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A35583 Movnt Pisgah, or, A prospect of heaven being an exposition on the fourth chapter of the first epistle of St. Paul to the Thessalonians, from the 13th verse, to the end of the chapter, divided into three parts / by Tho. Case ... Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1670 (1670) Wing C837; ESTC R10699 286,764 418

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indeed Believers to be so far one with Christ Idem velle Idem nolle vera est amicitia and that is a very sweet and precious union to will and nill the same things is an high degree of love and oneness but to say no more of the Union betwixt Christ and his Saints is to say too little Sixthly Neither is this Union barely a Sacramental Vnion whereby Christians in either of the Sacraments or any other Evangelical institution are in an Elemental professional way joyned to Christ and Christ to them Thus all good and bad Elect and Reprobate Simon Magus as well as any of the Believing Samaritans Acts 8.12 13. Judas as well as Peter all I say are made one with Christ in an external professional use of those Gospel-institutions while in the mean time a real Believer in a true living spiritual saving way is made partaker of Christ and of all his benefits in all Gospel-Ordinances Seaventhly In contradistinction to the Union which we have with Christ by vertue of his assuming our humane nature Christ was incarnate in the Womb of the Virgin and thereby was personally united to our flesh which is the highest advancement of the humane nature that can be conceived Heb. 2.16 For verily he took not upon him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham Christ assumed mans nature being God from all Eternity he took on him the one to the other and so made of those two natures one person by this we have a kind of Union with Jesus Christ ver 11. He which Sanctifieth and they which are Sanctified are both of one i.e. of one God say some the Son of God and Saints are all of one God the Father others understand it of Adam Christ as concerning the flesh and all the sanctified are of one common root and Father though by a different generation But of one here is to be referred principally to the nature whereof both the sanctifier and sanctified are partakers i.e. Acts 17.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are of the same blood and kindred of the same mould constitution of the same humane nature This is a near and an honourable Conjunction for by this means Jesus Christ is become our Immanuel God with us bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh but yet this Conjunction is common to all sanctified and unsanctified prophane and holy and verily it will be found an high aggravation of sin in the great day that sinners should dare to profane and prostitute that nature to sinful purposes Heb. 2.11 which the Son of God hath sanctified by so wonderful an assumption of it into one and the same personality with the divine nature Thus the sanctified are one with him that sanctifieth but that 's not all Eighthly It is real in contradistinction to that contemplative Vnion which the Saints have with Christ in their holy Meditations Meditation doth bring the object and the faculty together and makes them one And thus the Saints are often united to Jesus Christ in holy contemplation whereby they let in Christ into their Souls and their Souls into Christ and become as it were One Spirit or one in Spirit with him but neither is this all for even common gifts and parts may produce this Conjunction as well as Grace Art may thus Unite Christ and the understanding as well as Faith One may be thus United to Christ for a time and yet be separated from Christ for ever Again Ninethly It is a real Union in contradistinction to Reconciliatory Vnion Falling out separates between person and person Reconciliation makes them one again Reconciliation is the Attonement of Enemies and thus indeed God and Sinners are Reconciled by Christ by him we have received the Attonement those whom sin made two Rom. 5.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reconciliation Christ makes one This is a choyce fruit of Christ's death a concomitant of our Union with Christ yet not the very Vnion it self or not the whole of this Union there is between Christ and Believers the Union of Friendship 2 Cor. 5.18 19. But neither is that all Tenthly and lastly This Vnion is real in contradistinction to affectionate Vnion Crederes unam animam in duobus esse divisam Min. Fel. Oct. Love is as an uniting affection it makes the lover and the beloved one as if two persons had but one Soul between them thus Christ loves the Saints Rev. 1.5 and the Saints love Christ again 1 Pet. 1.8 Christ's love to them is the cause their love to Christ is the effect 1 Jo. 4.19 Yet this Union is rather a fruit of that Union we are now speaking of than the Vnion it self as in Marriage the conjugal bond and conjugal love are distinct things Indeed Love doth Unite Christ and the Saints but Love is rather the fruit of this Union than the Union it self there is somewhat more real in this Union than the Love it self None of all these reach the nature of this Union The Scripture describes it to be a real and a solid Union as real as that beween Head and Members Root and Branches for although it be a Spiritual Union yet doth it not therefore cease to be real things are not therefore less real because Spiritual yea therefore more God who is the most absolute and real Being a Being which gives Being to every thing which hath a being is most spiritual John 4.24 God is a Spirit and the nearer any being or excellency approximates unto God the more real it is the more it self as we see in Angels and the Souls of men Our Saviour his giving of us his Flesh to eat is not as the Papists believe or rather as they would make us believe they do believe literal and carnal the truth it self bearing witness John 6.63 The Flesh profiteth nothing q. d. If you could literally tear my Flesh with your teeth and pour my Blood down your throats this would not profit you at all in point of Salvation What then will Why the words which I speak are Spirit and Life i. e. they are to be understood in a Sacramental and spiritual sense c. And yet although Christs Body be not food in a fleshly but in a spiritual sense Jo. ● 55 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truly or Verily it is not therefore less real no my flesh is meat indeed and my Blood is drink indeed it is neither painted nor Enchanted meat but real and substantial yet not corporal but spiritual yea it is so real that in comparison of that all other corporal food is but imaginary and metaphorical it is but like bread it is but like wine painted bread Quasi food and painted wine not so indeed and in truth compared with Christ in the holy Supper Such is this Union although yea because it is not a corporal but a spiritual Union therefore it is so true and real that in comparison of it all Unions and
clap on the wound of conviction of sin in the promise of the seed of the woman that should break the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 Lest the wound should take cold fester and by delay prove incurable all the Promises in Scripture they are but so many Receipts written down beforehand in the Book of the great Physitian of souls for the use of all Gods Family the Saints of God from the beginning of the world there are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises i. e. concerning exceeding great and precious things 1 Pet. 1.4 and they are all yea and Amen in Jesus Christ verity and infallibility Thither therefore let all Gods Patients go and search and read and take whatever Receipt suiteth best with their Malady and they shall rightly applied find present ease and infallible cure in the constant and believing use thereof For whatsoever was written aforetime was written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15.4 Gods compassions over his mourners are great and therefore his consolations are not small Though God would have his people deeply humbled and tried to the quick yet he would not have their spirits sink under the temptation and therefore when he observes them to begin to faint he ceaseth contending with them and begins his comforting work for the iniquity of his covetousness Isa 57.18 I smote him and was wrath but when God saw that would do no good he trieth another course I will restore comforts to him Just as when a Parent is correcting a Child and the Child cryes and swoons presently away goes the rod and the strong-water-bottle is snatcht up and applied to the mouth of the Child so compassionately dealeth God with his fainting Children It is a wonderful expression which God useth towards Ephraim Jer. 31.20 My bowels are troubled for him Ephraim saith I smote upon my thigh and presently God smites upon his heart and cryes out My bowels are troubled for him I will have mercy upon him O ineffable sympathy answerable whereunto God hath a cup of consolation prepared in his hand which he putteth to their mouths and bids drink yea drink abundantly of it till they forget their sorrows even that overflowing cup Fulness of joy and pleasures for ever at his right hand Ever with the Lord. Psal 103.13 Surely as a father pitieth his children so the Lord pitieth them that fear him and such compassions would he have to fill the bowels of all his Evangelical Messengers Isa 40.1 2. Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith their God speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem c. Thus doth God fill up his Title brim-full and running over The Father of mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 and the God of all comfort In the fourth place 4. Branch of Information here you may see the absolute and indispensable necessity of faith without which all the choicest consolations and richest cordials the Word can afford are but so much water of life in a dead mans mouth or as Elisha's Staffe upon the face of the dead Child ● King 4. which causeth neither voice nor motion Heb. 10.38 The just shall live by faith an unbelieving man is but a dead man for as faith is the first principle of spiritual life so it is the constant medium whereby the spiritual fewel and restoratives of that life are brought in and made vital to the soul The life I now live in the flesh I live it by the faith of the Son of God Christs flesh is meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed but it is to faith only it is not meat indeed if there be not faith indeed He that cometh to me shall never hunger What 's that He that believeth on me shall never thirst The Word of God is the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 but it is to them only who believe God hath provided a cup of consolation for his fainting people in their swooning fits but it is the hand of faith that must take it and the mouth of faith only that can drink it The unbeliever is an unhappy man nothing can do him good Heb. 4.2 The word doth not profit not being mixt with faith The body and blood of Christ proves poyson instead of divine nutriment because it is not received by faith This is the will of him that sent me saith our Lord that he that believeth on me may have everlasting life Divine Cordials so magisterial that they are able as it were to put life into a dead man give them to an unbeliever they signifie no more than water in the shooes Oh get faith Saints act your faith or else ye are undone Great notions are but small comforts to a natural man and the reason is because they are above him nothing can act above its principle you can never comfort a Swine with arguments of reason no more can ye comfort a carnal heart with heavenly consolations the reason is Quiequid recipitur recipitur ad modum recipientu because both are above the constitutive principles of either Divine notions may serve a man without faith to discourse by but they will never serve him to live by reason may discourse upon them but faith must live upon them The life I now live I live by the faith c. Therefore doth the Apostle there put the cup of consolation into the hand of faith ver 14. If we believe that Jesus died and rose again c. There is an inexhaustible fulness of comfort in Christ and in the Promises but not one drop to be drawn forth without faith The breasts of Scripture-consolation are full they even drop again but it is the mouth of faith that must suck them out the still-born Child may as well-draw the Mothers dug as a faithless Christian make the teats of Scripture to afford any drop of divine influence to his drooping soul but to the believer it is cried at least by way of accommodation Suck ye Isa 66.11 12. and be satisfied with the breasts of consolation milk out and be delighted with the abundance of glory A man may as well live and laugh without a soul as have true evangelical comfort without faith which is the bond of union between Christ and the Soul and so being united to the fountain 1 Pet. 1.18 Believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious This is that golden pipe through which all the golden oyl of grace and comfort is derived into the heart Zech. 4.12 The men of the world may have vast proportions of knowledge both natural and divine but meer knowledge is light without heat but faith warms the heart as they said one to another Did not our hearts burn within us when he spake unto us If I assent and consent to the glorious Doctrine of the Resurrection knowing with Job that my Redeemer liveth c. I can in that triumph over all occurrent
hath made them sc by vertue of their Union with Jesus Christ Doth Christ call God his Father and his God behold He Heb. 2.11 being not ashamed to call them Brethren lets them know that he is their God and Father God to my Brethren and say to them John 20.17 I ascend to my Father and your Father to my God and your God Once more Hath the Father appointed him a Kingdom so doth he appoint unto them a Kingdom Luk. 22.29 Hath the Father assigned him a Throne so doth Christ assigne unto his Saints a Throne also To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me Rev. 3.21 in my Throne even as I also overcame and am set down with my Father in his Throne My Brethren what a Soul-enriching beatifical Union is this There be Unions in nature which convey nothing communicate nothing but empty and insignificant titles which make the person admitted into them not a whit the richer the better not a jot the more noble or happy but this Union as that divine essential Union between the Father and the Son doth invest Christ into all divine properties and prerogatives with the Father so this between Christ and the Believer invests the Believer into the whole Christ and all his riches and all his glory in so much as the Spouse gives in the whole accompt in this vast and invaluable sum Cant. 2.16 My Beloved is mine and I am his he is mine the whole Christ is mine in his natures offices excellencies prerogatives and inheritance In all he is and in all he hath it is all mine for my good and for my glory This is the voice of her Faith and then I am his this is the voice of her love I am his in all I am in all I have in all I can make by my interest in the world and if it were a thousand times more he should have it all and all too little for him who hath loved me and washed one in his own Blood and hath taken me into so rich and glorious an Vnion with his own self To him be glory for ever Amen This is the fourth Property I proceed to a fifth property of the Union Fifth Property an intimous Vnion and it is a near inward intimous Union To hint the intimateness of this Union the Holy Ghost in Scripture carries us through the climax of all Unions under Heaven and compares it with them of what nature and kind soever Whether Artificial Whether Political Whether Natural Wherein although you may find different degrees one exceeding another yet all falling short of this blessed Vnion in respect of closeness and intimacy It tells you that look how the house and foundation are one so are Christ and Believers 1 Pet. 2.4 5 6. yea higher It tells you that look how Husband and Wife are one so is Christ and his Saints Hos 2.19 Eph. 5.30 only with this incomparable difference Husband and Wife make but one flesh 1 Cor 6.16 17. but Christ and the Believer make one Spirit ut supra It tells us yet higher that look how the Head and Members are one so is Christ and his Church 1 Cor. 12.12 how root and branches are one John 15.1.6 so Christ and Believers and closer yer the Scripture tells us that look how Food and the body are one so also is Christ and the Believer one hence we hear of eating his Flesh and drinking his Blood John 6.51 53 54 55 56. and nearer yet if nearer can be It 〈◊〉 that look how the Soul and Body are one how Life and the subject wherein it resides are one so is Christ and the Believer Colos 3.4 when Christ who is our life shall appear c. Behold here Christians is an Union which amounts tantum non to an identity say only with Cyprian it is not such an Union as is between the two natures in Christ Non miscet personas nec unit substantias Cypr. It is indeed an Union of persons but not a personal Union Mystici Theologi A Believer trans-essentiated into God and Bread and Wine transsubstantiated into Christ are much of a Language So they call the Holy Ghost auram zephyri caelestis and pardon of sin Deos superos manesque pacare Card. de Bemb which makes them but one person not such an Union as is between the three glorious Persons in the blessed Trinity who notwithstanding the distinction of their personality are but one nature and essence and you cannot say or think too highly of this Vnion yea whatsoever you can say or think will be short of the intimacy and excellency of this Union Onely we must tell the world that those mystical divines amongst the Papists as they call themselves who talk of the Saints being trans essentiated into God and those Seraphicks amongst us as they would be called but Phanatiques more truly and properly who rant at the same rate Christed with Christ and Godded with God these speak as men so ambitious of being accounted sublime and Angelical in comparison of all other men whom they scorn as illiterate Literatists that they think it a lessening to them to speak in a common and sober Dialect and rather then not speak bigger words then other men they fear not to speak Blasphemy The Lord convince them Notwithstanding I must add this to what I have said that because no Union under Heaven was close enough to express the oneness which is betwixt Christ and the Believer therefore our Lord Jesus himself carries us up to Heaven there to contemplate the essential Union which is between the Father and the Son Jo. 17. and puts them into the same parallel As thou Father art in me and I in thee that they may be one in us yet still we must be careful to understand the words of Christ in a sober sense lest whil'st our Lord doth honour our Union with himself by comparing it to divine Union in the Trinity we do in the least dishonour that Union by levelling it with ours we must duly remember that this comparative particle as doth not here intend equality but likeness o●●y the truth of the intimacy and not the nature or the degree of it to lift up this mystical Union above all other Unions in nature but we must still keep the divine Union in its own place This is the fifth property The sixth property Sixth property total It is a total Union The whole Christ is United to the whole Christian as the whole humane nature in Christ is joyned to the whole divine nature so the whole person of a Believer is joyned to the whole person of Christ yet not so as to make Christ and the Believer but one person but as in the conjugal Union between Man and Wife making up one mystical body or as in the body natural every Member is joyned to the head and the head to every member so is Christ and the Believer Yea once
conjecture that we should not too soon forget the Affliction and the Misery the Wormwood and the Gall but that our Souls having them continually in remembrance might be humbled in us Lam. 3.19 20. Possibly that the Children being every way alike both in Person and in Disposition one and the same Plaister might give ease and cure to the wound and one and the same Monument perpetuate their Memorial unto Posterity Truly they were a pair of lovely Babes Babes in Age though men in knowledg and understanding of whom we may in their Capacity sing as David once in his Funeral Elegies of Saul and Jonathan They were pleasant in their lives in their death they were not divided Their lives indeed were short so it seemed good to the Divine Wisdome after He had shewed two such excellent pieces in the Light for a while timely to lay them up amongst his Jewels lest they should receive hurt or stain from a present evil world But although their lives were short yet verily they were precious such as allowing them this Abatement that they were Children neither Parents nor Standers-by could rationally have wished they had been otherwise then they were And though there were some distance of years yet there was the greatest parity of Persons observed between them that though they were but the Brother 's and Sister 's Sons you could not had they been together have distinguished them from natural Brethren or Tynnes rather of the same Birth For Elegancy of Person Loveliness of Countenance Solidness of Judgment Acuteness of Wit Tenaciousness of Memory Sweetness of Disposition Vniversal Innocence and Modesty in behaviour Obedience to Parents Next or Remote Submission to Governours Observance to Superiours Love to Equals Condescention to Inferiours and candor to all And that which deservedly is of higher value with God Reverend Attention to his Word Read or Preached together with some suitable ability to give a methodical repetition of both Studious in learning Catechisms of which they were able to give such a rational account as if they had been Candidates for the Vniversity as many both of the Nobility and others in the Parish of Giles 's in the Fields can at this day witness Love to the best things and a due respect to the best men with a more then a Childish dislike of and adversness to what they understood to be evil c. These Desirablenesses according to yea and above the rate of Children rendered them so like one another as if one Soul had animated two bodies or one and the same Conception had been formed up into two Patterns though reserved to be seen successively to the end as it were that the Elder might out-live himself in the Younger Aut Utrumque putabis esse verum aut Utrumque putabis esse pictum You would have deemed them to be either the same Person or two Pictures one the Original the other a Copy Sic oculos sic ille manus sic ora ferebat He that had seen one might have known them both And as they were alike in their Lives so in their Death they were not divided or if a little in time not at all in the manner and Circumstances They both Lived with us but died with you they lived with the Divine but died with the Physitian to shew that neither Religion doth kill nor Physick can keep alive Nevertheless though they died with you they came not to dye any further than the hidden Decree of the Divine will had before determined They died alive as it were Death gave them so little warning Neither Parents or Children understood wherefore they came until within a very few days Death shewed his Commission and as soon Executed it They died both of them in the absence of their Trustees who though one step higher in the Parental line were not I am sure half a step lower in Parental affection which the Divine eye Saw and pittied and therefore out of Compassion hiding from us what he was about to do As he snatched us from the Elder by sending us abroad So He snatched the Younger from us by sending him Home to his Fathers House So pittying our Infirmity who otherwise possibly might not have parted with them so willingly nor have born their loss so patiently The loss of two such choyce Patterns of Divine workmanship could not but have been an heart-breaking object to us as it was to you but that their constant absence from you was a preparative whereby the terrour of death was somthing abated their very absence so long before was a little death That which sweetneth it to us all is that God hath not left us to mourn as men without hope that in the Context before us The Children are not dead but sleep they sleep in Jesus If any Stander-by shall judg possibly that my affection hath transported my Charity into their excess my Apology is this that I had rather be guilty of an Excess in Charity than a Defect in thankfulness I know we cannot expect such rational accounts of Grace in Children as may be found in Adult Saints but that that doxologie out of the mouths of Babes and Sucklings thou hast ordeined strength Psal 8.2 doth not exclude Children though not confine the meaning of the words so narrow is the judgment of the old St. Ignatius who from those Scripture instances of Samuel Josiah and others denieth not but that the Spirit of God working in young ones doth many times give out early discoveries of the Grace of the Covenant when Elder Persons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Epist ad Magn. do only carry their Gray-haires as a badg of their Ingratitude to God As for your dear Children God hath not left himself without fu●ther witness in their death of an interest in them Those heavenly whispers which the tender Aunt laying her ear to the pale lips of her dying Nephew as he lay upon his back with eyes fixed Heaven-ward when he wanted strength to make his heart audible God Christ Grace c. And her own dear Childs delight in that little Book A Guide to Heaven a book little in bulk but great in Excellency which as it caused him to make it his Vade Mecum while he lived his Golden Cup out of which he drank his Mornings draught every morning in his Bed So it caused him to take it with him as his Viaticum to Heaven when he came to dye For it was found with him when dead These I say are overplusses of Divine Grace and witnesses of Divine Love to those dying Babes from their Heavenly Father Wherefore Dear Children let not the Consolations of God seem small unto you but improve them for your own Comfort and quickning in the holy Education of the surviving Treasures of your Blood that if they live you may have comfort in their Lives or if they dye you may have hope in their Deaths Be steadfast and immoveable and always abounding in the work of the Lord for as
of us all Jesus Christ was the Center in whom the sins of all the Elect of God did meet and unite together to make Him as it were the common sinner For God made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him and under the insupportable burthen of our sin he swet and wept and bled and groaned and gave up the Ghost Behold Rom. 8.31 So God the Father Loved us that he spared not his own Son but delivered him up to the death for us all and shall we think much to give up the dearest Treasures of our blood in death to Him So much did God the Son love us that He died for love of us he died the first death that we might not die the second death he died for us that we might live with him And shall we count our lives or the lives of our dearest Relations too dear for him especially when no such advantage can accrue to the Lord Jesus by our death as did accrue to us by his death also in as much as neither we nor ours are in any capacity to reap the fruit and advantage of his death until we dye also and the sooner we dye the sooner shall we reap those fruits Behold God's First-borne was laid in the Sepulchre and shall we think God deals hardly with us if we follow our first-born to the Grave and leave them there till our Lord himself come to awaken them Especially since therefore Jesus died and was buried that he might sanctifie death to us by his death and by his being buried might perfume the Grave and make it a sweet Dormitory or bed of spices for his members to rest in until the Morning of the Resurrection Oh Christians Let us comfort our selves and one another with these words also Jesus dyed The fourth word is yet more Cordial A fourth word of Comfort and that is although Jesus dyed yet He rose again He died indeed but he rose again from the dead God suffered his dear Son to be laid in the Sepulchre but he did not leave him there nor suffer any taint of Corruption to seize upon his precious Body And to that end Christ made hast to rise again out of the Grave he rose the third day and that very early in the Morning saith the Text as soon as ever it could be called day The Alarm no sooner went off as it were but the Lord Jesus did lift up his Royal head and put on his Glorious Apparel and came forth out of his Grave as a Bridegroom out of his Chamber in State and Triumph And this was the Cordial which our Lord himself took before his passion Thou wilt not leave my Soul in Hell Psal 16.10 neither wilt thou suffer thine holy one to see Corruption Therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth c. This was his Triumphant Song And it may be ours as well as his yea therefore ours because his whether in reference to our selves or to our gratious Relations For therefore was not Christ left in Hell i. e. in the state of the dead that he might lift up us also out of the pit and therefore his body saw i. e. sustained no corruption or putrefaction no not for the least particle of time that our mortal bodies might not inherit Rottenness and Oblivion in the dust for ever And indeed in this phrase in the Text Jesus arose again there be three things implied which interest every believer in this Triumph of Christs Resurrection c. Jesus rose again implieth three things First Power Secondly Right Thirdly Office First 1st Power 〈◊〉 Jesus Rose again it implieth Christs power Viz. That Jesus Christ rose by his own power It is not said Jesus was raised which might have spoken Him passive onely in his Resurrection but Jesus rose which speaketh Him active namely that he rose as a Conquerour by his own strength as Himself professeth I have power to lay down my life and I have power to take it again Joh 10.18 What power that was Rom. 1.4 will tell us declared to be the Son of God with power according to the spirit of holiness by the Resurrection from the dead It is true it is elsewhere said that Christ was raised from the dead by the Glory of the Father Rom. 6.4 And likewise that he was quickned by the Spirit Pet. 3.18 To shew that neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost were excluded from a joynt share and concurrence in his Resurrection but here as elsewhere it is said also that Christ rose to shew that he was not merely passive in his Resurrection as the Children of the Resurrection are but that he rose also by the mighty power that was seated in his own Royal person The divine Nature in Christ to which the humane nature was personally united Alteram Christi naturam intelligamus nempe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verbi incarnati potentiâ was that Spirit of Holiness by which the Lord Jesus did rise Triumphantly from the dead In the same language speaks another Apostle he was put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit i.e. by the Divine essence which was in Christ Death and the Grave had swallowed a morsel which they could not keep but as the Whale when it had swallowed Jonas in this the Type of Christ was forced to vomit him up again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it being impossible Christ should be holden by death The power of the word incarnate loosed or dissolved the bonds of Death as a thread of Tow is broken when it is touched with the fire Yea Sampson-like herein also another type of his Jesus Christ did break in sunder the bars of the Grave and carried away the Gates of death upon his shoulders making a shew of them openly Thus Jesus rose again as a Conquerour by his own power and this is our Triumph and Rejoycing For surely He that thus raised up himself can raise up us also and will indeed raise us up by the same power Phil 3 21. whereby he is able to subdue even all things unto himself Secondly Jesus rose again it implieth his Office Second Office he rose as a Jesus a Saviour the Mediator of our peace who having finished the work he came about namely to satisfie divine Justice and to bring in everlasting Rightcousness so making peace by the blood of his Cross God the Father sent a publique Officer from Heaven to open the Prison doores Math. 28.2 an Angel to rool away the stone from the mouth of the Sepulchre thereby proclaiming to all the world that the debt was paid and that God had received full satisfaction for the sins of the Elect saying as it were Deliver him for I have received a Ransom This is another ground of our Triumph that Jesus rose that is he rose as our Jesus our Saviour and so by dying hath
of his humiliation Thirdly Third Reas to finish his Mediatory Office Our Lord Jesus Christ must come himself at the last day to perfect and finish his Mediatory-Office At his first coming his Mediatory-work was to pay a price to divine Justice 1 Per. 1.19 So he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so to purchase us of his Father At his second coming his Mediatory-work will be to gather all his Redeemed ones together and to present them a glorious Church to his Father not having spot or wrinckle or any such thing but holy and without blemish in some such language as was long before Prophesied Behold here am I and the Children whom thou hast given me Isa 8.18 And again as when he was going out of the world he gave his account to his Father of all whom thou hast given me Joh. 17.12 I have lost none but the Son of perdition At his first coming his Mediatory-work was to fight with the Devil Act. 26.18 Colos 1.13 Luk. 11.21 22. In this respect he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 11.26 and all the powers of darkness and to rescue what he had bought of the Father out of the power of Satan that strong man armed who kept his goods in peace At his second coming his Mediatory-work will be to vanquish all those Enemies out of whose dominion he hath freed his Elect to bind them with chains to cast them into everlasting darkness and to seal the bottomless pit upon them for ever And when he hath done this the Lord Jesus shall deliver up the Kingdome to his Father His Office is not compleated till this be done God's Oath is past upon it and cannot be reverst Isa 45.23 c. The Text is applyed to Christ presently upon his Exaltation to this very purpose Phil. 2.20 Well then we have now found out the person of the Judg. The Lord Himself c. And for the Use it may serve 1. For infinit terror to the Wicked 2. For unspeakable Consolation to the Godly First it serves for infinit terror to the Wicked Use 1 That the Judgment now should be put into the hand of Him Terror to the Wicked whom of all the world they counted their Enemy at least if they did not call him so they used him so Oh what a dreadful sight will his Appearance be If Ahab cryed out with so much discomposure of spirit at the suddain appearance of Elijah the Prophet of God Hast thou found me Oh mine Enemy With what horror and affrightment will Reprobate Gaitiff's cry out when they shall be drag'd from before the Tribunal of the Lord Jesus the Lord of the Prophets Hast thou found us Oh our Enemy If Josephs Brethren were so astonished at the presence of Joseph when he said unto them I am Joseph whom you sold into Egypt How will all the world of ungodly men be confounded at the presence of the Lord now coming in the glory of his Father to Judg them when he shall say unto them I am Jesus I am Jesus whom ye sold for less than ever Judas sold me even for the price of a base Lust I am Jesus whom ye Crucified over and over again to your selves and put me to an open shame I am Jesus whose Person you have slighted whose Government you have spurn'd at crying in the Pride and Rebellion of your obstinate spirits We will not have this man Reign over us I am Jesus whose Counsel you have rejected whose Threatnings you have laughed to scorn whose Promises you have derided and set at nought I am Jesus whose Blood you have trampled under your feet as an Vnholy thing even doing despite to the Spirit of grace c. I say Now will the Reprobate world be confounded at the presence of their Judg Behold in the days of his Flesh when he appeared in the forme of a Servant and was even led away as a Sheep to the Slaughter and as a Lamb before the Shearer not opening his mouth by way of murmur against his Father or reviling against his Enemies yet how did that Lamb-like Word I am He fill the hearts of those sturdy Souldiers who came to apprehend Him with horror and strike them to the ground like a blast of Thunder and Lightning Oh how will that word when he shall come cloathed with Majesty and terror with all the glorious Host of Heaven attending his Person I am he fill Reprobate Souls with astonishment and distraction and even strike them backward into Hell before their time How will it cause them to woo the Mountains and Rocks now as hard and inexorable as their hearts once were in the day of God's patience crying out to them to the amazement of Heaven and Earth Mountains Fall on us Rev. 6.26 27. Rocks cover us and hide us from the face of Him that sitteth on the Throne and from the presence of the Lamb for the great day of his Wrath is come and who shall be able to stand But all in vain As the Lord Jesus once in the day of his grace cryed unto them and they would not answer c. So they shall now cry to Heaven and Earth to Rocks and Mountains Prov. 1.24 25 26. Psal 50.22 and they shall not answer yea the Judg shall laugh at their Calamity and mock when their fear cometh Oh consider this ye that forget God lest he tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver Second Use Second Use of Comfort to the Saints Christ Himself will be their Judg. But on the contrary unspeakable Consolation may this doctrine of Christ's personal Appearance speak to the Godly the Sheep of Christ which have heard his voyce speaking to them in the Gospel of peace and have obeyed it Behold He that in the days of his flesh came to be their Redeemer now in the day of his power shall come to be their Judge He that so often pleaded for them to his Father and for whom they so often pleaded and contended with a disobedient and gain-saying Generation I say He shall now be their Judg and pass sentence upon them their Friend their Brother their Head their Husband What need they fear that Tribunal where not their Enemies who were wont fas●y to accuse and condemn them no not their prejudiced and imprudent Friends who somtimes have rashly and causelesly mis-judged them much less the Accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 who accused them before their God day and night none of these I say shall sit in Judgment But their dear Redeemer who for their sake came down from Heaven that loved them so dearly that he died for love of them that he might Redeem them and wash them in his own Blood He that Regenerated Sanctified Justified Preserved and Perfected them He to whom both in Life and Death they were so nearly and inseparably Vnited and by vertue of which Conjunction they are now
the Saints in the Resurrection that they shall be glorious even to admiration They shall be admired by the very Angels by one another and even by themselves also they shall wonder to behold this strange Change wrought upon themselves as a poor Captive-maid taken out of the Dungeon stript of her nasty stinking raggs and cloathed with Prince-like Robes adorned with rich and costly Jewels to be Married to a King would stand fill'd with wonder and delight to look round about upon her self and behold the beauty and lustre of every part So shall it be with the Saints in the Resurrection The reflexes of Christs glory shall shine forth in them even to wonder and astonishment Christ shall be glorified in his Saints and in all them which believe Christ shall not be glorious in Himself only but glorified in all his Saints Thirdly It is sowen in weakness weakness indeed What more impotent than Man while yet alive Vanity it self Psal 39.5 Yea hear that Text out and you will say he is vanity indeed for first it is every man Kings as well as Beggars C●l Adam Giants as well as Pygmies every man take where ye will And secondly as it is every man so it is Every vanity or * Col-Hebel Vniversa Vanitas altogether vanity Every man is the Center of every vanity he is not only mixt vanity partly somthing and partly nothing some solidity and some froth but vanity throughout vanity and nothing else And then again it is every man in his * Nitztzab best Estate or according to the Heb. * Nitztzab Standing Yee need not stay till he is down when he is languishing suppose in his sick bed but take him standing in his most erect posture when he is most himself in his bravery Heb. Chasde or as it is Isa 40.6 take him in his goodliness Gallantry in his freshest colours and excellencies and yet then even then he is vanity every man is every vanity Ach. Vtique and that you may not doubt of it the Holy Ghost hath set a double seal to it one in the front Verily and another in the heel of the Text Selah Verily every man in his best Estate is altogether Vanity Selah such a piece of vanity that he is not able at his best to free himself of or fence himself against the injuries of the most contemptible creature that ever God made Frogs and Flies Lice and Worms have courage enough to encounter and strength enough to conquer the proudest potentest Tyrant as we see in Pharaoh Herod c. Thus weak he is in his Strength what is he in his Weakness So feeble he is when he stands how feeble when he is fallen in sickness in his old decrepit age his second Infancy Read and ponder on that graphical description which the Holy Ghost hath drawn of him Eccles 12. Eccles 12. We will pick out but some of those lively Characters ver 3. The Keepers of the House tremble the Arms and Hands the principal instruments in repelling evil from the body they tremble with Palsies and shakings The Strong men bow themselves the leggs and thighs which were wont to carry the body upright with strength and vigour now faulter and shrink under their weight and buckle together for very debility the ligaments of nature being now untied The Grinders cease because they are few the Teeth that were wont to grinde the Food and prepare it for the Stomach they cease from their function because but few and having lost their ke●nness Those that look out at the Windows are darkned the eyes those Spies and Intelligencers of this little world by reason of the driness and ineptitude of the Organs defluxion of humours c. do fail in the execution of their office The Doors are shut in the street All the Senses which are the Doors by which objects enter are so weakned that they are unusefull and of very little service They rise up at the voyce of the Bird Old men through difficulty and want of sleep rise at the crowing of the Cock or the chirping of a Sparrow the least noise disturbs their sleep See the more full and accurate exposition of this description of Old Age in the English Annot. upon Eccles by the Reverend and Learned Dr. Reynolds verse 5. They are afraid of that which is high they go slowly and timorously lest they should stumble at every stone or the least unevenness in the way The Grasshopper shall be a burden the lightest hop of the least creature is burthensome to Old Age. Desire fails all the sensual appetitions of Youth are now undesired and unsavory Behold here is weakness to perfection And yet all-this-while there is Life the Soul yet imbalms the body and keeps it from putrifying But Man returns to his long Home This same dry Seed is sown and it is sowen in weakness indeed not only meat for Worms but it turns into Worms and Vermin and hasteneth into its first feeble principle of dust to which it was sentenced by Divine Justice Dust thou art Gen. 3.19 and to dust thou shalt return But now behold this feeble thing shall be raised in power 3. Property Powerful The body even of the weakest Infant shall be invested with an Angelical power A Monument whereof the formidable Host of Sennacherib King of Assyria hath erected for all posterity wherein 2 King 19.35 one Angel went out and smote one hundred fourscore and five thousand who over-night like so many Goliahs defied the Armies of the Living God but in the morning lay upon the ground so many blasted life-less Corpses and all by the Ministry of one Angel Such Vessels of strength and Activity shall the bodies of the Saints be in the Resurrection they shall be indued with such power saith one that they shall be able to remove the Globe of the Earth with their foot as if it were but a foot ball they shall be cloathed with a kind of Omnipotence Gideon Sampson Jephtah David and all his famous Worthies are but as suoking Babes to the Children of the Resurrection He that is weak among them shall be as David and he that is as David shall be as the Angel of God Again It is sowen a natural body according to the Greek word for word an * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Abnimal body i. e. such a body as is animated susteined and acted by the Soul The holy natural 1. Because acted by a natural Soul yet in so low a way that it is subject to Corruption and is no sooner deserted by the Soul but it resolves into dust ut supr à or Natural i. e. such a body as stands in need of natural helps of meat drink rest sleep 2. Because it stands in need of natural props 3. Because endued only with natural affections c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fourth Property Spiritual to shore up the feeble Tabernacle of dust for
curiâ perfect before the Tribunal of Gods Justice Obj. If it be objected There is not a third State or a third Person viz. one that is not Guilty and yet not Righteous a man must be one of these either Guilty or Righteous if he be not Guilty he is Righteous if Righteous he is not Guilty Answ The objection admits of a fair and easie solution namely this * The Law is satisfied by suffering the Penalty in mens precepts but not in God's wherein not only Penalties are threatned but Blessings are promised Down de Justif It holds true in matters of criminal Justice where a person is tried upon Indictment of a Crime suppose Theft or Murder or Sacrilege or the like there upon Examination to be found Not Guilty is to be Righteous Legally Righteous there being no other Righteousness looked after in that Tryal but Whether Guil●y of the Fact or not Guilty But in matters of remunerative justice where the Law propounds a reward to such and such qualifications there a not-Guilty will not suffice Ex. gr If a Scholar in the University be a Candidate for an office there or a Fellowship in a Colledg where the Statutes do require such and such qualifications there upon Examination to be found not-Guilty of Murther of Sacriledg or any other Crime this will not capacitate the Candidate for the preferment this is the case in hand The Saints are now Candidates for Heaven and Glory Absolution or Pardon is not sufficient to capacitate them for this glory yea though it be supposed the pardon be extensive to all not the transgressions only of the Law but the very omissions defects too yea to the least non-conformity unto the Law in its utmost perfection it sufficeth not because a pardon is not the qualification which the Law requireth but a positive perfection Fac hoc c. Do this and Live Whether God by absolute Prerogative cannot dispence with this qualification and pardon the want of it I will not dispute but Whether God can in Justice dispence with his own Law and with that Condition of Righteousness and Life established in the first Covenant is the main Enquiry of which anon It is true there is not a third State a State which is neither a state of Guilt nor a state of Righteousness neither is there a third person there is not a person to be found which is neither Guilty nor Righteous but though there be not a third State or a third Person yet there is tertius Conceptus a third Conception or notion in the understanding though there be not a person which is neither Guilty nor Righteous yet to be not-Guilty They differ as to the praedicate though they be not separate as to the subject and to be Righteous are two different capacities considerable in one and the same person it is one thing for a man to be considered meerly as not Guilty or purely as an absolved person another thing to be considered as a Righteous person invested with all those excellent qualifications which may capacitate him for the priviledg annexed to the condition Ex. gr As it is between Sin Holiness He that is not sinful is holy there is not a person to be found who is not sinful and yet not holy the notions are different though the subject be one and the same So it is between not-Guilty and Righteous there is not a person who is neither not-Guilty and yet not-Righteous for although the considerations be unseparable yet they are not identical Not-Guilty is not the same notion with Righteous that is purely privative this positive though they are ever Vnited yet they are not to be Confounded Again as in point of Eternal punishment He that is punished with the pain of Loss Paena damni Paena sensus is punished also with the pain of Sense yet is not the pain of Loss the same with the pain of Sense He that is deprived of Gods presence and the joys of Heaven doth suffer the torments of Hell with the Devil and his Angels for ever the punishments are distinct though they be inseparable So it is between the two capacities relating to these two places Hell and Heaven The Person under the notion of not-Guilty is an absolved person and acquitted from Hell and eternal damnation And as under the notion of Righteous he is capacitated for Heaven and life everlasting Not-Guilty relates to freedome from Hell Righteousness relateth to Heaven as the proper qualification thereof Do this and Live though where the one is there is the other yet the one is not formally the other And according to these two capacities and places there are two great Works which the Redeemer did undertake for the Redeemed The one to make satisfaction for sin to divine justice by his Blood i. e. by his Death The other to yield most absolute Conformity to the Law of God both in Nature and Life By the one we may conceive the Redeemed freed from Hell and everlasting burnings by the other we may conceive them qualified for Heaven and everlasting Glory Yet not so precisely neither the one or the other but that both may be produced by both Active and Passive obedience may have a joynt influence upon both his Active to save from Hell and his Passive to bring to Heaven As a man that payeth a debt and purchaseth an Inheritance either of them to the value of five hundred pounds at the same time with a Jewel worth a thousand one half whereof relates to the debt the other to the Purchase yet so as it is hard to distinguish which is done by which there is a distinct consideration in it yet so as that both concurr to both so in the case in hand As the Active and Passive obedience in Christ suppose not two Redeemers but one and the same Person under both these distinct engagements so Absolution and positive real Righteousness infer not a distinction of persons but diversity only of considerations in one and the same person But further That a positive Righteousness is requisite to the justification of a Sinner as well as Absolution from guilt and punishment may appear upon a four-fold account viz. Of 1. The Justice of God 2. The Perfection of the Law 3. The Necessity of the Sinner 4. The Excellency of the Redeemer First the Justice of God 1. Accompt The justice of God this is for the glory of Gods Justice to justifie man in such a way as wherein he may also justifie himself This the holy Apostle counts highly worthy our best observation That he might be just Rom. 3.26 and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus God would shew himself a Righteous God in justifying of Vnrighteous men and this he declareth in both the parts of Justification Sc. Pardon Accounting Righteous First In Pardon God shews himself just He declareth his Righteousness for the Remission of Sins that are past Remission looks backward Righteousness
between Christ and believers how expressed in scriture 1.22 Opened in 7. distinguishing properties 1 Spiritual 1.23 2 Real 1.25 3 Operative 1.29 4 Enriching 1.30 5 Intimous 1.33 6 Total 1.35 7 Indissoluble ib. It is of Gods 1 Praeordination 1.36 2 Efficiency ibid. 3 Support ibid. No in and out in it 1.37 Death dissolveth it no●● ibid. Unkindnesses to Christ great hinderances of assurance 3.128 W Waiting It is good for us to wait for God 3 133 Wicked great terror to such that Christ shall be Judge 2.73 They shall be dragged by Angels before the Tribunal to receive their sentence 2.164 No good that ever they did shall be mentioned to their honour 2.170 Wicked men how to be suffered 2.117 All they do is abomination 2.170 Will our wills will be like unto God in heaven 3.79 Witnesses their enemies confounded at their ascension 2.102 Word of Christ more authentick than tradition or revelation 2.63 The only foundation for our faith 2.66 Works a comparison between the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace 3.81 Works reward encouragement to good works 3.91 World compared to a stage 3.70 World and the Devil have counterfeit Cordials 3.154 Worldly enjoyments not what we fancy them 3.70 Worldly felicities quickly grow old 3.74 Y Young the joyes of heaven alwayes young 3.74 Youth the Saints shall rise in youth and perfect strength and beauty 3.73 ERRATA Part I. II. PAge 49 marg for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 52 line 52 f. the r. these f. the r. you p. 53 l. 11 f. 〈◊〉 r. own l. 9 f. tranessentied r. transossentiated p. 56 l. 15 ● third r. three p. 62. l. 6. f. others r. some p. 70 l. 27 f. twofold r. threefold p. 77 marg f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 82 marg f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 125 l. 21 dele as it were p. 126 l. 19 f. or r. of p. 143 l. 9 add more p. 144 l. 3 f. eternal life and happiness r. on holy life here l. 6 add hereafter p. 146 l. 15 f. but r. and l. 31 f. obedience r. disobedience p. 161 l. 11 dele ●● Part III. Page 5 line 4 dele is p. 6 l. 28. for hath r. as p. 8 l. 5 add himself p. 9 marg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 11 l. 27 f. form r. formed p. 18 marg f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 21 l. 18 f. infirn●tes r. infernales p. 34 marg dele heat p. 39 marg f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 46 marg f. praeteritur r. judicis l. 17 add God after but p. 48. from thence correct the pages till 65. p. 51 l. 1 for ●manate r. emanare p. 53 l. 11 f. glasses r. visions p. 57 l. 25 add our l. 28 f. they r. roe p. 59 l. 4 f. best r. lest p. 61 l. 16 f. ascended r. ascend p. 62 l. 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 65 l. 15 dele of p. 66 l. 20 f. happiness r. fulness p. 69 l. 1 f. guest r. gust p. 84 l. 26 f. finites r. finite p. 89 marg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 95 l. 33 f. ninthly r. fifthly p. 98 l. 15 f. sum r. same p. 102 l. 6 f. in r. on l. 21 f. be r. take p. 103 l. 19 f. opulentous r. opulent p. 104 l. 3 f. Crowns r. counters l. 15 add see p. 105 l. 22 add grow p. 107 l. 13 f. sheaves of Saffron r. fruits of righteousness b. 108 l. 11 add the p. 112 marg f. domini r. domine p. 115 l. 17 f. care r. core p. 118 marg dele quere p. 130 l. 1 f. that r. th●e p. 143 l. 17 f. thee r. the p. 153 l. 9 f. emanate r. ●manare p. 155 l. 20 f. fortune r. fortitude p. 157 l. 8 f. by r. my p. 158 l. 10 f. and r. man l. 12. f. trial r. sorrere p. 160 l. 2 f. comforters r. comfort l. 7 those evidences r. that evidence These Books with several others are Printed for and are to be sold by Dorman Newman at the Chirurgions-Arms in Little-Britain near the Hospital-gate Folio A Description of the four parts of the World taken from the Works of Monsieur Sanson Geographer to the French King and other eminent Traveller● and Authors To which is added the Commodities Coins Weights and Measures of the chief places of traffick in the world Illustrated with variety of useful and delightful Maps and Figures By Richard Blome Gent. Memoires of the Lives Actions Sufferings and Deaths of those excellent Personages that suffered for Allegiance to their Soveraign in our late intestine Wars from the year 1637. to 1666. with the Life and Martyrdom of King Charles the first By David Lloyd The Exact Polititian or Compleat Statesman briefly and methodically resolved into such principles whereby Gentlemen may be qualified for the management of any publick trust and thereby rendred useful for the Common-welfare By Leonard Willan Esquire The Jesuits Morals collected by a Dr. of the Colledg of Sorbon in Paris Written in French and exactly translated into English A Relation in form of a Journal of the Voyage and Residence of King Charles the Second in Holland The History of the Cardinals of the Roman Church from the times of their first creation to the election of the present Pope Clem. 9. with a full account of his Conclave A History of Ireland By Edmund Spencer Esquire Quarto The Christian-mans Calling or a Treatise of making Religion ones business wherein the Christian is directed to perform it in all religious duties natural actions particular vocations family directions and in his own recreations in all relations in all conditions in his dealings with all men in the choice of his company both of evil and good in solitude on a week day from morning to night in visiting the sick on a dying bed By George Swinnock Mr. Caryl's Exposition on the Book of Job Gospel Remission or a Treatise shewing that true blessedness consists in the pardon of sin By Jerem. Burroughs An Exposition on the Song of Solomon By James Durham late Minister in Glascow The Real Christian or a Treatise of Effectual Calling wherein the work of God in drawing the soul to Christ being opened according to the holy Scriptures some things required by our late Divines as necessary to a right preparation for Christ and true closing with Christ which have caused and do still cause much trouble to some serious Christians and are with due respects to those worthy men brought to the ballance of the Sanctuary there weighed and accordingly judged To which is added a few words concerning Socinianisme By Giles Firmin sometime Minister at Shalford in Essex The vertue and value of Baptism By Zach. Crofton The Quakers Spiritual Court proclaimed being an exact narrative of a new High Court of Justice at the Peel in St. John street also sundry errors and corruptions among the Quakers which were never till now made known to the world By Nathaniel Smith who was conversant among them fourteen years A Discourse upon Prodigious Abstinence occasioned by the twelve months fasting of Martha Taylor the famed Darbyshire Damosel proving that without any miracle the texture of humane bodies may be so altered that life may be long continued without the supplies of meat and drink By John Reynolds Octavoes and Twelves Vindicta Bietatis or a Vindication of Godliness from the imputation of folly and fancy with several Directions for the attaining and maintaining of a godly life By R. Allen. Heaven on Earth or the best Friend in the worst times To which is added a Sermon preached at the Funeral of Tho. Mosely Apothecary By James Garreway Justification only upon a satisfaction By Rob. Firgirson The Christians great Interest or the trial of a saving Interest in Christ with the way how to attain to it By Will. Guthry late Minister in Scotland The vertue vigour and efficacy of the Promises displayed in their strength and glory By Tho. Henderson The History of Moderation or the Life Death and Resurrection of Moderation together with her Nativity Country Pedigree Kindred Character Friends and also her Enemies A Guide to the true Religion or a Discourse directing to make a wise choice of that Religion men venture their salvation upon By J. Clapham An Exposition on the Hebrews By David Dickson Rebukes for Sin by Gods burning anger by the burning of London by the burning of the World and by the burning the wicked in hell fire To which is added a discourse of Heart-fixedness By Tho. Doolittle Four select Sermons upon several Texts of Scripture wherein the will-worship and idolatry of the Church of Rome is laid open and confuted By Will. Fenner The Life of Doctor James Vsher late Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of Ireland Spare Minutes or resolved Meditations or premeditated Resolutions By Arthur Warwick A most comfortable and Christian Dialogue between the Lord and the Soul By Will. Cowper Bishop of Galloway The Cannons and Constitutions of the Quakers agreed upon at their general Assembly at their new Theatre in Gracechurch-street A Synopsis of Quakerism or a Collection of the fundamental errors of the Quakers By Tho. Danson Blood for Blood being a true Narrative of that late horrid Muther committed by Mary Cook upon her Child By Nath. Partridge With a Sermon on the same occasion By J. Sharp