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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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so Israel was Elect 2. There is an Election to salvation which is the eternall predestination of God appointing certaine men to be vessels of mercy and to enjoy the glory of heaven 3. There is an Election to sanctification which is performed in time by the power of the Gospell separating the fore-ordained from the masse of forlorne men unto holinesse of life This is nothing else but effectuall vocation 4. There is an El●ction to the administration of some office as to the Apostleship Election imports a singling of a man from some thing that is vil● and miserable and so the godly are elect from the masse of condemned men in Adam and from under the power of Sathan and the kingdome of darknesse from the first death from the company of evill men from the tyranny of sinnes of all ●o●●s from 〈◊〉 ●igo● an● 〈◊〉 o●●he law and eternall ●ondemnation These Elect men are not to be knowne by their numbers wit wealth nobility beauty personage nor by their presence paines or priority in Gods vineyard but they are to be knowne both by their birth and by their life By their birth and so they may be knowne for they are borne of God borne by promise borne againe they are then called and converted of God Rom. 8.30 By their life they may be knowne for they depart from iniquity and call upon the name of the Lord. 2 Tim. 2.19 they are fruitfull in well-doing and their fruits remaine Iohn 15.16 they are holy and unreb●keable Ephes. 1.4 they beare the image of the Son of God both in holinesse and sufferings for holinesse Rom. 8.29 They abound in faith vertue godlinesse knowledge temperance patience brotherly love and kindnesse 2 Pet. 1.5.6.10 These Elect men have admirable felicities and priviledges aboue all the men in the world For 1. They have most deare acceptation with God in his beloved Eph. 1.5 they are his delight Psal. 132.13 his chiefe treasure Psal. 135.4 his pe●uliar people Deut. 7.6 26.18 2. They are adopted to bee the children and heires of God in Christ Ephes. 1.4 3. They have the pleasures of Gods house Psal. 65.4 5. 4. In adversity they are sure of countenance Esa. 41.8 9. Protection v. 10. the avenging of their wrongs Esay 41.11 12. Luke 18.8 deliverance and victory Zach. 1.17.20.21 5. The non-suting of all actions and accusations in heaven against them Rom. 8.35 6. They are made the friends of God and from thence have audience in all suites and communication of the secrets of God Iohn 15.15 16. Deut. 4.7.37 7. They are assured of preservation to the end Mat. 24. 8. They shall obtaine glory in Iesus Christ being chosen to salvation ● Thess. 2.13 14 15. Hence we may informe our selves 1. That there is a choice God did not drive in whole Nations Cities Townes c. but a certaine number of them 2. That the doctrine of Election may be taught It is true that it is in some respects strong meate and hath in some things an Abyssus It should also inflame in every one of us both praises and prayers to God that he would above all things remember us with the favour of his people and comfort us with the joy of his chosen and above all care to care to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 What shall it profit a man to be sure of his house money lands c. and not to be sure of the salvation of his soul Know yee not that Christ Iesus is in you except you be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 Such as finde by the signes their Election should abound in all possible thankfulnesse to God 2 Thess. 2. 13. c. Further hath God cho●en us and shall we not live like Gods Elect It should teach us to endeavour to shew by our workes that we are chosen of God separating our selves from the wicked and holding forth the light of the truth in all unrebukablenesse of holy conversation not being discouraged with ill entertainment in the world Deut. 10.12 to 18. 14.1 26.26 c. Ephes. 1.5 2.10 Iohn 15.18 19 20. c. Finally we should hence learne not to be ashamed of Gods Elect but choose unto us whom God hath chosen to him choose them I say both to honor them and to sort with them and to countenance them and defend them Ministers should acknow●edge there in their teaching and great men in conversing This also may be a doctrine of singular terror to wicked men that will not be gathered and called by the meanes of salvation Esay 66.4 5. If it be such a felicity to be chosen of God what misery is it then to be rejected of God for ever If such a vexation to be disgraced and scorned of great men what is it then to be rejected of the great God and this is the more wofull if the fore-runner of the full declaration of it be upon men I meane a spirit of slumber Rom. 11.7.10 And thus of Election This Election is first amplified by the ground of it which is the fore-knowledge of God According to fore-knowledge Praescience or fore-knowledge in God is considered more largely or more strictly more largely and so it notes the whole act of praeordination so in the 20. verse of this chapter it is rendred ordained more strictly and properly for the knowledge of God praeceding in order the appointment to the end and thus it is taken two wayes For there is a praescience they call in schooles absolute by which God from eternity doth know all things simply and absolutely so the word is used 2 Pet. 3.17 There is also a praescience they call speciall by which God not onely knoweth the Elect as hee knoweth other things but acknowledgeth them for his and loves them above all others and this is called the knowledge of approbation Rom. 8.27 11.2 In the first sense there is difference betweene Fore-knowledge Providence and Predestination Praescience reacheth to all things to bee done either by God or any other and so to sinnes Providence reacheth to all that God would doe Predestination onely to the counsell of God about reasonable creatures Quest. If any aske after what maner God viewes things or lookes upon them or knowes them Answ. I answer that we are not able to expresse the maner of divine knowledge unlesse it bee by way of negation that is by denying to God those wayes of knowledge which are in the creatures and note imperfection For God doth not know things 1. By sense as by hearing seeing tasting c. For these things are in God only by an Anthropopathy or Metaphore 2. By opinion or conjecture For that knowledge is neither certaine nor evident and therefore cannot be in God 3. By faith For God knowes nothing by relation or report of others Besides though faith bee a certaine knowledge yet it is not evident Heb. 11.1 4. By Art For
of mercy from God noted by the sprinkling of the mercy seate 7. times 2. The intercession of Christ noted by the incense heated by the burning coales of his owne ardent affection Ver. 12 13. 3. The perfection of Christs mediation in that no man is joyned with him nor must any man be present Ver. 17. 4. The extent of the benefits to all the Elect noted by the sprinkling of the blood upon the foure hornes of the Altar The Use of all may be briefly both for instruction and consolation For instruction 1. To the people who should be above all things carefull to seeke the comfort of the application of Gods favour in Jesus Christ oh wee must above all things by faith keep this sprinkling of blood as is said of thē Heb. 11.28 2. Ministers should hence take notice of the maine end of preaching which is to sprinkle blood upon the hearts of the people that they may both be setled in the knowledge and assurance of their right in Christ and the covenant of grace and likewise purged in their consciences from dead workes we doe little by preaching if we beget not reformation and assurance in the hearts of the people he preacheth not that sprinkles not 2. For Consolation Be not fearefull Christs blood will protect thee as safely as ever did the blood of the paschall lambe the children of Israel Be not doubtfull of the efficacy of it For if the blood of buls and goates c. could purifie in respect of legall cleansings how much more shall the blood of Christ who by the eternall spirit offered up himselfe to God purge thy conscience from dead workes and make attonement for all thy sins cleansing thee from all unrighteousnesse Heb. 9.13 14 15. 1 John 1.7 Be not discontent with thy condition thou hast what was merited and purchased with blood how little soever it seeme in thy eyes But especially be not unthankfull for such a singular way of mercy but with all gladnes of heart rejoyce above all things in Christ him crucified for thee Hitherto of the persons saluted the forme of the salutation follows Grace and peace be multiplied to you It was the maner in their salutations to wish to their friends that which they accounted a chiefe happinesse to them So doth the Apostle here wishing the multiplying of grace and peace Grace and peace Grace must be considered two wayes 1. First as it is in God and so it is his free love and gracious disposition to shew mercy in Christ. 2. Secondly as it is in man and so it notes either the gifts of their minde or their condition or estate in Christ and so the faithfull are said to be under grace and not under the Law Peace is both inward and outward Inward peace consists in the contentation and rest of the soule and so it is both the rest of the conscience from terrors and the rest of the heart from passion● and perturbations Outward peace is nothing else but prosperity or an estate free from unquietnesse and molestation and adorned with needfull blessings Grace and Peace are the two principall things to be sought and wished in this world when Christ comes to inrich the world hee comes with grace and truth Iohn 1. he cannot be miserable that hath th●se two nor happy that wants them altogether Which may be a singular comfort to a Christian in grace and peace is his portion and he may goe boldly to the throne of God in the intercession of Christ to beg either of these in his need Heb. 4. ult God may deny him other things but he will never deny him grace peace And therefore also Christians should joy in the grace of God wherein they stand Rom. 5.3 and be resolved in themselves that the grace of God is sufficient for them 2 Cor. 12.9 Especially they should praise and esteeme and glorifie the grace of God It is all God askes for as it were at our hands even to honour him by praising his grace and free love to us Ephes. 1.6 Woe unto wicked men that neglect the grace of God what shall it profit them to gaine the world which yet they doe not and want grace and peace but especially why doe they not let Christians alone with their portion why doe they trouble them in their peace and despight them for their grace can they not follow their pleasures lusts profits honors c. and let Christians live quietly by thē who desire but liberty to enjoy grace with peace There is something also to be noted from the order of placing grace must bee had before peace there can bee no peace to the wicked and hee is undoubtedly wicked that hath not the grace of God Be multiplied Grace and Peace is multiplyed 1. First when the number of gracious persons is increased This is to be sought and prayed for 2. When the kindes of grace and peace are all had For there is the manifold grace of God 3. Thirdly when the measures and degrees are augmented The Husbandman would faine have his seed increase and the tradesman his trade so would the ambitious man his honors and preferments c. Even so should the Christian be ambitious and covetous in his desires that his grace and peace might increase Quest. What should we doe that grace and peace might be multiplied Answ. 1. Be sure it be true grace else it will never increase 2. Thou must increase in ●eeknesse and humility For God will give more grace to the humble Iam. 4.8 and the meeke shall have abundance of peace Psal. 37.6.11 3. If thou wouldest have thy grace and peace increase thou must be constant much in the use of all the ordinances of God which are the meanes of grace and peace As thou measurest to God in the meanes so will God measure to thee in the successe thou must be much in hearing For grace is in the lips of Christ Psal. 45.3 and much peace shall be to them that love Gods lawes Psal. 119. and thou must goe often unto God by prayer who gives grace and glory and will withhold no good thing Psal. 84.12 2 Thess. 1.11 12. Runne by faith to Christ who is the Prince of peace Esay 9.6 and stirre up the grace of God that is in thee For thou hast not received the spirit of feare but of power 2 Tim. 1.7 4. Thou must not perplex thy heart with the cares of this life but in all things goe to God by prayer and cast all thy care upon him so shalt thou have peace that passeth all understanding to keep thy heart and minde Phil. 4. 6 7. Thou must make much of the beginnings of desires joy liking and care of the meanes of godlinesse and not let them goe out so as thou shouldest fails of the grace of God or receive those graces in vaine 6. Thou must be resolved upon it to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live righteously and religiously
but rather be still providing for the war againe Secondly that Gods children have a garrison to defend them Now if any would know distinctly how this is true I will endeavour to shew it to be true five wayes 1. For first we see that sometimes they are fenced and protected by the godly who as an holy army rise up in their defence to help them either by Apologie succour or prayers 2. Sometimes the unreasonable creatures protect and avenge the righteous God can send the armies of silly creatures as a valiant garrison to defend Israel and offend Pharaoh and they are strong that doe Gods worke 3. It is sure that the Angels are alwayes in garrison for the Elect pitching their tents round about them that feare God That which Elisha and his man saw with bodily eyes every beleever may be assured of by faith 4. God can raise up in them even an army of powerfull thoughts and meditations so as their very inward tranquillity arising from the testimony of a good conscience and the knowledge of Gods excellent love can make and keepe them secure and sound 5. But lastly in all these and above all these God himselfe is the Christian mans garrison as David saith God is his rocke his fortresse his strength his buckler his high tower and his deliverer All this may very fitly serve for two uses 1. First for consolation to the godly and that two wayes First if they consider how carefully God hath provided for their safety and that he is faithfull and will doe it Secondly if they observe what is implyed hereby for in that God plants a garrison about his people it imports that they are wonderfully deare unto him Jewels of great price which God would by no meanes lose yea great Princes that are preserved with such a continuall guard If Gods government towards his people were every way visible and manifested the meanest Christian would appeare to be no whit inferiour to the greatest Monarch 2. Secondly this implies terror and amasement to all the wicked For it imports that God cares not for them and takes no charge of them yea thathe accounts them as enemies and yet they are not without their ●●●rison neither But what is it they have their hearts kept by the devill as a strong man armed for their ruine and the law keepes them with a strong guard till the day of Christ. By the power of God The word translated power is rendered mighty workes sometimes miracles c. but ordinarily it is meant as here power The maine doctrine is that the preservation and keeping of the faithfull depends upon Gods power Now for explication of this doctrine I must answer divers questions First some one might say doth it follow God hath power to keepe us therefore he will It doth not simply follow but in two respects 1. First in respect of the intercession of Christ he hath mediated for our preservation and the father will grant what he askes and therefore so long as he hath power hee will continually doe it 2. Secondly in respect of Gods promises he hath promised to use his power for our preservation and therefore as sure as God hath power so sure are we to be preserved Quest. Now if any aske how it may appeare that Gods power is engaged to keep us Answ. I answer it may appeare evidently by these scriptures 2 Cor. 12.9 1 Cor. 4.8 Heb. 1.3 Ephes. 3.20 Heb. 7.16 Mat. 6.13 Rom. 1.4 Iude 24. Quest. Now if any yet ask which way God doth shew his power in our preservation Answ. I answer the Lord doth exercise his power in keeping us three wayes 1. In his word making that a glorious instrument to keep us to salvation it is as it were the arme of God it is called expresly the power of God unto salvation For by the word is the demonstration of the spirit and of power as the Apostle speakes and thus Christ liveth still on earth by the very power of God in the word yea there is an effectuall working of power given to the word 2. The Lord exercises his power in keeping us by the grace of his spirit in us by making grace to be sufficient for us strengthening our saith and establishing us with every needfull grace especially in times of tryall For a Christian hath received the spirit of power and of a sound minde 3. In the workes of his providence by his disposing and raising meanes to protect and uphold the faithfull against in or out of all troubles c. Quest. But may some one say Is the promise of Gods power in the preservation of the faithfull so absolute as doe what they will Gods power will keep them Answ. No For if Christians would have God to keep them they must themselves keepe that which is committed to them they must keep the word even the patterne of wholesome words in faith and love they must stirre up the grace of God in them and waite upon God by prayer and the constant use of all the meanes and here they must live by faith they must keepe themselves in their wayes or else they must not wonder that the Lord doe as it were tumble downe the wall of their protection and seeme to leave them to themselves The use hereof is divers 1. First it may serve for confutation of that false opinion of the Papists about their doctrine of free-will For marke it The very Saints have not power to keep themselves no not after calling and therefore much lesse before calling 2. And further it may confute the very confidence of all the adversaries of Gods people they insult many times over the godly because they are so few so meane persons so simple and weake and pride themselves in the conceit of their owne greatnesse and power to compasse all their plots and malicious intendments against the godly But they doe notably deceive themselves For godly men are preserved not by their owne might or meanes or friends or sufficiency but by the power of God grossely therefore are they deluded if they thinke to prevaile finally against them 3. Yea this might fully and at once confute the objections of the weake Christian Oh he hath so many infirmities and temptations and allurements and corrupt inclinations so many lets and discouragements and so wanteth the meanes that hee can never persevere to the end these are his feares and this workes his unbeleefe But all this is soone answered Thou standest not by thine owne strength but by the power of God and therefore I must apply that speech of Christ to the Sadduces to them a little turning them you erre not knowing the promises of God in the scriptures nor the power that is in Gods nature Secondly this may serve for information For it may shew us the impotency of all earthly things nothing but Gods
man that it makes him breake through at length all doubts and difficulties having a witnesse within himselfe even the witnesse of the spirit of adoption 9. As it procures strength to suffer adversity so as a man shall not faile or sink under crosses or wrongs For he that hath given us to beleeve in his 〈◊〉 gave ●● also strength to suffer for him 10. Lastly as it overcomes the world that is it fortifieth a Christian against all pleasures profits carnall friends hopes feares dangers or whatsoever it is that either by inticement or inforcement the world might draw them away by Now for the second If any aske how faith doth all this I answer it doth it first as in generall it assures a Christian of Gods love and that God is his father and will love him to the end and this assurance is wrought by the knowledge and application of Gods promises and the observation of the signes of those promises in himselfe Secondly as it renewes upon every occasion a particular perswasion that God in such and such a crosse or temptation c. will for his promise and sons sake keepe and deliver him in particular For God stands upon this particular faith I will not instance only in these cases extraordinary mentioned in these Scriptures Mat. 8.13 and 9.28 Mark 5.36 and 11.23 John 4.20 but it is true also in cases ordinary A perswasion that God will help and keep us will keep us indeed For the just lives by his faith and it shall be to us according to our faith so as he that beleeveth or is so perswaded shall not be ashamed All things are possible to him that beleeveth and the true reason why many things are not obtained is because we are not perswaded they shall be obtained as for extraordinary things the same God that hath determined that miracles shall cease hath caused that kinde of perswasion to cease too Thirdly it doth it as it sets meditation and prayer aworke meditation I say as it lookes upon Christ and the former promises of God in him and prayer as it begs performance in all humility warranting hope upon that generall promise whatsoever you aske the Father in my name beleeving it you shall have it Now for the third it must greatly be pondred what kinde of faith or perswasion can effect all this This I unfold negatively and affirmatively negatively it is not a verball faith will doe it By a verball faith I meane a bare affirming that a man hath faith without all reason or discerning that inwardly there is any such thing in his soule and this abounds every where amongst the ignorant sort that take beleeving to be nothing else but to say they doe beleeve but this will availe nothing Nor is it a forced faith that will worke this by a forced faith I meane such as the faith of devils when a man is compelled to beleeve some truth not for love or desire after the truth but out of a servile disposition because he cannot tell how to deny it or object against it The devills beleeve and tremble and so doe many wicked men Nor is it a partiall faith I am driven to use these tearmes that by them I might expresse the severall humors of men by partiall faith I meane this when a man will beleeve some truthes but not all as some men will beleeve Moses but not Christ the Law but not the Gospell the truth of directions for life but not the assurance in particular by the promises in Jesus Christ and contrariwise some will beleeve Christ but not Moses they thinke the promises are true but they will never beleeve that such and such threatnings can be so God will be more mercifull Againe some men will beleeve in prosperity while they see meanes but not in adversity when they want what they desire or when their confidence may bring them into disgrace or trouble Nor is it a limiting faith that will appoint how it shall be before it bee beleeved The Jewes will beleeve but then Christ must worke wonders at their appointment The Pharises will beleeve in the Messias but then he must be such a one as they will describe many could beleeve if God will doe it by such meanes or at such times or in such measure as they could name Thomas will beleeve but then he must first see Christ but it was otherwise with Nathaniel Nor is it a dead faith that Iames speakes of that is without workes that will effect this Nor will the temporary faith doe it Lastly the wavering faith hath but little force I meane a faith that is tossed with so many fancies and so many doubts that hath a kinde of habit of inconstancy which may be found in many Christians that perhaps in the generall have a true faith my meaning is this that when we give liberty to the power of every fancy or temptation or doubts or impediments or affliction so as if any thing fall in our way that in the least measure might seeme to crosse our desires we are presently out of all heart or perswasion and usually are never setled but when nothing opposeth us this kinde of wavering and weaknesse is wonderfully scourged with want of sense and experience of Gods mighty working or at best it gives but dishonourable entertainment to the greatest meanes of God For though perhaps great mercies are greatly affected for the present yet the sense of them is instantly gone and every trifling crosse turnes the heart out of contentment and so out of perswasion too for all that is not yet had These are unstable in all their wayes But contrariwise that perswasion that is thus mighty through Gods power to keep us is a perswasion originally begotten by the word prepared by repentance witnessed by the spirit confirmed by the Sacraments renewed by prayer attended with the love of God encouraged by experience within our selves or others and continued by some seed of the word The use of all this is threefold 1. First for terror to all those that live without faith and for humiliation to all those that live without the setled assurance of faith Here men may see what by faith might be had and the need of it Now what can be the estate of such as neglect it and willingly sit downe in unbeliefe but even the condemnation hereunto belonging He that bele●veth not is condemned and this is the condemnation of worlds of men even their wretched sinning against faith and assurance of Gods promises This is the true reason that they dye in their sinnes this is a signe they are not of Christs sheep For if they were they would beleeve in him yea and the wretched wilfulnesse of many in confirming themselves in the neglect of assurance causeth many times these fearefull judgements that they should be given over
he gives but a little help Dan. 11.34 6. Sixtly when hee leaves us to our selves and withdrawes the speciall working of his spirit 2 Chron. 32.31 7. Seventhly when he suffers us to fall into the same miseries that wicked men doe yea sometimes making our condition to be as the beasts of the field Eccles. 3.17 18 19. Now the consideration of this doctrine of Gods melting and trying men may serve for foure Uses 1. First there is a great comfort in it and that foure waies 1. For first it is a comfort that God makes so much account of men as to think them worthy the melting or trying even this favour Iob wonders at Ioh 7.18 2. Secondly it is comfortable that it is Gods wont to try his servants it hath been Gods custome to doe so It is no strange thing if he try us hee doth no more than what hee hath done to them that were deare unto him Heb. 11.36 3. Thirdly it is especially comfortable if we consider out of other Scriptures the manner of Gods compassion and care for his people when they be in the furnace For First he appoints their time how long they shall tarry there and beyond that time they shall not be in the furnace Dan. 11.35 Secondly the Prophet Malachy saies he sitteth down himself by the furnace to tend it and to look to them Mal. 3.2 or if he be upon any occasion urged to be absent the Prophet Esay saies he flies and returnes Esay 31.9 and ult c. Thirdly if they have any sute to God or make any moane while they live in the furnace they are sure to be heard no time like it for the hearing of prayer Zach. 13.9 Fourthly if the fire be too hot for them he will defer his wrath and refraine from them Esay 48.9 10. Fiftly he will take notice of a little grace in the midst of a great deale of drosse if there be but a sigh a good thought a holy desire in the midst of a great deale of ignorance and perturbation he will accept it and account of it Rom. 8.27 4. Fourthly it is a comfortable doctrine to Gods children if they consider but the effect of this melting and that either the present effect or the future The present it is to try them not to consume them or to make a full end of them it is to refine them not to destroy them Dan. 11.36 Ier. 46. ult and they shall come out as Iob saith as the gold Iob 23.10 And besides for the time to come it is certaine the Lord tryes them that hee may doe them good at their latter end Deut. 8.14 15 16. and after they are tryed they shall have a crowne of life Iam. 1.12 And thus of the Use for consolation Secondly this doctrine is a terrible doctrine too terrible I say in generall to all such as will not be purged by affliction such as will not be made better by their crosses Let them consider that it is the Lord that cast them into the furnace and seeing they mend not one of these two evils will befall them Either the Lord will give them over as altogether drosse and so they shall never be purged or else since they will not mend by the beginnings of his displeasure he will cause his fury to rest upon them as the Prophet speaks Ezech. 24.13 14. and in particular woe to all wicked men that nourish themselves in sinne because they are inward or secret sinnes Little doe they know or thinke that God will search Ierusalem with lights even all them that be frozen in their dregges or setled on their lees Z●ph 1.12 When the Lord will search for them it is not the top of Carmell nor the bottome of the sea that shall hide them c. Amos 9.2 3. And in speciall woe is to all hypocrites they are fallen into Gods hand that compasseth about all their waies there is not a thought in their minds but God seeth woe to carelesse professors the Lord will make all the Churches to know that hee searcheth the heart and reines Rev. 2.23 Thirdly this doctrine may teach us two things 1. First to be more carefull of in ●ard uprightnesse seeing it is God that tryeth us who tries the heart as well as the life 1 Chro. 29.19 2. Secondly in all the wrongs and aspersions of wicked men to put our selves upon Gods tryall Psal. 7.9 Ier. 11.20 1 Thes. 2.4 Of your faith Two things I note here 1. First that where God gives faith he will try it where he bestowes the assurance of his favour let men looke for it For certainly hee will melt them God will try our faith for divers reasons he will thereby melt off the rust of antiquity There be certaine odde and old opinions and conceits in men at their first conversion and it is Gods manner to schoole men by afflictions and many times a Christian in a few daies of adversity learnes more true knowledge then otherwise hee would doe in many weekes Againe there are dregges of unbeliefe in the best and these need to goe into the furnace to get them off Besides by affliction God doth shew the truth of his owne grace from that which is but counterfeit in wicked men The furnace manifestly puts a difference betweene a justifying faith and the best of all other faiths to wit temporary faith this may serve to confute their folly that think themselves happy because they are not in trouble as other men But contrariwise this is an ill signe many times that they are miserable and have not any faith that would endure the tryall This should also teach us so to seeke assurance of Gods favour or so to hold the possession of it as to looke for assaults and tryals while we are in this world more or lesse 2. Secondly that of all other graces God stands most upon faith in affliction and this is so both because it brings more glory to God for to live by faith is to yeeld an immediate glory unto God as also because it is of most principall use for the good of Christians For faith doth in the midst of all stormes and the waves of adversity set a Christian on a rock it doth give him ground to be established upon so as he needs not feare drowning hence the Metaphors of grounded and stablished are given to faith Againe Faith delivers from the curse of the law so as what afflictions break in upon a Christian they are not curses but chastisements which may be a great hearts ease in all temptations or tryals Againe Faith quiets a mans heart and works peace and inward tranquility for against the force of the curse it gives a man accesse to the view of the glo●y of heaven yea it doth as it were give a being to things which are not it makes the glory of heaven as it were present it laies hold on eternall life Lastly faith is many times the very condition of
Col. 2.10 The consideration hereof should kindle in us a holy impatience of desire so to dispatch Gods worke on earth that wee might haste to that time and place when we shall be like the Angels of God yea their very society should kindle desire to be with such glorious creatures and in the meane time how can we sufficiently praise God that hath appointed such excellent c●eatures to attend upon us both in life and death how should we esteeme faith and repentance that in Jesus Christ works unto us such a safety of estate under their willing and carefull protection 3. Now for their affection which they beare to man we must in generall know that as understanding is yeelded them so is will and desire inseparably joyned with their knowledge though in a far more noble manner then they are in man There are two principall differences between the affections in Angels and those in men For first Angels have not those base and inferiour our affections that are in men I meane the sensitive appetites Secondly Angels have not their affections seated in any one place or subject as the fountaine of affections as in man the heart is the seat of affections of some of them I meane which are more noble besides that their affections are carried without all sinfull or unhappy perturbations Now for their speciall affection they beare to man either of love or joy or desire divers Scriptures testifie Mat. 18.10 Luk. 15.7 10. Eph. 3.10 This also appeares by their wonderfull readinesse and wisdome and care in the discharge of their protection and preservation of man excellently shewed in a Vision Ezech. 1. Now this desire in them ariseth 1. out of the flames of desire after the glory of God 2. Out of a sympathy or fellow feeling that they have as the members of the same body with the Saints Col. 2.10 Now for the Use of this third point Doe the Angels thus affectionately long after joy in and desire to be hold the spirituall riches of the Church 1. How should this confound us with shame that have no more care to look into our owne happinesse 2. The desire and joy of the Angels should be unto us a quick spur unto all well-doing 3. We should learn of them how to rejoyce in and desire after the good of others we should be so far from envy at their happinesse that wee should desire to know the riches of Gods love to them that we might joy in it This were to be as the Angels of God and the contrary is to be like the devils of hell Now the last thing is their knowledge in those words to looke into To looke into Three things may be here noted 1. That the Angels doe looke into the things of the Church they doe take notice how things are carryed which may both comfort and instruct us Comfort us that so excellent creatures who have the charge over us are so watchfull over all our wayes so as there cannot be the least advantage of our good but they behold the face of God and are ready prest to receive commandments for our succour and good 2. It should make us wonderfull respective of our waies if not for other reasons yet because of the Angels they looke upon us and take notice of all we doe 2. The word here used in the originall seems to allude to the Cherubins about the Arke in the Law and so imports that the Angels looke upon and into the things of the Church as the Cherubins did looke upon the Arke and so it assures us three things in the manner of the looking of the Angels 1. That they looke into the Church and the things of the Church with wonderfull sincerity and singlenesse and purity of nature This was shadowed out Exod. 26.8 in that the Cherubins that should looke upon the Arke were of gold yea of beaten gold not onely excellent by creation but by confirmation also as the workmanship of Christ so as their natures were every way far from contempt or envy or any corrupt desires or ends Besides they did take this view as in the presence of God whom they made the witnesse and Judge of the uprightnesse of their desires 2. That it is with singular perfection and exactnesse This was shadowed in that the Cherubins were not onely placed within the most holy place but close to the Arke yea at both ends of the Arke ver 19. so as they throughly looke into the affaires of the Church 3. That it is with singular constancy of desire and admiration For their faces are alwaies upon it as if they could never looke enough into it 4. That they desire to look into these things as being wonderfully ready to doe any service for the good of the Church This was shadowed in the stretching out of their wings as if they were ready to fly to the succours of the Church Now lest man should grow proud of his estate it is added in the Law that all this view of the Angels was upon the Arke but especially as it was covered with the Mercy-seat to note that that which they most wonder at is the marvellous favour of God in the mediation of Christ stilling the displeasure of God justly conceived by the view of his law broken by man Thus of the manner of the knowledge as it was shadowed out in the old law Now thirdly I consider of the kind of knowledge more distinctly that is in the Angels and that both negatively and affirmatively 1. Negatively We must lay this as a ground that the knowledge of Angels is not sensitive but contemplative that is it is not by sense They doe not know things as we doe by seeing or hearing or smelling or rasting or feeling They have no eyes to looke upon things withall nor doe they know things by images or by reason as the soules of men doe When we conceive of any thing we conceive of it either by images in the phantasie or we find it out by reasoning or discourse and so make judgement of it and this judgement is as it were the eyes of the soule but thus doe not the Angels know things nor doe they know things by their essence as God doth For Gods essence is as it were an infinite looking glasse in which all things shine in their natures and motions and so he knowes them That God that hath given vertue to precious stones or glasses to shew things remote from them hath such a power in his owne being infinitely much more but thus doe not the Angels know things Thus negatively 2. Affirmatively there is a fouretold knowledge in Angels 1. Naturall 2. Supernaturall 3. Revealed 4. Experimentall 1. Naturall was the knowledge all Angels good and bad had of things by creation 2. Supernaturall was that saving knowledge as I may so call it by which the good Angels so know God that they cannot nor will not fall from him but perfectly cleave to
wicked and dissolute 4. By confession and godly sorrow to beat downe and crucifie our flesh and the lusts thereof when they begin to rise Thus of the matter to be avoided viz. The lusts of their former ignorance The manner followes viz. not to be fashioned unto them which imports that they should not give themselves over out of the liking of sin to the service and obedience of it For to fashion our selves to evill hath in it divers things 1. The imagining of mischiefe praeconsideration deliberation the frame of evill 2. An admiration of the beauty of sin a liking of it a secret inward high estimation of it a kind of adoring of the felicity contained in it a contemplative delight in it 3. A taking care to performe it and accomplish it 4. A framing and ordering of our affaires that they may be obeyed and the inward frame effected 5. A constancy in all this to be every day striving about it 6. A pursuing of sinne though we be disappointed or cloyed in the enjoying of it 7. A laying downe of all our armour and not resisting it The Use of this is 1. For information wee may here note implyedly that Gods servants have their frailties after calling in that he doth only exhort from fashioning our selves to sinne 2. For tryall Art thou grieved for thy daily sinnes and wants and dost thou foare thou dost sinne presumptuously here thou mayest try thy selfe by 1. inquiring whether thou fall to thy old sinnes or no. 2. whether thou sin with study and deliberation 3. whether thou admire sin and accordingly favour it and delight in it 4. whether thou take care for it being vexed if thou be crossed in it casting about for all waies to accomplish it 5. whether thou yeeld thy selfe to it as a servant to obey it or rather as a childe of disobedience to be framed according to it 6. whether thou refuse to beare armes against it 7. and lastly continue in the love of it though thou be disappointed For if thou beare armes against it and art thankfull when thou art disappointed and dost not by covenants yeeld thy selfe to it nor place thy happinesse in it or not sinne by deliberation it is certaine thy sinnes are but of infirmity But contrariwise if these things be in thee before condemned thou sinnest presumptuously Here also men may try whether they decline or no after calling 3. We should be here informed to take heed of any of these degrees of sin and by a daily watch to looke to our selves that wee be not overcome of the deceitfulnesse of sinne and be thankfull to God if thy sins get not this head in thee or if they have dally no longer but repent For certainly thou art fallen away inquire no further into it but repent and amend 4. Lastly here is implyed wherein the holinesse of a Christian doth consist viz. 1. To be free from the power of his old corruptions 2. To fashion himselfe to the law of God and the law of his minde It doth not consist in the perfect resembling of the holinesse of Gods law but in a desire and daily endevour to fit and frame himselfe more and more to the holinesse set before him and that daily striving still to come neerer and neerer to the patterne Ignorance There are three sorts of ignorance 1. There is a profitable ignorance 2. There is an ignorance of meere negation that is no sinne 3. There is a ignorance of corrupt disposition There is a profitable ignorance viz. not to know evill so it had beene good for Adam never to have known evill by experience so had it beene good for the Iewes if they had never known the fashions of the Gentiles and in some respect for Apostates if they had never knowne the truth 2 Pet. 2.21 There is also an ignorance of meere negation as Christ knew not the day of Judgement and husbandmen know not Physick or Astronomie c. and yet sinne not But most usually ignorance is taken in the third sense to note that want of knowledge is joyned with evill disposition also and so it is taken here Now this ignorance is either of frailty or of wilfulnesse and presumption The one is in the godly after calling and they pray against it and confesse it and mourne for it and the other is in wicked men and they like themselves well enough notwithstanding yea they refuse the knowledge of Gods waies and willingly live without knowledge and this latter is here meant But why is ignorance named as the speciall sin to set out their unregenerate estate seeing they were guilty of many other sins Not because men sinne onely by ignorance as the Platonists thinke but 1. It may be the holy Ghost doth of purpose doe it to aggravate the hatefulnesse of the sinne because men use to excuse it and make light of it 2. Because it is a sinne none are free from If he had named whoredome or drunkennesse c. many unregenerate men would have pleaded not-guilty 3. This sinne serves more to taunt and reproch the rebellious nature of man It was the knowledge of good and evill that Adam so much aspired unto and loe now he and all his were set in grosse ignorance as the just fruit of aspiring after forbidden knowledge 4. Because ignorance is the mother and nurse of all sorts of sinnes as these places shew Eph. 4.18 19. 2 Pet. 2.12 Psal. 36.2 3 4. But have unregenerate men no knowledge that he thus directly chargeth the unregenerate estate of the very Elect with ignorance Yes they have some knowledge For they are wise to doe evill and they may have great knowledge and learning in Arts and Sciences and they may have excellent civill knowledge to manage civill affaires and may abound in skill to get money and advance their estates and they have in matters of religion the light of nature and the generall grounds of knowledge of the principles in Scripture yea they may raste of the good word of God and the powers of the life to come But yet they are justly taxed with ignorance because they know no● God as a Father by the light of faith nor whom hee hath sent Christ Iesus and besides they have no desire nor delight to know their owne iniquities or the way how to reforme their owne lives they have no knowledge to doe good These things being thus resolved there are divers observations to be noted from hence 1. That a true Convert must make conscience of inward sins as well as outward of defects as well as evill desires or lusts as here of ignorance as well as of wicked thoughts The same God that saith How long shall thy evill thoughts abide in thee complaines also of ignorance as Esay 1.3 2. That ignorance is no small sin it is exceeding hatefull to God contrary to the doctrine of the Papists that say it is the mother of devotion 3. That without
doe it and for this purpose hath God set apart the ministery of the Word that by them it might be applied God inspired the Scriptures and the Ministers are to urge them and whet them upon the hearts of their hearers for their Instruction Reproofe or Consolation 2 Tim. 3.17 They are like the Priests for cutting up or dividing of the Sacrifices 2 Tim. 2.15 And this may serve to justifie the course of godly and painfull Ministers that most study the sound application of their doctrine and secretly staineth the pride of those men that avoid with scorne application vainly affecting the praise of wit and learning Thirdly we may hence note that all men in the visible Church have not a right to the comforts of the Scripture and it is the Ministers duty to drive wicked men off from claiming any part in the promises which are the onely treasure of the Saints as here wee see in these two verses the Apostle carefully doth Men must doe the works of Iacob if they would have the comforts of Iacob Micah 2.7 A Minister must separate between the clean and uncleane His word must be like a Fanne that will drive the cha●fe one way and the wheat another and though wicked men brook not thi● yet God requireth this discretion at the hands of his people Gods Ministers must not dawbe with untempered morter or give the childrens bread to dogs or cast holy things to swine Fourthly they may hence cleerly also see that no other difference may be put between many then what faith and unbeliefe obedience and disobedience make Men must not be known after the flesh Fiftly it is hence also apparant that all the godly have a common right to the promises made in Christ. The godly in the Apostle Peters time had right to the former consolation as well as the godly in the Prophet Esaies time God is no respecter of persons Col. 3.11 Thus in generall Two things are to be observed in particular The one concerns the godly who are comforted The other concernes the wicked who are terrified The godly are comforted in these words To you therefore which beleeve he is precious In which words it is the drift of the Apostle to raise an use for consolation out of the former Text whence consider First the persons comforted viz you that beleeve Secondly the happinesse applyed unto them He is precious For the first It is manifest that the Apostle directs them to look for faith in their hearts if they would have cōfort in Gods promises It is not enough to know that beleevers shall be saved but we must be sure that men in particular are beleevers we must examine our selves whether we be in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13.5 Which should both reprove and direct It reproves the great shamefull slothfulnesse of Christians that suffer the tempter to keepe them without the assurance of faith some have no faith at all and the better sort live in too much doubtfulnesse in the point of the assurance of faith And therefore wee should be warned and directed to try our faith and to make it sure that we are beleevers Quest. What is it to be a true beleever Ans. It is to imbrace with our hearts the reconciliation salvation which by Christ is purchased for us and by the Gospell is offred to us Now that this point being of such singular waight may be cleerly understood I will break it open into particulars or into particular parts or steps of judgement and practice in the beleever First he must acknowledge that by nature he stands bound to observe all the morall Law Secondly he must see that he hath broken all those holy lawes of God and is therefore guilty before God of the curses of the Law and so of eternall condemnation Thirdly he must know that God sent his own Son in the flesh to obey the Law and satisfie the justice of God by making an expiation for mans sins Fourthly he must learne that God hath bound himselfe by promise that whosoever imbraceth the agreements in this new covenant in Christ shall be saved Fiftly that when a man doth in his own particular discerne this gracious offer of God in the Gospell and goeth to God and with his heart relieth upon it then he doth truely beleeve and is justified and shall be saved Quest. But many men are perswaded that God hath given Christ for them and yet it is evident that they doe not beleeve because there is no appearance of any repentance or reformation in them many say they have a strong faith and yet have none How shall the perswasion of the godly man be distinguished from this vaine presumption in wicked men Ans. That perswasion of Gods grace in Christ which is true and of the nature of true faith doth prove it selfe to be ●ight by many infallible signes First by the renovation of the heart The knowledg of Gods love in Christ doth make the heart of man new it clenseth out the old drosse and makes a man hate his sweet and most secret sins Faith purifies the heart Acts 15. Secondly by the joy and comfort of the holy Ghost with which the beleevers heart is refreshed from the presence of God 1 Pet. 1.9 Thirdly by the victory of the world For the true beleever is so satisfied with Gods goodnesse in Christ that he can deny his profits pleasures credit friends and the like for Christs sake and the Gospell yea faith marres the tast of earthly things and makes a man able to forsake the love of worldly things 1 Iohn 5.5 It will endure the tryall of troubles of afflictions and temptations and persecutions for the Gospels sake 1 Pet. 1.7 without ●aking haste to use ill meanes in the evill day Quest. But how may faith be discerned in such as say they are not perswaded that they have faith which sometimes proves to be the case of divers deare children of God Answ. Their faith may be discerned First by repentance which cannot be separated from it the sight hatred confession and sorrow for their sins is an argument of true faith because without faith no man can have true repentance Secondly by their complaining of their unbeliefe and desire of faith I beleeve Lord help my unbelief was the voice of him that had true faith Thirdly by their daily renouncing of their owne merits begging favour of God onely for the merits of Christ. Fourthly by the love of the godly for faith worketh by love Gal. 5. Fiftly by other marks signs of Gods children which can never be had but faith is had also such as are love of God and his Word and of their enemies and uprightnesse of heart and the spirit of prayer and the like Precious Christ is precious to them that beleeve not onely in their acco●nt but by effect and so both because he is great riches unto them as also because he is an honour unto them He is great riches
Law and the Gospell and inwardly the Spirit of Christ. The instrument of receiving it in respect of the generall will of God is the understanding or in respect of the promise of grace it is faith The Law is a light Prov. 6.23 of the light of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 2 Cor. 4.6 Knowledge is light Act. 26.18 and of the light of faith Ioh. 8.12 Eternall light is the light of heaven where the inheritance of the Saints lieth Col. 1.12 Revel 18.19 It is the spirituall light upon the soules of men the light of knowledge and faith is here specially meant which is conveyed and increased by the Gospell Doct. The point then hence is cleare That Gods servants in comparison of their former condition are brought into great light The spirituall light shineth upon every one that is to be converted Act. 26.18 God hath promised light to every penitent sinner Iob 33.28 30. Esa. 42.16 and Christ was given to be the light both of Jewes and Gentiles Esa. 42.7 and 49.6 Hence it is that Christians are said to bee the children of light Luk. 16.18 Io● 12.36 yea light it selfe Eph. 5.6 the lights of the world Phil. 2.15 And thus they are so by reason of the light of Jesus Christ shining in their hearts through the knowledge and beliefe of the Gospel All the world is like unto Egypt 〈◊〉 with darknesse and the godly are like the children of Israel in Goshen Use. The use may be first for instruction to the godly since they are called to such light by Christ they should First beleeve in the light since they see now what they doe they should establish their hearts in the first place in the assurance of Gods love since his shining favour sheweth it selfe in the Gospel Secondly they should doe the workes that belong to the light they may now see what to doe and therefore ought not to bee idle but to worke while they have the light 1 Ioh. 2.8 And to that end they should daily come to the light that it may be manifest that their workes are wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 And they should now abound in all goodnesse and justice or righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.8 9. proving what that acceptable will of God is vers 10. Thirdly they should therefore cast away the workes of darknesse and have no fellowship with the children of the night but rather reprove them Eph. 5.7 to 14. For what fellowship betweene light and darknesse 2 Cor. 6.17 Fourthly they should in all difficulties and ignorances pray to God to shew forth his light and truth seeing they are called to light Psal. 43.3 Use 2. Secondly godly men should hence bee comforted and that in divers respects First though they may have many distresses in their estates yet light is risen to their soules though they may for a season suffer some eclipse of their comfort yet light is sowne for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart Psalm 97.11 and the more they should be glad of their portion in light when they bebold the daily ruines of ungodly men The light of the righteous rejoyceth when the lampe of the wicked is put out Prov. 13.9 In 2 Corin. 4.4 6. there are three reasons of consolations assigned First the light wee have should comfort us if wee consider how many men have their mindes blinded by the god of this world and of those many of them great wise and learned men Secondly if we consider what darknesse we have lived in God hath done as great a worke upon our hearts as hee did when he commanded the light to shine out of darknesse in the beginning of the world Thirdly if we consider what glorious things are revealed unto us for by the Gospel he hath caused to shine in our hearts the knowledge of the glory of God c. Finally it is the more comfortable in that the Apostle calls this light marvellous light which is now in the next place to be opened Marvellous light The spirituall light which shines in the hearts of the godly by the Gospel is a marvellous light either because it is such as the godly doe marvell at or because it is such as they ought to marvell and wonder at When men first enter into the truth that is when they are first converted Christians being for the most part full of affections as they that have scaped lately singular danger and as they that never before saw the Kings Court they are frequently stirred up with admiration at the glory of the Gospel they wonder at and are vehemently affected with the new discovery of the riches of Christ shewed them in the preaching of the Gospel and thus it is a marvellous light in this sense Esa. 30.26 But I rather consider of it in the other sense It is a marvellous light though wee should not have the heart to bee so affected towards it it is marvellous I say First because it is a light that needed the Mediator to procure it none but Christ can give us this light Other light is free wee pay nothing for it but this is carried in the hand of the Mediatour to us and for us Esa. 42. 4● Secondly because it commeth after so long a night of ignorance and sinne they must needs account the light precious that have not seene it a long time as blind men when they receive fight Esa. 9.2 Matt. 4.16 Thirdly and more because it is a light commanded to shine out of darkenesse 2 Cor. 4.6 That God should call light out of such darknesse as wa● in our hearts is marvellous Fourthly in comparison with the times of the Law and the shadows of the Old Testament Fifthly because it is a light comes not from any creature but from God the Creator God is our light Esa. 6.19 And in this respect this light is like the light that shone about Paul Act. 22.6 Sixthly because it is a light that shines at the time of the evening of this world That the Sunne should shine in the day time is no wonder but that it should shine in the night or at evening were a dreadfull wonder even so it is in this last age of the vorld Zech. 14.7 Seventhly because it is a knowledge above the reach of reason it is the light of faith Eighthly because it shines onely to the godly It is light in Goshen when there is no light in Egypt that was marvellous and so is it when we see the light shining all abroad and many men sit in darknesse even in the same place in the same congregation city or family When the godly see clearly the wicked discerne nothing light is with-held from the wicked Ninthly because it hath more force than any other light for it is the light of life it quickens the soule and enlives it Ioh. 8.12 Lastly because it is an everlasting light it is such a day as no night followeth it The consideration of all this should worke divers things in us
For if in all these senses it be a marvellous light then First we should be marvellously affected with it and strive to be exceeding thankfull for it How have wee deserved to be cast againe into darknesse for our extream unthankfulnesse How have we given God cause to take away the Candlesticke from us Let us therefore strive after thankfulnesse and admiration and if the Lord doe worke it in us let us take heed wee lose not our first love Secondly we should arme our selves for the defence of the light we should preserve it as a singular treasure both in our hearts and in our Churches wee should with the more resolution resist the works of darknesse standing alwaies upon our guard Rom. 13.12 Thirdly we should strive after all the degrees of the assurance of faith Fourthly we should strive to make our light shine the more excellently both for the measure of good workes Malac. 5.16 and for the strict and precise respect of the exact doing of good duties Now we have the light so cleerly shining wee may doe every thing more exactly than if it were darke Ephes. 5.15 Our gifts must not be hid The light must not be put under a bushell Matth. 5.15 Phil. 2.15 Wee should now avoid not onely greater faults and falls but lesser stumblings 1 Ioh. 2.10 11. We should do all things to the life and power of them and shew discretion aswell as knowledge This doctrine also doth imply the grievous misery of wicked men for if it bee marvellous light into which the godly are called there is a marvellous darknesse in which wicked men live The whole creation of God had beene but a confused heape if God had not set in it the light of the Sunne such a confused Chaos is the world of men if the Gospel shine not into their hearts Finally this should much comfort the godly they are called into marvellous light in all the senses before named which should much enflame their hearts and they should rebuke their owne hearts for not valuing so rich treasure We may from hence take occasion to note how little wee should trust to the judgement of flesh and blood in valuing spirituall things when the very godly themselves doe not so much esteeme of them as they should Whatsoever we thinke yet in Gods account the light of the Gospel the light of faith and knowledge the light of Gods countenance c. is marvellous light But if the light of the godly be marvellous in this world what shall it be in the world to come when God and the Lambe shall be their immediate light Here God lights us by the meanes there God himselfe will bee our everlasting light Here our light may bee darkened with clouds of affliction and temptation there shall be an eternall light without all darknesse Here wee have no light but what is infused into us there we shall our selves shine as the Sunne in the firmament Hitherto of the description in Tropicall termes Now it followes in plaine words VERS 10. Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which in times past were not under mercy but now have obtained mercy THe Apostle takes the words of this verse out of the Prophet Hosea chap. 1.11 where the Lord promiseth that the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea and in the place where was it said unto them Ye are not my people it shall be said unto them Ye are my people Now the Apostle applies that sentence to the people to whom he wrote shewing that it was accomplished in them Quest. The question is of whom the Prophet and Apostle spake Ans. Some say of the Israelites in the letter both because the same chapter shewes that they were cast off and called Loammi not Gods people as also because the Apostle is thought to write onely to the Jewes But the Apostle Paul Ro. 9.24 25 26. apparently expounds it of the Gentiles chiefly and therefore wee must rest in his sense which by the way shewes that this Epistle was written to the Elect amongst the Gentiles as they were strangers and pilgrims in the world and not to the provinciall Jewes onely The Apostle then to the singular comfort of Christians in those times shewes that now were the Prophesies accomplished concerning the calling of the Gentiles which was before a great mystery hidden from ages and generations Col. 1.26 admired by Angels Eph. 3.10 1 Pet. 1.12 Before I open the words of this verse in particular some use would be made of this great worke of calling the Gentiles and so from the consideration of their estate both before and after calling And first for the meditation of the estate of the world or the Nations of the world before Christ preached unto them note First the horrible infectiousnesse of sinne whole worlds of people are poysoned with it Secondly the dreadfull horrour of Gods Justice against sinne which as we may see plainly in the sufferings of Christ so also very lively in the desertion and forsaking of the Gentiles so many millions of men perishing without pardon or pity and therefore it was never safe to follow a multitude in evill nor to pleade the practice of fathers or forefathers with such like And for the meditation of their calling againe in Christ by the Gospel wee may gather matter First of information and so first that God is not tied to any place If Israel after the flesh will not serve him hee will raise up children unto Abraham from among the Gentiles Mat. 21.43 Secondly that the Church of Christ is now Catholicke of all Nations and therefore Christs Kingdome is the largest Kingdome in the world and the glory of it must not be restrained to Rome or any one place Secondly of consolation for here we may observe First the infallibility of Gods promises these promises concerne the calling of the Gentiles as being dead and were most unlikely and yet wee see them fulfilled which should teach us to trust upon God Secondly the wisdome and power of God working light out of darknesse The rebellion of the Jewes is so farre from laying Sion waste or dissolving Religion that it is an occasion of a greater worke of God among the Gentiles yea when profanenesse seemes to over-grow all and the whole world seemes to live in wickednesse yet wee know not what times may come for the glory of Religion among Jewes and Gentiles Thirdly Gods wonderfull love to his Elect hee will gather them from all the foure windes of heaven Though they be few in number in comparison and live dispersed in every Country yet God the great Husbandman will not want meanes to fetch them home into his garner A husbandman that had all his field growne over with weeds save here and there one graine of corne on a land would never be at the paines of gathering and separating yet God will Fourthly the great encouragement that
restlesnesse by the grievous distempers of the body or failing of their senses being for the time as Iob saith brought under the king of terrours Iob 18.14 What a wofull case Belshazzar was in you may reade Dan. 5.9 These terrours are the fansies the Gentiles so much dreamed of The fourth is desperation An evill Conscience in sinne many times brings them to hellish despaire of all mercy and pardon thus Cain rageth and blasphemeth like a frantick man And these effects of an evill Conscience are so mu●h the more great 1. Because the Conscience can lash a man without noise it can secretly inflict torments when no eyes shall pity him 2. Because there is no escape from Conscience a man can neither drive it away nor run from it it cleaves to the offender inseparably From a tyrant or ill master some men run away but from an ill Conscience there is no flying 3. Because Conscience it selfe is a thousand witnesses to prove the fault though never so secret and the offender is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemned of himselfe and goes up and downe with a heavie sentence upon him in his bosome though all the world should account him innocent 4. Because an evill Conscience is such a damnable disease and the griefe raised by Conscience is such and so lasting that the grieved dies before the griefe can be removed yea so violent is the confusion which despaire bringeth into the thoughts that out of the grievous mistaking and impatience many times the offender makes away himselfe as Saul Achitophel and Iudas did and many in our times doe 5. Because death it selfe doth not abate the torments of an evill Conscience but the living worme gnawes them even in hell for ever and with so much strength and power there that one said wittily Hell were not hell if it were not for the gnawing of this never-dying and never-ceasing worme 6. Because unto the making up of the compleat misery of the impenitent sinner the sentence of Conscience and the testimony of it shall be heard and admitted at the last day before the Tribunall of Christ. For though an evill conscience shall never disgrace for some effects as for that of working despaire of mercy yet for the maine body of the proceedings of Conscience it shall be not only allowed but justified by the voice of Christ to the eternall shame and confusion of the offender And though it be true that the worst of the effects before mentioned arise from a stirring Conscience yet is not the man safe that hath a still Conscience if it bee evill For first hee is in continuall danger of the awaking of that conscience of his that now is asleep What ease can that mans heart be at if he had all pleasures round about him if he were tied to a Beare or Lion or mad Dog though he were then asleep for hee may awake every moment and then where is hee The stilnesse of an ill conscience is but like the sleep of a frantick man Secondly there can be no true peace unto the man that lieth in sinne without repentance Isa. 57. There is no peace to the wicked saith my God Though hee bee friends with himselfe for a time yet God is not friends with him nor is sinne and Satan at peace with him though there be an uncertaine truce for a time Thirdly the danger of a still conscience is the greater for the terrours of a troubled conscience may prepare a man for Christ and compell a man to seeke helpe from Christ but in the case of a still conscience there are these two usuall miseries the one that men take a still conscience to be a good conscience and the other is that a man runnes onely blindefolded so long till death and hell may seaze upon him Thus of the effects of an evill conscience the meanes how conscience may be made good follow That an evill conscience may be made good two things must bee looked into first that wee get a right medicine to heale it secondly that we take a right course in application of the medicine First the medicine for the curing of an ill conscience is onely the bloud of Christ the disease of conscience is of so high a nature as all the medicines in the world are insufficient nothing but sprinkling it with bloud will serve the turne and it must be no other bloud than the bloud of the immaculate Lambe of God as the Apostle shews Heb. 9.14 The reason of this is because conscience will never be quiet till it see a way how Gods anger may be pacified and sinne abolished which cannot be done any way but by the bloud of Christ which was powred out as a sacrifice for sinne Now unto the right application of this medicine foure things are requisite First the light of knowledge Secondly the washing of regeneration Thirdly the assurance of faith Fourthly the warmth of love First knowledge a man must have both Legall and Evangelicall for they must know by the law what sinnes lie upon the conscience and trouble it and they must know by the Gospel what a propitiation is made by Christ for sinnes And for the second an evill conscience will never bee gotten off unlesse our hearts be sprinkled and washed from the filth and power of the sinnes which did lie upon the conscience Heb. 10.22 1 Tim. 1.5 Now unto such removing of such sinnes from the heart two things are requisite First that by particular confession wee doe as it were scratch off the filth of those sinnes that soule the heart and trouble the conscience Secondly and then that wee wash our hearts and daily rinse them with the teares of true repentance and humiliation before God for those sinnes Thirdly assurance of faith is necessary to the cure of an ill conscience because faith is the hand that layes on the medicine A man must apply the sufferings of Christ to himselfe and beleeve that Christ did satisfie for those sinnes that lie upon the conscience and must accordingly all to besprinkle the conscience with that bloud of Christ and then of an evill conscience it will presently become good but men must looke to one thing and that is that their faith be unfained For conscience will not be satisfied with the profession of faith they must beleeve indeed and with their hearts and with sound application of the promises of the Gospel concerning the bloud of Christ or else conscience will not be answered Heb. 10.22 1 Tim 1.5 Fourthly the heat of love must be added a man must so apply the bloud of Christ as that his owne bloud be heated in him affection with both towards God and Christ and Christians Christian love doth put as it were naturall heat into the conscience and makes it now receiving life by faith to bestirre it selfe in all the workes either of service to God or duty to men 1 Tim. 1.5 Heb. 9.24 knowledge bringing it light mortification making it cleane faith
if we knew no more but that it pleased God to have it so it is his will it should be so But yet that it is a wise providence of God so to order it it may appeare in divers things for by continuing the meanes to call his owne Elect thus by degrees the wicked are left without excuse Besides the godly while they looke for the daily discovery of new converts are thereby put to the exercise of many graces and duties as diligence compassion charity a winning conversation meeknesse prayer exhortation and the like And besides the outward peace of the Church is thereby preserved for if it were knowne once that all the Elect in any place were called there would follow such violent opposition from the greater and worser sort as there would be no place of rest for the Church in the world They would all bee of Caines minde if God had declared his testimony on both sides from heaven And therefore at the day of judgement assoone as hee hath parted the Elect and Reprobate and sentenced them hee disposeth so of them as they shall never live together againe And further if all the Elect were gathered at once the world would bee at an end for then Christ would deliver up the kingdome to his father 1 Cor. 15.24 and therefore Ministers should continue painefull in their labours as remembring that they are set to worke for edification of the Church till Christ come againe Eph. 4.12 And though the most of their present hearers have refused the Word of God and are hardened yet they may see cause of constancie because God still supplies their Auditories with new generations that rise up by degrees in the roome of those hardned ones And withall they must thinke that all the yeere is not harvest they are Gods husbandmen and must not thinke much to labour and toile many daies and weekes before they see the fruit of their labours as hoping that in the end God may grant them a comfortable harvest and if Israel should not be gathered yet their reward is with God Thus of the first point imported in this word Also Secondly we may hence gather further that the Apostle would have us to account all that are won to religion to be safe He imples so much in that hee treats about winning of more to them as if hee accounted them safe that were won already And it is true of such as are won to the outward profession of religion that in charity wee are bound to hope the best of each one particularly but for such as are won to sound sanctification the signes whereof were noted before it is certaine of them they can never bee lost which is cleare by these proofes 1 Cor. 1.8 9. Phil. 1.6 Rom. 8. ult 1 Pet. 1.5 Iohn 6. 10.29 30. And it must needs be so for God will not cast off the people whom he hath chosen Psal. 94.14 Rom. 11. And besides Christ lives in the hearts of those that are truely sanctified Gal. 2.20 and Christ can die no more Rom. 6.10 He may as well die at the right hand of his Father as die in the heart of a Christian. And further God hath given us his spirit as the earnest of our eternall salvation sealing to us thereby all the promises he hath made us Eph. 1.14 15. and it is a known principle that whom God loveth he loveth to the end and finally Gods decree is unalterable 2 Tim. 2.29 Ob. This may be true of the most but alas how know I that God will looke so carefully to me in particular I may be lost Sol. Gods promise is universall Not one of them saith the Prophet shall be lacking Ier. 23.4 and God hath charged Christ to see to the keeping of the bodies and soules of every true beleever Iohn 6.39 40. Ob. It is true God will never depart from us but we may depart from him and so perish Sol. The Lords covenant is that neither he will depart from us nor we shall depart from him for hee will put his feare within us to that end Ier. 32.41 Ob. But I feele my selfe so weake and ignorant I cannot hold out Sol. The smoaking flaxe shall not be quenched nor the bruised reed broken Esay 42. Ob. But we are in continuall danger by reason of temptations within and infections of all sorts from without Sol. God is faithfull and will keepe you from evill for all that 2 Thes. 3.3 and Christ hath made intercession to his Father for that very thing that you may be kept from those evills Iohn 17. and God hath put his Spirit within you of purpose to make you keepe his statutes and to hold on your way Ezek. 36.27 Ob. But the Apostle Iohn seemes to say that we may lose what we have wrought 2 Iohn 8. Sol. The words of the Apostle Iohn are these Looke to your selves that we lose not those things which we have wrought but that we receive a full reward Which words may be understood as spoken to such as were hypocrites had but temporary grace not sound sanctification for he saith in the next words He that transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God They never had God then that lose what they have wrought and so this toucheth not such as are sure now they have God in that they have saving grace Again it is true that the godly may lose what they have wrought when they fall into scandalls or by weakenesse fall from the profession of the truth I say they may lose what they have wrought in those sins first in respect of the praise of men all their former honour may be laid in the dust secondly in respect of the inward sense and comfort of what good they have done and thirdly in respect of the fulnesse of the reward in heaven for their glory may be much lessened by their falls but it doth not therefore follow that they may fall finally away from God for they will recover againe Ob. But we see that Christians of greater gifts than we have fallen away and never recover again but die in their Apostacie as Hymeneus and Philetus did in the Apostles times Sol. The Apostle in that place answers that Gods foundation remaines sure and hath this seale he knoweth who are his which evidently importeth that God did never know them to be his what shewes soever they made amongst men and therefore their fall need not discourage such as are sure by the former markes that they are Gods Object But wee see that the godly themselves doe fall as David and Peter did Sol. First they did recover againe and so were not lost Secondly though they fall they shall not be utterly cast downe for God staies them from falling wholly away though they fall away in some particular act Psal. 37.23 Thirdly in the worst fals of the Saints there is ever still an holy seed of grace and faith and knowledge that abideth in
his office he is carefull to prove that he hath given knowledge to the men God gave him to prepare them for eternall life Iohn 17.6 7 8 26. Fifthly by the relation it hath to God himselfe it is a part of the image of God in the new man Col. 3.10 Sixthly by the contrary it is accounted a great sinne and a curse to want knowledge Hosh. 4.11 and other gifts or services are rejected as vaine if this grace be not had as Zeale Rom. 10.2 Sacrifice Hos. 6.6 and therefore such as want knowledge should shake off profane sluggishnesse and vaine objections and seeke to be rich in knowledge as the men in the world doe to abound in wealth Pro. 4.7 2.4 And such as have knowledge should strive to encrease it and be thankfull to God for his great mercy in giving them knowledge and the meanes of it Doct. 2. Knowledge is required of all sorts of men Not of Ministers only but of private men of all husbands yea and of all men before they be husbands because so soone as they have wives they are charged to shew their knowledge Iohn 1.9 1 Cor. 8.1 1 Tim. 2.4 This condemnes the sacrileg●ous humour of those persons that are like the wicked Lawyers our Saviour speakes of Luke 11.52 which take away the key of knowledge from private men either by their opinions hindering others from seeking knowledge with their errours mudding the cleere fountaine of Gods Word or by their power restraining the meanes of knowledge from the people And withall this should stirre up all sorts of men to seeke knowledge and use all meanes to attaine it as they will give their account unto God of the use of their time at the last day Doct. 3. Knowledge is given us for use and practice not for idle speculation it is given as other gifts of the Spirit to profit withall it is a light to lighten our paths Our knowledge should be after godlinesse Tit. 1.1 It should some way help forwards the worke of godlinesse that we get by hearing should be shewed by practise Iames 1.22 23 24. They that have knowledge and will not use it shall have that knowledge taken from them Mat. 13.11 Nor is the use of knowledge only for discourse but for conversation The words of knowledge or utterance is given to some Christians onely 1 Cor. 12.8 And such as cannot talke much may yet have comfort if they have knowledge to stay their hearts in faith and that they can shew their knowledge by a good conversation Doct. 4. The knowledge seated in our minds should have a commanding power of our actions all should be according as a mans knowledge faith Those parcels of divine truth put into our minds should rule us and dispose of us and make us ordered according to them Those lawes in our mindes should make us master all that rebels against them and make the members be subject to them to obey them Our knowledge should be lively and indued with soveraigne power This is the honour we should give to the light that is in our minds to let it rule us in all things And this point may much humble all sorts of Christians for want of stirring up their knowledge or for want of obeying it Most Christians have their knowledge so feeble that the Divell or the world may lead them aside to all sorts of temptations and yet their knowledge makes not opposition and doth not take arms to subdue what exalts it self against the light of it as it should do 2 Cor. 10.4 Now if men would hearten and give life and power to those notions of knowledge are in their minds and would have their knowledge to have full power they must observe these rules 1. They must daily wound and mortifie and resist the law of the members that is such humours in them as are w●nt to be incorrigible Most persons have some faults in their natures that they are guiltie of with a kind of wilfulnesse such faults as must be allowed such as if they be crossed in there will be no peace but open rebellion such faults as sticke so fast to them as if God and man must let them alone in them these members must obey them as a law Now these men must find out and be sure they resist them or else the lawes of the minde will be but feeble and sacred notions infused will starve and wither and never appeare in their life and power 2. Men must be sure they study profitable things and avoide such knowledges as are fruitlesse as belong not to them 1 Tim. 6.20 2 Tim. 2.23 Tit. ● 9 There is knowledge that will puffe up 1 Cor. 8 1. But men must be wi●e for themselves and strive to understand their owne way Pro. 9.12 3. They must pray God to put a spirit and life into their knowledge and give them grace to shew all good conscience in their obedience and withall they must pray hard for their Teachers that their word may be a word of power to give fire to the sparkles of light are already in their minds Finally let all men that professe the knowledge of Gods word remember that their knowledge should make them differ from all other men Their lives should excell others according to the knowledge in which they differ from them A man must hold forth th● life and light of the knowledge he hath Phil. 2.15 They have a great taske to doe that have received much knowledge much is required of them if they doe ill their example may doe much mischiefe 1 Cor. 8.10 11. Doct. 5. True knowledge makes an impression upon every part of a man● life it makes him better in all his wayes both towards God and man as here true knowledge makes a man a better husband He must carrie himself● as a husband according to his knowledge he hath of Gods word Tru● knowledge enricheth a man in every thing 1 Cor. 1.5 The favour of our knowledge should be manifest in every place 2 Cor. 2.14 The knowledge that will not doe thus is falsely so called 1 Tim. 6.20 There is use of knowledge in the most ordinarie things of the life of man as meats marriage and the things of our calling 1 Tim. 4.3 and therefore this should stirre up all godly Christians to shew this proofe of their knowledge and to pray that they may abound in kno●ledge and all judgement Phil. 1.9 C●l 1.9 and gives cause to Christians of ill behaviour in their callings or private carriage to mistrust that their knowledge is no● tight and in particular wives should pray God to give their husbands knowledge of his Word and to blesse all meanes to that end for that will make them the better husbands Doct. 6. It is an ill thing for men to transgresse against their knowledges when they doe things that are not according to their knowledge or leave undone things they know they should doe The servant that knowes his masters will and
With thee is the fountaine of life adds And in thy light we shall see light Psal. 36.8 And so the promise to the penitent sinner was that his life should see the light Iob 33.28 So Christ saith he that followeth him shall have the light of life Marke it the Light of life Iohn 8.12 So that the life of our minds is knowledge in generall and in particular it is the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ as our Saviour saith expresly Iohn 17.3 This is eternall life to know God and whom he hath sent Jesus Christ. And the reason why this knowledge doth most inlive and quicken our hearts is because God in Christ is the most glorious subject of contemplation as being that highest good a very Ocean of goodnesse only able to fill and ravish the heart of man and besides because God as our chiefe good can alone make the ravishment of the heart perpetuall and so last for ever which nothing else can doe But because every knowledge of God hath not this effect to breed everlasting life in the heart of a man therefore I will distinctly set downe what kind of knowledge it is that hath this effect and what is required that it may be right 1. It must be such a knowledge as discernes God to be the only true God and this rule excludes the Pagans from eternall life who though by the light of nature they might discerne the invisible things of God by the workes of the creation yet they so shut up those principles of naturall truth in unrighteousnesse that they set up creatures as God and gave the glory of the true God to them Rom. 1. 2. It must be such a knowledge as ascribes unto the Nature of God such an excellencie as can be exprest by no likenesse of any creature in heaven above or earth beneath or the waters under the earth God must not be conceived of by any Images Images in the Church shut out the Papists from eternall life and Images in the heart to conceive of God by exclude the ignorant and carnall Protestants In the right conceiving of Gods nature we must adore him that is like nothing in heaven or earth 3. It must be such a knowledge or vision of God as discernes him to be the chiefe good and only happinesse to be desired and so all those persons that behold any thing in this life to be sought after as the chiefe felicity of their lives are excluded from eternall life And the things so esteemed the Scripture calls their gods so some make their bellies their gods some their riches some honour and the favour of men 4. It must be such a knowledge of God as conceives of him in Jesus Christ that is that sees the way how Gods infinite justice provoked by many sins is pacified by the attonement made by Jesus Christ as the Mediatour betweene God and man Iohn 17.3 else the knowledge of God in respect of the contemplation of Gods justice will be so far from inliving our hearts that it would kill them if they had life And this rule excludes all such from eternall life as live in despaire of Gods mercy as Cain and Iudas These knowledges are such as without which life cannot be had but yet in themselves doe not quicken the soule and inspire it with life 5. It must be such a knowledge as doth not only discerne aright the doctrine of the nature of God and of the person and offices of Christ but doth discerne that God is ours in particular in Jesus Christ and fully reconciled to us and our portion for ever To know God to be our God in Christ is the very life of our soules Now because we discerne this in God two waies viz by the light of ●aith beleeving the promises of the Word though we see him not and by the light of vision when we shall see him in his goodnesse face to face therefore is the former light called the light of faith and belongs to this life and the latter light belongs to another world Hence our justification which is by faith is called the justification of life Rom. 5.18 This is a point which should be of unspeakable comfort to the weake Christians that have attained to this knowledge for certainely this is eternall life in them as true as if they had the glory of heaven already But now that true Christians may be the more infallibly settled in the knowledge of their interest in eternall life as it lieth in the right knowledge of God ●o be ours i● Jesus Christ I will add certaine effects of this knowledge which shew not only that it is right but also that it is very eternall or spirituall for if it be a right knowledge 1. It raiseth in the dead heart of man spirituall senses that were never there before it makes the soule of a man able to heare Gods Word that could never doe it before it gives sight in spirituall things and sense and feeling and spirituall tastes of Gods goodnesse and a savouring of spirituall things more than earthly 2 Cor. 2.15 Rom. 8.5 Psal. 36.8 Phil. 1.9 2. It is a knowledge with admiration it sets a mans heart upon a constant wondering at the glory of the things revealed He that hath this knowledge sees in a Mirrour hee sees and wonders Nothing more ravisheth the heart than doth the word when it shewes him the glorie of Gods grace to him 2 Cor. 3.18 Wicked men see but they see not in a Mirrour 3. It is a knowledge that workes transformation it changeth a man into the likenesse of that it sees even from glory to glory by the power of the spirit of Christ. The light comes into wicked men but leaves them the same men it found them for disposition and conversation but this light humbles the heart of a man for his sins and purifieth him from his most secret sins Acts 15.9 and besides prints upon him the image of God and stirs him u●to all the motives of life in doing good workes 2 Cor. 3.18 Col. 3.10 1 Iohn 2.3 3.24 4. It is such a light as is indeleble and will abide the triall of manifold afflictions and gives life and joy still to the soule it doth not only comfort in Gods house but will support us when we are gone home under the miseries of this present life 1 Pet. 1.7 The Use should be to teach us all to blesse God for the Gospel that brings life to light and shewes us the love of God to us in Christ and for all the meanes by which the Gospel is preached to us in the life of it Oh how should we be beholding to them that help us to eternall life by leading us unto God this Ocean of goodnesse And withall we should be wonderfully thankfull to God and for ever comforted if we can finde that we have attained to the assurance of Gods love to us in Christ. Though our knowledge here be but small and weake
yet it is so rich as the tongue of man cannot utter if it be in any measure true and sincere Besides how should this fire our desires after wisedome and spirituall understanding in the world of Christ seeing it is our life and in the same degree we encrease in eternall life that we encrease in acquaintance with God in Christ and therefore above all gettings we should be getting understanding And finally it shewes the wofull estate of ignorant persons that are carelesse of the studie of the Word of God and of hearing of the Gospel preached This is their death and will be their eternall death if they prevent it not by repentance and sound redeeming of the time for the service of the soule about this sacred knowledge Now for the fourth point the things that nourish life are greatly to be heeded both to shew us what we should apply our selves to and with what thankfulnesse to receive the meanes of our good herein 1. We must know that the principall cause of the nourishment and increase of spirituall life is the influence of vertue from Christ our mysticall head by the secret and unutterable working of the spirit of Christ which is therefore called the spirit of life because it both frees us by degrees from the feares of death and from the power and blots of sin Rom. 8.2 and withall it quickens and encreaseth life in us for the better exercise of righteousnesse Rom. 8.10 2. The contemplation of Gods favour and presence doth wonderfully extend and inflame life in us To marke God any where or by any experience to find effectually his love and to taste of the sweetnesse of his goodnesse this is life from the dead better than all things in naturall life it doth a godly mans heart more good than all things in the world can doe as these places shew Psal. 30.5 63.7 8. 36.3 16. ult with coherence 3. The entertainment God gives his people in his house is one speciall cause of encrease of this life in us as it encreaseth both knowledge and joy and all goodnesse and satisfies the heart of man especially amongst all the things that are without us the Word of God as it is powerfully preached in Gods house is the food of this life called the savour of life unto life 2 Cor. 2.16 Christ words are the words of eternall life Iohn 6. see Psal. 36. 8. Iohn 12.50 Pro. 4.22 4. Fellowship with the godly is singular to quicken and excite the life of grace and joy and knowledge in us therefore it is an amiable thing for brethren to dwell together in unity because there God hath commanded the blessing even life for evermore Psal. 133. ult Pro. 2.20 The mouth of the righteous is a veine of life Pro. 10.11 Yea the very reproofes of instruction are the way of life Pro. 6.23 And therefore weake Christians should be instructed from hence with faith to rest upon the God of their lives who by the spirit of Christ can enable them to eternall life and with thankfulnesse to embrace all signes of Gods favour and presence and above all things in life to provide for themselves powerfull meanes in publike and good societie in private and not to be turned off from either of these by slight either objections or difficulties and to resolve to labour more for these than carnall persons would doe to have their naturall lives if they were in distresse or danger It is also excellent counsell which Saint Iude gives in this point concerning eternall life he would have us looke to foure things The first is to edifie our selves in our most holy faith striving to get in more store of Gods promises and divine knowledges and to strive to establish our hearts in our assurance of our right to them The second is to pray in the holy Ghost for he knew that powerfull prayer doth greatly further eternall life in us The third is to keepe our selves in the love of God avoiding all things might displease him chusing rather to live under the hatred of all the world than to anger God by working iniquity The fourth is to looke as often and as earnestly as we can after that highest degree of mercy and glory we shall have in the comming of Christ Iud. 1.19 20. I will conclude this point with that one counsell of Solomon Keepe thy heart with all diligence for thereout come the issues of life Christians that would prosper in spirituall life should be very carefull of the first beginnings of sin in their thoughts and desires and be very diligent in nourishing all good motions of the holy Ghost preserving their peace and joy in beleeving with all good consciences Pro. 4.23 Thus of the fourth point 5. Now for the differences of life in these degrees especially the first and last degree they are very great for though eternall life in the first degree be a treasure of singula● value yet the glory of this life doth greatly excell as it is to be held in another world I intend not to compare life in heaven with naturall life here for that is not worthy to be mentioned in the ballance with that eternall life of glory but with eternall life it selfe as it is held by the godly only in this world And so the difference is very great 1. In respect of the place where the godly live in each degree 2. In respect of the meanes of preservation of life in each degree 3. In respect of the company with whom we live in each degree 4. In respect of the quality of life it selfe 5. In respect of the effects of life eternall in each degree For the first There is great difference betweene the life of grace and the life of glory in the very place of living Here we live in an earthly tabernacle in houses of clay there we shall live in eternall mansions buildings that God hath made without hands 2 Cor. 5.1 Here we live on earth there in heaven Here we are strangers and pilgrims far from home H●b 11. there we shall live in our Fathers house Here we are in Egypt there we shall live in Canaan Here wee live where death sorrow and sin and Divels dwell there we shall live in a place where God and immortality and all holinesse dwels 2 Pet. 3.13 Here we are but banished men there we shall live in the celestiall Paradise Here we have no abiding City but there we shall abide in the new Jer●s●lem that is above The glory of the whole earth can but shadow out by simili●ude the very walls and gates of that Citie Rev. 21. Here wee can but enter into the holy place there we shall enter into the most holy place Heb. 10.19 To conclude there we shall enter into the heaven of heavens which for lightnesse largenesse purenesse delightfulnesse and all praises almost infinitely excells the heavens we enjoy in this visible world For the second In this life unto the
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
and disagreements and faults in the carriage or judgements of Christians in their living together The earnestnesse of the Apostle in heaping up these directions imports that he discerned many things amisse which was not only true of the Churches of Corinth and Galatia and Thessaloni●a but even of the Church of Philippi which St. Paul most commends And the like we may find in the estate of the seven Churches of Asia if we mark what is said to them by S. Iohn in his Revelation Yea there was not perfect agreement at all times amongst the Pillars of the first Christian Churches Paul and Barnabas were at variance Acts●5 ●5 ●9 and Paul and Peter did openly disagree Gal. 2. The reason is because in this life we know but in part and are sanctified but in part 1 Cor. 13. The Use should be first to teach us not to be offended or scandalized at the differences of opinion that breake out in all the Churches of Christ every where in our times Wee must pray the God of peace to give us peace and know that it hath alwaies beene so and therefore it should not hinder us from embracing the known truth Secondly this should the more enflame our desires after heaven and make us the more willing to die because there will never be perfect holinesse and agreement till we come to heaven then we shall be holy as God is holy and know as we are known and charity will be perfect for ever And besides this should teach us with the more patience to instruct and waite for the amendment of such as are contrary minded and not strive over violently or passionately with them 2 Tim. 2.25 Lastly if Christians can agree no better and have such defects then wee should never wonder overmuch at the monstrous abominations in opinion or life that are found amongst the wicked of the world and in false Churches A second doctrine I observe from hence is That we ought to be rightly ord●red in our minds as well as any other part of our soules or lives Yea the minde is to be looked to in the first place Hence it is that in our regeneration our mindes are especially renewed Rom. 12.2 and God requires to be served with our minds Mat. 22.37 Yea as God is an eternall mind so the service of the mind is most proper for God And besides our mindes give lawes to our lives and therefore if the mind be not good the life must needs be evill The happinesse of the whole man depends upon the mind and therefore the Apostle reckons the impuritie of the mind and conscience to be the worst impurity can befall a man Tit. 1.15 and the same Apostle makes it a signe of a man whose end is damnation to have his mind taken up and wholly bent to earthly things Phil. 3.19 This point may serve first to shew the wofull estate of such persons as have ill and unsound minds And the mind is unsound when it is corrupt or putrefied with ill opinions concerning either faith or manners 2 Tim. 3.8 1 Cor. 11.3 and when it is blinded with ignorance 2 Cor. 4.3 4. for without knowledge the mind cannot be good Pro. 19.2 and it is a divellish mischiefe to have darknesse in our mindes as that place in the Corinthians shewes The minde is also unsound and in wof●ll ●aking when it is taken up with vile thoughts and contemplative wickednesse Rom. 1.21 Eph. 4.17 and when men have double mindes Iames 4.7 or wavering mindes Iames 1.7 And therefore one of the highest curses God inflicts upon men with whom he is angry is to plague them in their mindes either with a reprobate mind Rom. 1.28 or with a desperate minde Secondly this Doctrine shewes what harmfull creatures deceivers of mindes are they doe more mischiefe than such as deceive men in their estates or poison mens bodies Tit. 1.10 Thirdly this should teach all carefull Christians to gird up the loynes of their mindes 1 Pet. 1.13 and to labour to get a sound minde 2 Tim. 1.7 and in particular to get the unitie of minde which the Apostle here requires And so I come to the third point The third Doctrine then which I observe out of these words is That all true Christians are bound in a speciall maner to strive to be all of one mind which in this place is meant of unity and agreement in judgement and matter of beliefe in the points of Religion This is urged in divers Scriptures as 1 Cor. 1.10 2 Cor. 13.11 Phil. 2.2 Rom 15.5 and this was the great glorie of the first Christian Church that all the multitude were of one heart and one soule Acts 4.32 There are many reasons to perswade us hereunto 1. From the nature of this agreement It is as it were one of the bonds of the mysticall union for though it be not the principall one for that is the Spirit of Christ yet it is a speciall one it is like the veines and sinewes which tye the bodie together to breake this unitie is to cut asunder the very veines and sinewes of the mysticall bodie of Christ 1 Cor. 1.10 2 From the equitie and comelinesse of it We have but one Father one Baptisme one Spirit one Hope and therefore should have but one Faith Eph. 4.3 4 5. 3 From the good effects of this unitie for first it will make us the fitter to prayse God and doe him service with the greater encouragement and comfort as we may see Rom. 15.5 Secondly it will make us ever eat our meat with more gladnesse and singlenesse and quietnesse of heart Act. 2.46 Thirdly it will winne us the more favour and honour amongst the people as wee reade in the example of those first Christians Act. 2.47 yea in the end of that verse wee may gather that it is a great advantage for the conversion of others when they see us agree so well together and further it will bee a singular joy to our Teachers to see us agree and be all of one minde and to serve God with one shoulder as the Prophet speaketh Zeph. 3.9 so Phil. 2.2 Yea it will bee a signe to us that wee are true Christians and have found true comfort in Christ and in brotherly love and that we have fellowship by the Spirit in the bodie of Christ and that we have right bowels and mercie unto others Phil. 2.1 2. 4 From the ill effects of dissenting Two of them may be gathered from the coherence in this place for first it is implyed That if Christians agree not in opinions they will hardly practise the foure other vertues here named towards the persons with whom they dissent they will not love them as brethren heartily nor bee so pitifull to them in distresse nor so mercifull to helpe them if they be in need nor so courteous and kinde to them Secondly if this first rule be transgressed it is very probable they will bring trouble upon themselves and that either