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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 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
THE BEATITUDES OR A DISCOURSE Upon part of CHRISTS Famous Sermon ON THE MOUNT Whereunto 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 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand LONDON Printed for Ralph Smith at the Bible in Cornhill near the Royal Exchange 1660. TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE JOHN EARLE of CLARE And his Vertuous and Pious Consort ELIZABETH Countesse of CLARE Right Honorable THE many civilities and favors received from your Honours have laid no small obligations upon me and I knew not wherein I might better testifie my gratitude to you both than by presenting you with something of this kinde as a specimen of that solemne respect and service which I owe to you My Lord the soul being a blossome of eternity what should so preponderate and bear sway with us as those things which help to raise the soul to its full 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of happinesse and set it off in its orient splendor Blood may enoble learning may adorn but Religion puts the Garland of salvation upon a man In this consists true Wisdom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My Lord the study of this subject which I here offer to your view will with the blessing of God much expedite and help forward the true progress of Religion For the Author of this Sermon on the Mount behold a greater than Solomon is here Christ himself is the Preacher as his lips did ever drop like an hony-comb so most eminently in these Divine Aphorismes The duties here enjoyned are weighty the rewards annexed glorious Here we may see a Christian clothed in his white linnen of purity and scarlet-robe of Blessednesse Here we may see grace and glory meeting together and kissing each other Let no man ever think to get heaven who doth not ascend this Jacobs ladder * Gratia divina necessario requiritur ad beatitudinem consequendam Aquin. Would he be rich he must be poor in spirit would he enjoy happinesse he must espouse holinesse My Lord I could not be so exact as I desired in discussing this subject having much other work lying on my hands but I know such is your noble candour that you will rather cover than censure what you see amisse I will not farther Preface it but craving your Lordships patrociny and favourable acceptance of these impolite labours of mine I shall continue an earnest Oratour at the throne of grace for the distillation of all heavenly benedictions upon you and your nobly descended family and remaine Your Lordships humble Servant in Christ THOMAS WATSON From my Study at Steph. Walbrook July 6. 1660. Mr. Watson's Beatitudes TO THE Reader Christian Reader I Here present thee with a Subject full of Sweet Variety This Sermon of Christ on the Mount is a piece of Spiritual Needle-work wrought about with divers Colours here is both Utile Dulce In this portion of Holy Scripture thou hast a Breviary of Religion the Bible Epitomized Here is a Garden of Delight set with Curious Knots where thou mayest pluck those Flowers which will deck the Hidden man of thy heart Here is the Golden Key which will open the gate of Paradise Here is the conduit of the Gospel running Wine to cheer such as are Poor in spirit and Pure in heart Here is the Rich Cabinet wherein the Pearl of Blessedness is lock'd up Here is the Golden Pot in which is that Manna which will feed and refocillate the Soul unto Everlasting life In a word here is away Chawlked out to the Holy of Holyes Reader how happy were it if while others take up their time and thoughts about Secular things which Perish in the using thou couldest minde Eternity and be guided by this Scripture-clue which leads thee to the Beatifical vision Hoc patens unum miseris asylum Boetius de Consol If after God hath set life before thee thou shalt indulge thy sensual appetite and still Court thy lusts how inexcusable will be thy neglect and how unexpressible thy misery The Lord grant that while thou hast an opportunity and the wind serves thee thou mayest not lye idle at anchor and when it is too late begin to hoyse up Sailes for Heaven Ob now Christian let thy Loines be girt and thy Lamps burning that when the Lord Jesus thy blessed Bridegroom shall Knock thou mayest be ready to go in with him to the Marriage-supper which shall be the Prayer of him who is Thine in all true affection and devotion Tho. Watson ERRATA Reader be pleased diligently to Correct these mistakes in the Printing else the sense cannot be clear Page 76. margent for plungenda read plangenda p. 84. line 30. for donatus r. Novatus p. 100. l. 17. for that he may be saved r. that thinks he may be saved p. 116. marg for Naturam agens r. naturam agentis p. 127. l. 18. for deny r. envy p. 132. l. 3. for in r. it p. 148. l. 5. for judicial r. juridical p. 215. l. 2. for bemercified r. bemercied p. 223. l. 33. for soil r. soul p. 285. marg for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 238. l. 24. for straine r. stream p. 331. l. 13. for world r. word p. 384. l. 10. for least r. last p. 435. l. 17. for obnoxious r. obvious p. 454. l. 1. for rig r. ring p. 495. l. 9. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 513. l. 24. for of another r. to another p. 553. l. 13. for Hannibal r. Cannibal p. 570. l. 25. for must be saved r. may be saved 580. l. 7. for transforms him r. transforms us p. 584. l. 10. for purifying r. purifieth p. 617. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 615. l. 11. for scriptural r. spiritual p. 625. l. 9. for zeal of the spirit r. seal of the spirit p. 619. marg for charitatum r. charitatem p. 623. l. 26. for should r. would p. 639. l. 11. for laid r. lead THE BEATITVDES Or a Discourse upon Christs Sermon ON THE MOUNT MATTH 5.1 2. And seeing the multitudes he went up into a mountain and when he was set his disciples came unto him And he opened his mouth and taught them CHAP. I. The Introduction into the ensuing Discourse THE blessed Evangelist Saint Matthew the Penman of this Sacred History was at first by profession a Publican or gatherer of Toll * Publicani aut vectigaliarii Cael. Rhod. Antiq. and Christ having called him from the Custom-house made him a gatherer of souls This holy man in the first Chapter sets down Christs birth and Genealogy in the second his dignity a Starre ushers in the Wisemen to him and as a King he is presented with Gold and
winds in a Voyage as the spiritual Pilots of Gods Church do when they are transporting souls to heaven 1. Some hearers have bad memories Jam. 1.25 Their memories are like leaking Vessels all the precious wine of holy Doctrine that is poured in runs out presently Ministers cannot by study find a truth so fast as others can lose it if the meat doth not stay in the stomack it can never breed good blood if a truth delivered doth not stay in the memory we can never be as the Apostle saith Nourished up in the words of faith 1 Tim. 4.6 How often doth the Divel that Fowle of the Aire pick up the good seed that is sown * Verbum Dei suffurante Diabolo memoriâ excidit If Thieves steal away peoples money they tell every one and make their complaint they have been Robbed but there is a worse Thief they are not aware of How many Sermons hath the Devil stollen from them how many truths have they been robbed of which might have been so many death-bed cordials now if the Word preached slides so fast out of the memory Ministers had need the oftner go up the preaching Mount that at last some truth may abide and be as a nail fastened by the Masters of Assemblies 2. The Ears of many of our hearers are stop't with earth I mean the cares of the world that the Word preached will not enter according to that in the Parable Hearing they hear not Matth. 13.13 We read of Saul his eyes were open yet he saw no man Acts 9.8 A strange Paradox and is it not as strange that mens ears should be open yet in hearing hear not * Fanus pecuniae funus anima They mind not what is said Ezek. 33.31 They sit before thee as my people sitteth but their heart goeth after their covetousness Many sit and stare the Minister in the face yet scarce know a word he saith they are thinking of their wares and drugs and are often casting up accounts in the Church If a man be in a Mill though you speak never so loud to him he doth not hear you for the noise of the Mill. We preach to men about matters of salvation but the Mill of worldly business makes such a noise that they cannot hear in hearing they hear not It being thus Ministers who are called sons of thunder had need often ascend the Mount and lift up their voice like a Trumpet * 〈◊〉 58.1 that the deaf ear may be seringed and unstopped and may hear what the Spirit saith to the Churches Revel 2.7 3. Others as they have earth in their ears so they have a stone in their hearts Zach. 7.12 They made their hearts as an Adamant stone lest they should hear the Law The Ministers of Christ therefore must be frequently brandishing the Sword of the Spirit and striking at mens sins that if possible they may at last pierce the heart of stone When the earth is scorch'd with the Sun it is so hard and crusted together that a showre of rain wil not soften it there must be showre after showre before it will be either moist or fertil such an hardned piece is the heart of man naturally it is so stiffned with the scorchings of lust that there must be Precept upon precept Isa 28.10 Our Doctrine must distill as the dew as the small rain on the tender herb and the showers upon the grass Deut. 32.2 6. Christs Ministers according to the example of their Lord and Master should take all occasions of doing good not only in regard of Gods Glory but their own Comfort What triumph is it and cause of gladness when a Minister can say on his death-bed Lord I have done the work which thou gavest me to do I have been trading for souls When a Minister comes to the Mount of glory the heavenly Mount it will be a great comfort to him that he hath been so often upon the preaching Mount. Certainly if the Angels in heaven rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner Luk. 15. how shall that Minister rejoyce in heaven over every soul that he hath been instrumental to convert every convert gained as it shall adde a member to Christs body so a jewel to a Ministers Crown Dan. 12.3 They that are wise or as the Original carries it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They that are Teachers shall shine not as Lamps or Tapers but as Stars fulgebunt sicut Stellae not as Planets but fixed Stars in the firmament of glory for ever And though Israel be not gathered yet shall Gods Ministers be glorious in the eyes of the Lord Isa 49.5 God will reward them not according to their success but their diligence * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost When they are a savour of death to men yet they are a sweet savour to God In an Orchard the Labourer that Fells a Tree is rewarded as well as he that Plants a Tree the Chyrurgions Bill is paid though the Patient dye SECT 1. Use 1 First LET me crave liberty to speak a word to the Elisha's my Reverend and Honoured Brethren in the Ministry You are engaged in a glorious service God hath put great Renown upon you he hath entrusted you with two the most precious jewels his TRUTHS and the SOULS of his people never was this honour confer'd upon any Angel to convert souls What Princely Dignity can parallel this The Pulpit is higher than the Throne for a truly constituted Minister represents no less than God himself 2 Cor. 5.20 As though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God Give me leave to say as the Apostle Rom. 11.13 I magnifie my Office Whatever our Persons are the Office is Sacred The Ministry is the most honourable imployment in the World Jesus Christ hath graced this calling by his entring into it other men work in their Trade Ministers work with God 1 Cor. 3.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are labourers together with God O high honour God and his Ministers have one and the same work they both negotiate about souls Let the sons of the Prophets wear this as their Crown and Diadem but while I tell you of your Dignity do not forget your Duty Imitate this blessed pattern in the Text the Lord Jesus who seeing be multitudes he went up and taught He took all occasions of preaching sometimes he taught in the Temple Mark 14.49 sometimes in a Ship Mark 4.1 and here upon the Mount his lips were a Tree of life that fed many How often did he neglect his food that he might feast others with his Doctrine Let all the Ministers of Christ tread in his steps make Christ not only your Saviour but your Samplar suffer no opportunities to slip wherein you may be helpful to the souls of others be not content to go to heaven your selves but be as the Primum Mobile which draws other orbs along with it be such shining Lamps that
spirit paves a Cawsey for blessedness Blessed are the poor in spirit Are you poor in spirit you are blessed persons happy for you that ever you were born If you ask Wherein doth this blessedness appear Read the next words Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven CHAP. V. Shewing that the poor in spirit are enriched with a Kingdom Matth. 5.3 Theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here is high preferment for the Saints they shall be advanced to a Kingdom there are some who aspiring after earthly greatnesse talk of a temporal reign here but then Gods Church on earth should not be Militant but Triumphant but sure it is the Saints shall reign in a glorious manner Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven a Kingdom is held the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and top of all worldly felicity and this honour have all the Saints so saith our Saviour Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven All Christs subjects are Kings By the Kingdom of heaven is meant that state of glory which the Saints shall enjoy when they shall reign with God and the Angels for ever sin hell and death being fully subdued For the illustration of this I shall show first wherein the Saints in heaven are like Kings SECT 1 Wherein the Saints glorified may be compared to Kings KIngs have their insignia or regalia their ensignes of Royalty and Majesty 1. Kings have their Crowns so the Saints after death have their Crown-royal Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life Believers are not only pardoned but crowned * Corona insignem habet praeceteris ornamentis dignitatem Bern. the Crown is an ensigne of honour A Crown is not for every one it will not fit every head it is only for Kings and persons of renown to wear Psal 21.3 The Crown which the poor in spirit shall wear in heaven is an honourable Crown God himself installs them into their honour and sets the Crown-royal upon their head And this Crown the Saints shall wear which is divinely orient and illustrious exceeds all other 1. 'T is more pure Other Crowns though they may be made of pure gold yet they are mixed mettal they have their troubles A Crown of gold cannot be made without thornes * Non ita corona circundat caput sicut animam sollicitudo it hath so many vexations belonging to it that it is apt to make the head-ache Which made Cyrus say did men but know what cares he sustained under the Imperial Crown ne humi diadema tollerent he thought they would not stoop to take it up But the Saints Crown is made without crosses it is not mingled with care of keeping or fear of losing What Solomon speaks in another sence I may say of the Crown of glory it addes no sorrow with it Prov. 10.22 This Crown like Davids Harp drives away the evil spirit of sorrow and disquiet there can be no more grief in heaven than there is joy in hell 2. This Crown of glory doth not draw envy to it Davids own son envied him and sought to take his Crown from his head A Princely Crown is oftentimes the mark for envy and ambition to shoot at but the Crown the Saints shall wear is free from envy one Saint shall not envy another because all are crowned and though one Crown may be larger than another yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one shall have as big a Crown as he is able to carry 3. This is a never-fading Crown Corona haec non fit ex rosis aut gemmis * Tertul. c. Other Crowns quickly wear away and tumble into the dust Prov. 27.4 Doth the Crown endure to all generations Henry the sixth was honoured with the Crowns of two Kingdoms France and England the first was lost through the faction of his Nobles the other was twice plucked from his head The Crown hath many heirs and successors The Crown is a withering thing death is a worm that feeds in it but the Crown of glory is immarcessible it fadeth not away 1 Pet. 5.4 'T is not like the Rose that loseth its glosse and vernancy this Crown cannot be made to wither but like the flower we call Semper vivens it keeps alwayes fresh and splendent Eternity is a Jewel of the Saints Crown 2. Kings have their Robes The Robe is a garment wherewith Kings are arayed The King of Israel and the King of Judah sate cloathed in their robes 2 Chron. 18.19 The Robe was of scarlet or velvet lind with Ermyn sometimes of a purple colour whence it was called Purpura sometimes of an azure brightnesse Thus the Saints shall have their Robes Rev. 7.9 I beheld a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations and kindreds clothed in white Robes The Saints Robes signifie their glory and splendor and white Robes that is to denote their sanctity they have no sin to taint or defile their Robes in these Robes they shall shine as the Angels 3. Kings have their Scepters in token of Rule and Greatness King Ahashuerus held out to Esther the golden Scepter Esth 5.2 and the Saints in glory have their Scepter and Palms in their hand Rev. 7. It was a custome of great Conquerors to have Palm-branches in their hand in token of victory So the Saints those Kings have Palms an Emblem of victory and triumph they are Victors over sin and hell Rev. 12.11 They overcame by the blood of the Lamb. 4. Kings have their Thrones When Caesar returned from conquering his enemies there were granted to him four Triumphs in token of honour and there was set for him a Chair of Ivory in the Senate and a Throne in the Theatre Thus the Saints in heaven returning from their victories over sin shall have a Chair of State set them more rich than Ivory or Pearl and a Throne of glory Revel 3.21 This shall be 1. An high Throne 't is seated above all the Kings and Princes of the earth nay 't is far above all heavens Ephes 4. There is 1. the Aery heaven which is that space from the earth usque ad spheram lunae to the sphere of the Moon 2. The Starry heaven the place where are the Stars and those superiores Planetae as the Philosophers call them Planets of the higher elevation as Saturn Jupiter Mars c. 3. The Empyraean heaven which is called the third heaven 2 Cor. 12.2 In this glorious sublime place shall the Throne of the Saints be erected 2. It is a safe Throne Other Thrones are unsafe they stand tottering Psal 73.18 Thou hast set them in slippery places but the Saints Throne is sure Rev. 3.21 He that overcomes shall sit with me upon my Throne The Saints shall fit with Christ he keeps them safe that no hand of violence can pull them from their Throne O ye people of God think of this though now you may be called to the Bar yet shortly you shall
that could finde out a new pleasure but the comforts of the Spirit are satisfactory they recruit the heart Psal 94.19 Thy comforts delight my soul There is as much difference between heavenly comforts and earthly as between a banquet that is eaten and one that is painted on the wall 6. The comforts God gives his Mourners in this life are glorious comforts 1 Pet. 1.8 Joy full of glory 1. They are glorious because they are a prelibation and fore-taste of that joy which we shall have in a glorified estate * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys These comforts are an handsel and earnest of glory they put us in heaven before our time Ephes 1.13 14. Ye were sealed with that holy Spirit which is an earnest of the inheritance the earnest is part of the sum behind so the comforts of the Spirit are the earnest the cluster of grapes at Eshcol * Num. 13.23 the first-fruits of the heavenly Canaan 2. The joyes of the Spirit are glorious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in opposition to other joyes which compared with these are inglorious and vile A carnal mans joy as it is aery and flashy so it is sordid he sucks nothing but dregs Amos 6.13 Ye rejoyce in a thing of naught A carnal spirit rejoyceth because he can say this house is his this estate is his but a gracious spirit rejoyceth because he can say this God is his Psal 48.14 For this God is our God for ever and ever The ground of a Christians joy is glorious he rejoyceth in that he is an heir of the promise the joy of a godly man is made up of that which is the Angels joy he triumphs in the light of Gods countenance his joy is that which is Christs own joy he rejoyceth in the mystical union which is begun here and consummate in heaven Thus the joy of the Saints is a joy full of glory 7. The comforts which God gives his Mourners are infinitely transporting and ravishing so delightful are they and amazing that they cause a jubilation which as some of the Learned speak is so great that it cannot be expressed * Jubiliatio dicitur cum cordis laetitia oris efficacia non expletur of all things joy is the most hard to be deciphered 't is called laetitia inenarrabilis joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1.8 You may sooner taste honey then tell how sweet it is the most pathetical words can no more set forth the comforts of the Spirit then the most curious Pensil can draw the life and breath of a man the Angels cannot express the joyes they feel some have been so overwhelmed with the sweet raptures of joy that they have not been able to contain but as Moses have dyed * Plurimis mortem attulit gaudium ingens Gell. with a kiss from Gods mouth Thus have we seen the glass oft breaking with the strength of the liquor put into it 8. These comforts of the Spirit are powerful they are strong cordials so the Apostle phraseth it Hebr. 6.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong consolation Divine comfort 1. Strengthens for duty Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength Joy whets and sharpens industry a man that is steeled and animated with the comforts of Gods Spirit goes with vigour and alacrity through the exercises of Religion he believes firmly he loves fervently he is carried full sail in duty the joy of the Lord is his strength 2. Divine comfort supports under affliction 1 Thes 1.6 Having received the Word in much affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with joy The wine of the Spirit can sweeten the waters of Marah * Amaritudines mundi dulces reddit Aug. They who are possessed of these heavenly comforts can gather grapes of thorns and fetch honey out of the Lyons carcass They are strong consolations indeed that can stand it out against the fiery tryal and turn the flame into a bed of Roses How powerful is that comfort which can make a Christian glory in tribulation Rom. 5.3 A believer is never so sad but he can rejoyce the Bird of Paradise can sing in Winter 2 Cor. 6.10 As sorrowing yet alwayes rejoycing Let sickness come the sense of pardon takes away the sense of pain The Inhabitant shall not say I am sick Isa 33.24 Let death come a Christian is above it O death where is thy sting 1 Cor. 15.55 At the end of the Rod a Christian tastes honey these are strong consolations 9. The comforts Gods Mourners have are heart-quieting comforts they cause a sweet acquiescence and rest in the soul * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Ech. The heart of a Christian is in a kind of ataxy and discomposure like the Needle in the Compass it shakes and trembles till the Comforter comes Some creatures cannot live but in the Sun a Christian is even dead in the Nest unless he may have the Sun-light of Gods countenance Psal 143.7 Hide not thy face from me lest I be like them that go down into the pit Nothing but the breast will quiet the child 't is only the breast of consolation quiets the believer 10. The comforts of the Spirit are abiding comforts as they abound in us so they abide with us John 14.16 He shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever Worldly comforts are still upon the wing ready to flie they are like a land-flood or a flash of lightning Mart. Saepe fluunt imo sic quoque lapsa sinu All things here are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the comforts with which God feeds his Mourners are immortal 2 Thes 2.16 Who hath loved us and hath given us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting consolation Though a Christian hath not always a full beam of comfort yet he hath a dawning of it in his soul he hath still a ground of hope and a root of joy there is that within him which bears up his heart and which he would not on any terms part with Use Use Behold the Mourners priviledge he shall be comforted David who was the great Mourner of Israel was the sweet singer of Israel The weeping Dove shall be covered with the golden feathers of comfort O how rare and superlative are these comforts Quest But may not Gods Mourners want these comforts Answ Spiritual Mourners have a title to these comforts yet they may sometimes want them God is a free Agent he will have the timing of our comforts he hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-freedom to do what he will The holy one of Israel will not be limited he will reserve his Prerogative to give or suspend comfort pro libitu and if we are awhile without comfort we must not quarrel with his dispensations for as the Mariner is not to wrangle with Providence because the wind blows out of the East when he desires it to blow out of the West nor is the Husbandman to murmure when God stops the bottles of heaven in
lips drop hony his arms sweetly embrace them The Saints shall have a spring-tyde of joy and it shall never be low-water the Saints shall at that day put off their mourning and exchange their sables for white robes Then shall the winter be past the rain of tears be over and gone * Cant. 2.11 12. the flowers of joy shall appear and after the weeping of the Dove the time of the singing of birds shall come This is the great consolation the Jubily of the blessed which shall never expire in this life the people of God taste of joy but in heaven the full vessels shall be broach'd There is a river in the midst of the heavenly Paradise which hath a fountain to feed it Psal 36.8 9. The times we are cast into being for the present sad and cloudy it will not be amisse for the reviving the hearts of Gods people to speak a little of these comforts which God reserves in heaven for his mourners They shall be comforted The greatnesse of these celestial comforts is most fitly in Scripture expressed by the joy of a feast mourning shall be turned into feasting and it shall be a marriage-feast which is usually kept with the greatest solemnity Rev. 19.9 Blessed are they which are called into the marriage-supper of the Lamb. Bullinger and Gregory the great do understand this Supper of the Lamb to be meant of the Saints supping with Christ in heaven * Ibi gratia sine merito charitas fine modo Bernard Rev. 14.13 men after hard labour go to supper So when the Saints shall rest from their labours * Ibi gratia sine merito charitas fine modo Bernard Rev. 14.13 they shall sup with Christ in glory Now to speak something of the last great Supper It will be a great Supper 1. In regard of the Founder of this Feast God it is the Supper of a King therefore sumptuous and magnificent Psalm 95.3 The Lord is a great God and a great King above all gods Where should there be state and magnificence but in a Kings Court 2. It will be a great Supper in regard of the cheere and provision this exceeds all Hyperbolies What blessed fruit doth the tree of life in Paradise yield Rev. 2.7 Christ will lead his Spouse into the banquetting-house and feast her with those rare Viands and cause her to drink that spiced wine that heavenly Nectar and Ambrosia wherewith the Angelical powers are infinitely refreshed First Every dish served in at this heavenly Supper shall be sweet to our palate there is no dish here we do not love Christ will make such savory meat as he is sure his Spouse loves Secondly There shall be no want here there is no want at a Feast the various fulnesse in Christ will prevent a scarcity and it will be a fulnesse without surfeit because a fresh course will continually be served in Thirdly they who eate of this Supper shall never hunger more hunger is a sharp sawce the Lambs Supper shall not only satisfie hunger but prevent it Rev. 7.16 They shall hunger no more 3. It will be a great Supper in regard of the company invited Company adds to a Feast and is of it self sawce to sharpen and provoke the appetite Saints Angels Archangels will be at this Supper nay Christ himself will be both Founder and Guest the Scripture calls it an innumerable company * Cedit in solatium beatoram qui eo sanè laetiores quo plures sunt c. Heb. 12. and that which makes the society sweeter is that there shall be perfect love at this Feast The Motto shall be cor unum via una one heart and one way all the guests shall be linked together with the golden chain of charity 4. It will be a great supper in regard of the holy mirth Eccles 10.19 a feast is made for mirth at this supper there shall be joy and nothing but joy Psalm 16. ult There is no weeping at a feast O what triumph and acclamations will there be There are two things at this Supper of the Lamb will create joy and mirth 1. When the Saints shall think with themselves that they are kept from a worse supper The Devils have a supper such an one as it is a black banquet there are two dishes serv'd in weeping and gnashing of teeth every bit they eate makes their hearts ake who would deny them their dinner here who must have such a supper 2. It will be matter of joy at the Supper of the Lamb that the Master of the Feast bids all his guests welcome the Saints shall have the smiles of Gods face the kisses of his lips he will lead them into the wine-cellar and display the Banner of love over them The Saints shall be as ful of solace as sanctity What is a Feast without mirth worldly mirth is flashy empty this shall be infinitely delightful and ravishing 5. It will be a great supper for the musick This will be a marriage-supper and what better musick than the Bridegroomes voyce saying my Spouse my undefiled Take thy fill of love there will be the Angels Anthems * Ibi Angelorum Chori concinnut Aug. The Saints triumphs the Angels those trumpeters of heaven shall sound forth the excellencies of Jehovah and the Saints those noble Queristers shall take down their harps from the willows and joyne in consort with the Angels praysing and blessing God Rev. 15.2 3. I saw them that had gotten the victory over the Beast having the Harps of God and they sing the song of Moses and the song of the Lamb saying Great and marvellous are thy works Lord God Almighty just and true are thy wayes thou King of Saints c. O the sweet harmony at this Feast it shall be Musick without discord 6. This Supper is great in regard of the place where it shall be celebrated in the Paradise of God Rev. 2.7 It is a stately Palace stately 1. For its scituation 't is in excelsis of a very great heighth Rev. 21.8 For its prospect all sparkling beauties are there concentred and the delight of the prospect is propriety that is the best prospect where a man can see furthest on his own ground 3. For its amplitude this Royal Feast shall be kept in a most spacious Room a Room infinitely greater than the whole firmament one Star whereof if we may believe Astronomers is bigger than the whole earth though there be such a multitude as no man can number of all Nations Kindreds People and Tongues Revel 7.9 yet the Table is long enough and the Room spatious enough for all the Guests Aulus Gellius in his 13th Book makes this to be one of those four things which are requisite to a Feast locus electus a fit place The Empyrean heaven bespangled with light arrayed with rich hangings embroydered with glory seated above all the visible orbs is the place of the Marriage-supper this doth infinitely transcend the
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
society of the wicked Quest Quest But what hurt is in this did not Jesus Christ converse with sinners Luk. 5.29 Answ 1 Answ 1. There was a necessity for that If Jesus Christ had not come among sinners how could any have been saved He went among sinners not to joyn with them in their sins but to heal them of their sins He was not a Companion of sinners but a Physitian of sinners * Ut si accusetur medicus quod in domum aegroti intraverat Austin 2. Though Christ did converse with sinners he could not be polluted with their sin his Divine Nature was a sufficient Antidote to preserve him from infection Christ could be no more defiled with their sin then the Sun is defiled by shining on a Dunghill Sin could no more stick on Christ than a Bur on a glass of Chrystal the soil of his heart was so pure that no viper of sin could breed there But the case is altered with us we have a stock of corruption within and the least thing will encrease this stock therefore it is dangerous mingling our selves among the wicked If we would be pure in heart let us shun their society He that would preserve his garment clean avoids the dirt the wicked are as the mire Isa 57.20 The fresh waters running among the salt taste brackish 6. If you would be pure walk with them that are pure as the communion of Saints is in our Creed so it should be in our company Prov. 13.20 He that walketh with the wise shall be wise and he that walketh with the pure shall be pure The Saints are like a Bed of spices by intermixing our selves with them we shall partake of their savouriness association begets assimilation sometimes God blesseth good society to the conversion of others 7. Wait at the posts of Wisdoms doors Reverence the Word preached the Word of God suck'd in by faith * Hebr. 4.2 transforms the heart into the likeness of it Rom. 6.17 The Word is an holy seed * Jam. 1.18 which being cast into the heart makes it partake of the Divine Nature * 2 Pet. 1.4 8. Pray for heart-purity Job propounds the question Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean Job 15.14 God can do it out of an impure heart he can produce grace make that prayer of David Psal 51.10 Create in me a clean heart O God Most men pray more for full purses than pure hearts we should pray for heart-purity fervently it is a matter we are most nearly concerned in without holiness no man shall see the Lord. Our prayer must be with sighs and groans Rom. 8. There must not only be elocution but affection Jacob wrestled in prayer Gen. 32.24 Hannah poured out her soul 1 Sam. 1.15 We oft pray so coldly our Petitions even freezing between our lips as if we would teach God to deny * Ludit Deum qui ore petit quod corde negligit We pray as if we cared not whether God heard us or no. Oh Christian be earnest with God for a pure heart lay thy heart before the Lord and say Lord Thou who hast given me an heart give me a pure heart My heart is good for nothing as it is it defiles every thing it toucheth Lord I am not fit to live with this heart for I cannot honour thee nor to dye with it for I cannot see thee oh purge me with Hysop let Christs blood be sprinkled upon me let the Holy Ghost descend upon me Create in me a clean heart O God Thou who biddest me give thee my heart Lord make my heart pure and thou shalt have it MATTH 5.8 They shall see God CHAP. XVII The blessed priviledge of seeing God explained THESE words are linked to the former and they are a great incentive to heart-purity the pure heart shall see the pure God There is a double-sight which the Saints have of God 1. In this life that is spiritually by the eye of faith Faith sees Gods glorious Attributes in the glass of his Word faith beholds him shewing forth himself through the Lattice of his Ordinances Thus Moses did see him who was invisible Hebr. 11.27 Believers see Gods glory as it were vailed over they behold his back-parts Exod. 23.33 2. In the life to come and this glorious sight of God is meant in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall see God A pleasant prospect this Divines call the beatifical vision * Inspectio sola divinitatis efficit ut beatius nihil esse potest Cassiodor at that day the Vail will be pull'd off and God will shew himself in all his glory to the soul as a King on a day of Coronation shews himself in all his Royalty and Magnificence This sight of God will be the heaven of heaven we shall indeed have a sight of Angels and that will be sweet but the quintessence of happiness and the Diamond in the Ring will be this we shall see God If the Sun be absent it is night for all the Stars The Angels are called Stars Job 38.7 But it would be night in heaven if the Sun of righteousness did not shine there it is the Kings presence makes the Court Absalom counted himself but half alive unless he might see the Kings face * 2 Sam. 14.32 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God This sight of God in glory is 1. Partly mental and intellectual we shall see him with the eyes of our mind If there be not an intellectual sight of God how do the spirits of just men made perfect see him 2. Partly corporeal not that we can with bodily eyes behold the bright essence of God Indeed the Anthromorphites and Vorstians erroneously held that God had a visible shape and figure as man was made Gods image so they thought God was made in made in mans image but God is a spirit John 4.24 and being a Spirit is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 invisible 1 Tim. 1.17 He cannot be beheld by bodily eyes whom no man hath seen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor can see 1 Tim. 6.16 A sight of his glory would overwhelme us this wine is too strong for our weak heads But when I say our seeing of God in heaven is corporeal my meaning is we shall with bodily eyes behold Jesus Christ through whom the glory of God his wisdom holiness mercy shall shine forth to the soul Put a back of steel to the glass and you may see a face in it so the humane nature of Christ is as it were a back of steel through which we may see the glory of God * 2 Cor. 4.6 in this sense that Scripture is to be understood Job 19.26 with these eyes shall I see God SECT 1. Setting forth the excellency of the Beatifical vision NOW concerning this blessed sight of God it is so sublime and sweet that I can but draw a dark shadow of it we shall better understand it
inheritance The making one an heir implies a relation to an inheritance A man doth not adopt another to a title but an Estate so God in adopting us for his children gives us a glorious inheritance Col. 1.12 The inheritance of the Saints in light 1. 'T is pleasant 't is an inheritance in light 2. 'T is safe God keeps the inheritance for his children 1 Pet. 1.4 and keeps them for the inheritance 1 Pet. 1.5 so that they cannot be hindered from taking possession 3. There is no disinheriting for the Saints are Coheirs with Christ Rom. 8.15 Nay they are members of Christ Col. 1.18 The members cannot be disinherited but the head must 4. The heirs never dye eternity is a jewel of their Crown Revel 22.5 They shall reign for ever and ever Before I pass to the next here a question may arise How Gods Adopting and mans Adopting differ 1. Man adopts to supply a defect because he hath no children of his own but God doth not adopt upon this account he had a Son of his own the Lord Jesus he was his natural Son and the Son of his love testified by a voyce from heaven Matth. 3. ult This is my beloved Son Never was there any Son so like the Father he was his exact Effigies Hebr. 1.3 The express image of his person he was such a Son as was more worth than all the Angels in heaven Hebr. 1.4 Being made so much better than the Angels so that God adopts not out of necessity but pity 2. When a man adopts he adopts but one heir but God adopts many Hebr. 2.10 In bringing many sons to glory Oh may a poor trembling Christian say Why should I ever look for this priviledge to be a childe of God! 't is true if God did do as a man if he did only adopt one son then thou mightest despair but he adopts millions he brings many sons to glory indeed this may be the reason why a man adopts but one because he hath not Estate enough for more if he should adopt many his Land would not hold out but God hath Land enough to give to all his children John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many Mansions 3. Man when he adopts doth it with ease 't is but sealing a Deed and the thing is done but when God adopts it puts him to a far greater expence it sets his wisdom on work to find out a way to adopt us it was no easie thing to reconcile hell and heaven to make the children of wrath the children of the promise and when God in his infinite wisdom had found out a way it was no easie way it cost God the death of his natural Son to make us his adopted sons When God was about to constitute us sons and heirs he could not seal the Deed but by the blood of his own Son it did not cost God so much to make us creatures as to make us sons To make us creatures cost but the speaking of a word to make us sons cost the effusion of blood 4. Man when he adopts doth but settle earthly priviledges upon his heir but God settles heavenly priviledges Justification Glorification Men do but entail their Land upon the persons they adopt God doth more he not only entails his Land upon his children but he entails Himself upon them Hebr. 8.10 I will be their God not only heaven is their portion but God is their portion 2. Gods filiating or making of children is by the infusion of grace When God makes any his children he stamps his Image upon them this is more than any man living can do he may adopt another but he cannot alter his disposition if he be of a morose rugged nature he cannot alter it but God in making of children doth disponere ad filiationem he doth prepare and sanctifie them for this priviledge he changeth their disposition he files off the ruggedness of their nature he makes them not only sons but Saints they are of another spirit Numb 14.24 They become meek and humble they are partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 SECT 3. Shewing how we come to be Gods children 3. THE third thing is How we come to be the children of God Answ There is a double cause of our filiation or childship 1. The Causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or impulsive cause is Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his free-grace We were Rebels and Traytors and what could move God to make sinners sons but free-grace Ephes 1.5 Having predestinated us unto the Adoption of children according to the good pleasure of his will Free-grace gave the casting voyce Adoption is a mercy spun out of the bowels of free-grace it were much for God to take a clod of earth and make it a Star but it is more for God to take a piece of clay and sin and instate it into the glorious priviledge of son-ship How will the Saints read over the Lectures of free-grace in heaven 2. The Organical or Instrumental cause of our son-ship is faith Baptism doth not make us children that is indeed a badge and livery and gives us right to many external priviledges but the thing which makes God take cognizance of us for children is faith Gal. 3.26 Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Before faith be wrought we have nothing to do with God we are as the Apostle speaks in another sense bastards and not sons Hebr. 12.7 An unbeliever may call God his Judge but not his Father Wicked men may draw near to God in Ordinances and hope that God will be their Father but while they are unbelievers they are bastards and God will not Father them but will lay them at the Divels door Ye are the children of God by faith faith doth legitimate us it confers upon us the title of son-ship and gives us right to inherit How then should we labour for faith without faith we are creatures not children without faith we are spiritually illegitimate this word illegitimate is 1. A term of infamy such as are illegitimate are looked upon with disgrace we call them base-born Thou who dost ruffle it in thy silks and velvets but art in the state of nature thou art illegitimate God looks upon thee with an eye of scorn and contempt thou art a vile person a son of the earth of the seed of the serpent the Divel can shew as good a Coat of Armes as thou 2. This word illegitimate imports infelicity and misery Persons illegitimate cannot inherit legally the Land goes only to such as are lawful heirs till we are the children of God we have no right to heaven and there is no way to be children but by faith Ye are the children of God by faith Here two things are to be discussed 1. What faith is 2. Why faith makes us children 1. What faith is If faith doth instate us into son-ship it concerns us to know what faith is There is a two-fold faith 1. A more
Object 2 knowledge of God they have no sense of spiritual things nor are they the better for our instructions 1. We read in Scripture of children who by vertue Answ 1 of instruction have had their tender years sanctified Timothies Mother and Grand-mother taught him the Scriptures from his Cradle 2 Tim. 3.15 And that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures Timothy sucked in Religion as it were with his milk we read of young children who cried Hosanna to Christ and did trumpet forth his praises Matth. 21.15 And sure those children of Tyre had some seeds of good wrought in them in that they shewed their love to Paul and would help him on his way to Sea-shoar Acts 21.5 They all brought us on our way with wives and children Saint Paul had a Convoy of young Saints to bring him to take ship Answ 2 2. Suppose our counsel and instruction doth not at present prevail with our children it may afterwards take effect The seed a man sowes in his ground doth not presently spring up but in its season it brings forth a crop he that plants a Wood doth not see the full growth till many years after If we must not instruct our children because at present they reap not the benefit by the same reason we should not baptize our children because at present they have not the sense of baptisme nay by the same reason Ministers should not preach the Word because at present many of their hearers have no benefit Answ 3 3. If our counsels and admonitions prevail not with our children yet we have delivered our own souls There is comfort in the discharge of conscience we must let alone issues and events duty is our work success is Gods All which considered should make parents whet holy instructions upon their children they who are of the Family of God and whom he hath adopted for children will endeavour that their children may be more Gods children than theirs they will travail in birth till Christ be formed in them A true Saint is a load-stone that will be still drawing others to God Let this suffice to have spoken of the signs of Adoption I proceed SECT 5. Discovering Gods love in making us children THE next particular to be discussed is the love of God in making us children 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God! God shewed power in making us creatures but love in making us sons Plato gave God thanks that he had made him a man and not a beast but what cause have they to adore Gods love who hath made them children the Apostle puts an ecce to it behold * O aeterna vera charitas Aug. That we may the better behold Gods love in making us children consider three things 1. We were deformed Ezek. 16.6 8. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood it was the time of love Mordecai adopted Esther because she was fair but we were in our blood and then God adopted us he did not adopt us when we were cloathed with the Robe of innocency in Paradise when we were hung with the jewels of holiness and were white and ruddy but when we were in our blood and had our leprous spots upon us the time of our loathing was the time of Gods loving 2. As we did not deserve to be made children so neither did we desire it No landed man will force another to become his heir against his will if a King should go to adopt a beggar and make him heir of the Crown if the beggar should refuse the Kings favour and say I had rather be as I am I would be a beggar still the King would take it in high contempt of his favour and would not adopt him against his will Thus it was with us we had no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or willingness to be made children we would have been begging still but God out of his infinite mercy and indulgence not only offers to make us children but makes us willing to embrace the offer * Psal 110.3 Behold what manner of love is this 3. Which is the wonder of love that God should adopt us for his children when we were enemies If a man would make another heir of his Land he would adopt one that is near akin to him no man would adopt an enemy but that God should make us children when we were enemies that he should make us heirs to the Crown when we were Traytors to the Crown oh amazing astonishing love Behold what manner of love is this We were not akin to God we had by sin lost and forfeited our Pedigree we had done God all the injury and spight we could defac'd his image violated his Law trampled upon his mercies and when we had angered him he adopted us What stupendious love was this such love was never shewn to the Angels when they fell though they were of a more noble nature and in probability might have done God more service than we can yet God never vouchsafed this priviledge of Adoption to them he did not make them children but prisoners they were heirs only to the treasures of wrath * Rom. 2.5 Use Let all who are thus nearly related to God stand admiring his love when they were like Saul breathing forth enmity against God when their hearts stood out as Garrisons against him the Lord conquered their stubborness with kindness and not only pardoned but adopted them 't is hard to say which is greater the mystery or the mercy this is such amazing love as we shall be searching into and adoring to all eternity the bottom of it cannot be fathomed by any Angel in heaven Gods love in making us children is 1. A rich love it is love in God to feed us but it is rich love to adopt us it is love to give us a Crumb but it is rich love to make us heirs to a Crown 2. It is a distinguishing love that when God hath passed by so many millions he should cast a favourable aspect upon thee most are cut out for fuel and are made Vessels of wrath and that God should say to thee Thou art my son here 's the mirrour of mercy the meridian of love Who O who can tread upon these hot coals and his heart not burn in love to God SECT 6. Declaring the honour of Gods children 6. THE sixth particular is the honour and renown of Gods children for the illustration of this observe two things 1. God makes a precious account of them 2. He looks upon them as persons of honour 1. God makes a precious account of them Isa 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight c. A father prizeth his childe above his Estate How dearly did Jacob prize Benjamin his life was bound up in the life of the Lad Gen. 44.30 God makes a precious valuation of his children
12.9 My grace is sufficient for thee Deutr. 33.27 Underneath are the everlasting arms if Christ put the yoke of persecution over us he will put his armes under us the Lord Jesus will not only crown us when we conquer but he will enable us to conquer when the Dragon fights against the godly Christ is that Michael which stands up for them and helps them to over-come Dan. 12.1 9. He that refuseth to suffer persecution shall never be free from suffering 1. Internal sufferings he that will not suffer for conscience shall suffer in conscience thus Francis Spira after he had for fear abjur'd that doctrine which once he professed was in great terrour of minde and became a very Anatomy he professed he felt the very pains of the damned in his soul he who was afraid of the stake was set upon the wrack of conscience 2. External sufferings Pendleton who refused to suffer for Christ not long after his house was on fire and he was burned in it he who would not burn for Christ was afterwards made to burn for his sins 3. Eternal sufferings Jude 7. Suffering the vengeance of eternal fire 10. These present sufferings cannot hinder a man from being blessed Blessed are they that are persecuted c. We think beati divites blessed are they that are rich nay but blessed are they that are persecuted Jam. 1.12 Blessed is the man that endures temptation 1 Pet. 3.14 If ye suffer for righteousness sake happy are ye That persecution cannot hinder us from being blessed I shall prove by four demonstrations 1. They are blessed who have God for their God Psal 144.15 Happy is that people whose God is the Lord but persecution cannot hinder us from having God for our God Dan. 3.17 Our God is able to deliver us though persecuted yet they could say Our God therefore persecution cannot hinder us from being blessed 2. They are blessed whom God loves but persecution cannot hinder the love of God Rom. 8.35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall persecution The Goldsmith loves his gold as well when it is in the fire as when it is in his bag God loves his children as well in adversity as in prosperity Rev. 3.19 As many as I love I rebuke God visits his children in prison Acts 23.11 Be of good chear Paul God sweetens their sufferings 2 Cor. 1.5 As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth As the mother having given her childe a bitter pill gives it afterwards a lump of sugar persecution is a bitter pill but God gives the comforts of his Spirit to sweeten it if persecution cannot hinder Gods love then it cannot hinder us from being blessed 3. They are blessed for whom Christ prays but such as are persecuted have Christ praying for them John 17.12 Keep through thy own Name those whom thou hast given me which prayer though made for all believers yet especially for his Apostles which he fore-told should be Martyrs John 16.2 Now if persecution cannot hinder Christs prayer for us then it cannot impede or obstruct our blessedness 4. They are blessed that have sin purged out but persecution purgeth out sin Isa 27.9 Hebr. 12.11 Persecution is a corrosive to eat out the proud flesh it is a Fan to winnow us a fire to refine us persecution is the physick God applies to his children to carry away their ill humours that surely which purgeth out sin cannot hinder blessedness 10. The great suffering consideration is the glorious reward which follows sufferings their's is the Kingdom of heaven the hope of reward saith Saint Basil is very powerful and moving Moses had an eye at the recompence of reward Hebr. 11.26 yea Christ himself Hebr. 12.2 Many have done great things for hope of a temporal reward Camillus when his Countrey was oppressed by the Galls ventured his life for his Countrey to purchase fame and honour if men will hazard their lives for a little temporal honour what should we do for the reward of glory A Merchant saith Chrysostom doth not mind a few storms at Sea but he thinks of the emolument and gain when the ship comes fraught home so a Christian should not be over-solicitous about his present sufferings but think of the rich reward when he shall arrive at the heavenly Port. Great is your reward in heaven † Ver. 12. The Cross is a golden Ladder * Noli attendere quá iturus sis sed quo venturus Aug. by which we climb up to heaven a Christian may lose his life but not his reward he may lose his head but not his crown if he that gives a cup of cold water shall not lose his reward then much less he that gives a draught of warm blood the reward of glory may sweeten all the waters of Marah it should be a spur to Martyrdom Caution Not that we can merit this reward by our sufferings Rev. 2.10 I will give thee a Crown of life The reward is the Legacy which free-grace bequeaths Alas what proportion is there between a drop of blood and a weight of glory Christ himself as he was man only setting aside his Godhead did not merit by his sufferings For 1. Christ as he was man only was a creature now a creature cannot merit from the Creator 2. Christs sufferings as he was man only were finite therefore could not merit infinite glory indeed as he was God his sufferings were meritorious but consider him purely as man they were not This I urge against the Papists if Christs sufferings as he was man only though as man he was above the Angels could not merit then what man upon Earth what Prophet or Martyr is able to merit any thing by his sufferings But though we have no reward ex merito by merit we shall have it ex gratiâ by grace so it is in the Text Great is your reward in heaven The thoughts of this reward should animate Christians * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Look upon the Crown and faint if you can the reward is as far above your thoughts as it is beyond your deserts a man that is to wade through a deep water fixeth his eyes upon the firm Land before him while Christians are wading through the deep waters of persecution they should fix the eyes of their faith on the Land of promise great is your reward in heaven They that bear the Cross patiently shall wear the Crown triumphantly Christs suffering Saints shall have greater degrees in glory Matth. 19.28 God hath his highest seats yea his Thrones for his Martyrs it is true he that hath the least degree of glory a door-keeper in heaven will have enough but as Joseph gave to Benjamin a double mess above the rest of his brethren so God will give to his sufferers a double portion of glory some orbs in heaven are higher some stars brighter Gods Martyrs shall shine brighter in the heavenly Horizon Oh often look upon
yoake 8. Gospel-commands are finite therefore not grievous Christ will not alwayes be laying his commands upon us Christ will shortly take off the yoak from our neck and set a Crown upon our head There is time coming when we shall not only be free from our sins but our duties too prayer and fasting are irksome to the flesh in heaven there will be no need of prayer or repentance duties shall cease there indeed in heaven the Saints shall love God but love is no burden God will shine forth in his beauty and to fall in love with beauty is not grievous In heaven the Saints shall praise God but their praising of him shall be so sweetned with delight that it will not be a duty any more but part of their reward 'T is the Angels heaven to praise God This then makes Christs commands not grievous though they are spiritual yet temporary 't is but awhile and duties shall be no more The Saints shall not so much be under commands as embraces wait but a while and you shall put off your armour and end your weary marches thus we have seen that Christs commands considered in themselves are not grievous 2. Let us consider Christs commands comparatively 2. Comparatively and we shall see they are not grievous let us make a four-fold comparison Compare Gospel-commands 1. With the severity of the Moral Law 2. With the Commands of sin 3. With the torments of the damned 4. With the glory of heaven 1. Christs commands in the Gospel are not grievous Compari 1 compared with the severity of the Moral Law The Moral Law was such a burden as neither we nor our fathers could bear Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them Impossible it is that any Christian should come up to the strictnesse of this The golden Mandates of the Gospel comparatively are easie For 1. In the Gospel if there be a desire to keep Gods commandments it is accepted Nehem. 1.11 2 Cor. 8.12 If there be first a willing mind it is accepted Though a man had had never so good a mind to have fulfilled the Moral Law it would not have been accepted he must de facto have obeyed Gal. 3.12 but in the Gospel God crowns the desire If a Christian saith in humility Lord I desire to obey thee I would be more holy † * Isa 26.8 this desire springing from love passeth for currant 2. In the Gospel a Surety is admitted in the Court The Law would not admit of a Surety it required personal obedience but now God doth so far indulge us that what we cannot of our selves do we may do by a Proxy Christ is called the Surety of a better Testament Heb. 7.22 We cannot walk so exactly we tread awry and fall short in every thing but God looks upon us in our Surety and Christ having fulfilled all righteousness * Matth. 3.15 it is all one as if we had fulfilled the Law in our own persons 3. The Law did command and threaten but gave no strength to perform it did Egyptianize requiring the full tale of Brick but gave no Straw But now God with his commands gives power Gospel-precepts are sweetned with promises God commands Ezek. 18.31 Make you a new heart Lord may the soul say I make a new heart I can as well make a new world But see Ezek. 36.26 A new heart also will I give you God commands us to cleanse our selves Isa 1.16 Wash you make you cleane Lord where should I have power to cleanse my self Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean Job 14.4 See the Precept turned into a Promise Ezek. 36.25 From all your filthinesse and from your Idols will I cleanse you If when the child cannot go the father takes it by the hand and leads it now it is not hard for the child to go when we cannot go God takes us by the hand Hos 11.3 I taught Ephraim also to go taking them by their armes 4. In the Gospel God winks at infirmities where the heart is right The Law called for perfect obedience it was death to have shot but an hairs bredth short of the mark it were sad if the same rigor should continue upon us Wo to the holiest man that lives saith Austin if God comes to weigh him in the ballance of his justice 'T is with our best duties as with gold put the gold in the fire and you will see drosse come out what drossinesse in our holy things but in the Gospel though God will not endure haltings yet he will passe by failings Thus Christs commands in the Gospel are not grievous compared with the severity of the Moral Law 2. Christs commands are not grievous compared with the commands of sin Sin layes an heavie yoak upon Compari 2 men Sin is compared to a † Talent of lead * Onera unusquisque portas sua peccata sunt Aug. Zac. 5.7 to shew the weightinesse of it The commands of sin are burdensome let a man be under the power and rage of any lust whether it be covetousnesse or ambition how doth he tire and excruciate himself what hazards doth he run even to the endangering of his health and soul that he may satisfie his lust Jer. 9.5 They weary themselves to commit iniquity And are not Christs precepts easie and sweet in comparison of sins austere and inexorable commands Therefore Chrysostome saith well That Virtue is easier than Vice * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Temperance is lesse burdensome than Drunkennesse doing justice is lesse burdensome than violence There 's more difficulty and perplexity in the contrivement * Micah 2.1 and pursuit of wicked ends than in obeying the sweet and gentle preceps of Christ Hence it is that a wicked man is said to travel with iniquity Psal 7.14 To shew what anxious pain and trouble he hath in bringing about his wickednesse What tedious and hazardous journeys did Antiochus Epiphanes take in persecuting the people of the Jews Many have gone with more pain to hell than others have to heaven Compari 3 3. Christs commands are not grievous compared with the grievous torments of the damned The rich man cries out I am tormented in this flame Luke 16.24 Hell-fire is so unconceivably torturing that the wicked know not either how to bear or to avoid it The torment of the damned may be compared to a yoak and it differs from other yoaks usually the yoak is laid but upon the neck of the beast but the hell-yoak is laid upon every part of the sinner his eyes shall behold nothing but bloody Tragedies his ears shall hear the groans and schreeks of blaspheming spirits He shall suffer in every member of his body and faculty of his soul and this agony though violent yet perpetual The yoak of the damned shall never be taken off Vestiga nulla retrorsum Sinners might break the
all our burdens to supply all our wants there can be no defect in that which is infinite Use 1 Use 1. Information And it hath six Branches Inform. Branch 1 1. It shews us the glorious fulness of Jesus Christ He is all in all Christ is a Panoply a Magazin and Store-house of all spiritual riches you may go with the Bee from flowre to flowre and suck here and there a little sweetness but you will never have enough till you come to Christ for he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all in all Now in particular Christ is all in six Respects 1. Christ is all in regard of righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 He is made to us righteousness The Robe of innocency like the vail of the Temple is rent asunder ours is a ragged righteousness Isa 64.6 Our righteousnesses are as filthy rags As under rags the naked body is seen so under the rags of our righteousness the body of death is seen we can defile our duties but they cannot justifie us but Christ is all in regard of righteousness Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to them that believe * Domine Jesu ego sum peccatum tuum tu es justitia mea Luth. That is through Christ we are as righteous as if we had satisfied the Law in our own persons Jacob got the blessing in the garment of his elder brother so in the garment of Christ our elder brother we obtain the blessing Christs righteousness is a coat woven without seam 2 Cor. 5. ult We are made the righteousness of God in him 2. Christ is all in regard of Sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 He is made to us Sanctification Sanctification is the spiritual enamel and embroydery of the soul 't is nothing else but Gods putting upon us the jewels of holiness the Angels glory by it we are made as the Kings daughter all glorious within Psal 45.13 This doth disponere ad coelum it doth tune and prepare the soul for heaven it turns iron into gold it makes the hea● which was Satans Picture Christs Epistle The Virg●● ●●●her 2.12 had their dayes of purification they 〈◊〉 first to be perfumed and anointed and then they were to stand before the King we must have the anointing of God 1 John 2.27 and be perfumed with the graces of the Spirit those sweet odours and then we shall stand before the King of heaven there must be first our dayes of purification before our dayes of glorification what a blessed work is this a soul beautified and adorned with grace is like the coelum stellatum the firmament bespangled with glittering stars O what a Metamorphize is there I may allude to that Cant. 3.6 Who is this that comes out of the wilderness with myrrhe and frankincense and all the powders of the Merchant So who is this that comes out of the wilderness of sin perfum'd with all the graces of the Spirit Holiness is the signature and engraving of God upon the soul but whence is this Christ is all he is made to us Sanctification he it is that sends his Spirit into our hearts to be a refiners fire to burn up our dross and make our graces sparkle like gold in the Furnace Christ ariseth upon the soul with healing under his wings Mal. 4.2 He heals the understanding and saith Let there be light he heals the heart by dissolving the stone in his blood he heals the will by filing off its rebellion Thus he is all in regard of Sanctification 3. Christ is all in regard of Divine acceptance Eph. 1.6 He hath made us accepted in the Beloved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath made us Favourites so Chrysostom and Theophylact render it through Christ God is propitious to us and takes all we do in good part A wicked man being out of Christ is out of favour as his ●oughing is sin Prov. 21.14 so his praying is 〈◊〉 ●●ov 15.8 God will not come near him his brea●● infectious God will hear his sins and not his prayers but now in Christ God accepts us Eccles 9.7 Go thy way eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart for God now accepts thy works as Joseph did present his Brethren before Pharaoh and brought them into favour with the King Gen. 47.2 so the Lord Jesus carries the names of the Saints upon his breast and presents them before his Father so bringing them into repute and honour through Christ God will treat and parly with us he speaks to us as Isa 62.4 Thou shalt no more be termed forsaken but thou shalt be called HephꝪibah for the Lord delighteth in thee Through the red glass every thing appears of a red colour through the blood of Christ we look of a sanguine complexion ruddy and beautiful in Gods eyes 4. Christ is all in regard of Divine assistance a Christians strength lies in Christ Phil. 4.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I can do all things through Christ Whence is it a Christian is able to do duty to resist tentation but through Christs strengthning * Nunquam Caesar tanto impetu civitates oppugnavit quanto Satan conscientias piorum Luther Whence is it that a sparkle of grace lives in a Sea of corruption the storms of persecution blowing but that Christ holds this sparkle in the hollow of his hand Whence is it that the roaring Lyon hath not devoured the Saints but that the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah hath defended them Christ not only gives us our Crown but our Shield he not only gives us our garland when we overcome but our strength whereby we overcome Rev. 12.11 They overcame him that is the accuser of the Brethren by the blood of the Lamb. Christ keeps the Fort-royal of grace that it be not blown up Peters shield was bruised but Christ kept it that was not broken I prayed for thee that thy faith fail not Luke 22.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it be not in a total Eclipse The Crown 〈◊〉 all the Saints victories must be set upon the head of Christ Rom. 8.38 In all these things we are more than Conquerors through Christ Write the name of Michael upon all your conquests 5. Christ is all in regard of pacification when conscience is in an agony and burns as hell in the sense of Gods wrath * Job 6.4 now Christ is all he poures the balm of his blood into these wounds he maketh the storm a calm Christ doth not only make peace in the Court of heaven but peace in the Court of conscience he not only makes peace above us but within us Joh. 16. ult That in me ye might have peace in me tanquam in fonte saith Cyprian all our golden streams of peace flow from this fountain John 14.27 Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you Jesus Christ not only purchased peace for us but speaks peace to us he is called the Prince of peace Isa 9.6 Peace
wonder Saint Paul was willing to be bound and dye for Christ Acts 21.13 when he knew that Christ loved him and had given himself for him Gal. 2.20 Though I will not say Paul was proud of his chain yet he was glad of it he wore it as a chain of pearle Quest Quest But how shall I get this jewel of assurance Answ Answ 1. Make duty familiar to you when the Spouse sought Christ diligently she found him joyfully Cant. 3.4 The Ordinances are the Lattice where Christ looks forth and gives the soul a smiling aspect As Christ was made known to his Disciples in the breaking of bread Luke 24.35 so in the use of holy Ordinances in the breaking of bread Christ makes a glorious discovery of himself to the soul Christs parents found him in the Temple Luk. 2.46 They who would find Christ with comfort and have the kisses of his lips shall be sure to meet with him in the Temple 2. Preserve the virginity of conscience when the glass is foule you will not poure wine into it but when it is clean so when the soul is cleansed from the love of every sin now God will poure in the sweet wine of assurance * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Socrat. Hebr. 10.22 Let us draw near in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience Guilt clips the wings of joy he who is conscious to himself of secret sin cannot draw near to God in full assurance he cannot come with boldness but blushing he cannot call God Father but Judge assurance is a flowre that grows only in a pure heart before David prayes for joy he first prayes for a pure heart Psal 51.10 Create in me a clean heart O God 3. Be much in the actings of faith the more active the childe is in obedience the sooner he hath his fathers smile if faith be ready to dye Rev. 3.2 if it be like Armour hung up or like a sleepy habit in the soul never look for assurance God will not speak peace to thee when thou art asleep it is the lively faith which flourisheth into assurance Abraham had a vigorous sparkling faith Rom. 4.18 who against hope believed in hope That is against the hope of sense he believed in the hope of the promise and how sweetly doth God manifest himself to Abraham he calls him his friend he makes him of his Cabinet-counsel Gen. 18.17 Shall I hide from Abraham the thing which I do Wouldst thou have Christ reveal his love to thee k●ep faith upon the wing this is the Bird which soars aloft and plucks a bunch of grapes from the true Vine 4. If Christ be all then make him so to Branch 4 you 1. Make Christ all in your understanding be ambitious to know nothing but Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 For I determined not to know any thing among you save Jesus Christ The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I judged not I did not think any thing in my judgement worth knowing in comparison of Christ Austin saith of Cicero he liked his eloquence but he could not take so much delight in reading him quia Nomen Christi non erat ibi because he could not finde the Name of Christ there what will all other knowledge avail a man at his death who is ignorant of Christ Si Christum nescis nihil est si coetera noscis What is it to have knowledge in Physick to be able with Esculapius and Galen to discourse of the causes and symptomes of a disease and what is proper to apply and in the mean time to be ignorant of the healing under Christs wings What is it to have knowledge in Astronomy to discourse of the Stars and Planets and to be ignorant of Christ that bright morning star which leads to heaven what is it to have skill in a shop and ignorant of that commodity which doth both enrich and crown what is it to be versed in Musick and to be ignorant of Christ whose blood makes atonement in heaven and musick in the conscience what is it to know all the stratagems of War and to be ignorant of the Prince of peace O make Christ all be willing to know nothing but Christ though you may know other things in their due place yet know Christ in the first place let the knowledge of Jesus Christ have the preheminence as the Sun among the lesser Planets This is the crowning knowledge Prov. 4.18 The prudent are crowned with knowledge 1. We cannot know our selves unless we know Christ he it is who lights us into our hearts and shews as the spots of our souls whereby we abhor our selves in dust and ashes Christ shews us our own vacuity and indigency and untill we see our own emptiness we are not fit to be filled with the golden oyle of mercy 2. We cannot know God but through Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 Out of Christ God is terrible he is a consuming fire it is through Christ that we know God as a friend oh then treasure up the knowledge of Christ he is the golden ladder by which we ascend to heaven to be ignorant of Christ is as if a man were poysoned and there were an herb in the garden could cure him but he is ignorant of that herb 2. Make Christ all in your affections 1. Desire nothing but Christ he is the accumulation of all good things Ye are compleat in him Col. 2.10 Christ is the Christians perfection what should the soul desire less what can it desire more * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignatius Psal 73.25 Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee David had his Crown and his Throne to delight in I but it was the presence of Christ he chiefly thirsted after without Christ all his other comforts were not only emptiness but bitterness 2. Love nothing but Christ love is the choycest affection it is the purest stream of the soul it is the richest jewel the creature hath to bestow oh if Christ be all love him better than all let your Rivers still run into this golden Sea Every mans heart is set upon his treasure in Christ there are unsearchable riches Ephes 3.8 Though the Angels have lived so long in heaven yet to this day they know not how rich Christ is Take the most precious pearle or Diamond that is and the Jeweller can set the full value of it he can say This is worth so much and no more but the riches of Christ are unsearchable it cannot be said he is worth so much and no more neither man or Angel are able to set the full value of the pearle of price and shall not Jesus Christ lie nearest our hearts shall he not have the cream of our love Consider 1. If you love other things when they dye your love is lost but Christ lives for ever to requite your love 2. You may love other things in the excess but you cannot
love Christ in the excess MARY LOVED MUCH Luke 7.47 but not too much if Christ cannot be prized enough he cannot be loved too much the Angels in heaven cannot love Christ to his worth 3. When you love other things you love that which is worse than your selves if you love a fair house a pleasant garden a curious picture these things are worse than your selves if I would love any thing more intensly and ardently it should be something which is better than my self and that is Jesus Christ He who is all let him have all give him your love who desires it most and deserves it best Minus te amat qui aliquid tecum amat 3. Make Christ all in your abilities do all in his strength Ephes 6.10 Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might When you are to resist a tentation to mortifie a corruption do not go out in your own strength but in the strength of Christ Be strong in the Lord. Some go out to duty in the strength of parts and go out against sin in the strength of resolutions and they come home foiled Alas what are our resolutions but like the green wit hs which did binde Sampson a sinful heart will soon break these do as David when he was to go against Goliah saith he I come to thee in the Name of the Lord. So say to thy Goliah-lust I come to thee in the Name of Christ Then we conquer when the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah marcheth before us Christ is called an horn of salvation Luke 1.69 The strength of a creature lies in his horn so the strength of a believer lies in this horn of salvation Oh make Christ all do all in his strength The Bird may as well flie without wings as we can do any thing prevailing without Christ 1 Sam. 2.9 For by strength shall no man prevail 4. Make Christ all in your aimes do all to his glory 1 Pet. 4.11 Let Christ be the center to which all the lines of your actions are drawn the hypocrite pretends Christ but drives on some self-interest Hos 10.1 He is like one who pretends to woe for his friend but is a sutor for himself Simon Magus would have given money for the gift of the Holy Ghost Acts 8.18 but probably the reason was because he intended to have sold that gift to others how many make the Name of Christ a stirrup to get into the saddle of honour and preferment it is well if some have not made the Crown delinquent for its jewels and the Church for its Lands The squint-ey'd hypocrite is the Divels wind-fall oh make Christ all in your aimes and designs in every action propound this question Will this make for the honour of Christ will this bring any Revenues into his Exchequer how happy were it if it might be said of us as the Angel speaks to the two Maries Matth. 28.5 I know that ye seek Jesus which was crucified If a man doth not take a right aime he can never hit the mark he who doth not aime at Gods glory can never hit the mark of his own salvation 5. Make Christ all in your affiance trust to none but Christ for salvation the Papists make Christ something but not all they trust partly to Christ and partly to their own merits they pray to Christ and Angels to Christ as a Mediator of Redemption and to Angels as Mediators of Intercession they invocate the Virgin Mary for mercy so mingling her milk with Christs blood but what is given to others superstitiously is taken from Christ sacrilegiously they have their Masses Pennance extream unction they confess ind●ed Christs blood doth wholly sati●fie for Original sin but sins after Baptisme committed they have fountains of their own to wash in The Eagles feathers will not mix with other feathers Christ will not endure to have his blood mixed either with the merits of Saints or prayers of Angels Christ will be all in all or nothing at all And is there not naturally a spice of Popery in our hearts we would be grafting happiness upon the stock of our own righteousness every man saith Luther is born with a Pope in his heart How ready are we to Idolize our duties and graces and to draw so much from the stream as to neglect the Spring Oh make Christ all in regard of recumbency let him be your City of refuge to flie to your Ark to trust to It was a good speech of Luther If I could keep the whole Moral Law I would not trust to this for justification I would vail and stoop to Christs merits 6. Make Christ all in your joy Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour The Virgin Mary did not so much rejoyce that she was Christs Mother as that Christ was her Saviour she did not so much rejoyce that Christ was conceived in her womb as that he was formed in her heart how glad was Simeon when he had taken Christ in his arms Luke 2.29 How chearful may that man be who hath taken Christ in the arms of his faith The wise men when they saw the star rejoyced with exceeding great joy Matth. 2.10 O Christian hast thou seen the Lord Jesus hath this morning Star shined into thy heart with its enlightning quickning beams then rejoyce and be exceeding glad Shall others rejoyce in the world and will not you rejoyce in Christ how much better is he than all other things God hath given the men of the world a Crutch to lean on he hath given thee a Christ to lean on oh rejoyce in Christ Shall the Malefactor rejoyce and shall not the Favourite rejoyce it reflects disparagement upon Christ when his Saints are sad and drooping is not Christ yours what would you have more Object 1. But saith one I am low in the World Object 1 and that takes off the Chariot wheels of my joy and makes me drive heavily Answ But hast thou not Christ and is not Christ all Answ Psal 16.5 6. The Lord is the portion of my inheritance and of my cup the lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places yea I have a goodly heritage Christ is omnibus Thesauris opulentior an inexhaustible Treasury Aug. and he who by faith is united to him hath a title to all Christs riches A beggar being married to a Prince she hath a right and title to all his Revenues Object 2. If indeed I knew Christ were mine then I Object 2 could rejoce but how shall I know that Answ 1. Is thy soul fill'd with anhelations and pantings after Christ Answ dost thou desire as well water out of Christs sides to cleanse thee as blood out of his sides to save thee These sighs and groans are stirred up by the Spirit of God by the beating of this pulse judge of the life of faith in thee a wicked man hath
is a foolish loss 2. It is a fatal loss to lose the soul 1. It is an unparallel'd loss because in losing the soul there are so many things lost with it as a Merchant in losing his ship loseth many things with it his money plate jewels spices Thus he that loseth his soul he loseth Christ he loseth the Comforter he loseth the Society of Angels he loseth Heaven 2. It is an irreparable loss other losses may be made up again if a man lose his health he may recover it again if he lose his Estate he may get it up again but if he lose his soul this loss can never be made up again Are there any more Saviours to dye for the soul as Naomi said to her daughters Are there yet any more sons in my womb Ruth 1.11 Hath God any more sons or will he send his Son any more into the world oh no if the soul be lost Christs next coming is not ●o save it but to judge it Christian remember thou hast but one soul and if that be gone all is gone God saith Chrysostom hath given thee two eyes if thou losest one thou hast another but thou hast but one soul and if that perish thou art quite undone The Merchant that ventures all in one ship if that ship be lost he is quite broken 3. The loss of the soul is an eternal loss the soul once lost is lost for ever he that loseth his soul may say as that wicked Doctor of Paris on his death-bed Parcite funeribus mihi nil prodesse valebit Heu infaelicem eur me genuere parentes Ah miser aeternos vado damnatus ad ignes The sinner and the furnace shall never be parted Isa 33.14 As the sinners heart will never be emptied of sin so Gods Vial shall never be emptied of wrath 't is an eternal loss Branch 3 3. Do what you can to secure the main chance to save these precious souls In times of danger men call in their debts and labour to secure their Estates let me tell you all you who are yet in your natural Estate your souls are morgaged if your Land were morgaged you would endeavour to redeem it your souls are morgaged Sin hath morgaged them sin hath laid your souls to pawn and where do you think your souls are The pawn is in the Divels hand therefore a man in the state of nature is said to be under the power of Satan Acts 26.18 Now there are but two wayes to fetch home the pawn and both are set down Acts 20.21 Repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ Unravel all your works of sin by repentance honour Christs merits by believing Divines call it fidem salvificam saving faith because upon this wing the soul flies to the Ark Christ and is secured from danger LUKE 5.31 They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick The Souls Malady and Cure THE occasion of the words is set down in the context Levi was called from the receit of custome he was a Custome-house man but Christ called him and there went out power with the word he left all rose up and followed him ver 28. Levi did not consult with flesh and blood he did not say What shall I do for the hundred Talents * 2 Chron. 25.9 how shall I live and maintain my charge I shall lose many a sweet bit at the Custom-house poverty is like to be my patrimony nay in case I follow Christ I must espouse persecution he doth not reason thus but having a call he hastens away after Christ He rose up and followed him and that he might give Christ a pledge and specimen of his love he makes him a feast ver 29. And Levi made him a great feast in his own house a better guest he could not invite Christ alwayes came with his cost Levi feasted Christ with his chear and Christ feasted him with salvation Well Christ being at this feast the Pharisees begin to murmur ver 30. Why do ye eate and drink with publicans The Pharisees 1. were offended at him that he should go in and eate with Publicans The Publicans were counted the worst of sinners sinners of the deepest dye yet the Pharisees were not so much offended at the sins of the Publicans as they had a mind to pick a quarrel with Christ He who was the Horne of salvation to some was a Rock of offence to these Jews others did feed on him these did stumble at him 2. They accuse Christ for these words carry in them a Charge and Accusation Why do ye eate with Publicans and sinners The Pharisees impeached Christ for eating with sinners malice will never want matter of accusation Though the Divels proclaimed Christs holinesse Luke 4.34 Let us alone I know thee who thou art the holy one of God Yet the Pharisees tax him for a sinner see what malice will do it will make a man speak that which the Divel himself will not speak The Divels justifie Christ the Pharisees accuse him And if Christ who was a Lamb without spot could not scape the worlds censures no wonder if his people are loaded with the calumnies and censures of the wicked But let us examine the master of the Charge they bring against Christ and see how groundlesse it was They indite Christ for going in with sinners First Christ did nothing but what was according to his Commission the Commission he received from his Father was that he should come to save sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 Secondly Christ went in with sinners not to joyn with them in their sins but to heale them of their sins to accuse Christ was as Austin saith as if the Physitian should be accused because he goes among them that are sick of the Plague This groundlesse accusation Christ over-hears and in the text gives these envious Pharisees a silencing answer Th●y that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick As if Christ had said you Pharisees think your selves righteous persons you need no Saviour but these poor Publicans are sick and ready to die and I come as a Physitian to cure them therefore be not angry at a work of mercy though you will not be healed yet do not hinder me from healing others They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick In the words there are two general parts 1. The dying Patients 2. The healing Physitian 1. The dying Patients Them that are sick Whence observe Doctr. 1. That sin is a soul-disease Psal 103.8 Isa Doctr. 1 53.4 He hath born our griefs in the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our sicknesses Man at first was created in an healthful temper he had no sicknesse of soul he ayled nothing the soul had its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 its perfect beauty and glory The eye was clear the heart pure the affections tuned with the finger of God into a most sweet harmony God made man upright Eccles
Judges 11.35 Alas my daughter thou hast brought me very low so may the soul say Alas my sin thou hast brought me very low thou hast brought me almost to the gates of death 3. Sickness doth eclipse the beauty of the body This I ground on that Scripture Psal 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct man thou makest his beauty to consume away like a Moth. The Moth consumes the beauty of the cloth so a fit of sickness consumes the beauty of the body Thus sin is a soul-sickness it hath eclipsed the glory and splendor of the soul it hath turned ruddiness into paleness that beauty of grace which once sparkled as gold now it may be said How is this gold become dim † * Lam. 4.1 That soul which once had an orient brightness in it it was more ruddy than Rubies its polishing was of Saphyr the understanding be spangled with knowledge the will crowned with liberty the affections like so many Seraphims burning in love to God now the glory is departed Sin hath turned beauty into deformity as some faces by sickness are so disfigured and look so ghastly they can hardly be known So the soul of man is by sin so sadly Metamorphiz'd having lost the image of God that it can hardly be known Joel 2.31 The Sun shall be turned into darkness Sin hath turned that Sun of beauty which shined in the soul into a Cimmerian darkness and where grace is begun to be wrought yet the souls beauty is not quite recovered but is like the Sun under a cloud 4. Sickness takes away the taste a sick man doth not taste that sweetness in his meat so the sinner by reason of soul-sickness hath lost his taste to spiritual things The Word of God is pabulum animae it is bread to strengthen wine to comfort but the sinner tastes no sweetness in the Word A childe of God who is spiritualized by grace tastes a savouriness in Ordinances the promise drops as an honey-comb Psal 19.10 but a natural man is sick and his taste is gone since the tasting of the forbidden Tree he hath lost his taste 5. Sickness takes away the comfort of life a sick person hath no joy of any thing his life is a burden to him So the sin-sick soul is void of all true comfort and his laughter is but the pleasing dream of a sick man he hath no true title to comfort his sin is not pardoned he may be in hell before night for any thing he knows 6. Sickness ushers in death it is the prologue to death sickness is as it were the cutting of the Tree and death is the falling of the Tree so this disease of sin if not cured in time brings the second death 2. What the diseases of the soul are Adam by breaking the box of original righteousness hath filled the soul full of diseases the body is not subject to so many diseases as the soul I cannot reckon them all up Psal 19.12 Who can understand his errors * Psal 40.12 Only I shall name some of the worst of these diseases Pride is the tympany of the soul lust is the feaver error the gangrene unbelief the plague of the heart hypocrisie the scurvy hardness of heart the stone anger the phrenzy malice the Wolf in the breast covetousness the dropsie spiritual sloth the green sickness apostasie the epilepsie here are eleven soul-diseases and when they come to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the full heigth they are dangerous and most frequently prove mortal 3. The third thing to be demonstrated is that sin is the worst sickness To have a body full of plague sores is sad but to have the soul which is the more noble part spotted with sin and full of the Tokens is far worse as appears 1. The body may be diseased and the conscience quiet Isa 33.24 The Inhabitant of the Land shall not say I am sick He should scarce feel his sickness because sin was pardoned but when the soul is sick of any reigning lust the conscience is troubled Isa 57. ult There is no peace to the wicked saith my God When Spira had abjured his former faith he was put IN LITTLE EASE his conscience burned as hell and no spiritual physick that Divines did apply could ever allay that inflammation 2. A man may have bodily diseases yet God may love him Asa was diseased in his feet 2 Kings 15.23 He had the Gout yet a Favourite with God Gods hand may go out against a man yet his heart may be towards him diseases are the Arrows which God shoots pestilence is called Gods Arrow Psal 91.5 This Arrow as Gregory Nazianzene saith may be shot from the hand of an indulgent father But soul-diseases are symptoms of Gods anger as he is an holy God he cannot but hate sin he beholds the proud afar off Psal 138.6 God hates a sinner for his plague-sores Zach. 11.8 My soul loathed them 3. Sickness at worst doth but separate from the society of friends but this disease of sin if not cured separates from the society of God and Angels The Leper was to be shut out of the Camp this leprosie of sin without the interposition of mercy shuts men out of the Camp of heaven Rev. 21.8 This is the misery of them that dye in their sins they are allowed neither friend nor Physitian to come at them they are excluded Gods presence for ever in whose presence is fulness of joy Use 1 1. See into what a sad condition sin hath brought us it hath made us desperately sick Inform. nay we dye away in Branch 1 our sickness till we are fetch'd again with the water of life O how many sick bed-rid souls are there in the world sick of pride sick of lust sin hath turned our Houses and Churches into Hospitals they are full of sick persons What Davids enemies said reproachfully of him is true of every natural man Psal 41.8 An evil disease cleaveth fast unto him He hath the plague of the heart 1 Kings 8. And even those who are regenerate are cured but in part they have some grudgings of the disease some ebullitions and stirrings of corruption nay sometimes this Kings Evil breaks forth to the scandal of Religion and from this sin-sickness ariseth all other diseases * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys de poen hom 5. Plague Gout Stone Feaver 1 Cor. 11.29 30. He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself for this cause many are weak and sickly among you Branch 2 2. If sin be a soul-sickness then how foolish are they that hide their sins it is folly to hide a disease * Insipientium malus pudor ulcera celat Job 31.33 40. If I covered my transgression as Adam by hiding my iniquity in my bosome let thistles grow instead of wheat c. The wicked take more care to have sin covered than cured if they can but sin in private and not be suspected they
were requisite as none but Christ could give 3. Christ came as a Physitian out of the sweetness of his Nature he is like the good Samaritan who had compassion on the wounded man Luke 10.33 A Physitian may come to the Patient only for gain not so much to help the Patient as to help himself but Christ came purely out of sympathy there was nothing in us to tempt Christ to heal us for we had no desire of a Physitian nor had we any thing to give our Physitian as sin made us sick so it made us poor so that Christ came as a Physitian not out of hope to receive any thing from us but was prompted to it out of his own goodness Hos 14.4 I will heal their back-slidings I will love them Love set Christ awork not only his Fathers Commission but his own Compassion moved him to his spiritual Physick and Chyrurgery King David banished the blinde and lame out of the City 2 Sam. 5.8 Christ comes to the blinde and lame and cures them it is the sounding of his bowels that causeth the healing under his wings 3. The third particular is That Christ is the Only Physitian Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other c. There 's no other Physitian besides Verinus Non plures medici sed satis unus erit The Papists would have other healers besides Christ they would make Angels their Physitians all the Angels in heaven cannot heal one sick soul indeed they are described by their wings Isa 6.2 but they have no healing under their wings Papists would heal themselves by their own merits Adam did eat that Apple which made him and his posterity sick but he could not finde any herb in Paradise to cure him our merits are rather damning than healing to make use of other Physitians and medicines is as if the Israelites in contempt of that brazen Serpent which Moses set up had erected other brazen Serpents O let us take heed of that turba medicorum Indeed in bodily sickness it is lawful to multiply Physitians when the Patient hath advised with one Physitian he desires to have others joyned with him but the sick soul if it joyns any other Physitian with Christ it surely dies 4. How Christ heals his Patients Answ There are foure things in Christ that are healing 1. His Word is healing Psal 107.20 He sent his Word and healed them His Word in the mouth of his Ministers is healing when the Spirit is wounded in desertion Christ doth create the lips that speak peace Isa 57.19 The Word written is a Myrothecium or Repository in which God hath laid up Soveraign oyles and balsomes to recover sick souls and the Word preached is the pouring out of these oyles and applying them to the sick Patient He sent his Word and healed them We look upon the Word as a weak thing What is the breath of a man to save a soul but the power of the Lord is present to heal Luke 5.17 Christ makes use of his Word as an healing medicine the Receits which his Ministers prescribe he himself applies he makes his Word convincing converting comforting Caution Not that the Word heals all to some it is not an healing but a killing Word 2 Cor. 2.16 To the one we are a savour of death unto death Some dye of their disease two sorts of Patients dye 1. Such as sin presumptuously though they know a thing to be sin yet they will do it Job 24.13 They are of those that rebel against the light this is dangerous * Num. 15 30. David prays Psal 19. Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins 2. Such as sin maliciously when the disease comes to this head the Patient will dye Hebr. 10.29 But to them who belong to the election of grace the Word is the healing medicine Christ useth He sent his Word and healed them 2. Christs wounds are healing Isa 55.3 With his stripes we are healed Christ made a medicine of his own body and blood the Physitian dyed to cure the Patient * Ille Colaphizatus lauceatus spinis corenatus in cruce suspensus ut per ejus mortem nobis medelam pararet Aug. in Evang. Joh. The Pelican when her young ones are bitten by Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them Thus when we were bitten by the old Serpent then Jesus Christ prescribes a Receit of his own blood to heal and restore us Sanguis Christi salus Christiani * Corpus Christi est aegris medicina languorem sanans sanitatem servans Bern. The blood of Christ being the blood of him who was God as well as man had infinite merit to appease God and infinite vertue to heal us This this is the balme of Gilead that recovers a soul which is sick even to death Balm as Naturalists say is a juyce which a little shrub being cut with glass doth weep out This was anciently of very precious esteem the favour of it was odoriferous the vertue of it Soveraign it would cure ulcers and the stinging of Serpents * Pliny This balm may be an emblem of Christs blood it hath a most Soveraign vertue in it it heals the ulcer of sin the stinging of tentation it merits for us justification Rom. 5.9 O how precious is this balm of Gilead by this blood we enter into heaven 3. Christs Spirit is healing the blood of Christ heals the guilt of sin the Spirit of Christ heals the pollution of sin the Spirit is compared to oyle it is call'd the anointing of the Spirit Isa 61. to shew the healing vertue of the Spirit oyle is healing Christ by his Spirit heals the rebellion of the will the stone of the heart though sin be not removed it is subdued 4. Christs rod is healing Isa 27.9 Christ never wounds but to heal the rod of affliction is to recover the sick Patient * Unguento utitur medicus item ferro igue Bern. Davids bones were broken that his soul might be healed God useth affliction as the Chyrurgion doth his Launce to let out the venome and corruption of the soul and make way for a cure Quest But if Christ be a Physitian Quest why are not all healed Answ 1. Because all do not know they are sick they Answ 1 see not the sores and ulcers of their souls and will Christ cure them who see no need of him many ignorant people thank God they have good hearts but that heart can no more be good which wants grace than that body can be found which wants health 2. All are not healed because they love their sickness Answ 2 Psal 52.3 Thou lovest evil many men hug their disease Augustine saith before his conversion he prayed against sin but his heart whispered Non adhuc Domine Not yet Lord he was loth to leave his sin too soon how many love their disease better than their Physitian while sin is loved Christs medicines are loathed 3. All are not
never thinks he hath fully healed us till he hath drawn his own beautiful image upon us Cant. 2.13 Arise my fair one fair with justification fair with sanctification Christ doth not only heal but adorn he is called the Sun of righteousness Mal. 4.2 Not only because of the healing under his wings but because of those Rayes of beauty which he puts upon the soul Rev. 12.1 12. And lastly Christ is the most bountiful Physitian Other Patients do enrich their Physitians but here the Physitian doth enrich the Patient Christ prefers all his Patients he doth not only cure them but crown them Rev. 2.10 Christ doth not only raise from the bed but to the Throne he gives the sick man not only health but heaven 1 Good Newes this day there is balm in Gilead Use 1 there is a Physitian to heal sin-sick souls the Angels that fell had no Physiti●● sent to them we have there are but few in the world to whom Christ is revealed they that have the gold of the Indies want the blood of the Lamb but the Sun of righteousness is risen in our Hemisphere with healing in his wings If a man were poysoned what a comfort would it be to him to hear that there were an herb in the Garden could heal him if he had a gangrene in his body and were given over by all his friends how glad would he be to hear of a Chyrurgion that could cure him O sinner thou art full of peccant humours thou hast a gangren'd soul but there is a Physitian that can recover thee There is hope in Israel concerning this though there be an old Serpent to sting us with his tentations yet there is a Brazen Serpent to heal us with his blood Use 2 2. If Christ be a Physitian then let us make use of this Physitian for our diseased souls Luke 4.40 When the Sun was setting all they that had any sick with divers diseases brought them unto him and he laid his hands on every of them and healed them You that have neglected a Physitian all this while now when the Sun of the Gospel and the Sun of your life is even setting bring your sick souls to Christ to be cured Christ complains that though men are sick even to death yet they will not come or send to the Physitian John 5.40 Ye will not come to me that ye might have life In bodily diseases the Physitian is the first that is sent to in soul-diseases the Physitian is the last that is sent to But here there are many sad Objections that poor souls make against themselves why they do not come to Christ their Physitian Object 1 Obj●ction 1. Alas I am discouraged to go to Christ to cure me because of my unworthiness just like the Centurion who sent to Christ about his sick servant Luke 7.6 Lord trouble not thy self for I am not worthy that thy thou shouldest enter under my roof Christ was coming to heal his servant but the Centurion would have slaved off Christ from coming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not worthy So saith many a trembling soul Christ is a Physitian but who am I that Christ should come under my roof or heal me I am unworthy of mercy as Mephibosheth said to King David 2 Sam. 9.8 What is thy servant that thou shouldest look upon such a dead Dog as I am Now to such as have their hearts broken with a sense of their unworthiness and are discouraged from coming to Christ to heal them let me say these five things by way of reply 1. Who did Christ shed his blood for but such as are unworthy 1 Tim. 1.15 Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners Christ came into the world as into an Hospital among a company of lame bed-rid souls 2. Though we are not legally worthy we may be evangelically it is part of our worthiness to see our unworthiness Isa 41.14 Fear not thou worme Jacob. Thou mayst be a worme in thy own eye yet a Dove in Gods eye 3. Though we are unworthy yet Christ is worthy we do not deserve a cure but Christ hath merited mercy for us he hath store of blood to supply our want of tears 4. Who was ever yet saved because he was worthy What man could ever plead this title Lord Jesus heal me because I am worthy What worthiness was there in Paul before his conversion what worthiness was there in Mary Magdalen out of whom seven Divels were cast but free-grace did pity and heal them God doth not find us worthy but makes us worthy 5. If we will never come to Christ to be healed till we are worthy we must never come and let me tell you this talking of worthiness savours of pride we would have something of our own had we such preparations and self-excellencies then we think Christ would accept of us and we might come and be healed this is to see our Physitian oh let not the sense of unworthiness discourage * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 go to Christ to be healed Arise he calleth thee Mark 10.49 Object 2 2. Objection But I fear I am not within Christs Commission I am not of the number of those that shall be saved and then though Christ be a Physitian I shall not be healed Answ 1 Answ 1. We must take heed of drawing desperate conclusions against our selves 't is high presumption for us to make our selves wiser than the Angels All the Angels in heaven are not able to resolve this question Who are elected and who are reprobated Answ 2 2. Thou that sayest thou art not within Christs Commission read over Christs Commission see who he comes to heal Luke 4.18 He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Hath God touched thy heart with remorse dost thou lay to heart thy Gospel-unkindnesses dost thou weep more out of love to Christ than fear of hell then thou art a broken-hearted sinner and art within Christs Commission a bleeding Christ will heal a broken heart Object 3 3. Objection But my sins are so many that sure I shall never be healed I am sick of many diseases at once Answ Answ Thou hast the more need of a Physitian one would think that was a strange speech of Peter to Christ Luke 5.8 Depart from me for I am a sinful man O Lord rather Lord come near to me Is it a good Argument to say to a Physitian I am diseased therefore depart from me No therefore come and heal me Our sins should serve to humble us not to beat us from Christ I tell you if we had no diseases Christ would have no work to do in the world Object 4 4. Objection But my disease is inflamed and grown to a Paroxysme my sin is greatly heightned Answ Answ The playster of Christs blood is broader than thy sore 1 John 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin The blood of the Lamb takes away the poyson of the Serpent all diseases are alike
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
and then you are at the end of your race 4. In a race there is a Crown or Garland given to him that gets the better * Bravium significat praemium quod datur ijs qui ex certamine victores sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 legunt palmam Ambr. Cypr. de Exhort Martyr cap. 8. so in Religion those that win the race shall wear the Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Such as do not run through sloth or will not run through pride miss of the reward but such as run the heavenly race faithfully shall have a Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 And this reward is fitly resembled to a Crown for the splendor of it a Crown hung full of jewels is bright and splendid it gives an orient lustre neither can pen describe or pensil delineate or tongue of Angel express the glory and magnificence of this Crown nor can it be shadowed out by all the beauties of heaven though every star were a Sun 2. The second thing to be illustrated is to shew wherein the Christian race differs from other races 2. In other races one only is crowned so in the Text but one receiveth the prize but in the spiritual race many win the prize the Saints shall come to heaven from all the quarters of the world East and West c. Matth. 8.11 Many shall come from the East and West and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of heaven Rev. 7.4 There were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the Tribes of the children of Israel after this I beheld and l● a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations of kindreds and people and tongues stood before the Throne and before the Lamb cloathed with white Robes and Palms in their hands Ver. 9. By this multitude not numerable are to be understood those that belong to the election and are salvable these as Victors are crowned and stand with Palms in their hands should but one receive the prize there might be room left for despair 2. In other races some stand still and look on and usually there are but two run but here in the heavenly race all must run those that are unfit to run other races must run this as the lame and blinde none are excused from this race all have run from God by sin and all must run to him by repentance either run or damn either flie to heaven or fall to hell 3. In other races the feet run but in the Christian race the heart runs Psal 119.32 I will run when thou shalt enlarge my heart In Religion the heart is all that which the heart doth not is not done * Quicquid cor non facit non fit 't is not the lifting up of the eye or hand towards heaven that forwards the race it is the out-going of the heart many a mans tongue runs in Religion but not his heart Dost thou believe with thy heart Rom. 10.9 Dost thou love God with thy heart Matth. 22.37 This is to run the race of Religion this rids away ground and brings a Christian apace to the Gole when Davids heart was enlarged then he would run 4. In other races he only gets the prize that runs fastest but it is not so in this heavenly race though others may out-run us yet if we hold on to the end of the race we shall receive the reward Some Saints are like Asael light of foot as a Roe 2 Sam. 2.18 They run swifter in the race of obedience as Ahimaaz out-ran Cushi 2 Sam. 18.23 But this is the comfort of weak believers though they cannot run so fast as others yet if they hold on to the end of the race without tyring they are crowned he that came in at the eleventh houre had his pay as well as he that came in at the first houre Matth. 20.9 To shew that those who set out later and may be out-run by other Christians yet persevering they are saved 5. In other races men run for a temporal reward in the Christian race we run for an eternal others run for a corruptible Crown 1 Cor. 9.25 Sometimes the Crown bestowed upon the Victor was made of Olive sometimes of Myrtle the Aegyptians had a Crown of Cinnamon enclosed in gold but still it was corruptible but the Crown the Saints run for is incorruptible it is a never-fading Crown 1 Pet. 5.4 Other Crowns are like a Garland of flowers that soon withers Prov. 27.4 But this Crown given to the conquering Christian is immarcessible * Corona haec no●fi ●sit aut gemmis flores isti ex quibu●●tur semper vi●idescunt repullulant semper the jewels of this Crown are never lost the flowers of it never fade 6. In other races the Garland is bestowed in a way of merit but in the Christian-race it is bestowed as a Legacy of free-grace though we shall not obtain the prize unless we run yet not because we run how can we merit the recompence of reward Before we merit we must satisfie but we have nothing to satisfie Besides what proportion is there between the race and the recompence therefore the Crown bestowed is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gratuitous gift Rom. 6.23 The gift of God is eternal life * Munera sua Coronat Deus non merita tu● Aug. epist 105. God will so bestow his rewards that he himself may be no loser though the Saints have the comfort of their Crown God will have the glory 7. In other races many times one hinders another but in the race to heaven one Christian helps another 1 Thes 5.11 Edifie one another even as also you do One Christian helps by his prayer advice example to confirm another What is the communion of Saints but one Christian putting forward another in the heavenly race 8. One may lose other races and not be miserable but he cannot lose this race in Religion but he must needs be so In other races a man does but lose his wager but if he falls short of this spiritual race he loseth his soul how seasonable therefore is that Apostolical caution Heb. 4.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let us fear lest we should come short The third thing to be insisted on is Why we must run this race of Christianity There are three Reasons 1. Because God hath set us this race Heb. 12.1 Let us run the race that is set before us It is not Arbitrary it is not left to our choice whether we will run or no God hath set us the race Gods commands carry power and Soveraignty in them If a General bids his Army march they must march There 's no disputing duty at the Word of God the heavens drop down their dew the stars set themselves in Battalio the earth thrusts forth a crop the Sea is bridled in and dare not go a step farther If inanimate creatures obey the word of command much more those who are endued with reason when God saith
Faith shows a Christian the land of promise Hope sails thither with patience Thus you see how Faith and Hope differ but these Twins must not be parted Faith strengthens Hope and Hope comforts Faith as Elm supports the Vine and the Vine loads the Elm with its fruit Faith is the Cable and Hope the Anchor and both these help to keep the soule steady that it doth not dash upon Shelves or sink in the Quick-sands Thus much for the first what hope is 2. What a Christian hopes for This is set down 1. Emphatically 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That blessed hope Hope here is put by a Metonymie for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The things hoped for That blessed hope is the hope of blessedness A Christians hope is not in this life then he were in the Forlone-hope here is nothing to be hoped for but viciscitudes all the world rings changes but looking for that blessed hope This is the difference between the Seamans Anchor and the Believers Anchor The Seaman casts his Anchor downwards the Believer casts his Anchor upwards in heaven looking for that blessed hope The Believer is a rich heir Hebr. 6.17 and he waits till the Crown-royal shall be set upon his head According to our Common Law there are two sorts of Free-holds There is a Free-hold in Deed and a Free-hold in Law a Free-hold in Deed is when a man hath made an entrance upon Lands and Tenements and is actually seized of them but a Free-hold in Law is when a man hath right to Lands but hath not yet made actual entrance upon them Heaven is a Believers Free-hold in Law he hath a right to it it is promised by the Father it is purchased by the Son it is assured him by the Holy Ghost but he hath not the Free-hold in Deed but waits Gods leasure and looks for that blessed hope till the time comes that he shall actually enter upon possession of the inheritance 2. The Object of a Christian hope is set down Specifically The glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Christ Where by the way the Deity and Godhead of Christ is strongly proved from hence against the Arrians as Hierom and Chrysostom well observe The Apostle shows who this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this great God is it is saith he our Saviour Jesus Christ but that only in transitu To speak then of the Object of a Christians hope set down here Specifically 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour There is a threefold Epiphany or appearing of Christ 1. There is an appearing of Christ to us as when he was Incarnate Isa 9.6 To us a Child is born This was a happy appearing when this morning Star appeared then salvation appeared to mankind when Christ took flesh he did marry our humane nature to the divine nature The Virgins womb was the place consecrated for the tying that knot Great is this Mystery God manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 'T is such an aenigma as the Angels adore 1 Pet 1.12 God said the man is become as one of us Gen. 3.22 but now we may say God himself is become as one of us he made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the likeness of men Phil. 2.7 This was Christs first appearing 2. There is an appearing of Christ in us that is when he appears in our hearts which is called a forming of Christ in us Gal. 4.19 Christ is said to appear in us when by the operation of his grace he transforms him into his own image In the Incarnation Christ made himself like to to us by Sanctification he makes us like to him holy as he is holy and this is a comfortable appearing What are we better for Christs appearing in our flesh unless he appear in our hearts what are we the better for a Christ without us unless we have a Christ within us Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory 3. There is an appearing of Christ for us and that two wayes 1. Christ appears for us as an Advocate Hebr. 9.24 He is entred into heaven there to-appear in the presence of God for us 'T is a Metaphor borrowed from our Law-Courts where the Atturney pleads for the Client so Christ pleads as an Advocate for the Saints Satan is the accuser but Christ is the Advocate he answers all bills of Indictment brought in and he appears saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the presence of God for us the High Priests under the Law appeared before the Ark and the Mercy-seat which was but a Type of Gods presence but Christ appears in the very presence of God for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the face of God he spreads his merits before his Father and in the vertue of his bloody sufferings pleads for mercy and if Christ appear for us in heaven shall not we appear for him upon earth 2. Christ appears for the Saints as a Judge and this appearing is meant in the Text looking for the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Christs first appearing in the flesh was dark and obscure his beauty was vail'd over Isa 53.2 all that saw the Man did not see the Mesiah But his second appearing as our Judge will be a glorious appearing like the Sun breaking out of a Cloud * Tunc ejus s●lgor Majestas omnibus inn●rescet Esti it will be a glorious appearing both in respect of Christ and the Saints 1. In respect of Christ himself and that thee manner of wayes 1. His Person will be glorious That light which shone upon Saint Paul surpassing the glory of the Sun Acts 26.13 was but a part of Christs beauty as a sparkle of the Sun of Righteousness what will it be when he shall appear in all his Spiritual embroidery 2. His throne will be glorious he shall sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the throne of his glory Matth. 25. he shall have his Chair of State set him more rich than Ivory or Pearl a Throne most sublime and magnificent 3. His attendants shall be glorious Matth. 25.31 When the Son of man shall come in his glory and all the holy Angels with him The Angels are the Courtiers of heaven they are compared to lightning Matth. 28.3 in regard of their sparkling lustre and these glorious sublimated spirits shall be Christi satellitium part of Christs Train and Retinue accompanying him to his Throne thus it will be a glorious appearing in regard of Christ 2. It will be a glorious appearing in regard of the Saints Christ will appear to do three things 1. Christ as a Judge will appear to acquit his people and that is by pronouncing the sentence Come ye blessed of my Father The debt-book shall be crossed in the blood of the Lamb. 2. Christ as a Judge will appear to vindicate his people The names of the godly many times lie buried in reproach but at that day they shall as