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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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husbandman that his land beare no thornes not briers not weeds if it beare him not good graine It is not enough for a servant that he do his Master no hurt but he must ●ee to it that he do his Masters worke For first obedience and good fruits are required at our hands in the Law of God besides the prohibition of sinne Secondly Christ dyed to this end that we might live righteously as well as die to sinne Thirdly because all the gifts of the Spirit bestowed on us in our regeneration are given to profit withall not to lay them up in a napkin 1 Cor. 12. Fourthly because we shall be judged at the last day according to our works Rom. 2.6 Use. And therefore this shewes the dangerous folly of such carnall people as think if they come to Church and live civilly and doe nobody no wrong they are out of all question in a right course And besides it should awake carelesse and sluggish Christians to look to their gifts and remember what accounts they will give to God for their unprofitablenesse and unfruitfulnesse 2 Pet. 1.8 Doct. 3. It is from hence evident that the only living is to live righteously He is worthy to be sayd to live that lives to righteousnesse a religious life is the best life And these are the reasons First because it is the most honorable life For to live to righteousnesse makes a man highly in the favour of God Psa. 11.7 Prov. 15.9 and it shewes that a man is borne of God 1 Ioh. 2.29 and besides it helps a man to the best and most blessed memoriall Prov. 10.7 and the fruits of righteousnesse are the best means of glorifying God Phil. 1.11 And therefore Salomon sayd well that the righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Pro. 12.26 And David saith They are the only excellent Ones Ps. 16. whereas every wicked man is lothsome and a sinfull life is a shamefull life Prov. 1● 5 c. 14.34 Secondly because it is the most profitable life and the most gainfull for blessings are upon the head of the righteous Pro. 10.6 The wicked worketh a deceit●ull work but to him that ●oweth righteousnes shall be a sure reward Pro. 11.18 And righteousnesse is both the best riches and the most durable Pro. 8.18 19 20. And it hath the promise of this life as well as the life to come 1 Tim. 6. Iob 8 6. And the profit of righteousnesse will help a man when he is to die when the treasures of the wicked will profit nothing Pro. 10.2 Yea a good man lacketh not an inheritance for his childrens children and the wealth of the sinner is many times layd up for the juit Thi rely because it is the safest and quietest life Hee that walketh uprightly walketh surely Prov. 10.19 and the fruit of righteousnesse is peace Iam. 3.18 For Gods promise is that no evill shall happen to the just whereas the wicked shall be filled with mischiefe Pro. 12.21 And Gods blessing makes them rich and he mingles no sorrow with it Pro. 10.21 and 15.6 And righteousnesse is reckoned as an impenetrable a●mour 2 Cor. ● 7 And God doth marke every one that doth righteousnesse and solaceth his heart Esay 64.5 And the very doing of good is sweetnesse to the ●ou●e Pro. 13.19 And whereas there is no peace to the wicked the righteous is at peace with God with Angels with the creatures and with all godly men Fourthly because it is the most durable life for the feare of the Lord prolongeth the dayes but the yeeres of the wicked shall be shortned Pro. 10. 27.30 The way of righteousnesse is life and in the path-way thereof is no death Pro. 12.28 As a whirl-winde so is the wicked seene no more but the righteous is an everlasting foundation Prov. 10.25 Fiftly because it is a life that ends the best of all mens lives for the wicked is driven away in his wickednesse but the righteous hath hope in his death and great hope too having the promises of a better life and so much glory as the eye of mortall man never saw nor eare of man heard nor came into the heart of a naturall man Pro. 14.32 1 Tim. 6. 1 Cor. 2.9 Sixtly because righteousnesse is more proper to the soule What is riches or honour or any outward thing to the soule of man or what shall it profit a man to provide the whole world to be his estate if hee provide not grace for his soule Riches profit but the outward estates of a man whereas righteousnesse profits the man himselfe And therefore Adams losse was greater in losing his innocency than in losing of Paradise What can it profit a man to have all other things good about him if he be not good himselfe Use. The Use should be first for triall Men should throughly search themselves whether they be indeed righteous men and the more carefully should they search because the most righteous on earth have their many ignorances and frailties There is no man but sinneth daily and in many things And besides a man may attaine to some kinde of righteousnesse and yet not enter into the Kingdome of heaven as there is a generation that are pure in their owne eyes and yet are not cleansed from their sins And the Pharisees had a righteousnesse that had many praises they gave almes and fasted and prayed long prayers and did that which was warrantable in respect of the Law outwardly and yet if our righteousnesse exceed not the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees we cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven Quest. But how may a man know all his infirmities notwithstanding he be truely righteous and have such a righteousnesse as doth exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees Ans. For answer hereunto I will cast the signes of a righteous man into two rankes First such as describe him in himselfe secondly such as describe him in the difference from Pharisaicall righteousnesse The signes that describe him in himselfe either appeare upon him in his infancy or in his ripe age In the very infancy of the just man even when God first changeth his heart and cleanseth him and raiseth him up to live righteously there be divers things by which he may discerne the truth of his sanctification as First by the dissolving of the stoninesse of his heart When God comes effectually to cleanse a man he takes away the stony heart out of the body and gives him a heart of flesh he may feele his heart melt within him especially when he stands before the Lord when the Lord is fashioning of him for himselfe by his Ordinances Ezek. 36.25 26. He hath a new heart that hath not a stony heart Secondly by the rising of the day-starre in his heart The Father of lights when he renueth the heart of a man causeth a sudden and heavenly light as it were a starre to shine in the understanding by vertue of which men see more into
feare but he that is guilty of many treasons hath great reason to be extreamly confounded in himselfe and this is thy case Secondly thy disobedience is the more grievous because thou hast received abundance of blessings from God who hath by them wooed thee to repentance and this will heap much upon thee Rom. 2.4 Esay 1.3 Thirdly thou must consider all the meanes thou hast had of amendment God hath planted thee in his garden the Church hee hath commanded his vine-dres●ers to bestow the paines and apply the meanes of growth to thee If now thou be not fruitfull this will be pleaded against thee which art still a barren fig●tree Luke 13.6 Fourthly it increaseth thy disobedience that thou hast been guilty of divers h●inous and soule evils as if thou have been a drunkard a filthy person a blasphemer of the Name of God a man of blood or the like Fiftly the continuance in sin thou hast long abused the patience of GOD and this heaps coales of further indignation against thee Rom. 2.4 5. and the rather because thy heart hath been to sin for ever for there is in the heart of unregenerate men a desire to sin for ever and it is a griefe to them to think that at any time they should not be able to live in sin still Sixtly thou hast offended against thine own vowes and covenants and the promises thou hast made to God both in baptisme and the communion and in other passages of thy life Seventhly it increaseth thy offence that thou hast dealt wickedly in the land of uprightnesse Esay 26.11 There thou hast offended where thou hast had the example of the godly to shew thee a better course It is ill to sinne any where though in Babel but it is worse to transgresse in Sion or Jerusalem even in the glorious Churches of Jesus Christ. Eighthly thy incorrigiblenesse adds to the heap of sin though the Lord hath afflicted thee yet thou hast not learned obedience by the things thou hast suffered but thou hast made thy heart like an adamant so as thou wouldst not return Ier. 5.2 3. Ninthly it is yet more that thou hast beene so farre from reforming thine own life that thou hast scorned and reproached the good conversation of the godly thou hast spoken evill of the good way of God Thus and many other wayes may the sinner charge his owne heart and thereby prepare himselfe to returne to the Lord while there is yet hope For if thou wouldest returne with all thy heart and take unto thee words and confesse thy sins and pray for forgivenesse and mourne before the Lord and turne away from thy owne wickednesse the Lord would shew mercy and the obedience of Christ would heale thy disobedience and God would love thee freely and the bloud of Christ would cleanse thee from all thy sins Hos. 14. Esay 55.7 1 Ioh. 1.7 and while it is yet to day the Lord sendeth to thee and beseecheth thee to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.19 21. Consider that God hath been with thee all this while having sent many others to hell for their sins and there is hope of forgivenesse the Lord hath received great offenders to mercy as the Israelites that often fel away from him Iudges 10. and Mary Magdalene and Peter and David and the thiefe upon the Crosse Consider that God hath offered thee thy pardon in the Sacrament Feare the Lord therefore and his goodnesse and returne with all thy heart and iniquity shall not be thy ruine Hitherto of their sin their punishment followes and so first upon their rulers and leaders in these words The stone which the Builders refused is become the Head of the corner Which words are taken out of Psal. 118.22 where they are used by the Prophet David and here quoted by the Apostle Peter The words have a double sense for they did concerne both David and Christ. As they concerned David this was the meaning that though the Nobles and Courtiers did despise and reject and oppose David yet s●ch was Gods providence that the man whom they rejected God made King of Israel and the chief stay and support of that State Now for this sense of the words divers things may be noted First that God hath raised up great men in the Common-wealth for this end that they might seeke the publique good and imploy their labours for the building up and prosperity of the State Which should both teach great men to think of their duties and the accounts they must make to God a● also it should teach the people to pray the more heartily for them and to obey them in all lawfull things Secondly wee may hence gather the imperfection of all humane things For in that earthly Kingdomes need building up still it shews that they attain to no perfection but at the best are still in progresse Thirdly that many times great men wilfully oppose the right and set themselves against the righteous and resist the will of God Which should teach us not to place our confidence in the great men of this world nor to be alwaies led by their example in opinions Fourthly that God will find out the wickednesse of great men and bring them to confusion God accepts not persons hee hateth sin in great men as well as in mean men and will crosse and confound their godlesse ungodly counsels Fiftly that God takes to himselfe the power to dispose of earthly Kingdomes and to give Kings and Rulers at his owne pleasure It was the Lords doing and it was marvellous that David should become the Head of the corner Psal. 118.23 The Lord pleads it as a part of his soveraigtny and prerogative to set up Kings By me Kings raigne Pro. 8. Which should teach Princes and Judges and Nobles to doe homage to God and acknowledge him for their Soveraign therefore serve him with fear Ps. 2. And it should teach the people to give honour and tribute and custome and obedience for conscience sake to their Rulers seeing the power that is is of God Rom. 13. Now as these words were understood in the case of David so was David herein a type of Christ and so the words are to be understood in the case of Christ also as our Saviour himselfe applies them Mat. 21. and as it is evident to be the meaning of the Apostle here And it is the drift of the Apostle to strengthen weak Christians against the scandall that might arise from the opposition of the Kingdome of Christ. For it might trouble amaze them to consider how Christ was opposed by the Scribes Pharises who were the great learned men of the time and such as were eminent in the Church and in the account of the most men were the chief persons that took care for Religion and the state of the Church and did excell all other sorts c. Now that this scandall might be removed he shews in these words First that nothing did therein fall out but what
thou wert a Prince borne thou must not inherit the first day and it is the better for us that it is so for so it is the safer from sinne violence Satan c. For you That is for such as are begotten againe some reade in us or in you to note that men must looke into their hearts whether they shall have heaven For if Christ and his spirit dwell not there they are never like to come to this glory but I reade it as before and so it plainly notes that none but converted Christians have any interest in this inheritance Lastly this inheritance is commended by the place where it lyeth it is in heaven The Holy Ghost would have us meditate much even of the very place of our glory but for explication of this I propound two things 1. where heaven is 2. wherein it excelleth other places First by heaven I meane not the ayre as sometimes the word signifieth nor yet the heavenly moveable orbes that are visible above our head but the place of the blessed where God dwelleth and Christ in his body is ascended and where the spirits of just and perfect men now are Now where this place is cannot be knowne by sense because it is not obnoxious to any of the senses nor can we learne where it is by reason For it is true that the ninth heaven is not knowne by sense for we cannot see it or heare it move c. yet Astronomers by the effect of it though it be above the starry firmament have found it out certainely to be But now for the heaven of the blessed that extends not to us by any effect or influence and therefore cannot be known by reason Scripture onely doth reveale it and so it is manifest to be a place that is above us For Christ ascended up into heaven and we shall be where he now is It is called the high and holy place and Gods family is called Ierusalem that is above and the Psalmist saith God dwelleth on high so that it is a place farre above all those visible elements and heavens As for those that imagine heaven is every where where God is we may manifestly conceive of their error For so to goe to heaven were to goe to hell for God is there also as the Psalmist faith and our Saviour saith not Our Father which art every where but Our Father which art in heaven and besides God and the devill doe not keep house together But we know that the devills live in this ayre and every where round about us in these visible regions of the elements and therefore heaven must needs be above all these Now for the excellency of this place above all others who is able to describe it yet for help to thy meditation consider the names that be given to it It is called Paradise the Fathers house the throne of God the kingdome the heavenly Ierusalem 2. The shadowes by which the excellency thereof is signified In the 21. of the Revelation a search is made through all the bowels of the earth to finde out all the precious treasures that could be had gold pearles and precious stones of all sorts and what can these serve to onely to shadow out the glory of the walls of the new Ierusalem and the gates and to pave the streets of that City But there is not treasure enough in the whole world so much as to shadow out the mansions that are there and the inward furniture or the glorious cloathing or dyet of the Worthies that shall dwell there much lesse the divine Royalties and prerogatives eternall of that excellent heaven 3. Consider but the summe of that which Divines out of the Scriptures write of it For substance It is a place obnoxious to no corruption alteration passion nor motion it is not whirled about as these heavens are For quantity it is greater then all this world besides For qualities it is most exceeding light most pleasant and most faire a place wherein none evill needs be found and none good can be wanting having upon it the very glory of God even a most divine splendor Verse 5. Which are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation which is prepared already to be shewed in the last time HItherto of our glorification The third argument followes and that is taken from our preservation unto glory which is this Verse It is two wayes amplified First by the meanes of our preservation and secondly by the end of our preservation The meanes are twofold First in God his power and secondly in us our faith The end is salvation which is also amplified first by the things which goe before it viz. preparation and revelation It is prepared to be revealed Secondly by the time in the last time From the coherence and generall consideration of these words three things may be briefly noted First that such is our wretched condition in this world in respect of corruption adversaries temptations c. that were it not for Gods mercy and power neither present grace would hold out nor the glory of heaven ever be enjoyed Secondly that the same God that of his mercy begot us againe and provided an incorruptible inheritance doth undertake also to preserve it hee takes it upon himselfe to see it accomplished which should bee a singular comfort 〈…〉 Thirdly that Gods children may draw many arguments of consolation and get great experience of joy from the very observation of Gods providence in preserving them Kept The word in the originall signifieth properly to keep as a towne is kept from the enemies in the time of war with a garrison and so it is rendered 2 Cor. 11.32 where it is said Aretas kept the City with a garrison In the third of the Galathians the word is used metaphorically to expresse our condition under the Law he saith we were kept under the Law that is the sinner having transgressed was kept by the Law as it were under a strong garrison that he could not possibly escape unlesse he be delivered by Christ the law will hold him so fast he shall not possibly get away now here it is used to expresse the wonderfull safety of all men and women truly converted they are kept with a garrison wherein two things may bee noted First that the dearest of Gods children in this world are in continuall war they are ne●er at such rest and peace as to discharge their garrison seldome or never but they are continually in war either outward with the world of wicked men or with crosses that daily assaile them or else inward with temptations Heaven properly is the rest of the godly or if they bee at any time free yet they are in danger and therefore still stand upon their guard which should teach us under either afflictions or temptations never to account it strange and if at any time God give us some little breathing not to grow secure
the Papists for 1. This word of God was afterwards written and so written as nothing must be added Rev. 21.18 2. The doctrine here reported was delivered by the holy Ghost sent downe from heaven as the coherence shews Therefore unlesse they can shew the like authority for their traditions they say nothing 3. Their traditions were of the first sort and so condemned in Scriptures Secondly we may note that Christians when their hearts are turned unto God doe see a wonderfull glory in spirituall things They see that which the Prophets desired to see and could not Mat. 13 16,17 2 Cor. 3.16 17 18. which is one difference betweene the knowledge of the godly and the knowledge of the wicked For wicked men have but a dark glimmering knowledge that tends to basenesse and bondage and this should teach us to pray for the spirit of wisdome and revelation to know the riches tha● is in Christ Jesus being daily carefull that the god of this world doe not hide the glorious Gospell of Christ from us But have we the will of God onely by report This word report belongs principally to the first times before the Scriptures of the New Testament were written and so the word was sure enough being delivered by Apostolicall men who confirmed it by miracles And if the word doe also belong to our times then God● Ministers are said to report Gods will unto us as Embassadors doe the wills of Princes by the instructions given in their commissions or as Lawyers report the law out of their great Charter or Statute-books or as Physitians report their remedies out of the books of practice and tryed experiments It is true that the doctrine of holy things is like unto a report 1. In respect of wicked men who passe all over as a tale that is told or respect it at best but as a nine dayes wonder 2. In respect of godly men who receive it but by peeces and degrees not as one continued story but as a report 3. In respect of the matter of happinesse it is so removed from our natures and we have so little right unto it that it comes to us as a report not a● any thing we knew before or could expect or looke for 4. In respect of the opportunity of it if wee take not hold of it in the very season it will be gone The Lord doth not every day set before us life and death but onely at some times and then how soone is the voice gone if our hearts open not to receive it Thus of the things contained in Gods answer as they are barely propounded Now in the words that follow they are further commended to us First by the efficient causes of them By them which preached the Gospell unto you The Gospell is diversly accepted in Scripture Sometimes it signifies the history of the life and death of Christ so in the title of every Evangelist his booke and so 2 Tim. 2.8 Mat. 26.13 Sometimes it signifies the glorious tidings of Christ come in the flesh and of salvation in him so it was promised by the Prophets Rom. 1.2 Act. 13.32 but most usually it signifies in generall the joyfull newes of happinesse eternall through the favour of God in Christ Jesus notwithstanding our misery in our selves and this was called the promise in the Old Testament and the Gospell in the new The Greek word properly signifieth good newes and in the New Testament the word is used to expresse that most happy newes of God reconciled in Christ and of perfect happinesse in him Now because this newes contains the more excellent part of Gods word therefore I will consider of it more exactly This heavenly newes is the more admirable if we consider 1. What it is that the Gospell doth signifie 2. How we are assured of the newes in the Gospell 3. What are the effects of it 4. What is required in the persons that have any part in this newes Then I would resolve certaine questions and lastly make some use of all For the first the Gospell brings newes unto forlorne men 1. Of peace and reconciliation with God The Gospell of peace 2. Of remission and forgivenesse of our sins Act 10.43 3. Of freedome from death and condemnation 4. Of a divine and most sufficient righteousnesse to be revealed from heaven Rom. 1.16 17. 5. Of eternall life The Gospell of the Kingdome Mat. 9.35 and all for Christ Jesus sake the son of David Rom. 1.23 But how can we be certaine of this newes 1. By the testimony of the Spirit 2. By the vaticinies of the Prophets 3. By the miracles that first confirmed it 4. By the testimony of Christ himselfe that in our nature preached it Mat. 4.13 5. By the word of God or of the Apostles The effects of the Gospell are 1. It brings life and immortality to light 2 Tim. 1.10 2. It melts the hearts of Gods elect more then any thing with voluntary griefe for sin it makes men condemne themselves in the flesh 1 Pet. 4.6 3. It revives and refresheth with wonderfull encouragements 1 Pet. 4.6 4. It makes a man sacrifice himselfe to God Rom. 15.16 5. It is the ministery of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 6. It fenceth the affections against the love care after worldly things Hence we are said to be shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace 7. It establisheth hope Col. 1.23 8. It is the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 Fourthly there are eight things required in every one that would have part in the Gospell 1. Reformation of life 2. Faith and trust in it Mat. 16.15 16. Eph. 1.13 Heb. 4.2 and to this end get evidence and seale to it Eph. 1.13 3. A singular estimation of it so great as 1. Our chiefest praise should be in the Gospell 2. We should be content to suffer any thing for it and not be ashamed of the afflictions or bonds of the Gospell Marke 8.35 10.29 1 Thes. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.8 Philem. 13. 4. Poverty of spirit Esay 61.1 5. A diligent strife and constant endevour to attend upon it wee should presse to it Luke 16.16 6. Professed subjection to it 2 Cor. 9.12 7. We should endevour to live so as might become the Gospell Phil. 1.27 8. We should continue in it and not be moved away from the hope of it Col. 1.23 a vile offence to be turned from it Gal. 1.6 But was the Gospell never preached till now that hee saith it is now reported Distinguish If the Gospell be taken for the newes of Christ come in the flesh then it was not preached till the times of Christ and the Apostles But if it be taken for the promise of grace and pardon in Christ it was given in Paradise to Adam and continued by the Patriarks and Prophets Act. 10. 43. Heb. 13.8 Moses wrote of Christ Ioh. 5.46 Moses wrote of Christ two waies 1. By writing the promise concerning
a perfect hope they are sure to lose heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 Deut. 29.19 c. 3. Of weak and wayward Christians This doctrine should found in their eares as a great reproofe Why doe ye doubt oh ye of little hope doth God require a perfect hope and are yee still after so many daies so much unsetled unperfected We should account it a great shame to have but a little hope especially after so long profession and so much meanes and so many pledges of Gods love 4. Of backsliding Christians that fall away or to ●se the phrase of the Apostle are moved away from the hope of heaven either internally by an habituall forgetfulnesse of it or externally by revolt or apostasie to the love of the world These are so far from perfecting their assurance that they fall away from it Thirdly this should serve for instruction to quicken us to use all meanes for perfecting of our hope devoting our selves to the study of heavenly things and to the daily contemplation of the glory to come according to the counsell of the Apostle Heb. 6.11 not suffering slothfulnesse to hinder from the seri●us performance of our duties herein ver 12. Lastly here is great encouragement to all such of Gods servants as doe trust upon God for their salvation the Lord will never fa●le them that trust in him and whatsoever become of the hypocrite yet will he never cast away the perfect man Iob 8.13 20. If God require so great trust it imports there is a sure preparation of a glorious estate Oh saith the Psalmist how great is his goodnesse that he hath laid up for them that trust in him Psal. 31.19 Thus of the m●nner of our hope Trust perfectly Now followeth the object of it viz. The grace which is to be brought unto us in the revelation of Iesus Christ and here first of the object it selfe and then of the time of the communication of it The grace which is to be brought unto you Grace sometimes signifies the Gospell Tit. 2.11 sometimes the favour of God in Christ so in the salutations of the Epistle sometimes an externall calling or function so Paul calls his Apostleship a grace Rom. 1.16 sometimes the gifts of the holy Ghost so usually lastly sometimes the glory of heaven so here It is true that some reade it the grace that is brought in the revelation of Iesus Christ and so it meanes that true grace which in this world the Elect doe receive when Christ is revealed to them in their conversion to God by the mighty power of the Gospell and so foure things might be observed 1. That God revealeth his Sonne in all that shall be saved at some time of their life or other 2. That Christ is never revealed in us till the time the grace of the sanctifying Spirit be wrought in us and the riches of Gods graces in his promises be declared to us For there is a double grace in the revelation of Christ. 1 The declaration of Gods grace in his promises 2. The possession of the graces of his holy Spirit 3. That were not this grace is brought unto us offred and urged upon us we would live and die without it 4. That when we know our interest in Gods favour and that wee have received the true grace of Christ we should trust perfectly in it and that i● all the foure senses before opened But I take it in the sense as it is rendred by the Kings Translators and so understand it of the glory of heaven which is to be considered both in the nature of it it is called grace and the time of manifestati●n not on●●y in generall that is to be brought unto us but in speciall at the revelation of Iesus Christ. Grace The glory of heaven is called grace in three respects 1. Because it is given freely without our deserts as the Scriptures prove Eph. 2.5.8 Tit. 2.11 Rom. 4.16 5.21 2. Because it is assured unto us by grace as the body of Christ is called bread because it is signified by it so our hope and everlasting consolation is assured by grace 2 Thes. 2.16 3. Because grace and holinesse is the greatest part of the kingdome of heaven For righteousnesse is the maine thing wherein the kingdome of God consists as the image of God in the creation was Adams greatest happinesse not Paradice onely see Psal. 17. ult Rom. 14.17.1 P●t 3.7 5.10 The Uses are 1. We should therefore disclaime al● conceit of our owne me●its and use our hearts to it affectionately to professe that we are all that we are onely by the grace of God 1 Cor. 15.10 2. It should inflame our thankfulnesse we sh●uld never be without this sacrifice considering we have so great inheritance by the meere grace of God in Christ. It is worth the noting that the same word for thankfuln●sse doth signifie grace in the originall 3. We should have our conversation according to the grace of God 2 Cor. 1. 12. seei●g grace is that which will live by us for ever we should be taken up with a perpetuall care of getting and increasing of it 4. Seeing God doth all for us freely w● should be importunate in prayer that he would make us worthy of the 〈…〉 him to fulfill all the goo● pleasure of his own goodnesse especially the work● of our faith with power that h●● name and grace may be glorified in u● 2 The● ● 11 12. 5. We should learne to shew mercy as God doth 1. Though they deserve it not 2. In gr●at abun●ance 3. In matters of holinesse as much as any other way it being the best meanes to shew mercy to the soules of men 4. To bring it to them not tarry till it be sought of us 5. In the most seasonable time God doth not give heaven or his blessi●gs all at once as men doe their workes of mercy all at one time of the yeere 6. With constancie God will never leave till they be in heaven 7. With faith and faithfulnesse so as promised mercy may be trusted on without faile God never disappoints after he hath promised wee may trust perfectly on it Which is to be broug●t unto you From the manner of the propounding of the words divers things may be noted 1. That the Christians happinesse in hope is better than the carnall mans felicity present They must trust upon the grace to be brought yea so a● they trust not in any thing el●e For they are sure to have their happinesse and to enjoy it when they have it so are not carnall men of any thing they hold as we may see by experience Is it not better for a poore man to have the hope of heaven when h● dies then to be as some great men have been which are now co●founded and mined 2. God hath thought it meet to deferre the glory of heaven it is to be brought it is not brought already If any a●ke why God doth not give heaven
so matchlesse and perfect a rule and canon of holinesse written in the word of God to direct us 3. Having our natures by regeneration in part healed and freedome of will in part restored so as no● if wee be not holy it is because wee will not be holy 4. Having such mighty helps as are 1. The assistance and supply of the spirit of grace within us 2. Prayer with a promise of granting whatsoever we aske 3. Guides and spirituall Pastors to oversee and direct us 4. A cloud of witnesses even the examples of the godly of all sorts 5. Such acceptation with God if we be willing and love to be his servants Act. 10.36 But of this in the next point 4. Here is implyed how infinitely kinde God is in accepting our holy endevours if we desire to be holy in all our conversation he will account it to be holy as he is holy and yet alas it comes ten thousand degrees short of the holinesse of God yea far short of what it should be yea which is more of what it might be in us 5. The image of God is in conversation as well as nature we resemble God not onely in the renovation of our nature but in the renewed actions also so then we beare Gods image 1. In nature 2. In action or obedience Of this later here 6. A Christian should be especially carefull of his outward conversation even to shew forth the light of good works and holy carriage before men Wee should be exceeding carefull to expresse holinesse in conversing one with another There are many motives 1. We are Gods witnesses 2 Tim. 2.2 2. T is a good profession 2 Tim. 2.2 3. There are many witnesses to observe us 2 Tim. 2.2 4. Carnall men are crooked and perverse Phil. 2.16 5. A holy conversation will silence foolish men 1 Pet. 2.15 6. It will bring much glory to our heavenly Father Mat. 5. 7. It proves our justification and foretels our salvation 8. To walk upright is to walk safely Prov. 9. T is as it were to live in heaven Phil. 3.20 10. It will support us in wrongs adversity Act. 23.1.2 Cor. 1.12 11. It will shew our knowledge is not idle 2 Pet. 1.8 12. It furthers our reckoning and provides us acceptation in the day of death and judgement 2 Pet. 3.11 Rev. 14.13 7. If we would be holy as God is holy we must be holy in all conversation that is we must shew respect to all the commandements of God wee must shew a care of religion as well as vertue of godlinesse as well as honesty of mercy as well as just dealing to enemies as well as friends at home as well as abroad toward inferiors as well as superiors in prosperity as well as adversity in all companies as well as one c. Mark it in the tryall of our selves by this doctrine we may know infallibly whether wee be called or beare the image of God or no for if there be any one sinne that we will not forsake or any one commandment we are not desirous to obey it will prove all is n●ught in us Heb. 13.18 8. Lastly we must here further observe that if we would have comfort that we beare the image of Gods holinesse we must be carefull of the manner of our conversation as well as the matter For though these words ● all manner may note the extent unto the matter of all holinesse yet there is no evident reason why a great part of the meaning of the holy Ghost should not be restrained to the manner as the word sounds Now there are divers things in the manner of our conversation to be observed for the resembling of Gods holinesse 1. The first is godly purenesse we must in our conversation shew respect of God and godlinesse and keep our selves from the impurities of the times and watch against sin in all our waies 2 Cor. 1.12 2. The second is simplicity or holy harmlesnesse as it is opposed to fraud and fleshly wisdome and shews it selfe in a plaine and evident desire to doe what God requires though it be never so much scorned in the world 2 Cor. 11.3 1.12 3. The third is precisenesse or circumspection making conscience of lesser sins as well as greater and avoiding the appearances and occasions of evils as well as the evils themselves Eph. 5.15 4. Conversation in heaven which is so to use the world as to let our hearts still run upon God and his Kingdome directing all our actions some way to further that end Phil. 3.20 5. Meeknesse of wisdome which is shewed by lowlinesse and not being wise in our selves but doing good in a continued sense of our own vilenesse and unworthinesse to doe any service to God or man Iam. 3.13 This is called a conversation with feare 1 Pet. 3.2 ver 16. 6. Constancy Phil. 1.27 7. The affections of godlinesse or well-doing or zeale Tit. 2.14 Verse 16. Because it is written be ye holy as I am holy THE first argument no inforce the exhortation ver 13. is taken from the image of God in us and this reason is propounded in the first words of ver 14. and expounded in the two former verses and this and that two waies 1. By a description of the image of God in us ver 14 15.2 By the proofe in this verse In this proofe two things are to be observed 1. Whence the proofe is taken As it is written 2. What is alledged viz. Be ye holy as I am holy The meaning is that we stand bound to shew regard of our conformity to God in holinesse for this was long since required in the written word of God that wee should be holy as God is holy And first then concerning the Scripture from whence the proofes of doctrine are fetched Here I consider 1. Of the use of the Scriptures in generall for proofe of doctrine 2. Of the Scripture of the Old ●estament from whence this proofe is fetched For the first Proofes of doctrine are of three sorts 1. From men as they are men 2. From the senses 3. From God The first is not infallible the second is infallible in some respects the third is infallible simply for ever The testimonies of men work onely opinion as being but Arguments contengent and probable The testimonies of the senses and of God work knowledg or bring arguments necessary Hence it is that the Prophets and Christ and the Apostles in their teaching amongst the people almost never use any testimonies of men in matters of religion and when they doe it is chiefly for confutation of adversaries by their owne writers Now for the senses they are internall or externall Internall and so there is a double testimony 1. from the law of nature 2. from the conscience The externall are seeing hearing tasting c. and the argument from them is from experience The testimony of the senses is in●allible in some respects viz. as they are rightly
that was himselfe the onely begotten Sonne and heire of God by 〈◊〉 that God and man might be one in covenant This one is made God and man in person 2. For instruction we may learne divers duties 1. To blesse God for our Saviour Christ as the foundation of all our happinesse Shall 〈…〉 talke of his righteousnesse all the day Shall not everlasting joy be upon our heads Psal. 103.1 2. 71.23 Esay 35.10 1 Cor. 30 31. Eph. 1.6 7. 2. To seeke redemption in him both from the guilt of our sins Rom. 3. 24 25 Esay 44.22 and from the power of them and from the punishment of them Psal. 1 30.7 Iob 19.25 Psal. 34.19 c. Esay 63.16 50.2 Psal. 31.7 55.18 Hos. 13.14 3. Therefore we must serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all our daies Luke 1.68 74. Esay 59.20 Tit. 2.14 4. Let us follow the example of his humility and let him that would be great amongst us be the servant of all Mat. 20.28 Coherence 5. Honour the redeemed of Jesus Christ and ever say what one Nation is like to Christs people By his bloud Hitherto of the person by whom we were redeemed now followes the manner We were redeemed 1. by the passion of Christ 2. by the obedience of Christ and well are they joyned together for the justice of God required both and it hath ever been the nature of the Devill and the world to powre out flouds of tribulation after innocency especially in the eminent As it was with Christ so it is with all his members who are conformed unto him both in sufferings and obedience and as any are more innocent so is their passion the greater but let that passe The first point here intended is that the Holy Ghost would have us to know and knowing to be deeply affected with it that wee were ransomed by bloud yea by the bloud of Iesus Christ God and man For the explication of this point foure things briefly would be considered 1. That it is 2. What it is 3. Why it is 4. How it is 1. The first that our ransome was to be payed in bloud was foretold continually from the very fall by sacrifices in bloud and is proved by expresse Scriptures Heb. 9.13 14. Act. 20.28 2. For the second The bloud of Christ is diversly taken sometimes sacramentally and so the wine in the Sacrament is his bloud Mat. 26. sometimes mystically and so the bloud of the Martyrs is the bloud of Christ and so they are said to fulfill the rest of the passion of Christ sometimes imputatively and so the Saints have their robes made white in the bloud of the Lambe Revel 7.14 but most an end properly for his naturall bloud and so it is taken here For no Saints nor bloud of Martyrs can make atonement for our sinnes But by his bloud He syne●d●chically meanes all his passion even all that hee suffered of the malediction of the law as the surety for our sinnes 3. For the third If any aske why Christ in suffering endured this kinde of suffering I answer 1. Expiation for sinne was a way universally conceived of to be fittest done in bloud 2. Hereby he fulfilled both the Scriptures of the Prophets and the types went before of him 3. It was not onely for example but also for the sanctification of the like sufferings in the Martyrs of all ages 4. It was one of the curses of the law 5. It was his good pleasure hereby to shew his matchlesse love to us If we aske why this part of the passion of Christ is so much stood upon and so often remembred I answer 1. To shew the extremity of Christs humiliation 2. To shew the full accomplishment of all types 3. To confirme our faith in the assurance of the compleatnesse of our ransome 4. To settle our hearts with more affection to him 4. For the fourth Christ shed his blood for us many times As first in his Circumcision as the first fruits and pledge of the rest 2. In his sweate in the garden 3. When hee was crowned with thornes and whipped 4. When he was nailed on the Crosse. 5. When his side was pierced with a speare The last is chiefly intended The Use may be divers 1. It may informe us of our extreame misery by nature men must think upon it their native condition is most servile else there had not needed such a ransome by such blood 2. It may import the horrible misery of wicked impenitent sinners when they shall fall into Gods hands If Christ being but a surety for others suffered such extreame things oh what mercy can wicked men expect The very dolours of Christ should teach them how miserable their case shall bee 3. To consider that Christ hath bought us to himselfe by his blood should compell our affections to resolve more unchangeably and unfainedly to devote our selves to his service that paid so deare for us Shall we not live to him in all sincerity that was faine to shed his blood before he could redeeme us to himselfe as a peculiar people If any thing will doe it this should kindle the zeale of good workes in us 4. It may comfort us many wayes 1. It shewes that Christ wonderfully loves us 2. That the satisfaction of our debt is fully made 3. That his intercession daily for us must prevaile since his blood cryes in heaven for us and speakes better things then did the blood of Abel 4. That our nourishment to eternall life shall bee surely effected because he hath given himselfe as bread and his blood as drinke for us 5. It should teach us patience in all our afflictions or combats with sin seeing we have not resisted unto blood as the author and finisher of our faith did Heb. 12.3 4. Precious blood The blood of Christ is commended for the marvellous preciousnesse of it which may appeare besides the expresse affirmations of Scripture 1. By the continuall view of the slaine sacrifices 2. By the amasement of the creatures when it was shed The Sunne eclipsed the vaile of the Temple rent the rockstorne the earth trembling c. 3. By the admirable effects of it it appeased Gods anger Rom. 3.25 it purchased the Church Acts 20. 28. which all the gold and silver could not doe it ratified the covenant therefore called the blood of the covenant Luke 22.20 Heb. 9.18 it is our drinke indeed Iohn 6. it makes a holy consanguinity betweene Iew and Gentile they are all allyed in the blood of Christ Eph. 2.13 it overcomes the Devill Rev. 12. it saves us from the destroying Angels Heb. 11.18 it makes intercession for sins after calling continually in heaven Heb. 12.24 it purgeth the conscience from dead workes Heb. 9.14 and it opens the holy of holies and gives an entrance into the kingdome of heaven Heb. 10.19 Quest. But whence comes this preciousnesse into the blood of Christ Answ. I answer many wayes 1. Because it
they shew forth the vertues of Christ and resemble his holinesse of carriage 5. And hee is manifested with them in that eternall fellowship of glory in the kingdome of heaven It is the first kinde of manifestation which is here meant Now Christ was manifested for them 1. on earth 2. in heaven On earth he was manifested 1. In his incarnation when hee shewed himselfe in our nature thus was accomplished that great mysterie of godlinesse God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 2. In his passion for so he was that true brazen serpent Ioh. 3. 3. In his ascension shewing himself in triumph leading captivity captive and giving gifts unto men Eph. 4. In heaven he is manifested for us 1. By session 2. By intercession By session for so hee was declared wonderfully as head of the Church when being set at the right hand of God all power was given him both in heaven and earth And by intercession he daily appeareth before God for us In this manifestation Christ hath turned himselfe into all formes for us for he hath beene manifested for us as a servant to doe our work as a surety to pay our debts as a sacrifice to expiate for our sins as a treasurer to supply all our wants as a Prophet to instruct us as an Advocate to plead our cause and as a King to subdue our enemies and rule over us The points of doctrine from hence to be observed are these 1. That God may conceive a wonderfull love to his people and have a glorious plot for their good and yet not manifest it of a long time Coherence shews this The Use should be in all distresses publike or private for the Church where we live or for our owne particular to live by faith and not mistrust or murmure or limit God as if hee had forgotten the cause of his people little knowest thou the thoughts of God concerning thy good and therefore we should check our owne hearts as David did and say Why art thou so sad oh my soule c. Secondly if God once doe manifest his love to thee oh then know thy happinesse and rejoyce in thy portion how rich is that goodnesse the Lord shews thee when in prayer or the word he declareth hid and mighty things in his answers Ier. 33.3 2. When God manifests Christ he discovers his greatest treasure the utmost of all Gods benefits for Christ is unsearchable riches and ●● is hee in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed The Use is That therefore seeing God accounts the manifesting of hi● Son for us to be such a matter we should hence admire and praise this goodnesse of God that sent his owne Son into the world for our sakes and nou● in heaven honors and heares him for our sakes and in our behalfe especially this should quicken us unto the study of that sacred knowledge of Christ and his Kingdome and we should willingly serve so mighty and divine a Saviour 3. That it is no comfort to know that Christ is manifested till wee know he is manifested for us it is ill trusting to the knowledge of Christs incarnation we must seeke by all possible prayer and supplication that he may be acknowledged as a Saviour for us 4. The knowledge of Christs manifestation for us should be a point that should move and stir affection in the heart of every beleever and therefore it is to that end in this place urged But what should I doe might some one say to shew that my heart is affected towards my Saviour in this point of his manifestation either on earth or in heaven for me We must shew our affection herein foure waies 1. By beleeving in him without any doubting seeing in respect of the obedience of the law the discharge of our debt the conquest of our enemies the advocation in our causes c. he hath so fully manifested himselfe 2. By manifesting our selves without feare or delay for his sake wee should put our selves out into the open profession of his truth with all boldnesse but yet so as wee learne by his example how to manifest our selves● that is to say 1. In the fulnesse of time that is after good advise and sound deliberation too hasty profession often-times doth great hurt 2. With resolution to endure all sorts of reproaches or what else in the labour or opposition might befall us though we should be accounted as he was Esay 53. Heb. 12.3 3. With all integrity being carefull to shew forth his vertue and not to blemish our profession with any spotted conversation especially expressing our imitation of his humility and dove-like harmlesnesse and respect of Gods law and contempt of the world 4. With all constancy even unto the death that wee may receive the crowne of life 3. By manifesting our selves to be ready to do any service to his servants 4. By longing for the time of his last and full manifestation in his appearing at the last day Thus of the fift point concerning our redemption The sixt is who are redeemed viz. such as by Christ doe beleeve in God for you who by him doe beleeve in God verse 21. For you The maine doctrine is twofold 1. That beleevers onely have benefit by Christ for them was redemption intended for them Christ shed his bloud for them he was made a sacrifice for them he was manifested both by incarnation and the preaching of the Gospell and by intercession in heaven Ioh. 17.9 19. Heb. 11.6 The Use is 1. For instruction Be sure thou have faith whatsoever thou want 2 Cor. 13.5 thou perishest else for ever Ob. If I have all faith yet I may perish 1 Cor. 13.3 Sol. All faith to doe miracles not to lay hold on Christ. 2. It is all faith without love and lovest thou not Gods children 2. For cons●●●ation to the godly to whom God hath given this precious faith it is to be truely rich to be rich in faith it makes the poorest begger equall with the highest Monarch Iam. 2.5 because it procures priviledges better then that of Princes it intitles them to a birth better then that of the so●● of men Ioh. 1.12 13. and for honour they have favour with the Highest that can doe more for them then all the Kings of the earth Ioh. 3.16 and for alliance it makes them a kinn to all the Saints and for contentment it fills them with joy unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.9 and for victory it makes them more then conquerors Rom. ● and for riches they have all the treasures of Christ and for possessions they have an immortall inheritance especially their glory shall appeare in the day of Christ 2 Thes 1.10 3. It should quicken the godly to a care to repaire and establish themselves in the faith and to this end to pray as 2 Thes 1.11 4. It shews the miserable estate of divers men in the very visible Church There are three sorts of Christians
necessity of the doctrine when God saith a thing over againe it shewes us that that point must be knowne we must take notice of it it is a doctrine cannot be missed in the Church no worke of God will well go forward without it He must cry aloud that all flesh is grasse God lo●g● 〈◊〉 it were to have this doctrine take in our hearts He knowes a great part of the hardship of godlinesse were over if this were soundly digested oh that they were wise and would consider their latter end men would apply their hearts to wisdome if they had once learned to number their daies Thirdly it imports that God finds us wonderfull dull of hearing and forgetfull and carelesse of this doctrine and that naturally we are wonderfull impo●●nt in these considerations The Lord doth reproach us as it were for negligence that a plaine point should need to be repeated And therefore we should examine our selves seriously herein and not vexe God with our unteachablenesse in this point Oh how might God be displeased with us if he should call us to account herein have we not heard have we not seene from the beginning that all flesh is grasse yea hath not God heard our attestations we shake our heads we confesse it is true we are sometimes comforted and conceive some weake resolutions to thinke better of it and provide for death when God hath us here in the Church as it were in his schoole wee seeme as if wee had learn'd this lesson perfectly and yet miserable wretches that the most of us are we go home and forget all as if wee had never bin taught it nay is it not needfull for the most of us to be taught againe the same doctrine which the very last Sabboth we heard of this argument oh who is effectually perswaded amongst us indeed to lay it to his heart doth not this repetion smite us all certainly if we be not warned death may come before wee are aware and surprise us when wee shall not have time to learne to die There are many incoveniences come from this forgetting of the doctrine of our latter end and suffering it to runne out 1. Mens sins cleave fast unto them their filthinesse is in their skirts because they remember not their latter end Lam. 1.9 men live securely while they keepe out the thought of death 2. This brings many miseries upon men For when God cannot prevaile by doctrine he wil set upon us by judgment and then we may come downe wonderfully Deut. 32.29 30. where●s we might avoid our distresses by thinking of death voluntarily 3. We keep our spirits void of true magnanimity we can never tell our strength till we know whether we can die or no one would chase a thousand one I say of these that will consider of their latter end Deut. 32.30 4. We can never tell whether our knowledge bee right or no till wee have tryed it with thoughts of death they are a people without understanding that consider not their latter end Deut. 32.28 29. 5. Our hearts will grow harder and harder if we put out these remorses wrought in us concerning death as ●ron is harder the oftner it is heated and cooled 6. We keepe our selves without those joyes would come of the frequent contemplation of the glory of heaven we dare not thinke of heaven because we would avoid the thought of death 7. We give wonderfull advantage to the temptations of life 8. We keepe our selves without the comfort of one excellent signe of our salvation viz the love of the appearance of Christ we pray not that Gods kingdome may come wee desire not to be dissolved we dare not say with the Church Come Lord Iesus come quickly wee are loth to pray God to teach us to number our dayes for these things which have beene the excellent praises of the Saints we suffer not to be found in us 9. Lastly as I touched it before death may come suddenly and then what case are we in that suffer the thoughts of death thus to go out and be lost in us so as they produce no sound effect of preparation in us But what must we doe that wee might bring our selves to a more serious consideration of our mortality vanity how may this fault in us be helped Goe to God by prayer to forme this in thee strive with God by importuning his assistance in teaching thee to number thy dayes it is Gods worke we see the Israelites sentenced to death yet could not mind it and therefore Moses makes that prayer Ps. 90.12 2. It is an excellent helpe to inure our selves to die dayly to trie how wee could die by the most effectuall supposition of our present death compelling our selves to put the case what if I should now die 3. The thought of death would not be so put off if we had got a sound assurance of our salvation and of the remission of our sins it is want of assurance that makes many so afraid of dying And thus in generall In particular these words of the repetition afford us some observations that are common to both some speciall to each in which they differ one from another The observations that are common to both are these 1. That men both in their bodies and glory will decay man continueth not in one stay if you looke either upon his person or his estate 2. That man in both decaieth speedily he is of few daies in his body and full of trouble in his estate he commeth up like a flower and fleeth away as a shadow Ioh 14. 1 2. it shall be accomplished before his time that is before the time he fancieth to himselfe Ioh 15.33 The glory of may shall flee away as a bird from the birth and from the wombe and from the conception Hosh. 9.11 3. That man decaies insensibly he goes away by degrees both in his body and honor he declineth like a shadow and is consumed as it were by the moth 4. That man would come to this decay even without violence as the grasse and flowers perish though they were never cut downe 5. That when man is decaied either in body or estate he growes extreamely base vile he is but as a little stubble or as a rotten leafe or flower And all this should the more force upon man the care to provide for immortality and not to glory in or trust upon his outward condition especially it should make every one of us affraid of procrastination death doth not alwaies give warning nor can we alwaies foresee our ruine or losse of outward things And thus of what is common to both Now in speciall we may note 1. That the text acknowledgeth more stability in the body of man than in his glory For the flower falleth off or fadeth immediately after the spring usually whereas the stalke is greene long after and therefore it shews the vanity of such men as so greedily pursue the getting of outward
Christ. As the Israelites were chosen out of all the nations of the world so now the Elect out of all the ages of the world Quest. But what is there in the election of a Christian that should so much affect him as to account himselfe so wonderfull happy in that respect Answ. There are many things in our election which should much ravish us as to consider First when we were chosen viz. before the foundation of the world from all eternity Oh what a favour it is to thinke that God had such thought of us be fore ever wee had any beeing Eph. 1.4 Secondly by whom wee were chosen viz. by God Men are wont to be affected if any of any degree almost doe point out them above others unto any condition of praise or preferment To be beloved and in request with any is a contentment but especially if Kings or great persons should chuse us out to set their love upon us how would wee be moved with that Oh! what comparison can there be betweene the greatest men on earth and the great God in heaven Thirdly to what we were chosen viz. to a Kingdome and great glory For meaner persons to be chosen to any preferment it would prove a great contentment but especially to be advanced to the highest honours why God hath chosen and called us to no lesse an happiness than a Kingdome and glory yea his Kingdome and glory in heaven Mat. 25.34 2 Thess. 2.13 14. Fourthly for how long this choice must last viz. for ever To be chosen to a great office though it were but for a yeare is a great honour in the account of some men but especially to enjoy a Kingdome if it may be for divers yeares as twenty thirty forty or the like how would men rejoyce that could attaine to such an election But behold our happinesse is greater For we have by our Election an entrance into the everlasting Kingdome of Jesus Christ. Fifthly upon what reason we were chosen viz. upon Gods free and meere grace and goodnesse hee chooseth whom he will It was his good pleasure to chuse us to such a Kingdome we had it not by descent or desert Rom. 9.18.21 Ephes. 1.11 Sixthly in what manner he chose us viz. unchangeably To be chosen to so great an estate though it had beene but during pleasure and that pleasure to such as might change had beene a great advancement but Gods purpose remaines according to his choice Rom. 9. and whom he elected he calls and whom hee calls he justifies and whom he justifies he glorifies Rom. 8.30 The foundation of God remaineth sure 2 Tim. 2.19 Lastly to consider whom he chose which hath a double incitation in it For first the Scripture tels us Many are called but few are chosen Now this increaseth our honour that but a few onely can be admitted to the participation of it If many had enjoyed it the commonnesse of it might have had in it some occasion of lessening the value of it Deut. 7.6 7. Mat. 20.16 Secondly God chose us that were most vile creatures polluted in blood covered with filthinesse fallen from him by vile Apostasie and our rebellion in our first parents and being guilty of many treasons in our owne actions And this should much move us that God should set his heart upon such vile wretches as we every day are proved to bee Uses The use of this may be divers But I will onely stand upon two uses First the consideration hereof should enforce upon us a care to make our election sure 2 Pet. 1.9 Quest. Now if any aske By what signes I may know that I am elected of God Answ. I answer There bee divers infallible signes of election As for example First separation from the world when God singles us out from the world it doth manifest that he hath chosen us from all eternity Now that this separation may be proved sure and infallible we must know First that it is wrought in us by the Gospell 2 Thess. 2.14 Secondly That it containes in it a contempt of earthly things so as our hearts doe unfainedly disclaime all happinesse in the things of this world as out of true judgement resolving that all is vanity and vexation of spirit The love of God and the love of the world cannot stand together 1 Ioh. 2.14 Thirdly that it with-drawes us from needlesse society or delight in the men of this world who follow the lusts of life and mind onely earthly things Psalm 26. Fourthly an estimation of spirituall things above all the world Secondly a relying upon Jesus Christ and the covenants of grace in him so as we trust wholly upon him for righteousnesse and happinesse Hence it is that faith is called the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1.1 Thirdly the sanctification of the spirit 2 Thess. 2.13 which hath in it both the reformations of those evills which were wont to prevaile over us and were most beloved of us as also the qualifying the heart with such graces as are supernaturall such as those mentioned in the Catalogue 2 Pet. 1.5 6 7 8 9. and such are those graces heretofore mentioned in the sight of salvation Fourthly the testimony of the spirit of Adoption For every godly man hath a witnesse in himselfe 1 Ioh. 5.10 Rom. 8.15 Gods Spirit doth assure Gods Elect that they are elect and that it doth principally by sealing up unto them the promises of Gods Word Ephes. 1.13 14. Fiftly by the conformity of Christians unto Christ in affliction for the Elect are predestinate to be made like unto Christ in sufferings Now because this signe must be warily explicated we must understand that barely to bee afflicted is not a signe of Election For so may and are wicked men as well as godly men but to become like Christ in the suffering is the signe which that it may bee more infallible and cleare wee must observe in these sufferings First the kindes as for example to be hated and scorned of the world and reviled and persecuted is a token that we are not of the world because the world would love his owne Ioh. 25.18 19. Secondly the causes as if we be hated for goodnesse and do not suffer as evill doers Ioh. 15.8 21. Psal. 38.20 when our afflictions are the afflictions of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.8 9. Mat. 5.12 Thirdly the effects that we love obedience by our sufferings Heb. 5.8 and be made more holy and fruitfull and quiet and meeke and humble by them Heb. 15.11 so as wee can say It was good for mee that I was afflicted Psal. 119. Fourthly by the manner that wee be like Christ in silence Esa. 13.7 patience and despising the shame of the crosse Heb. 12.1 2. 1 Pet. 2.21 22 23. prayers to God and submission to Gods will with strong cryes and fervencie Heb. 5.7 Fifthly by the issue when God giveth a like end to the triall of his servants as he did unto the passion of Christ making
can to our kinred even to the houshold of faith for this very reason because they are our kinsmen in the spirit and in particular we should be ready to do all that for them which the law of kinred bindeth us unto viz. First we should acknowledge them and not hide our selves from any that is godly Secondly wee should receive one another heartily and willingly without grudging or murmuring Thirdly we should defend one another and be ready in all oppositions to stand for the godly Fourthly we should shew all bowels of mercy and tender kindnesse and pity and sympathize in their necessities and miseries Fourthly we should hence learne to be provident to preserve our owne reputation that we be no way a dishonour and shame to our kinred but learne of the wise steward by lawfull meanes to preserve our credits and provide for our selves though hee did it by unlawfull for our Saviour noted this defect when he said The children of this world are wiser in their generation than the children of the light Luk. 16.8 Thus much of their kinred or generation A royall Priest-hood These words containe the two next prerogatives which have so much connexion one with another that they are joyned together as inseparable The Apostle makes a comely and effectuall inversion of the words recorded in Exodus 19. for there they are said to be a Kingdome of Priests which the Apostle more plainly expresses in the words A royall Priest-hood They are both Kings and Priests but both with difference from other men of either of those callings They are Kings not profane or civill onely but sacred Kings they are Priests not common or typicall Priests but royall The one word tels their dignity to which they are ordained the other their office in respect of God These words with those that follow are in Exodus expounded or rather propounded indefinitely to the Israelites but in this place limited to the elect onely which shewes that promises and priviledges of right belong onely to the elect and chosen of God c. Royall Christians may be said to be Royall in foure respects First comparatively with wicked men for whatsoever their condition bee yet if their estate be compared with the miserable condition of all impenitent sinners it is a Royall estate they are like Kings in respect of them Secondly as they are united to his body who is the greatest King as members of Jesus Christ who is King of Kings Revel 19. Thirdly because they looke for a Kingdome It is their Fathers pleasure to give them a Kingdome they shall one day raigne and therefore are Royall Fourthly because for the very present in this life they have the state of Kings They have the state of Kings in this life I say For first they appeare clad in purple The Romans knew who was King when they saw the man clad in purple Robes Christians have royall garments garments of Salvation the righteousnesse of Christ doth cover them which so soone as they put on they are saluted for Kings in heaven Secondly they have the attendance of Kings a great traine and guard about them no King like any of them that is not one of them for they have the Angells for their guard and as ministring Spirits to them Psalm 34. and 91. Heb. 1.14 Thirdly they have the dominion of Kings and soveraignty and power of Kings and so first the whole world is their Kingdome in which they raigne they are heires of the world Rom. 4 and so our Saviour faith They inherit the earth Matth. 5. Fourthly their owne hearts are as a large Kingdome in which they sit and raigne governing and ruling over the innumerable thoughts of their mindes and affections and passions of their hearts among which they doe justice by daily subduing their unruly passions and wicked thoughts which like so many Rebels exalt themselves against the obedience should be yeelded to Christ the supreme Lord and Emperour as also by promoting the weale of all those saving graces which are placed in their hearts nourishing and lifting up all good thoughts and cherishing all holy desires and good affections conscience being by commission the chiefe Judge for their affaires of this whole Kingdome Fifthly it is something royall and which proves them to bee Kings they have a regall supremacie A King is hee that judgeth all and is judged of none such a one also is every spirituall man said to be 1 Cor. 2. ult Sixthly they prove themselves Kings by the many conquests they make over the world and sathan sometimes in lesser skirmishes sometimes in some maine and whole battels Ob. Might some one say Is this all the Kingdome of a Christian This is infinitely below the magnificence and honour of an earthly Kingdome c. Sol. God hath done more for the naturall man or for the nature of men for providing meanes for this spirituall Kingdome than in opening a way for earthly Kingdomes which may appeare by divers differences For First none but great men and of great meanes can attaine to the Kingdome of this world but here the poore may have a Kingdome as well as the rich Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven Secondly while the father lives the little child cannot raigne whereas in this Kingdome little ones attaine to the Kingdome and safely hold it Matth. 18. Thirdly this Kingdome is of heaven wheras the others are only of the earth Fourthly these Kings are all just there is none unrighteous can possesse these thrones they are all washed justified and sanctified there is not a drunkard a railer a buggerer and adulterer a murtherer or any the like amongst them which is no priviledge belonging to the Kingdome of this world Rom. 14.17 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Gal. 5.21 The godly are Kings such as Melchisedech was somewhat ob●cure in the world but they raigne in righteousnesse in peace none like them Heb. 7. Fifthly the godly have received a Kingdome that cannot be shaken Their Kingdome is an everlasting Kingdome Heb. 12.28 but all the Kingdomes of the world may be and have beene shaken and will be ruined and end whereas the godly that set out in soveraignty over lesser dominions and with lesse pompe yet increase so fast till at length they attaine the most glorious Kingdome in the new heavens and new earth The use of all this may be divers Uses First for singular comfort to the godly what account soever the world makes of them yet here they see what God hath ordained them unto it matters not for the worlds neglect of them for Gods Kingdome comes not by observation and in particular it should comfort them into two causes First in matter of service when they come to stand before the Lord they must know that they are honourable in Gods sight He respects them as so many Kings in his presence Secondly in the mortification of vices they have received power and authority as Kings and
therefore no rebellious conversation can so exalt it selfe but it may be subdued The oyle of God is upon them and what can the greatest Rebels doe against the power of the King But secondly withall here is terror to wicked men For this is the priviledge onely of the godly and it is certaine that wicked men are in Gods account as base as the godly are honourable they are thrust besides these thrones And so are both sorts of wicked men for not only openly profane men are to be smitten with this terrour but also hypocrites It is true indeed that hypocrites act the parts of Kings but they are onely such Kings as Players are upon a stage they speake of the words or the words of Kings but are not so indeed For they are by the wiser and better sort accounted as Rogues and the scum of the people even so are wicked men in Gods account neither will their outward shewes helpe them For the Kingdome of God is tried not by words but by the power of it 1 Cor. 4.20 And withall unruly Christians may be hence checked such as will not be ruled by their teachers such were the Corinthians they reigned without Paul and their godly teachers But the Apostle wisheth they were indeed Kings or did indeed reigne Why bearest thou the name of a King and canst not rule thy passions Thirdly divers uses for instructions may be hence gathered for First we should hence learne to honour poore Christians they are spirituall Kings as well as the kings of the earth And we know what a stirre we would make to entertaine the Kings of this world Iam. 2.5 Secondly we should hence bee stirred up in desire after this Kingdome to pray for it that it may come and that God would count us worthy of such a Kingdome Matth. 6. 2 Thess. 1.5 And to this end we should looke to two things First that we seeke this Kingdome first above all other things Mat. 6. Secondly that we should refuse no paines nor hardship for the entertainment of true godlinesse This Kingdome of Heaven should suffer violence and the violent onely will take it by force Mat. 11.12 It is an easie thing for Iohn to be a partner in the patience of the brethren when hee is a partner with them in the Kingdome of Jesus Christ Revel 1.9 It is no great thing men can suffer if we consider it is for a Kingdome and the want of outward things should the lesse trouble us if God make us so rich in spirituall things Thirdly we should hence especially learne to live in this world like Kings and this Christians should shew First by declaring their conquest over the passions and desires of their own hearts It is a royall quality in a Christian to be able to shew all meeknesse of minde and temper and sobriety in being able to deny unto himselfe what may not be had without sinne or offence Hee that winnes the conquest over his owne heart is greater than he that winnes a City Secondly putting on the Lord Jesus The righteousnesse of Christ is the robe of a Christian and since all the life of a Christian is a high feast hee should alwaies put on his robe to distinguish him from all other men and this righteousnesse is both the impured righteousnesse of Christ as also the inherent vertues of Christ. Thirdly by serving the publike Kings are the common treasure of the subjects they are appointed for the good of many Christians and should shew that they remember that they are Kings by devoting themselves to all possible profitablenesse of conversation Fourthly by their contentation What should they feare or what should discontent them Hath no● God given them a Kingdome and great glory Fifthly by subduing carnall and servile feares of men Why should Christians feare the faces of great men on earth are they not spirituall Kings themselves and is not the breath in the nostrils of the greatest men on earth why art thou then afraid to come before them c. Priest-hood The fourth thing for which Christians are commended is their Priest-hood which notes the honour of their imployment in things that concerne God and his service Es● 61.6 Rev. 1.6 c. Now the Priest-hood of Christians is a singular priviledge if we first either consider the kindes of Priest-hood or secondly the specialties of their calling and imployment First for the kinde The Priest-hood of Christians is better than the Priest-hood of the Levites the sonnes of Aaron because it is a royall Priest-hood they are Priests after the order of Melchizedeck as Christ himselfe was in which order every Priest was a King so were none of the sonnes or house of Aaron Secondly and for the specialties of favour imported in the Priest-hood of Christians divers prerogatives are included in it For first the Priest-hood of a Christian imports separation and consecration to God The godly of all the people in the world are the only people that are devoted to God chosen out of all the world as his portion as the Levites were out of all Israel Secondly it imports neernesse constancie of communion with God The Priests lived in Gods house and stood alwaies before the Lord dwelt in his presence and did approach neerer to him than all the people else so do the godly spiritually They onely dwell in his sight and enjoy his speciall presence and see the glory of his presence and have their soules satiated with fatnesse arising from the comfort of Gods favourable presence Ier. 31.14 Uses Now the consideration of this excellent Priest-hood of Christians should serve first for consolation secondly for instruction and thirdly for great reproofe First it should much comfort godly and carefull Christians to consider how neere God hath placed them to himselfe even in his chamber of presence as it were and how meanly soever the world doth account of their service yet they hence know that their Priest-hood is a royall Priest-hood and the godly imployments of religious men are more honourable than the greatest imployments of the greatest Monarchs of the earth and withall it may specially comfort fearfull Christians against one scrup●e They sometimes are afraid to goe into Gods presence or they doubt their accesse they are so unworthy to come before the Lord. Why this word Priest-hood should satisfie them For it imports that they are priviledged by their calling to come before God The Priests might enter into the house of the Lord yea they must doe it it was required of them it was a sinne if they did it not and they did not sinne by doing it Secondly the Priest-hood of Christians should put them in mind of divers duties as First it should worke in them a care of knowledge the Priests should preserve knowledge and they should seeke the Law at his mouth A godly Christian should bee able to direct others and hold forth the light of the Word for the profit of others and as dumbe Ministers
the flesh worke that which was extreemly ill for us Fourthly we hold our profession before many witnesses many eyes are upon us and the most men are crooked and perverse 1 Tim. 6.12 Phil. 2.15 and the best way to silence foolish men is by unrebukeablenesse of conversation 1 Pet. 2.15 Fifthly our heavenly Father is hereby glorified Mat. 5. 6. Sixthly it will be a great comfort to us in adversity 2 Cor. 1.12 Lastly great is our reward in heaven For hereby will be ministred abundantly an entrance into the glorious Kingdome of Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 1.11 But then we must looke to divers rules about our conversation that it may be right for First it must be a good conversation in Christ 1 Pet. 3.16 Secondly it must be a conversation discharged from those ●suall vices which are hatefull in such as professe the sincerity of the Gospell and yet common in the world such as are lying wrath bitternesse rotten communication or c●●sed speaking or the like Eph. 4.25 Col. 3.8 1 Pet. 1.14 Thirdly it must be all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1.15 wee must shew respect to all Gods Commandements at home and abr●●ad in religion mercy righteousnesse or honesty Fourthly we must shew all meeknesse of wisedome when we hea●e outward praise or do good or are to expresse our selves in discourse or otherwise Iam. 3.13 2 Cor. 1.12 And that we may attaine to this holinesse of conversation First we must walke according to the rule of Gods Word and let that be a light to our feet and a lanthorne unto our paths Gal. 6.16 Ioh. 3.21 Secondly wee must set before us the patterne of such Christians as have most excelled that way Phil. 3.17 and walke with the wise Thirdly especially as obedient children we should learne of our heavenly Father to fashion our selves according to his nature and in all conversation strive to be holy as he is holy and as it followes in this verse we should studie and strive to shew forth the vertues that were eminent in Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.15 16. and 12.10 Thirdly in so much as holinesse is the prerogative of a Christian it should teach all sorts of men to try themselves whether they have attained true holinesse or no so as they bee sure their holinesse exceed the holinesse of the Scribes and Pharisees for else they cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven For a Christian must have that holinesse of conversation which no wicked man can attaine unto Now that this triall may bee done effectually I will shew wherein the holinesse of a true Christian exceeds the holinesse First of a meere civill honest man Secondly of the most glorious Hypocrite First for the meere civill honest man The true Christian exceeds his righteousnesse both in the righteousnesse of faith and in the internall holinesse of the heart and the power of holy affections but because it is holinesse of conversation which is especially here meant I will touch the differences in conversation and so First they differ in one maine cause of orderly life For the holinesse of the godly Christian proceeds from a regenerate heart whereas the meere civill man is so naturally or onely by restraining grace he hath not beene in the surnace of mortification for sinne Secondly the meere civill honest man glories in this that he payes every man his owne and is no adulterer or drunkard or the like notorious offender But for the most part he is altogether defective in the religious duties of the first table especially in the duties of the Sabbath and the religious duties he should performe in his family Thirdly the meere civill honest man makes conscience of great offences but cares not to be stained with lesser sinnes whereas the true Christian lives circumspectly and makes conscience of the least Commandement Secondly now for the hypocrite Though the difference be hidden yet it may be assigned in divers things as First the holinesse of the godly Christian flowes from a pure conscience and faith unfained whereas there is no such repentance or faith in the hypocrite Secondly the true Christian hath his praise of God but the hypocrite of men Rom. 2.26 Thirdly the true Christian obeyes in all things the hypocrite but in some as here for the most part they may be found tainted with some evill vice Fourthly the true Christian is carefull of his conversation in all places and companies the hypocrite onely or chiefly when he is where he thinkes hee shall be observed and marked Fifthly the true Christian will not cease bearing fruit what weather soever come Ier. 17.7 8. But the hypocrite gives over when hard times come He is not like the good ground that brings forth fruit with patience The hypocrite will not hold out till the end though the times bee peaceable till his death For the most part he then beares the burthen of his hypocrisie he cannot die in peace Use. Lastly this is a terrible doctrine for open and notorious offenders For hereby it is apparent they are strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel and are not of this nation their language and their workes betray them Drunkards Adulterers Swearers Lyers Usurers and such like cannot inherit or have any lot in this heavenly Canaan For all this nation is holy and such are not they their owne consciences being Judges Nor is it a pleasing Doctrine to scandalous professors For such as give scandall are either hypocrites or godly If they bee hypocrites their scandalls betray them and testifie to their faces they have no lot among the Saints and if they be godly Christians that have fallen through weaknesse yet they have cause to be much humbled For by them the name of God is blasphemed and besides many other inconveniences that will pursue their fall this is not the least that hereby they have weakned their evidence and wonderfully darkned the markes of their happinesse For if the godly be a holy nation how discomfortably have they provided for themselves and their owne soules that have so stained their profession and holinesse An holy nation The sixth prerogative of Christians is imported in this word Nation which shewes the number For though all the wicked are more in number than the godly yet such is the glory and greatnesse of the number of all the godly of all ages that if we could behold them on earth as wee shall see them in heaven and at the last Judgement we would wonderfully admire the beauty and multitude of the Christian Armie All the godly together make a goodly Nation and though in largenesse of number they do not goe beyond the wicked yet in the priviledges of their number they goe farre beyond them They are all one and a whole Nation of them which imports divers priviledges First they are all originally of one blood borne of the blood of Jesus Christ. Secondly they are all governed by one Ruler their noble Ruler is of themselves there
but with great difference for 1 The godly man may be intangled with evill desires but the wicked man is more For he burnes in lust yeelds himselfe over to his hearts lusts Hee is given up to his lusts he takes care for the lusts of the flesh to fulfill them He serves his lusts c. Rom. 13.13 and 1.24 Tit. 3.3 Ephes. 2.3 2 The godly man if he be overcome of his lusts for a time yet he humbleth himselfe and judgeth himselfe for them and grieves for them whereas the wicked boasteth himselfe of his hearts lusts and placeth his contentment in them Psal. 10.3 3 The godly man if he be yet overcome he will breake off his iniquity by repentance whereas the wicked in his lusts is like the divell Hee is incorrigible no ill successe or judgement or reproofe can breake off his desire of transgression yea his lusts are called The lusts of his father the divell Ioh. 8.44 Thirdly all godly Christians should learne from hence to be seriously bent to preserve themselves in the purity of Christian Religion and to keepe their hearts from these soule annoiances Quest. But what should we do to be preserved from lusts Answ. First thou must avoid the occasions of lusts such as are 1 Evill company and therein evill example and evill counsell Psal. 1.1 2 Idlenesse and solitarinesse 3 Excessive desire after and delight in riches 1 Tim. 6.9 4 Ignorance 1 Pet. 1.14 5 Intemperance drunkennesse and fulnesse of bread and deliciousnesse of fare and apparell 6 Hardnesse of heart Eph. 4.17 18. Secondly we must walke in the Spirit cherishing all good motions and pure imaginations yeelding our hearts over to the government of Gods Spirit doing all duties with the powers of our soule Gal. 1.16 Thirdly wee must crucifie them if they arise among our selves with the same mind was in Christ and resolve to suffer in the flesh by the sound practise of mortification Fourthly we must strive after contentation 1 Tim. 6. Fifthly we must get knowledge for as ignorance brings them in so knowledge fils the heart and dares them out Thus of the manner of avoiding them The motives follow and the first of them is Yee are strangers and pilgrims A stranger is hee that lives in a place that is not his owne Country or Kingdome or Nation whither by right he belongs so Abraham was a stranger Gen. 21.23 and the Israelites in Egypt Exod. 2.12 Now a pilgrim is he that resteth not in a place but travelleth onward from place to place Godly men are said to be strangers and not strangers in divers respects It is said they are not strangers in respect of freedome to the City of God and the Common-wealth of Israel Ephes. 2.29 They are strangers in respect of their absence from the heavenly Canaan which is their owne home to which they were borne by regeneration In this world then all the godly are but strangers and pilgrims which may serve First for reproofe even of divers godly men and that in divers respects 1 For their too much minding of earthly things Why do our hearts carry us away after the world considering it is but an Inne to be in for a little time 2 For their meddling with other folkes businesse A stranger onely thinkes of his owne affaires and doth not interpose himselfe in the affaires of others so should we study to be quiet and meddle with our owne businesses 3 For discouragement of heart under the sense of our owne weaknesses and wearinesse in spirituall things we must expect in such travell much weaknesse and wearinesse 4 For impatience either under the crosses of life cast on us by God whereas strangers arme themselves to beare all weathers or under the scornes and contempt of the world whereas we should looke for it that the world should gaze at us and deride us as usually men doe at strangers Nor should Christians be at leasure to stay their journey by seeking revenge for their wrongs or be troubled if they cannot get preferment in the world Secondly for instruction It should wholly impose upon us the care of carrying our selves like strangers and pilgrims 1 By having our conversation without covetousnesse 2 By our language speaking alwayes as may become the people of God and heires of heaven that the men of this world may perceive by our speech that we are not of this world 3 By our circumspection and desire to live without offence as a stranger is very heedfull of his wayes in all places where he comes 4 By our daily enquiring after the particular way to heaven 5 By our thankfulnesse for the favours we finde while we are in the world seeing it is a place we are not to looke for much in 6 By our apparell If ●●rangers be knowne by their garments then is it a great fault for Christians to be found in the fashions of this world 7 By our delight in good company we should be glad of any that would goe with us to heaven 8 By our affection homeward our mindes should still be in heaven Nor should godly men be overmuch troubled that they are strangers here in this world and pilgrims in the condition of travellers for First they are not strangers in the Common-wealth of Israel and in the Kingdome of Christ though at the same time they are strangers in respect of their condition in this world Secondly they are well provided for at their Innes God provides their resting places and no good thing will hee with-hold from them That God which commands men to regard strangers and shew them mercy will himselfe much more be carefull for his strangers Thirdly their pilgrimage will not be long Fourthly they have good company all the godly travell their way Fifthly God hath appointed them guides yea Christ himselfe will bee their way Sixthly by prayers they may send home continually Seventhly it should much comfort them to thinke what a glorious condition they shall be in when they come home in the new Jerusalem Thus of the first reason Secondly the lusts must be avoided because they are fleshly Fleshly These lusts are fleshly in divers respects First because they please after the flesh which is the corrupt nature of man they hold no delight or shew of profit but to the flesh they are exceeding noisome and grievous and foolish to the Spirit Secondly because they raigne onely in fleshly persons they be the lusts of Gentiles and such as are strangers from the life of God Godly men complaine of them as an extreame misery Rom. 7.1 Pet. 4.3 Thirdly because they arise most from the body which is but a servant to the soule and it is an extreame unmanlinesse for the soule to be at the command of her servant the body which concludes against the lusts of uncleannesse riotousnesse drunkennesse vanity of apparell c. Fourthly because they proceed from the old man or corruption of nature or the flesh considered as the enemy to
Men must be subject because God hath taken mens consciences bound to subjection Rom. 13. 3 Because Kings are heads of the people and therefore as members it is agreeable that they should submit and bee ruled and guided 4 In respect of the benefit men receive by Magistrates both in outward things and in matters of Religion For outward things men enjoy publike peace and quietnesse and protection by the help of the power of the Magistrate And for matters of Religion earthly Common-wealths are as it were Innes to lodge the Church in and Princes power affords protection so as Christians may more safely follow their calling and if they be godly Kings they are the very nurses of Religion And thus of the reasons For the second this Submission hath in it sixe things the first is obedience to their lawes and commandements Tit. 3.1 The second is honour Rom. 13.7 for they are principalities and powers as the Angels shine in heaven so doe Princes on earth Yea they are called gods and so in two respects first as they are Gods Deputies and Viceroyes God executes a part of his Kingdome by Kings Secondly as they beare the image of God and his authority and soveraignty Now wee must performe this honour by reverence and by feare of them and by judging the best of them and their actions without conceiving suspitions of them or receiving evill reports against them or daring to speake evill of those dignities and Rulers of the people and by all thankefulnesse for the good wee receive by them acknowledging to the full all their praises The third is loyalty by which wee resolve and endevour to the uttermost of our powers to maintaine and preserve the persons rights prerogatives crownes and dignities of Princes If wee must lay downe our lives one for another then much more for our King and Country The fourth is piety we must pray for them with all manner of prayer wee must make supplications for Gods blessing upon them and deprecations for the removing evils from them and if they should sinne and God bee wroth with them wee should stand up in the gap and make intercession for them and we should give thanks for all the mercies the Lord shewes unto them 2 Tim. 2.1 The fift is maintenance tribute must bee paid Rom. 13.7 Christ himselfe submitted herein The last is subjection to their punishments Rom. 13.4 yea to their injuries as David Christ and the Apostles did submit themselves to the injurious dealing of Saul Pilate and the Tyrants when perhaps they could have made resistance Use 1. The use may be first for terror to the seditious great hath beene the vengeance of God upon Traytors the earth swallowed up Corah Dathan and Abiram for their rebellion Absolon was hanged up by the haire between heaven and earth as unworthy both of heaven and earth The words of our Saviour Christ are in an high degree true in this case Hee that taketh ●up the sword shall perish by the sword And S. Paul saith They shall be damned that resist the power Secondly it should much humble the better sort of men for divers 〈◊〉 that are too common such as are the receiving of evill reports and speaking evill with too frequent intemperancy grudging at the payment of tribute and taxations evill surmises of the actions of Princes and the aptnesse ●o f●vour themselves in the liberty of doubting concerning obedience to them in things indifferent Thirdly all good Christians should be perswaded to make conscience of this submission and to that end they should bee at the paines to study this Doctrine and withall pray to God to direct them and keepe them in his feare and obedience herein and besides they should be sure that they meddle not with the changers or with the seditious Pro. 24.22 Your selves These words may note either the manner of our submission or the matter the manner thus Submit your selves that is yeeld obedience uncompelled doe it of your selves stay not till you be forced to doe it and so the Apostle should thereby import that our submission even to men should bee performed willingly and so wee should willingly and cheerefully obey their lawes honour and defend their persons pray for them to God yeeld them tribute yea wee should without murmuring submit our selves to their punishments yea cheerefully beare their injuries and so it removes grudging and force from our submission But I rather understand the words to note the matter to bee submitted and that is our selves not our goods onely for tribute or custome but our persons also must bee at the Princes service our very bodies must be submitted both to doe the labour tha● belongs to the beating of any office for the publike good and to the enduring of any punishment by the lawes to be inflicted upon the body and to the imploying of the body and life in defence of the true Religion and of the King● person law and desire in warre or otherwise This is manifest by the frequent wars in the Old Testament both required and performed nor may any say that Christians in the New Testament are not charged in the businesse of warre for First It was Christ's maine intendment to forme a spirituall Kingdome to God he left the state of earthly Kingdomes to the condition they were in before Secondly when the Apostles doe in the generall require the submission of Christians to their Magistrates without exception of their obedience in warre or otherwise it is manifest that they leave them to the lawes of nature and the lawes of God before Thirdly even in the New Testament this is implyed by Baptist's answer to the souldiers Luk. 3.14 and the praises of those worthy warriours Heb. 11.33 34 In which place also is a manifest proofe for subjection even in our bodies to the sentences of Magistrates whether just or unjust And the Magistrate's sword Rom. 13.4 is not onely a sword of justice upon malefactors in his owne land but of revenge on the enemies of God or the Church or Common-wealth abroad And for that saying of our Saviour to Peter He that taketh the sword shall perish with the sword Mat. 26.52 it is spoken of him to whom of the Lord it is not delivered that is of him that hath not authority from God as Magistrates have to command others to take the sword and it was spoken to Peter a Pastour of soules Put up again thy sword into his place That materiall sword was not for him to use Thirdly note that it is indefinitely propounded Your selves that is all of all sorts no man can bee exempted from subjection to Princes Christians must obey as well as Pagans strangers as well as home-borne while they are within their gates All the doubt is whether Church-men are to bee subject to secular Princes The Papists deny it but wee affirme it and have reason so to doe First because the precept is generall without exception Secondly because the Apostle saith Rom. 13.1
servants in heaven but in Gods Kingdome they are as free as their Masters and therefore should not thinke much of a little hardnesse or harshnesse in this life Thus of the originall of servants Secondly we may hence note that servants are bound by God himselfe in his Word unto their subjection The Word of God doth belong to the calling of Servants as well as to any other calling God hath included them within the doctrine of Scripture as well as any other men partly to shew that they have right to the Scripture as well as others and partly to shew that the power of binding servants is from God And God hath taken it upon him by his Word to teach Servants as well as other men and that for two reasons The one is because Servants belong to the Kingdome of Christ and his Church as well as other Christians and therefore must be taught as well as they Secondly the other is because usually Masters are negligent in teaching them and therefore God provides that by his Word they shall bee taught Men have some care in teaching their children but little of their servants and therefore God to shew that he is no respecter of persons gives order to his Ministers to see them instructed The Use may be divers Uses First Masters must learne from hence their dutie For when they see that God takes care to teach their servants they should not be so proud or carelesse as to neglect their instruction Yea it shewes also that if they would have them taught or reproved or incouraged they must doe it with Gods Word and with their owne yea it also shewes the folly and wickednesse of divers Masters that cannot abide their servants should heare Sermons or much reade the Scriptures when they doe not only wickedly in restraining their servants from the meanes of their Salvation or comfort but do foolishly also hinder them of that meanes which should especially make them good servants Secondly Servants may hereby be instructed or informed and taught Informed that though neither Master nor Minister will teach them yet they are not excused because they are bound to learn from Gods Word their duties And taught from hence they must be to do their duties to their Masters not for fear or reward but for conscience sake because God hath bound them to his subjection Thirdly Ministers should learne and from hence be awakened to take notice of their charge both to catechize in speciall and to teach servants in generall as well as others their hearers If it be a part of the Commission of great Apostles to instruct servants as well as other Christians then what accounts can they give to God if it be found that they have had no care of instructing the servants of their parishes and charges Doct. 3. Thirdly the indefinite propounding of the word Servants shewes that all sorts of servants are equally bound to subjection hired servants are as strictly bound as bond-servants The servants of Princes are not free from the duty of servants more than other servants and ●o likewise poore mens servants must be subject and obedient to their Masters with as much reverence and fear as servants to great men Old servants are tied to as much duty as such as come new to serve Religious servants are bound to as much subjection and obedience as Pagans or rather their bond is the stronger because Religion should rather make them better servants And so there is no difference of sexes men servants are bound as well as women servants neither doth birth office gifts or meanes priviledge any servant from the strictnesse of the bond of subjection Be subject The duty then required of servants is subjection servants must be subject It is not enough to weare their masters Cloth and to hire themselves to their masters they must make conscience of it to performe constant and humble subjection to their masters And so they must be subject to their masters three wayes First to their commandements and so they must obey them and yeeld themselves to them to be ruled and directed by them in all things Eph. 6.5 Colos. 3.22 Secondly to their rebukes and corrections For if children need rebukes and corrections then doe servants also Pro. 13.1 and 15.5 Servants will not alwayes be corrected by words and therefore need blowes Pro. 29.19 Gen. 16.6 yea they must patiently suffer correction though it be inflicted unjustly as appeares in the verses following this Text. Thirdly to their restraints Servants must be subject to the appointment of their masters even in the things wherein they restraine them as for instance in their diet It is a sinfull humour in them not to be content with such diet as their masters appoint them though it be worse than the diet of their masters or the diet of the children of the family So likewise in their company they must avoid all company that may be any way offensive to their masters and so likewise in their apparell in such cases where servants are to be apparelled by their masters as also in respect of their going out of the house in the day time when they have not leave but much more abominable it is to be out of their masters houses in the night without their leave And as their subjection must be performed in all these cases so the indefinite manner of propounding it shewes both that they must be subject in all things and in all the wayes of shewing subjection for the manner of it they must be subject in all things so as to beare with their masters for it is a sinfull rebellion to crosse or disobey or leave undone any thing that is required of them to doe And besides it showes that they must be subject in their very hearts and in their words and in their countenance and gesture as well as in the work to be done by them Use. The use may concerne both servants and the parents of such servants and the masters that rule them Servants should hence from their hearts learne to yeeld themselves over to their masters with all good conscience to performe the subjection required yea such servants as heare this doctrine may try their hearts whether they be indeed good servants or no for a good servant that makes conscience of his duty when he heares the doctrine doth from his heart consent to it and will strive to fashion himselfe according to it Now the servants that desire to be such as is required may attaine to it if they observe these rules First they must carefully study the doctrine of servants duties Servants oftentimes faile through meere ignorance because they doe not lay before their mindes what God requires of them Secondly they must often judge themselves for their faults wherein they have displeased their masters or neglected their duties therefore many servants mend not because either they will not see their faults or doe not humble themselves in secret for them Thirdly they
they desire to be as pure as he would have them to be 3. Sound mortification and judging of our selves for what impurity we finde cleave to our workes 't is Christian perfection to judge our selves for our imperfections 1 Iohn 3 3. 4. Freedome from the grosse impurities and vices and vanities of the time God accounts us pure when our spot is not as the spots of the wicked and when we are not infected with the corruptions which are usually in the world 1 Tim. 5.22 2 Pet. 1.4 5. Freedome from the reigne of hypocrisie in the heart and from hypocriticall courses in the life Thus Saint Iames accounts the heart to be pure when men are not double minded Iames 4.8 And in conversation he is a pure man that is like Iacob a plaine man without fraud trickes or dissimulation 6. Precisenesse circumspection or exactnesse of conversation when a man sheweth respect to all Gods Commandements and makes conscience to avoide lesser sins as well as greater Eph. 5.15 Mat. 5.19 7. Devoutnesse and zeale in matters of religion and Gods worship and glory and so a pure conversation is a religious conversation that expresseth zeale and conscience in the things of Gods service in a speciall manner seeking Gods Kingdome first and above all other things 2 Tim. 2.22 Titus 2.14 8. Chastitie in keeping the heart and life cleane from the impurities condemned in the seventh Commandement is one great part of Christian purity But before I come to entreat of chastity in particular I would apply this doctrine of purity in generall first to the Text and then to the times As for the Text a pure conversation is here considered only so far as it may fall into the observation of carnall men and so it comprehends of the former senses chiefly inoffensivenesse separation from impure men freedome from grosse impurities and dissimulation a Christian and wise strictnesse of life and devoutnesse and well ordered zeale in matters of religion Use. Now for the Use of it If these be applied to these times it shewes first how wicked and profane those sorts of people are who reproach godly men for the care and practice of these things as if to be a Puritane even in these senses were to be some vile man not worthy to live amongst men Secondly it shewes that worlds of people that beare the name of Christians are not true Christians because their conversations are not pure for their swearing or drunkennesse or whoredomes or sins of deceit or dissimulation or fashioning themselves to this world or the liberty they take to live as they list testifies against them to their faces that their workes are not pure and therefore unlesse they repent they will all perish Rev. 3.1 2. and the rather because they cause by their evill lives not only the hearts of the good to be grieved but the mouthes of the enemies of religion to be opened to blaspheme Thirdly godly men that find these cares in them should comfort themselves much in the testimonies of their owne consciences and the gracious acceptation of God who will shew himselfe pure with them that are pure 2 Cor. 1.12 Psal. 18. Thus of Purity in generall Now of Chastity as a part of a pure conversation and it may well be that which is chiefly here intended Chastitie is either of the mind or of the body and it is a most certaine truth that God requires a chaste minde as well as a chaste body and doth forbid unchaste thoughts and desires a● well as unchaste words or deeds For unchaste thoughts and desires are first foolish and noisome 1 Tim. 6.9 secondly they hinder the power of religion and true knowledge and grace 2 Tim● 4 thirdly they fight against the soule 1 Pet. 2.11 A man were as good have his body wounded with weapons as his soule wounded with lusts fourthly they cause many times many and monstrous sins in the life which arise at first from the nourishing of soule desires and thoughts in the heart The wickednesse that was in the lives of the Gentiles did in many of them spring from the l●sts which they harboured in their hearts Rom. 1. lastly if men repent not of them in time they will drowne them in perdition 1 Tim. 1.9 But it is the chastitie of the body which is especially here intended our Saviour Christ divides those chaste persons into three sorts some are termed Eunuches from their mothers wombe and so are disabled for bodily fornication some are made so by other men who by violence for their owne service made some men Eunuches Now the third sort are they that made themselves Eunuches for the kingdome of Heavens sake Of this third sort are all chaste persons who by a godly care and watchfulnesse keepe themselves from the sinnes of filthinesse as well as naturall Eunuches doe Mat. 19.12 Now these persons that are made chaste for the kingdome of Heavens sake are either single persons or married persons of chastity in single persons other Scriptures intreat as 1 Cor. 7. of chastity in married persons this place intreats Now this vertue of chastity is of purpose imposed upon godly Christians by the Apostle because the sins of fornication were so rife and common among the Gentiles who oftentimes defended their filthinesse to be either no sin or a very small sin But before I come to speake of chastity in particular some doctrines would be in generall observed as first Doct. 1. A godly Christian must shew the proofe of his religion especially in keeping himselfe free from the sins that are most common and rife in the world and even the more sinne abounds in the world the more strict they should be in resisting sinne as here even the more filthy the lives of others were the more chaste should the conversation of godly Christians be because their love to God should constraine them the more to be zealous for his glory by how much the more God is dishonoured by other men and because they are flatly forbidden to follow a multitude to sin and because God hath chosen them out of all other sorts of men to beare his name and to hold forth the light of the Word in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation and because thereby the conscience of wicked men may be the more effectually convinced and prepared to repentance Thus Lot is righteous in Sodome and Ioshua and his house will serve the Lord though all the Nation serve Idols This point as it should inflame the zeale of the godly to contend for the truth the more earnestly and to resist all the vices of the time so it shewes that they can hardly have any truth of grace in them that are so easily borne downe with the streame of evill example and are so apt to follow the fashion of the world Doct. 2. Chastity may be in married persons as well as in single persons as here wives are said to be chaste in conversation though they with-hold not
spirit as Solomon shewes in the whole booke of Ecclesiastes Now if worldly things be corruptible things then in generall we should all learne divers lessons first not to set our affections upon these things here below we should not set our hearts upon that which wee cannot keepe long All wee have though it bee not yet corrupted yet it is all corruptible why should wee then make such haste to bee rich especially why should wee trust upon unc●rtain● riches Secondly seeing wee shall have these things but a ●hile wee should use them as such things as wee cannot enjoy long and so wee should take our part of them in a sober and Christian freedome while wee have them Psalme 49.18 Eccles. 9.7 10. and especially wee should employ them to the best uses wee can And the best use to put worldly things to is either to make friends with them by liberalitie to the poore Luke 16. or to buy wisedome with them by spending freely for the procuring of the meanes of salvation for our selves or others Proverbs 17.16 and in generall the chiefe use of them is by them to make our selves rich in good workes 1 Tim. 6.19 20. Thirdly seeing earthly things are corruptible wee should not envie the prosperity of wicked men that abound not in any thing that will ●arry long with them all their portion is in these things that will away Psalme 37.1 2. 49.15 16 18. Lastly wee should all therefore bee of Moses minde rather to suffer affliction with Gods people that shall possesse eternall things than with the wicked to enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season Heb. 11.26 And in particular both poore and rich may bee instructed hereby for rich men should not glorie in their riches but rather r●joice if God have made them low by true grace which will last for ever Iames 1.9 10. 1 Tim. 6.17 20 and poore men that have a portion in spirituall things should not bee troubled for want of these ●●rthly things seeing if they ●●d them they would last but a while I●●●s 1.9 and therefore having food and raiment they should bee content Thus of the first Doctrine Doct. 2. Earthly things doe not adorne a man As they are corruptible so they doe not make a man any whit the more comely which is true in these foure senses following First they doe not adorne a man in the sight of God he respects it not whether a man be poore or rich bond or free cloathed or naked in robes or in rags Gal. 3.28 Secondly they adorne not the inward man they add nothing to the mind or heart of man Thirdly they adorne not with true ornament but onely with a shew for if the glory of the world be like a withering flower what true ornament can it be to weare such withered things Fourthly they adorne not for continuance All apparell for the body of a man and all ornaments for his house or state any way they are the worse for wearing and will weare cleane out in the end And therefore for the use first how vaine a thing is the pride of life and secondly we should therefore know no man after the flesh but to reckon of mans worth by better things than worldly things Doct. 3. A third doctrine is evidently to be observed out of these words and that is very comfortable for godly Christians such as the Apostle supposed these to be to whom he writes and that is That godly Christians have right to all incorruptible things That which is not corruptible if they seeke they may possesse It is their owne God would have them put it on as they put on their apparell He hath adorned his children with the gift of all incorruptible things heavenly treasures are theirs and they may lay hold on them and lay them up as their certaine riches and portion Mat. 6. ●0 He grants eternall life to them that seeke glory and honour and incorruptible things that is he grants them an eternall possession of spirituall things Rom. 2.7 Now that this doctrine may be more evident and full of comfort it is profitable to inquire distinctly what is incorruptible and will last alwaies and so we shall find by the testimonies of the Scripture that seven things are incorrup●ible 1. ●od is incorruptible Rom. 1. and God is their God by covenant and as David saith he is the strength of their heart and their portion for ever Psal. 37.26 1●9 57. and God his mercy and his love and his power is everlasting His mercy endures for ever Psal. 136. and his loving kindnesse ●●all never be taken from him Psal. 89.33 and with everlasting compassion he hath received them to favour Esay 54. and with everlasting love hath he loved them Ier. 31.3 and in the Lord Iehovah is everlasting strength for the protection and preservation of his people and therefore they may trust upon him for ever Esay 26.4 and therefore if all people will walke every ●ne in the name of his God godly men ought much more to wa●ke in the name of the Lord their God for ever and ever Micah 4.6 2. The Word of God is incorruptible and lasts beyond all end 1 Pet. 1.24 Psal. 119.89 And this is the heritage of the godly Psal. 119.111 127. The truth shall be with us for ever 2 Iohn 2. 3. The righteousnesse of Christ is everlasting Dan. 9.24 and this righteousnesse is theirs ●o as they may put it on as a garment and it makes them righteous before God Rom. 13. ult 1 Cor. 1.30 2 Cor. 5.21 4. Gods covenant is incorruptible and everlasting Esa● 55.4 and it cannot be abrogared but the godly shall have the benefit of it for ever 5. The gifts of saving gr●ce are incorruptible and their hearts can never ●ee drawne dry but the spring of grace will bee in some measure in them And through these graces the godly have everlasting consolation for Gods gifts and calling are without repentance Iohn 4.14 2 Thes 2.10 Rom. 11. This love is incorruptible 2 Cor. 13. and everlasting joy shal be upon their heads Esay 61. So the seed of saving knowledge will abide in the godly for ever 1 Iohn 3. and their meeknesse and a quiet spirit is reckoned an ornament that is not corruptible But of this afterwards 6. Good workes are incorruptible so the righteousnesse of the just will last for ever 2 Cor. 9.9 and though he die yet his workes will follow him to Heaven Rev. 14.13 Psal. 139.24 Lastly Heaven and the glory of it is everlasting Gods kingdome is an everlasting kingdome 1 Tim. 6.11 and that glory is an eternall waight of glory 2 Cor. 4.14 We have an house that is eternall in the Heavens 2 Cor. 5.1 our inheritance there is immortall and undefiled and withereth not away 1 Pet. 1.3 The uses may be divers Use 1. For first it should teach us to strive to be such as may have our portion in incorruptible thing and so wee must first
then we shall see God by direct vision Moses that saw as much of God as a mortall man then could saw but his backe parts he saw God as we see a man going from us but then we shall see him face to face as he is comming to us yea as he is possessed by us Wee shall not need helpe to shew God to us as we doe now for God himselfe shall be our everlasting light as was shewed before There is a foure-fold vision of God the one is natu●all as when wee see him in the creatures the other is speculous or Symbolicall when we see God in certaine signes of his presence as in the burning fire in the Bush or in the Cloud or Pillar of fire at the Tabernacle The third is the vision of Faith when we know how good God is by the promises of his word to us in Christ. The last is the vision of ●lory which differs from all the former in a way of seeing unknowne to us Thirdly our knowledge will differ in the measure Now wee know b●t in part there are many things wee know not and what wee doe know wee know but obscurely and darkly then wee shall know perfectly even as wee are now knowne perfectly of God 1 Cor. 13.10 11. c. and so wee shall know both God and the Creat●res There is a world of most delightfull and rare knowledge of the Creatures which wee attaine not to in this life but the chiefe glory of our knowledge then shall bee in the perfect vision of God and those unspeakable beauties of his nature when wee shall behold perfectly the glory of every propertie or attribute in God which will be sufficient to breed everlasting wonder and delight In a word the knowledge of the meanest Christian in heaven shall be above the knowledge of Prophets or Apostles on earth The first difference is in the effect of our knowledge for from our knowledge and this celestiall light flowes righteousnesse peace and joy in the holy Ghost which the Apostle Paul makes to be the parts of the Kingdome of God and so both in this life and in heaven Rom. 14.17 And unto these three heads may bee referred all things that concerne the glory of eternall life and all these are held with great difference in each degree of eternall life For though we have righteousnesse and peace and joy now in the truth of them yet wee have ●hem not as we shall have them in heaven as will appeare if we consider of them distinctly First for righteousnesse Here it is the greatest burthen of life unto the godly that they are not able to serve God as they desire the imperfections of their gifts the corruption of their natures the daily infirmities that discover themselves in their conversations make life many times more bitter than death would be to them as appeareth by St. Paul Rom. 7. But there all that is imperfect shall be done away there shall be no danger of displeasing God for we shall be made perfect in all parts and degrees of holinesse our nature shall be perfect like the nature of God our members shall never more be servants unto unrighteousnesse and our soules shall exactly resemble God in all perfection of goodnesse and gifts Here the glory of mans inheritance lieth in the goodnesse of things without them there it shall consist principally in an everlasting goodnesse confirmed upon themselves We shall be without spot and wrinkle Eph 5.27 We shall be as he is in holinesse 1 Iohn 3.2 Here is our griefe that our hearts cannot be so filled with the love of God and the godly as they should be there our hearts shall burne with an eternall inflammation of affections towards God and the blessed ones without any interruption or decay we shall never mor● be troubled with hardnesse of heart discouragement feare distractions inordinate desires and perturbations Yea our holinesse shall be better than Adams in Paradise for he had a power not to sin but we shall have no power at all to sin Yea in relation to Christ it shall be better with us then than it is now for now we are reckoned just men only by the benefit of Christs righteousnesse imputed to us but then we shall be made so perfectly holy by inherent righteousnesse that we shall stand everlastingly righteous before God by the righteousnesse that is in us Imputation shall there cease for ever when Christ hath delivered up the kingdome to God the Father and when faith shall be done away Lastly the difference in this point may further appeare in the freedome of our wills In this life many times our wills are not free to desire to doe the good we should doe and most an end want power to execute what we desire but there shall be all libertie so as we shall never want either desire or power to accomplish what may be for Gods everlasting glory or our owne felicity Secondly for peace there is great difference for first in this life we have but little peace in respect of the miseries of life Sometimes we have but little inward peace our hearts being unquiet with feare or griefe or discouragement or passions or else our consciences are unquiet either because God fights against us to trie us or to humble us or we fight against our selves through ignorance and unbeliefe or distresse for sin Sometimes when our spirits are quiet and there is a truce from inward war we then want out vard peace either men are unreasonable and molest us without cause in our estates or names or else God afflicts us in body with paine and weaknesse or in estate sometimes with easie crosses like small rain sometimes with greater crosses like some fierce storms Now in heaven there shall be an eternall cessation of all miserie there shall be no curse and affliction shall be cast into the Sea Rev. 22.23 Secondly our Sabbaths or dayes of rest which G●d hath consecrated and blessed to us as the chiefe joy of our lives prove many times daies of sorrow affliction because either our bodies are molested with pain or our soules distressed for want of powerfull meanes or for want of abilitie to keepe a Sabbath unto God or for want of joy in our soules but in heaven we shall have an eternall Sabbath not one day in seven but all our dayes rest without labour and solace of heart without any difficultie in our selves or interruption without us God and the Lamb will be an eternall Temple to make our rest for ever glorious Wee shall be freed from all the labours of life and from all paine and difficultie in serving God and our works shall be all easie and full of delight even the praising of God for ever Rev. 14.12 Heb 4.9 Thirdly for joy There is great difference both in the causes and in the measure and in the continuance of it The causes of our joy shall be the highest can befall a
assoone as he gives grace and favour I answer 1. That God thereby doth give way unto the kingdome of Christ for the exercise of it on earth in gathering the Elect and subduing his enemies which when it is done he will deliver the Kingdome into his Fathers hands and th●n God shall be all in all 2. It is deferred that so God might make evident proofe of the faith and patience of his servants and to shew that they stand by a better grace then they had in their creation But what should I wade into this point It is enough for us that it is the pleasure of Gods will it should be so and it is equall we should doe our work before we receive our wages 3. It shewes that the Maker and Builder of that happinesse is God and that our glory is made ready to our hands 4. It imports that as in the state of nature we cared not for grace so in the state of grace wee are not so carefull as wee should be of going to heaven wh●n we are justified and sanctified we forget heaven it must be brought unto us we will scarce goe seeke it 5. It shews ●u● security and forgetfulnesse shall not make the faith of God of none ●ffect it shall c●rtainly be brought unto us 6. Lastly wee may here gather one way of comforting our selves against the infirmitie● that accompany our natures that when we feele our weaknesses yet we sh●uld be comforted in the hope of the strength wee shall have Art th●u humbled for thy ignorance why rejoyce in the knowledge thou shalt have And so I say of the untowardnesse of thy nature to good thinke of the time when Christ shall be perfectly formed in thee think of the grace shall be brought unto thee if thou be discouraged and never of 〈…〉 ●t the revelation of Iesus Christ. That i● at the day of judgement The day of judgement shall be a time of wonderfull revelation For then 1. 〈◊〉 glory of his person which he hath received of the Father in heaven sh●ll ●e r●vealed 2. The terror of Christ as a Judge shall then be fully exprest The world little know● the terror of that day Hee came not at the first comming to judg● the world that is yet to be revealed 3. The g●●ry of the body of Christ the Church shall then be revealed when we shall ●ee all the societies of all ages together in one armie 2. All the good they have all done shall be fully opened 3. All the glory of heaven shall then ●e e●●ated upon them 4. The everlasti●g counsels of God shall then be broken open and explained to the eternall clearing of Gods justice and the exalting of the praise of his mercy The Use may be 1. For information we may see one reason why Christs Kingdome and the righteousnesse thereof is so securely contemned of the world It is because a vaile is as it were drawne over Christ that they cannot behold him and so we may see one reason why we are not more inflamed to the personall love of Christ it doth not yet appear what we shall be by his merits nor have we seen the exceeding glory of the onely begotten Son of God 2. For instruction we should long after that day if Christ be so good unto us now oh what will he be at that day If in this life holy men could say of him as Paul did Phil. 3.9 what shall we say or think of him but as worth ten thousand worlds in comparison In the meane while let us be content that our life be bid with Christ in God knowing that when he shall appeare we shall also appeare with him in glory Verse 14. c. As obedient children not fashioning your selves unto the former lusts of your ignorance HItherto of the three things to which the Apostle exhorts The reasons follow whereof the first is contained in these verses and it is taken from the image of God in which Gods children ought to resemble him they should strive against all inward evils and refraine all the excesses of life and addresse themselves with all care and confidence to the provision of a better life because they are begotten again unto God and it is required of them that they should be holy as he is holy This reason is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children It is expounded two waies 1. By description 2. By proofe or testimony It is described negatively and affirmatively by negation he shewes what we should shun viz. fashioning your selves according to the lusts of your former ignorance Affirmatively he sets it out by shewing 1. the patterne to be imitated 2. and the manner of our imitation The patterne is the holinesse of him that called us The manner is to be holy in all manner of conversation Thus of the description For the proofe 2. things are to be considered 1. Whence the proofe is fetched ●n these word As it is written 2. What is alledged in these words Be ye holy as I am holy As obedient children These two words import a twofold consideration 1. they are the children of God 2. you must obey as children The first point gives an occasion to consider of three things 1. That God hath children not onely Christ his naturall Son and the Angels his sons by creation but the Saints also by adoption and regeneration 2. That it behoves Christians to seeke and know their adoption to be the sons of God It is wonderfull to think of the almost infinite carelesnesse of men that can heare of so great felicity as the adoption of sinfull men to be the sons of God and yet there is no heart in man to seeke after it 3. In that the Apostle applies the consideration hereof to perswade to holinesse of life it shews that the assurance of Gods favour as our Father doth kindle obedience and make us more fit for all well-doing as these places prove 1 Thes. 1.5 6 7. 2 Pet. 1.8 9 10. 1 Cor. 2.12 14. 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 10.22 The Use is First for confutation of their fancies that thinke assurance would breed security and that it is better to be a little doubtfull then fully resolved whereas both Scripture and experience is against it yea there is a secret corruption in the hearts of the very godly herein nourished perhaps by the devill But let us be fully perswaded to pray with all importunity that God would give us this knowledge But I have felt more hardnesse of heart and corruption of nature since assurance then I had before First examine thy heart whether thou call not peace of conscience by the name of hardnesse of heart 2. Know that hardnesse of heart and unfitnesse to holy duties is in us by nature and is not taken away by assurance neither is thy case the worse that thou feelest it more now then before For that may import more softnesse of heart 3. Consider
the reward should pluck up thy heart against all the hardship of godlinesse for 1. God will grant thee pardon of all thy sins Acts 2.39 2. Thou shalt have fellowship with God himselfe and he will shew thee so much when thou seekest to him in his ordinances 1 Iohn 1.7 3. Thou hast most precious promises recorded every where in the sacred volume of Gods booke 2 Pet. 1.4 4. Who would not be stirred up with the contemplation of that glorio●s inheritance is reserved for us in heaven that incorruptible crown should make any body willing to abstaine from all things and to run with all violence in the race set before us 1 Pet. 1.3 1 Cor. 9.24 25 26 27. Only let me conclude this point with an earnest exhortation to all Christians that would have comfort of life to apply themselves to get all possible knowledge they can in the Scriptures for that knowledge is a tree of life Pro. 3.18 16.22 and those sacred knowledges they must not let goe but take fast hold on them Pro. 4.13 They must attend incline their eares and not let them depart from betweene their eyes and be sure to keep them in the middest of their hearts Pro. 4.21 20 22. Marke every one of those words to doe it and consider that it is not the having of the Bibles or Sermons or the reading or hearing but the knowledge we get into our hearts nor is it any knowledge but wisdome or the wise knowledge of the Scriptures and our knowledge is then wise when it is an understanding of our owne waies and wee are wise for our selves when we studie profitable things and when we sow those seeds of truth in daily practice and when wee practice with discretion looking to the circumstances of every dutie not to draw upon our selves incumbrances by our owne rashnesse or indiscretion And lastly when with all knowledge we joyne lowlinesse of minde and meeknesse that meeknesse that is called meekenesse of wisdome by Saint Iames. Thus of the meanes to attaine life the signes follow There are divers waies to trie our selves whether eternall life bee begun in us as 1. By the savouring of those things that are immortall Our mortall life relisheth nothing but what is transitory and eternall life finds happinesse in nothing but what is eternall or tends to it Thus a man that is endued with this life esteemes with sense grace above riches spirituall treasures above all earthly In particular the desire after the Word of God is a signe that we are at least new borne babes in Gods kingdome if so be wee desire it with a kind of naturall affection as the child doth the breast and constantly and as the word is sincere and with an unfained desire to grow in grace and goodnesse by the power of the Word Rom. 8.5 1 Pet. 2. Iohn 6.27 2. By our knowledge of God in Christ as hath beene shewed before when it is such a knowledge as workes not onely admiration but also sound transformation of our hearts and lives 3. There is a kind of sorrow that the Apostle faith is to salvation 2. Cor. 10.7 and that is such a sorrow as is voluntary and secret for our sinnes and for all sorts of sinnes Rom. 7. Esa. 6.5 Esa. 1.16 and as they are sinnes and not for other respects and such a sorrow as quieteth the heart and leaveth a vehement desire of reformation and is most stirred by the sense of Gods goodnesse Hos. 3.5 Esa. 1.16 and is found in prosperity as well as adversitie 4. By our love to God for if the light of life be in us and that we are truly acquainted with God as our God in Christ the heart hath seene that that will make it in love with God for ever and shew it by his estimation of Gods loving kindnesse and all the signes of it above all things in life Psal. 63.2 11. and by longing after the comming of Christ 2. Tim. 4.8 and by grieving for Gods absence Cant. 3.1 and by his feare to offend God in any thing Iude 20. and by his willingnesse to suffer any thing for God and the Gospel 1 Thes. 1.2 5. By our love of the brethren The Apostle Iohn with great confidence of words makes this a ●●gne that we are translated from death to life 1 Ioh. 3.14 and it is infallible if we so love them as we account them the only excellent ones Psal. 16.3 and desire them as the onely companions of our lives and if it be for the grace and goodnesse is in them 1 Ioh. 5.1 2 Ioh. 1.2 and if it be notwithstanding their infirmities or adversities and if we love all the brethren without respect of persons 6. To conclude this point generally If eternall life be begun in us wee are new creatures borne againe the Image of God is restored in us in some degree Ioh. 3.5 Tit. 3.5 Colos. 3.10 and wee are such as are fully resolved to spend our daies in the way of righteousnesse and a holy course of life Prov. 12.28 8. The properties of this life follow and they are five for 1. It is unspeakable eye hath not seene nor eare heard nor can the heart of man conceive what God hath prepared in life for them that love him 1 Cor. 2.9 2. It is free it is not given by merit but is the free gift of God Rom. 6. ult 3. It is certaine for there is an Act for it in Gods counsell Men be ordained to life and their names written in the booke of life Acts 13.48 Phil. 4.4 and God hath bound himselfe by many promises in his Word to the beleever and besides hath confirmed it with an oath Heb. 6.17 and Christ is gone into heaven to make the place ready for all the heires of life Iohn 14.3 and further we have it already begun even eternall life begun Iohn 17.3 4. It is a life by assimilation that is such a life as is fashioned in likenesse to the life of another even Jesus Christ according to whose Image we are created Col. 3.10 And who shall change our vile bodies and make them like his glorious body Phil. 3.21 5. It is eternall a life that will last as long as God liveth it will never have an end Divines expresse the eternity of it in part by this similitude Suppose a little bird came to the Sea once in a thousand yeares and tooke up only one drop of water and so should continue to take every thousand years only one drop what an unspeakable space of time would it be before the Sea would be drunke up and yet eternity is a lasting beyond that unmeasurably Thus of the explication of the Doctrine concerning life The Uses follow and Use 1. First what a strong impression should this doctrine have upon the hearts of all unregenerate men How should life and heaven suffer violence How should this force open their eyes that they might awake from that fearfull lethargie and stand up from
the dead that Christ might give them this light of life How should they unchangeably resolve to seeke Gods kingdome first above all things and above all gettings strive to get understanding What shall it profit them to win the whole world and lose their owne soules But especially the doctrine of life should melt the hearts of all the godly and imprint upon them the care of many duties as 1. They have cause to wonder at the exceeding riches of Gods kindnesse to them in Jesus Christ in providing such an inheritance for them Ephes. 2.7 2. They should pray earnestly to God to open their eyes more and more to see the glory of this life and effectually to take notice of the high dignity of their calling and riches of their inheritance in life Eph. 1.19 3. This should marvellously wean their hearts from the cares of this present life and from the love of earthly things seeing their inheritance lieth in spirituall and eternall life 1 Cor. 7.38 Heb. 13.4 5. 11.13 Col. 3.1 2. Phil. 3.20 4. Since they have found this precious life by the Gospel they should therefore take heed they be not carried about with divers and strange doctrine nor trouble themselves with doubtfull disputations or unprofitable questions They have found the words of eternall life and whither else will they goe Tit. 3.7 9. Heb. 13.9 5. This should make them love one another as such as shall be companions in life for ever Yea they should receive one another as Christ received them to glory Iohn 13.34 Eph. 4.2 5.1 Rom. 15.7 And in particular husbands should make much of their wives and masters of such servants as are heires with them of the grace of life as this Text shewes and Col. 3.14 6. They should strive to shew the power of this life and how much it excells naturall life and therefore the fruit of the Spirit should be in them in all goodnesse righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.9 and they should so hold forth the Word of life that they should think on whatsoever things are true honest just pure lovely and of good report and if there be any vertue or any praise they should strive to act that being carefull in all things to maintaine good workes Phil. 4.8 Tit. 3.7 8. Oh what maner of persons should they be in all maner of good conversation 7. They should lift up their heads with joy and be alwaies comfortable considering the assurance they have of eternall life they have the spirit of glory resting upon them One would think they should be alwaies singing and making melodie in their hearts though they have crosses and wants in this life yet is not God their portion and is it not enough they are provided for in respect of eternitie and is there any comparison betweene the afflictions in this world and the glory to be revealed Grace Thus of the matter of their inheritance The cause followes and that is grace Grace is either a gift in us or an attribute in God Sometimes by grace is meant the gifts God bestowes upon men and if grace were so taken then would be implied this doctrine That dead men may have the grace of God There may be grace in men without life yea men may have excellent gifts and yet be not alive spiritually as gifts of government from the Spirit of God as Saul had and gifts for edification in the Church A man may be an excellent Preacher as Iudas was and may have the gifts of prophecying and working miracles as the Reprobates mentioned Mat. 7.21 a man may have the gift of knowledge of the Scriptures as St. Paul imports 1 Cor. 8.2 Heb. 6.4 a man may confesse his sins as Pharaoh and Saul did a man may be much grieved and sorrow and humbled for his sins as Ahab and Cain and may repent too as Iudas did and may make a great profession of true religion and be very forward as Demas and Hymeneus and Phyletus did a man may be very zealous for the truth as Iohn and the Galatians were a man may pray and cry hard and often to God and be heard of God as the Israelites were in their distresses many times a man may be of an unrebukeable conversation amongst men as Paul was before his conversion and such as have sinned may reforme their lives in many things as Herod did finally a man may have faith to beleeve Gods Word as the Divels doe and to beleeve Gods promises as they that have a temporary faith doe after a sort and may joy much in the comfort of them as they concerne the godly and yet in all these gifts there was no life Another point in that sense is this That there are gifts of Gods grace bestowed on the Elect which are ever accompanied with life so as their grace is the grace of life And both these points should wonderfully awaken all sorts of Christians to looke about and trie their estates and weake Christians should diligently studie their booke of signes of true grace and marke how the Scripture proveth all those saving graces to be such as can be found in no reprobate But because I think Grace in this place cannot be taken for the gifts of grace in men I passe from these points By grace then here is meant the glorious attribute of goodnesse that is in God by which he freely sheweth his love and mercy to his creatures And that it must be taken in this sense I gather from the third of Titus v. 7. where the sentence being like grace is called there His grace we are justified by his grace and made heires of eternall life Now this grace of God as it is in God I consider of two wayes first as it is in relation to this spirituall and eternall life of Gods heires and then secondly as it is in it selfe generally considered In relation to spirituall life I consider of it both in what it excludes and what it includes Grace excludes both nature and the workes of the Law It excludes nature from this life in three respects first in respect of propagation This life cannot be propagated by naturall generation we are not borne heires of life and so the sons of God we are borne only the sons of Adam not of God They that are borne after the flesh are not the seed Rom. 9.8 Secondly in respect of priviledge By nature we are the children of wrath and therefore cannot be the children of promise Eph. 2.3 Thirdly in respect of the works of nature for by nature we doe such workes as proclaime us to be children of disobedience and children of the Divell and therefore cannot be heires of life by any workes done by nature since the fall And as it excludes nature so it excludes the workes of the Law not in respect of the obedience to the Law but in respect of the merit of life so as the inheritance cannot be had but by the workes of