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A25467 A Continuation of morning-exercise questions and cases of conscience practicaly resolved by sundry ministers in October, 1682. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1683 (1683) Wing A3228; ESTC R25885 850,952 1,060

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Col. 2.14 but withal it did direct them to the Lord Jesus who was to appear once in the end of the World to put away Sin by the Sacrifice of himself The Moral Law discovered their duty convinced them of Sin and declared the necessity of a Mediator to make an Atonement The Apostle when he witnessed that Christ should suffer and be the first that should rise from the dead and shew Light to the People and to the Gentiles he sticks not to affirm that he said no other things ●●an what Moses and the Prophets did say should come Act. 26.22 23. Moses saw Christ and his Cross and esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches th●● the Treasures of Egypt Heb. 11.26 Abraham rejoyced to see his day h● saw it and was glad Joh. 8.56 Nay several thousands of years before the actual rising of this Sun of righteousness there was some Light which caused a day break presently after the fall That promise the seed of the Woman shall bruise the Serpents head shews that the First Adam was not altogether ignorant of the Second 5. The Revelation of Christ under the new Testament is more clear therefore to be ignorant of him is the more without Apology the veil upon the Face of Moses did signifie the obscurity of the Mosaick Dispensation but that vail is done away in Christ and we all may now with open Face behold as in a Glass the Lords Glory 2 Cor. 3.18 The New Testament helps us to understand the Old and adds de novo a far more glorious Light than ever shined before God spake more by his Son than he had done by his Servants the Prophets that lived in the Ages before his Manifestation in the flesh Such a clear Discovery of things which before were but darkly intimated is a priviledg which should be taken notice of and thankfully improved Mat. 13.16 17. Blessed are your Eyes for they see and your ears for they hear for verily I say unto you that many Prophets and righteous men have desired to see those things which ye see and have not seen them and to hear those things which ye hear and have not heard them 6. All true Believers in Christ have some Knowledg of him Rom. 10.14 How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard As it was in the first Creation God said let there be Light and there was Light so it is in the New Creation Darkness overspreads the Soul but God does shine into the heart and gives the Light of the Knowledg of Jesus Christ And Christ being thus revealed the heart is taken with him gladly opens and receives him relies and believes in him to Life everlasting Let the Church of Rome boast of the conveniences of Ignorance and the sufficiency of implicite Faith we shall shew our selves Children of Light by pleading for Light and it shall be our desire That God would deliver us from the Ignorance of the Church of Rome as well as from the Tyranny of the Bishop there 7. Those that know most of Christ know him but in part therefore are to be urged to grow in Knowledg The Apostle Paul who equalled James Cephas and John for in conference they added nothing to him Gal. 2.6 who was caught up to the third Heaven and there had abundance of revelations and heard words which was not lawful to utter yet humbly acknowledges that he knew in part and prophesied in part 1 Cor. 13.9 and that he saw but through a Glass darkly v. 12. Knowledg in this World is imperfect as well as Holiness and where both these are true there will be an industrious longing that both may be still carried on towards perfection These things being premised I shall tell you what it is to grow in the Knowledg of Christ in these particulars I. Growing in the knowledg of Christ implies a fuller apprehension of his Godhead Here is Majesty Immensity Glory that may presently amaze and overwhelm us Alas 't is but a small portion of this that we can understand but this must be known that the self same perfections which are in the Father are likewise in the Son for He and his Father are one Christ is the true God and Eternal Life 1 John 5.20 't is a destructively heretical Gloss to say he is styled God only by a Figure He is affirmed to be over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 He created all things in Heaven and in Earth visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or Principalities or Powers and he is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.16 17. And those excellent Creatures all the Angels of God are commanded to worship him Heb. 1.6 This Truth that Christ is God is more and more to be lookt into He that denyes it loses his Christianity according to * Necessarium est credere confiteri articulum de divinitate Christi quem ubi Arrius negavit necesse fuit etiam negare articulum R●demptionis vincere enim peccatum mundi mortem maledictionem iram lei in semetipso ●on est ullius ●reaturae sed ●ivinae potentiae opus Quare negantes divinitatem Christi amittunt tandem totum Christianismum fiuntque prorsus Gentiles Luther Tom. 4. p. 92. b. Luther and the prop and foundation of his Faith Here is the Rock upon which the Church is 〈◊〉 so as the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it Mat. 16.18 The Godhead of Christ makes his blood a price of infinite value full satisfaction has been made to divine Justice by the payment of it The Godhead of Christ puts merit into his obedience and sufferings so that believers cannot ask for more than he has deserved they should receive The Godhead of Christ gives efficacy to Ordinances so that the dead are quickned the blind are enlightned the weak are strengthened and confirmed The Godhead of Christ puts life and vigour into the Christians Faith he may safely be trusted who is God only wise who is the Lord Almighty whose mercy and faithfulness endure for ever 2. Diabolus lapsus est invidia illa qua invidit hominibus tantam dignitatem quod Deus futurus esset homo Bernard Growing in the knowledge of Christ implies a clearer sight of his humanity how often is he called the Son of Man as well as the Son of God One of the Fathers imagined that this was the fault and the fall of the reprobate Angels a proud enviousness at the forethought of the Son of God his advancing by taking upon him the humane nature And Luther supposed this was the occasion upon which Satan suggested to Mahomet in his Alcoram that many of the good Angels became Divels because they refused to worship Adam 'T is a great Mystery of Godliness that God is manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 Videtur Diabolus ipse autori Alcorani suggessisse quod id o Daemones facti essent ex bonis Angelis quia
Object of it is real the Ground of it certain the Actings of it sensible to himself and the Effects of it evident to others This I shall endeavour to do I. As for the Object of a Believers Faith and Hope that good which he believes shall be and expects after this life a state of glory for the spirits of just men He that shall deny that such a thing is must not own the Name of Christian when even the light of Nature will go so far toward the proving of it for 1. That shews us that the Soul is immortal as being of a spiritual nature and independent on the Body in its most proper and noble Operations the actings of the Understanding and Will 2. That there is a reward after this life for them that do well no less than on the contrary Punishment for evil doers This the generality of the Pagan World that knew not distinctly wherein that Reward did consist yet have granted the thing and who is not instructed by his own Conscience in the knowledge of it The work of the Law written in the Heart † Rom. 2.15 and the secret pleasure and satisfaction men take in their own Innocence or good actions proves a reward on the one hand as well as the fears and horrors which the Consciences of the most slie and secret sinners subject them to speak the punishment they expect on the other And if these things were only impressions made upon mens Fancies in their tender years it were strange that all the Reason they grow up to exercise and all the Art many obstinate Sinners make use of on purpose to obliterate them and to impress the contrary upon their Minds together with a thousand other Species printed on their Imaginations by their Employments their Pleasures and all the various Occasions and accidents of their Lives should never be able to rid them of these so unpleasing Sentiments 3. Something may be said even from natural Reason to prove this reward to consist in the enjoyment of God and so not only to evince the reality of some Happiness but of this in particular in the other life For 1. It will scarce be denyed but that the soul of Man is capable of enjoying God as its Sovereign good i. e. of most intensely delighting and entirely acquiescing in him as a good suitable to the spiritual Nature and sufficient for the vast capacity of an immortal Soul Some of the Heathen came near this when they stated mans Happiness as consisting in the Contemplation of the highest being And indeed the very Nature and Operations of the Soul and its apprehending spiritual Objects amounts to little less than a demonstration of this 2. The enjoyment of God is the greatest good any Creature can be capable of God is in himself absolutely the greatest good because an infinite one and comprehensive of all Perfection and there can be no greater good than to be possessed of him that is the greatest 3. The reward and happiness of an holy Soul can be nothing less than the greatest good and therefore must needs be the enjoyment of God himself this appears in that 1. Less than the greatest good cannot satisfie mans Soul and then to be sure cannot make it happy when its happiness consists in its being fully satisfied All the riches and pleasures of this World and delights of Sense can never be to the Soul instead of God because they are unsuitable to its nature which is spiritual to its duration which is immortal and to those appetites God hath implanted in it It 's very capacity of enjoying God is attended with a secret Inclination to it insomuch that many times when a man may not have an explicit and distinct knowledge of the good he wants yet being unsatisfied with what he hath though never so great he finds a want of something else and because he wants it he desires it though he know not clearly what it is to make him happy 2. It is most congruous to the Wisdom and goodness of God to appoint the greatest good to be the Happiness of the noblest of his Creatures not that they deserve it but because he may be most glorified by it and because he hath given them a nature capable of it As he suits the good of other Creatures to the capacities he hath given them so he doth the good of man None but Angels and men are capable of enjoying or actively glorifying him and God having capacitated them for that sutes their good to their Capacity It had not been agreeable to the Wisdom of God for man to have had only some inferiour good in this Life assigned to him as his chief Happiness when he had made him capable of an higher Thus much hath been said and more might even from Reason it self to prove the reality of those things Believers look for in the other Life How much might be said from Scripture with respect to which only they are the Objects of Faith but this I referre to the next head the ground of a Christian Faith 2. That is certain The same things sometimes may both be believed with a Divine Faith and known too by natural Reason but then the Medium whereby they are known and the ground whereon they are believed are very different the one is some rational argument the other the Word of God In the case before us the being of Eternal Life the present Object of Faith we speak of may be proved by reason but then so far it is not the Object of Faith but of Knowledge but withall it may be proved by Scripture and so it is the Object of Faith and as such I am now to speak of it and so to shew that the ground on which a Christian believes Eternal Life is most certain and that is no other than the Word of God particularly the Promise of the Gospel The Scripture therefore is the ground of the Faith of Eternal Life 1. As it reveals it for that it doth more fully and clearly though something a man may know of future Happiness by his natural light as before was said yet the fairest and most distinct notion he hath of it is by Revelation in the Word that tells us plainly what is that great good in which mans Happiness consists 1 Joh. 3.2 Seeing God as he is and being like him Life and Immortality are brought to light especially by the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 not only more distinctly discovered than ever Nature could discern them but than God himself had revealed them in the Old Testament 2. As it shews the way to it the terms on which it is to be obtained sets before us Eternal Life as in Christ it not only tells us of the thing it self but shews how man sinfull man may attain to the enjoyment of it declares true Holiness to be the way in which he is to walk and Christ the Door by which he is to enter 3. As it secures it upon
to them for the knowledge of Mysteries unless a Mystery of Iniquity were more pleasing to them whose very Religion was that Great Mystery of Godliness God was manifested in the flesh justify'd in the Spirit seen of Angels preacht unto the Gentles believed on in the World received up into glory 1 Tim. 3.16 Now this Mystery he first more generally characterizes by calling it the Mystery of God a divine Mystery not made one by meerly humane fiction and then he very distinctly specifies it in the following words and of the Father and of Christ Where the former and needs not be thought copulative but exegetical and might be read even or to wit or it may be read both as 't is usual with the Greeks as well as Latines when the copulative is to be repeated so to read the former As if it were said by the Mystery of God I mean not of God alone and abstractly considered as if it were enough to you to be meer Deists and that the whole superadded Revelation concerning the Mdiatour might be look't upon with indifferency or neglect as by the Gnosticks it was known then to be and afterwards by some of their great leaders in the substance of it with downright hatred and opposition but that which I so earnestly covet for you and wherein I would have you unite and be all one is the acknowledgement of the whole Mystery of God i. e. both of the Father and of Christ 2. The Apprehensive Principle which we may by a general name call Faith and accommodately enough to the name here given us of its object a Mystery which is elsewhere called the Mystery of Faith 1 Tim. 3.9 or a Mystery to be believed Faith being the known Principle of receiving the Gospel revelation But he here expresses it by words that signifie knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereby intimating that the Faith of Christians is not to be a blind and unintelligent Principle but that though there were contained in the Gospel Mysteries never to be understood if God had not afforded a special Revelation of them on purpose yet being revealed we ought to have a clear and distinct as well as lively and practical perception of them By these two words and the other expressions he joyns in with the former he seems to intimate two sorts of properties which belong to that Faith of the Gospel which he wishes to them 1. The rectitude clearness and certainty of notion 2. The efficacy impressiveness and immediate aptitude to have influence upon practice which he would have it carry with it The latter properties supposing and depending on the former he there highly exaggerates the matter and heaps together expressions that might with most lively emphasis set forth the kind of that knowledge which he conceives would be of so great use to them He wishes them a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a clear perspicacious Knowledge and an Assurance even to a plerophory a fulness of assurance in their knowledge of the truth of the Gospel Yea he wishes them the Riches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea and all Riches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that full assurance or Plerophory of understanding and knowledge of that Truth apprehending that this would certainly fix them in their Faith and Profession so as they would never recede from it As when in Christs own daies many went back and walked no more with him Joh. 6.66 That which retained others so that when Christ asks Will ye also go away vers 67. they presently answer Lord to whom shall we go could entertain no such thought was that besides what they believed of him was of greatest importance to them thou hast the words of eternal Life vers 68. So their belief was with that assurance as to exclude all suspicion or doubt in the Case and we believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the living God vers 69. And therefore neither canst want Power to confer eternal Life as all thy words do import thy design and promise to do nor truth to make good thy own plain words And then he also knew that such a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or knowledge would produce what he further wishes them an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an acknowledgement an inward vital owning a cordial embrace a lively perception of the same blessed Truths which must needs further most abundantly contribute to this their so much desired joynt and unanimous stability And now these are the two expedients by which he reckons they would be so closely compacted together as that no subtilty or violence could endanger them mutual love and a clear certain operative Faith of the Gospel if by the one they did cohere with each other and by the other adhere to God in Christ if the one might have with them the place power and bindingness of a cement the other of a continual inclination yieldingness and compliance to the magnetism of the center they would never so fall asunder as to give any enemies opportunity to be the succesful authors or the gratify'd Spectators of their ruine Thus therefore I would summ up the sense of this Scripture and the answer to the question proposed That the maintaining of sincere Love among Christians and the improving of their Faith to greater measures of clearness certainty and efficacy in reference to the substantials of Christianity are to be endeavoured as the best means to unite establish and preserve them against such as design the ruine of the truly Christian Interest The Case was at that time urging and important A great and numerous party was formed of such as did nauseate the simplicity of the Christian Religion and hate the true design of it All the care was what course was most proper and suitable to preserve the rest And you see what was then thought most proper Counsel was not taken to this effect and therefore Christians in a private capacity should not covet to have it so Let us bind them by certain devised preter-Evangelical Canons to things never thought fit to be enjoyn'd by Christ himself severely urge the strict and uniform observance of them make the terms of Christian Communion straiter than he ever made them adde new rituals of our own to his Institutions and cut off from us all that never so conscientiously scruple them No this was the practice of their common enemies and it was to narrow and weaken the too much already diminish't Christian Interest The Order mentioned vers 5. might be comely enough without things that were both unnecessary and offensive Nor was it consulted and resolved to agitate the Controversy about this power and practice in perpetual endless disputations and stigmatize them that should not be enlightned and satisfy'd in these matters as schismatical and wilful thô they never so sincerely adhered to the Doctrine and observed the Laws of Christ i. e. 'T was neither thought fit to urge the unsatisfy'd upon doubtful things
God but the Corruptions and Maladies of Christians are not You must hold nothing but what Christians of old have held as received from Gods Word but because they have all some Faults and Errors you must not hold and do all those V. Maintain the Vnity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace with all true Christians as such and live in Love in the Communion of Saints That is with them that live in the Belief and in holy Obedience to the Christian Faith and Law By their Fruits you shall know them The Societies of Malignants who suppress true Practical Knowledge and Piety and hate the best men and cherish Wickedness and bloodily persecute those that in Conscience obey not their Usurpations and Inventions are not the Communion of Saints Wolves Thorns and Thistles are not the Sheep or Vines of Christ VI. Prefer not any odd or singular Sect before the Universal Consent of the Faithful in your Learning or Communion so far as the Judgment of men is to be regarded Though we take not our Faith from the Number of Believers and though the most be usually none of the best and some few are much wiser than the most and in a Controversie a few men of such knowledge are to be believed before the multitude of less knowledge yet Christ is the Head of all true Christians and not of an odd Sect or Party only and he hath commanded them all to live as Brethren in Love and holy Communion And in all Sciences the greater number of agreeing men are liker to be in the right than some stragling persons who shew otherwise no more ability than they At least which side soever you like best in less necessary Points you must always be in unity with all true Christians and not unnecessarily differ from them VII Never set a doubtful Opinion against a certain Truth or Duty reduce not things certain to things uncertain but contrarily uncertain things to certain for instance It is certain that you ought to live in Love and Peace with all that are true Christians and to do good to all and wrong to none Let not any doubtful difference make you violate this Rule and hate and slander and backbite and hurt them for a doubtful indifferent or unnecessary thing Set not your Mint or Cummin Tythes or Ceremonies against Love and Justice and the great and certain things of the Law It 's an ill Sect or Opinion that is against the Nature and common Duty of Christianity and Humanity VIII Faithfully serve Christ as far as you have attained and be true to all the Truth that you know sin not by omission or practice against the Knowledge which you have lest God in justice give up your Understanding to believe a Lie IX Remember that all men on earth are ignorant and know but as in a Glass and in part and therefore the best have many Errors No man knoweth the smallest Grass or Worm with an adequate perfect knowledge And if God bear with multitudes of Errors in us all we must bear with such as are tolerable in each other It 's well if men be humble and teachable and willing to know As we have seen few more imperfect than the Sects that have asserted sinless perfection so we see few so fallible and erroneous as the Roman Sect which pleadeth their Infallibility when they tell you that you must believe their Popes and Councils that you may come to an end of Controversie Ask them whether we may here hope for any end of Ignorance Errour and Sin if not what hope of ending all Controversies before we come to Heaven where Ignorance is ended The Controversies against the Essentials of Christianity were ended with us all when we became true and adult Christians and the rest will be lessened as we grow in knowledge Divinity is not less mysterious than Law and Physick c. where Controversies abound X. Yet sti●t not your selves in Knowledge nor say we have learnt enough but continue as Christ's Scholars in Learning more and more to the Death the wisest know little and may still increase There is a great difference in Excellency Usefulness and Comfort between men of clear digested Knowledge and confused undigested Apprehensions These ten Rules practised will save you from being perplexed with Doubts and Controversies of all Pretenders in Religion II. But if your trouble be not about Doctrinal Controversies but about your Sins or want of Grace and Spiritual state digest well these following Truths and Counsels and it will cure you I. God's Goodness is equal to his Greatness even to that Power that ruleth Heaven and Earth His Attributes are commensurate And Goodness will do good to capable Receivers He loved us when we were Enemies and he is essentially Love it self II. Christ hath freely taken Humane Nature and made Satisfaction for the Sins of the world as full as answereth his Ends and so full that none shall perish for want of sufficiency in his Sacrifice and Merits III. Upon these Merits Christ hath made a Law or Covenant of Grace forgiving all Sin and giving freely everlasting Life to all that will believingly accept it so that all mens Sins are conditionally pardoned by the Tenor of this Covenant IV. The Condition of Pardon and Life is not that we sin no more or that by any price we purchase it of God or by our own works do benefit him or buy his Grace but only that we believe him and willingly accept of the Mercy which he freely giveth us according to the Nature of the Gift that is that we accept of Christ as Christ to justifie sanctifie rule and save us V. God hath Commissioned his Ministers to proclaim and offer this Covenant and Grace to all and earnestly intreat them in his Name to accept it and be reconciled to him he hath excepted none VI. No man that hath this Offer is damned but only those that obstinately refuse it to the last Breath VII The Day of Grace is never so past to any Sinner but still he may have Christ and Pardon if he will and if he have it not it is because he will not And the Day of Grace is so far from being past that it is savingly come to all that are so willing and Grace is still offered urgently to all VIII The Will is the Man in God's account and what a man truly would be and have he is and shall have Consent to the Baptismal Covenant is true Grace and Conversion and such have right to Christ and Life IX The number and greatness of former Sin is no exception against the pardon of any penitent converted Sinner God pardoneth great and small to such where Sin aboundeth Grace superaboundeth and much is forgiven that men may be thankful and love much X. Repentance is true though Tears and passionate Sorrow be defective when a man had rather leave his Sin than keep it and sincerely though imperfectly endeavoureth fully to overcome it No Sin
given is no other than the Will of the great God who made us all which Will must be made known and revealed unto man before it can have on him the force of a Law Now the Discoveries of God's Will are after a twofold manner for there are some other Discoveries than these that are by the Light of Nature What may be understood by the Light of Nature from the things made is done by the exercise of our Reason but what is revealed any other way is not received the same way with the former our knowledge of these Revelations depends not solely on the exercise of but principally on the exercise of Faith 'T is God who after an extraordinary manner has reveal'd his Will and therefore 't is on the Truth of his Testimony we must lean for the knowledge thereof that is we must Believe we must exercise Faith by the Exercise whereof we come to the knowledge of those things which we could not arrive unto meerly by the Exercise of our highest Reasonings and really God delights to try and exercise our Faith so that now especially since the Fall the Life and Heart of that Religion that is necessary to Salvation consists in the Exercise of Faith To be truly Religious and to be a sound Believer are expressions of one and the same import The Religion we are designed for and must now exercise if we will be saved is the Life of Faith which is a Life much higher than that of meer Reason for by Faith we know what by meer Reason we could never know If we consider the most momentous Points of our Religion we shall find that as they are adjusted to our own Capacities even so they are of Matters infinitely above us they are of Matters that are not within our view unto the knowledge of which we cannot come but by some special Revelation the certainty of which Revelations depend on the Veracity and Truth of God's Testimony and 't is our Faith alone by which we receive these Discoveries that are thus given us of God whence 't is said that the stronger our Faith is the more we glorifie God by believing the Truth of his Testimony And that we may thus glorifie God it hath pleased the Lord so to order the Revelations of his Mind and Will and so to dispose of things by his Providence as to pose our Reason and leave us in the dark at which time if we lean on the Veracity and Truth of Gods Testimony about the Doctrine and on his Wisdom and Righteousness about his Providence we discover the strength and firmness of our Faith to the Glory of God These things being so 't is manifest That the many profound Doctrines that are in Scripture and the many dark Providences that attend us do very much contribute to our living the more religiously i. e. to our walking the more by Faith to the saving the Soul This I conceive is one great End of the profoundness of the Doctrines of Religion and of the many difficulties in the Providences of God namely to raise us up to a Life above Sense and Reason even to the Life of Faith which is a high and a heavenly Life The more Difficulties that lie in the way of our Believing the more strong is the Faith that is exercised and the stronger our Faith the more God is glorified by us and the more is our Salvation furthered the which being so we have great reason to be abundantly quickned in our Thoughts If we consider the Nature of Faith we shall find that Mysterious Doctrines and Providences are very necessary for the engaging us to apply our selves to the Exercise of it 1. FAITH is the Evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 The Evidence not only of unseen future Glories but the Evidence of somewhat else not within the view of our Sence or Reason Faith doth evidence unto the Believer the Reality and Certainty of the Promises about Spiritual Blessings to be enjoyed in this Life and doth clearly shew unto him that these Blessings promised are real and shall most assuredly be enjoyed yea though there are in the eye of our Sence and our Natural Reasonings some Impossibilities between us and the inheriting the Promises yet even then Faith sees the Accomplishment not only possible but certain and sure By Faith we believe and receive those Truths which though clearly enough revealed yet are so much above our Capacity that we cannot otherwise embrace them By Faith we believe that the Promise shall be when we cannot see how it can be Thus was the Faith of Abraham exercis'd He believed when his Sight and Reason fail'd him Abraham was an hundred years old and as it were dead Sarah barren and now according to all Rules past Child-bearing notwithstanding all which the Promise being made that Sarah should bear a Son Abraham believes he could see how this could be by Faith though he could not see how it could be by his Reason According to his own Reasonings his Hopes were gone but being strong in Faith he staggered not at the Promise but had a hope above Hope being fully perswaded that what God had promised he was able also to perform Rom. 4. The like also when God commanded Abraham to offer up his Son his own his only Son Isaac whom he loved and of whom the Promise was for in Isaac shall thy Seed be called but nevertheless Abraham is commanded to kill him for a Sacrifice but here is the difficulty if Isaac be slain while so young as he then was even before he had any child how could the Promise be fulfilled Abraham must kill him and yet believe that he should live that he might be the Father of many Nations but how could this be Surely this transcended his Understanding but not his Faith for he believed That God was able to raise him from the dead therefore 't is said by Faith Abraham when he was tempted offered up Isaac accounting that God was able to raise him up from the dead Heb. 11.17 18 19. Time would fail to mention Jacob Joseph Moses David and many others who when surrounded with dark Dispensations by Believing gave Glory to God Then Faith is in a special manner acted and exercised when the Believer is compassed about with a cloud of difficulties when in the Doctrines that being plainly reveal'd are to be believed there is somewhat above our Reason and when in the Providences with which we meet there is somewhat very dark they seeming to thwart the doctrinal Discoveries that are made of the Will of God unto us then is the time to act Faith that is not Faith which does carry us no higher than our own scanty Reasonings To believe no more than we can comprehend with our own Reason is too low a thing to deserve the name of Faith Faith is a more noble and raised Grace by which a man believes when his Reason is at a Loss What is here said of Faith is a
destroy Natural Liberty Where the Spirit does not find sinners willing by his sweet Methods he makes them willing Psal 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power a day of power yet willing Even the Spirits Drawing is managed with all consistency to the freedom of the will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys he draws but 't is one that he makes willing to follow Hos 2.14 Behold I will allure her ay there 's the Spirits leading This being the constant and avowed Doctrine of the Protestants and † Ductus spiritus non est impulsus violentus quo rapimur inviti ut stipites sed est efficax persuasio quâ ex nolentibus efficimur volentes Par. with many others particularly their Explication of the Spirits leading in the Text how injurious and invidious are the Popish Writers in their traducing and calumniating of them as if they asserted the Spirit in This or any Other Act to work with Compulsion or in a way destructive to mans Essential Liberty 'T is a vile scandal And yet how do Esthius Salmeron Contzen upon the Words charge our Divines with it We perfectly concurr with Blessed St. * Enchirid. Cap. 64. de verbis Apostol Serm. 13. c. 11 12. Austin in that excellent passage of his cited by the Rhemists As many as are led by the Spirit he meaneth not says he that the Children of God are violently compelled against their Wills but that they be sweetly drawn moved or induced to do good But no more of this IV. The Extent of this Leading of the Spirit The Extent of it A threefold account may be given of that 1. In regard of the Subject or person led So it extends to the Whole Man First to the Interior Acts of the Soul in its several Faculties Vnderstanding Will and Affections And then to the Exterior Acts of the Body yea to the whole Conversation For all these are comprehended within and fall under the Spirits Leading For as his Sanctifying Operation extends to all of these the God of Peace sanctify you wholly and I pray God your whole Spirit Soul and Body be preserved blameless unto the coming of Christ 1 Thes 5.23 So does his Guiding Operation also these two being Commensurate and Coextensive This might be made out in Particulars was I not afraid of too much prolixity 2. In regard of the Object or Matter that the Spirit leads unto So it extends to the whole Duty of a Christian to all that he is to Know Believe and Do. Look as the Word in its External Leading guides us in all things that concern Faith and Practice it being a compleat and perfect Rule 2 Tim. 3.16 17. so 't is with the Spirit in his Internal Leading too Joh. 14.26 For Knowledge and Faith the Promise is But the Comforter which is the Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name he shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you John 16.13 And again Howbeit when he the Spirit of Truth is come he will guide you into all Truth see 1 John 2.20 27. And so 't is as to Holiness also this Spirit directs those who have him to and in the Practice of Holiness in its full and utmost Extent and Latitude Tit. 2.12 As the Grace of God the Gospel Without teaches us that denying ungodliness and worldly Lusts we should live soberly righteously godly in this present world which is the summe of all Duty towards God towards Men and towards our selves So the Spirit Within teaches guides inclines to all these His Gracious Conduct is not confin'd to does not terminate in this or that particular Duty of Religion no but it extends to every Duty to the whole Obedience of a Christian 3. In regard of the Degree and Measure of it Concerning which 't is clear that this Leading of the Spirit in the Directing Inclining Governing Notions of it is not as to Degree equal in all God's Children All have the Thing in the Necessary and Substantial part of it yet so as that there is a Gradual Difference in their having of it Some having more and some less He being a Free and Arbitrary Agent does proportion this Act of his Grace to different Persons as he pleases And he making Some more ductil to his Leadings than Others accordingly he vouchsafes more of Them to Those than he does to Others But in None does it reach so high as to render them perfect here For although we should grant which I do not that the Spirit should advance his Guidance consider'd in it self and as it comes from Him to such a Degree and Pitch as to lay the Foundation of Perfection in Saints here below yet considering what the Capacity of the Subjects of this Act is here they being Flesh as well as Spirit 't is not imaginable that de Facto and in Eventu they should ever here be perfect upon it Wherefore it must be bounded and limited though not from what the Spirit could do yet from what he is pleased to do in Believers in their present imperfect state He shall guide you into all Truth what so as to make Saints Omniscient or Infallible He guides unto all Holiness what so as to render them sinless and impeccable here on Earth we must by no means carry it thus high It therefore must be qualified thus He shall guide you into all Truth i. e. into the Knowledge of all Necessary and Fundamental Truths And he shall guide you into all Holiness i. e. so far as your present state admits of and so far as is necessary for your future Glory Beyond this Measure we must not extend or heighten the Spirits Leading For the truth is if we take it in this bounded Notion we secure the Thing but if we go higher we totally undermine and nullifie it as all Experience proves And by the way Observe that this Guidance of the Spirit in the General and that Guidance of His in Particular in the Duty of Prayer do much stand upon the same level Insomuch that as the Former the Spirits immediate Guiding of Believers in the Matter and Manner of their Actions does not thereupon render Them or Their Actions perfectly Holy and free from all mixtures of sin So neither does the Latter the Spirits immediate Guidance and Assistance in the Matter and Manner of Prayer render the Prayers of such infallible or of equal Authority with the Scriptures as some Object Because as to Both this Agency of the Spirit is to be limited partly from the Consideration of the present State of the subject in whom it is exerted and partly from the Spirits Aim and End therein 'T is true to obviate a bad Inference that may be drawn from hence the Apostles themselves considered as but Men and as men in the State of Imperfection so they were fallible as we are But as they had in matters of Faith
industriously conceal themselves from being serviceable they are guilty of a civil Self-excommunication while they shut out themselves from those Employments wherein they might be useful God hath made every thing for use to rust in a Corner for the avoiding of Trouble can proceed from nothing but uncharitable Pride or wilful Ignorance from base Pride you think the Neighbourhood not good enough to be blest with your endowments or slothful weakness which you are conscious of but won't take pains to cure In short to choose retirement for love of ease is an envious kind of Life and therefore far from Happiness But what can Religion do in this case One that is Serious in Religion can best manage an obscure Station whether it be forc't or voluntary 'T is only he that is crucified to the World that can scorn the Worlds scorns and contemn the Worlds contempt He that hath learnt the great lesson of Self-denial in the School of Christ is well pleas'd with his Secresie for Communion with God In short his Religion keepeth him from being fond or weary of worldly Obscurity Thus I have run over the † 1 Joh. 2.16 beloved Disciples Summary of all worldly Vanities and their Contraries and how Godliness in the Power of it corrects the Vanity and extracts the Excellency of all those But let these pass and let 's examine things of a higher Nature for which more may be pleaded than can for these be pretended and here you 'l find that without Serious Godliness their Vanity is intolerable IV. Who knows whether Wisdom and Learning and the endowments of the Mind be best for a man or whether to be without these and their troublesome Attendants Now we come to a close and inward Search For Wisdom and Learning and intellectual accomplishments they are of such incomparable Excellency that he is scarce worthy the Name of a man that slights them a Eccles 2.13 Wisdom excelleth Folly as far as light excelleth darkness This is Solomons sentence even then when he is sentencing all worldly Vanities But and who mistrusts such a but here the wiser men are the more they are exempted from the ordinary Comforts of humane Society they meet with but few and those but seldom that they can converse with to any Satisfaction the more Learning they have the more Sense of and Sorrow for their Ignorance b Eccles 1.18 In much Wisdom is much Grief and he that increaseth Knowledge increaseth Sorrow Hence it is they affect an uncomfortable Solitude that they are fain to force themselves into a sociable complyance where they seldom meet with any thing but what they slight or pity they are ordinarily the objects of their own grief and of others envy There 's nothing more ordinary than for Persons of lower accomplishments to carry their designs and attain their ends before them they can't sneak and flatter like lower-spirited Animals that while they are pursuing a Notion others catch Preferment and while they are inriching their Minds others are filling their Coffers What doth Serious Godliness in this Case 'T is this alone that makes wise men truely wise and Learned men truely learned Unsanctified parts and Learning may in some respects be reckoned among Christs worst Enemies aye and among his worst Enemies that have them they furnish him with Cavils which they call unanswerable Reasons against the Simplicity of the Gospel they fill him with those prejudices that nothing but Grace can remove c Rom. 8.7 The carnal Mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be But where Grace is graffed upon good Natural parts there Wisdom and Learning are excellently beneficial it is they that have the clearest Understanding of Gospel Mysteries 't is these who are the most substantial grounded Christians these are the only Christians who are able to defend the Truth and convince gain-sayers d Job 33.3 't is their Lips can utter Knowledge clearly e 1 Cor. 14.3 't is they that can best speak or write to Edification and Exhortation and Comfort What then can be said for the want of parts and Learning Those that have no considerable Parts nor Learning that do not trouble themselves nor others about the difficulties of Knowledge or Practice but take those things to be Truth that are commonly received these are more satisfied than those thar are more inquisitive Besides these better suit the generality they live among They are wise enough to get Estates for men are ordinarily afraid to deal with those that are wiser than themselves lest they be over-reacht and they are esteem'd in the World and what care they They don't impair their health by study nor perplex themselves with great matters What can be more desired to make them happy Happiness as it were drops into their mouth unawares for when they compare their Condition with others they find it more eligible thô they did nothing to make it so But alas what use do these make of their Souls A lazy neglect of improving of parts and of getting of learning who is able to express the Sin and Mischief of it To be contented to live and die but one remove from a Brute who can express the baseness of it Ignorance may well be the Mother of their Devotion whose Religion is a Cheat but the Scripture tells us and we believe it f Prov. 2.10 When Wisdom entereth into thine Heart Knowledge is pleasant unto thy Soul And without it neither Heart nor State can be good But what doth Serious Godlinesse in this Case These thô they have not any considerable Parts and Learning yet they bewail their Ignorance and are willing to learn they get a savoury Knowledge of necessary practical Truths and they increase the knowledge of them by practice thô they are Fools to the World they are wise for their Souls and wise for Eternity and this is the best Wisdom They have learned Christ which is the best Learning This you shall find those great Doctrines of Christianity which Learned men bandy to and fro in doubtful disputation such as these viz. The unaccountableness of Predetermination the supra or infralapsarian aspect of Election the controverted extent of Redemption the manner of the concourse of the Divine and Humane will in Vocation the formality of Justification In these and such like Doctrines wherein the most eminently learned can neither give nor receive satisfaction Serious Christians of but ordinary Knowledge are so far satisfied as to admire the Grace of God in Christ and press after such Holiness of Life as adorns their Profession and muzzles Revilers So that by what hath been said you may plainly see that both the excellency and deficiency of intellectual endowments are best managed by Serious Godliness without which whatever can be said for either is not worth the mentioning V. Having named several things of real worth and compared them with other things that others think so
notitiae connotat affectum light and heat clearer views and dearer and stronger Loves must go together 3. The Persons who are to labour after a greater measure of Knowledg and those are real Christians who have attained to some degree of spiritual Understanding that Light which is as the Light of the Moon should be increased so as to equal the Light of the Sun and that which is as the Light of the Sun should be augmented so as to equal the light of seven days should grow more and more glorious 4. The Arguments to perswade and they are two Christ is their Lord Christ is their Saviour 1. Christ is their Lord a Lord most great most gracious the more this is understood the better will his Service be liked as honourable and advantageous and Obedience will be yielded with greater chearfulness and constancy 2. Christ is their Saviour a Saviour from the greatest Evils Sin and the miserable effects of it in time in eternity a Saviour to the greatest Blessedness an everlasting Kingdom and Glory a Saviour of that which is most pretious the Soul which if safe the whole man must needs be secured The Text may be considered with a double reference to what goes before to what follows after 1. To what goes before grow in Grace and Knowledg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and hence we may observe That the way to increase in Grace is to increase in the Knowledg of Christ the means of Grace will be found inefficacious and empty will convey nothing if Christ be not with them and in them if he be not understood by those that use them All that fulness out of which the Church is replenished from the beginning of the world to the very end of it it has pleased the Father should dwell in Christ Col. 1.19 If a man know where a vast Treasure lies hid he may quickly go and enrich himself the way to have more Grace is to understand that Christ is the Fountain from whence all Grace is derived He is head over all things to his Church which is his Body and is called to shew the reality and plentifulness of Communication the fulness of him who filleth all in all Eph. 1. ult 2. The Text may be referred to what follows after To him be Glory both now and for ever Amen Hence observe th●t th● gr●●●●r Kn●●l●●●●●● Christ we attain to the more we shall ●●●●●r and s●● 〈…〉 glorifie him his Godhead is the same with the Fathers his 〈…〉 Dominion equal and eternal The Church millitant mu●● 〈…〉 begin to glorifie her Lord and Saviour and whe● she comes to be 〈…〉 praises will be vastly higher and to magnifie to love to a●●ire and to rejoyce in him will be her everlasting business But I shall wave the Connexion and from the words themsel●●● r●●se this Doctrine That it highly concerns all s●●cere 〈◊〉 to grow and i●crease in the Knowledg of Christ The Gospel which rev●●ls Christ 〈…〉 mystery which the Angels themselves desire to 〈…〉 looking they admire the manifold wisdom of God the exceeding riches of his Grace and love and shall not the Saints search farth●● into this Gospel shall they not look more unto and into Jesus what 〈…〉 him the nature of Angels but the Seed of Abraham The better Christ is understood the better will they understand how happy he has ma●●● them and that Christ being theirs all is theirs The question that in this exercise I am to answer is this How 〈…〉 grow in the Knowledg of Christ and make use of and 〈…〉 K●●wledg Now that the Answer may be the more full I shall do the●● four things First I shall tell you what it is to grow in the Knowledg of Christ 〈◊〉 the telling you this will tend to the advancement of this gro●th Se●ondly What Properties are required in this Knowledg Thirdly The Directions are to follow that you may increase in the Knowledg of him Fourthly What Vse and Improvement you are to mak● of t●is K●●wledg or of Christ known I begin with the first of these What it is to grow in the K●●wledg of Christ Here several Propositions are to be premised 1. The Knowledg of Christ is of the greatest Excellency The Apostle calls this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3.8 Yea doubtless and I c●●●t ●ll things but loss for the Excellency of the Knowledg of Christ Jesus my Lord other kind of Knowledg is like Light from the S●ars this like b●am● from the Sun Christ is called the Sun of Righteousness He is called Wisd●m in the abstract Sapientiae omnimoda sapientia Prov. 1.20 in the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wisdom in him i●●he Sum the Perfection of Wisdom To know him does assimu●ate and make us like him and when we shall have a full view of him in glory we shall to our utmost capacity fully resemble him To know him is Life eternal and they that seek Life any other way will find death 〈◊〉 themselves mistaken in the end No wonder the Apostle glories in 〈◊〉 Knowledg and that an ancient Father said he was gl●d he had somet●●●● of value he meant Phil●sophy to despise in comparison 2. This Knowledg of Christ is of absolute necessity Stat invicta haec rupe s. Ego sum Via nullus a in s quicquid ante m via haec non fuerit error lubricum te nebraesunt Luther Tom. 2. p. 507. In Scripture he is compared to those things which are so needful that we cannot be without them 〈◊〉 M●●t and Drink and Raiment Christ is the Bread of Life the fountain of Living Water we are to put on the Lord Jesus his righteousness is t●● Garment which must cover and secure us To be totally ignorant ●f him must needs be death eternal for there is not Salvation in any other● 〈◊〉 4.12 3. The Knowledg of Christ is by supernatural revelation Much of God may be r●●d in the Book of nature his visible Works do make the wisdom p●wer and goodness of the Worker also visible But Christ is a mystery h●d from Ages and Gen●rations and would have remained hid still if the Gospel had not revealed him Col. 1.26 Who could ever have thought of God his being manifested in the fl●sh and redeeming the Church with his o●●● Blood if this had not been brought to Light by the Gospel Th●se are indeed the deep things of God which the Spirit reveals 1 Cor. 2.10 11. and power to discern them and believe them is from the same Spirit 4. The Knowledg of Christ was communicated in a degree under the old Testament The Prophets spake of him and if they had not what they had said besides had been insignificant The Law was a Schoolmaster to bring Israel to Christ Gal. 3.24 The Ceremonial Law requiring the blood of so many sacrifices 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shewed plainly that the Sacrificers themselves deserv●d to die and therefore is said to be against them
all their promises are yea and Amen in Christ 2 Cor. 1 20. The Covenant was made for his sake 't was ratified and confirmed by his death his bloud is called the bloud of the everlasting Covenant Heb. 13 20. his bloud being shed the Covenant stands good unto eternity Here is vast encouragement to lay hold upon the promises If you come to God and ask Lord hast thou not made promises of pardon to the penitent and believing promises of grace to the humble promises of satisfaction to the hungry Souls promises of joy and comfort to the mourners In his Word God answered Yea. If you farther add Lord Let these promises be accomplished for thy Christs sake the answer is Amen it shall be so they shall be all fulfilled 10. Growing in the knowledge of Christ implies a more earnest looking for his Word appearing The day of this appearing is appointed it draws very near being hastned by the Prayers and sufferings of Saints by the Sins and security of the World Yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry Heb. 10.37 If Christ were better known this day would be more longed for by the Saints Innocency will then be cleared all enemies more then conquered salvation will be perfected the whole Church of Christ with all its members glorified Col. 3 4. When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with him in glory Thus you see what it is to grow in the knowledge of Christ and the telling you this is indeed a directing you how to grow in this knowledge In the second place I am to shew you what properties are required in this Knowledge 1. This knowledge of Christ would grow more and more certain The Apostle speaks of Riches of full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgement of the Mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ Col. 2 2. The truths of Christ are certain in themselves the mind should understand them as most certain there should be an assurance of their certainty a full assurance of it such an assurance is a rich thing a thing of great value for 't will have a great vertue and efficacy both upon the heart and life 2. This Knowledge of Christ should more and more 〈…〉 when he sees the treasures of W●sdom in Christ he should be sensible of his own folly when he views the robe of Christs ●●ghteousness he should be sensible that his own righteousn●●● are but rags When he studies Christs fulness and Power he should be sensible of his own emptiness and weakness Finally he should see himself to be nothing when he perceives that Christ is all in all Col. 3.11 3. This Knowledge of Christ should grow more Spiritual He is not to be known after a carnal manner and therefore Popish Images are very unfit representations of him not that his flesh is swallowed up of his Divinity as Servetus dreamed but his flesh is glorified and as transcendently glorious we must now look upon him We must also know him as the purchaser and bestower of all Spiritual gifts and graces that we may be further renewed by his Spirit the Apostle ●s th●● 〈◊〉 be understood when ●e s●●s 2 Cor. 5.16 ●● Though 〈…〉 after the Flesh yet now henceforth know we him no more therefore if 〈…〉 in Christ he is a new Creature 4. This Knowledge of Christ should encourage to a m●●● 〈…〉 upon him when we see what a sure and everlasting foundation Christ is here we should build higher and higher till the top reach Heaven there is no fear that the foundation will not bear the superstructure We may safely depend upon Christ for a lasting peace with God for perfecting the work of grace and abundant entrance into the everlasting Kingdom He that believes in him shall never be confirm did 1 Pet. 2 6. Let 〈◊〉 this R●lya●●e be called a ●●lling faith but without scoffing at her let the Church of Christ be permitted to lean upon her Beloved while she is so weak as she is in the Wilderness of this World Cant. 8.5 5. The Knowledge of Christ should raise him higher and 〈◊〉 Christians estimation The more we know of him new beauties will still be discovered in him He is greater than Jonas a Prophet gr●●●● t●●● Solomon a King who was the most famous King of Israel He is altogether lovely nay he is the Angels wonder Heavens darling the brightness of his Fathers glory Here is no danger of an over value of an excessive love Therefore let the Spark be blown up into a fla●● that may not be quenched by many Flouds of Water that may be too strong for Death and Hell it self to conquer Cant. 8.6 7. 6. The Knowledge of Christ should have a great Aspect upon whatever else is revealed in the Word of God 'T is a great matter to know the truth as it is in Jesus Eph. 4 21. The Apostle tells us that he desired to know nothing else but Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2 2. will plainly intimate that he lookt upon other things with a respect unto Christ and indeed without such a respect what knowledge can be profitable what knowledge can be comfortable Luther said In Christs Crucif●● 〈…〉 Theologia cognitio De● There cannot be a right knowledge of God if there be an ignorance of Christ crucified 7. The Knowledge of Christ it should be operative still in a greater measure It is inexcusable to be slothful where the Master is so good the promised assistance so great the commands far from grievous and the reward eternal The better we know our Lord Jesus we shall s●●●● him wit● a more perfect heart with a more willing mind Obedience is reasonable pleasant necessary we should be stedfast and always abound herein Labour shall not be in vain 1 Cor. 15 58. 8 The Knowledge of Christ should cause great glorifying and joy Well may believers who have no confidence in the Flesh who worship God in the Spirit rejoyce in Christ Jesus Phil. 3 3. God in Christ is become their Father and he will not disinherit any of his Children 〈◊〉 he has adopted but they shall abide in the House forever nothing shall separate them from his love The marriage union between Christ and them shall never be dissolved Mansions are preparing for them in Heaven where there is everlasting light and pleasantness and they are fitting for these Mansions and shall not be long out of them Well may they love their Lord and believing rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1 ● In the third place the Directions follow how you may increase and grow in the Knowledge of Jesus Christ The directions are these 1. Be sensible of your remaining ignorance and how great the hindrance is how great the harm is that is the effect of it You that are the Children of light and of the day have much of night and darkness in you A perfect
9 10. Lay hold of the promise of the Spirit which the Father is more forward to give then earthly Parents bread to their hungry Children take heed of grieving this holy Spirit deliver up your selves to his guidance and hear what he saith unto the Churches and he will lead you farther into all truth and glorify Christ Joh. 16 14. by causing you to see more of his beauty more of his glory 7. Take heed of seducing Spirits Hearken to the Apostle Joh. 14 1. Beloved believe not every Spirit but try the Spirits whether they are of God and the Trial is to be made with reference to Christ v. 2. It is much to be observed that Satan the Father of lies in broaching of heresies has struck at our Lord Jesus in a special manner Arrius of old denied his Godhead Eutyches his Manhood Nestorius denyed the Union of his Nature in one Person Pelagius opposed his Grace and Antichrist would fain banish his Gospel and hinder him from being lookt unto as the only Mediatour You that are the Sheep of Christ hearken not to the voice of such strangers but flee from them Be not like Children toss't too and fro and carried about with every wind of Doctrine as you would become perfect men in the knowledge of the Son of God and attain to the measure of the Stature of the fulness of Christ Eph. 4 13 14. 8. Abstain from worldly and fleshly lusts these put out the Souls ey● and take away the heart These lusts are called deceitful and foolish lusts for they make meer fools of those that make provision to fulfil them The cleaner your hearts are from pride envy passion malice evil concupiscence and covetousness the clearer will the eyes of your understandings be to see the Lord Jesus The Apostle bids the Ephesians Chap. 4 22 23. to put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts and then adds be ye renewed in the Spirit of your mind So Col. 3 5 10. Mortify your members which are upon Earth fornication uncleanness inordinate affection c. and then it follows put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the Image of him that created him 9. Associate your selves with them who have a great measure of the Knowledge of Christ Solomon tells us He that walketh with the wise sh●ll be wise but a companion of fools shall be destroyed Prov. 13 20. Value the communion of Saints and delight in them as the most excellent Company and like them best when they shew the best of themselves and most of all manifest that light and heat that is in them Oh what an improvement might Saints make one of another as to wisdom grace and consolation if they were not wanting ●ne to ●●other and to themselves also The weaker Christians should learn of the stronger ●specially of their Teachers and Teachers themselves by i●●●●ing light to others would find then own light increased Ego ex corum numero me ess● profiteor qui scribunt proficiendo scribendo proficiunt August Epist 7. Knowledge being lik● the Widdows oyl which the more it was drawn out the more it was augmented 10. Let your end in desiring a greater degree of the Knowledge of Christ be right not that you may be pa●● up in your own minds or admired by men but that Christ may b● more admired and esteemed by you If knowledge pulls you up you ●re not really great and grown but only swell'd and diseased Apparet Christus humilis ad superbos Est enim superbia non magnitudo sed tumor quod autem tumes videtur mag●●●sed non est sa● num Augustin Serm. 27. de Temp. as a Father observes Superbia non est magnitude sed tumor More talents will be committed to your trust if you ask more that you may improve them Let this be your design in desiring to grow in the knowledge of Christ that your Faith may grow exceedingly that your love may grow more ardent and that over all things in your hearts Christ may know the preheminence Long to know him better that this knowledge may more perfectly cleanse both your hearts and conversations Follow on to know him that you may follow harder after him In the fourth and last place I am to tell you what Vse and improvement you are to make of this knowledge of Christ or of Christ known And here I might speak largely first of all to them that are without Christ you that are in this state must needs he also without hope and with us God in the world You that are such pray consider what you have heard concerning the Lord Jesus and seriously weigh with your selves whether you have reason still to slight him Much good has been told you concerning him and none but a lying Spirit can suggest and a foolish heart believe that 't is best still to keep at a distance from him Christ calls after you to this day though you have long rejected him behold he stand at the door and knocks Prov. 3.20 waiting that he may be gracious Oh that at length you would he prevailed with to come to him I shall only vse these two arguments to perswade you 1. Christ is willing to receive the very must of you upon your returning and believing he will take you with all your faults and obtain your full and free pardon he will take you with all your debts and cross your scores cancel your bonds though you debts amount to many thousand talents He will take you with all your infirmities though ●ever so soul and loathsome and heal and cleanse your Souls by his Blood and Spirit The Apostle Paul speaks of his being apprehended of Jesus Christ Phil. 3 12. And when our Lord Jesus apprehended him and graciously received him whom did he receive it was a Blasphemer 〈◊〉 Persecut●r and Injurious and yet he obtained mercy I● t●e Apostle had ransack all he could hardly have found a worse ●rue the● those mentioned 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Fornicatours Idolaters Adulterers ●ffiminate abusers of themselves with Mankind Thieves Covetous Drunkards Revilers Extortioners and yet these were washt and sanctified first and saved afterwards Here is a strong inducement to the very worst to come to this Gracious this mighty Saviour 2. Christ is willing to give himself to you so that all that he is and has shall be yours you are not only called but woo●d you are solicited to give your con●ent marriage and this is the greatest and the b●● Match of all to be married to the Prince of life and Lord of all Be but willing to be his he is much more willing to be yours Oh wonder at his condescending love wonder at your own madness in standing out and presently yield your selves to Jesus saying Lord we repent we believe help th●● our and ●●belief and heal the impenitency and ●ardness of our hearts I shall say no more at present to the
unbelievers but address my self to you that are Saints who have known Christ with a saving Knowledg and shall shew you how Christ and the knowledg of him may be used and improved 1. Improve the knowledg of Christ with reference to God himself God out of Christ is very dreadful thus considered sinful man must look upon him as the Devils do and tremble Jam. 2.19 He has fury in his Face curses in his mouth and a glittering Sword in his hand and what flesh can stand before him But you that are Believers are to look upon him as he is in Christ now his wrath is taken away he is the God of Love and Peace and Grace and comfort you may discern his bowels yearning towards you his everlasting arm embracing you his Language is most sweet and full of kindness nay He swears he will bless you with all sorts of blessings but especially with the best namely spiritual and everlasting Under the Old Testament God was called the Lord that brought Israel out of Aegypt Afterwards the Lord that brought Judah out of the Land of the North. But under the New Testament he is styled again The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 1.3 1 Pet. 1. ● Behold him in Christ and you will see him to be a Father a Guide a Shield an exceeding great reward you may abound in Faith and Hope and Joy in the Lord for he is the God of your Salvation 2. Improve the Knowledg of Christ with reference to the Law of God The Law considered in it self since the fall of Man is the ministration of Death it condemns the Transgressors and concludes and leaves them under wrath and t is so weak through the flesh that it can give righteousness and Life to none but if this Law be lookt upon in the hand of Christ the Mediator its Curse is removed its rigour abated The Believer may delight in the Law of God Ps 1.2 and prefer it before thousands of Gold and Silver Ps 119.72 and is to account it one of the choice new Covenant Blessings to have this Law written in his very heart Heb. 8.10 Christ heals the natural enmity against the Law of God which was in the hearts of believers and strengthens them to yield obedience to it and that promise is fulfilled Ezeck 36. ●7 I will put my Spirit within yo● and cause you to walk in my Stutures and ye shall keep my Judgments and do them 3. Improve the knowledge of Christ with reference to Sin Behold the Lord Jesus for Sin condemning Sin in the flesh that is by being made a sin offering he condemned sin Sins cause Falls sin is as it were cast and the sinner believing in Jesus is acquitted If you are in Christ Sin though it has damned thousands yet you are freed from it's condemning Power Rom. 8.1 There is therefore no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Behold this Lamb of God who bare your sins himself a Load too heavy for you to bear Are you afflicted with the remainders of Lusts and Corruptions Still look to Jesus No Lust so strong but he can easily mortify it The death of Christ has a killing Power in reference to sin without this all means of mortification will be of little efficacy The Apostle speaks of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being planted together in the Likeness of his death Rom. 6.5 As the branch derives vertue from the Vine so the Christians mortifying Power from Christ's death When he the second Adam was crucifyed the old Adam was crucifyed with him and truly the old Man with his Lusts and Deeds must be mortifyed by the improvement of Christs Crucifixion Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our Old Man is crucifyed with him that the Body of Sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve Sin Hoc ben●ficium Christo acceptum ferre convenit quia sine ipso hostile potius Angelis nobiscum di●cidium est quam familiaris juvandi nostri cura Ideo super ipsum ascendere descendere dicuntur non quod illi soli ministrent sed quod ejus respectu in ejus honorem complectantur sua cura totum Ecclesiae corpus Calvin in Johan c. 1. 4. Improve the Knowledg of Christ in reference to Angels and that both good and evil Angels The good ones have Christ to be their Head Col. 2.10 And they holding this Head are confirmed and established These good Angels are said to ascend and descend upon Christ John 1.51 Which Luther refers to their Contemplation of Christs divinity and humanity V. der● in ead●m Persona summa infima conjunctissima But Calvin refers it to the Angels Ministration here is an allusion to Jacob's Ladder Christ is that Ladder whereby we may ascend 't is through Him that Heaven is open and 't is upon his Account that the Angels are ready to do Offices of kindness to believers and are so ready to be ministring Spirite to minister for them that are Heirs of Salvation Heb 1.14 And as from Christ you are to expect care from the good Angels so he can easily defend you from the bad ones He stops the mouth of the Devil who is the Accuser of the Brethren by that full satisfaction he ha● made to divine Justice He detects him as a Lyar and discovers his wiles and devices He opposes Satan as a Murtherer and hinders him from devouring the least Lamb of his flock he is ready to a●m you with the whole armour of God and strengthens you both to combate and to conquer He has tryed Satans Strength in his own person and had got the Victory He had spoiled Principalities and Powers and made a shew of them openly triumphing over them Col 2.15 5 Improve this Knowledg of Christ with reference to this present World Christ in the days of his flesh had little of the world and in the hour of Temptation he despised the offer of the whole Surely 't is a thing of small value and it usually proves a great snare else Christians should have more of it They are enemies to the C●oss of Christ who mind e●rthly things Phil. 3.18 19. They are Strangers to the power of his resurrection whose hearts and Treasure are not in Heaven Look unto Jesus and look off from the World or look upon it with contempt Be not so eager after that which Christ lost his Life to deliver you from Gal. 1.4 He gave himself that he might deliver us from this present evil world acccording to the Will of God and our Father 6. Improve this knowledg of Christ with reference to Duties Grace and perseverance in Grace Let all your Duties be done in his Name Gal. 3.17 that is in his Strength and with expectation of acceptance ●●●●rely upon the account of his Mediation Apply your selves to him for grace to help in every time of need Heb. 4.16 for grace to do for grace to suffer for grace to persevere and stand perfect and