12 they rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the face but the Spirit of God puts gladnesse into the heart divine joyes are heart-joyes Zach. 10.7 John 16.22 Your heart shall rejoyce a believer doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God And to show how filling these comforts are which are of an heavenly extraction the Psalmist saith they create greater joy than when wine and cyle encrease Psal 4. Wine and Oyle may delight but not satisfie they have their vacuity and indigence we may say as Zach. 10.2 they comfort in vaine outward comforts do sooner cloy than chear and sooner weary than fill Xerxes offered great rewards to him
it comes to a Duty by Examination and Ejaculation When the Earth is prepared then it is fit to receive the seed when the Instrument is prepared and tuned it is fit for Musick 2. Watching the heart in a Duty An holy heart labours to be affected and wrought upon his heart burns within him There was no Sacrifice without fire a pure Saint labours to have his heart broken in a duty Psal 51.17 The incense when it was broken did cast the sweetest favour Impure souls care not in what a dead perfunctory manner they serve God Ezek. 33.31 They pray more out of fashion than out of faith They are no more affected with an Ordinance than the Tombs of the Church God complains of offering up the blind Mal. 1.8 And is it not as bad to offer up the dead O Christian say to thy self How can this deadness of heart stand with pureness of heart Do not dead things putrifie 3. Outward reverence Purity of heart will express it self by the reverend gesture of the body the lifting up of the eye and hand the uncovering the head the bending the knee Constantine the Emperour did bear great reverence to the Word When God gave the Law the Mount was on fire and trembled Exod. 19.18 The reason was that the people might prostrate themselves more reverently before the Lord. The Ark wherein the Law was put was carried upon bars that the Levites might not touch it Exod. 25.11 14. To shew what reverence God would have about holy things Sitting in prayer unless in case of weakness and having the Hat half on in prayer is a very undecent irreverent practice let such as are guilty reform it We must not only offer up our souls but our bodies Rom. 12.1 The Lord takes notice what posture and gesture we use in his worship If a man were to deliver a Petition to the King would he deliver it with his Hat half on The careless irreverence of some would make us think they did not much regard whether God heard them or no. We are run from one extream to another from superstition to unmannerliness Let Christians think of the dreadful Majesty of God who is present Gen. 28.17 How dreadful is this place this is none other but the house of God and this is the gate of heaven The blessed Angels cover their faces crying Holy holy Isa 6.1 An holy heart will have an holy gesture 6. A pure heart will have a pure life 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord. Where there is a good Conscience there will be a good Conversation Some bless God they have good hearts but their lives are evil Prov. 30.12 There is a generation that are pure in their own eyes and yet are not washed from their filthiness If the stream be corrupt we may suspect the spring-head to be impure Aaron was called the Saint of the Lord Psal 106.16 He had not only an holy heart but there was a golden plate on his fore-head on which was written holiness to the Lord. Purity must not only be woven into the heart but engraven upon the life Grace is most beautiful when it shines abroad with its golden beams The Clock hath not only its motion within but the finger moves without upon the Dyal Pureness of heart shews it self upon the Dyal of the Conversation 1. A pure soul talks of God Psal 37.30 His heart is seen in his tongue the Latines call the Roof of the mouth Coelum Heaven He that is pure in heart his mouth is full of heaven 2. He walks with God Gen. 6.9 He is still doing Angels work praising God serving God he lives as Christ did upon Earth Holy duties are the Jacobs Ladder by which he is still ascending to heaven Purity of heart and life are in Scripture made Twins Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within them there is purity of heart and they shall walk in my statutes there is purity of life Shall we account them pure whose Conversation is not in heaven * Phil. 3.20 but rather in hell Micah 6.11 Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and with the bag of deceitful weights How justly may others reproach Religion when they see it kicked down with our unholy feet a pure heart hath a golden Frontispice grace like new wine will have vent it can be no more conceal'd than lost The Saints are called Jewels Mal. 3. because of that shining lustre they cast in the eyes of others 7. A pure heart is so in love with purity that nothing can draw him off from it 1. Let others reproach purity he loves it as David when he danced before the Ark and Michal scoffed if saith he this he to be vile I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 So saith a pure heart If to follow after holiness be to be vile I will yet be more vile Let water be sprinkled upon the fire it burns the more The more others deride holiness the more doth a gracious soul burn in love and zeal to it If a man had an inheritance befallen him would he be laughed out of it what is a Christian the worse for anothers reproach 't is not a blind mans disparaging a Diamond that makes it sparkle the less 2. Let others persecute holiness a pure heart will pursue it Holiness is the Queen every gracious soul is espoused to and he will rather dye than be divorced Paul would be holy though bonds and persecutions did abide him Acts 20.23 The way of Religion is oft thorny and bloody but a gracious heart prefers inward purity before outward peace I have heard of one who having a Jewel he much prized the King sent for his Jewel Tell the King saith he I honour his Majesty but I will rather lose my life than part with my Jewel He who is enriched with the Jewel of holiness will rather dye than part with this Jewel When his honour and riches will do him no good his holiness will stand him instead Rom. 6.22 Ye have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life SECT 5. Exhorting to heart-purity Use 3 3. LET me perswade Christians to heart-purity the Harlot wipes her mouth Exhort Prov. 30.20 But that is not enough Wash thy heart o Jerusalem Jerem. 4.14 And here I shall lay down some Arguments or Motives to perswade to heart-purity 1. The necessity of heart-purity it is necessary 1. In respect of our selves Till the heart be pure all our holy things are polluted they are splendida peccata Titus 1.15 To the unclean all things are unclean their offering is unclean Under the Law if a man who was unclean by a dead body did carry a piece of holy flesh in his skirt the holy flesh could not cleanse him but he polluted that Hag. 2.12 13. He who had the Leprosie whatever he touched was unclean if he had touched the
their spiritual accounts they reckon what Religion must cost them and may cost them it must cost them the blood of their sins it may cost them the blood of their lives 2. The fore-thoughts of persecution will be as sawce to season our delights that we do not surfeit upon them How soon may there be an Alarum sounded how soon may the clouds drop blood the thoughts of this would take off the heart from the immoderate love of the creature Our Saviour at a great Feast breaks out into mention of his death Mark 14.3 She hath prepared this against my Burial So the fore-thoughts of a change would be an excellent antidote against a surfeit 3. The fore-thoughts of sufferings would make them lighter when they come * Levius laedunt praevisa mala Grotius the suddenness of an evil addes to the sadness this was ill news to the fool in the Gospel who reckoned without his Host Hac nocte This night shall thy soul be required of thee This will be an aggravation of Babylons miseries Rev. 18.8 Her plagues shall come in one day not that Antichrist shall be destroyed in a day but in a day that is suddenly the blow shall come unawares when he doth not think of it the reckoning before hand of suffering doth alleviate and take off the edge of it when it comes therefore Christ to lighten the Cross still fore-warms his Disciples of sufferings that they might not come unlooked for Joh. 16.33 Acts 1.7 4. Fore-thoughts of persecution would put us in mind of getting our Armour ready 't is dangerous as well as imprudent to have all to seek when the trial comes as if a Souldier should have his weapons to get when the enemy is in the Field Caesar seeing a Souldier whetting his sword when he was just going to fight cashier'd him he that reckons upon persecution will be in a ready posture for it he will have the Shield of Faith and the Sword of the Spirit ready that he may not be surprized unawares 2. Let us prepare for persecution a wise Pilot in a calm will prepare for a storm God knows how soon persecution may come there seems to be a cloud of blood hanging over the Nation SECT 9. Shewing how we may be armed for sufferings Quest HOW shall we prepare for sufferings Answ Do three things 1. Be persons rightly qualified for suffering 2. Avoide those things which will hinder suffering 3. Promote all helps to suffering 1. Labour to be persons rightly qualified for suffering Be righteous persons that man who would suffer for righteousness sake must himself be righteous I mean Evangelically righteous in particular I call him righteous 1. Who breaths after sanctity Psal 119.5 Though sin cleaves to his heart yet his heart doth not cleave to sin though sin hath an alliance yet no allowance Rom. 7.15 What I do I allow not a good man hates that sin to which Satan doth most tempt and his heart most incline Psal 119.128 2. A righteous person is one who makes Gods glory his Center the glory of God is more worth than the salvation of all mens soul He who is divinely qualified is so zealously ambitious of Gods glory that he cares not what he loseth so God may be a gainer he prefers the glory of God before credit estate relations It was the speech of Kiliaz that blessed Martyr Had I all the gold in the world to dispose of I would give it to live with my relations though in prison yet Jesus Christ is dearer to me than all 3. A righteous person is one who values the jewel of a good conscience at an high rate good conscience is a Saints Festival his Musick his Paradise and he will rather hazard any thing than violate his conscience They say of the Irish if they have a good Skimmeter a warlike weapon they had rather take a blow on their Arme than their Skimmeter should be hurt To this I may compare a good conscience a godly man had rather sustain hurt in his body or estate than his conscience should be hurt he had rather dye than violate the Virginity of his conscience such a man as this is Evangelically righteous and if God call him to it he is fit to suffer 2. Avoid those things which will hinder suffering 1. The love of the world God allows us the use of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 But take heed of the love of it he that is in love with the world will be out of love with the Cross 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me having loved this present world he not only forsook Pauls company but his doctrine The love of the world choaks our zeal a man wedded to the world will for thirty pieces of silver betray Christ and a good cause Let the world be as a loose garment that you may throw off at pleasure before a man can dye for Christ he must be dead to the world Paul was crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 It will be an easie thing to dye when we are dead before in our affections 2. Carnal fear There is a two-fold fear 1. A filial fear when a man fears to displease God * Incidam potius in Geheunam quam peccatum Anselm when he fears lest he should not hold out this is a good fear Blessed is he that fears alway if Peter had feared his own heart and said Lord Jesus I fear I shall forsake thee Lord strengthen me doubtless Christ would have kept him from falling 2. There is a cowardly fear when a man fears danger more than sin when he is afraid to be good this fear is an enemy to suffering God proclaimed that those who were fearful should not go to the Wars Deuter. 20.8 The fearful are unfit to fight in Christs Wars a man possessed with fear doth not consult what is best but what is safest If he may save his Estate he will snare his conscience Prov. 29.25 In the fear of man there is a snare Fear made Peter deny Christ Abraham equivocate David fain himself mad fear will put men upon indirect courses making them study rather compliance than conscience Fear makes sin appear little and suffering great the fearful man sees double he looks upon the cross through his perspective twice as big it is fear argues sordidness of spirit * Degeneres animos timor arguit it will put one upon things most ignoble and unworthy a fearful man will Vote against his conscience fear infeebles it is like the cutting off Sampsons locks fear melts away the courage Josh 5.1 Their hearts melt because of you and when a mans strength is gone he is very unfit to carry Christs Cross fear is the root of Apostasie Spira's fear made him abjure and recant his Religion fear doth one more hurt than the Adversary it is not so much an enemy without the Castle as a Traytor within indangers it 't is not so much sufferings without as trayterous fear within which undoes
used Jobs wife as a Ladder by which he would have scaled the impregnable Tower of Jobs faith Still retain thy integrity a cutting kind of speech as if the Divel had said God hath pull'd down thy hedge he hath smitten thee in thy children and art thou so sensless as still to serve and worship God what hast thou got by his service where are thy earnings what hast thou to shew but thy Boiles Throw off Religion Curse God and dye Satans physick alwayes poysons Mal. 3.14 Ye have said It is vain to serve God and What profit is it that we have kept his Ordinance We have mourn'd and fasted and have almost fasted away all we have we will fast no longer When a mans estate is low and his spirit troubled now Satan begins to throw in his Angle and oftentimes Satan makes use of poverty to put a man upon indirect courses Agur fear'd his heart in poverty Prov. 30.8 9. Oh keep thy heart in adversity beware of taking the forbidden fruit 5. Keep thy heart in time of prosperity The Moon the fuller it is the more remote it is from the Sun and oftentimes the more full a man is of the world the further his heart is from God Deutr. 32.15 Jesurun waxed fat and kicked 't is hard to abound in prosperity and not abound in sin a full cup is hardly carried without spilling the Trees are never more in danger of the winde than when they blossome pride idleness luxury * Multos felicitas p●ratai● pa● vict●s reddidi● are the three daughters which are bred of plenty Sampson fell asleep in Dalilahs lap millions in the lap of prosperity have slept the sleep of death Agur prayed Give me not riches Prov. 30.8 He knew his heart would be ready to run wilde the worlds golden apple bewitcheth When God sets an hedge of prosperity about us we had need set an hedge of caution and circumspection 3. Reasons enforcing heart-custody 3. The next thing is why we must be so careful about keeping of our hearts the Reasons are 1. Because the heart is a slippery piece Jer. 17.9 The heart is deceitful above all things in the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heart is a Jacob above all things the heart is a supplanter if we are not very cautious and watchful our hearts will put a cheat upon us There is deceit in coyne in friends in books but the heart hath an art of deceiving beyond all 't is a desperate impostor * Grande profundum est homo Aug. the way of the heart is like a Serpent upon a Rock O the pleats and folds the subtilties and labyrinths of a self-deceiving heart Let us a little trace the heart in its fallacies and stratagems and see if there be not reason to lie sentinel continually and set a strong guard about it The heart will deceive us about things sinful lawful religious 1. The heart will deceive us about things sinful 1. The heart will tell us sin is but small and being small it is venial 2. The heart will apologize for sin masking over bad transactions with golden pretences 3. The heart will tell a man he may keep his sin and keep his Religion too 2 Kings 17.33 They feared the Lord and served their own gods The heart will secretly suggest to a man thus as long as he goes to Church and gives almes he may secretly indulge corruption as if duty gave a man a Pattent and License to sin 4. The heart will quote Scripture to justifie sin 1 Cor. 9.20 22. To the Jewes I became as a Jew that I might gain the Jewes I am made all things to all men c. This Text the heart will bring for sinful compliance O subtile heart that canst finde out Scripture to damn thy self though Saint Paul in things indifferent would conform to others that he might save their souls yet he would not to gratifie them violate a Law or deny an Article of his Greed and if the heart is so treacherous being alwayes more ready to excuse sin than examine it what care and circumspection should we use in keeping our hearts that they do not decoy us into sinne before we are aware 2. The heart will deceive us about things lawful in two cases 1. It is lawful to endeavour to preserve our credit A good name is a precious oyntment but under a pretence of preserving the name the heart is ready to tempt a man to self-seeking and make him do all to get a name John 12.43 Thy loved the praise of men more than the praise of God 2. It is lawful to take comfort in estate and relations Deutr. 26.11 But the heart will be ready here to overshoot how oft is the wife and childe laid in Gods room the full stream of the affection runs out to the creature and scarce a drop of love to Christ this is the deceit of the heart it makes us offend most in lawful things more are killed with wine than poyson they are afraid of poyson but take wine in the excess Gross sins affright but how many surfeit upon lawful things when we overdo we undo 3. The heart will deceive us about things religious 1. Our duties 2. Our graces 1. Our duties The heart will tell us it is enough to come to Word and Sacrament though the affections are not at all wrought upon this is like the Salamander which lives in the fire but as Naturalists say it is never the hotter Will this be any Plea at Gods bar to tell the Lord how many Sermons you have heard surely it will be the bringing of Uriahs letter it will be an evidence against you How subtile is the heart to plot its own death and bring a man to hell in the way of duty 2. Our graces the heart is like a flattering glass that would make the hypocrite look fair the foolish Virgins thought they had oyle many strongly conceit they have grace but have none The hypocrites knowledge is no better than ignorance 1 John 2.4 He hath illumination but not assimilation he is not made like Christ The hypocrites faith is fancy he believes but his heart is not purified * Acts 15.9 he pretends to trust God in greater matters but dares not trust him in lesser he will trust God with his soul but not with his estate Well if the heart be thus deceitful what need have we with all keeping to keep the heart do with the heart as with a cheater we will trust a cheater no further than we can see him the heart is a grand cheater it will supplant and cozen try it but do not trust it Prov. 28.26 He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool 2. We must excubias agere keep the heart with watch and ward because it is not only false but fickle God complains of Israel that their goodness was as the early dew Hos 6.4 The Sun ariseth and the dew vanisheth the
heart let thy delight be in them that excell in vertue Psal 16.3 The Saints carry the Lanthorn of the Word along with them it is good to walk with them that carry the light Answ 3 3. If you would keep your heart watch over your passions the heart is ready to be destroyed by its own passion as the Vessel is to be overturned with the Sail the heart doth sometimes sink in sorrow swell with anger and abound excessively with carnal joy Diagoras seeing his three sons in one day crowned Conquerors dyed for joy Passion transports beyond the bounds of reason 't is a kind of phrensie that possesseth Lay the curben-bit of restraint upon your passions or your hearts will run wilde in sin take heed of enflaming your spirits as a man would avoid those wines and strong waters that may heat his blood cut off all occasions that may awaken this FURY take away the fuel that feeds this fire When this viper of passion begins to gather heat pray it down Prayer saith Luther takes down the swelling of the soul and abates the heat of inordinate affections How dangerous are these fiery exhalations Moses in a passion spake unadvisedly with his lips Psal 106.33 A man in a rage is like a ship in a Tempest that hath neither Pilot or Sails or Oars to help it but is exposed to the Waves and Rocks how many have lost their hearts in a storm Answ 4 4. If you would keep your heart keep all the passages to your heart he that would keep a City keeps the Forts and Outworks keep especially the two Portals of the heart fast the eye and the ear 1. Keep the eye the eye oft sets the heart on fire Job did make a Covenant with his eyes Job 31.1 * Voluit reducere speciem sensus externi ad tandem speciem cum inte●o The Serpent sometimes creeps in through the Window or Casement into a Room the old Serpent the Divel creeps through the Casement of the eye into the heart the eye is taster to the appetite First Eve saw the Tree was good for food then she took of the fruit Gen. 3.6 Look to the eye some of the Heathens have pulled out their eyes because they would not be enticed by impure objects I say not pull out the eye only keep the Portal shut the Romans never did let their prisoners go abroad but their Keepers went with them never send thine eyes abroad but send their Keepers with them 2. Keep the ear much sin is conveyed to the heart through the ear the Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 corrupt communication Eph. 4.29 Because impure discourse corrupts and poysons the heart Keep thy ear open to God and shut to sin deafen thy ears to the lies of the slanderer and heretick let not him have thy ear who comes to rob thee of thy heart 5. If you would keep your heart get Christ into your Answ 5 heart Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your heart Nothing can hurt but sin if Christ be in the heart he will purifie it his Spirit is the refiners fire Mal. 3.2 If Christ be in the heart he will adorn it he will bring in the rich furniture of his graces and so beautifie the hidden man of the heart 1 Pet 3.4 If Christ be in the heart he will defend it the Castle of the heart can never be taken if Christ be in it Let Satan dig his Mines lay his Train of powder shoot his Balls of wilde-fire if the Lord of Hosts pitch his Tent in the heart it can never be taken by storm 6. If you would keep your hearts have a care to keep Answ 6 your thoughts Jer. 4.14 How long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee What though you set a watch before the door of the lips if you let your heart run out in vain impure thoughts the heart is the presence-chamber which is to be kept for God vain thoughts defile the Room and make it unfit for God to come into The thoughts make way for sin while the mind is musing the heart burns David let his heart rove into wanton thoughts and that made way for the act of adultery 2 Sam. 11.4 Thoughts are Purveyers for sin they do first start sin and then the heart hunts it Answ 7 7. If you would keep your heart keep your accounts well bring thy heart often to trial put queries to thy heart O my heart what dost thou whether goest thou see what work lies undone what sin thou hast to bewail what grace to strengthen search thy evidences examine thy title to Christ 2 Cor. 13.5 Traverse things narrowly in thy soul see if there be no sin countenanced search as Israel did for Leven keep a Diary in thy heart see how things go in thy soul be not a stranger at home for want of this p●lying with the heart many are kept in the dark and understand not the true state of their souls they live known to others but dye unknown to themselves O what wisdom is it for a Christian to be much with his own heart he that would keep his Estate must keep his Account-books well Christian redeem time every day to turn over the book of conscience trade with thy own heart it will be stealing out to sin call it often to account Seneca would every night when his candle was out ask himself what he had done that day often reckonings keep God and the conscience friends Answ 8 8. If you would keep your heat set fences about your heart those who would keep fruit or flowers fence them in There are foure Fences we should set about our hearts to keep them Fence 1 1. The fear of God Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long As in natural fear the spirits recoil to the heart to keep it so the fear of God preserves the heart fear puts an holy awe upon the soul and keeps it from sinful excursions fear bolts the door of the heart against vanity Prov. 16.6 By the fear of the Lord men depart from evil As a Noble-mans Porter stands at the gate to keep out every thing that is unseemly from being brought into the house so the fear of God stands as an armed man at the gate of the heart to keep out tentations from entrings fear lies sentinel it stands as a Watchman on the Tower and looks every way to see what danger is approaching fear will not admit any thing into the soul which is dishonourable to God 2. Love without fear makes us presume and fear Fence 2 without love makes us despair the love of God is the most forcible Argument to prevail with an ingenious spirit Thus love argues Hath God given me Christ hath he joynted me in the promises hath he setled a Reversion of heaven upon me and shall I walk unworthy of this love shall I voluntarily sin against this God No I will rather dye than sin this made
their Relations consider 1. He who is not good in his Relations goes under the just suspition of an Hypocrite let a man seem to be a penitent or Zelot yet if he bear not fruit proper to his station he is no tree of righteousness but some wild degenerate plant There are some will pray hear Sermons discourse well this is good but what means the bleating of the sheep they are not good in their Relations this discovers they are foundered and unsound A good Christian labours to fill his Relations and to go through all the parts of Religion as the Sun through all the Signs of the Zodiack I like not those Christians who though they seem to be travelling to heaven yet leave the duties of their Relations a as Terra incognita which they never come near 2. The excellency of a Christian is to bring forth proper fruit * Perfectum est quod propriam att●ngit virtutem wherein lies the goodness of a member in the body but to discharge its proper office The eye is to see the ear to hear c. So the excellency of a Christian is to bring forth that fruit which God hath assigned him what is a thing good for which doth not do its proper work what is a Clock good for that will not strike what is a ship good for that will not saile what is a Rose good for that doth not smell what is that Professor good for that doth not send forth a sweet perfume in his Relation the commendation of a thing is when it puts forth its proper vertue 3. Not to bring forth suitable fruit spoils all the other fruit which we bring forth If a man were to make a Medicine and should leave out the chief ingredient the Medicine would lose its vertue If one were to draw a Picture and should leave out an eye it would spoile the Picture there are many to whom Christ will say at the day of judgement as to the young man Luke 18.22 Yet lackest thou one thing Thou hast pray'd and fasted and heard sermons yet lackest thou one thing thou hast not been good in thy Relations 4. Relative graces do much beautifie and set off a Christian It is the beauty of a Star to shine in its proper Orbe Relative grace doth bespangle a Christian 5. A good Christian brings forth seasonable fruit Psal 1.3 he that bringeth forth fruit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his season * Eccles 3.1 every thing is beautiful in his time Eccles 3.11 That may be good at one time which at another may be out of season There is a great deale of skill in the right timing of a thing duties of Religion must be perform'd in the fit juncture of time 1. Christian duties that relate to our Neighbour must be observed in their season 1. Our reproving others must be seasonable Reproof is a duty when we see others walk irregularly like souldiers that march out of Rank and File we ought mildly yet gravely to tell them of their sin Levit. 19.17 but let this fruit be brought forth in its season 1. Do it privately Matth. 18.15 Go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone 2. Do it when thou seest him in the best temper not when his passions are up that were pouring oyle on the flame but when his spirit is meekned and calm'd you put the seal on the wax when it is soft and plyable there is a time when mens spirits are more flexible and yielding now is the fittest season to stamp a Reproof upon them and it is likelyest to take impression When Abigail reproved Nabal it was in the right season not when he was in wine but when he was in his wits and was fit to hear a Reproof 1 Sam. 25.37 3. Another season for Reproof is in the time of affliction Affliction tames mens spirits and now a word of Reproof spoken prudentially may work with the affliction a bitter potion is not refused if in case of extremity of pain Affliction opens the ear to Discipline * Job 36.10 2. Our comforting others must be seasonable Prov. 15.23 A word spoken in due season how good is it when we see one fallen into sin and with Peter weeping bitterly oh now a word of comfort will do well The cest●ous Corinth being deeply humbled the Apostle calls for oyle and wine to be poured into his wounds 2 Cor. 2.7 Ye ought rather to comfort him and the reason is given lest perhaps such an one should be swallowed up of sorrow When the soul is wounded for sin now bring the mollifying oyntment of a promise Jer. 3.1 hang out free graces Colours display the glory of Gods Attributes his Mercy and Truth to the sinner when the spirit is broken a word of comfort spoken in season is the putting it in joynt again Gal. 1.6 this is to bring forth seasonable fruit when we give wine to them that are of a heavy heart Prov. 16.4 Pleasant words are as an honey-comb sweet to the soul Jobs friends pretended to comfort him but instead of pouring oyl into the wound they poured in vinegar 2. Duties of Religion that relate to God must be performed in their season 1. Mourning for sin is a duty God loves a contrite heart Psal 51.17 how powerful with God is the weeping Rhetorique that a poor sinner useth but yet there is a time when mourning may not be so seasonable when God hath given us some eminent signal deliverance and this mercy calls aloud to us to rejoyce but we hang our Harps upon the willows and sit weeping this sadness is fructus intempestivus fruit out of season there was a special time at the feast of Tabernacles when God called his people to rejoycing Deutr. 16.15 Seven dayes shalt thou keep a solemn feast unto the Lord thy God and thou shalt surely rejoyce Now if the Israelites had sat heavy and disconsolate at that time when God called them to rejoycing it had been very unseasonable like mourning at a wedding when we are called to thanksgiving and we mingle our drink with tears is not this to be highly unthankful for mercy God would have his people humble but not ungrateful 'T is the Divels policy either to keep us from duty or else to put us upon it when it is least in season 2. Rejoycing is a duty Psal 33.1 But when God by some special providence calls us to weeping now joy is unseasonable this is that which God complains of Isa 22.12 In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and behold joy and gladness c. Oecolampadius and others think it was in the time of King Ahaz when the signs of Gods anger like a blazing star did appear * Cum jam prae foribus esset in●●tus now to be given to mirth was very unseasonable ver 14. Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you die saith the Lord of Hosts In the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉
give them a Kingdom above all the Princes of the earth nay far above all heavens God thinks nothing too good for his children We many times think much of a tear a prayer or to sacrifice a sin for him but he doth not think much to bestow a Kingdom upon us How will the Saints read over the Lectures of free-grace in heaven and Trumpet forth the prayses of that God who hath crowned them with loving kindness Infer 3 3. It shews us that Christianity is no disgraceful thing Wise men measure things by the end what is the end of godliness it brings a Kingdom a mans sin brings him to shame Prov. 13.5 Rom. 6.21 What fruit had ye in those things whereof you are now ashamed but Religion brings to honour Prov. 4.8 it brings a man to a Throne a Crown it ends in glory it is the sinners folly to reproach a Saint 't is just as if Shimei had reproached David when he was going to be made King it is a Saints wisdom to contemn a reproach say as David when he danced before the Ark I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 If to pray and hear and serve my God be to be vile I will yet be more vile This is my excellency my glory I am doing now that which will bring me to a Kingdom O think it no disgrace to be a Christian I speak it chiefly to you who are entring upon the wayes of God perhaps you may meet with such as will reproach and censure you binde their reproaches as a Crown about your head despise their censure as much as their praise remember there is a Kingdom entailed upon godlinesse Sin draws hell after it grace draws a Crown after it 4. See here that which may make the people of God Infer 4 long for death then they shall enter upon their Kingdom Indeed the wicked may fear death it will not lead them to a Kingdom but a Prison hell is the iayle where they must lie rotting for ever with the Divel and his Angels To every Christlesse person death is the King of terror but the godly may long for death it will prefer them to a Kingdom When Scipio's father had told him of that glory the soul should be invested with in a state of immortality why then saith Scipio do I tarry thus long upon the earth why do I not hasten to die * Tully in Somn. Scip. Believers are not perfectly happy till death When Croesus asked Solon who he thought happy he told him one Tellus a man that was dead a Christian at death shall be compleatly installed into his honour the anointing oyle shall be poured on him and the Crown-royal set upon his head The Thracians in their funerals used musick The Heathens as Theocritus observes had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Funeral banquet because of that felicity which they supposed the parties deceased were entred into The Saints are now heirs of the Kingdom James 2.5 Doth not the heir desire to be crowned Truly there is enough to weane us and make us willing to be gone from hence The Saints eate ashes like bread they are here in a suffering condition Psalm 141.7 Our bones are scattered at the graves mouth as when one cutteth and cleaveth wood upon the earth When a man hewes and cuts a tree the chips flie up and down here and there a chip so here a Saint wounded there a Saint massacred our bones flie like chips up and down for thy sake are we killed all the day long Rom. 8.36 But there is a Kingdom a coming when the body is buried the soul is crowned Who would not be willing to saile in a storm if he were sure to be crowned as soone as he came at shore How is it that the godly look so gastly at the thoughts of death as if they were rather going to their execution than their Coronation though we should be willing to stay here awhile to do service yet we should with Saint Paul desire to be dissolved and be with Christ The day of a believers dissolution is the day of his inauguration SECT 5. Containing a scrutiny and tryal whether we belong to this Kingdom Use 2 BUT how shall we know that this glorions Kingdom shall be setled upon us at death Trial. 1. If God have set up his Kingdom within us Luke 17.21 The Kingdom of God is within you by the Kingdom of God there is meant the Kingdom of Grace in the heart Grace may be compared to a Kingdom it swayes the Scepter it gives out Lawes there is the Law of love Grace beats down the Divels garrisons it brings the heart into a sweet subjection to Christ Now is this Kingdom of Grace set up in thy heart Do'st thou rule over thy sins Canst thou binde those Kings in chaines * Psal 149.8 Art thou a King over thy pride passion unbelief Is the Kingdom of God within you While others aspire after earthly greatnesse and labour for a Kingdom without them do'st thou labour for a Kingdom within thee Certainly if the Kingdom of Grace be in thy heart thou shalt have the Kingdom of glory If Gods Kingdom enter into thee thou shalt enter into his Kingdom But let not that man ever think to reign in glory who lives a slave to his lusts 2. If thou art a believer thou shalt go to this blessed Kingdom James 2.5 Rich in faith heirs of the Kingdom Faith is an heroical act of the soul it makes an holy adventure on God by a promise this is the crowning grace Faith puts us into Christ and our title to the Crown comes in by Christ By Faith we are borne of God and so we become children of the blood-royal By Faith our hearts are purified Acts 15.9 and so we are made fit for a Kingdom rich in faith heirs of the Kingdom Faith paves a Causey to heaven believers die heirs to the Crown 3. He that hath a noble Kingly spirit shall go to the heavenly Kingdom set your affection on things above Col. 3.2 Dost thou live in mundo supra mundum in the world above the world The Eagle doth not catch flies she soars aloft in the aire dost thou superna anhelare pant after glory and immortality Hast thou a brave majestick spirit an heavenly ambition dost thou mind the favour of God the peace of Sion the salvation of thy soul Dost thou abhor that which is sordid and below thee Alexander would not exercise at the Olympick-games Canst thou trample upon all sublunary things Is heaven in thy eye and Christ in thy heart and the world under thy feet He who hath such a Kingly spirit that looks no lower than a Crown he shall dwell on high and have his throne mounted far above all heavens SECT 6. A serious exhortation to Christians Use 3 USE 3. Exhortation And it hath a double aspect it looks Exhort 1. towards the wicked Is there a Kingdom to be had a
tears shed we have many can mourn over a Dead Childe that cannot mourn over a Crucified Saviour Worldly sorrow hastens our Funerals 2 Cor. 7.10 The sorrow of the world worketh death 2. There is a Diabolical Mourning and that is two-fold 1. When a man mourns that he cannot satisfie his impure lust this is like the Divel whose greatest torture is that he can be no more wicked Thus Amnon Mourned and was sick till he had defiled his sister Tamar 2 Sam. 13.2 Thus Ahab Mourned for Naboths Vineyard 1 Kings 21.4 He laid him down upon his bed and turned away his face and would eat no bread this was a Divellish Mourning 2. When men are sorry for the good which they have done Pharaoh grieved that he had let the children of Israel go Exod. 14.5 Many are so Divellish that they are troubled they have prayed so much and have heard so many Sermons they repent of their Repentance but if we repent of the good which is past God will not repent of the evil which is to come SECT 1. Shewing the Object of holy Mourning TO illustrate this Point of holy Mourning I shall shew you what is the Adequate object of it There are two objects of spiritual mourning sin and misery 1. Sin and that twofold 1. Our own sin 2. The sin of others 1. Our own sin sin must have tears Nihil est fletu dignum nisi peccatum * Paul de Palatio While we carry the fire of sin about us we must carry the water of tears to quench it Ezek. 7.16 They are not blessed saith Chrysostom who mourn for the dead but who mourn for sin * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc and indeed good reason we mourn for sin if we consider 1. The guilt of sin which binds over to wrath Will not a guilty person weep who is to be bound over to the Sessions every sinner is to be tryed for his life and is sure to be cast if mercy doth not become an Advocate for him 2. The pollution of sin sin is a plague-spot and wilt thou not labour to wash away this spot with thy tears sin makes a man worse than a toad or serpent the serpent hath nothing but what God hath put into it poyson is medicinable but the sinner hath that which the Divel hath put into him Acts 5.3 Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye to the Holy Ghost What a strange Metamorphosis hath sin made the soul which was once of an azure brightness sin hath made of a sable colour we have in our hearts the seed of the unpardonable sin we have the seeds of all those sins for which the damned are now tormented and shall we not mourn he that mourns not sure hath lost the use of his Reason but every Mourning for sin is not sufficient to intitle a man to Blessedness I shall shew 1. What is not the right Gospel-Mourning for sin 2. What is the right Gospel-Mourning for sin SECT 2. 1 WHAT is not the right Gospel-Mourning for sin there is a five-fold Mourning which is false and spurious 1. A despairing kind of Mourning such was Judas his Mourning he saw his sin he was sorry he made confession he justifies Christ he makes Restitution Mat. 27. Judas who is in hell did more than many now adayes he confessed his sin he did not plead necessity or good intentions but he makes an open acknowledgement of his sin I have sinned Judas made Restitution his conscience told him he came wickedly by the money it was the price of blood and he brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the High Priests Matth. 27.3 But how many are there who invade the rights and possessions of others but not a word of Restitution Judas was honester than they are well wherein was Judas his sorrow blame-worthy it was a Mourning joyned with despair he thought his wound broader than the playster he drowned himself in tears his was not a Repentance unto life * Acts 11.8 but rather unto death 2. An hypocritical Mourning the heart is very deceitful it can betray as well by a tear as by a kiss Saul looks like a mourner and as he was sometimes among the Prophets 1 Sam. 10.12 so he seemed to be among the Penitents 1 Sam. 15.25 And Saul said unto Samuel I have sinned for I have transgressed the the commandment of the Lord. Saul did play the hypocrite in his mourning for 1. He did not take shame to himself but he did rather take honour to himself verse 30. honour me before the Elders of the people 2. He did pare and mince his sinne that it might appear lesser he laid his sinne upon the people ver 24. because I feared the people they would have me flie upon the spoile and I durst do no other a true mourner labours to draw out sinne in its bloody colours and accent it with all its killing aggravations that he may be deeply humbled before the Lord Ezra 9.6 Our iniquities are encreased over our head and our trespasses are grown up unto heaven The true penitent labours to make the worst of his sinne Saul labours to make the best of sinne like a patient that makes the best of his disease lest the Physitian should prescribe him too sharp physick How easie is it for a man to put a chea● upon his own soul and by hypocrisie to weep himself into hell 3. A forced mourning when tears are pumped out by Gods judgments these are like the teares of a man that hath the stone or that lies upon the wrack Such was Cains mourning Gen. 4.13 My punishment is greater than I can bear his punishment troubled him more than his sin to mourn only for fear of hell is like a thief that weeps for the penalty rather than the offence the teares of the wicked are forced by the fire of affliction 4. An extrinsecal mourning when sorrow lies only in superficie in the outside 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they disfigure their faces Matth. 6.16 The eye is tender but the heart hard Such was Ahabs mourning 1 Kings 21. 27. He rent his cloaths and put sackcloth on his flesh and went softly His cloaths were rent but his heart was not rent he had sackcloth but no sorrow he did hang down his head like a bull-rush but his heart was like an Adamant There are many may be compared to weeping Marbles they are both watery and flinty 5. A vaine fruitlesse mourning some will shed a few teares but are as bad as ever they will cozen and be unclean such a kind of mourning there is in hell the damned weep but they blaspheme SECT 3. WHat is the right Gospel-mourning Answ That mourning which will entitle a man to blessednesse hath these qualifications 1. It is spontaneous and free it must come as water out of a spring not as fire out of a flint Teares for sin must be like the myrrhe which drops from the tree freely
without cutting or forcing Mary Magdalens repentance was voluntary she stood weeping Luke 7. She came to Christ with ointment in her hand with love in her heart with teares in her eyes God is for a freewil-offering he loves not to be put to distrain 2. Gospel-mourning is spiritual that is when we mourn for sinne more than suffering Pharaoh saith Take away the plague he never thought of the plague of his heart A sinner mourns because judgement follows at the heeles of sinne but David cries out my sinne is ever before me Psal 51. God had threatned that the sword should ride in circuit in his family but David doth not say the sword is ever before me but my sinne is ever before me The offence against God troubled him he grieved more for the treason than the bloody axe thus the Penitent Prodigal Luke 15.21 I have sinned against heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and before thee he doth not say I am almost starved among the husks but I have offended my father In particular our mourning for sinne if it be spiritual must be under this threefold notion 1. We must mourn for sinne as it is an act of hostility and enmity Sinne doth not only make us unlike God but contrary to God Levit. 26.40 and that they have walked contrary unto me Sinne doth affront and resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 Sinne is contrary to Gods nature God is holy sinne is an impure thing sin is contrary to his will if God be of one minde sinne is of another sinne doth all it can to spight God The Hebrew word for sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies rebellion a sinner doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now when we mourn for sinne as it is a walking Antipodes to heaven this is a Gospel-mourning nature will not bear contraries 2. We must mourn for sin as it is a piece of the highest ingratitude it is a kicking against the breasts of mercy God sends his Sonne to redeeme us his Spirit to comfort us we sinne against the blood of Christ the grace of the Spirit and shall we not mourn We complaine of the unkindnesse of others and shall we not lay to heart our own unkindnesse against God Caesar took it unkindly that his son Brutus should stab him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou my son may not the Lord say to us these wounds I have received in the house of my friends * Zach. 13.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Theocr. Israel took their jewels and ear-rings and made a golden Calfe of them the sinner takes the jewels of Gods mercies and makes use of them to sin ingratitude dies a sin in grain hence they are called crimson sinnes Isa 1.18 sinnes against Gospel-love are worse in some sence than the sinnes of the Divels for they never had an offer of Grace tendred to them Diabolus peccavit in innocentia constitutus ego vero restitutus ille perstitit in malitia Deo reprobante ego vero Deo revocante ille obduratur ad punientem ego vero ad blandientem sic uterque contra Deum ille contra non requirentem se ego vero contra morientem pro me ecce cujus imaginem horrebam in multis aspicio me horribiliorem Anselm de Casu Diab Now when we mourn for sin as it hath its accent of ingratitude upon it this is an Evangelical mourning 3. We must mourn for sinne as it is a Privation it keeps good things from us it hinders our communion with God Mary wept for Christs absence John 20.13 they have taken away my Lord. So our sinnes have taken away our Lord they have deprived us of his sweet presence Will not he grieve who hath lost a rich jewel When we mourn for sinne under this notion as it makes the Sun of righteousnesse withdraw from our Horizon when we mourn not so much that peace is gone and trading is gone but God is gone Cant. 5.6 My beloved had withdrawn himself this is an holy mourning the mourning for the losse of Gods favour is the best way to regaine his favour If thou hast lost a friend all thy weeping will not fetch him again but if thou hast lost Gods presence thy mourning will bring thy God again 3. Gospel-mourning cogit ad Deum it sends the soul to God When the Prodigal sonne repented he went to his father Luke 15.18 I will arise and go unto my father Jacob wept and prayed Hos 12.3 The people of Israel wept and offered sacrifice Judg. 2.5 Gospel-mourning puts a man upon duty the reason is because in true sorrow there is a mixture of hope and hope puts the soul upon the use or means That mourning which like the flaming sword keeps the soul from approaching to God and beats it off from duty is a sinful mourning 't is a sorrow hatch'd in hell such was Sauls grief which drove him to the Witch of Endor 1 Sam. 28.7 Evangelical Mourning is a spur to prayer the childe who weeps for offending his father goes into his presence and will not leave till his father be reconciled to him Absalom could not be quiet till he had seen the Kings face 2 Sam. 14.32 33. 4. Gospel-Mourning is for sin in particular Dolosus versatur in generalibus It is with a true penitent as it is with a wounded man he comes to the Chyrurgion and shews him all his wounds here I was cut with the Sword here I was shot with a Bullet So a true penitent bewails all his particular sins Judg. 10.10 We have served Baalim they mourned for their Idolatry And David layes his finger upon the sore and points to that very sin that troubled him Psal 51.4 I have done this evil he means his blood-guiltiness a wicked man will say he is a sinner but a child of God saith I have done this evil Peter wept for that particular sin of denying Christ Clemens Alexandrinus saith he never heard a Cock crow but he fell a weeping there must be a particular Repentance before we have a general pardon 5. Gospel-tears must drop from the eye of faith Mark 9.24 The father of the childe cryed out with tears Lord I believe our disease must make us mourn but when we look up to our Physitian who hath made a playster of his own blood we must not mourn without hope believing tears are precious when the clouds of sorrow have overcast the soul some Sun-shine of faith must break forth the soul will be swallowed up of sorrow it will be drowned in tears if faith be not the bladder to keep it up from sinking though our tears drop to the earth our faith must reach heaven after the greatest rain faith must appear as the Rainbow in the cloud the tears of faith are botled as precious wine Psal 56.8 6. Gospel-Mourning is joyned with self-loathing the sinner doth admire himself the penitent doth loath himself Ezek. 20.42 Ye shall loath your selves in your own sight for all your
evils A true penitentiary is troubled not only for the shameful consequence of sin but the loathsome nature of sin not only the sting of sin but the deformed face How did the Leper loath himself Lev. 13.45 The Hebrew Doctors say the Leper pronounced unclean was to put a covering on his upper lip both as a Mourner and in token of shame * Maimony cap. 10. The true Mourner cries out O these impure eyes this heart which is a conclave of wickedness he not only leaves sin but loaths fin he that is fallen in the dirt loaths himself * Hos 14.1 7. Gospel-Mourning must be purifying our tears must make us more holy we must so weep for sin as to weep out sin our tears must drown our sins we must not only mourn but turn Joel 2.12 Turn to me with weeping What is it to have a watry eye and a whorish heart 't is foolish to say it is day when the Aire is full of darkness So to say thou repentest when thou drawest dark shadows in thy life It is an excellent saying of St. Austin He doth truly bewail the sins he hath committed who never commits the sins he hath bewailed * Ille vere plaugit comm●ssaqui non commutit plungenda Aug. True Mourning is like the water of jealousie * Num. 5.12 it makes the Thigh of sin to rot Psal 74.14 Thou break●st the heads of the Dragons in the waters The heads of our sins these Dragons are broken in the waters of true Repentance true tears are cleansing they are like a Flood that carries away all the rubbish of our sins with it the waters of holy Mourning are like the River Jordan wherein Naaman washed and was cleansed of his Lep●osie 'T is reported there is a River in Sicilia where if the blackest s●eep are bathed they become white so though our sins be as scarlet yet by washing in this River of Repentance they become white as snow Naturalists say of the serpent before it goes to drink it vomits out its poyson in this be wise as serpents before thou thinkest to drink down the sweet cordials of the promises cast up the poyson that lies at your heart do not only mourn for sin but break from sin 8. Gospel-Mourning must be joyned with hatred of sin 2 Cor. 7.11 What indignation We must not only abstain from sin but abhor sin the Dove hates the least feather of the Hawk * Aldrovand a true Mourner hates the least motion to sin a true Mourner is a sin hater Amnen hated Tamar more than ever he loved her 2 Sam. 13.5 To be a sin-hater implies two things 1. To look upon sin as the most deadly evil a complicated evil it looks more ghastly than death or hell 2. To be implacably incensed against it a sin-hater will never admit of any terms of peace the War between him and sin is like the War between Rehoboam and Jeroboam 1 Kings 14.30 There was War between Rehoboam and Jeroboam all their dayes Anger may be reconciled hatred cannot true Mourning begins in the love of God and ends in the hatred of sin 9. Gospel-Mou●ning in some cases is joyned with Restitution 't is as well a sin to violate the name as the chastity of another if we have eclipsed the good name of others we are bound to ask them forgiveness * Fama pari passu ambulat cum vita if we have wronged them in their Estate by unjust fraudulent dealing we must make them some compensation Thus Zacheus Luk. 19.8 If I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation I restore him four-fold according to that Law Exod. 22.1 Saint James bids us not only look to the heart but the hand James 4.8 Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your hearts if thou hast wronged another cleanse thy hands by Restitution be assured without Restitution no Remission * Non remittitur peccatura nisi restituatur ablatum Aug. 10. Gospel-Mourning must be a speedy Mourning We must take heed of adjourning our Repentance and putting it off till death as David said I will pay my vows now Psal 116.18 so should a Christian say I will mourn for sin now Luke 6.21 Blessed are ye that weep now as Popilus the Roman Legat when he was sent to Antiochus the King made a Circle round about the King and bade him make his answer before he went out of that Circle so God hath incircled us in the compass of a little time and chargeth us presently to bewail our sins Acts 17.30 Now God calleth everywhere to repent we know not whether we may have another day granted us Oh let us not put off our Mourning for sin till the making of our will Do not think holy Mourning is only a death-bed duty you may seek the blessing with tears as Isaac when it is too late Quamdiu cras saith Austin How long shall I say I will repent to morrow why not at this instant Mora trahit periculum Caesars deferring to read his letter before he went to the Senate house cost him his life The true Mourner makes haste to meet an angry God as Jacob did his brother and the Present he sends before is the sacrifice of tears 11. Gospel-Mourning for sin is constant there are some who at a Sermon will shed a few tears but this land-flood is soon dryed up the hypocrites sorrow is like a vein opened and presently stopped the Hebrew word for Eye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies also a Fountain to shew that the eye must run like a Fountain for sin and not cease but it must not be like the Lybian Fountain of the Sun which the Ancients speak of in the Morning the water is hot at Mid-day cold the waters of Repentance must not overflow with more heat in the Morning at the first hearing of the Gospel and at Mid-day in the midst of health and prosperity grow cold and be ready to freeze no it must be quotidianus planctus a daily weeping as Paul said 1 Cor. 16.31 I dye daily so should a Christian say I mourn daily Therefore keep open an issue of godly sorrow and be sure it be not stopped till death Lam. 2.18 Let not the apple of thine eye cease It is reported of holy Mr. Bradford scarce a day passed him wherein he did not shed some tears for sin daily mourning is a good antidote against back-sliding I have read of one that had an Epilepsie or falling sickness and being dipped in Sea-water was cured the washing of our souls daily in the brinish waters of Repentance is the best way both to prevent and cure the falling into Relapses Even Gods own children must mourn after pardon for God in pardoning doth not pardon at one instant sinnes past and furure but as repentance is renewed so pardon is renewed should God by one act pardon sinnes future as well as past this would make void part of Christs Office What need were
there is hope Repentance unravels sin and makes sin not to be but hardness of heart binds guilt fast upon the soul it seals a man under wrath it is not the hainousness of sin but hardness of heart that damns this makes the sin against the Holy Ghost uncapable of mercy because the sinner that hath committed it is uncapable of Repentance CHAP. VII Containing a sharp Reprehension Use 1 Use 1 THIS Doctrine draws up a Charge against several sorts Reproof Branch 1 1. Those that think themselves good Christians yet have not learned this Art of holy Mourning Luther calls Mourning Bara herba a rare herb Men have tears to shed for other things but have none to spare for their sins there are many Murmurers but few Mourners most are like the stony ground which wanted moisture Matth. 13. We have many cry out of hard times but are not sensible of hard hearts hot and dry is the worst temper of the body sure I am to be hot in sin and to be so dry as to have no tears is the worst temper of the soul How many are like Gideons dry Fleece and like the Mountains of Gilboa there is no dew upon them Did Christ bleed for sin and canst not thou weep if Gods bottle be not filled with tears his Vial will be filled with wrath We have many sinners in Sion but few mourners in Sion It is with most people as with a man on the top of a Mast the Winds blow and the Waves beat and the ship is in danger of shipwrack and he is fast asleep so when the Waves of sin have even covered men and the stormy wind of Gods Wrath blows and is ready to blow them into hell yet they are asleep in security 2. It reproves them who instead of weeping for sin Branch 2 spend their dayes in mirth and jollity instead of Mourners we have Ranters they take the Timbrel and Harp they spend their dayes in wealth Job 21.13 Vitam agunt Sybariticam * Luther they do not lugere animo but indulgere genio they live Epicures and dye Atheists St. James bids us turn our laughter to Mourning Jam. 4.9 But they turn their Mourning to laughter Sampson was brought forth to make the Philistines sport Judg. 16.26 The jovial sinner doth make the Divel sport it is a saying of Theophylact It is one of the worst sights to see a sinner go laughing to hell How unseasonable is it to take the Harp and Viol when God is taking the Sword Ezek. 21.9 10. A sword a sword is sharpned and also furbished should we then make mirth this is a sin that enrageth God Isa 22.12 13. In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and behold joy and gladness slaying Oxen and killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine and it was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of Hosts Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye saith the Lord God of Hosts That is this your sin shall not be done away by any expiatory sacrifice but vengeance shall pursue you for ever 3. It reproves those who instead of mourning for sin Branch 3 rejoyce in sin Prov. 2.14 2 Thess 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who take pleasure in iniquity Wicked men are worse in this sense than the damned in hell for I dare say they take little pleasure in their sins there are some so impudently profane that they will make themselves and others merry with their sins sin is a soul-sickness Luke 5.31 Will a man make merry with his disease ah wretch did Christ bleed for sin and dost thou laugh at sin is that thy mirthwhich grieves the Spirit * Tantis in malis laetari diesque jocis choreis consumere nonne est eos imitari qui phrenesi laborant qui dum carnes proprias laccrant ridem Isid Clar. is it a time for a man to break jests when he is upon the Scaffold and his head is to be stricken off thou that laughest at sin now the time is coming when God will laugh at thy calamity Prov. 1.26 Branch 4 4. It reproves those that cry down mourning for sin they are like the Philistines who stopped the Wells Gen. 26.15 These would stop the Wells of godly sorrow Antimonians say this is a legal Doctrine but Christ here preacheth it Blessed are they that mourn and the Apostles preached it Mark 6.11 And they went out and preached that men should repent Holy ingenuity will put us upon mourning for sin he that hath the heart of a child cannot but weep for his unkindness against God Mourning for sin is the very fruit and product of the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Such as cry down Repentance cry down the Spirit of grace mourning for sin is the only way to keep off wrath from us such as with Sampson would break this Pillar go about to pull down the vengeance of God upon the Land To all such I say as Peter to Simon Magus Acts 8.22 Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee O sinner Repent that thou hast cryed down Repentance CHAP. VIII Motives to holy mourning 2. LET me exhort Christians to holy Mourning Use 2 Exhort I now perswade such a Mourning as will prepare the soul for blessedness Oh that our hearts were spiritual limbicks distilling the water of holy tears Christs Doves weep Ezek. 7.16 They that escape shall be like Doves of the Vallies all of them mourning every one for his iniquity There are several Divine Motives to holy Mourning 1. Tears cannot be put to a better use if you weep Motive 1 for outward losses you lose your tears 't is like a showre upon a Rock which doth no good but tears for sin are blessed tears Blessed are they that mourn These poyson our corruptions salt-water kills the worms the brinish water of repenting tears will help to kill that worm of sin which would gnaw the conscience 2. Gospel-Mourning is an evidence of grace Zach. Motive 2 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and they shall mourn c. The Holy Ghost descended on Christ like a Dove Matth. 3. The Dove is a weeping creature where there is a Dove-like weeping it is a good sign the Spirit of God hath descended there weeping for sin is a sign of the new birth assoon as the child is born it weeps Exod. 2.3 And behold the babe wept To weep kindly for sin is a good sign we are born of God Mourning shews an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 A stone will not melt when the heart is in a melting frame it is a sign the heart of stone is taken away Motive 3 3. The preciousness of tears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tears dropping from a mournful penitent eye are like the water dropping from the Roses very sweet and precious to God
is too soone Satan but have presently embraced his tentation have you not put the Devil off and will you put God off 4. It is a foolish thing to adjourn and put off mourning for sin for 1. The longer you put off holy mourning the harder you will finde the work when you come to it A bone that is out of joynt is easier set at first than if you let it go longer A disease taken in time is sooner cured than if it be let alone till it comes to a Paroxysme * Sero medicina paretur cum mala per longas invaluere moras You may easily wade over the waters when they are low if you stay till they are risen they will be beyond your depth O sinner the more treasons thou committest the more dost thou incense heaven against thee and the harder it will be to get thy pardon the longer thou spinnest out the time of thy sinning the more work thou makest for repentance 2. To adjourn and put off mourning for sin is folly in respect of the uncertainty of life how doth the procrastinating sinner know that he shall live to be old What is your life it is but a vapour James 4.14 how soone may sicknesse arrest thee and death strike off thy head may not thy sun set at noone Oh then what imprudence is it to put off mourning for sin and to make a long work when death is about to make a short work Caesar deferring to read the Letter sent him was stab'd in the Senate-house 3. 'T is folly to put off all till last in respect of the improbability of finding mercy though God give thee space to repent he may deny thee grace to repent When God calls for mourning and thou art deaf when thou callest for mercie God may be dumb Prov. 1.24 28. Think of it seriously God may take the latter time to judge thee in because thou didst not take the former time to repent in 4. To respit our solemn turning to God till old age or sicknesse is high imprudence because these late acts of devotion are for the most part dissembled and spurious Though true mourning for sin be never too late * Sera poenitentia raro vera yet late mourning is seldome true † That repentance is seldome true-hearted which is gray-headed 'T is disputable whether these Autumn-tears are not shed more out of fear of hell than love to God The Mariner in a storm throws his goods over-board not but that he loves them but he is afraid they will sink the ship when men fall to weeping-work late and would cast their sins over-board it is for the most part only for fear lest they should sink the ship and drown in hell 'T is a great question whether the sick bed penitent doth not mourn because he can keep his sins no longer All which considered may make men take heed of running their souls upon such a desperate hazard as to put all their work for heaven upon the last hour Hindr. 8 8. Delay of the execution of justice Eccles 8.11 Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sonnes of men is fully set in them to do evil God forbears punishing therefore men forbear repenting He doth not smite upon their back by correction therefore they do not smite upon their thigh by humiliation Jer. 31.19 The sinner thinks thus God hath spar'd me all this while he hath eeked out patience into long-suffering sure he will not punish Psal 10.11 He hath said in his heart God hath forgotten God somtimes in infinite patience adjourns his judgements and puts off the Sessions awhile longer he is not willing to punish 2 Pet. 3.9 The Bee naturally gives hony but stings only when it is angred The Lord would have men make their peace with him Isa 27.5 God is not like an hasty creditor that requires the debt and will give no time for the payment he is not only gracious but waits to be gracious * Poenitentiam expectat tuam dum patientiam exercet suam Isa 30.18 but God by his patience would bribe sinners to repentance but alas how is this patience abused Gods long-suffering hardens because God stops the Vial of his wrath sinners stop the Conduit of tears That the patience of God may not through our corruption obstruct holy mourning let sinners remember 1. Gods patience hath bounds set to it Gen. 6.3 Though men will not set bounds to their sin yet God sets bounds to his patience there is a time when the Sun of Gods patience will set and being once set it never returns any degrees backward the Lease of patience will soon be run out There is a time when God saith My Spirit shall no longer strive The Angel cryed the houre of his judgement is come Rev. 14.7 Perhaps the next sin thou committest God may say Thy houre is now come 2. To be hardned under patience makes our condition far worse incensed justice will revenge abused patience God was patient towards Sodom but not repenting he made the fire and brimstone flame about their ears Sodom that was once the wonder of Gods patience is now a standing Monument of Gods severity all the plants and fruits are destroyed and as Tertullian saith that place still smels of fire and brimstone * Olet adhuc incendio terra Long forbearance is no forgiveness God may keep off the stroak a while but justice is not dead but sleepeth God hath leaden feet but iron hands the longer God is taking his blow the sorer it will be when it comes the longer a stone is falling the heavier it will be at last the longer God is whetting his Sword the sharper it cuts sins against patience are of a deeper dye these are worse than the sins of the Divels The lapsed Angels never sinned against Gods patience how dreadful will their condition be who therefore sin because God is patient for every crumb of patience God puts a drop of wrath into his Viol the longer God forbears a sinner the more interest he is sure to pay in hell Hindr. 9 9. Mirth and Musick Amos 6.5 That chant to the sound of the Viol and drink wine in Bowles instead of the Dirge the Antheam many sing away sorrow and drown their tears in wine the sweet waters of pleasure destroy the bitter waters of mourning How many go dancing to hell like those fish which swim down pleasantly into the dead Sea Let us take heed of all these hindrances of holy tears Let our Harp be turned into mourning and our Organ into the voyce of them that weep Job 30.31 CHAP. X. Shewing some helps to mourning HAving removed the obstructions let me in the last place propound some helps to holy mourning 1. Set Davids prospect continually before you Psal 51.4 My sinne is ever before me David that he might be a mourner kept his eye still upon sin See what sin is and
Thy sin thy neighbour is not so bad in offending thee as thou art in not forgiving him thy neighbour in offending thee doth but trespasse against a man but thou refusing to forgive him dost trespasse against God 2. Thy danger thou who art implacable and though thou may'st smother the fire of thy rage yet wilt not extinguish it know that if thou dyest this night thou dyest in an unpardoned condition if you will not believe me believe Christ Mark 11.26 If you do not forgive neither will your Father which is in heaven forgive your trespasses He who lives without meeknesse dies without mercy 3. Branch of meeknesse is in recompencing good for evil this is an higher degree than the other Matth. 5.44 Love your enemies do good to them that hate you pray for them which despightfully use you Rom. 12.20 If thine enemy hunger feed him 1 Pet. 3.9 not rendring evil for evil but contrarywise blessing This three-fold cord of Scripture should not easily be broken To render evil for evil is bruitish to render evil for good is divellish to render good for evil is Christian The Heathens had this maxime Nemini laedere nisi lacessitus injuriâ they thought it lawful to wrong none unlesse first provoked with an injury but the Sun-light of Scripture shines brighter than the lamp of reason Love your enemies when grace comes into the heart it works a strange alteration when a sciens is ingrafted into the stock it partakes of the nature and sap of the Tree and brings forth the same fruit take a crab ingraft it into a Pepyn it brings forth the same fruit as the Pepyn so he who was once of a sowre crabby disposition given to revenge when he once partakes of the sap of the heavenly olive he bears generous fruit he is full of love to his enemies Grace allays the passion and melts the heart into compassion as the Sun draws up many thick noxious vapours from the Earth and Sea and returns them in sweet showres so a gracious heart returns all the unkindnesses and discurtesies of his enemies with the sweet influences and distillations of love thus David Psal 35.13 They rewarded me evil for good but as for me when they were sick my cloathing was sackcloth I humbled my soul with fasting c. Some would have rejoyced he wept some would have put on scarlet David put on sackcloth this is the rarity or rather miracle of meekness it retorts good for evil thus we have seen the nature of meekness SECT 1. Shewing the Character of a true Saint IT shews us the badge of a true Saint he is of a meek Use 1 candid spirit he is not easily provoked he takes every thing in the best sense and conquers malice with mildness I would to God all who profess themselves Saints were bespangled with this grace We are known to belong to Christ when we wear his Livery he is a Saint whose spirit is so meekned that he can smother prejudices and bury unkindnesses a passion of tears doth better become a Christian than a passion of anger every Saint is Christs Spouse Cant. 4.8 It becomes Christs Spouse to be meek if any injury be offered to the Spouse she leaves it to her husband to revenge 't is unseemly for Christs Spouse to strike SECT 2. Containing a Swasive to meekness Use 2 LET me beseech all Christians to labour to be eminent in this superlative grace of meekness Exhort Zeph. 2.3 Seek meekness Seeking implies we have lost it therefore we must make an hue and cry after it to find it Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God meekness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Put it on as a garment never to be left off Meekness is a necessary ingredient into every thing 1. It is necessary in instruction 2 Tim. 2.25 In meekness instructing c. Meekness conquers the opposers of truth meekness melts the heart soft words are softning 2. Meekness is necessary in hearing the Word Jam. 1.21 Receive with meekness the ingrafted Word he who comes to the Word either with passion or prejudice gets no good but hurt he turns wine into poyson and stabs himself with the sword of the Spirit 3. Meekness is needful in reproofs Gal. 6.1 If a man be overtaken with a fault restore such an one with the spirit of meekness The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put him in joynt again if a bone be out of joynt the Chyrurgion must not use a rough hand that may chance break another bone but he must come gently to work and afterwards bind it up softly so if a brother be through inanimadvertency overtaken we must not come to him in a fury of passion but with a spirit of meekness labour to restore him I shall lay down several Motives or Arguments to meeken the spirits of men 1. Let me propound examples of meekness Motive 1 1. The example of Jesus Christ Matth. 21.5 Thy King cometh unto thee meek Christ was the samplar and pattern of meekness 1 Pet. 2.23 When he was reviled he reviled not again His enemies words were more bitter than the gall they gave him but Christs words were smoother than oyle he prayed and wept for his enemies he calls to us to learn of him Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek Christ doth not bid us saith Austin learn of him to work miracles to open the eyes of the blind to raise the dead but he would have us learn of him to be meek if we do not imitate his life we cannot be saved by his death 2. Let us set before our eyes the examples of some of the Saints who have shined in this grace Moses was a man of unparallel'd meekness Numb 12.3 Now the man Moses was very meek above all the men which were upon the face of the earth How many injuries did he put up when the people of Israel murmured against him instead of falling into a rage he falls to prayer for them Exod. 15.24 25. The Text saith they murmured at the waters of Marah sure the waters were not so bitter as the spirits of the people but they could not provoke him to passion but petition Another time when they wanted water they fell a chiding with Moses Exod. 17.3 Wherefore is this that thou hast brought us up out of Egypt to kill us and our children with thirst As if they had said if we dye we will lay our death to thy charge Would not this exasperate sure it would have required the meekness of an Angel to bear this but behold Moses his meekness he did not give them an unbecoming word though they were in a storm he was in a calm they chide but he prayes Oh that as the spirit of Elijah did rest upon Elisha so that some of the spirit of Moses this meek man or rather earthly Angel may rest upon us Another eminent pattern of meekness was David when Shimei cursed David and Abishai one
of Davids life-guard would have beheaded Shimei No saith King David Let him alone and let him curse 2 Sam. 16.11 And when Saul had wronged and abused David and it was in his power to have taken Saul napping and have killed him 1 Sam. 26.7 12. yet he would not touch Saul but called God to be Umpire Ver. 23. Here was a mirror of meekness 3. The examples of Heathens though their meekness could not properly be called grace because it grew not upon the right stock of faith yet it was beautiful in its kind Pericles when one did revile him and followed him home to his gate at night rayling upon him he answered not a word but commanded one of his servants to light a Torch and bring the Raylor home to his own house Frederick Duke of Saxony when he was angry would shut up himself in his Closet and let none come near him till he had mastered his passion Plutarch reports of the Pythagoreans if they had chanced to fall out in the day they would embrace and be friends ere Sun-set Cicero in one of his Orations reports of Pompey the great he was a man of a meek disposition he admitted all to come to him so freely and heard the complaints of them that were wronged so mildly that he excelled all the Princes before him he was of that sweet temper that it was hard to say whether his enemies did more fear his valour or his subjects love his meekness Julius Caesar not only forgave Brutus and Cassius his enemies but advanced them he thought himself most honoured by acts of clemency and meekness Did the spring-head of nature rise so high and shall not grace rise higher shall we debase faith below reason let us write after these fair Copies 2. Meekness is a great Ornament to a Christian 1 Pet. Motive 2 3.4 The ornament of a meek spirit How amiable is a Saint in Gods eye when adorned with this jewel what the Psalmist saith of praise * Psal 33.1 the same may I say of meekness it is comely for the righteous no garment more becoming a Christian than meekness therefore we are bid to put on this garment Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God meekness A meek spirit credits Religion silenceth malice it is the varnish that puts a lustre upon holiness and sets off the Gospel with a better gloss 3. This is the way to be like God God is meek towards Motive 3 them that provoke him * Cum crebris exacerbatur offensis iram suam temperat Cypr. how many black mouths are opened daily against the Majesty of heaven how do men tear his Name vex his Spirit crucifie his Son afresh they walk up and down the earth as so many Divels covered with flesh yet the Lord is meek not willing that any should perish 2 Pet. 3. How easily could God crush sinners and kick them into hell but he moderates his anger though he be full of Majesty yet full of meekness in him is mixed Princely greatness and Fatherly mildness as he hath his Scepter of Royalty so his Throne of grace Oh how should this make us fall in love with meekness hereby we bear a kind of likeness to God it is not profession makes us like God but imitation where meekness is wanting we are not like men where it is we are like God 4. Meekness argues a noble and excellent spirit a Motive 4 meek man is a valorous man he gets a victory over himself * Immensae virtutis est non sentire te esse percussum Passion ariseth from imbecillity and weakness therefore we may observe old men and children are more cholerick than others strength of passion argues weakness of judgement but the meek man who is able to conquer his fury is the most puissant and victorious Prov. 16.32 He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit then he that taketh a City To yield to ones passion is easie 't is swimming along with the Tyde of corrupt nature but to turn head against nature to resist passion to overcome evil with good this is like a Christian this is that spiritual Chivalry and Fortitude of mind as deserves the Trophies of victory and the garland of praise Motive 5 5. Meekness is the best way to conquer and melt the heart of an enemy When Saul lay at Davids mercy and he only cut off the skirt of his Robe how was Sauls heart affected with Davids meekness 1 Sam. 24.16 17. Is this thy voyce my son David and Saul lift up his voice and wept and he said to David Thou art more righteous than I for thou hast rewarded me good forasmuch as when the Lord had delivered me into thy hand thou killedst me not wherefore the Lord reward thee good c. This heaping of coals melts and thaws the heart of others it is the greatest victory to overcome an enemy without striking a blow the fire will go where the wedge cannot mildness prevails more than fierceness passion makes an enemy of a friend meekness makes a friend of an enemy the meek Christian shall have letters testimonial even from his Adversary It is reported of Philip King of Macedon that when it was told him Nicanor did openly rail against his Majesty the King instead of putting him to death as his Council advised sent Nicanor a rich Present which did so overcome the mans heart that he went up and down to recant what he had said against the King and did highly extoll the Kings clemency Roughness hardens mens hearts meekness causeth them to relent 2 Kings 6.22 When the King of Israel feasted the Captives he had taken in War they were more conquered by his meekness than by his sword 2 Kings 6.23 The bands of Syria came no more into the Land of Israel 6. Consider the great promise in the Text The meek Motive 6 shall inherit the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this Argument perhaps will prevail with those who desire to have earthly possessions * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Some may object If I forbear and forgive I shall lose my right at last and be turned out of all No God hath here entred into Bond the meek shall inherit the Earth The unmeek man is in a sad condition there is no place remains for him but hell for he hath no promise made to him either of Earth or Heaven 't is the meek shall inherit the earth Object How do the meek inherit the Earth when they are strangers in the earth Hebr. 11.37 Answ The meek are said to inherit the Earth not that the Earth is their chief inheritance or that they have always the greatest share here but 1. They are the inheriters of the Earth because though they have not always the greatest part of the Earth yet they have the best right to it The word inherit saith Ambrose notes the Saints title to the Earth * Fruuntur
yet thou art blessed because thou hungerest after it desire is the best discovery of a Christian actions may be counterfeit a man may do a good action for a bad end so did Jehu Actions may be compulsory a man may be forced to do that which is good but not to will that which is good therefore we are to cherish good desires and to bless God for them oftentimes a child of God hath nothing to shew for himself but desires Nehem. 1.11 Thy servants who desire to fear thy Name These hungrings after righteousness proceed from love a man doth not desire that which he doth not love if thou didst not love Christ thou couldst not hunger after him Object 1 Object 1. If my hunger were right then I could take comfort in it but I fear it is counterfeit hypocrites have their desires Answ Answ That I may the better settle a doubting Christian I shall shew the difference between true and false desires spiritual hunger and carnal 1. The hypocrite doth not desire grace for it self he desires grace only tanquam medium as a bridge to lead him over to heaven he doth not so much thirst after grace as glory he doth not so much desire the way of righteousness as the Crown of righteousness his desire is not to be made like Christ but to reign with Christ this was Balaams desire Num. 23.10 Let me dye the death of the righteous Such desires as these are found among the damned this is the hypocrites hunger but a child of God desires grace for it self and Christ for himself to a believer not only heaven is precious but Christ is precious 1 Pet. 2.7 2. The hypocrites desire is conditional he would have heaven and his sins to heaven and his pride heaven and his covetousness The young man in the Gospel would have had heaven provided he might keep his earthly possessions many a man would have Christ but there is some sin he must not be uncivil to but gratifie this is the hypocrites hunger but true desire is absolute Give me saith the soul Christ on any terms let God propound what Articles he will I will subscribe to them Would he have me deny my self would he have me mortifie sin I am content to do any thing so I may have Christ hypocrites would have Christ but they are loth to part with a lust for him they are like a man that would have a Lease but is loth to pay down the Fine 3. Hypocrites desires are but desires they are lazy and sluggish when one excited Lipsius to the study of vertue saith he My mind is to it Prov. 21.25 The desire of the slothful killeth him for his hands refuse to labour Many stand as the Carman in the Fable crying Help Hercules when his Wain stuck in the Mud when he should rather have put his shoulder to the Wheel Men would be saved but they will take no pains Doth he desire water that will not let down the Bucket into the Well but true desire is quickned into indeavour Isa 26.9 With my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early they are the violent take heaven by force Matth. 12.11 The love-sick Spouse though she was wounded and her vail taken away yet she follows after Christ Cant. 5.7 Desire is the weight of the soul which sets it a going as the Eagle which desires her prey makes haste to it Job 39. ult Where the stain are there is she the Eagle hath sharpness of sight to discover her prey and swiftness of wing to flie to it So the soul that hungers after righteousness is carried swiftly to it in the use of all holy Ordinances 4. The Hypocrites desires are cheap he would have spiritual things but he will be at no charges for them he cares not how much money he parts with for his lusts he hath money to spend upon a drunken companion but he hath no money to part with for the maintaining of Gods Ordinances Hypocrites cry up Religion but cry down maintenance of Ministers But true desires are costly David would not offer burnt-offerings without cost 1 Chron. 21.24 An hungry man will give any thing for food as it fell out in the siege of Samaria 2 Kings 6.25 That man did never hunger after Christ who thinks much of parting with a little silver for the Pearl of price 5. Hypocrites desires are flashy and transient they are quickly gone like the wind that stays not long in one corner or like an hot fit which is soon over While the Hypocrite is under legal terror or in affliction he hath some good desires but the hot fit is soone over his goodnesse like a fiery Comet soone spends and evaporates but true desire is constant It is observable the Greek word in the text is in the participle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blessed are they that are hungring though they have righteousness yet they are still hungring after more Hypocrites desire is like the motion of a Watch which is quickly down The desire of a godly man is like the beating of the Pulse which lasts as long as life Psal 119.20 My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath to thy judgements And that we might not think this pang of desire would soone be over he adds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at all times Davids desire after God was not an high colour in a fit but the constant complexion of his soul In the Temple the fire was not to go out by night Levit. 6.13 The fire shall ever be burning upon the Altar There was saith Cyril a mystery in it to show that we must be ever burning in holy affections and desires 6. Hypocrites desires are unseasonable they are not well timed they put off their hungring after righteousnesse till it be too late they are like the foolish virgins that came knocking when the door was shut Matth. 25.10 In time of health and prosperity the stream of the affections did run another way it was sin the Hypocrite desired not righteousnesse when he is to dye and can keep his sins no longer now he would have grace as a Passe-port to carry him to heaven * Luke 13.25 This is the Hypocrites fault his faith is too early and his desires are too late his faith began to bud in the morning of his infancie he beleeved ever since he could remember but his desires after Christ begin not to put forth till the evening of old age he sends forth his desires when his last breath is going forth as if a man should desire a pardon after the sentence is passed these bed-rid desires are suspitious but true desires are timely and seasonable a gracious heart seeks first the Kingdom of God Matth. 6.33 Davids thirst after God was early Psal 63.1 The wise Virgins got their oyle betimes before the Bridegroome came Thus we see the difference between a true and false hunger they who can finde
the poor Sol. Jarchi Besides at the Jews solemn Festivals the poor were to have a share Deutr. 16.11 And as relieving the necessitous was commanded under the Law so it stands in force under the Gospel 1 Tim. 6.17 18. Charge them that be rich in this world that they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do good that they be rich in good works c. 'T is not only a counsel but a charge and the non-attendency to it runs men into a Gospel praemunire Thus we have seen the mind of God in this particular of charity let all good Christians comment upon it in their practice what benefit is there of gold while it is imbowel'd and lock up in the Mine and what is it the better to have a great Estate if it be so hoarded and cloistered up as never to see the light 2. As God commands so grace compels to works of mercy and beneficence 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constraineth Grace comes with Majesty upon the heart 't is not in sermone but virtute grace doth not lie as a sleepy habit in the soul but will put forth it self in vigorous and glorious actings grace can no more be conceal'd than fire like new wine it will have vent grace doth not lie in the heart as a stone in the Earth but as seed in the Earth * Si operari renuit gratia non est it will spring up into good works SECT 6. Containing a Vindication of the Church of England Use 1 Use 1. Inform. IT may serve to justifie the Church of England against the calumny of malevolent men Inform. Julian upbraided the Christians that they were Solifidians and the Church of Rome layes upon us this aspe●sion that we are against good works indeed we plead not for the merit of them but we are for the use of them Titus 3.14 Let ours also learn to maintain good works for necessary use We preach they are needful both necessitate praecepti and medii * Asserunt Pontificii bona opera 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esse peccati mortis terrores vincere neque misericordiâ Dei propitiatore Christo egere quas in operibus opiniones ut impias damnamus Melanct. de Justif Debitorem ipse se Dominus fecit non accipiendo sed promittendo Austin in Psal 83. We read the Angels had wings and hands under their wings Ezek. 1.8 It may be emblematical of this truth Christians must not only have the wings of faith to flie but hands under their wings to work the works of mercy Tit. 3.8 This is a faithful saying and these things I will that you maintain constantly that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works The Lamp of faith must be filled with the oyle of charity faith alone justifies but justifying faith is not alone you may as well separate weight from lead or heat from fire as works from faith good works though they are not the causes of salvation yet they are evidences though they are not the foundation yet they are the superstructure * Bona opera sunt via ad regnum non causa regnandi Bern. Faith must not be built upon works but works must be built upon faith Rom. 7.4 Ye are married to another that ye should bring forth fruit unto God Faith is the grace which marries Christ and good works are the children which faith bears for the vindication of the Doctrine of our Church and in honour of good works I shall lay down these four Aphorisms 1. Works are distinct from faith 't is vain to imagine Aphor. 1 that works are included in faith as the Diamond is inclosed in the Ring no they are distinct as the sap in the Vine is different from the Clusters that grow upon it 2. Works are the touch-stone of faith Shew me Aphor. 2 thy faith by thy works Jam. 2.18 * Sicut se res habet ad esse ita ad operari Aquin. Works are faiths letters of credence to shew if saith Saint Bernard thou seest a man in operibus strenuum full of good works then by the Rule of charity thou art not to doubt of his faith We judge of the health of the body by the pulse where the blood stirs and operates O Christian judge of the health of thy faith by the pulse of mercy and charitableness it is with faith as with a Deed in Law To make a Deed valid there are three things requisite the Writing the Seal the Witnesses so for the tryal and confirmation of faith there must be these three things the Writing the Word of God the Seal the Spirit of God the Witnesses good works Bring your faith to this Scripture-touch-stone faith doth justifie works works do testifie faith 3. Works do honour faith these fruits adorn the Aphor. 3 Trees of righteousness let the liberality of thy hand saith Clemens Alexandrinus be the ornament of thy faith and wear it as an holy bracelet about thy wrists Job 29.15 I was eyes to the blind and feet was I to the lame I put on righteousness and it cloathed me my judgement was as a Robe and a Diadem While Job was the poors Benefactor and Advocate this was the Ensign of his honour it cloathed him as a Robe and crowned him as a Diadem This is that takes off the odium and obloquy and makes others speak well of Religion when they see good works as hand-maids waiting upon this Queen Aphor. 4 4. Good works are in some sense more excellent than faith in two respects 1. Because they are of a more noble diffusive nature though faith be more needful for our selves yet good works are more beneficial to others faith is a receptive grace * Fidei est accipere charitatis distribuere Aug. it is all for self-interest it moves within its own Sphere Works are for the good of others and it is a more blessed thing to give than to receive 2. Good works are more visible and conspicuous than faith Faith is a more occult grace it may lie hid in the heart and not be seen but when works are joyned with it now it shines forth in its native beauty though a Garden be never so decked with Flowers yet they are not seen till the light comes so the heart of a Christian may be enriched with faith but it is like a Flower in the night it is not seen till works come when this light shines before men then faith appears in its orient colours SECT 7. A check to the unmerciful 2. IF this be the Effigies of a good man that he is of a Use 2 merciful disposition then it doth sharply reprove those that are far from this temper Reproof their hearts are like the scales of the Leviathan shut up together as with a close seal Job 41.15 They move only within their own circle but do not indulge the necessities of others Job 41.15 they have a flourishing Estate but like
did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son God predestinates us to Christs image which image consists in righteousnesse and true holinesse Ephes 4.24 So that till thou art holy thou canst not shew any signe of election upon thee but rather the Divels brand-mark 5. Purity is the end of our redemption if we could have gone to heaven in our sins Christ needed not have died Why did he shed his blood but to redeem us from a vain conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 19. and Titus 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people Christ shed his blood to wash off our filth the Crosse was both an Altar and a Lavor Jesus Christ died not only to save us from wrath 1 Thes 1. ult but to save us from sin Matth. 1.21 Out of his sides came water which signifies our cleansing as well as blood which signifies our justifying 1 John 5.6 The truth is it were to make the body of Christ monstrous if the head should be pure and not the members 2. Reasons for heart-purity 2. Why Purity must be chiefly in the heart 1. Because if the heart be not pure we differ nothing from a Pharisaical Purity the Pharisees holinesse did consist chiefly in externals their 's was an outside Purity they never minded the inside of the heart Matth. 23.25 Wo unto you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye make cleane the outside of the cup and of the platter but within ye are full of extortion and verse 27. Ye are like unto whited Sepulchres which indeed appear beautiful outward but are within full of dead mens bones The Pharisees were good only in superficie they were not Albi but dealbati whited over not white they were like a rotten post laid in Vermilion colour like a fair Chimny-piece guilded without but within nothing but Soot O such Hypocrites Salvian complains of who had Christ in their mouths but to no purpose we must go farther be pure in heart like the Kings daughter all glorious within Psal 45.13 Else ours is but a pharisaical purity and Christ faith Matth. 5.20 Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven 2. The heart must especially be kept pure because the heart is the chief seat or place of Gods residence God dwells in the heart he takes up the heart for his own lodgings Isa 57.15 Ephes 3.17 therefore it must be pure and holy A Kings Palace must be kept from defilement especially his Presence-chamber The heart is Gods Presence-chamber How holy ought that to be If the body be the Temple of the holy Ghost † * 1 Cor. 6.19 the heart is the Sanctum Sanctorum Oh take heed of defiling the room where God is to come let that room be washed with holy tears 3. The heart must especially be pure because it is the heart sanctifies all we do if the heart be holy all is holy our affections holy our duties holy The Altar sanctified the gift * Mat. 23.19 the heart is the Altar that sanctifies the offering The Romans kept their springs from being poysoned the heart is the spring of all our actions let us keep this spring from poyson be pure in heart SECT 1. Shewing the true beauty of the soul 1. SEE here what is the beauty that sets off a soul in Use 1 Gods eye viz. Purity of heart Inform. Thou who art never so beautiful art but a spiritual Leper till thou art pure Branch 1 in heart God is in love with the pure heart for he sees his own picture drawn there Holinesse is a beam of God it is the Angels glory They are pure virgin-spirits take away purity from an Angel and he is no more an Angel but a Divel thou who art pure in heart hast the Angels glory shining in thee thou hast the Embroydery and Workmanship of the Holy Ghost upon thee The pure heart is Gods Paradise where he delights to walk 't is his lesser heaven the Dove delights in the purest Aire the Holy Ghost who descended in the likeness of a Dove delights in the purest soul God saith of the pure in heart as of Sihon Psal 132.14 This is my rest for ever here will I dwell God loves the fairest complexion the pure in heart is Christs Bride decked and bespangled with the jewels of holiness Cant. 4.9 Thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes Thine eyes that is thy graces these as a Chain of Pearl have drawn mine heart to thee of all hearts God loves the pure heart best Thou who dressest thy self by the glass of the Word and adornest the hidden man of thy heart * 1 Pet. 3.4 art most precious in Gods eyes though thou mayst be blear-eyed as Leah lame as Barzillai yet being pure in heart thou art the mirrour of beauty and mayst say Yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord Isa 49.5 How may this raise the esteem of purity this is a beauty that never fades and which makes God himself fall in love with us SECT 2. That Christians must not rest in out-side purity Branch 2 2. IF we must be pure in heart then we must not rest in outward purity civility is not sufficient a Swine may be washed yet a Swine still civility doth but wash a man grace changeth him civility like a Star may shine in the eyes of the world but it differs as much from purity as the Chrystal from the Diamond civility is but strewing flowers on a dead corps a man may be wonderfully Moralized yet but a tame Divel how many have made civility their saviour Morality may as well damn as Vice a Vessel may be sunk with gold as well as with dung Observe two things 1. The civil person though he will not commit gross sins yet he is not sensible of heart-sins he discerns not the Law in his members Rom. 7.23 He is not troubled for unbelief hardness of heart vanity of thoughts he abhors Jayle-sins not Gospel-sins 2. The civil person hath an aking tooth at Religion his heart riseth against holiness the Snake is of a fine colour but hath a deadly sting The civil man is fair to look to but hath a secret antipathy against the ways of God he hates grace as much as vice zeal is as odious to him as uncleanness so that civility is not to be rested in The heart must be pure God would have Aaron wash the inwards of the Sacrifice Lev. 9. Civility doth but wash the out-side the inwards must be washed Blessed are the pure in heart SECT 3. Shewing the signs of an impure heart LET us put our selves upon the Trial Trial. whether we are Use 2 pure-hearted or no. Here I shall do two things to shew the signs of 1. An impure heart 2. A pure heart 1. An ignorant heart is an impure
heart to be ignorant of sin Signs of an impure heart or Christ argues impurity of heart Nahash the Ammonite would enter into Covenant with the men of Jabesh-Gilead so he might thrust out their right eyes 1 Sam. 11.2 Satan leaves men their left eye in worldly knowledge they are quick-sighted enough but the right eye of spiritual knowledge is quite put out 2 Cor. 4.4 Ignorance is Satans strong hold Acts 26.18 The Divels are bound in chains of darkness Jude 6. So are all ignorant persons impossible it is that an ignorant heart should be good it is knowledge makes the heart good Prov. 19.2 That the soul be without knowledge it is not good For any to say though their mind be ignorant yet their heart is good they may as well say though they are blind yet their eyes are good In the Law when the plague of Leprosie was in a mans head the Priest was to pronounce him unclean This is the case of an ignorant man the Leprosie is in his head he is unclean That heart cannot be very pure which is a Dungeon Grace cannot reign where ignorance reigns an ignorant man can have no love to God Ignoti nulla cupido he cannot love that which he doth not know he can have no faith knowledge must usher in faith Psal 9.10 he cannot worship God aright John 4.22 Though he may worship the true God yet in a wrong manner ignorance is the root of sin blindness leads to lasciviousness Ephes 4.18 19. Prov. 7.23 Ignorance is the mother of pride Revel 3.17 It is the cause of Error 2 Tim. 3.6 and which is worst an affected ignorance aliud est nescire aliud nolle scire Many are in love with ignorance * Non modo ducem non quaerunt sed oblatum respuunt Bern. they hug their disease Job 21.14 2 Pet. 3.5 Ignorant minds are impure there is no going to heaven in the dark 2. That heart is impure which sees no need of purity Revel 3.17 I am rich and have need of nothing Not to be sensible of a disease is worse than the disease you shall hear a sick man say I am well I ayle nothing there are some who need no Repentance Luk. 15.7 Some sinners are too well to be cured heart-purity is as great a wonder to a natural man as the new-birth was to Nicodemus Joh. 3.4 'T is sad to think how many go on confidently and are ready to bless themselves never suspecting their condition till it be too late 3. He hath an impure heart who regards iniquity in his heart Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me In the Original it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if I look upon sin that is with a lustful look sin-regarding is inconsistent with heart-purity Quest What is it to regard iniquity Quest Answ 1 Answ 1. When we indulge sin when sin not only lives in us but we live in sin Some will leave all their sins but one Jacob would let all his sons go but Benjamin Satan can hold a man by one sin the Fowler holds the Bird fast enough by a Wing or Claw Others hide their sins like one that shuts up his Shop-windows but follows his Trade within doors Many deal with their sins as Moses his mother dealt with him she hid him in the Ark of Bulrushes as if she had left him quite but her eye was still upon him and in conclusion she became his Nurse Exod. 2.9 So many seem to leave their sins but they only hide them from the eye of others their heart still goes after them and at last they Nurse and give the breast to their sins 2. To regard iniquity is to delight in iniquity A child of God though he sins yet he doth not take a complacency in sin Rom. 7.15 What I hate that do I but impure souls make a recreation of sin 2 Thes 2.12 They had pleasure in unrighteousness Never did one feed with more delight on a dish he loves than a wicked man doth upon the forbidden fruit This delight shews the will is in the sin Et voluntas est regula mensura actionis 3. To regard iniquity is to lay in provision for sin Rom. 13.14 Make not provision for the flesh Sinners are Caterers for their lusts 't is a Metaphor taken from such as make provision for a Family or victual a Garrison The Greek word there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a projecting and fore-casting in the mind how to bring a thing about This is to make provision for the flesh when one studies to gratifie the flesh and lay in fuel for lust Thus Amnon made provision for the flesh 2 Sam. 13.5 He fains himself sick and his sister Tamar must be his Nurse she must cook and dress his meat for him by which means he defiled the breasts of her Virginity it is sad when mens care is not to discharge conscience but to satisfie lust 4. To regard iniquity is to give it respect and entertainment as Lot shewed respect to the Angels Gen. 19.2 He bowed himself with his face toward the ground and said behold now my Lords turn in I pray you c. When the Spirit of God comes it is repulsed and grieved but when tentation comes the sinner bowes to it sets open the great Gates and saith Turn in my Lord this is to regard iniquity 5. He is said to regard sin that doth not regard the threatnings of God against sin We read of seven thunders uttering their voyce Rev. 10.3 How many thunders in Scripture utter their voyce against sin Psal 68.21 God shall wound the hairy scalp of such an one as goes on still in his Trespasses Here is a thundering Scripture but sinners fear not this thunder let a Minister come as a Boanerges cloathed with the spirit of Eliah and denounce all the curses of God against mens sins they regard it not they can laugh at the shaking of a Spear * Job 41.29 this is to regard iniquity and doth argue an impure heart 4. An unbelieving heart is an impure heart The Scripture calls it expresly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an evil heart of unbelief Hebr. 3.12 An unbelieving heart is evil summo gradu 't is full of the poyson of hell Unbelief is omnium peccatorum colluvies the root and receptactle of sin 1. Unbelief is a God-affronting sin 1. It puts the lye upon God it calls in question his power * Psa 78.19 20. mercy truth 1 John 5.10 He that believeth not hath made God a lyar And can a greater affront be cast upon the God of glory 2. It makes us trust to second causes which is a setting the creature in the room of God 2 Chron. 16.12 Asa in his disease sought not to the Lord but to the Physitians He relied more on the Physitian than upon God Saul seeks to the Witch of Endor O high affront to lean upon the Reed and neglect the Rock
up as it did Korah and Dathan These are Divels covered over with flesh they have damnation written on their foreheads Lucian who in the time of the Emperor Trajan had professed Religion afterwards became so profane as to make a mock at the Christians and by his jeeres and taunts went about to rend Religion at last he himself was rent asunder and devoured by dogs When the scab of the Leper did appear he was to be shut out of the Camp Levit. 13.9 Those who flout at Religion if God give them not repentance are sure to be shut out of the Camp of heaven SECT 4. Shewing the signes of a pure heart Signs of a pure heart I Shall next shew you the signs of a pure heart 1. A sincere heart is a pure heart Psal 32.2 In whose spirit there is no guile There are four Characters of a sincere-hearted Christian 1. A sincere heart serves God with the whole heart First He serves God with the heart The Hypocrite doth but make a shew of obedience Jer. 12.2 Thou art near in their mouth and far from their reins there may be a fair complexion when the Lungs and Vitals are rotten The Hypocrite is fair to look on he hath a devout eye but a hollow heart but he who is sincere his inside is his best side In the Law God would have the inwards offered up Levit. 4.11 A good Christian gives God the inwards when he prays his heart prays 1 Sam. 1.13 Hannah prayed in her heart In his Thanksgivings the heart is the chief instrument of praise Psal 111.1 Then is the sweetest musick when we make melody in our hearts to the Lord Col. 3.16 Secondly The sincere Christian serves God with the whole heart Psal 119.2 Hypocrites have a double heart Psal 12.2 An heart for God and an heart for sin Hos 10.2 Their heart is divided God loves a broken heart but not a divided heart an upright heart is a whole heart the full straine and torrent of the affections runs out after God a sincere heart follows God fully Num. 14.24 2. A sincere heart is willing to come under a trial Psal 139.23 Search me O God and try me That mettal is to be suspected which men are afraid to bring to the Touch-stone a sound heart likes the Touch-stone of the Word he is for a searching Ministry Hypocrites are veritatis lucifugae * Tertul. they flie from that light which would discover sin they hate that Physick of the Word which meeting with their ill humours begins to make them sick and trouble their conscience A gracious soul loves that preaching best which makes an Heart-Anatomy 3ly A sincere heart dares not act in the least against his conscience he is the most magnanimous yet the most pusillanimous he is bold in suffering Prov. 28.1 but fearful of sin Gen. 39.9 He dares not get an estate by sinful shifts or rise upon the ruines of another Jacob got his fathers blessing by fraud but that is not the way to get Gods blessing Fourthly a sincere heart is a suspitious heart The Hypocrite suspects others and hath charitable thoughts of himself the sincere Christian hath charitable thoughts of others and suspects himself he calls himself often to account O my soul hast thou any Evidences for Heaven are they not to seek when they should be to shew Is there no flaw in thy Evidences thou mayest mistake common grace for saving Weeds in the Corn-fields look like flowres The foolish Virgins Lamps looked as if they had oyle in them O my soul is it not so with thee The sincere soul being ever jealous playes the Critick upon himself and doth so traverse things in the Court of conscience as if he were presently to be cited to Gods Bar. This is to be pure in heart 2. A pure heart breaths after purity If God should stretch out the golden Scepter and say to him Ask and it shall be given thee to half the Kingdom he would say Lord a pure heart let my heart have this inscription Holiness to the Lord let my heart be thy Temple and do thou dwell in it Lord what should I do in heaven with this unholy heart what converse could I have with God or Angels A gracious soul is so in love with purity that he prizeth a pure heart above all blessings 1. Above riches he knows he may be cloathed in purple and fine linnen and yet go to hell * Divitiae sunt in sinistra Domini Bern. he is content to be poor so he may be pure he knows heart-purity is a special Certificate of Gods love the pure in heart shall see God 2. Above gifts gifts do not at all set us off in Gods eye a pure heart is the jewel Matth. 15.28 O woman great is thy faith It was not her Rhetorical language Christ was taken with but her faith Hypocrites have had rare gifts Saul had the spirit of Prophesie Judas no doubt could make an Elegant Oration Hypocrites have come into Gods Church loaden with Egyptian gold videl Humane learning There may be Illumination without Sanctification A small Diamond is better than a great deal of brass A little grace excels the most flourishing parts Now if the out-goings of thy soul are after holiness thou desirest rather a pure heart than an eloquent tongue thou hast the oyle of the Spirit poured on thee and thou shalt be crowned with a sight of God 3. A pure heart abhors all sin A man may forbear and forsake sin yet not have a pure heart 1. He may forbear sin as one may hold his breath while he dives under water and then take breath again And a man may forbear sin 1. For want of occasion The Gun-powder makes no noise till the fire be put to it the Clock stands still till the Weights are put on Let a tentation come which is like the hanging on of the Weights and the heart goes as fast in sin as ever 2. He may forbear sin formidine poenae for fear A man forbears a Dish he loves for fear it should bring his disease upon him of the stone or gout There is a conflict in a sinner between the passion of desire and fear Desire spurs him on to sin but fear as a Curben-bit checks him nor is it the crookedness of the Serpent he fears but the sting of the Serpent 3. He may forbear sin out of a design he hath a plot in hand and his sin might spoile his plot Some rich heir would flie out in excess but he carries it fair to prevent a cutting off the Entail How good was Joash while Jehoiada the Priest lived Prudence as well as Conscience may restraine from sin 2. A man may forsake sin yet not have a pure heart it is a great matter I confess to forsake sin so dear is sin to men that they will part with the fruit of their body for the sin of their souls † * Micah 6.7 Sin is the Dalilah
Altar or Sacrifice the Altar had not cleansed him but he had defiled the Altar A foul hand defiles the purest water an impure heart defiles Prayers Sacraments he drops poyson upon all A pure stream running through muddy ground is polluted the holiest Ordinances are stained running through an impure heart A sinners works are called opera mortua dead works Hebr. 6.1 And those works which are dead cannot please God a dead wife cannot please her husband 2. Heart-purity is necessary in respect of God God is holy purity is the chief Robe wherewith God himself is cloathed Hab. 1.13 Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil And will this holy God endure to have an impure heart come near him will a man lay a Viper in his bosome the holy God and the sinner cannot dwell together None can dwell together but friends but there is no friendship between God and the sinner both of them being of a contrary judgment and disposition An impure heart is more odious to God than a Serpent God gave the Serpent its venome but Satan fills the heart with sin Acts 5.3 Why hath Satan fill'd thy heart The Lord abhors a sinner he will not come near him having his plague-soars running Zach. 11.8 My soul loathed them 3. Heart-purity is necessary in regard of the Angels they are pure creatures The Cherubims which typified the Angels were made of fine gold to denote the purity of their Essence no unholy thought enters into the Angels therefore there must be purity of heart that there may be some resemblance between us and them What should unholy hearts do among those pure angelical spirits 4. In regard of the Saints glorified They are pure being refined from all lees and dregs of sin Their title is spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12.23 Now what should profane spirits do among spirits made perfect I tell you if you who wallow in your sins could come near God and Angels and spirits of men made perfect and have a sight of their lustre you would soone wish your selves out of their company as a man that is dirty and in his rags if he should stand before the King and his Nobles and see them glistering in their cloth of gold and sparkling with their jewels he would be ashamed of himself and wish himself out of their presence 5. There must be heart-purity in regard of heaven heaven is a pure place it is an inheritance undefiled 1 Pet. 1.4 No unclean beasts come into the heavenly Ark there shall not enter into it any thing that defileth Rev. 21.27 The Lord will not put the new wine of glory into a musty impure heart all which considered shows the necessity of heart-purity 2. It is the will of God that we should be pure in heart 1 Thes 4.3 This is the will of God your sanctification Are you low in the world perhaps it is not the will of God that you should be rich but it is the will of God that you should be holy This is the will of God your sanctification Let God have his will by being holy and you shall have your will in being happy Gods will must either be fulfilled by us or upon us 3. Purity of heart is the characteristical note of Gods people Psal 73.1 God is good to Israel even to such as are of a clean heart Heart-purity denominates us the Israel of God It is not profession which makes us the Israel of God it makes us of Israel indeed but all are not Israel which are of Israel Rom. 9.6 Purity of heart is the jewel which is hung only upon the elect As chastity distinguisheth a vertuous woman from an Harlot so the true Saint is distinguished from the Hypocrite by his heart-purity This is like the Noblemans star or garter which is a peculiar ensign of honor differing him from the vulgar when the bright star of purity shineth in a Christians heart it doth distinguish him from a formal professor 4. Purity of heart makes us like God it was Adams unhappinesse once he aspired to be like God in omnisciencie but we must endeavour to be like God in sanctity Gods image consists in holinesse those who have not his image and superscription upon them he will say I know you not* Chrysost God delights in no heart but where he may see his own face and likenesse You cannot see your face in a glasse when it is dusty Gods face cannot be seen in a dusty impure soul a pure heart like a clean glasse gives forth some idaea and representation of God There is little comfort in being like God in other things besides purity Are we like God in that we have a being So have stones Are we like him in that we have motion So have stars are we like him in that we have life so have trees and birds Are we like him in that we have knowledge so have Divels there is no likenesse to God will prove comfortable and blisseful but our being like him in purity God loves the pure in heart lovers founded upon likenesse 5. The excellency of the heart lies in the purity of it Purity was the glory of the soul in innocency the purer a thing is the better the purer the aire is and the more free from noxious vapours the better it is the spirits of water distill'd are most precious the purer the gold is the more valuable the purer the wine is when it is taken off from the lees and dregs the more excellent it is the more the soul is clarified by grace and taken off from the lees and dregs of sin the more precious account God makes of it the purer the heart is the more spiritual it is and the more spiritual the more fit to entertain him who is a Spirit 6. God is good to the pure in heart Psal 73.1 God is good to Israel even to such as are of a clean heart We all desire that God should be good to us 't is the sick mans prayer the Lord be good to me God is good to such as are of a clean heart Quest Quest But how is God good to them Answ Answ Two wayes 1. To them that are pure all things are sanctified Titus 1.15 To the pure all things are pure Estate is sanctified Relations are sanctified as the Temple did sanctifie the gold and the Altar did sanctifie the offering To the unclean nothing is clean their Table is a snare their Temple-devotion is sin There is a curse entailed upon a wicked man † but holiness removes the curse * Deut. 28.16 and cuts off the entail to the pure all things are pure 2. The pure-hearted have all things work for their good Rom. 8.28 Mercies and afflictions shall turn to their good the most poysonful drug shall be medicinable the most cross Providence shall carry on the design of their salvation * Ista quae putatur poena fit medicina Hier. who then would not be pure in heart
the wicked are of no account with God they are vile persons Nahum 1.14 I will make thy grave for thou art vile therefore the wicked are compared to chaffe Psal 1.4 to dross Psal 119.119 There is little use of a wicked man while he lives and no loss of him when he dies there is only a little chaffe blown away which may well be spared But Gods children are precious in his sight they are his jewels Mal. 3.17 The wicked are but lumber which serves only to cumber the ground but Gods children are his jewels locked up in the Cabinet of his Decree from all eternity Gods children are the apple of his eye Zach. 2.8 very dear and tender to him and the eye-lid of his special Providence doth cover them the Lord accounts every thing of his children precious 1. Their name is precious the wicked do leave their name for a curse Isa 65.15 The names of Gods children are embalmed Isa 60.15 So precious are their names that God enters them down in the book of life and Christ carries them on his breast How precious must their name needs be who have Gods own Name written upon them Rev. 3.12 Him that overcometh I will write upon him the Name of my God 2. Their prayers are precious Cant. 2.14 O my Dove in the clifts of the Rock let me hear thy voyce for sweet is thy voyce Every childe of God is this Dove prayer is the voyce of the Dove and sweet is this voyce The prayer of Gods children is as sweet to him as Musick a wicked mans prayer is as the howling of a Dog Hosea 7.14 The prayer of the Saints is as the singing of the Bird the finger of Gods Spirit touching the Lute-strings of their hearts they make melody to the Lord. Isa 56.7 Their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine Altar 3. Their tears are precious they drop as pearls from their eyes I have seen thy tears Isa 38.5 The tears of Gods children drop as precious wine into Gods bottle Psal 56.8 Put thou my tears into thy bottle A tear from a broken heart is a Present for the King of heaven 4. Their BLOOD is precious Psal 116.15 Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints This is the blood God will chiefly make inquisition for Athaliah shed the blood of the Kings children 2 Kings 11.1 The Saints are the children of the most High and such as shed their blood shall pay dear for it Rev. 16.6 Thou hast given them blood to drink for they are worthy 2. God looks upon his children as persons of honour Isa 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable c. 1. God esteems them honourable he calls them a Crown and a Royal Diadem Isa 62.3 He calls them his glory Isa 46.13 Israel my glory 2. God makes them honourable as a King creates Dukes Marquesses Earles Barons c. so God installs his children into honour he creates them noble persons persons of Renown David thought it no small honour to be the Kings son-in-law 1 Sam. 18.18 Who am I that I should be son-in-law to the King What an infinite honour is it to be the children of the High God to be of the blood-royal of heaven The Saints are of an Ancient Family they are sprung from the Ancient of dayes Dan. 7.9 That is the best Pedigree which is fetched from heaven here the youngest childe is an heir a co-heir with Christ who is heir of all Hebr. 1.2 Rom. 8.17 Consider the honour of Gods children 1. Positively 2. Comparatively 1. Positively 1. They have the titles of honour they are called Kings Rev. 1.6 The excellent of the Earth Psal 16.2 Vessels of honour 2 Tim. 2.21 2. They have their Scutchion you may see the Saints Scutchion or Coat-Armour the Scripture hath set forth their Heraldry sometimes they give the Lyon in regard of their courage Prov. 1.28 Sometimes they give the Eagle in regard of their sublimeness they are ever flying up to heaven upon the two wings of faith and love Isa 40.31 They shall mount up with wings as Eagles sometimes they give the Dove in regard of their meekness and innocency Cant. 2.14 This shews the children of God to be persons of Renown 2. Consider the honour of Gods children comparatively and this comparison is double Compare the chidren of God 1. With Adam 2. With the Angels 1. Compare the children of God with Adam in a state of innocency Adam was a person of honour he was the sole Monarch of the World all the creatures did vail to him as their Soveraign he was placed in the garden of Eden which was a Paradise of pleasure he was crowned with all the contentments of the Earth nay more Adam was Gods lively picture he was made in the likeness of God himself yet the state of the meanest of Gods children by Adoption is far more excellent and honourable than the state of Adam was when he wore the Robe of innocency for Adams condition though it was glorious yet mutable and was soon lost Adam was a bright star yet a falling star but Gods children by Adoption are in a state unalterable Adam had a posse non peccare a possibility of standing but believers have a non posse peccare an impossibility of falling once adopted and ever adopted as Isaac said when he had given the blessing to Jacob I have blessed him and he shall be blessed Gen 27.33 So may we say of all Gods children they are adopted and they shall be adopted so that Gods children are in a better and more glorious condition now than Adam was in all his Regal Honour and Majesty 2. Let us ascend as high as heaven and compare Gods children with the glorious and blessed Angels Gods children are equal to the Angels in some sense above them and then sure they must needs be persons of honour 1. Gods children are equal to the Angels this is acknowledged by some of the Angels themselves Rev. 19.10 I am thy fellow-servant here is a Parallel made between John the Divine and the Angel the Angel saith to John 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am thy fellow-servant 2. The children of God by Adoption are in some sense above the Angels and that two wayes 1. The Angels are servants to Gods children Hebr. 1.14 Though they are glorious spirits yet ministring spirits The Angels are the Saints servitors we have examples in Scripture of Angels attending the persons of Gods children we read of Angels waiting upon Abraham Moses Daniel the Virgin Mary c. Nor do the Angels only service to Gods children while they live but at their death too Lazarus had a Convoy of Angels to carry him into the Paradise of God thus we see the children of God have a preheminence and dignity above the Angels the Angels are their servants both living and dying and this is the more to be observed because it is never said in Scripture that the
policy 't is wisdom saith the flesh to keep out of suffering 't is wisdom not to declare against sin 't is wisdom to finde out subtile distinctions to avoide the Cross the wisdom of the flesh is to save the flesh Indeed there is a Christian prudence to be used the Serpents eye must be in the Doves head wisdom and innocency do well but it is dangerous to separate them cursed be that policy which teacheth to avoide duty this wisdom is not from above but is divellish Jam. 3.17 it is learned from the old Serpent this wisdom will turn to folly at last it is like a man who to save his gold throws himself over-board into the water so the Polititian to save his skin will damn his soul 5. A man must deny self-will Saint Gregory calls the will the Commander in chief of all the faculties of the soul indeed in innocency Adam had rectitude of minde and conformity of will the will was like an instrument in tune it was full of harmony and did tune sweetly to Gods will but now the will is corrupt and like a strong Tyde carries us violently to evil the will hath not only an indisposition to good but an opposition Acts 7.51 Ye have alwayes resisted the Holy Ghost there is not a greater enemy than the will it is up in arms against God 2 Pet. 2.10 The will loves sin and hates the Cross Now if ever we suffer for God we must cross our own will the will must be martyred a Christian must say not my will Lord but thy will be done 6. A man must deny self-reasonings the fleshy part will be reasoning and disputing against sufferings Mark 2.8 Why reason you these things in your hearts such reasonings as these will begin to arise in our hearts 1. Persecution is bitter Self-rea ∣ soning 1 Answ Oh but it is blessed Jam. 1.12 Blessed is he that endureth tentation c. The Cross is heavy but the sharper the Cross the brighter the Crown 2. But 't is sad to part with Estate and Relations Self-rea ∣ soning 2 Answ But Christ is better than all he is Manna to strengthen he is wine to comfort he is salvation to crown 3. But liberty is sweet Self-rea ∣ soning 3 Answ This restraint makes way for enlargement Psal 4.1 Thou hast enlarged me in distress when the feet are bound with irons the heart may be sweetly dilated and enlarged Thus should we put to silence those self-reasonings which are apt to arise in the heart against sufferings This self-denying frame of heart is very hard this is to pluck out the right eye one saith a man hath not so much to do in over-coming men and Divels as in overcoming himself Fortior est qui se quam qui fortissima vincit Maenia Self is the Idol and how hard is it to sacrifice this Idol and to turn self-seeking into self-denial but though it be difficult it is essentially necessary to suffering a Christian must first lay down self before he can take up the Cross Alas how far are they then from suffering that cannot deny themselves in the least things in their dyet or apparel who instead of martyring the flesh pamper the flesh instead of taking up the Cross take up their Cups is this self-denial to let loose the reins to the flesh 't is sure they who cannot deny themselves if sufferings come they will deny Christ Oh Christians as ever you would be able to carry Christs Cross begin to deny your selves consider 1. Whatever you deny for Christ you shall finde again in Christ Matth. 19.29 Every one that hath forsaken houses or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands for my Names sake shall receive an hundred fold and shall inherit everlasting life Here is a very saving bargain is it not gain enough to have ten in the hundred nay above an hundred for one 2. 'T is but equity that you should deny your selves for Christ did not Jesus Christ deny himself for you he denied his joy he left his fathers bosome he denied his honour he endured the shame Hebr. 12.2 He denied his life he poured out his blood as a sacrifice upon the Alta● of the Cross Col. 1.20 Did Christ deny himself for you and will not you deny your selves for him 3. Self-denial is the highest sign of a thorow-paced Christian hypocrites may have great knowledge and make large profession but it is only the true-hearted Saint that can deny himself for Christ I have read of an holy man who was once tempted by Satan to whom Satan said Why takest thou all this pains Thou watchest an ●astest and abstainest from sin O man what dost thou more than I Art thou no Drunkard no Adulterer no more am I. Dost thou watch let me tell thee I never slept Dost thou fast I never eat What dost thou more than I Why saith the good man I will tell thee Satan I pray I serve the Lord nay more then all I deny my self nay then saith Satan thou goest beyond me for I exalt my self and so vanished Self-denial is the best touch-stone of sincerity by this you go beyond hypocrites 4. To deny your selves is but what others have done before you Moses was a self-denier he denied the honours and profits of the Court Hebr. 11.25 Abraham denied his own Country at Gods call Hebr. 11.8 Marcus Arethusus who lived in the time of Julian the Emperour endured great torments for Religion if he would but have given an half-penny towards the rebuilding of the Idols Temple he might have been released but he would not do it though the giving of an half-penny might have saved his life here was a self-denying Saint 5. There is a time shortly coming that if you do not deny the world for Christ the world will deny you the world now denies satisfaction and ere long it will deny house-room it will not suffer you so much as to breath in it it will turn you out of possession and which is worse not only the world will deny you but Christ will deny you Matth. 10.33 Whosoever shall deny me before men him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven 7. Get suffering graces these three in particular 1. Faith 2. Love 3. Patience 1. Suffering grace is faith Ephes 6.16 Above all taking the shield of faith the pretence of faith is one thing the use of faith another the hypocrite makes faith a cloak the Martyr makes it a shield a shield is useful in time of danger it defends the head it guards the vitals such a shield is faith faith is a furnace-grace 1 Pet. 1.7 Though it be tryed with fire it is found unto praise and honour Faith like Hercules club beats down all oppositions by faith we resist the Divel 1 Pet. 5.9 By faith we resist unto blood Hebr. 11.34 Faith is a victorious grace the Believer will make Christs crown flourish though it be in his own
the recompence of reward not all the silks of Persia the spices of Arabia the gold of Ophir can be compared to this glorious reward How should the thoughts of this whet and steel us with courage in our sufferings when they threatned Basil with banishment he comforted himself with this that he should be either under heaven or in heaven * Aut sub coelo aut in coelo It was the hope of this reward which did so animate those Primitive Martyrs who when there was incense put into their hands and there was no more required of them for the saving of their lives but to sprinkle a little of that incense upon the Altar in honour of the Idol they would rather dye than do it this glorious reward in heaven is called a reigning with Christ 2 Tim. 2.12 If we suffer we shall reign with him First Martyrs then Kings Julian honoured all those who were slain in his battels so doth the Lord Jesus after the Saints Crucifixion follows their Coronation they shall reign The wicked first reign and then suffer the godly first suffer and then reign The Saints shall have an happy reign it shall be both peaceable and durable who would not swim through blood to this Crown who would not suffer joyfully Christ saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be exceeding glad Ver. 12. The Greek word signifies to leap for joy * G●sticulationem sonat laetantis Erasm Christians should have their spirits elevated and exhilarated when they contemplate the weight of glory 11. If you would be able to suffer pray much beg of God to cloath you with a spirit of zeal and magnanimity Phil. 1.29 To you it is given in the behalf of Christ not only to believe on him but also to suffer for his sake It is a gift of God to be able to suffer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pray for this gift do not think you can be able of your selves to lay down life and liberty for Christ Peter was over-confident of himself John 13.37 I will lay down my life for thy sake but Peters strength undid him Peter had habitual grace but he wanted auxiliary grace Christians need fresh gales from heaven pray for the Spirit to animate you in your sufferings as the fire hardens the Potters Vessel which is at first weak and limber so the fire of the Spirit hardens men against sufferings pray that God will make you like the Anvil that you may bear the stroaks of persecutors with invincible patience 1 JOHN 5.3 His Commandments are not grievous CHAP. XXII Containing an Appendix to the Beatitudes YOU have seen what Christ calls for Poverty of spirit Purity of heart meekness mercifulness chearfulness in suffering persecution c. Now that none may hesitate or be troubled at these commands of Christ I thought good as a closure to the former Discourse to take off the surmises and prejudices in mens spirits by this sweet mollifying Scripture His Commandments are not grievous The censuring world objects against Religion that it is difficult and irksome Mal. 1.13 Behold what a weariness is it therefore the Lord that he may invite and encourage us to obedience draws Religion in its fair colours and represents it to us as beautiful and pleasant in these words His Commandments are not grievous This may well be called a sweetning ingredient into Religion and may serve to take off that asperity and harshness which the carnal world would put upon the wayes of God For the clearing of the terms let us consider 1. What is meant here by Commandments Answ By this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandments I understand Gospel-precepts faith repentance self-denial c. 2. What is meant by not grievous The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies they are not tedious or heavy to be born there is a Meiofis in the words His commands are not grievous that is they are easie sweet excellent Doctr. Hence observe Doctr. That none of Gods commands are grievous when he calls us to be meek merciful pure in heart these Commandments are not grievous Matth. 11.30 My burden is light the Greek word there for burden 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies properly the ballast of a ship which glides through the waves so swiftly and easily as if the ship had no weight or pressure in it Christs Commandments are like the ballast of a ship useful but not troublesome all his precepts are sweet and facil therefore called pleasantness Prov. 3.17 To illustrate and amplifie this consider two things 1. Why Christ layes commands upon his people 2. That these commands are not grievous 1. Why Christ layes commands upon his people there are two Reasons 1. In regard of Christ it is sutable to his dignity and state he is Lord Paramount this name is written on his Thigh and Vesture King of Kings Rev. 19.16 And shall not a King appoint Laws to his subjects it is one of the jura regalia the flowres of the Crown to enact Laws and Statutes what is a King without his Laws And shall not Christ by whom Kings reign * Prov. 8.15 put forth his Royal Edicts by which the world shall be governed 2. In regard of the Saints it is well for the people of God that they have Laws to binde and check the exorbitancies of their unruly hearts how far would the Vine spread its luxuriant branches were it not pruned and tyed the heart would be ready to run wilde in sin if it had not affliction to prune it and the Laws of Christ to binde it the precepts of Christ are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a yoke Matth. 11.30 The yoke is useful it doth keep the Oxen in from stragling and running out so the precepts of Christ as a yoke do keep the godly from stragling into sin whether should we not run into what damnable opinions and practises did not Christs Lawes lay a check and restraint upon us Blessed be God for precepts That is a blessed yoke which yokes our corruptions we should run to hell were it not for this yoke The Lawes of Christ are a spiritual hedge which keeps the people of God within the pastures of Ordinances some that have broken this hedge and have stragled are now in the Divels pound Thus we see what need the Saints have of the Royal Law 2. The second thing I am to demonstrate is That Christs commands are not grievous I confess they are grievous to the unregenerate man to mourn for sin to be pure in heart to suffer persecution for righteousness sake Durus hic sermo this is grievous to flesh and blood therefore ●hrists commands are compared to bands and cords Psal 2. because carnal men look upon them so Gods commands restrain men from their excess and binde them to their good behaviour therefore they hate these bonds and instead of breaking off sin say Let us break their bands asunder and cast away their cords from us Psal 2.3 A carnal man is
like an untamed Heifer which will not endure the yoke but kicks and flings or like a wilde Bull in a net Isa 51.20 Thus to a person in the state of nature Christs commands are grievous Nay to a childe of God so far as corruption prevails for he is but in part regenerate Christs Laws seem irksome the flesh cries out it cannot pray or suffer the Law in the members rebels against Christs Law only the spiritual part prevails and makes the flesh stoop to Christs injunctions A regenerate person so far as he is regenerate doth not count Gods Commandments grievous they are not a burden but a delight Divine commands are not grievous if we consider them first positively in these eight particulars 1. Positively 1. A Christian consents to Gods commands therefore they are not grievous Rom. 7.16 I● consent to the Law that it is good What is done with consent is easie if the Virgin give her consent the Match goes on chearfully A godly man in his judgement approves of Christs Laws * Rom. 7.12 and in his will consents to them therefore they are not grievous a wicked man is under a force terror of conscience hales him to duty he is like a slave that is chained to the Gally he must work whether he will or no he is forced to pull the Rope tug at the Oare but a godly man is like a free subject that consents to his Princes Laws and obeyes out of choice as seeing the equity and rationality of them Thus a gracious heart sees that beauty and equity in the commands of heaven as draws forth consent and this consent makes them that they are not grievous 2. They are Christs comands therefore not grievous Take my yoak Matth. 11.29 Gospel commands are not the Laws of a Tyrant but a Saviour The husbands commands are not grievous to the wife it is her ambition to obey this is enough to animate and excite obedience Christ commands As Peter said in another sence Matth. 14.28 Lord if it be thou bid me come unto thee upon the water So saith a gracious soul Lord if it be thou that wouldest have me mourn for sin and breath after heart-purity if it be thou dear Saviour that biddest me do these things I will chearfully obey Thy commandments are not grievous A souldier at the word of his General makes a brave onset 3. Christians obey out of a principle of love and then Gods commandments are not grievous Therefore in Scripture serving and loving of God are put together Isa 56.6 The sons of the strangers that joyne themselves to the Lord to serve him and to love the Name of the Lord c. Nothing is grievous to him that loves love lightens a burden it adds wings to obedience an heart that loves God counts nothing tedious but it s own dulnesse and slownesse of motion love makes sin heavie and Christs burden light 4. A Christian is carried on auxilio Spiritus by the help of the Spirit and the Spirit makes every duty easie Rom. 8.26 The Spirit helpeth our infirmities The Spirit works in us the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both to will and to do Phil. 2. When God enables to do what he commands then his commandments are not grievous if two carry a burden it is easie the Spirit of God helps us to do duties to bear burdens it draws as it were in the yoke with us If the Scrivener guides the childs hand and helps it to frame its letters now it is not hard for the childe to write If the Loadstone draw the iron it is not hard for the iron to move if the Spirit of God as a Divine Loadstone draw and move the heart now it is not hard to obey When the birds hath wings given it it can flie Though the soul of it self be unable to do that which is good yet having two wings given it like that woman in the Revelation * Rev. 12 24. the wing of faith and the wing of the Spirit now it flyes swiftly in obedience Ezek 11.1 the Spirit did lift me up The heart is heavenly in prayer when the Spirit lifts it up The sails of a Mill cannot move of themselves but when the wind blows then they turn round when a gale of the Spirit blows upon the soul Now the sails of the affections move swiftly in duty 5. All Christs commands are beneficial therefore not grievous Deut. 10.12 13. And now O Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to love him to keep his Statutes which I command thee this day for thy good Christs commands carries meat in the mouth of them and then surely they are not grievous salvation runs along in every precept To obey Christs Laws is not so much of duty as our privilege all Christs commands centre in blessednesse Physick is in it self very unpleasant yet because it tends to health no man refuseth it Divine Precepts are to the fleshy part irksome yet having such excellent operation as to make us both holy and happy they are not to be accounted grievous the apprentise is content to go through hard service because it makes way for his freedome The Scholar willingly wrastles with the knotty difficulties of Arts and Sciences because they serve both to enoble and advance him How chearfully doth a believer obey those Laws which reveal Christs love That suffering is not grievous which leads to a Crown This made Saint Paul say I take pleasure in infirmities in persecutions 2. Cor. 12.10 6. 'T is honourable to be under Christs commands therefore they are not grievous The precepts of Christ do not burden us but adorn us * Omnia quae praestari jubet Christus non onerant nos sed ornant Salv. 'T is an honour to be employed in Christs service How chearfully did the rowers row the Barge that carried Caesar the honour makes the precept easie a Crown of gold is in it self heavy but the honour of the Crown makes it light and easie to be worn I may say of every command of Christ as Solomon speaks of wisdom Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a Crown of glory shall she deliver to thee 'T is honourable working at Court The honour of Christs yoake makes it easie and eligible 7. Christs commands are sweetned with joy and then they are not grievous Cicero questions whether that can properly be called a burden which is carried with joy and pleasure * Utrum onus appellandum quod laetitiá fertur Cicero When the wheeles of a Chariot are oyled they run swiftly when God poures in the oyle of gladnesse how fast doth the soul run in the wayes of his commandments Joy strengthens for duty Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength and the more strength the lesse wearinesse God sometimes drops down comfort and then a Christian can run in the
19.25 And Saint Paul had this assurance 2 Tim. 1.12 Gal. 2.20 Yea may some say Paul was an eminent believer a Christian of the first magnitude no wonder if he had this jewel of assurance nay but the Apostle speaks of it as a case incident to other believers Rom. 8.35 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who shall separate us from the love of Christ He doth not say Who shall separate me but us so that by all it appears that a believer may come to spell out his interest in Christ Caution 1. Not that the Saints have alwayes the Caution 1 fame certainty or that they have such an assurance as excludes all doubtings and conflicts there will be flowings and ebbings in their comforts as well as in their graces was it not so in David sometimes we hear him say Gods loving-kindness was before his eyes Psal 26.3 As it is a Proverbial speech I have such a thing in my eye I see it just before me but at another time Where are thy loving-kindnesses Psal 89.49 A Christian hath not alwayes the same Plerophory Saint Paul at one time sets up the Trophies of victory and sings his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or triumphant song Rom. 8.37 We are more than Conquerors At another time how did the Plumes of his confidence fall and he was as a man in the midst of the Sea strugling with the waves and crying out for help Rom. 7.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O wretched man that I am c. A Saint in this life is like a ship at Anchor which though safe yet it may be sometimes tossed upon the water these doubtings and convulsions God suffers in his children sometimes that they may long the more for heaven where they shall have a constant spring-tyde of joy Caution 2. Not that all believers have the same assurance Caution 2 1. Assurance is rather the fruit of faith than faith Now as the root of the Rose or Tulip may be alive where the flowre is not visible so faith may live in the heart where the flowre of assurance doth not appear yet this is sure there is so much wrought in the heart of every believer by Gods Spirit as he can bottom his hope upon as for instance a high prizing of Christ an acquiescence in Christ a rejoycing in his image a delighting in his word the weakest believer hath so much to shew as he would not part with for a world 2. Assurance is difficult to be obtained it is a rare jewel but hard to come by not many Christians have this jewel 1. God sees it good sometimes to with-draw assurance from his people that they may walk humbly through the corruption of our nature we are apt to abuse the richest mercies the Moth breeds in the finest cloth the Worm in the sweetest fruit pride is apt to breed in this sweet fruit of assurance It is hard for Christians to want assurance and be content and to have it and be humble 2. Satan doth what he can to way-lay and obstruct our assurance he is called the red Dragon Rev. 12.3 And how doth he trouble the waters of a Christians peace If the Divel cannot keep a believer from heaven he will do what he can to keep him from an heaven upon earth he will wrack him with fears and disquiets If he cannot blot a Christians evidence yet sometimes he casts such a mist before his eyes that he cannot read his evidence the Divel envies that God should have any glory or the soul any comfort 3. That we want assurance the fault for the most is our own we walk carelesly neglect our spiritual watch let go our hold of promises comply with temptations no wonder then if we walk in darkness and are at such a loss that we cannot tell whether Christ be ours or no our uneven carriage grieves the Spirit whose work it is to seal up assurance if we quench the graces of the Spirit no wonder if God quench the comforts of the Spirit 3. Assurance is very sweet this wine of Paradise chears the heart how comfortable is Gods smile the Sun is more refreshing when it shines out then when it is hid in a cloud for want of this knowledge Christ is ours we often hang our Harps upon the Willows and sit as Israel by the Rivers weeping Psal 137.1 2. A man that hath a rich Mine of gold in his Field yet if he doth not know it is there he cannot take the comfort of it One that hath a great Estate befallen him beyond the Seas yet if ignorant of it he is as if he had no such Estate Hagar had a Well of water by her but her eyes being held that she saw not the Well she sat weeping it is the knowledge of an interest gives comfort Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour not a Saviour but my Saviour The Rabbins say that Moses dyed with a kiss from Gods mouth he that knows Christ is his hath a kiss from Christs lips he dyes triumphing assurance puts a man in heaven before his time 4. Assurance is very useful it will put us upon service for Christ 1. It will put us upon active obedience assurance will not as the Papists say breed security in the soul but agility it will make us mount up with wings as Eagles in holy duties faith makes us living assurance make us lively if we know that Christ is ours we shall never think we can love him enough or serve him enough 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constrains us Assurance is like wings to the Bird like oyle to the Lamp like weights to the Clock it sets all the wheels of obedience a going assurance is a whetstone to the graces it stirs up hope love zeal faith makes a Christian walk 2 Cor. 5.7 assurance makes him run Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength Assurance breeds such joy in the soul as doth derive and issue forth strength for duty 2. Assurance will put us upon passive obedience Rom. 5.3 5. We glory in tribulation because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts He that hath Christs love shed into his heart will be willing to shed his blood for Christ he who knows Christ is his will come to him with Peter upon the waters he comforts himself with this though he lose all for Christ he shall find all in Christ Mr. Fox speaks of a woman in Queen Maries dayes who when the adversaries threatned to take her husband from her she answered Christ is my husband when they threatned to take away her children she answered Christ is better to me than ten sons when they threatned to take away all from her saith she Christ is mine and you cannot take away him from me that man who is assured Christ is his will hazard the loss of all for him he knows though he may be a loser for Christ he cannot be a loser by Christ for Christ is all and in all No
an infinite mercy is it for a man to be made sensible of sin and seeing himself sick to cry out with David 2 Sam. 12.13 I have sinned against the Lord. Were it not a mercy for a person that is distracted to be restored to the use of his reason so for him that is spiritually distempered and in a lethargy to come to himself and see both his wound and his remedy Till the sinner be made sensible of his disease the medicine of mercy doth not belong to him * Non moris ●●t membrum non percussum plaugere nondum suscepto ictu admovere manum fovere unguento ubi non dolet emplastrum adhibere ubi caesura non ost B●rn in Apologe● Branch 6 6. If sin be a soul-sicknesse then labour to get this disease healed if a man had a disease in his body a Plu●i●ie or Cancer he would use all means for a cure the woman in the Gospel who had a bloody issue spent her whole estate upon the Physitians Luke 8.43 Be more earnest to have thy soul cured than thy body Make Davids prayer Psal 41.4 Heal my soul for I have sinned Hast thou a consumptive body rather pray to God to heal the Consumption in thy soul go to God first for the cure of thy soul James 5.14 Is any sick among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray over him The Apostle doth not say Let him call for the Physitian but the Elders that is the Ministers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Physitians are to be consulted in their due place but not in the first place Most men send first for the Physitian and then for the Minister which shews they are more desirous and careful for the recovery of their bodies than their souls but if soul-diseases are more dangerous and deadly then we should prefer the spiritual cure before the bodily heal my soul for I have sinned let us consider 1. Till we are cured we are not fit to do God any service A sick man cannot work while the disease of sin is violent we are not fit for any heavenly employment we can neither work so God Opera●to animi secundum virtutem nor work out our own salvation The Philosopher defines happiness the operation of the minde about vertue To be working for God is both the end of our life and the perfection Would we be active in our Sphere let us labour to have our souls cured So long as we are diseased with sin we are lame and bed-rid we are unfit for work We read indeed of a sinners works but they are dead works Heb. 6.1 2. If we are not cured we are cursed if our disease abides on us the wrath of God abides on us Quest But how shall we get this disease of sin cured This brings to the second thing in the Text The healing Physitian The whole need not a Physitian Whence observe Doctr. 2. That Jesus Christ is a soul-physitian Doctr. 2 Ministers as was said before are Physitians whom Christ doth in his Name delegate and send abroad into the world He saith to the Apostles and in them to all his Ministers Lo I am with you to the end of the world Matth. 28.20 That is I am with you to assist and bless you and to make your Ministry healing but though Ministe●s are Physitians yet but under-physitians Jesus Christ is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Chief Physitian he it is that teacheth us all our Receits and goes forth with our labours else the physick we prescribe would never work all the Ministers under heaven would not do any cure without the help of this Great Physitian For the Amplification of this I shall shew 1. That Christ is a Physitian 2. Why he is a Physitian 3. That he is the only Physitian 4. How he heals his Patients 5. That he is the best Physitian 1. That Christ is a Physitian it is one of his titles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee He is a Physitian for the body he anointed the blinde cleansed the Lepers healed the sick raised the dead Matth. 8.16 He it is that puts vertue into physick and makes it healing and he is a Physitian for the soul Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart We are all as so many impotent diseased persons one man hath a Feaver another hath a dead Palsie another hath a bloody issue he is under the power of some hereditary corruption now Christ is a soul-physitian he healeth these diseases * Medicus aegrotis Jesus Bern. therefore in Scripture the Lord Jesus to set forth his healing vertue is resembled 1. By the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.9 Those who were stung were cured by looking on the Brazen Serpent so when the soul is stung by the old Serpent it is cured by that healing under Christs wings 2. Christ is resembled by the good Samaritan Luke 10.33 34. A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among Thieves which stripped him of his rayment and wounded him and departed leaving him half dead but a certain Samaritan as he journyed came where he was and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him and bound up his wounds pouring in wine and oyle c. We have wounded our selves by sin and the wound had been incurable had not Christ that good Samaritan poured in wine and oyle 3. Christ as a Physitian is resembled by the Trees of the Sanctuary Ezek. 47.12 The fruit thereof shall be for meat and the leaf thereof shall be for medicine Thus the Lord Jesus that Tree of life in Paradise hath a sanative vertue he heals our pride unbelief c. As he feeds our graces so he heals our corruptions 2. Why Christ is a Physitian 1. In regard of his Call God the Father called him to practice Physick he anointed him to the work of healing Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Christ came into the world as into an Hospital to heal sin-sick souls this though it were a glorious work yet Christ would not undertake it till he was commissionated by his father The Spirit of the Lord is upon me he hath sent me Christ was anointed and appointed to the work of a Physitian this was for our imitation we are not to meddle in any matters without a call that is acting out of our sphere 2. Jesus Christ undertook this healing work because of that need we were in of a Physitian Christ came to be our Physitian not because we deserved him but because we needed him not our merit but our misery drew Christ from heaven had not he come we must of necessity have perished and dyed of our wounds our disease was not ordinary it had seized on every part it made us not only sick but dead and such Receits
with and the son breaks the father is not bound to set him up again God gave Adam a stock of grace to begin the world with Adam did break and make all his children Banquerupts God is not tyed to give him grace again 2. God may justly deny his grace to every wicked man because he is a despiser of grace he tramples this pearle under foot Prov. 1.7 Is God bound to give grace to them that despise it If a Kings pardon be rejected once he is not bound to tender it any more but I shall not launch forth any further into this 4. The cogency and necessity of grace it is most needful because it fits us for communion with God 2 Cor. 6.14 What communion hath light with darkness God can no more converse with an ungracious soul than a King can converse with a Swine it is by grace that we keep a constant intercourse with heaven 1. Let me with the greatest zeal and earnestness perswade Use 1 all who have souls to save Exhort to endeavour after grace this is the Unum Necessarium grace will be desirable at death it is as useful now and more seasonable to look after Prov. 4.7 With all thy getting get understanding Alexander being presented with a rich Cabinet of King Darius he reserved it to put Homers works in as being of great value The heart is a spiritual Cabinet into which the jewel of grace should be put we should desire grace above other things above the gifts of the Spirit nay above the comforts of the Spirit Comfort is sweet but grace is better than comfort bread is better than honey we may go to heaven without comfort not without grace it is grace makes us blessed in life and death I shall shew you twelve rare Excellencies in grace I shall set this fair Virgin of grace before you hoping that you will be tempted to fall in love with it Excellency 1 1. Grace hath a soul-quickning excellency in it Hebr. 10.38 The just shall live by faith Men void of grace are dead they have breath yet want life they are walking ghosts Eph. 2.1 The life of sin is the death of the soul * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A sinner hath all the signs of one that is dead he hath no pulse the affections are the pulse of the soul his pulse doth not beat after God he hath no sense Eph. 4.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who being past feeling Dead things have no beauty there 's no beauty in a dead flower dead things are not capable of priviledge the dead heir is not crowned but grace is the vital artery of the soul it doth not only irradiate but animate therefore it is called lumen vitae the light of life John 8.12 And believers are said to have their grave-cloaths pulled off and to be alive from the dead Rom. 6.13 By grace the soul is grafted into Christ the true Vine John 15.5 and is made not only living but lively 1 ●et 1.3 Grace puts forth a Divine Energy into the soul 2. Grace hath a soul-enriching excellency 1 Cor. 1. Excellency 2 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye are enriched in all knowledge As the Sun enricheth the world with its golden beams so doth knowledge bespangle and enrich the mind * Vera divitiae non opes sunt sed virtutes Bern. Faith is an enriching grace Jam. 2.5 Rich in faith plus fulget fides quam aurum faith brings Christs riches into the soul it intitles to the promises the promises are full of heavenly riches Justification Adoption Glory Faith is the key that unlocks this Cabinet of the promises and empties out their treasure into the soul The riches of grace excell all other riches the merchandize of it is better than the merchandize of silver Prov. 3.14 1. These riches make a man wise wisdom is the best possession * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand other riches cannot make one wise A man may ditescere delirare he may have a full purse and an empty brain Many a rich heir though he lives till he be of age yet he never comes to years of discretion But these riches of grace have power to make a man wise Psal 111.10 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom The Saints are compared to wise Virgins Matth. 25. Grace makes a man wise to know Satans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his devices and subtilties 2 Cor. 2.11 It makes him wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 Grace gives the Serpents eye in the Doves head 2. These spiritual riches sanctifie other riches Riches without grace are hurtful they are not divitiae but insidiae they are golden snares they are the bellows of pride the fuel of lust they set open hell gates for men * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand they are unblest blessings but grace sanctifies our riches it corrects the poyson it takes away the curse it makes them beneficial to us riches shall be Certificates of Gods love wings to lift us up to Paradise Thus grace by a Divine Chymistry extracts heaven out of earth and gives us not only the venison but the blessing 3. Grace satisfies other riches cannot Eccles 5.10 Riches can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle but grace fills up every chink and hiatus of the soul it dilates the heart it ravisheth the affections with joy Rom. 15.13 which joy as Chrysostom saith is a foretaste of heaven Excellency 3 3. Grace hath a soul-adorning excellency it puts a beauty and lustre upon a person 1 Pet. 3.4 5. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plating the hair and of wearing of gold but let it be the hidden man of the heart even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price for after this manner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves If a man hath Plate and Jewels Cloth of Gold Hangings of Arras these adorn the house not the man the glory of a man is grace * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chaysost Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace The graces are a Chain of pearle that adorns Christs Bride the heart inlaid and enamel'd with grace is like the Kings daughter all glorious within * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Psal 45.13 A gracious soul is the image of God curiously drawn with the Pensil of the Holy Ghost an heart beautified with grace is the Angels joy Luke 15.7 and is Gods lesser heaven Isa 57.15 Eph. 3.17 Reason doth not so far exceed sense as grace doth reason grace changeth corruption into perfection nothing so graceth a man as grace doth grace is the purest complexion of the soul for it makes it like God Grace is the flower of delight which Christ loves to smell to grace is to the soul as the eye to the body as the Sun to the
words are mandatory for all counsels in Scripture carry in them the force of a command Keep thy heart Here is Gods solemn charge to every man like the Judges charge given upon the Bench. I shall first explain then apply 1. Keep the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep hath various significations 1. Sometimes it signifies munire to arm or fence a stroak at the heart kills fence thy heart 2. Sometimes it signifies c●rare to take care of a thing that it be not lost as one would take care of a piece of plate that it be not taken away 3. Sometimes it signifies custodire to keep in safe custody so keep thy heart lock it up safe that it may be forth-coming when God calls for it 2. Thy heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heart is taken diversly in Scripture sometimes it is taken for the vital part Judg. 19.5 sometimes for the soul Deutr. 13.3 sometimes for the mind Prov. 10.8 sometimes for the conscience 1 John 3.20 sometimes for the will and affections Psal 119.36 I shall take it in its full latitude for the whole soul with all its noble faculties and endowments this is the depositum or charge every man is entrusted with the heart 3. With all diligence the original carries it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all keeping the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to keep with watch and ward a Christian is to set a continual guard about his heart Some read the words Keep thy heart supra omnem custodiam above all keeping * Junius nothing requires such strict custody a Christians heart must ever be in his eye 4. For out of it are the issues of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the heart is the fountain of life if the heart lives the body lives if the heart be touched death follows So the soul is a spiritual fountain out of it issues either sin or grace from this spring-head flow the streams either of salvation or damnation In the words there is 1. A duty Keep thy heart 2. The manner with all diligence 3. The reason for out of it are the issues of life Doctr. Doctr. It must be a Christians great care with all keeping to keep his heart we are to keep our eyes Job set a watch there Job 31.1 I made a Covenant with mine eyes c. We are to keep our lips David bridled his tongue Psal 39.1 I will keep my mouth as with a bridle but especially we are to look to our hearts Keep thy heart with all keeping The heart like Dinah will be gadding abroad and it seldom returns home but it is defiled It was the saying of an Heathen I never come home with such good desires as I went out with Christian thy chief work lies with thy heart Keep thy heart The Serpent when any danger is near keeps his head and to preserve his head will expose his whole body to injury so a wise Christian should especially keep his heart he should adventure his skin to keep a wound from his heart To amplifie this I shall shew that the heart must be kept 1. With all kind of keeping 2. At all times 3. The Reasons enforcing 1. The heart must be kept with all kinde of keeping 1. Keep the heart with all kind of keeping 1. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a Temple the Temple was an hallowed place set apart for Gods worship so the heart is Augustissimum Dei Templum * Seneca the Temple of God 1 Cor. 3.16 This heart-temple must be kept pure and holy no filth * 2 Chron. 29.16 mus● lie here sweep the dust out of the Temple * Mundemus ●oc Templum quod non fumo nec pulvere sed mal● cogitatio nibus sordidatur Lactan. the vessels of the Temple were cleans'd 2 Chr. 29.15 Thus the memory affections conscience these Temple-vessels must be cleansed 2 Cor. 7.1 Christ whipped the buyers and sellers out of the Temple John 2. The cares of the world will be crowding into the heart now you must get a whip made of the threatnings of the Law and drive these money-changers out of the Temple of your heart let not Gods Temple be made an Exchange the Temple had a fire burning on the Altar take heed of strange fire but keep the fire of zeal and devotion flaming upon the Altar of thy heart do Temple-work offer up the sacrifice of a broken heart When the heart is Dei sacrarium a consecrated place an Holy of holies now God will walk there Many a mans heart is a Pest-house a Bedlam being polluted with sin this is to put Swine into Gods room this is to let the Divel come into Gods Temple Davids heart was a Temple dedicated Psal 119.38 2. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a treasure A man that hath a great treasure of money and jewels will keep it with lock and bolt that it be not stollen Christian thou carriest a precious treasure about thee even all that thou art worth an heart * Particula divinae aurae the Divel and the world would rob thee of this jewel oh keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep thy life if thou art robbed thou art ruined few know the value of their hearts an husbandman can set a price upon corn but not on pearle men know not the worth of that treasure they carry about them therefore prefer other things keep thy heart as a treasure 3. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a Garden Thy heart is a Garden * Ca● 4 1● weed sin out of thy heart Among the flowers of the Spirit weeds will be growing the weeds of pride malice covetousness these grow without setting therefore every day be weeding thy heart by prayer examination repentance 1. Weeds hinder the herbs and flowers from growing the weeds of corruption hinder the growth of grace where the weed of unbelief grows it hinders the flower of faith from growing 2. Weeds spoil the walks Christ will not walk in an heart over-grown with weeds and bryars Christ was sometimes among the lillies Cant. 6.3 never among the thistles Poor sinner thou complainest thou hast not communion with God time was when God did make himself known to thee but now he is grown strange and never comes near thee this is the reason sin hath spoiled Christs walks thy heart lies like the field of the sluggard Prov. 24.30 And will Christ walk there Indeed we read Christ was once in the wilderness when he was tempted Matth. 4.1 But he did not go thither for delight but that he might duel and skirmish with Satan 't is the garden Christ delights in oh weed thy heart daily let not thy heart be a Thicket for Satan 4. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a Garrison The heart of man is a Garrison * Cor hominis tanquam castellum Bern. or Fort-royal this Garrison is besieged the Divel shoots his fiery darts of tentation
heart sometimes seems to be in a good frame but it soon alters set the water on the fire it boyles set it in the open Aire it freezeth Those good affections which boyle in the Church often freeze in the Shop one day a Christian is quick and lively in prayer another day like the Disciples heavy and sleeping Luke 22.45 At one time a Christian is like David when he danced before the Ark with all his might 2 Sam. 6.14 At another time like Sampson when his hair was shaved and his strength went from him Judges 16.19 When the gold hath been made pure in the fire it remains pure but it is not so with the heart when it hath been purified in an Ordinance it doth not remain pure it gathers new soile and dross The heart is one day humble next day proud one one day meek the next day passionate one day quick in its motion towards heaven the next day the clock is set back 't is with the heart as with a sick mans pulse which alters almost every quarter of an houre The heart being so full of variation and inconstancy it is needful to keep the heart with all keeping the heart like a Viol will soon be out of order therefore we must often scrue up the strings and keep the instrument in tune that we may make melody in our heart to the Lord * Ephes 5.19 3. The heart must especially be looked to and watched because the heart is the fountain of all our actions and purposes the heart doth either sweeten or poyson all we do the heart is the spring which makes the current of our life run either pure or muddy the heart is the Throne either of sin or grace If the root be soure no sweet fruit can grow upon it so if there be a root of bitterness springing u●n the heart * Hebr. 12.15 it is impossible that our services should give a sweet rellish As in the natural body the heart is the fountain of life if the heart lives the whole body lives if the heart be tainted and poysoned the body dies So it is in a spiritual sense if the inner man of the heart be holy then the thoughts and actions are holy if the soul be earthly and impure the actions receive a bad tin●ture In Religion the heart is all we judge of mens heart by their actions God judgeth of mens actions by their hearts the heart differenceth actions Amaziah did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2 Chron. 25.2 But of Asa it is said his heart was perfect all his dayes 2 Chron. 15.17 It is the heart gives the denomination to a thing now if the heart be the spring which makes our actions good or bad then the heart is chiefly to be watched and tended preserve the spring pure keep thy heart with all diligence Use 1 1. It shews a difference between the godly and the wicked Inform. the hypocrite looks most to externals he keeps his actions from blotting he sets a watch before his lips the godly man sets a watch before his heart his main work lies within doors he sees the first ebullitions and risings of sin and grieves for them he labours to set his heart right the heart is the Altar which sanctifies the gift Use 2 Reproof 2 If we are to keep our hearts with all keeping then it reproves four sorts of persons 1. Such as have no care at all about their hearts they will have a care to keep their land that it be not morgaged but no care to keep their hearts Salvation and blessedness depend upon the keeping of the heart yet how few mind their hearts they let the Divel get into their hearts The Shepherd keeps his Flock the Physitian keeps his Receits the Lawyer keeps his Evidences the Merchant keep his Wares the Covetous man keeps his gold but few that keep their hearts Quest Quest Why do not men keep their hearts Answ 1 Answ 1. Because they study not the preciousness of them what a treasure is the heart it is divinely ennobled it is capable of glory but few know the worth of this jewel 2 Men keep not their hearts because they are taken up Answ 2 in keeping other things Cant. 1.6 My own vineyard have I not kept Many a man may say I have been cumbred about the world I have been keeping my estate tending my lusts but my own heart hath been neglected my own vineyard have I not kept Judas was keeping the bag when he should have kept his heart 3. Men keep not their hearts because they keep themselves Answ 3 in sloth to keep the heart requires diligence and few are willing to put themselves to the trouble but should not a Merchant keep his books of account because he finds some trouble in it 4. Some think their hearts are so good that they need Answ 4 not spend time about them to keep them Many a bold sinner is presumptuously confident of heaven he thinks he wants nothing but taking possession hence it is he never looks into his heart or searcheth his evidences till it be too late 2. It reproves them who when they should be keeping their hearts fall asleep Mat. 13.25 While men slept the enemy came and sowed tares When men are asleep and neglect their spiritual watch the Divel comes and sowes poysonful seeds in their hearts seeds of malice pride lust they say when the Dragon is asleep a jewel is taken out of his head so the Divel takes away this jewel of the heart while men sleep in security 't is death for a Souldier to fall asleep upon his guard 3. It reproves them who instead of keeping their hearts have suffered them to be stollen away The love of the world hath stollen away mens hearts we may make an hue and cry after hearts Satan catcheth mens hearts with a golden bait this this is the reason why preaching the Word doth so little good Ministers preach to mens ears but the world hath stollen away their hearts 4. It reproves those who keep half of their heart but not all they have affections to good things but let out some rooms of their heart to sin H●rod did many things but he let out one room of his heart to the Divel he lived in incest * Ubi regnat peccatum non potest regna●e Dei regnum Au● The true mother would not have the childe divided God will not endure to have the heart divided he will have the whole heart kept for him Use 3 3. It exhorts Christians to keep their hearts Merchants complain of losses at Sea Exhort but whatever we lose if we can keep our hearts we shall do well enough Keep thy heart with all diligence This is I confess an hard work Eliah found it easier to shut heaven by prayer than to shut his heart from evil thoughts * Facilius est coelum obse●a●e quam
animum but this is the work every good Christian must set upon the keeping of his heart Quest Quest. But if my heart be evil must I keep it Answ Answ No Cast away the evil of it and keep that which is good as when we candy fruit we pare off the skin cut out the core and rotten and preserve that which is best so do with thy heart what is evil in it cast away what is good preserve if thy heart be hard cast away the stone keep it soft if hypocritical cut out the rotten keep that which is sound separate between the precious and the vile The sin in thy heart throw away the grace keep and cherish in a word do with thy heart as they in the Parable did with the Fish Mat. 13.43 They gathered the good into vessels but cast the bad away This is the great Exhortation Heart-custody sinners look to your hearts let not your hearts be bewitched and stollen away with the pleasures of the world Hos 4.11 Whoredom and wine take away the heart many have drowned their hearts in wine Clemens Alexandrinus reports of a certain Fish that hath not an heart distinguished from the belly as other fishes but hath the heart in the belly an emblem of Epicures their heart is in their belly Quest Quest What is the holy frame and posture in which I should keep my heart Answ Answ Keep thy heart awake Cant. 5.2 My heart waketh Psal 108.2 I my self will awake early * Ut te ipsum serves non expergisceris Hor. though we have been sluggish yet now it is high time to awake out of sleep Rom. 13.11 Take heed of sleeping in ignorance impenitency security the heart is naturally asleep sin may be compared to sleep 1. A man that is asleep his senses are tyed up * Somnus est ligatio sensuum so a sinner whose heart is asleep in sin his spiritual senses are taken away he is not sensible of sin or wrath Eph. 4.19 He is going to hell but knows it not he laughs in his sleep 2. Though in sleep the senses are bound yet the fancy is let loose the man dreams he is at a Banquet Isa 29.8 So when the heart of a sinner is asleep in sin yet his fancy is quick he fancies that he is an heir of the promise that God loves him fancy is let loose 3. Sleep hinders from action he that is asleep cannot work so a sinner fallen asleep in sin cannot work out his salvation 4. A man asleep is in danger to be robbed his money or jewels may be taken away so while the sinner is asleep he may be robbed of his soul oh therefore keep thy heart awake let the judgement of God on sinners be as an alarum to awaken thee make that prayer of David Psal 13.3 Lighten mine eyes that I sleep not the sleep of death 2. Keep thy heart jealous towards others exercise charity towards thy self jealousie the better the heart is the more suspitious Satan hath a party within us the heart is not true to its self therefore it needs excubation and caution little did Hasael think what was in his heart 2 Kings 8.13 Had one come to Noah and said Noah Thou wilt be drunk shortly he would have been ready to have defied him there 's all sin seminally in the heart whether will not the heart run if we do not guard it it will run to Idolatry Atheisme Incest Be ever jealous jealousie breeds vigilancy and vigilancy safety let thy heart be ever in thy eye keep it in with the curben-bit of mortification 3. Keep thy heart serious take heed of a light heart Zeph. 3.11 His Prophets are light The heart of the wicked is vain and in this sense is said to be little worth Prov. 10.20 If you put a feather in the scale it weighs nothing so feathery is the heart of a sinner vanity swims on the top and deceit lies at bottom Christ saith of the Sparrows Are not two of them sold for a farthing Matth. 10.29 Thousands of the sinners thoughts are not worth a farthing a light heart is like a ship without a ballast it soon overturns a vain heart will be unstable light things are blown every way a flashy Christian is not broken for sin sin seldome lies heavy on a light heart keep the heart serious fix it upon God Psal 57.7 O God my heart is fixed Grace consolidates the heart and keeps it from floting in levity poize thy heart with the thoughts of hell and judgement 4. Keep thy heart humble 1 Pet. 5.5 That is the best frame of heart which fits a man for Gods presence the humble heart is the Valley where God delights to walk the house where he will take up his residence * In spirituali deficio fundamen●i locus ponitur in imo Hugo de Claustr anim l. 1. Isa 57. The humble heart doth sibi ipsi vilescere * Ba●n it hath a low esteem of it self and an high esteem of others Phil. 4.3 The more humble the heart is the more fertil in grace those Meadows which lie low are the richest grounds Keep thy heart humble view thy own wants and others perfections the impostume of pride kills The Eagle lifts up the Tortoise into the Aire and then throws her down upon a rock and breaks her * Valer. Max. so the Divel lifts the heart up in pride and so destroys it 5. Keep thy heart sublime Col. 3.1 2. Seek those things which are above Keep down thy heart with the weight of humility yet mount it up with the wing of heavenly-mindedness when the heart is touched with the loadstone of the Spirit it ascends Thus you have seen the holy frame and posture the heart is to be kept in Quest Quest What means is to be used for the keeping of the heart 1. If you would keep your heart keep the Word in Answ 1 your heart Psal 119.11 Thy Word have I hid in my heart Rules for keeping the heart that I might not sin against thee The Word is a preservative and antidote to keep the heart from spiritual infection What are all the golden precepts in the Word of God but several receits for the keeping of the heart if a Mariner would keep his ship he must have his eye to the Star and the Compass the best way to keep our hearts is to sail by a Scripture-compass 2. If you would keep your heart have a care what Answ 2 company you keep incorporate your selves into the society of the Saints when the people of God are together they heat and quicken one another their counsels are seasonable their prayers helpful That ship is most likely to be preserved from Pirates which goes with a Convoy Christian Wouldst thou keep thy heart safe in thy voyage to heaven let the communion of Saints be thy Convoy take heed of coming near such as are irreligious they are infectious and will poyson thy
ver 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Love is a munificent bountiful grace it is full of good works it drops as the honey-comb 2. Charity is not puffed up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it be bountiful it is not proud love is a humble grace like the violet though it perfumes the Aire yet hangs down its head love laies aside the Trumpet and covers it self with a vail love conceals its own worths and saith as Paul 2 Cor. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though I be nothing 3. Charity seeketh not her own ver 5. The Apostle complains Phil. 2.21 All men seek their own but love seeketh not her own This is a diffusive grace and wholly spends it self for the good of others 1 Cor. 10.33 It is reported of Pompey that when there was a great dearth in Rome Pompey having provided great store of corn abroad and ship'd it the Mariners being backward in hoysing up sail by reason of a tempest Pompey himself sets forward in the storm using these words Better a few of us perish than that Rome should not be relieved * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here was publick spirit love seeks not her own it makes a private Christian a common good Love is a grace that dwells not at home it goes abroad it makes frequent visits it looks into the condition of others and relieves them * Quid prodest misereri inopis nisi alimoniam ei Largiaris Amb. Love hath one eye blind to wink at the infirmities of others and another eye open to spy their wants 4. Charity is not easily provoked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not in a Paroxysme it burns not in anger it is meek and calm never taking fire unless to warm others with its benigne beams of mercy it gives honey but doth not easily sting 3. The Apostle sets forth the excellency of this grace of love Comparative by laying it in the ballance with other graces ver 13. And now abideth faith hope charity these three but the greatest of these is charity He compares love with faith and hope and then sets the ctown upon love indeed in some sense Faith is greater than charity 1. Ordine causalitatis in respect of causality faith is the cause of charity therefore more noble for as Austin saith * Quicquid pulchritudinis in arbore ex radice proficiscitur though the root of the tree be not seen yet all the beauty of the branches procee'ds from the Root So all the beauty that sparckles in love proceeds from the Root of Faith 2. Faith is more excellent than charity Ratione beneficij Faith is a more beneficial grace to us for by faith we are ingraffed into Christ and partake of the fatness of the Olive Faith fetcheth in all the strength and riches of Christ into the soul Faith puts upon the soul the embroidered Robe of Christs Righteousness in which it shines brighter than the Angels but in another sence love is greater than faith 1. Respectu visibilitatis because Love is a more visible grace then Faith Faith lies hid in the heart Rom. 10.9 Love is more conspicuous and shines forth more in the life Love discovers the soundness of Faith as the even beating of the pulse shows the healthful temper of the body Faith bows the knee to Christ and worships him love opens its treasures and presents unto Christ gifts Gold and Frankincense c. 2. Love is greater than Faith Respectu durationis in regard of continuance 1 Cor. 13.8 Charity never faileth we shall lay down our body of flesh and see God face to face faith and hope shall be no more but love shall remain While we live here we have need of Faith this is our Jacobs staff to walk with 2 Cor. 5. We walk by faith but we shall set this staffe shortly at heaven door and love only shall enter within the vail * Chrys in 1 Cor. Hom. 34. So you have seen the sparkling of this Diamond and thus doth the Apostle no less elegantly than divinely set forth the beauty and orient lustre of this grace 3. The third Argument pressing Christians to love is this is Decus ornamentum Evangelij it sets a crown of honour upon Religion it renders the Gospel lovely in the eyes of the world it was an honour to Religion in Tertullians time when the Heathens could say Ecce quam mutuo diligunt see how the Christians love one another Psal 133.1 Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity it is like the pretious oyntment upon the head that runs down to the skirts of Religions Garments O what a blessed sight it is to see Christians link'd together with the silver link of charity the Church is Christs Temple the Saints are living stones 1 Pet. 2.5 how beautiful is this Temple when the stones of it are cemented together with love it was said of the first Temple there was no noise of hammer in it and oh that there might be no noise of strife and division in Gods Church could we see unity and verity like the Vine and Elm mutually embracing could we see the children of Sion spreading themselves as Olive plants round about their Mothers table in an amicable and peaceable manner how should this adorn Religion and be as a lure to invite and draw others to be in love with it what is Religion but Religation a binding and knitting together of hearts we are knit to God by Faith and one to another by love 4. The fourth Argument is the necessity of love love is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a debt now debts must be paid Owe nothing to any man but love Rom. 13.8 The debt of love differs from other debts 1. When a debt is paid we receive an Acquittance and are to pay it no more but this debt of love must be alwayes paying in heaven we must be paying this debt love to God and the Saints there is no discharge from this debt 2. Other debts may be dispensed with we forgive a debt sometimes as that Creditor did in the Parable Matth. 18.27 The Lord of that servant was moved with compassion and forgave him the debt But this debt of love is by no means to be dispensed with it must be paid if we do not pay this debt God will come upon us with an arrest and throw us into hell prison 3. In civil debts between man and man the more they pay the less they have but in this debt of love it is quite contrary the more we pay the more we have the more grace from God the more love from others love like the widdows oyle encreaseth by pouring out by paying other debts we grow poor by paying this debt we grow richer 5. Love makes us like God God is love 1 Joh. 4.16 a golden sentence Austin saith the Apostle doth more commend love in this one word God is love than Saint Paul doth in his whole Chapter as
that they have no time to practice better things the world is like a Mill it makes such a noise in carnal hearts that it drowns the sound of Gods silver Trumpet Mens affections are somtimes kindled by the preaching of the word and we begin to hope that the flame of godliness will break forth in their lives but then comes the earth and puts out this fire how many Sermons lie buried in earthly hearts More die then are put in the Bill of Mortality Oh that the want of Practice in this age were more laid to heart This is a Lamentation and shall be for a Lamentation many Professors are all ear if we should see a Creature made up of nothing but ear it were a monster in nature how many such monsters are there in Christianitie They hear and hear and are never the better like the Salamander which lies in the fire but as Naturalists say it is never the hotter Some satisfie themselves with the having of Ordinances Judg. 17.13 Then said Micah Now know I that the Lord will do me good seeing I have a Levite to my Priest But what is Physick if it be not applied what is it to have the sound of the word in our ears unless we have the savour of it in our hearts It will be little comfort to men on their death-beds to think that Christ hath been preached in their streets and they have been lifted up to heaven in Gospel administrations when their Consciences shall tell them they have been unholy and unreformed they have come into Gods House as the beasts did into the Ark they came in unclean and went out of the Ark unclean Use 2 2. It exhorts all to become Practitioners in Religion Exhort There are three steps leading to heaven Knowledg Assent Practice it is not the taking the two first steps but the third step which will make you happy Obedience is the Grand precept both of the Law and Gospel in this stands a Christians duty in this consists his felicity 1 Sam. 15.22 To obey us better than Sacrifice Per victimas aliena caro per obedientiam vero propria voluntas macta●ur T is grateful to God t is graceful to a Christian What is the excellencie of a thing but its practicalness and usefulness what are the fine feathers of a bird if it cannot sing what is a plant though decked with leaves if it brings not forth fruit What is it we commend in an Horse his eyes or his good mettle Cant. 5.5 My hands dropped with Myrrhe I may allude not only a Christians lips must drop knowledge but his hands and his fingers must drop Myrrhe that is by working the works of obedience Let me use some Divine Motives to tempt Christians to the practique part of godliness 1. Gospel-obedience is an evidence of sincerity as our Saviour Christ said in another sence Joh. 10.25 The works which I do bear witness of me Though never man spake like Christ yet when he comes to put himself upon a trial he will not be judged by his words but by his works they bear witness of me so it is not a Christians golden words but his works which testifie of him Psal 119.59 I have turned my feet unto thy statutes David did not only turn his ears to Gods Testimonies but he turned his feet to them he walked in them we judge not of the health of a mans body by his high colour but by the pulse of the arm where the blood chiefly operates so we judge not of a Christians soundness by his knowledge or high expressions what is this high colour Saul may be among the Prophets but the estimate of a Christian is to be taken by his obediential actings towards God 2. To be practitioners in Religion will not only do your selves good but others This will both honour Religion and propagate it 1. It will honour Religion the Gospel may be compar'd to a beautiful Queen the fruitful lives of Professors are so many jewels that do adorn this Queen and make her shine forth in greater glory and magnificence what a honour was it to godliness when the Apostle could say the faith of the Romans was trumpeted abroad in every place Rom. 1.8 I thank my God that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world That is faith flourishing into obedience 1 Thes 1.2 3. We give thanks to God for you remembring your work of faith and labour of love Christians should be ambitious to keep up the credit of Religion 2. The practice of those truths we know will much propagate Religion Practice is the best Syllogisme and Argument we can use to prevail with others this will confirm them in the truth of Religion The Emperor Jovinian said to the Orthodox and Arrian Bishops I cannot judge of your Doctrine but I can judge of your lives their practice would preach loudest If others see us make a profession and yet live in a contradiction to what we profess if they hear Jacobs voice but see Esaus hands they will think Religion is but a devout complement a severe policy why doth the Father forbid his Children to swear when he himself swears would you gain many Proselytes to Religion be doers of the Word say as Abimilech to his fellows Judg. 9.48 What ye have seen we do make hast and do as I have done Would ye be as load-stones to draw your children and servants to heaven set upon the practice of holiness Basil observes that Julian in one of his Epistles writing to Arsatius saith that the Christian Religion did much flourish by the sanctity and liberality of them who professed it 3. Thus we show our love to Christ Joh. 14.21 He that hath my Commandements and keepeth them he it is that loveth me We use to say If you love me do such a thing This me thinks should be a great Argument to obedience by the love ye bear to Jesus Christ obey his Word Every man would be thought to love Christ I but try your love by this touch-stone Are ye cast into a Gospel-mould do you obey It is a vain thing for a man to say he loves Christs person when he slights his commands * Qui Dei praecepta contemnit Deum non diligi● neque enim principem veneramur si odi● ejus leges habemus Isidor 4. Without practice you will come short of them who have come short of heaven Herod did many things Mar. 6.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was in many things a practiser of Johns Ministry Those who rest in the speculative part of Religion are not so good as Herod 5. What unspeakable comfort will obedience yeild both in life and death 1. In life is it not a comfort to a man when he hath been casting up his Accounts and finds that he hath gained in his Trade you come hither in the use of Ordinances Word and Prayer to trade for heaven now if ye find upon a true account that ye