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A60194 A learned commentary or exposition: upon the first chapter of the second Epistle of S. Paul to the Corinthians Being the substance of many sermons formerly preached at Grayes-Inne, London, by that reverend and judicious divine, Richard Sibbs, D.D. Sometimes Master of Catherine-Hall in Cambridge, and preacher to that honourable society. Published for the publick good and benefit of the Church of Christ. By Tho. Manton, B.D. and preacher of the Gospel at Stoake-Newington, near London. Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662.; Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1655 (1655) Wing S3738; ESTC R215702 745,441 567

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the conscience in sound principles in good courses in the faith of Christ in holy obedience things that will hold out in life and death If I were to speak to Ministers I would inlarge the point further Let us all in our Conversations labour rather to approve our selves to the consciences of men that they may acknowledge us to be honest downright faithful men rather then to please their humours and fancies for as Solomon saith he that tells a man the truth shall have more favour at the last then he that dissembleth for his conscience will witnesse that he hath dealt rightly and faithfully with him that he is an honest man and goes on in the same principles still Let us therefore first look to our own conscience and then to the conscience of others and if we cannot approve our selves to our own conscience and to the conscience of others alas what will become of us how shall we approve our selves to God and to Jesus Christ at the day of Judgment There is no man but a sound Christian that approves himself to the conscience of another man For any other man it is just with God in his Judgment to find him out first or last he may wind himself into the conscience for a time as the superstitious Papists do but first or last he is found out to be a dissembler and to bring false wares And so for Civil conversation there is none that will have place in the conscience of other men to think them and their courses good but those that are sound Christians For the most those that are not led by the grace of Gods Spirit all mens consciences condemn them they are smitten and censured there and judged there Besides their own conscience which perhaps they will not give leave to tell them somewhat in their ear that they would be loath to hear This you are this you did and this you spake amisse they will not suffer conscience to speak but drown it in sensuality and stifle it they take this course they think they are well enough and they would never be themselves A carnal man will hardly give conscience leave to speak till it will whether he will or no at the hour of death and the day of Judgment when God lets it loose upon him but let them take this course as long as they will yet in the conscience of other men they have no place for they live not as S. Paul saith here in simplicity and sincerity not by carnal wisdome but by the Grace of God This is the benefit that a good man hath in this life that howsoever he have the ill words of carnall men sometimes and their humour is against him yet notwithstanding if they be in the Church and have any illumination any judgment he hath their conscience for him Nay I say more they cannot but think reverently of a man of God of a good Christian I speak not of Ministers onely they cannot but think reverently of them and reverence them in their consciences do what they can for it is not in mens power to frame what conceits they will to frame what opinions they will of men but as there is a necessity of reason as the principles we say are so strong rhat a man cannot say they are false do what he can because the light is visible to the understanding as a man cannot say the Sun shines when it is night when it is dark because it is a sensible falshood so a man cannot deny the principles of any Art if they be principles because there is such a light of truth that over-powers him and as it were compells the inward man So it is here there is such a majestie in grace and good courses of a Christian that another man that lives a wicked life he cannot think of him what he would He may force himself to speak what he list and force odd opinions of him but when he is him sober self he must needs if he have any reliques of conscience in him if he be not altogether a sot he must needs think well in his conscience of such a mans courses This is the majestie and honour of good things that however they may have the humour and passion and fancy of men against them yet they have their conscience for them yea of wicked men when they are themselves Take the wickedest man at the hour of death if he have himself at command that his spirits be not disturbed and ask him whether he justifie the courses of such and such men he will answer Oh yes I would I had led them my self What is that that besots them Sensuality and such courses for men that are not led by the Grace of God are led with outward things which besot the judgment for a time but when that dulnesse is past when a wicked man is stripped of all and is best able to judge then he likes such courses If the worst men shall in their conscience acknowledge the best persons and the best things one day nay they do now if they will suffer themselves to be themselves then let us take such courses as our own consciences may justifie as S. Paul saith here This is my glorying the testimony of my conscience and likewise the conscience of those I live with I write no other thing but what you acknowledge in your consciences your selves And I trust you shall acknowledge to the end This word Trust doth not imply as usually it doth in common speech an uncertainty of a thing a moral conjecture I trust or hope it may be so it may be otherwise but I hope well it is not an uncertain conceit with the fear of the contrary but the word implies a gracious dependant disposition upon God I trust in God as it is so exprest in some other places Now you acknowledge me and I trust in God you shall acknowledge me to the end So here Saint Paul sets down what he resolved to be by the Grace of God and what in the issue he should be because holy resolutions are seconded with gracious assistance And likewise he sets down what they should judge of him to the end I trust as you acknowledge me now so to the end you shall have grace so to do and I shall have grace so to be I shall be as I am and have been I have led my life in simplicity and sincerity and as you have acknowledged me to be such a one so you shall have grace still to acknowledge me I hope or trust I will not enter into any common place onely I will speak that which the Text puts to me I trust you shall acknowledge to the end Here he begins with his hope of their judging of him to continue so to the end Saint Paul here takes a good conceit a good opinion of his children whom he had begotten to the faith in Corinth I hope as you are and as you do judge of
yea and amen to be yea and nay We make truth a lie and do rather believe our own lying hearts then Gods immutable and unchangeable Promises Therefore let us see the fulnesse of our hearts and complain of them to God and desire him to cure it and redresse it and he will do it This is to give glory to God indeed we cannot honour God more then to believe his Promises and build on him This will breed love when we feel the comfort of the Promises Foolish men think to honour God by complements by dead performances filly men consider that the principal honour in the world to God is to seal his truth that thou shouldest not make him a liar Hath he promised all things in the world get faith that will honour him and he will honour thy faith What makes God honour faith so much He that believes he will bring him to heaven Faith honours him it gives him the glory of his truth the glory of his goodnesse of his mercy of his truth c. as it honours him he honours it The Believer shall come to heaven when the idle fashionable Christian shall vanish with his conceits that thinks to serve God with empty vain shadowes Honour God with the obedience of faith man cast thy self upon him trust in him in life and death and then thou givest him the honour that he requireth at thy hands For as the honour of his mercy is the greatest honour he will have in this world more then that in the Creation so thou honourest him more in the Gospel to cast thy self on him for forgivenesse of sins and life everlasting and for the guidance of thy daily course of life thou honourest him more then by looking on the creature or by doing him any service He is honoured more by faith in Christ then by any other way Let faith go to him as faith honours him so he will honour it Let it be according to thy faith Let not all be lost let us bring vessels for the precious Promises the vessel of a believing heart Shall all this be lost for a vain heart that will not lodge up these promises shall we have a rich portion and neglect it shall we have so many promises and not improve them and make use of them Therefore I beseech you let it be our practice continually every day of all portions of Scripture make the Promises most familiar to us for duties follow promises if we believe the Promises with our heart they are quickning Promises we will love God and perform other duties Faith works by love If we believe love will come kindly off Therefore he saith here All the Promises are Yea and Amen insinuating that all is included in the Promises Let us empty our hearts of confidence in any thing and fill them with the Promises in Christ that are Yea and Amen Let us stablish our hearts with the Promises let us warm and season and refresh our hearts every day with these In these times of infection what do we those that are careful of themselves that go abroad in dangerous places they have Preservatives they take something to preserve their spirits and to strengthen them against the contagion abroad and it is wisdome so to do it is folly to neglect it and to tempt God not to be careful in this kind it is very well done But what is this if thou do not fence thy soul and thy spitit and take a draught of the Promises every day afresh Let us take out our pardon of course every day of the forgivenesse of sins We sin every day let us go for our pardon If we sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ and he is the propitiation for our sins And the blood of Jesus Christ shall purge us from all sin And he is in justifying us still every day he is acquitting our soules and there is a pardon of course to be taken out every day Let us renew and refresh our hearts with the Promises of pardon and forgivenesse of sins every day Let us strengthen our soules with renewing the Promises of grace for that day to walk comfortably before God that he will keep us by his Spirit from sin that he will be a shield and a Sun to us that he will give us wisdome to carry our selves as we should and he will give us his holy Spirit if we beg it Let us every day take these Promises to be Cordials in these dangerous times and then come life come death all shall be welcome why because we are in Christ and have imbraced the Promises and Christ and all in Christ is Yea and Amen it shall go well with us What a wondrous comfortable life would a Christians life be if he could yield the obedience faith answerable to the promises What a shame is it that having such rich promises we should be so loose so changeable that we should be cast down with crosses and lift up with prosperity It is because we believe not the promises of better things therefore we are proud of present things and cast down with present crosses and are fast and loose Now we have good things for the present afterward the devil comes between us and the promises and makes us let go our hold Religion stands on this which makes me to presse it the more If this were well taken to heart and digested we should know what Religion means if we know Christ and the promises all other things will come off All others are but formalities they will never comfort without the confideration of knowing God in Christ and the rich promises to us in Christ. Likewise if this be so that the promises of God in Christ are Yea and Amen This teacheth us how to make use of all former examples of others and of all former goodnesse to our selves Was God merciful to Abraham and to David Our father 's trusted in thee and were not confounded Psal. 22. Therefore he reasons If I trust in God I shall not be confounded for the Promises are Yea and Amen they are true to one as well as another And whatsoever was written afore was written for our comfort Rom. 15. And this is a singular good use we may make of reading of the stories of the Scripture and of holy men that the same God he lives for ever his arm is not shortened he that was is and is to come and therefore we should read histories with application Did God make sure his Promises to them surely he will make sure his Promises to us Had David forgivenesse of sins upon his confession surely so shall we Abraham believed and it was acc●…ed to him for righteousnesse and ●…o it shall to us if we believe It is alledged for that end Rom. 4. And S. Paul prefixeth his example to all posterity God was mercifull to me and not so onely but to all that believe in him 2 Tim. 2. This is an Use
Promises in him Yea and Amen will he give me the greater and will he not give me the lesse Sometimes by the lesser be encouraged to hope for the greater sometimes quicken our deadnesse and dulnesse in believing the lesser with the undoubted performance of the greater Will God give me life everlasting and will he not give me provision in my pilgrimage till I come there undoubtedly he will Fear not little flock it is your Fathers will to give you a Kingdome saith Christ. They were distrustful for the things of this life Do you think saith he that he will not give you the things of this life that keeps a Kingdome for you Fear not Again when we hear any promise in the Word of God turn it into a prayer put Gods bond in suit as it were his promises are his bonds sue him on his bond he loves to be sued on his bond and he loves that we should wrastle with him by his promises Why Lord thou hast made this and this promise thou canst not deny thy self thou canst not deny thine own truth thou canst not cease to be God thou canst as well cease to be God as deny thy promise that is thy self So let us put the promises into suit as David Psal. 119. if it be his Lord remember thy promise wherein thou hast caused thy servant to trust as if God had forgotten his promise Lord remember thy primise I put thee in mind of thy promise wherein th●… hast caused thy servant to trust If I be deceived thou hast deceived me thou hast made these promises and caused me to trust in thee and thou never failest those that trust in thee What makes a man faithful Trust to a man makes him faithful so when God is honoured with our trusting of him it makes him faithful Let us therefore put in suit his promises of provision and protection every day in the way of our calling and for necessary grace and comfort that he will not fail us in any necessary grace to bring us to heaven considering that he hath filled our nature with all grace in Christ. Again let us take this course when we hear of rich and precious promises that are made labour to know them What shall we have an inheritance a portion and not labour to know it Let us labour to know all our portion and to know it of those that search the Word of God to be glad to hear any thing concerning the priviledges and prerogatives of a Christian those that dig the Mines of the Scripture which is the office of the Ministers let us labour to know all our priviledges Let not Satan rob us of one priviledge Every promise is precious they are rich promises yet they are no more then God thought necessary for us he thought all little enough to stablish our faith let us not lose one we cannot be without one let us labour to know them And when we know them work them upon our hearts by meditation and shame our selves upon it say is it true are these promises so is it true that God hath revealed these things in his Word To whom hath he made them to Angels or to beasts No to men to sinners to men in the world to comfort them they are their provision their inheritance as David saith Psal. 119. Thy word is my inheritance and my portion they are sweeter then the honey and the honey-comb Are they so Do I believe this or do I not believe it Yes I do If I do can I believe them and be so uncomfortable Let us shame our selves do I believe the promises of life everlasting the promises of perseverance the promise that God will hide me in danger that he will be my habitation and my hiding place and do I look to unlawful means Do I live without God in the world as if there were no Promise what a shame is this There is a weaknesse in my faith certainly when a branch withers there is a fault in the root so there is a defect in the radical grace that it drawes not juice out of the promises as it should there is a defect in my faith therefore I will look where the defect is and strengthen my faith Thus we should shame our selves Can I hear these Promises and be no more joyful and be no more affected Can I use indirect means and yet believe that God is Al-sufficient to me in the Covenant Certainly I cannot Therefore let us come to the tryal to some few evidences that a man doth believe in the promises He that believes the promises of God in Christ to be Yea and Amen doubtlesse he will be affected answerable to the things promised saith David Thy Statutes they are the joy of my heart The Promises will be the joy and rejoycing of our heart He that can hear of promises and not be affected certainly he believes them not When a man thinks of his inheritance and of his evidences that they are clear that he shall enjoy it without suit or trouble it comforts him he cannot think of it without comfort Cannot a man think of a little pelf of the earth without comfort when he knowes he hath assurance to it and shall we think of heaven and happinesse and not rejoyce will not these be the joy of a mans heart certainly they will affect him When good things are apprehended by faith will they not work upon the affections certainly they will Again where the promises are believed they will quicken us to all chearfull obedience certainly if God will assist me with strength and comfort if I go on in his wayes and in the end of all give me life everlasting this will quicken me to all obedience Therefore those that go deadly and dully as if they had no encouragement here nor promise of glory after they believe not the promises For God doth not set us on work as Pharaoh set the children of Israel to make brick without straw but when he bids us do any thing he promiseth us grace and gives us his Spirit and after grace he gives glory If men did believe this they would go about Gods work without dulnesse and staggering so far as we are dull and stagger in the work of God so far our faith is weak in the promises of God Again as they quicken in regard of comfort so they purge in regard of holinesse for they make men study mortification and sanctification 2 Cor. 6. and the beginning of the 7th Having these promises Let us purge our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit perfect sanctification in the fear of God Having these promises So that the promises as they have a quickning so they have a purging power and that upon sound reasoning Doth God promise that he will be my Father and I shall be his son and doth he prcmise me life everlasting and doth that estate require purity and no unclean thing shall come there
to domineer over faith because it is onely a drawing from outward inforcement to the use of means Again it is not a ruling over faith nor a base slavery when men hear the Word of God opened directly and clearly when men shall perswade others according to their own judgment that this is so and when others shall yield There is some faith that may be called in some degree implicite faith and obedience that is not sinful but good and discreet As when men by their standing in the Church and by their experience and holinesse of life are thought to be men that speak agreeable to the ground of Scripture though they have not a direct rule and place of Scripture for it other mens conscience may follow what they say I have been directed by such men at such times that by reason of their calling have opportunity to advise But this frees it from base service that it must be with reservation till it appear otherwise by some place of Scripture or till better counsel may be yielded obedience to others with reservation and counselling with others this is no domineering because it is with reserving our selves to a further discovery and a further light That the Moralists use to call the opinion of an honest man where the Law speaks not it is much to be esteemed especially an honest discreet Christian when the Law of God speaks not directly then he that speaks out of conscience and some light he may perswade another man with this reservation till further light be discovered this is no domineering over faith I might take away many things that might breed a suspition as if we domineered over the faith of others when we do not But to come to shew you this positive truth what this tyranny over the faith of others is and where it is practised Those tyrannize over the faith of others that do equalize mens Traditions some Canons of their own with the Word of God and presse them with equal violence perhaps more because they are bra●…s of their own brain Those that will devise a voluntary worship of God and so intangle people and tell them This you must do when there is no ground for it in the Word of God it is will-worship God loves willing worship when we worship him willingly but he loves not-will-worship when it is the device of our own brain how we will serve him As if a servant or a slave must devise how his Lord will be served what impudency is this if we consider what God is They tyrannize over peoples consciences that equalize their own dotages though they account them witty devices and their own inventions with the worship of God that jumble all together as if conscience were equally bound to any device of their own as to Gods Word Again those do tyrannize over the faith of others that think they can make Articles in Religion to bind conscience Those that think to free themselves from the danger of errour as if what they said were unfallible they tyrannize over others Those that for trifles excommunicate whole Churches because they hold not correspondency with them in their errours they tyrannize over the faith of others Those that withhold the means of knowledge that so in a dark time all their fooleries may be more admired As we see masks and such like overly things they must have the commendation of some light that is not so glorious as the Sun to win admiration of men so those that would win admiration of their fooleries they shut people as much as they may in darknesse that they may have their persons and all other things in admiration this is to tyrannize over faith and to hinder them from that that is the means to reform them better But who are guilty of all this We see what Church especially is guilty of this of domineering over the faith of others that is the Church of Rome The Councell of Trent equalizeth Traditions with the Word of God they divide the Word of God into the written and unwritten and under a curse they pronounce that all must be received with the same reverence And then they have devised a will-worship of their own and follow and force their will-worship with greater violence then the worship of God and they set Gods stamp upon all their fooleries to gain authority under the name of Christs Church and the Word of God they carry all Again you know they hold the Church to be infallible they hold the judgment of the Pope the man of sin to be infalible he cannot erre and hereupon whatsoever he saith it must bind conscience because he is in his Chair and cannot erre whatsoever he saith is the scope of Gods Word infallible And this is a fundamental errour as we call it a first lie a leading lie This is moving to errour this is the mover that moves all other errours under it For where upon is all the abominations of Popery justified They are iustified by this though they seem ridiculous grosse and blasphemous they came from the Church and the Church is virtually in the Pope An absurd Position that the whole Church should be virtually in one man yet that is the Jesuitical opinion and the Church cannot erre therefore it is good because these tenents come from him whose judgment is infallible That is the errour that leadeth to and establisheth all other errours under it it is the first lie And in lies there is a leading one goes under another they never go alone so this is the leading lie of all Popery that the Pope cannot erre by this means they domineer over the faith of others and make the people even beasts indeed But to see the indignity of this that the Pope cannot erre it is the greatest errour of all and the prevention of all amendment on their side do you think that they will ever amend their opinion when they hold this that is a block in the way of all reformation that the Pope can erre for deny that and you call all the fabrick of their Religion in question and grant that it stops all reformation on their side What reformation may we hope for on their side that hold this Position that they cannot erre Hence come all their treasons and rebellions they have some dispensation from the Pope and he cannot erre though he prescribe rebellion and treason Another opinion they have that the Church is the Judge of all Controversies in which the faith of men must be resolved at last but it is the Pope that the Jesuits mean Now this is indeed to domineer over the faith to make a man of sin to be a Judge over all points of faith and faith to be resolved at last into that into the judgment of the Church The Church hath an inducing power a leading power perswading to the belief of the Scriptures and to hear what God saith in his Word but
hearts and wayes and presently to apply the balme of comfort the promise of pardon take the present when we have searched the wound to get pardon and forgivenesse daily as we sin daily Christ bids us ask it daily This will make us fit for comfort by discerning the estate of our souls and the remainders of corruption That which sharpens appetite and makes the balme of God to be sweet indeed is the sence of and the keeping open of our wound a daily search into our wants and weaknesses a daily fresh sight of the body of sin in us and experience how it is fruitful in ill thoughts and desires and actions this will drive us to a necessity of daily comfort And certainly a fresh sight of our corruptions it is never without some fresh comfort We see St. Paul Rom. 7. he sets himself to this work to complain of his indisposition by reason of sin in him and how doth he end that sight and search into his own estate he ends in a triumphing manner Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus After he had complained Oh miserable man that I am who shall deliver me from this bodie of death There can be no danger in a deep search into our waies and hearts if this be laid as a ground before that there is more supplie and heavenly comfort in God and the promises of God then there can be ill in our souls then the more ill we find in our selves the more we are disposed to fetch grounds of comfort from God And together with this searching of our souls and asking daily pardon let us for the time to come renew our covenant with God that we may have the comfort of a good conscience to get pardon for our sins past and renew our resolutions for the time to come And withall that we may use an orderly course of comfort let us every day feed on Christ the food of life let us every day feed upon something in Christ consider the death of Christ the satisfaction he hath made by his death his intercession in Heaven his blood runs afresh that we may every day feed on it We may run every day into new offences against the law to new neglect of duty into new crosses let us feed upon Christ he came into the World to save sinners to make us happie with peace of conscience here and with Glorie afterward Let us feed on Christ daily as the bodie is fed with cordialls so this feeds and comforts and strengthens the soul. This is to live by faith to lead our lives by faith to feed on Christ every day And likewise if we will keep our souls in a perpetual temper of comfort let us every day meditate of some prerogatives of Christians that may raise our souls Let us single out some or other As for example that excellent prerogative to be the Sons of God What love saith the Apostle that we of Rebels and Traitors in Christ should be made the sons of God That of slaves we should be made Servants of servants sons of sons heires and of heires fellow-heires with Christ what prerogative is this that God should give his Son to mak us that were Rebels sons heires and fellow heires with Christ And to consider what follows upon this liberty that we have from the curse of the Law to goe to God boldly to go to the throne of Grace through Christ our elder brother by prayer to think of eternall life as our inheritance to think of God above as our Father Let us think of our prerogatives of Religion adoption and justification c. Upon necessity we are driven to it if we consider the grievances of this world together with our corruptions our corruptions and afflictions and temptations and desertions one thing or other will drive us to go out of our selves for comfort to feed on the benefits by Christ. And consider what he hath done it is for us the execution of his office and all for us what he is what he did what he suffered what procured all is for us The soul delighting it self in these prerogatives it will keep the soul in a perpetuall estate of comfort Therefore the Scripture sets forth Christ by all terms that may be comfortable he is the door to let us in He is the way the truth and the life the water and the bread c. In sinne he is our righteousness in death he is our life in our ignorance he is our way in spirituall hunger and thirst he is the bread and water of life he is all in all And if we cannot think of some prerogative of Christianity then think of some promise as I said before think of the Covenant of Grace there is a spring of comfort in that that God in Christ is our God to death and for ever and that promise I speak of that All things shall work for the best Let us every day think of these things and suggest them to our owne souls that our souls may be affected with them and digest them that our souls and they may be one as it were And every day stirre up our hearts to be thankfull a thankfull heart can never want comfort for it cannot be done without some comfort and chearefulness and when God receives any praise and glory he answers it with comfort a thankfull heart is alway comfortable And let us stirre up our hearts to be fruitfull in the holy actions the reward of a fruitfull life is a comfortable life besides Heaven God alway in this life gives a present reward to any good action it is rewarded with peace of conscience Besides it is a good foundation against the evil day every good action as the Apostle sayth to Timothie it layes up a good foundation The more good we do the more we are assured that our faith is not hypocritical but sound and good and will hold out in the time of tryall It will be a good foundation that we have had evidence before that we have a sound and fruitful faith What do wicked men carelesse sinful creatures that go on in a course of prophanenesse and blasphemie c they lay a ground of despaire a ground of discomfort to be swallowed up in the evil day then conscience will be awaked at the last and Satan will be ready to joyn with conscience and conscience will seal all the accusations that Satan layes against them and where is the poor soul then As it is with them so on the contrary the Christian soul that doth good besides the present comfort of a good conscience it layes a good foundation against the time to come for in the worst times it can reason with it self my faith is not fruitlesse I am not an hypocrite though the fruits of it be weak and mixed with corruptions yet there is truth in them this will comfort us when nothing
else will Therefore let us every day be setting our selves in some good way for comfort is in comfortable courses and not in ill courses in Gods waies we shall have Gods comforts In those waies let us exercise the spiritual strength we have let us pray to God and performe the exercise of Religion with strength shew some zeal in it let us shew some zeal against sin if occasion be if it be in Gods work in Gods way Let a man set himself upon a good worke especially when it is in opposition for the honour of God and the peace of his conscience presently there is comfort upon it And that we may not be discouraged with the imperfection of our performances one way of daily comfort is to consider the condition of the covenant of Grace between God and us In the covenant of Grace our performances if they be sincere they are accepted and it is the perfection of the Gospel sincerity Sincerity will look God in the face with comfort because he is with the upright so much truth in all our dealings so much comfort And with sincerity labour for growth to grow better and better God in the Gospel meanes to bring us to perfection in heaven by little and little In the law there was present perfection required but in the Gospel God requires that we should come to perfection by little and little as Christ by little and little satisfyed for our sins and not all at once In the condition of the covenant of Grace we must live and grow by grace by little and little and not all at once The condition of the covenant of grace is not to him that hath strength of grace in perfection but if we believe and labour to walke with God if there be truth of Grace truth goes for perfection in the covenant of Grace We should labour for sound knowledge of the covenant of Grace that now we are freed from the rigor as well as from the curse of the law that though we have imperfections yet God will be our father and in this condition of imperfection he will be a pardoning father and lookes on our obedience though it be feeble and weak and imperfect yet being the obedience of children in the covenant of grace and he accepts of what is his owne and pardons what is ours And every day labour to preserve the comforts of the spirit that we have not to grieve the spirit for comfort comes with the spirit of God as heat accompanies the fire As wheresoever fire is there is heat so wheresoever the spirit of God is there is comfort because the spirit of God is God and God is with comfort wheresoever comfort is God is and wheresoever God is there is comfort If we would have comfort continually every day let us carefully watch that we give way to the spirit of God by good actions and meditations and exercises And by no meanes grieve the spirit or resist the spirit for then we resist comfort If we speake any thing that is ill we lose our comfort for that time conscience will check us we have grieved the spirit If we heare any thing with applause and are not touched with it we lose our comfort conscience will tell us we are dead-hearted and not affected as we should be there is a great deal of flesh and corruption that is affected with such rotten discourse And so if we venture upon occasions we shall grieve the spirit either if we speak somewhat to satisfie others that are nought or if we hear somewhat that is ill from others Want of wisdome in this kind doth make us go without comfort many times want of wisdom to single out our companie or else if we be with such to do that that may please them and grieve the spirit and hinder our own comfort These and such like directions if we would observe we might walk in a course of comfort the God of comfort hath prescribed this in the book of comfort These are the courses for Gods children to walk in a comfortable way till they come to heaven More especially if we would at any time take a more full measure of comfort then take the book of God into your hand those are comforts that refresh the soul single out some speciall portion of scripture and there you shall have a world of comfort As for example let a man single out the epistle to the Romans if a man be in any grievance whatsoever what a world of comfort is there fitting for every maladie there is a method how to come to comfort There St. Paul in the beginning first strips all men of confidence of any thing in themselves and tells them that no man can be saved by works Jewes nor Gentiles but all by the righteousnesse of God in Christ All are deprived of the Glorie of God Jewes and Gentiles every bodie And when we are brought to Christ he tells us in the later end of the third Chapter that by Christ we have the forgivenesse of all our former sins whatsoever he is the propitiation for our sins In the 4. Chapter he comforts us by the example of Abraham and David that they were justified without works by faith not by works of their own but by laying hold of the promises of comfort and salvation meerly by Christ and all that saith St. Paul is written for us But in the first Chapter especially because all the miseries of this life come from the first Adam because we are Children of the first Adam death and miserie comes from that he opposeth the comfort in the second Adam and he shewes that there is more comfort by the second Adam then there is discomfort by the first Righteousnesse in the second Adam reigns to life everlasting and Glorie Sin and miserie came by the first but there is the pardon of all sin by the second Adam he doth excellently oppose them in the latter end of that Chapter In the begining of the fifth Chapter he shewes there the method and descent of joy Being justified by faith in Christ we have peace with God Considering that by the righteousnesse of Christ we are freed from sin We have peace with God through Jesus Christ our Lord. And we have boldnesse to the Throne of Grace and we rejoyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation brings forth patience and patience experience and experience hope He sets himself there of purpose to comfort in all tribulation and he saith in these things we rejoyce We rejoyce in tribulation I but for our sins after our conversion after we are in the state of Grace what comfort is there for them there is excellent comfort in the fifth of the Romans If when we were enemies he gave his son for us if he saved us by the death of Christ when we were enemies much more Christ being alive and in heaven he will keep it for us and keep us to salvation now when we are
strongly that we live in an estate that we are ashamed to die in Come to some men and aske them how it is with you have you repented of your sins past have you renewed your purposes for the time to come Yes we doe it solemnly at the Communion but we should renew our repentance and renew our Covenants every day to please God that day Do you do so now If God should seize upon you now are you in the exercise of faith in the exercise of repentance in the exercise of holy purposes to please God are you in Gods wayes do you live as you would be content to dye But Satan and our own corruption bewitcheth us with a vaine hope of long life we promise our selves that that God doth not promise us we make that certain that God doth not make certain indeed we are certain of death but for the time and manner and circumstances we know them not sometimes we think we shall dye when we doe not and sometimes we dye when we think we shall not Oh will some say If I knew when I should dye I would be a prepared man I would be exact in my preparation Wouldest thou so thou art deceived Saul knew exactly he should die he took it for exact when the Witch in the shape of Samuel told him that he should dye by to morrow this time and yet he dyed desperately upon the swords point for all that he did not prepare himself It must be the Spirit of God that must prepare us for this if we knew never so much that we should die never so soon we cannot prepare our selves our preparation must be by the Spirit of God let us labour continually to be prepared for it And let no man resolve to take liberty a moment a minute of an houre to sinne God hath left it uncertain the day of death what if that moment and minute wherein thou resolvest to sin should be the moment of thy death and departure hence for it is but a minutes work to end thy dayes what if God should end thy dayes in that minute Let no man take liberty and time to sin when God gives him no liberty in sin If God should strike thee thou goest to Hell quick thou must sink from sin to Hell It is a pittifull case when as eternity depends upon our watchfulness in this world But to come to the end and issue why he was thus dealt with by God carrying him through these extremities That we might not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead Here is the end specified that God intended in suffering him to be brought so low even to deaths door that there was but a step between him and death the end is double That we should not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead It is set down negatively and positively First That we should not trust in our selves and then that we should trust in God And the method is excellent for we can never trust in God till we distrust our selves till our hearts be taken off from all confidence in our selves and in the creature and then when our hearts are taken off from false confidence they must have somewhat to relie on and that is God or nothing for else we shall fall into despaire The end of all this was that We might not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead The wisdom of heaven doth nothing without an end proportionable to that heavenly wisdom so all this sore affliction of the blessed Apostle what aimed it at To pull downe and to build up to pull downe selfe-confidence That we might not trust in our selves and to build up confidence and affiance in God but in God that raiseth the dead We being in a contrary state to grace and communion with God this order is necessary that God must use some way that we shall not trust in our selves and then to bring us to trust in him so these two are subordinate ends one to another We received the sentence of death that we might not trust in our selves From the dependance this may be observed that The certain account of death is a meanes to weane us from our selves and to make us trust in God The sentence of death the assured knowledge that we must dye the certain expectation and looking for death is the way to wean us from the world and to fit us for God to prepare us for a better life you see it follows of necessity We received the sentence of death that we should not trust in our selves c. The looking for of death therefore takes away confidence in our selves and the creature Alas in death what can all the creatures help what can friends or physick or money help then honours and pleasures and all leave us then This the rather to note a corrupt Atheisticall course in those that are to deale with sick folk that are extreame sick that conceale their estate from them and feed them with false hopes of long life they deserve ill of persons in extremity to put them in hope of recoverie Physitians that are not Divines in some measure what doe they against their conscience and against their experience and against sense Oh I hope you shall doe well c. Alas what do they they hurt their souls they breed a false confidence it is a dangerous thing to trust upon long life when perhaps they are snatched suddenly away before they have made their accompts even with God before they have set their souls in that state they should doe Therefore the best way is to doe as good Isay did with Hezekiah set thy house in order for thou must dye that is in the disposition of second causes thou shalt have a disease that will bring thee to death and God had said so God had a reservation but it was more then Isay knew at that time Set thy house in order for thou must dye So they should begin with God to tell them as we say the worst first It is a pittifull thing that death should be accounted the worst but so it is by reason of our fearfulness deal plainly with them let them receive the sentence of death that so they may be driven out of themselves and the creature altogether and be driven to trust in God that raiseth the dead Put thy soul in order you are no man of this world lest they betray their souls for a little self-respect perhaps because they would not displease them It may be in some cases discreet to yield to make the means to work the better but where there is nothing but evident signs of death they ought to deale directly with them that they may receive the sentence of death It wrought with St. Paul this good effect I received the sentence of death that we might not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead It is Gods just judgment upon Hypocrites and
to live by sense but to live by faith it is a remote thing to lead our lives by reasons drawn from things that are not seen to live by promises it is a hard thing when things ●…at are sensible cannot work upon us When we see men dye and see the vanitie of things sensible it will not work upon us how then doe we think that things that are supernaturall which are remote farre above sense should work on us it is a hard thing not to trust to our selves we are so adicted to live by sense and there is some corruption in St. Paul in the best men to trust to present things Who doth not think but he shall live one day longer and so trusts to life As the Heathen man could say There is not the oldest man but he thinks he may live a little longer one day longer who makes that use of mortality and the uncertain fading condition of this life as he should and all because of a false trust as in other things so in the continuance of life we see we are prone to trust to put base false confidence in somewhat or other while we live in this world Again our nature being prone to outward things and sunk deeply into them it can hardly be recovered it cannot be sober without much ado and brought from trusting of present things You have some men that have things at will in this world they never know what faith means all their life they live by sense their conscience is not awaked and outward afflictions seize not on them and supply of earthly things they have what Religion means and what God and Heaven means they have heard of them perhaps but throughly and inwardly what it means they never came to know in this world without there be some alteration and changes they must have some changes The wicked have no changes saith the Prophet but while they be as they are they know not God nor themselves nor the vanity of earthly things We speak the truth of God to a company oft-times that are besotted with sensuality and that have perpetual supply of earthly things speak to them of faith and of things that are remote from sence c. they hear them as if they were in a dream Nature is prone to trust in present things even in the best in St. Paul himself Now our pronenesse to it doth justifie Gods dealing in many things As why doth God humble great ones with great afflictions why doth he humble great men great and excellent Christians with great falls that they might not trust in themselves no not in their own present graces God will not bring a man to salvation now by grace in himself to give him title to heaven his graces must onely be to help his evidence that he is not an hypocrite and to give evidence to others that others may see his good works c. but if he come to trust in them once to set them in Christs stead God will abase his pride by suffering him to fall that he may go out of himself to be saved by Christ and to seek for mercy in Christ. And this is the reason why God in his providence doth great things by small means without means and against means sometimes when he crosses and curses great means it is that we might not trust in our selves we are prone to self-confidence and because God will cure it for we must not carry it to heaven with us therefore he is forced to take this kind of dispensation Proud flesh will alway devise something but that which it should do to uphold it self withall it will not be driven from all its holds God hath much ado to work it out from all its holds if it have not wealth it will have wit and policy or if it have not that it will have Civil life and outward works to trust to and to swell it with but to come and give God the glory of Salvation onely by mercy and to depend onely on God and to see an insufficiency in any thing we do it can hardly be brought to passe Insomuch that that Article of Justification by the obedience of Christ onely it is meerly a spiritual thing altogether transcending nature No marvel if we find such opposition from the Church of Rome and all unlesse it be the true Church they understand not the main Article of salvation onely by mercy because nature is so desperatly prone to self confidence Let us take heed of false confidence in the things of this life of confidence in any thing but in God But to come to some tryals You will say how shall we know whether we put over-much confidence in them or no It is an easie matter to know it We trust them too much when we grow proud upon any thing when our spirits are lifted up Charge rich men that they be not high-minded insinuating that they are in danger to be high-minded If riches increase set not your hearts upon them saith the Psalmist there is great danger when the heart is set on them and lifted up when men think themselves so much the better as they are greater Indeed if they weigh themselves in a Civil balance it is so but the corrupt nature of man goes further and thinks a man intrinsically better and more beloved of God for these things It is a dangerous sign that we trust too much to them Again over-much grief if they be taken away any of them or if we be crossed in them the grief in wanting betrayes the love in enjoying It is a sign that Job had gotten a great measure of self-denial not to trust in himself or his riches though he were a rich man because when they were taken away Blessed be God saith he thou gavest them and thou hast taken them away He that can stand when his stay is taken from him it is a sign he trusts not too much to his stay he that is so weak that when his stay is taken away down he falls it is a sign he leans hard Those that when these things are taken from them when their friends are taken away or their honours or riches are taken away yet they can support themselves out of diviner grounds it is a sign they did not overmuch trust these things nature will work something but over-much grief betrayes over-much love alwaies Again which is but a branch of the other we may know that we over-much set by them by fretting to be crossed in any of these things A man may know Achitophel trusted too much to his policie and wit when he was crossed he could not indure it we see he made away himself for very shame When a man is crossed in his wit and policy when he is crossed in those projects he hath laid when he is crossed in his preferment or riches or friends then he is all amort he frets which is more then grieving when
of trust in God True trust lookes to Gods truth and promise and Word in one part of it as well as another Thou trusts God for thy salvation and the promises of that but thou must trust him for the direction of thy life too Faith doth not single out some objects I will believe this and not that faith is carried to all the objects it believes all Gods truths therefo if I believe not the threatnings and the directions to be ruled by them I believe not the promises in what measure thou believest the promise of mercy to save thy soul in that measure thou believest the directions of Gods Word to guide thy soul. He that receives Christ as a Priest to save him he must receive him as a King to rule him All the directions and all the threatnings and all the promises must be received and believed A man hath no more faith and trust in God then he hath care to follow Gods direction for faith is carried to all divine truthes all come from the same God Thousands go to hell and think O God is a mercifull God and I will trust in him but how is thy life is it carried by Gods directions thou art a rebel thou livest in sins against conscience thou wilt trust in God in one part of his Word and not in another thou must not be a chooser Again the last that I will name at this time if thou trust God for one thing undoubtedly thou wilt trust him for all if thou trust him with thy Soul certainly thou wilt trust him with thy Children Some men hope to be saved by Christ O he will be mercifull to their souls and yet even to their Death they use corrupt courses to get an estate and to make their Children rich and except they have so much they will not trust in God If they have nothing to leave them they think not that there is a God in heaven who is a better Father then they Put cafe thou hast nothing hast thou not Gods blessing canst thou trust thy soul with God and canst thou not trust him with thy family Is he not the God of thy seed hath he not made the promise to thy posterity as well as to thy self If thou trust him for one thing thou wilt trust him for all Wilt thou trust him for Heaven and wilt thou not trust him for provision for daily bread Wilt thou not trust him for this or that but thou must use unlawfull meanes He that trusts God he trusts him for all truths and for all things needfull with his Family with his Body with his Soul with all And so much for the tryalls whether we trust in God or no. Let us not deceive our selves it is a point of infinite consequence as much as the salvation of our souls What brings men to hell in the Church false confidence they trust to false things or they think they trust in God when indeed they do not The fault of a ship is seen in a tempest and the fault of a house is seen when winter comes Thy trust that is thy house that thou goest to and restest in the fault of that will be seen when thou comest to extremity in the hour of death then thou hast not a God to go to then thy conscience upbraids thee thou hast lived by thy shifts in carnall confidence and rebellion against God and how canst thou then willingly trust God whom thou hast made thine enemy all thy life-time To go then to some helps If upon search we find that we do not so trust in God as we should Let us lament our unbelieving hearts complain to God of it desire God whatsoever he doth that he would honour us so much as that we may honour him by trusting in him for it is his glory and our salvation But because I will not go out of the text the best way is that which followes to know God as he is How come we to trust a man When we know his Honesty his Fidelity his Wisdom and his sufficiencie then we trust him therefore St. Paul adds here that we should Trust in God that raiseth the dead that is in God Almighty From whence I raise this general that The best way to trust in God is to know him as he is We know his attributes by his principall works we know his nature by his works as here is one of the principall set down he is God that raiseth the dead A sound sanctified trust in God is by knowing of him They that know thy Name will trust in thee Psal 9. There are three waies of the knowledge of God His Nature Promises Works To know what he hath engaged himself in in all the promises that concern us and then to know his strength how able he is to make good them promises And then to know his works how his nature hath inabled him to make good those promises Especially his nature as to consider his goodnesse and his wisdom every attribute indeed doth inforce trust for he is good freely he is good to us of his own bowels VVe may trust him that hath made himself a Father out of hiw own mercy in Christ when we were enemies His goodnesse and wisdom is infinite as himself and his power and his truth As the scripture saith oft-times Faithful is God that hath promised St. Bernard a good man in Evill times saith he I consider three things in which I pitch my hope and trust Charitatem adoptionis the love of God in making me his Child and Veritatem promissionis the truth of God in performing his promise his Love is such to make me his Child his truth is such to perform his promise Thirdly I consider his power that is able to make good that that he hath promised This threefold cable is a strong one his love in adoption his truth in performing his promise and his power in making good all this This threefold cable will not easily be broken Let my Sottish flesh murmur against me as long as it will as the flesh will murmur who art thou that thou darest trust in God What is thy merit that thou hopest for such great glory No no saith he I know whom I have believed as Saint Paul saith I answer with great confidence against my Sottish murmuring flesh I know whom I have trusted He is able he is good he is true This that Holy man had to exercise his faith I name it because it is the temper of all believing souls that are so in truth The believing heart considers the nature of God the promise of God and though the murmuring rebellious flesh say what art thou how darest thou that art flesh and blood look to God O he is faithful he is good and gracious in Christ he hath made himself a Father I know whom I have believed God is al-sufficient Trust and confidence doth grow in the soul in what measure and proportion the knowledge of him
he goes to prayer he goes to his rock and shield to God who was his all in all He knew all this was done to drive him to trust in God Why art thou disquieted O my soule why art thou vexed in me trust in God all this is to make thee trust in God he checks and chides his own soul. A Child of God doth check himselfe when his base heart would have him sink and fall down and go to false means then he raiseth himself up trust in God O my soule But such as Saul proud confident hypocrites when all outward things are taken away they go to the Witch to the Devill to one unlawfull meanes or other and at the last to desperate conclusions to the sword it self As we desire to have evidence of a good estate in grace that we belong to God so let us desire God that we may find him drawing us so neare to him by all crosses whatsoever that we may see in him a supply of whatsoever is taken from us If we lose our friends that we may trust God the more As St. Paul speaks of the widow 1 Tim. 5. when her Husband was alive she trusted to him but now she wants her former help to goe to she gives her self to prayer she goes to God she trusts in God So it should be with all when friends are taken away we should go to God he will supply that which is wanting Those that are berest of any comfort now they should go to God What do we lose by that we had the stream before now we have the fountain we shall have it in a more excellent manner in God then we had before And that makes a Christian at a point in this world he is not much discouraged whatsoever he lose if he lose all to his life he knowes he shall have a better supply from God then he can lose in the world therefore he is never much cast down he knowes that all shall drive him nearer to God to trust in God As St. Paul saith here We received the sentence of Death that we might not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead One meanes to settle our trust the better in God reconciled to us in the Covenant of grace through Christ his beloved and our beloved is the blessed Sacrament and therefore come to it as to a seal sanctified by God for that very purpose to strengthen our trust in God How many wayes doth God condescend to strengthen our trust because it is such an honour to him for by trusting in him we give him the honour of all his attributes we make him a God we set him in his throne which we doe not when we trust not in him how many waies doth he condescend to strengthen our trust We have his promise If we believe in him we shall not perish but have everlasting life We have a seale of that promise the Sacrament and is not a broad seale a great confirmation If a man have a grant from the King if he have his broad seal it is a great confirmation though the other were good yet the seale is stronger So we have Gods promise and in regard of our weakness there is a seale added to it If that be not enough we have more we have his oath he hath pawned his life As I live saith the Lord c. he hath pawned his being as he is God he will forgive us if we repent We have his promise seale and oath whatsoever among men may strengthen trust and faith God condescends unto to strengthen our faith because he would not have us perish in unbeliefe Besides that he hath given us earnest a mans trust is strengthened when he hath earnest Every true Christian hath a blessed earnest that is the Comforter he hath the Spirit in him the first fruits where God gives and an earnest he will make good the bargain at the last where he gives the first fruits he will add the harvest God never repents of his earnest where he hath begun a good work he will finish it to the day of the Lord. An earnest is not taken away but the rest is added And the same Spirit that is an earnest is also a pawn and pledge we will trust any runnagate if we have a pawn sufficient now God hath given us this pawn of his Spirit Christ hath given us his Spirit and hath taken our flesh to heaven our flesh is there and his Spirit is in our hearts besides many evidences that we have in this life as pawns Indeed in extremity sometimes we must trust God without a pawne upon his bare word Though he kill me yet will I trust in him saith Job but God ordinarily gives us many pawns of his love The Sacrament is not onely a Seal of the promise but likewise it hath another relation to strengthen our faith it is a seizon as a piece of earth that is given to assure possession of the whole as a man saith Take here is a piece of earth here is my land here are the keyes of my house so in the promises sealed by the Sacrament here is life here is favour here is forgiveness of sins here is life everlasting what can we have more to strengthen our faith God hath condescended every way to strengthen us if we will come in and honour him so much as to trust him with our souls and our salvation Therefor let us come to the Sacrament with undoubted confidence God will keep his credit he will not deceive his credit he will never forsake those that trust in him Psal. 9. But to answer an Objection Oh! all these are confirmations indeed if I did believe and trust in God but my heart is full of unbelief Indeed all these are made to some that believe already in some measure they have this seale and oath and earnest and pawnes and first fruits and all if they believe but I cannot bring my heart to trust in God What hinders thee I am a wretched creature a sinfull creature Doest thou mean to be so still It is no matter what thou hast been but what thou wilt be The greater the sickness the more is the honour of the Physitian in curing it the greater thy sins the more honour to God in forgiving such sins Retort the temptation thus upon Satan God works by contraries and whom he will make righteous he will make them to see their sins and before he will raise us up he will make us rotten in our graves before he will make us glorious he will make us miserable I know that God by this intends that I should despaire in my self God intends that I should despaire indeed but it is that I should despair in my self as the text saith here that we should not trust in our selves when we have a sight of the vilenesse of our sins but in God that raiseth the dead that raiseth
and perhaps I shall have better occasion to speak of it afterward I onely apply it to the present purpose how it strengthens faith in misery and in the houre of death A man is strengthened in his faith when he thinks now I am going the way of all flesh I am to yield my soul to God and death is to close up mine eyes yet I have trusted in God and do trust in God that will raise my body from the grave This comforts the soul against the horrour of the grave against that confusion and darknesse that is after death Faith seeth things to come as present it sees the body after it hath a long time been in the dust clothed with flesh and made like the glorious bodie of Christ faith sees this and so a Christian soule dies in faith and sowes the body as good seed in the ground in hope of a glorious resurrection And that comforts a Christian soule in the losse of children of wife of friends that have been dearest and nearest to me I trust in God that raiseth the dead that he will raise them again and then we shall all be for ever with the Lord it is a point of singular comfort for the maine Articles of our faith they have a wondrous working upon us in all the passages of our lives it is good to think often upon the pillars of our faith as this is one That God will raise us from the dead But I go on to the next verse VERS 10. Who delivered us from so great a death who doth deliver us in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us SAint Paul sets down his troubles to the life that he might make himself and others more sensible of his comforts and of Gods grace and goodness in his deliverance These words contain his deliverance out of that trouble his particular deliverance out of a particular trouble And this deliverance is set down by a triple distinction of time as time is either past present or to come so God who is the deliverer for all times he hath delivered us for the time past he doth deliver us for the present in whom we trust that he will deliver us for the time to come Who delivered us from so great a death After St. Paul had learned to rrust in God after he had taken forth that lesson a hard lesson to learn that must be learned by bringing a man to such extremity I say after he had learned to trust in God that raiseth the dead God gave him this reward of his diligence in the blessed school of afflictions he delivered him who hath delivered us and who doth deliver us continually he will not take his hand from the work and for the time to come I hope he will do so still St. Paul here calls his trouble a death It was not a death properly it is but his aggravation of the trouble that calls it a death because Gods mercy onely hindred it from being a death it was onely not a death it was some desperate trouble some desperate sicknesse the particular is not set down in the Scripture We know what a tumult there was about Diana of Ephesus Acts 19. and in 1. Cor. 15. He fought with beasts at Ephesus which is in Asia after the manner of men Whether it were that or some other we know not whatsoever it was he calls it a death he doth not call it an affliction but a death a great death to make himself the more sensible VVherefore have we souls and understandings but to exercise them in setting forth our dangers and the deliverances of God to consider of things to affect us deeply The Apostle here to affect himself deeply he sets it down here by a death And oft-times in the Psalmes the Psalmist in Psalme 18. and Psal. 11. he calls his afflictions death and hell and so they had been indeed except God had delivered him But to come to the points that are considerable hence First of all we may observe this that God till he have wrought his own work he doth not deliver he brings men to a low ebbe to a very low estate before he will deliver Secondly After God hath wrought his own work then he delivers hischildren Thirdly he continues the work still he doth deliver me Fourthly That upon experience of Gods former deliverance Gods children have founded a blessed argument for the time to come He hath he will deliver me God is alway like himself he is never at a loss what he hath done he doth and will doe reserving the limitations as we shall see afterward God doth not at the first deliver his children He delivered St. Paul but it was after he had brought him to receive the sentence of death and after he had learned not to trust in himself but in God that raiseth the dead God deferres his deliverance for many reasons To name a few God doth deferre his deliverance when we are in dangers partly as you see here to perfect the work of mortification of self-confidence to subdue trust in any earthly thing St. Paul by this learned not to trust in himself And then to strengthen our faith and confidence in God when we are drawn from all creatures to learn to trust in him And to sweeten his deliverance when it comes to indear his favours for then they are sweet indeed after God hath beat us out of our selves Summer and Spring are sweet after Winter so it is in this vicissitude and intercourse that God useth favour after affliction and crosses is favour indeed That makes heaven so sweet to Gods Children when they come there because they go to Heaven out of a great deal of miserie in this world And partly likewise God defers it for his own glory that it may be known for his meer work for when we are at a losse and the soul can reason thus God must help or none can help then God hath the glory therefore in love to his own glory he defers it so long Again he useth to defer long that he might the more shame the enemies at length for if the affliction be from the insolencie and pride of the enemies he deferres deliverance till they be come to the highest pitch and then he ariseth as a Gyant refreshed with wine and smites his enemies in the hinder parts he is as it were refreshed on the sudden And as it is his greatest glory to raise his children when they are at the lowest so it is his glory to confound the pride of the enemies when it is at the highest if he should do it before his glory would not shine so much in the confusion of them and their enterprises against his children One would think he should not have let Pharaoh alone so long but he got him glory the more at the last in confounding him in the Red-sea So Haman came very farre almost to the execution of the decree he
will remember the works of the Lord surely I will remember thy wonders of old I will meditate of all thy works and talk of thy doings c. See his infirmity when he was in trouble of mind his sins began to upbraid him that God had left him I said in my infirmity God hath forgotten me c. and hath God forgotten to be gracioue hath he shut up his tender mercies in displeasure then saith he this was my infirmity but I will remember the years of the right hand of the most high c. And the same he hath in many other places as Psal. 143. 4 5. It argues the great weaknesse of our nature which is ready to distrust God upon every temptation of Satan as if God had never dealt graciously with us as if God were changeable like our selves Let us labour to support our selves in the time of temptation with the former experience of Gods gracious goodnesse and his blessed work upon our souls he that delivered us from the power of Satan keeps us from him stil that we sink not into despair he will keep us for the time to come so that Neither things present nor things to come as the Apostle saith shall be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ. And let us as it were make diaries of Gods dealing to us this is to be acquainted with God as Job speakes this is to walk with God to observe his steps to us and ours to him it is a thing that will wondrously strengthen our faith especially in old years in gray hairs What a comfortable thing is it when an aged man can look back to the former part of his life and can reckon how God hath given him his life again and again how God hath comforted him in distresse how God hath raised him up in the middest of perplexity when he knew not which way to turn him how God comforted him when he was disconsolate all these meeting together in our last conflict when all comfort will be little enough what a comfort will it be And those that disfurnish themselves by their negligence and carelesnesse of such blessed helps what enemies are they to their own comfort Therefore consider Gods dealing remember it observe it think of it and desire Gods Spirit to help your minds and memories herein that nothing may be lost for I say all will be little enough the comfort of others our own experience the promises of Scripture Our Hearts are so readie to sink and to call in question Gods truth and Satan will ply us so in the time of temptation Especially those that are old and grow into years they should be rich in these experiments and able even to have a story of them we should be able to make a book of experiments from our Child-hood Gods care to every man in particular it is as if there were none but he and there is no man that is a Christian but he observes Gods wayes to him that he can say God cares for me as if he cared for none but me let us therefore treasure up experiments We see one notable example in David how he pleads with God Psalme 71. 3. from his former experience Be thou my habitation wherein I may continually rest thou hast given command to save me for thou art my rock and my fortresse Whatsoever is comfortable in the creature God hath taken the name of it to himself that in all troubles we might flie to him as the grand deliverer for it is he that delivers whatsoever the meanes be whether it be Angells or men it is he that sets all on work therefore he is called a rock and a fortresse c. Thou hast given command to save me that is God hath the command of all creatures he can command the fish to give up Jonas he can command the Divels to go out Christ did it when he was on earth in the daies of his flesh Therefore much more now he is in heaven he can command winds and storms and divells and all troubles He hath the command of all as he saith to Elias Behold I have commanded a widow to feed thee The hearts of Kings are in his hand as the rivers of waters he that commands the creatures can command deliverance Thou hast commanded to save me for the time past What doth he say for the time to come Deliver me oh God from the wicked thou art my hope and trust from my youth c. Cast me not off in mine old age when my strength faileth me for sake me not It is a good argument Thou hast been my God from my Mothers womb therefore cast me not off in my old age Well we see here the practice of Gods Children in all times Let it be a pattern for our imitation that we do not forsake our own mercy as Jonas saith When God hath provided mercy and provided promises to help us with experience let us not betray all through unbelief through base despair in the time of trouble If we had but onely Gods promise that he will be our God that he will forgive our sins were not that enough Is it not the promise of God of Jehovah that is truth it self but when he hath sweetned his promise by experience and every experience is a pledge and an earnest of a benefit to come what a good God have we that is content not onely to reserve the joyes of heaven for us but to give us a taste to give us the assurance and earnest of the time to come and besides his promise to give us comfortable experience and all to support our weak faith But remember withal that this belongs onely to Gods Children and in a good cause for wicked men to reason thus He hath and therefore he will it is a dangerous argument they must not trust former experience We must hope that God will continue as he hath been upon this ground that we are his Or else the ground of the ruine of wicked men is presumption that God will bear with them as he hath done The King of Sodom and his People were rescued out of trouble by Abraham and the army that he raised yet they were pittifully consumed not long after by fire from Heaven Pharaoh was delivered by Moses prayer God delivered him from ten plagues they made not a good use of it and they perished after miserably in the Red-sea Rabshakeh comes and tells of the former prosperitie of Sennacherib Where are the gods of Hamath and Arpad c. Hath not my Lord overcome all I but it was immediately before his reign Herod he prospered and had good successe in the beheading of James and therefore he would set upon Peter he thought to trust to his former successe he was flushed in the execution of James he thought God hath given me successe and blessed me in this He thought God was of his mind as it is Psalm 50. Thou thinkest me to
of God By the grace of God my conversation hath been in godly sincerity and not in fleshly wisdom For St. Paul was wondrous jealous of his heart for fear of pride not I saith he 1. Cor. 15. I laboured more then they all O not I but the Grace of God that was in me he was afraid of the least insinuation of spirituall pride and so he saith here Our rejoycing is the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and sincerity by the grace of God And then the extent of this conversation thus in simplicity and sincerity in regard of the object it hath been thus In the world towards all men that I have conversed with they can say as much wheresoever I have lived And more abundantly to you-ward my care and Conscience hath been to carry my self as I should more abundantly to you-ward with whom I have lived longest This is an excellent evidence of a good man that he is best liked where he is best known Now St. Paul had lived long amongst them and he was their father in Christ and therefore saith he my conversation is known especially to you-ward Many men are best trusted where they are least known their publick conversation is good and plausible but their secret courses are vile and naught as those know that are acquainted with their retired courses but you saith the Apostle with whom I have lived longest with whom I have been most you can bear witnesse of my conversation that I have lived so and so in the world and more abundantly to you-ward This is our rejoycing c. We see here the temper and disposition that St. Paul was in he was in a glorying in a rejoycing estate We see then that A Christian take him at the worst his estate is a rejoycing estate Our rejoycing is this The word in the originall is more then joy for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a glorying our glorying is this which is a joy manifesting it self in the outward man when the heart and the spirit seeme as it were to go outward and as it were to meet the thing joyed in A Christian hath his joy his glorying and a glorying that is proper to himself it is a spirituall joy as it followes after Our rejoycing is the testimony of our conscience So goodis God that in the worst estate he gives his Children matter of rejoycing in this world he gives them a taste of heaven before they come there He gives them a grape of Canaan as Israel they tasted of Canaan what a good land it was before they came thither so Gods Children they have their rejoycing St. Paul swears and protests it 1. Cor 15. By our rejoycing in Christ Jesus I die daily as verily as we joy in all our afflictions so this is true that I say that I die daily Therefore we should labour to be of such a temper as that we may glory and rejoyce A Christian hath his rejoycing but it is a spiritual rejoycing like his estate Every creature hath his joy as St. Chrysostome speaks we do all for joy all that we do is that we may joy at length it is the centre of the soule As rest is to motion so the desire of all is to joy to rest in joy So that heaven it self is termed by the name of joy happinesse it self Enter into thy masters joy Every creature hath his joy proper to him every man hath his joy a carnall man hath a carnal joy a spiritual man hath a holy joy First he joyes in his election which was before all worlds that his name is written in heaven as it is Luke 11. Rejoyce in this that your names are written in heaven and not that the divells are subject unto you And then he joyes in his justification that he is freed from his sins Rom. 8. Being justified by faith we have peace with God through Christ and we rejoyce in afflictions being justified first there is the way how this joy comes in A Christian being justified by faith and freed from the guilt of his sin it worketh joy And then there is a joy of sanctification of a good conscience of a holy life led as we see here our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience c. And then there is a joy of glory to come We rejoyce under the hope of glory saith the Apostle Rom. 5 so a Christians joy is suitable to himself There is no other man that can glory and be wise because all men but a Christian they glory in their shame or they glory in vanishing things A Christian is not ashamed of his joy of his glorying because he glories not in his shame Therefore the Apostle here justifies his joy our rejoycing is this I care not if all the World know my joy it is the testimony of my conscience As if he should say Let others rejoyce in base pleasures which they will not stand to a vow let others rejoyce in riches in honours in the favour of men let them rejoyce in what they please my joy is another kind of joy I rejoyce in the testimony of my conscience A Christian as he hath a joy so he hath a joy that he will stand to and make it good There is no other man but he will blush and have shame in his forehead that joyes in any thing that is baser then himself that joyes in outward things he cannot stand to it and say This is my joy but a Christian hath the warrant of his conscience for that which he joyes in and therefore he is not ashamed of it Another man dares not reveal his joy All the subtiltie of the world is to have the pleasures that sin will afford and yet withall they study to cover it that it may not appear Where is the joy of the ambitious His study his thought and his joy is to have respect Haman-like and yet he studies to conceal this he dares not have it known he dares not avow it This is my rejoycing for then all the world would laugh at him for a vain person Again the joy of the base-minded man is in his pleasure but he dares not avow this he dares not say my rejoycing is this for then every man would scorn him as a beast The rich man he joyes in his riches but he dares not be known of this for he would then be accounted a base earthly-minded man Every man would scorn him He studies to have all the pleasure and all the comfort that these things will afford and yet to cover them Because he thinks that there is a higher matter that he should joy in if he were not an atheist A Christian is not ashamed of his joy and rejoycing I rejoyce in this saith he For it is well bred it is bred from the Spirit of God witnessing that his name is written in the Booke of Life witnessing that his sins are
take away my sincerity saith he you would make me an hypocrite and thus and thus but my conscience tells me I am otherwise therefore you shall not take away my innocency from me And in Job 31. 35. Behold it is my desire that the Almighty would answer me and that my adversaries would write a Book against me I would take it upon my shoulder I would take it as a crown unto me Here was the force of a good conscience in Jobs troubles that if his adversaries should write a book against him yet he would bind it as a crown about him And so David in all imputations this was his joy when they laid things to his charge that he had never done he takes this for his joy the comfort of his conscience So St. Paul he retires to his conscience and being raised up with the worthinesse of a good conscience he despiseth all imputations whatsoever he sets Conscience up as a flag of defiance to all false slanders and imputations that were laid against him as we see in the storie of the Acts and in this place and others saith he in one place I passe not for mans sentence I passe not for mans day man hath his day man will have his Judgment-seat and will get upon the Bench and judge me that I am such and such I care not for mans day there is another Judgement-seat that I looke unto and to the testimony of my Conscience My rejoycing is the witnesse of my Conscience Holie men have cause to retire to their own Consciences when they would rejoyce against false imputations so holy Saint Austin what saith he to a Donatist that wronged him in his reputation Think of Austin what you please as long as my Conscience accuseth me not with God I will give you leave to think what you will If so be that a mans Conscience cleares him he cares not a whit for reports because a good man looks more to Conscience then to fame therefore if Conscience tell him truth though fame lie he cares not much for he squares not his life by report but by Conscience Indeed he lookes to a good name but that is in the last place For a good man lookes first to God who is above conscience and then he lookes to Conscience which is under God and then in the third place he lookes to report amongst men And if God and his Conscience excuse him though men accuse him and lay imputations upon him this or that he passeth little for mans judgment so the witness of conscience it comforts in all imputations whatsoever Again it comforts in sicknesse Ezechias was sick what doth he retire unto Remember Lord how I have walked uprightly before thee he goes to his Conscience In sicknesse when a man can eate nothing a good Conscience is a continuall feast In sorrow it is a Musician A good Conscience doth not onely Counsell and advise but it is a Musician to delight It is a Physitian to heal It is the best Cordiall the best Physick all other are Physitians of no value Comforts of no value If a mans Conscience be wounded if it be not quieted by faith in the blood of Christ if he have not the Spirit to witnesse the forgivenesse of his sins and to sanctifie and inable him to lead a good life all is to no purpose if there be an evill Conscience the unsound body while it is sick it is in a kind of hell already Again take a man in any crosse whatsoever a good conscience doth bear out the Crosse it bears a man up alway because a good Conscience being a witnesse with God it raiseth a man obove all earthly things whatsoever there is no Earthly discouragement that can dismay a good Conscience because there is a kind of Divinitie in Conscience put in by God and it witnesseth together with God so that in all crosses it comforts So likewise in losses in want in want of friends in want of comforts in want of liberty what doth the witnesse of a good Conscience in all these In want of friends it is a friend indeed it is an inward friend a near friend to us Put the case that a man have never a friend in the world yet he hath God and his own conscience where there is a good conscience there is God and his holy Spirit alway In want of liberty in want of outward comforts he hath the comfort of a good conscience A man on his death-bed he sees he wants all outward comforts but he hath a good conscience And so in want of libertie when a man is restrained his heart is at liberty A wicked man that hath a bad conscience is imprisoned in his own Heart though he have never such libertie though he be a Monarch a bad Conscience imprisons him at home he is in fetters his thoughts make him afraid of Thunder afraid of every thing afraid of himself and though there be no body else to awe him yet his conscience awes him Where there is a conscience under the guilt of sin unrepented there is the greatest liberty in the world there is restraint for Conscience is the worst prison Where there is a good conscience there is an inward inlargement A good man in the greatest restraint hath liberty Paul and Silas Act. 16. in the dungeon in the hell of the dungeon in the worst place of the dungeon in the stocks and at the worst time of the day of the naturall day I mean at midnight and in the worst usage when they were misused and whipped with all they had all the discouragements that could be and yet they sang at midnight these blessed men Paul and Silas because their hearts were enlarged there was a Paradise in the very Dungeon As where the King is there is his Court so it is where God is God in the prison in the noysom dungeon by his Spirit so enlarged their hearts that they sang at midnight Where as if conscience be ill if it were in Paradise Conscience would fear as we see in Adam Saint Paul in prison was better then Adam in Paradise when he had offended God Adam had outward comforts enough but when he had sinned his conscience made him afraid of him from whom he should have all comfort it made him afraid of God and hide himself among the leaves alas a poore shift We see then conscience doth witnesse and the witness of it when it is good doth cause the soul to glory and rejoyce not onely in positive ills in slanders and crosses but in losses in want of friends in want of comforts in want of liberty And so for the time to come in evills threatned a good conscience is bold It feares no ill tidings Psalme 112. My heart is fixed my heart is fixed saith David wicked men are like the trees of the forrest Isay 7. Wicked Ahaz his heart did tremble and shake as the leaves with the wind The noise of fear
is alway in their eares an ill Conscience when it is mingled with ill newes when there are two feares together it must needs be a great fear And a good conscience when it hath laid up grounds of joy in life in the worst estate and condition of life then it makes use of joy in death for when all comforts are taken from a man when his friends cannot comfort him and all earthly things leave him then that conscience that hath gone along with him that hath been a Monitor and a witnesse all his life-time now it comes to speak good things to him now it comforts him now conscience is some body at the houre of death when nothing else will be regarded when nothing will comfort then conscience doth The righteous hath hope in his death as the Wise man saith Death is called the King of feares because it makes all afraid It is the terrible of terribles saith he Philosopher but here is a King above the King of feares a good conscience is above the King of feares death A good conscience is fo farre from being discouraged by this King of feares that it is joyfull even in death because it knowes that then it is near to the place where conscience shall be fully enlarged where there shall be no annoyance nor no grievance whatsoever Death is the end of misery and the beginning of happinesse therefore a good conscience is joyful in death And after death at the day of judgment there the witnesse of conscience is a wondrous cause of joy for there a man that hath a good conscience he looks upon the Judge his Brother he looks on him with whom he hath made his peace in his life-time before and now he receives that which he had the beginnings of before then he lifts up his head with joy and comfort So you see how the witnesse of conscience causeth glory and joy in all estates whatsoever in life in death after death it speaks for a man there it never leaves him till it have brought him to heaven it self where all things else leave a man Therefore how much should we prize and value the testimony and witnesse of a good conscience And what madnesse is it for a man to humour men and displease conscience his best friend Of all persons and all things in the world we should reverence our own conscience most of all Wretched men despise the inward witnesse of this inward friend this inward divine this inward Physician this inward Comforter this inward Counsellour It is no better then madnesse that men should regard that every thing else be good and clean and yet notwithstanding in the middest of all to have foul consciences But to answer an objection and to unloose some knots It may be said that when the Hearts of people are good yet there a good conscience concludes not alway for comfort VVhere there is faith in Christ and an honest life conscience should conclude comfort here is the Rule this I have obeyed therefore I should have comfort Now this we see crossed oft-times that Christians that live exact lives are often troubled in conscience how can trouble of conscience stand with joy upon the witnesse of conscience I answer the witnesse of Conscience when it is a good conscience it doth not alway breed joy It is because our estate is imperfect here and Conscience doth not alway witnesse out of the goodnesse of it sometimee conscience is misled and so sometimes good Christians take the errour of conscience for the witnesse of Conscience These things should be distinguished Conscience sometime in the best erres as well as gives a true witnesse If we take the errour of conscience for the witnesse of conscience there will come trouble of conscience and that deservedly through our own folly Now conscience doth erre in good men sometimes when they regard Rules which they should not or when they mistake the matter and doe not argue aright As for instance when they gather thus I have not grace in such a measure and therefore I have none I am not the Child of God What a rule is this This is the errour of conscience and therefore it must needs breed perplexitie of conscience A good conscience when it is right cannot witnesse thus because the Word doth not say thus Is a nullitie and an imperfection all one No there is much difference in the whole kind A nullitie is nothing an imperfection though it be but a little degree yet it is something This is the errour of conscience and from thence comes trouble of conscience which makes men reason ill many waies As for instance I have not so much grace as such a one hath and therefore I have no grace Now that is a false reasoning for every one hath his due measure If thou be not so great a rich man as the richest in the Towne yet thou mayest be rich in thy kind Again when conscience looks to the humour you are to live by faith and not by the humour of Melancholy When the Instrument of reason that should judge is distempered by melancholy it reasons from thence falsly Because melancholy perswades me that I am so therefore conscience being led by the humour of the body saith I am so Who bid thee live by humour thou must live by rule Melancholy may tell thee sometime when it is in strength that thou art made of glasse as it hath done some it will deceive thee in bodily things wherein sense can confute melancholy much more will it if we yield to it in matters of the soule it will perswade us that we are not the Children of God that we have not Grace and goodnesse when we have Again hence it is that conscience doth not conclude comfort in Gods Children because it looks to the ill and not to the good that is in them for there are those two things in Gods Children there is good and ill now in the time of temptation they look to the ill and think they have no good because they will not see any thing but ill They fix their eyes on the remainders of their rebellious lusts which are not fully subdued in them and they look wholly on them Whereas they should have two eyes one to look on that which is good that God may have glorie and they comfort Now they fixing their eyes altogether on that which is naught and because they doe not or will not see that which is good therefore they have no comfort because they suffer conscience to be ill led that it doth not its duty And conscience in good men it looks sometimes to that that it should not in others in regard of others It looks to the flourishing of wicked men and therefore it concludes Certainly I have washed my hands in vain since such men thrive and prosper in the world Psalme 37. and Psalme 73. VVho bade thee look to this and to be uncomfortable from thence that thy
good demand It is not baptisme but the demand of a good conscience When the conscience hath fed on Christ it demands boldly as it is Rom. 8. of Satan and all enemies Who shall lay any thing to our charge it is God that justifieth it is Christ that died or rather that is risen again It boldly demands of God who hath given his Son the bold demand of conscience prevails with God and this comes by faith in Christ. Now this is strengthened by the Sacrament here are the visible representations and seales that we are incorporate more and more into Christ and so feeding upon Christ once our conscience is pacified and purged from all dead works and we come to have a continuall feast Christ is first the Prince of righteousnesse the righteous King and then Prince of peace first he gives righteonsnesse and then he speaks peace to the conscience The Kingdom of God is righteousnesse peace and joy in the Holy Ghost So that all our feast and joy and comfort that we have in our consciences it must be from righteousnesse A double righteousnesse the righteousnesse of Christ which hath satisfied and appeased the wrath of God fully and then we must have the righteousnesse of a good conscience sanctified by the Spirit of Christ we must put them together alway we can never have communion with Christ and have forgivenesse of sins but we must have a Spirit of sanctification There is mercy with thee that thou mayest be feared Where there is mercy in the forgivenesse of sin there is a disposition to fear it ever after Therefore if for the present you would have a good conscience desire God to strengthen your faith in the blood of Christ poured out for you desire God to strengthen your faith in the crucified bodie of Christ broken for you that so feeding on Christ who is your surety who himself is yours and all is yours you may ever have the feast of a good conscience that will comfort you in false imputations that will comfort you in life and in death and at the day of judgement This is our rejoycing in all things the testimony of our conscience first purged by the blood of Christ and then purged and sanctified by the Spirit of Christ that we have had our Conversation in simplicity and sincerity c. Our rejoycing is this that in simplicity and sincerity This is the matter of this testimonie of Conscience that is simplicity and sincerity Saint Paul glories in his simplieity and sincerity And mark that by the way it is no vain glorying but lawful upon such cautions as I named before but to add a little A man in some cases may glory in the Graces of God that are in him but with these cautions First if so be that he look on them as the gifts of God Secondly if he look on them as stained with his own defects and so in that respect be humbled Thirdly if he look upon them as fruits of his justification and as fruites of his assurance of his salvation and not as causes And then if it be before men that he glories not when he is to deale with God When men lay this and that imputation upon a man he may rejoyce as Saint Paul doth here in the testimony of his conscience in simplicity and sincerity The matter of the testimony of Conscience wherein he glories is simplicity and godly sincerity or as the words may well be read in the simplicity and sincerity of God such as proceeds from God and such as aimes at and looks to God and resembles God For both simplicity and sincerity come from God they are wrought by God and therein we resemble God and both of them have an eye to God a respect to God so it is in the originall in the simplicity and sincerity of God There is not much difference between simplicity and sincerity the one expresseth the other if you will have the difference simplicity especially respects men our conversation amongst men Simplicity hath an eye to God in all things in Religion opposite to hypocrisy in Religion Simplicity that is opposed to doublenesse where doublenesse is there is alway hypocrisy opposed to sincerity and where simplicity is there is alway sincerity truth to God But it is not good to be very exact and punctuall in the distinction of these things they may one expresse the other very well Simplicity Saint Paul's rejoycing was that his conscience witnessed to him his simplicity in his whole conversation in the world his whole course of life which the Scripture calls in other places a walking Saint Paul meanes this first of himself and then he propoundes himself an example to us How was St. Paul's conversation in simplicity Not onely if we consider Saint Paul as a Christian but consider him as an Apostle his conversarion was in simplicity It was without guile without seeking himself without seeking his owne for rather then he would be grievous to the Corinthians the man of God he wrought himself because he would not give any the least scandall to them being a rich people he had rather live by his own labour then to open his mouth he did not seek himself In a word he did not serve himself of the Gospell he served Christ he did not serve himself of Christ. There are many that serve themselves of the Gospell that serve themselves of religion they care no more for religion then will serve their owne turne Saint Paul's conversation was in simplicity he had no such aime he did not preach of envy orof malice or for gain as he taxeth some of the Philippian teachers Some preach Christ not of simplicity and sincerity but of envy c. Then again as an Apostle and a teacher his conversation was in simplicity because he mingled nothing with the Word of God in teaching his doctrine is pure What should the chaffe do with the wheat Jer. 20. What should the drosse do with the Gold he did not mingle his own conceits and devices with the Word for he taught the pure Word of God the simple Word of God simple without any mixture of any by-aimes So the blessed Apostle was simple both in his Doctrine and in his intentions Propounding himself herein exemplary to all us that as we look to hold up our heads with comfort and to glory in all estat es whatsoever so our consciences must bear us witnesse that we carry our selves in the simplicity and sincerity of God Now simplicity is when there is a conformity of pretention and intention when there is nothing double when there is not a contradiction in the spirit of a man and in his words and carriage outwardly That is simplicty when there is an exact conformity and correspondence in a mans judgement and speech in his affections and actions When a man judgeth simply as the truth of the thing is and when he affects as he judgeth when he loves
good we have is it not from him And the nearer you come to him the more your happinesse is increased the more you are striped of earthly things the more you have in God Hath not he mens hearts in his hands when you think you shall endanger your selves thus and thusby plain direct dealing without doubling if you be called to the profession of the truth c. Hath not he the hearts of men in his hands to make them favour you when he pleaseth In Pro. 10. He that walketh uprightly walketh boldly He that walketh uprightly not doubling in his courses he walketh safely God will procure his safety God that hath the hearts of men in his hand as the rivers of water he can turn them to favour such a man A mans nature is inclined to favour downe-right dealing men and to hate the contrary You see the three young men when they were threatened with fire come what will O King we will not worship the Image of Gold which thou hast set up They would be burned first What lost they by it Howsoever if we should lose as it is not to be granted that we canlose any thing by direct dealing For the earth is the Lords the fulnesse thereof and the hearts of men are his But suppose they doe yet they gain in better things in comfort of conscience and expectation and hope of better things Faith is the ground of courage and the ground of all other Graces that carrie a mans courage in a course of simplicitie in this World Therefore if we would walk simply and have our conversation in the world in this grace let us labour especially for faith to depend upon Gods promises to approve our selves to him to make him our last and chief end and our communion with him and to direct all our courses to that end This is indeed to set him up a Throne in our hearts and to make him a god when rather then we will displease him or his Vicegerent his Vicar in us which is conscience that he hath placed in us as a monitor and as a witnesse we will venture the losse of the creature of any thing in the world rather then we will displease that Vicar which he hath set in our hearts This I say is to make him a god and he will take the care and protection of such a man S. Paul here in all the imputations in all crosses in the world he retires home to himself to his own house to conscience and that did bear him out that in simplicity he had had his conversation in the world The next particular is In Sincerity The Apostle addes to simplicity this Godly sincerity and he may well joyn these two together for plainnesse and truth go together a plain heart is usually a true heart Doublenesse and hypocrisie which are contrary they alwaies go together he that is not plain to men will not be sincere to God Simplicity respects our whole course with men sincerity hath an eye to God though perhaps in matters and actions towards men Sincerity is alway with a respect to God and so it is opposed to hypocrisie a vice in Religion opposite to God Now this Sincerity that the Apostle speaks of it is A blessed frame of the soul wrought by the Spirit of God whereby the soul is set straight and right in a purpose to please God in all things and in endeavours answerable to that purpose and to offend him in nothing I make a plain description because I intend practice there may be some nicer descriptions But I say It is a blessed frame of the soul wrought by the sincere Spirit of God whereby the soul is set straight and right to purpose and to endeavour all that is pleasing in Gods sight and that with an intention to please God with an eye to God or else it is not sincerity It is such a disposition and frame of soul that doth all good that hates all ill with a purpose to please God in all with an eye to God And therefore it is called sincerity of God or godly sincerity and it is called so fitly because God is not onely the authour of it but God is the aim of it and the pattern of it for he is the first thing that is sincere that is simple and unmixed God is the pattern of it it makes us like to God and he is the aim of it A man that is sincere aimes at God in all his courses wherein he aimes not at God he is not sincere It comes from God and it looks to God For naturally we are all hypocrites we look to shewes therefore sincerity is from God And it is the sincerity of God especially because where this sincerity is it makes us aime at God in all things it makes us have respect to him in all things as the creature should have respect to the Creator the servant to the Master the sonne to the Father the Subject to the Prince The relations we stand in to God should make us aime at him in all things The Observation from hence is this A Christian that hopes for joy must have his conscience witnesse to him that his conversation is in the sincerity of God As the Apostle saith here This is the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversation c. Now to go on with this sincerity and lay it open a little Sincerity it is not so much a distinct thing as that which goes with every good thing Truth and sincerity it is not so much a distinct vertue and grace as a truth joyned to all graces As sincere hope sincere faith sincere love sincere repentance sincere confession It is a grace annexed to every grace it is the life and soul of every grace and all is nothing without it Therefore it behoves us to consider of it I say not so much a distinct thing from other graces as that which makes other graces to be graces without which they are nothing at all so much sincerity so much reality So much as we have not in sincerity we have nothing to God it is but an empty shew and will be so accounted In Philosophy you know that which is true onely hath a being and consistence all truth hath a being all falshood is nothing it is a counterfeit thing it is nothing to that it is pretended to be An Image is something but S. Paul calls it nothing because it is not that which it should be and which the Idolater would have it to be he would have it to be a God but it is nothing lesse All is nothing without sincerity Therefore let us consider of it And that we may the better consider of it let us look upon it in every action All actions are either Good Ill. Indifferent How is Sincerity discovered in good actions Sincerity is tryed in good actions many waies First of all a man that is
he saith We have not led our conversation according to carnal fleshly wisdome but by Grace his meaning is that a Christian when he hath heavenly wisdome he hath all graces and wisdome together There is a connexion a combination of graces as I said so he leads his life by all graces for all graces are necessary to a Christian life therefore instead of wisdome he puts the word grace Now besides these besides the favour of God accepting us in Christ And besides the working of these graces in us in and after our conversion there is another degree of grace requisite which is a particular exciting applying strengthening grace which is required to every good act to act every good work and to resist every evil and to enjoy good things as we ought to enjoy them I say there is a grace necessary to withstand temptations in all evil besides graces habitual that are wrought in us of Faith and Love and Hope c. These except they be actuated and enlivened by the continual work of the Spirit except they be brought to act and a new strength put into them they are not sufficient for a Christian life Therefore S. Paul here by Grace meanes not onely the graces of the Spirit habitual graces but the power of the Spirit acting enlivening quickening and strengthening him against every evil in particular and to every good work in particular But by the Grace of God In that the Apostle here though he principally mean wisdome yet he names Grace the next point I will observe is this That All the Wisdome that we have it comes from Grace All the wisdome we have comes from Grace meerly from Grace And this Grace is not wanting to us when we have renounced our fleshly wisdome Heavenly wisdome comes altogether from Grace To make this a little clear Whatsoever is spiritual it comes from Christ since the fall we have nothing but by especial grace God being reconciled by Jesus Christ he hath placed all fulnesse of grace in him he hath inriched our nature in him with wisdome and all graces whatsoever All the treasures of wisdome are in him and all other graces God the Father and our Saviour Christ they send the Spirit they communicate the Spirit which takes of Christ and doth enlighten and quicken and guide all those that are members of Christ. All in particular all inward things come from Grace Grace comes from the Spirit the Spirit from Christ and this is the descent of Grace and Wisdome Thereupon they are taken indefinitely in Scripture sometimes to walk wisely to walk graciously sometimes to walk in the Spirit sometimes to walk in Christ it is all one sometimes to be in Christ Whosoever is in Christ c. And to walk in the Spirit and by the Spirit to pray in the Spirit and in wisdome and in faith or to live by faith or to live by Grace or in Grace they are all one because they are subordinate For Christ is the treasure of the Church all that is Good for the Church is laid up in him Wisdome and whatsoever Of his fulnesse we receive Grace for Grace Grace answerable to the grace that is in him he vouchsafes us his Spirit Now the Spirit guides us not immediately but it works a habit in us as we call it it works somewhat in us to dispose us to that which is good And when that is wrought the Spirit guides us to every particular action These things that the Spirit works in us are called Graces because they come from out of our selves by the Spirit so wisdome is called Grace because it comes from the Spirit the Spirit comes from Christ and Christ hath grace not onely grace in himself but he infuseth Grace into us he hath not onely abundance but redundance not only Grace flowing in himself but redundant overflowing to all his members This Saint Paul meanes when he saith We have had our Conversation by the Grace of God that is by such blessed habits of Wisdome Faith Love c. as are wrought by the Spirit of God which Spirit is given us by Jesus Christ our head Hence we learn that every thing that is necessary to bring us to heaven it is a grace that is it comes from without us Adam had it within him he was trusted with his riches himself but now in Jesus Christ we have all of Grace we have all out of our selves Christ is the Sun we have all our beams from him all our light all our life from him he is the head all our motion is from him And this is not onely true of habits as we call them that is a constant work or disposition wrought in Gods Children which for the most part they carry about with them but likewise in all the particular passages of their life they have need of grace for every particular action And herein the soul is like to the ayr the ayr stands in need of light and if it be not enlightned by the Sun it is presently dark so a man is no wiser in particular actions then God will make him on the sudden put case he be a man of a wise spirit for the most part that he passeth for an understanding man and is so yet except he have the grace of Gods Spirit except he have wisdome to guide him in particular he is no wiser then God at that time will make him to be You see all motion in the body it comes from the head let the spirits in the head be obstructed never so little and there followes an apoplexy there will be no motion so all our wisdome all the direction that we have to lead our lives as becomes Christians it comes from Christ it comes from Grace not only the disposition but likewise every particular action for we need Grace continually to assist us to excite and stirre up our powers and to strengthen them against oppositions and if the opposition be strong we have need of a stronger Grace There is never a good work that we do but it is opposed from within us from without us From within us by Carnal wisdome as I said before and by carnal passions and affections From without us by Satan by the world and by men that are led with the spirit of the Devil therefore there is need of a strength above our own Besides the Grace that is in us ordinarily there needs a new particular strength and light to particular actions Doth all come from God and from his Grace Let us take heed when we have any thing of sacrilegious affections of attributing any thing to our selves to our own wisdome and let us give all presently to Grace Mark the phrase of S. Paul here Not by fleshly wisdome but by the Grace of God he doth not say by any habit in my self he doth not say by any wisdome that is in me but he chooseth that which is in God Grace and favour because he would
to their Childrens good I come to bestow a grace on you How this is observed I list not to speak therefore I leave it and come to that which concerns us all I was minded to come to you To bestow a grace on you We see then That The Preaching of the Gospel is a special Grace It is a free and bountiful benefit of God Gracce implies freedome and mercy and bounty It is a free mercy of God to have the Gospel Why Because this is the means to work all that is savingly good in us This is a means to open to us Gods love in Christ and to work in us a disposition answerable to his love therefore it must needs be a grace Heaven is a grace life is a grace reconciliation a grace and such like therefore the Word must needs be a grace by which all these are communicated Therefore the Word hath the name of these things It is the Word of the Kingdome of heaven It is called the Kingdome of heaven the preaching of the Gospel because it puts us into the state of the Kingdome of heaven and the Word of reconciliation because by it we know our reconciliation with God it is offered and wrought in our hearts and faith to apply it by this Word It is the Word of life Act. 20. the life of grace and the life of glory all come by this Word I commend you to God and the Word of his Grace saith the Apostle All grace and spiritual life is wrought in us by the Word therefore the Word preached it is a special grace and favour of God Saint Paul here calls his coming to them to strengthen and confirm them a grace For all means come under the same decree of Gods eternal love with the decree it self When God out of grace resolves and sets down that he will bring such a one to heaven of his free love he doth out of the same grace fit him with opportunities of persons and means he accommodates him with all means for he intends in such a way to bring him to heaven And therefore S. Austin doth well define Predestination it is an ordaining to salvation and a preparing of all means tending thereto Therefore all fall in the compasse of grace both the free favour of God setting a man down to make him happy and likewise by sending men that have an outward calling and inwardly furnishing them with gifts and whatsoever all is of Grace The preaching of the Word is a grace It concerns us therefore so to esteem it Do not many sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death Is it not a grace therefore that we partake of the means of salvation What is in us by nature better then in Turks and Pagans or then many other people under Satan and under Popish Teachers and so rot away in their Ignorance nothing we differ onely by the grace of God therefore let us esteem it as a grace How shall we esteem it as a grace Receive it thankfully as a largesse and bounty and free grace of God receive it as a bounty with thankful hearts Grace begets grace it begets thankfulnesse so to receive it as a grace is to receive it with thankful minds to be more thankfull for the means of salvation then for any outward thing How shall we come to be thankful Never unlesse we find some grace wrought by the Word of Grace Therefore to receive it as a grace is to receive it as a free loving gift of God and to yield to it when by it holy motions are stirred in our hearts not to suppresse and quench holy motions but to yield to them Not to quench and resist the Spirit but to yield our selves pliable to the Word This is to acknowledge it a grace to be thankfull for it because you find your hearts wrought to holy obedience by it Give it way in your soules that it may be an ingraffed Word that all the inward and outward man may be seasoned with it and relish of it that the Word may season your thoughts and speeches and desires and season your course of life that what you think may be in the relish and strength of the Word in the strength of some Divine truth and the guide of your actions may be Divine truth or some motives from it Then you will give thanks for what is wrought on you when it is an ingraffed Word in your soules and all relish of it your speeches and actions and your whole course when a man may know by your carriage that there is something invested and ingraffed in your soules that gives a blessed relish to all the expressions of the outward man Such a one indeed will account the Word a special grace by a sweet experience wrought in his heart I will not presse that Point any further Again whereas S. Paul saith he would come to bestow a second grace on them we see here That Those that are in the state of Grace already they need a second grace Those that have initial grace to be set in a good course they need confirming and strengthening Grace S. Paul had planted them before I but he must come to water them there is alway somewhat left for the Minister to do till he see their soules safe in heaven he hath alway somewhat to do to the Christian soules under him For he must not onely get them out of Satans Kingdome into a good estate but he must labour to build them up he must water them and fence them and strengthen them against all discouragements A man is never safe till he be in heaven therefore he saith I will come to you but I will come to bestow a second Grace on you you have need of it and my love is such to you that you shall have it To enforce this a little because we set termes to our growth and go on plodding in a course and many years after we are no better then we were at the first and some out of a prophane fulnesse out of a Laodicean temper they think they have enough they are rich when indeed they are empty and miserable and wretched and poor and if temptations set upon them they have nothing in them To let you see that we stand in need of a second grace and of a third grace and a fourth grace that we need continual building up First look within what opposition there is to saving goodnesse within what rebellion of lusts what Ignorance and blindnesse and darknesse and indisposition what head the flesh makes in us against the Word of God Let a man a little continue out of the means and he shall see what growth of corruptions there will be a distasting of all means that a man shall be ready to begin anew with them almost having a double principle in them of grace and corruption there needs continually strengthening and stablishing Grace Consider outwardly what discouragements from the ill
assistance this is the disposition of a modest Christian. You see in Psal. 2. how the Psalmist there insults over those that threaten to do this and that Why do the Heathen rage and the people imagine a vain thing c. against the Lord and against his anointed As if they would swallow up the Church and Christ the anointed why do they do this and that God that sits in heaven he laughes them to scorn You see the grounds of lightnesse so far forth as is needful I will name no more The way to prevent it may be in observing these grounds of constancy Especially this Stablish your thoughts with counsel for the time to come consult go not rashly and headlong about matters It is not with our common life as with those that run in a race for their swiftnesse gets all but in matters of government in Common-Wealth there the most staid get all those that weigh things and then execute upon mature deliberation that ripen things first and go not rawly and indeliberately about it this every man takes for granted but it is not thought on Then again labour to suppresse passion in any thing that comes from us speak nothing in passion for one of these things will follow If we execute it we are in danger for the things in passion and inconsiderately spoken if not we shall have the shame of being frustrate we undergo the shame of lightness that we speak that in our passion and heat that we retract after One of these inconveniencies will follow either you will do it and then it will be dangerous or you will not do it and then you will be ashamed a fit reward of rashnesse God gives us passions to be guided and ruled and not to rule us they are good servants and onely servants that should be raised up and stirred up onely when reason and judgment raiseth them and not otherwise But to go on Another cure of this rashnesse is holy dependance on God by prayer and by faith to commit our wayes to him our thoughts to him for the time to come leave all to him entertain nothing wherein we cannot expect his gracious assistance the best Christian is the most dependant Christian. That is the first thing the Apostle declines What is the second thing Or the things that I purpose do I purpose according to the flesh They thought he was a Politician as this is the lot of Gods Children sometimes if so be that God hath given them parts either of nature or breeding carnal devillish men that are led altogether by plots themselves esteem them by themselves The things that I purpose do I purpose according to the flesh He propounds this interrogatory to their conscience not idly but he knew that they had a prejudice in them by his corrivals false Apostles therefore he labours to wipe away that imputation likewise that he did not purpose and consult of things according to the flesh What is flesh here Flesh is the unregenerate part of man whereof fleshly wisdome is the chief for that guides the old man that is the eye of old Adam Carnall wisdome it is the fleshes counsellour in all things therefore especially he means that But why is it called flesh For many reasons among many this is one that the soul so far as it is sinful it is led with things that are fleshly that are outward and thereupon a man is called flesh and the soul it self is called flesh because it cleaves in its affections and desires to earthly things And because the poor understanding now which ruled all and should rule all is become an underling to the carnal will and carnal lusts Therefore it self is called flesh likewise The wisdome of the flesh is enmity with God For now it is swayed even which way carnal fancy and opinion and the flesh lead it The reason is it is betwixt God and heavenly things and betwixt earthly things And if it were in its right original as it came out of Gods hands being a Spirit it should be led by God and by Gods Spirit and Gods Truth by better things then it self as every infirm thing is guided by that which is better then it self as brute creatures are guided by men and weaker persons by Magistrates that are or should be better but now since the fall without Grace renew a man the understanding part of mans soul instead of lighting its candle from heaven it often lights it from hell and is ruled by Satan himself and takes advice even from things meaner then it self and plots and projects altogether for things worse then it self It was not given for that end God knows that give it this soul of ours to proul for earthly things for the ease and honour and profits and pleasures of the world That excellent Jewel that all the world is not worth it was not given for that end no it was given to attain a higher end then this world to attain communion with God but now since the fall it is thus with it that it is a slave Carnal wit is a slave to carnal will and that carnal will is drawn by carnal affections affections draw the will and the will drawes the wit and makes it plot and devise for that which it stands for for carnall lusts and affections which whet the wit that way therefore the whole soul is called flesh even reason it self And hereupon wicked men are called the world why the world because they are led with the things of the world with the guise and fashion of the world A man in the language of the Scripture is termed by that which he cleaves to therefore if the heart and soul cleave to the flesh and the things of the flesh it is flesh if it be led with the world and the things of the world it is called the world Wicked men are the world because the best thing in them is the love of worldly things and their wit is for worldly things all the inward parts of their soul are spent upon worldly things therefore they are called flesh and the world And sometimes Satan himself a man as far as he is carnal is called Satan yea good men Go after me Satan saith Christ to Peter A man as far as he yields to any thing he is named from that which he yields to when fleshly things rule a man he is called flesh when worldly things rule him profits and pleasures a man is the world when a man yields to Satan he is Satan This should make us take heed by whom we are led under whose government we come Saith S. Paul Do I purpose according to the flesh that is according to the profits and pleasures and honours which the flesh looks after are those my advisers my intelligencers my counsellours in the things I take in hand what may make for my honour my pleasure my estate my worldly ease here No saith he I
Word of God To tremble at the Word of God as it is Esay 66. To tremble at it as men do at thunder The thunder is said to be the voice of God The voice of God shakes the Cedars of Lebanon so it is with the voice of Gods Word Shall the Lion roar and the beasts of the Forrest not tremble Shall God threaten for sins that we are obnoxious to and shall we not tremble at his threatenings Therefore howsoever we hear it as if it were yea and nay yet it is yea therefore let us not think to go on in sin and escape and do well enough No it will not be so he that thinks it is the Word of God he trembles at his VVord and hath answerable affections to all the parts of Gods VVord If God direct he followes if God threaten he trembles if he promise he believes if he command he obeyes he hath a pliable disposition to every passage of Divine truth or else we do not believe it What shall we say then of those that come not so far as the Heathen man did VVe know Felix when he heard of justice and temperance and judgment to come he trembled VVhen he heard of things that he was loath to hear that he should be called to a reckoning for the course of his life he trembled and quaked If we hear these things and live in a course perhaps worse then he and do not tremble where is our faith that the VVord of God is yea that it is undoubtedly true Let us therefore examine our selves what power and efficacy the VVord hath it is a VVord that changeth and altereth the whole man it transforms the whole man It is a VVord of life if we find it hath so altered and changed us we can from experience say it is yea And likewise from particular Promises if we observe Gods Promises made good to us if we find peace of conscience upon the confession of our sins we can say Gods VVord is yea If upon the committing of sin we find God punishing and correcting us we can say Gods VVord is yea and it is a bitter thing to offend God I find carefulnesse is the best course to please God he finds me out in my sins and it is a bitter thing to offend God This is the best way to say in truth without hypocrisie that Gods Word is not yea and nay but yea Thus we see this truth that God is true and what followes thence his Word is true as himself and not inconstant yea and nay Besides all this that I have said Let us make this Use of it not to think Gods Word to be too good to be true but yield obedience to it yield the obedience of faith to it in the Promises Here is a foundation for faith the foundation of faith is without us the evidences of faith are within us by love by purging our hearts and stirring us up to pray c. but the foundation is out of our selves here is a foundation and pillar for faith to lean on God is true and his Word is true and not yea and nay it is eternally true Therefore apply all the Promises in the Old and New Testament to thy self It was not yea to Abraham and not to thee Gods Promises of forgivenesse of sins were not yea to David and not to thee they were not yea to Manasses and not to thee but Gods truth is yea eternally yea Whatsoever was written heretofore was written for our comfort and we are now the Davids and the Manasses and the Abrahams of God we are now the beloved of God for every one in their age are as they were in theirs and as the Promises of God were yea to them and saved their souls because they trusted on them so certainly every Promise of God is a shield for those that will have recourse to it The Name of God is a strong Tower and his Word is his Name whereby he will be known in his Promises Have recourse to it on all occasions relie on the Word wrastle with him when his dealings seem contrary though his dealings with us seem to be yea and nay We have been Gods Children he hath assured us that we were in the state of grace but now he deals with us as if we were not his children he afflicts us he suffers Satan to be let loose on us to tempt us here flesh and blood is ready to say Certainly I am not Gods child can I be thus and thus followed as I am No no Gods gifts are without repentance Hadst thou ever grace God hath said it who is truth it self that his gifts are without repentance Build on it therefore if thou hadst ever any grace where he hath begun he will make an end Where he hath begun a good work he will perfect it to the day of the Lord. Therefore wrastle with God in all temptations when things seem contrary yet alledge Gods nature to him and his Word for both are true and one is true because the other is true He is true in his Nature and true in his Word and free in his decree whatsoever his actions seem to be yet Lord thou canst not deny thy self thou art unchangeable thou art truth it self And thy Word that hath promised regard and respect to humble sinners that rep●…t and come to thee it is unchangeably true as thy self therefore Lord I will not leave thee though thou kill me as Job saith Here is a ground of wra●…ng as Job●…d ●…d alledge the Nature of God and the Word of God against his dealing Let his dealing be what it will his Nature is true and his Word is true therefore his Promises are true which is a branch of his Word that if we repent and confesse our sins he will be mercifull to us Therefore let us not forsake our own mercy This will uphold us as in all temptations so in Divine temptations when God seems to forsake us so Christ himself our blessed head did we cannot have a better pattern when God left him on the Crosse and left him to his humane nature to wrastle with the Devils temptations and the pains of his body and the sense of his wrath My God my God why hast thou for saken me yet he upheld himself that God was his God still and so likewise in the former example of Job I say it is a speciall comfort that Gods Word is not yea and nay as I said it is not doubtful as the Oracles of the Gentiles the Oracles of the Devill but Gods Word is certain Whatsoever it was to any Saint of God heretofore it is to every believing to every humble afflicted soul now and shall be to the end of the world So much for that VERSE XIX For the Son of God Jesus Christ who was preached among you by us by me and Sylvanus and Timotheus was not yea and nay but in him is yea IN the words the Apostle shews in particular
what he preached among them and we have in them these particulars briefly to be unfolded First That Christ Jesus in his nature and his offices is the chief and main object and subject matter of preaching Secondly That to make him profitable to us he must be preached Thirdly That consent of Divines and Preachers helps faith Fourthly That Jesus Christ being preached by the Apostles is an undoubted yea that is an undoubted ground and foundation to build on in all the uncertainties of this life in all the uncertainty of Religion Jesus Christ pteached by S. Paul and other holy men of those times was not yea and nay but yea First Christ Jesus is the main object of Preaching It were impertinent here to stand on particulars to shew you how Christ is the Son of God for he is brought in here as the object of preaching Onely in a word we must of necessity believe that Christ Jesus is the Son of God For how wondrously doth this stablish our faith when we believe in a Saviour that is God the Son of God Jesus Christ by eternal Generation In a word here are these prerogatives of Christs Generation from all other sons whatsoever Other fathers are before their sons this Son of God was eternal with his Father Other fathers have a distinct essence from their sons the father is one and the son another they have distinct existences but here there is one common essence to the Father and the Son Other fathers beget a son without them but this Father begets his Son within him it was an inward work So it is a mystical Divine Generation which indeed is a subject of admiration rather then of explication that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Son of man This was typified in the Ark the Ark was a type of Christ●… the A●… had wood and gold that covered that wood Christs humane nature was the wood and his Divine nature that contained it that is the gold But I should be too large besides the scope of the Text if I should unfold this Point I only touch it by the way Christ Jesus in his natures as he is God Man and in his offices as Jesus Christ that is anointed as King Priest and Prophet and in his estates of abasement and advancement is the main subject matter of preaching For what can we say but it must be reductive and brought to Christ If we open mens consciences by the Law and tell them what a terrible estate they are in what do we but drive them to the Physician what is the law but as John Baptist was to Christ to prepare the way to level the soul to pull down the high thoughts and imaginations to make way and passage for Christ And then in Christ when we preach Christ we preach his natures God and man and his Offices as King Priest and Prophet as he is predestinate and sealed and anointed by God the Father for that purpose that we may have a strong Saviour strong in himself and authorized by his Father And we preach his estates of abasement as he was crucified and suffered for our sins and his estate of exaltation as he arose and ascended into glory These things belong to the preaching of Christ. And then the benefits we have by him reconciliation to his Father by his death and peace of conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost and such like wondrous benefits we have by him And then our duty to him again which is faith and a conversation worthy To imbrace all that is offered by Christ that it be not lost for want of apprehending Christ Jesus is the subject matter of our preaching in his natures in his offices in the benefits we have by him in the duties we owe to him in the instrument of receiving all faith For in preaching that faith which we require to lay hold on Christ is wrought For preaching doth not onely manifest the benefits we have by Christ but is a potent instrument of the Spirit of God to work this qualification to make Christ profitable to us Now all that we preach of holy duties is either to humble us if we have them not to make us flye to Christ by faith or when we believe to make us walk answerable to our faith So whatsoever we preach is reductive to Christ either to prepare us or to furnish us to walk worthy of Christ. Indeed Jesus Christ is all in all in our preaching and he should be so in your hearing of all things you should desire to hear most of Christ. The apprehension of your sinfulnesse should drive you to Christ. The hearing of duties should be to make you adorn your Christian Religion you have taken on you Naturally men love to hear flashes witty conceits and moral points wittily unfolded but all these in the largest extent do but civilize men it must be Christ unfolded and Gods love and mercy and wisdome in him reconciling mercy and justice together The wondrous love of God in Christ and his justice and mercy and the love of Christ in undertaking to work our redemption and the benefits by Christ his offices estates and conditions these things work faith and love these things do us good All other things take them at the best they do but fashion our carriage a little but that which enlivens and quickens the soul is Jesus Christ. Therefore we should of all other things be desirous to hear of Jesus Christ. It is a point that the very Angels are students in For the Ark which I named before it had the Law and the Mercy-seat in it the mercy-seat to cover the Law Now Christ hath satisfied the Law and reconciled his Father he hath freed us from the curse of the Law and hath given full satisfaction to the Law he is the Mercy-seat by whom we have accesse to God the Father Now the Angels were upon the Mercy-seat interviewing one another and prying down upon the Mercy-seat insinuating that the reconciling of Gods Justice and Mercy by that infinite wisdome of God in Christ that our sins should be punished in him and yet he be merciful to us that he should punish our surety for us that he should joyn these attributes together that all the creatures in heaven and earth could not devise it is a matter for Angels to pry into the very frame of the Ark signified this and shall not we be students in those mysteries that the Angels themselves desire every day to behold If Christ be the main thing we are to stand on Let us labour more and more to understand Christ and him crucified let us see our nature in him advanced now in heaven to make us heavenly-minded let us see our nature in him punished let us see our sinful nature in him cleansed and purged by his death and abasement let us see our nature in him enriched Let us consider him as a publick person and
see our interest in his humiliation and exaltation in glory because he is the second Adam These things should raise up our thoughts wondrously to think of his humiliation and his exaltation and of the love and mercy of God in him And then think of what you will nothing is discouraging think of death of hell of the day of Judgment think of Satan of the curse of the Law they are terrible things I but think of the Son of God of Christ anointed of God the Father to satisfie the Law to satisfie his Justice to overcome Satan to crush his head to be our Saviour as well as our Judge at the day of Judgment these things will make all vanish Things that are most tetrible to the nature of man without the consideration of Jesus Christ the Son of God all are most comfortable when we think of him Now when we think of Satan we think of one crushed and trod under foot as he shall be ere long When we think of Judgment we think of a Saviour that shall be our Judge when we think of God we think of God reconciled in Christ. We have accesse by Christ to the Throne of grace he is now in heaven and makes intercession for us When we think of death we think of a passage to life where we shall be with him I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ. So the things that are most uncomfortable yet bring the consideration of them to Christ exalted in heaven having triumphed over all these in our nature and sits at Gods right hand The thoughts of these things are comfortable meditations Nay think of that which is the most terrible of all the Justice of God his anger for sin it is a matter of comfort above all other God is just to punish and revenge sin what then because he is just he will not punish ●…hing twice but his justice is fully satisfied aad contented in his Son Christ Jesus whom he hath anointed and predestinate and sent himself and he must needs acknowledge that satisfaction that is done by him that he hath sent himself hereupon we come to think comfortably of Gods Justice God out of Christ is a consuming fire there is nothing more terrible then God without Christ but now in Christ we can think of the most terrible thing in God with comfort Therefore S. Paul makes it the main scope of his preaching and so should we of ours and you should make it your main desire in hearing and the main subject matter of your meditating something concerning Christ. Let us often think of our nature in him now exalted in heaven and that we shall follow him ere long our head is gone before and he will not suffer his body alwayes to rot in the earth let us think of his natures and his offices and all the blessed prerogatives that we have by him and all the enemies that are conquered by him that in him we have God reconciled and the Devil vanquished we have heaven opened and hell shut we have our sins pardoned and our imperfections by little and little cured in him we have all in all There are four things that the Apostle speaks of which includes all 1 Cor. 1. 30. Of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made to us wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Christ Jesus is all in all if we be ignorant he is our wisdome if we want righteousnesse and holinesse to stand before God he is ou●… righteousnesse we stand righteous being cloathed with his righteousnesse If we want Grace Of his fulnesse we receive Grace for Grace he is sanctification to us If we be miserable as we shall be to our sense our bodies shall be turned to rottennesse he is our redemption not onely of the soul but of the body he shall make our bodies like his glorious body as he makes our soules glorious by his Spirit conforming them to his own Image here he means here redemption of our bodies from corruption as well as of our soules from sin He is all in all in sin he is sanctification in death he is life in ignorance he is wisdome there is nothing ill in us but there is abundant satisfaction and remedy in Christ. I speak this the rather to shew what reason S. Paul had to stand on this That all his preaching was to bring Christ Jesus among them I go on The Son of God Jesus Christ preached among you All the good we have by Christ is conveyed by the Ministery Despise that and despise Christ himself Therefore whatsoever benefits we have by Christ they are attributed to preaching they are attributed to the Gospel as it is preached and unfolded therefore it is called the Gospel of the Kingdome The Word of reconciliation The Word of life The Word of faith all these are by Christ but it is no matter whatsoever we have by Christ we must have it by Jesus Christ unfolded in the Ministery of the Word despise the Ministery that is contemptible to flesh and blood and despise Christ himself despise the Kingdome and life and all for Christ preached is that we must relie on Christ unfolded the bread of life must be broken the sacrifice must be anatomized and laid open Christ Jesus the Son of God must be preached he profits not but as he is preached his riches must be unfolded The unsearchable riches of Christ. Therefore God that hath appointed us to be saved by Christ hath appointed and ordained preaching to lay open Jesus Christ among us But to come to the third Point why doth he bring in consent to help By me and Silvanus and Timotheus would not his own authority serve the turn I answer no it would not sometimes In it self it will but in regard of the weaknesse of men it is necessary to joyn the consent of others S. Paul was an Apostle of Christ but he knew that they were so weak that they would regard his testimony the more for the joynt testimony of Timotheus and Silvanus and the rest God considers not so much what is true in it self as how to stablish our faith in it As in the Sacrament would not God give Christ and his benefits is he not true of his Word Yes but he gives the Sacrament for us his promises are sure enough yet he condescends to our weaknesse to adde Sacrament and oath and all the props that may be So the men of God that are led by the Spirit of God though their own authority were sufficient yet they condescend to the weaknesse of others Therefore S. Paul alledgeth with himself Silvanus and Timotheus to strengthen them the better Then again consent is a lovely thing and proceeds from love how sweet a thing is it for brethren to dwell together in unity therefore we ought to stand much upon consent if it may perswade us But as Cyprian saith well it must be consent in the truth Consent that is not
Parasites that when God calls them to stand for true causes what do they make their rule Not Gods constant yea but they bend and bow to opinion as if the opinion of any man in the World were the rule of their faith and obedience This is to make men and no men Is not the written Word of God the VVord of God Is not the law the law politike lawes I speak not of shall a man yield to mens opinion especially if the VVord do not warrant it shall he yield to any man living that is inconstant by his disposition There is truth which is certain that a man must maintain to the Death He is not onely a Martyr that maintaines Religion John Baptist was a Martyr that stood out in a matter that was not against heresie but for the standing out against Herod he did not yield as many thousands would have done in such a case Thou must not have thy Brother Philips wife it is unlawful Men ought to suffer for the truths of nature and not deny truth whatsoever because it is a Divine sparkle from God If it be any truth whatsoever it must be stood in because it is constant and it is the best thing in the world next to Divine and saving truth If this be so that the Gospel and Divine truth be yea and that the Church at all times hath been built on that and that whosoever is saved is saved by that yea Let us labour to have a faith answerable to our truth We say and distinguish well there is a certainty of the thing and a certainty of the mind apprehending the thing It is certain the Sun is bigger then the earth but you shall never perswade a simple Countrey-man that it is so There is a certainty of the object but not of the subject he will never believe it because it is against sense But now there must be both in a Christian. The Apostles doctrine the truth he doth believe the truth in the Scripture is yea that is it is certain and true and not yea and nay it is not flexible it is not as the Heathen Oracles were that is doubtful and wavering Let our assent be answerable to the truth let us build soundly on a sound foundation As a Ship that is to rest in the middest of the waves there is a double certainty necessary that the Anchor-hold be good in it self and that it be fastned upon somewhat that is firm if it be a weak anchor or if it be fastned upon gound that will not hold the Ship is tossed about with waves and so split upon some rock or other So our soules require a double certainty we must have an Anchor of faith as well as an object of faith we must have an Anchor of hope as well as an object For the object we may cast Anchor there it is Divine truth which will hold there is no doubt of that it is yea but then our Anchor must be firm our faith and affiance Let us labour to build soundly and strongly upon it It should be our endeavour continually to stablish our faith to stablish our hope that we may know on what terms we live and on what terms to dye Do but consider the difference between an understanding strong Christian and another A Christian that is judicious and understanding ask him in what estate he is why comfortable what is the ground of his faith why thus I live in no known sin I confesse my sins to God my doctrine is yea and I labour to bring my life to my doctrine Ask another What do you mean to live so loosely and carelesly why will you stand thus will you be content to die so perhaps he doth not know sound doctrine or if he do it is confusedly he doth not build on that rock on that foundation O let us labour to build stronger and stronger on the truth Our building strongly makes us eternal Gods truth is eternal truth because it makes us eternal Is it not a strange thing that man that is chaffe and vanity and smoak whose life passeth as a tale that is told that yet notwithstanding if he build on this yea which is certain and infallible the doctrine of the Gospel it will make him a rock a living stone it will make him eternal All flesh is grasse but the Word of God endures for ever What a comfort is this our life being a vapour and vanity and growing to nothing that the time will shortly come when we shall be no more no more in this world then to have Divine truth that will make us eternal Psal. 90. Moses a good man he saw men drop away faith he Thou art our eternal habitation from Generation to Generation What is the meaning of that That is We dwell in thee here in our Pilgrimage to Canaan we drop away but Thou art our habitation from Generation to Generation So when a Christian considers his life is uncertain all things are vanity that support this life yet notwithstanding I have a yea to build on the Divine truth The Word of the Lord endures for ever and it will make me endure for ever It is a Rock it self it makes me a Rock it will make me a living stone built on that foundation that all the gates of hell shall not prevail against my faith and hope What a comfort is this We have nothing without this Yea we are yea and nay and our happinesse is yea and nay we are so happy now as we may be miserable to morrow Let us labour to build on Divine truth which is like it self that in all the Changes of the world we may have somewhat that is unalterable that is as unchangeable as God himself As S. Paul here brings God himself As God is true my word to you was not yea and nay but yea So much shall suffice for that Verse I go on to the 20. Verse VERSE XX. For all the Promises of God in him are Yea and in him Amen THis comes in after this manner My Preaching to you saith he was invariable and constant because Christ himself is alway yea if Christ the matter of my preaching be alwayes yea and I preach nothing but Christ then my preaching is invariable and constant How doth he prove the minor how doth he prove that Christ is alway yea All the Promises of God in him are Yea and in him Amen Christ is invariable and my preaching of him was not yea and nay Christ is not yea and nay because all the Promises of God in him are Yea and Amen The Promises of God in him are Yea that is they are constant and in him they are Amen There is some diversity in reading the words But most constantly the best Expositors have it as this Translation hath it All the Promises of God in him are Yea and in him Amen The literal meaning is this All the Promises of God in Christ are Yea that is they are
him mystically as the Son of his love so the promises are made and given over to him of all good he takes all the promises of good from God for us and then they are made to us as we are in him He himself is the first promise that runs along in all the Scripture and all the promises of Christ are yea for whatsoever was promised of Christ before he came it was fufilled when he came for all types were fulfilled in him and all Prophecies and all promises they were all accomplished in him All types whether personal or real For personall types he was the second Adam Adam was a type of him he is the true Adam He was the true Isaac the ground of laughter He is the true Joseph advanced now to the kingdome to the right hand of God he is the steward of his Church to feed his Church here and bring her to Heaven with himself afterward He is the true Joshua that brought Israel out of the wildernesse to Canaan he brings us from Moses from the law to heaven he is the true Joshua that brings us through Jordan from death and miseries in this world to heaven He is the true Solomon the Prince of peace so all personal types of Kings and Priests as Aaron was a type of him c. they were yea in him they were fulfilled in him And all reall types he is the true Mercie-seat wherein God would be heard and prayed unto for he covers the Law the curse of it as the Mercie-seat did He is the true brazen Serpent that whosoever looks on him with the eye of faith shall not perish but have everlasting life He is the true Mannah the bread of life that type had its yea in Christ. He is the true sacrifice the Passeover Lambe the Lambe of God that takes away the sins of the world if our hearts be sprinkled with his blood the destroying Angell hath nothing to do with us The Passeover hath its yea in him therefore that which is affirmed of the Passe-over is affirmed of him Not abone of it shall be broken that is attributed to Christ that was performed in the type that is applied to Christ that was spoken of the Passeover to signifie the identitie of the type and the thing signified He was the yea of that of all comfortable types that were real personal all have their yea in him Therefore saith our Saviour Christ the last words of his almost upon the crosse All is finished all the types real and personal And all promises and prophecies have their yea in Christ. The first promise what was it but Christ The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head it was nothing but Christ it was yea when he was born and when he died he crushed the Serpents head By death he overcame him that had the power of death that is the divel So the promise that was renewed to Abraham In thy seed shall all nations of the earth be blessed that is in Christ. And so to David that he should come out of his family And that particular promise of I say that a Virgin should conceive And the Baptist points him out Behold the Lamb of God All the particular things that befel Christ in time they were prophesied of before and Christ was the yea of all that is all had their determinate truth in Christ when he came This is one reason why S. Paul saith All the promises in Christ are yea whatsoever was promised concerning Christ or foretold it was yea in him concerning his birth and the place of it concerning his death and the manner of it concerning his resurrection and ascension concerning his offices all was foretold as we see in Scripture in the New Testament it is the foot of diverse verses that It might be fulfilled so this that was foretold in the Old it was fulfilled in the New So Christ is the first promise and whatsoever was said of him is Yea and Amen Whatsoever was spoken of Christ it was Yea in the Old Testament and Amen in the New it was made to them in the Old Testament and performed in the New And what is the Old and New Testament but this syllogisme He is the Blessed seed that is the Son of the Virgin Mary born in Bethlehem that shall come in the end of Daniels weeks that shall come when the Scepter shall be departed from Juda c. He is the true Messias the true Christ saith the Old Testament here is the yea Amen saith the New Testament to this But Christ is the Son of the Virgin Mary he suffered these things that it might be fulfilled so all is Amen in the New Testament I say this is the main reason that all is built on He in whom all these agree is the true Messias But saith the New Testament all these are Amen in Christ therefore Christ the Son of the Virgin Mary he is the true Messias We see whatsoever was prophesied concerning Christ himself was yea And not onely so but all the prerogatives and good things that come by Christ are yea they are undoubted in Christ and they were yea before he was he profitted before he was he was yea to Adam because however he that was the seed of the woman came not till the latter end of the World till 4000. years after the beginning or thereabouts yet the faith of Adam and of Abraham made him present Abraham saw Christs day and rejoyced There was a vertue from Christ to all former ages they all had benefit by Christ as it is proved at large Heb. 11. And in Acts 15. We hope to be saved by Christ as well as they insinuating that they hoped to be saved by Christ as well as we so he was yea for comfort to all that were before him as well as now all the promises were yea even to the Patriarchs and Prophets Even as if a man should undertake three or four years hence to pay a debt that is due by one that is subject to be carried to prison and on that condition that this man shall be freed I undertake at such a time to pay such a debt so though the debt be paid three or four years hence he is let go free that was obnoxious to go to prison for the debt though it be to be paid after So it was with Christ he the second person in the Trinity undertook being so appointed by God the Father the blessed Trinity stablished this that Christ should pay the debt by death the debt to divine justice should be satisfied by the cursed death of the crosse that those that before should have gone to hell else for the debt should be all freed that had any part and interest by faith in Christ who should pay the debt afterwards Christ undertook at such a time to be incarnate and to pay it for us God the Father to whom we were obnoxious that
when we are once in Christ believe in Christ all the Scripture speaks comfort to us if we come in and receive him as he is offered upon his terms to be our Governour our King our Priest and Prophet then all the promises are Yea and Amen to us As for instance forgivenesse of sins if we receive Christ God will forgive us our sins and be reconciled to us for Jesus Christs sake We have an advocate with the Father and he is the propitiation for our sins The blood of Christ shall cleanse us from all sins These promises shall be Yea and Amen to thee if thy sins trouble thee they shall be done away How many promises to this purpose have we of the forgivenesse of sins Again if so be thou find want of Grace all the promises in Christ are Yea and Amen he hath promised his holy Spirit to them that ask him Luke 11. There is a promise shall be Yea and Amen if thou beg it He hath promised the fundamentall graces He will put his fear in our hearts that we shall never depart from him He will teach us to love one another you are taught of God to love one another He hath promised private blessings in this kind to circumcise and cut off the fore-skin of our hearts If a naughty and stonie heart vex thee he will take away that and give thee an heart of flesh a tender heart So these promises in Christ shall be Yea and Amen if we apply and believe them to take away our corruption and subdue that and to give and plant Graces he hath promised to do this therefore make use of them not only of the promises of pardon and forgivenesse of sins but of grace necessary Art thou sensible of thy imperfections that thou canst not go about the duties of Religion and of thy particular calling what saith Moses Who gives a mouth is it no tGod that gives a mouth And Be not afraid saith Christ you shall have speech and a spirit given you that all shall not be able to withstand Be not afraid God that calls us he will enable us You have a promise of sufficiencie of gifts If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God If any man lack wisdom to manage his affaires to beare crosses and afflictions let him ask it of God a rich promise in that kind And so art thou doubtful for the time to come what shall befall thee God in Christ Jesus hath made a Promise That where he hath begun he will make an end Philip. 1. 6. He that hath begun a good work will finish it to the day of the Lord. Christ is Alpha and Omega too and What shall separate us from the Love of God in Christ Neither things present nor things to come nor any thing else why because it is the love of God in Christ. Gods love is founded in Christ and he will love thee eternally There is a ground of perseverance Therefore be sure to take in trust the time to come as well as the present he will be thy God for the time to come as well as for the present he will be thy God to death Jesus Christ is yesterday to day and to morrow and the same for ever He was and is and is to come He was good to thee before he called thee he is good to thee now in the state of Grace and he will be for ever Why shouldest thou stagger for the time to come Take in trust all that shall befall thee for the time to come as well as for the present for he is Yea and Amen himself and all his Promises are Yea and Amen Christ is Amen the true witnesse Thus saith Amen Rev. 1. and all his Promises are like himself Amen Oh but I may fall away my grace is weak I stagger often But are the Promises founded upon thee No the Promises are founded in Christ. Christ receives Grace for thee and he is a King for ever and a Priest for ever to make intercession for thee and he is faithful He is beloved for ever and as long as he is beloved thou shalt be beloved because thou art in him God is in Christ and thou art in Christ how canst thou miscarry God is in Christ for ever and thou art in Christ will he lose a limb will he lose a member No the Promises in him are Yea and Amen and not in thee They are in thee Yea and Amen thou hast the benefit of them because they are in him Amen first I but for the troubles of this world for afflictions and crosses what promises have we to build on for them God in Christ is Yea and Amen to us and the promises are Yea and Amen in that kind In all things necessary for this life Heb. 13. Let yourconversation be without covetousnesse for he hath promised he will not fail thee nor for sake thee It is taken along from Joshuah's time it was a promise made to Joshuah and is enlarged to all Christians He hath promised he will not fail thee nor forsake thee Therefore Let your conversation be without covetousnesse Insinuating the reason why men are covetous because they do not trust that promise I will not fail thee nor for sake thee For if men in their calling as they should do would trust in God without putting forth their hands to ill meanes their conversation would be without shifting and covetousnesse Therefore covetous men are faithlesse men they believe not the Promise that God will not fail them nor forsake them for then they would not live by their wits and by their shifts but by faith in this very promise which is Yea and Amen to all that believe it God is a Sun and shield Psal. 84. and no good thing shall be wanting to those that lead a godly life Would you have more he is a Sun for all good he is a Shield to keep from all ill I am thy buckler and thy exceeding great reward saith God to Abraham I am thy buckler to keep thee from all ill and thy exceeding great reward to bestow all good having these promises why should we stagger they are Yea and Amen in Christ God is Al-sufficient in Christ. For the issue in our labours Oh what will become of it we take pains to no purpose we rise early and go to bed late what will become of all in the issue What saith Saint Paul 1 Cor. 15. Be constant alway abounding in the work of the Lord be ye abundant in the work of the Lord knowing that your labour is not in vain in the Lord therefore abound you in the work of the Lord let the issue go to God you have a rich promise Knowing this that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Therefore you know when Peter had fished all night and had caught nothing when Christ bids him cast the net into the Sea saith he We have fished all night
and catched nothing to what purpose should I cast it yet in thy Word in thy command I will cast it he obeyed and he drew so many that the net brake again with the fish So I say it is thy command Lord that I should go on in the duties of my calling that I should do that that belongs to me and in well doing to commit my self to thee as to a faithful Creator and a gracious Redeemer and to cast my self on thy Promises do what thou wilt you shall see then as the Apostle graciously speaks Your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. Cast your care on him for he cares for you I but when we have done there are so many imperfections cleave to that we do that they discourage us Why look the Promise is Yea and Amen for acceptance a cup of cold water is accepted offer that thou doest in the mediation of Christ God will pardon that which is faulty and accept that which is good So we have Promises of acceptance in Christ God will pardon and spare us as a Father spares his child Doth not a father accept the endeavour of his poor child and pardon his weaknesse when he cannot do as he would God looks on us as a Father on his children Therefore let us not fear this we have a promise of acceptance of what we do though it be weak and maimed and lame obedience If we cannot do as much as others yet bring two Turtles They that could not bring an Oxe a great sacrifice a lesse was accepted two Pigeons if thou canst not do as much as others a little sacrifice shall be accepted Oh that we had faith we might run through all the passages of our life justification sanctification perseverance for the time to come the duties of our calling the issue of our labours whatever you can imagine There is no passage of our life but our soules would be supported if we could think that these promises are Yea and Amen in Jesus Christ. There is no estate that we are in but there are Promises made to it we want no good but we have a promise of supply we are under no ill but we have a promise either for the removall of it or for the sanctifying of it which is better We may enlarge it likewise to posterity If the Promises in Christ be Yea and Amen that is true to us and to them that succeed us for as I said Christ is yesterday to day and the same for ever He was yesterday to our ancestors to day to our selves to morrow to our posterity Therefore saith Peter to the believing Jewes Act. 2. The Promise is made to you and to your children your children are in the Covenant and God is the God of thee and of thy seed For the Promises in Christ are Yea and Amen they are constant to us and to our children to the end of the world It is a comfort to parents that can leave their children no inheritance they leave them God in Covenant and he is a good portion I will be thy God for the grand promise is the promise of the Father Son and Holy Ghost God hath promised to be a Father and the Father gives his Son and the Father and Son give the Holy Ghost Well then God is the God of us and of our children he is the Father of us and of our children Christ is the Christ of us and them the Holy Ghost is the Spirit that sanctifies us and them Is not this a comfort to those that can leave their children nothing else that they leave them God in Covenant And this is a comfort for children if they have good Parents that they may say when they pray O God of my father Abraham And as David Psal. 116. I am thy servant and the son of thy handmaid I am thy servant my self and the son of one that was thy servant Is not this a comfort to a Christian to say I am thy servant and the son of thy servant therefore there is a double bond why thou shouldest respect me I cast my self on thee and I am the son of a believing father of a believing mother Oh it is a blessed thing to be in Covenant with God that those that can leave their children little else can leave them a place in the Covenant by their own goodnesse and faith Wicked Parents are cruel they damn their own soules and they are cruel to posterity Jeroboam hurt his posterity more then all the world besides for his sin God cursed his posterity They walked in the wayes of Jeroboam God many times will not punish men themselves but their posterity Wicked Kings God spares them themselves sometimes but he punisheth their posterity Jeroboam was spared for his own life but his posterity was punished when wicked men dye others applaud their wisdome they dye thus and thus c. and their posterity applaud their wisdome God therefore curseth their posterity walking in their wayes Jeroboam's children I say had cause to curse their father they had a prejudice in his example they thought him a very wise man that by setting up the Calves he could make such a rent but it turned to their destruction I say parents are cruel to posterity for God revengeth their sins on their posterity Let this be a strong motive to men to believe in Christ that they may leave a good posterity a posterity in Covenant with God Men are very Atheists in this point for they are more careful a great deal to leave them rich to leave them great then to leave them good and so they leave them a little goods perhaps but they leave the curse and vengeance of God with it I beseech you therefore enlarge this comfort that the Promises of God concerning all good things are made in Christ they are Yea and Amen to our selves and to all ours to our posterity Thus I have laboured to lay open a little to you the Promises you may enlarge them your selves Therefore take this course First consider your present estate if you would make use of this portion it is our portion our best inheritance are the Promises and indeed they are a good childs portion though the world take all from us though God strip us of all if he leave us his Promises we are rich men Therefore the Psalmist calls them his portion and his inheritance and indeed so they are because they are so many bonds whereby God is bound to us they are so many obligations And if a wretched exacting man think himself as rich as he hath bonds though he have not a penny in his purse He that hath a thousand pound in bonds thinks himself richer then he that hath an hundred pounds in money and he thinks he hath reason to be so because he hath good security Certainly a Christian that hath rich faith in the rich promises he is a rich man because he hath many
that we may make likewise of the story of our own lives as well as the story of others for consider the former times why Lord thy Promises heretofore have been Yea and Amen thou hast delivered me from such and such dangers thou hast been so good and so good to me thou art not changed Let us store up experience out of the story of our own lives God is Yea and Amen and his Promises are Yea and Amen constant to all his Children and to their children and they are alike in all ages from Generation to Generation as Moses saith Psal. 90. Thou art our God from Generation to Generation for ever Thus we see how to make use of the Promises for Promises we must know are either directly to particular persons or implyed A promise made to any directly to any in particular is an implyed promise to me in the general equity in matter of grace and glory or the removal of some true misery what was made to Joshua is applyed to all the Church Heb. 13. that which was directly promised to him is an implyed promise to all that will make use of that example Again if so be that all the Promises of God be Yea and Amen that is certain and constant in Christ this should comfort us when men deal loosely with us and fail in their Promises whereon we have perhaps builded too much when men deal falsly with us And indeed there is nothing that makes an honest heart wearier of this wicked world then the consideration of the falshood of men in whom they trust Oh it is a cruel thing to deceive him that unlesse he had trusted he had never been deceived by thee it is a treacherous thing but this world is full of such treacherous dealing that a man can scarce trust assurances much lesse words But there are things thou mayest trust if thou have a heart concerning the best good there are Promises that are Tea and Amen there is a God that keeps Covenant it is his glory to do so from Generation to Generation Here is the comfort of a Christian when he finds falsenesse in the world to retire to his God and hide himself there And in the uncertainty of all things below in all changes as this world is full of changes now poor now rich now in favour now out of favour why what hath a Christian to cast himself on The Promises of God in Christ they are Yea and Amen they are promises that never fail They that know thy Name will trust in thee Psal. 9. what is the reason it followes Thou never failest those that trust in thee Therefore in the vicissitude and intercourse of all earthly things under the Moon that are like the Moon changeable let us stablish our soules upon that which is unchangeable and that will make us unchangeable if we build on it For the Word of the Lord endures for ever Esay 40. which is alledged by Peter 1 Pet. 1. All flesh is grass and as the flower of the grasse that is it fades as the grasse and as the flower of the grasse all the excellency of wit and learning it is but as the flower of the grasse but the Word of the Lord endures for ever How doth the Word of the Lord endure for ever Saint John expounds it 1 Joh. 2. A true Christian endures for ever by the Word of the Lord he that believes in the Word he endures for ever because his comforts endure for ever they are Yea and Amen his grace endures for ever Gods love endures to him for ever Therefore by building upon that which is certain we make our selves certain too when the Word is ingraffed it is S. James his phrase when it is ingraffed into our hearts it turns our hearts to be like it self it is eternal it self and it makes us eternal He that doth the will of the Lord abides for ever saith S. John The world passeth and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of the Lord abides for ever And the Word of the Lord abides for ever as it is in another place the one expounds the other that is we by believing and doing the Word of the Lord abide for ever To stir us up to rely constantly upon this Word the promises and the grace of God brought to us by the promises As I said before Shall we have certain promises of God that never lie and shall we not build on them What is there in the world to build on if we cannot build on this and yet the froward heart of man will believe any thing rather then Gods truth The Merchant man he commits his estate his goods to the Sea he hath no promise that they shall come again it is onely in the providence of God he hath made no promise for it The Husbandman commits his seed to the ground though he have nothing left of his seed and though he sowe in tears yet he commits all to the earth in hope of a return and yet he hath no promise for this but Gods ordinary providence that may sometimes fail Are we in such hope when we commit our seed to the ground and when we commit our goods to the Sea to the Waves and yet have not a promise for this but Gods ordinary providence which oft-times failes having not bound himself that it shall be alway so because God will shew himself the God of nature that he can command nature and shall we not trust him when we have his providence and his promise too when he is bound by his Promise when he hath made himself a debtor to us when the free God who is most free hath made himself a debtor by his promise and hath sealed his promise by an oath and by Sacraments Alas God hath made all things faithful to us therefore we trust them but we trust not him that hath made other things so and is so faithful to us Therefore let us build on these Promises in Jesus Christ. Now to direct us a little further to train our selves up to make use of the Promises of God in Jesus Christ Observe every day how God fulfills his promises in lesser matters Parents train up their children by education that they may trust them for their inheritance So God traines us up to believe his providence that he will provide for us without cracking our consciences by ill means will we not believe his Promises for these things and will we believe him for life everlasting no certainly we cannot therefore let us exercise faith to believe the promises for provision that he will not fail us not forsake us but be with us in our callings using lawful means for the things of this life Sometimes again take another method when faith begins to stagger for the things of this life quicken it with the grand Promises Will God give me life everlasting and hath he given me Christ are his
had at the first as Gods mending is ever for the better The state of grace and glory is better then ever the state of nature was spiritual is better then natural Therefore it is much for the glory of the wisdome of God that he can in Christ reconcile justice and mercy and shew more mercy then ever he did in making man out of the dust of the earth and all is to the glory of God These attributes especially are glorious in the promises in Christ. His Justice is glorious in punishing sin in Christ there sin is odious in the punishing of Christ God-man if we speak of justice there is justice If of Mercy to put it upon our surety for God to give his Son for us there is transcendent mercy and transcendent justice in the punishing of our sin how could it be punished greater And then the glory of his Wisdom to bring these together infinite mercy and infinite justice in Christ. Infinite Power for God to become man and without sin to be so farre abased a humble omnipotency to descend so low that God could be mortal and then to raise himself again And then the glory of his Truth that whatsoever was promised to Abraham to David to the Prophets all was performed in Christ all the Types here is glory by Christ of Mercy Justice Wisdome Truth for all are Yea and Amen in Christ. Therefore he may well say all this is To the glory of God Therefore consider how the glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ as the Apostle saith If you would see God see him shining in the face of Jesus Christ see his Mercy shining in Christ and his Justice in the punishing our sin in Christ see his Truth his Power his Wisdome shineing in Christ and shining more then in the Creation or in any thing in the world besides Can you honour God more then in believing the Gospel Can you dishonour him more then to call his truth into question that is Yea and Amen If you believe the Gospel you set to your seal that God is true 1 Joh. 3. What an honour is this that God will be honoured by you in setting to your seal that he is true you give him the glory of all his attributes In not believing what a dishonour do you do to God you deny his Mercy his Wisdome his Justice his Truth you deny all his attributes you make God a liar what a horrible sin is unbelief Therefore fortifie your faith The Devil layeth siege to our faith above all other things if he can shake that he shakes all for holy life goes when faith goes Who will love God or obey God when he knowes not whether he be his God or no Let faith flourish and it will quicken life in the heart Let the promises grow in the heart and the Word be graffed in the heart and all will flourish in a Christians life all will come off clearly and freely obedience will be chearful and free when we see God reconciled in Christ. Then love will be full of devices when I see Gods love to me what shall I do to shew love again to shew thanks to God where is there any that for Cods sake I may do good unto How shall I maintain the truth and resist all opposers of the truth Can I do too much for him that hath done so much for me Love quickens The Devil knowes if he can shake faith he shakes all Let us fortifie faith and we glorifie God more then by any thing else He is glorious in the Gospel and how shall he be so by us except we set our hearts to believe him Therefore let us seal Gods truth by our faith and set to our seales that God is true God vouchsafes to be honoured by weak sinful men believing of him and that faith that honours him he will be sure to honour By us By us Ministers How When the Gospel is preached God is carried in triumph as it were and his banner is set up and the Promises displayed and sinners called unto him and God is glorified by the discovery of these things and faith is wrought in people to whom they are discovered and they glorifie God when they believe they blesse God that ever they heard these tydings so every way God is glorified The Ministers they open as it were the box of sweet oyntment that the savour of it may be in the Church and spread far They lay open the tapestry the rich treasures of Gods mercies they dig deep and find out the treasure Therefore these Promises in Scripture being so made and performed in Christ they tend to Gods glory but by us by our Ministery God to knit man and man together will convey the good he means to convey by the despised Ministery The enemies therefore of the Ministery of the Gospel what are they here is a double prejudice against them they are enemies of the glory of God and of the comfort of Gods people for they glorifie God in the sense of his mercy when it is unfolded to them God gets glory and they comfort What do we think then of Popish spirits that feed the people only with dead and dull ceremonies but let them go I go on to the next Verse having dwelt somewhat long on this VERSE XXI Now he that stablisheth us with you in Christ is God who hath anointed us c. AS the riches of a Christian consisteth in the promises of God which as we have heard in Christ are all Yea and Amen so unlesse he be stablished and built upon this strength all is nothing What if a man stand on a rock if he be not built on it what if the foundation be never so strong if he be not stablished thereon It is not sufficient that the Promises be stablished but we must be stablished upon them The Promises of God are indeed Yea and Amen might the soul say but what is that to me Therefore the Apostle addeth He that gives the Promises will stablish us upon the promises Now he which stablisheth us with you in Christ is God The first thing that I will observe before we come to the particular handling of the words shall be onely this in the general from the connexion and knitting together of this Verse with the former viz. That there must be a double Amen There is an Amen in the Promises they are in themselves true there must be an Amen likewise in us we must say Amen to them that is we must be stablished upon them There must be an Echo in a Christians heart unto God that as God saith These and these things I promise and they are all Amen so the soul by faith must Echo again These things are for me I believe them For as we say in the Schooles to good purpose there is a double certainty a double firmnesse a certainty of the Object and a
certainty of the Subject there is a firmnesse of the Promises in Jesus Christ and there must be a firmnesse in us upon those Promises It is no matter what the certainty of the thing be that we are to build upon if there be not a certainty in the person if there be not a building on that thing God shall lose the glory of his truth and we the comfort unlesse we be certain as well as the promises are certain It is no matter what the garment be if it be not put on It is no matter as I said before how firm the rock be if we plant not our selves upon it and therefore besides the writing of Gods Word on Tables unlesse he write it likewise in our hearts unlesse our hearts be stablished on that truth that in it self is certain that it may be certain to us all is to no purpose You see therefore the absolute necessity of the application of the soul unto those truths which are certain and sure in themselves there must be a stablishing of us as well as a stablishing of the promises There is a necessity of the application of the promises to our selves that they be true to us Christ is a garment we must put him on then he is the robes that we appear glorious before God in but we must put him on by faith Christ is the food of life he is so indeed but then he must be digested Meat except it be applyed except the stomach work nourishment out of it by application and so digest it to all the parts the body hath not nourishment from it Christ is the foundation of his Church I but there must be application we as living stones must be built on him Let the foundation be never so strong if the stones be not laid on the foundation the stones cannot stand Though Christ be the Spouse of the Church and be never so rich there must be application and consent we must strike up the bargain and match between Christ and us There must be our consent to tie our selves to him to give up our selves to him So look to all the comfortable relations that our blessed Saviour hath taken upon him in the book of God they all enforce application The ground I say is this that though there be never so much certainty in the thing yet if there be not a certainty in the person to found application upon all is to no purpose These two therefore must go together and they are sweet relatives promises on Gods part and faith on our part The Promises and Christ are nothing without faith For there must be a touch to draw vertue If faith have never so little touch of Christ it will draw vertue but there must be a touch there must be application Christ is nothing without faith and faith is nothing without Christ and the Promises For what is the difference between faith and presumption presumption is an empty groundlesse fruitlesse conceit faith builds on the Promises of the Word we can alledge the Promise It is nothing for a mad man to assume himself to be King of another Countrey why he hath no promise He that made account that all the ships that came to the Haven were his it was but a frantick part of him and so he was accounted So a man that thinks his estate is good and builds not himself upon the promise that hath no ground for it out of Gods Word it is but a presumptuous frantick conceit The promises are nothing without faith and faith is nothing without the promises There must be application This I thought good to observe first in the general To come now more particularly to the words themselves He that stablisheth us with you c. In the words you have first A gracious Act of building or stablishing Secondly The Basis the foundation of that stablishing or building and that is Christ. Thirdly the Authour of this stablishing God Lastly the persons who are built and stablished on that foundation with you He that stablisheth us with you in Christ is God The first thing is the Act Stablishing The point is this first That Stablishing settling grace is necessary It is necessary that there be a stablishing confirming grace It is not sufficient that we be brought out of the Kingdome of Satan for when we are gotten out of his hands and strength he pursues us with continual malice therefore there must be the same power to stablish us still in grace that first brought us into the state of grace For as Providence is a continuall creation so stablishing grace is the continuance of the new creature the same grace that sets us in the state of the new creation in Christ the same stablisheth us Stablishing grace is necessary It is necessary many wayes Man of himself is an unstable creature take him at the best but a creature God found no stability in the Angels take the best of creatures even as creatures they are unstable For God will have a creature as a creature to be a dependant thing upon the Creator who is a being of himself Jehovah There is no stability in any creature Man in his best estate was an unstable creature Since we are very unstable ready to be carried away in our judgment to the wind of any false doctrine ready to be blown over with every little temptation Nay now in the state of grace in our selves we are very unstable ready to fly off presently and therefore we have need to be established of God It is necessary in regard of the indisposition of our nature to supernatural truths we are an unprepared subject for them in our selves The Law indeed we have some principles of it but of the Gospel there are in us no seeds at all of it and that is the reason there are so many Heresies against the Gospel there are none against the Law And therefore Divine truths being contrary to our disposition as there must be a supernatural beginner so there must be a supernatural strengthener he that is Alpha must be Omega As there must be a mighty subduing of the heart to be a vessel to receive these truths an Almighty power to lay the soul on this foundation because of the contrariety of the truth to the natural heart of man so there is need of no lesse then of a Divine and supernatural stablishing Our natures are very inconstant and unsettled and wayward take us at the best before the fall you see how soon we fell being left to our selves and having no stablishing grace Much more now since the fall is there a nenecessity of Divine stablishing when we come to know the truth we are subject to fall away like little children that are ready to sink if they be not upheld by their parents or nurse God must uphold and propus and shore us up we presently sink else Moses was but in the Mount a while and we see how soon
necessity of Gods writing his truth in our bowels he saith in the Covenant of grace I will write my Law in their inward parts thaat is I will teach their very hearts that knowledge that they have shall be spiritual For beloved the knowledge that must save us must not onely be of Divine things but it must be Divine it must not onely be of spirituall things but it must be spiritual the light that we have of spirituall things must be answerable to the things we must see them by their own light we cannot know spiritual and heavenly things by a humane light but as the things themselves are spiritual so we must have the Spirit of God that by it we may come to know spiritual things spiritually Desire God therefore to vouchsafe us his Spirit that it may teach us and convince us of the truth of those things which we read and hear God must do it he must perswade and bow the heart and will and affections and so he will do it and doth it to those that rely upon him And this is the second Branch As God must do it so God will do it What is the Reason of that It is this he will do it because he is constant where he begins a good work he will finish it to the day of the Lord. He will do it because in the Covenant of Grace he hath undertaken both parts both his own and ours He undertakes his own part which is to give us eternal life and to give us Christ and he undertakes our part too which is to believe and to cleave unto Christ c. he makes this good himself he works this in the heart by the Spirit for therefore it is called the Covenant of Grace because God himself is graciously pleased to do both parts Which must be comfortably remembred against an Objection that flesh and blood will make I might indeed come to God and Christ but I am an unworthy empty creature I have no faith Come and atrend upon the means the gift of application and confirming and stablishing is part of the Covenant The Covenant that God makes with thee is not onely to give thee life everlasting and glory but to give thee grace likewise Faith is the gift of God He that stablisheth us and confirms us upon that which is certain in it self is God Lay it up against a time of temptation for a pillar and ground of your faith that here God doth both he gives us Promises and gives us Christ whereon the Promises are founded and likewise establisheth us and seals us c. he doth all So that as none can stablish the soul but God by his Spirit so he will do it It is an excellent reason of the Apostle in Rom. 5. If when we were enemies God gave us his Son to reconcile us how much more now shall we be saved If we were saved by the Death of Christ when we were enemies much more shall we be preserved by his life he now living in heaven So I say If God when there was nothing in us but we were in a clean opposite estate did begin spiritual life in us much more will he stablish that which he hath begun in us And this stablishing as well as the beginning of grace comes likewise from God for take Grace in the whole latitude and extent of it take all that can be in grace all comes graciously from God the offer of it the beginning of it this manner of it that it should be strong the strengthning of grace it comes from God he strengtheneth us in grace as well as begins it so that Grace it self and this Modus this manner that it is strong and firm that it should hold out all comes from God A Christian needs not onely converting grace but stablishing grace God that converted him must stablish him and build him up and confirm him Peter was in the state of grace and yet when God did not stablish him you see how he fell so David was an excellent man but when God did not stablish him you see how he fell The weakest with the stablishing grace of God will stand and the strongest without the stablishing grace of God will sink and fall The Apostle doth not say he hath done but he doth stablish us This must be considered that the life of a Christian is a perpetual dependant life not onely in his conversion he lives by faith he hath his first life but ever after he lives by faith that is dependance on God for assistance and protection and strength in the whole course of his life The ignorance of this makes us subject to fail for when we trust to grace received and do not seek for a new supply we fall into Peters case Though all men for sake thee yet will not I hereupon Peter fell fouly he had too much confidence in grace received Therefore God is fain to humble his children to teach them dependance and usually therefore in Scripture where some special grace is given he hath somewhat joyned with it to put them in mind that they do not stand by their own strength In the same Chapter where Peter makes a glorious confession Thou art the Son of the living God and he was honoured of Christ by that confession yet Christ calls him Satan in the same Chapter and he forsakes his Master A strange thing To teach us that we stand not of our selves When we are strong it is by God when we are weak it is by our selves Jacob wrastled and was a prevailer with God but he was fain to halt for it he was struck with halting all the dayes of his life though he had the victory and overcame God taking upon him as I said before the person of an enemy to strive with him yet God to put him in mind that he had the strength whereby he prevailed from him and not of himself he made him limp all his dayes We need perpetual dependance upon God Therefore let us set upon nothing in our own strength as Hannah saith comfortably 1 Sam. 2. No man is strong by his own strength God is all our sufficiency Mans nature doth affect a kind of Divinity he would be a God to himself but God will teach him that he is not a God but a dependant creature He affects a Divinity thus he will set upon things in confidence of his own wisdome without prayer and thinks to work things with the strength of his own parts to compasse things with his own wit to bring things to a good issue O no it will not be so In Prov. 3. Acknowledge God in all thy wayes That is acknowledge him in thy enterprizes in any thing acknowledge him in the progresse that thou needest stabilishing grace acknowledge him in the issue that thou needest his blessing upon all thy endeavours acknowledge God in all our wayes Therefore whas do we but make our selves Gods when we set upon businesse
the sweetnesse of his spirit joynes us with you he saith not you with us but as if they were as firmly set in Christ as himself he saith us with you he puts them together with himself for indeed all of us one with another weak Christians and strong Christians fetch all that we have from one Fountain draw all from one Spring are led all by one Spirit You have here also the Character of a sound Christian he loves and values all Christians A carnal man may value excellent Christians that have excellent parts of whom he hopes for kindnesse in some peculiar regard but he loves not all the Saints Love to all Christians as they be Christians because they have some anointing of the Spirit some earnest somewhat they have to be valued is a note of a good and sound Christian Another reason why he joynes us with you is to shew that the working of the Spirit it is not in the members severed from the body but as they are in the body The Spirit works in us but in us with you and in you with us that is as all the spirits come from the head and heart to the severall members of the body so they must be united they must be in the body before they can have the benefit of the spirits there must be an union with Christ the head and with the rest of the members before we can have the Spirit to strengthen us and anoint us those that rend themselves from the body cannot hope for stablishing from the head This should be a bond to ty us to the communion of Saints we have all that we have in the body we all grow in the body we are all stones in one building whereof Christ is the foundation therefore as stones in an Arch strengthen one another so should we Let us look for grace to be given in the communion of Saints it is an ill sign when any man will be a solitary Christian and will stand alone by himself As we are knit to Christ by faith so we must be knit to the communion of Saints by love That which we have of the Spirit is had in the communion of Saints It is worth ohserving the better to cherish Christian lovingnesse Thus you see the parts of this sentence in which we have the grace it self here spoken of Stablishing In whom we are stablished In Christ. By whom by God And who those are that are stablished Us with you To make now some Application of all If it be God that stablisheth us let us make this Use of it Let God have the glory of our stablishing If we have it in dependance upon God by Prayer let us return all by praise and thanksgiving all comes of his meer grace let all return to his meer glory Not unto us but unto thy Name give the praise It is the song of the Church on earth and the song of the Church triumphant in heaven that all glory be to God in all the whole carriage of salvation The promises are his stablishing is his that he would make a Covenant it is his that he will perform his Covenant to us it is his that he will enable us to perform the Covenant it is by his strength all is his therefore both the Church here and the Church in heaven our song should be Great and gracious and merciful is the true God that is so gracious and righteous in all his promises Let us labour I beseech you for stablishing especially in these times Is it not a shame that we have gotten no more ground now then we had threescore yeares ago nay that we rather call principles into question The Pope hath been Antichrist and Traditions have been accounted Traditions and not equal with the Word what shall we now stagger in the foundation is here our progresse Oh beloved labour to be stablished in the present truth that you may not be a prey for every subtile man And here especially I would speak to the younger sort that they should labour for this stablishing betimes before they be engaged in the world and before other businesses possesse them over-deeply for falshood hath more correspondency and suits better with our corruption specially if it be forced from subtil wits it prevailes much with unstable dispositions those that are uncatechized and ungrounded they are soon led away and therefore with other studies we should study the truth and remember that our best calling is to be a Christian and our best honour to be able to stand for the truth we professe Labour to have fundamental graces established and then all will be stablished if the root be strengthened the tree stands fast radical graces must be strengthened First Humility The foundation of Religion is very low and humility and abasing is in all parts of Religion every grace hath a mixture of humility because our graces are from God they are dependences Now humility is an emptying grace and acknowledgeth that in my self I am nothing Spiritual poverty with humility acknowledgeth that I in my self am a dependent creature if God withhold his influence if God withdraw his grace I shall be as other men as Sampson when his hair was cut Our strength is in God altogether Let us pray that we may be humble God gives grace to the humble When I am weak saith blessed S. Paul then I am strong that is when I am humble and feel and acknowledge my weaknesse then I am strong or else a man is not strong when he is weak but when he feeles and acknowledgeth his weaknesse Therefore let us labour to grow in humility and self-denial and we shall grow in strength Then again another radical grace to be stablished is Faith Depend upon God altogether for considering our strength is out of our selves and faith being a grace that goes out of our selves and layes hold of that that is out of our selves faith is necessary to our stablishing Believe and ye shall be stablished saith the Prophet Though the Promise be sure in it self yet we must be established by faith How doth God stablish us by working a spirit of faith therefore strengthen faith strengthen all other graces all have their issue from faith And faith comes from sound knowledge knowledge therefore hath the name of faith This is eternal life to know thee strengthen and increase knowledge Historical faith is nothing but knowledge when we know the Word of God to be as it is and that is the ground of justifying faith and dependance For the more I know God in Covenant as he hath revealed himself and the more I know the promise and the more I know Christ the more I shall depend upon him and trust in him They that know thy Name will trust in thee Psal. 9. Therefore let us labour for certainty of knowledge that we may have certainty of faith What is the reason that our faith is weak because men
19. It put his soul out of taste with all other things This joy of the Spirit it puts such a relish in the soul that it makes it undervalue all other things whatsoever the price of other things falls down when a man joyes in the Holy Ghost because it ariseth from the grounds of faith from peace and righteousnesse And likewise if it look forward from the hope of life everlasting and the favour of God the ground of all It riseth from things that are above all other contentments The loving kindnesse of the Lord that faith apprehends that is the ground of joy it is above life it self Now life is the sweetest thing upon earth but the loving kindnesse of God is better then that Therefore those that lose their soules in base contentments and joy in the dirty things of this life that are not fit for the soul to fasten on to place contentment in but are only to be used as those that take a journey to refresh them but those that are swallowed up in these things they know not what spiritual joy is that ariseth from the Word of God from divine truth that ariseth from faith for if they did this joy would raise them higher above all earthly contentments whatsoever Then again where this joy is this spiritual enlargement of soul which is called joy it is from true grounds it is with humility For the same Word that discovers matter of joy discovers matter of humility and grief in our selves by reason of the remainders of sin and of our own deservings So true joy it is a tempered and qualified joy it is not joyned with pride and swelling because it riseth from those grounds that teach us what we are in our selves alas such that we need not be proud in our selves but if we will glory we must glory in God Well it is not that that I mean principally to stand on but only I speak of it because it is placed here for faith as it springs from faith we are helpers of your joy To hasten then to that that followes For by faith ye stand This principally depends upon the first words We have not dominion over your faith because faith is such a grace as you stand by in all conditions Now what you stand by must be firm it must be on a good bottome and what is firm must not be humane but divine therefore we have no dominion over your faith for by faith ye stand Standing is a military word by faith ye stand that is first of all faith gives a standing a certain standing before any conflict it gives a standing in Christianity it sets the soul in a frame in a standing Nay faith helps us we stand by faith not only in a frame of Christianity and furnished with spiritual strength but then we are fit to encounter opposition by faith we stand to it and stand against all opposition we stand and stand to it by faith And standing likewise implies continuance in managing Christianity and opposing all enemies whatsoever by faith we stand and continue standing we hold out in all opposition Standing likewise in the next place implies a kind of safety together with victory at length By faith ye stand you stand so as you are not wounded to death you stand so as you are kept safe especially from mortal wounds and altogether safe so far as you use faith as a shield till you have got perfect victory and faith end in triumph So faith is that grace whereby we stand whereby we are in a frame of Religion fit to stand and whereby we so standiug encouter oppositions and continue so encountering and preserve our selves safe till victory be obtained this is the full expression and comprehension of the word By faith ye stand Now why is it by faith that we have this standing Because faith it is that grace in the new Covenant that makes the soul go out of it self it empties the soul of all things in it self and goes out to somewhat else whereupon it stands For in the new Covenant since Adams fall all our strength is in the second Adam our head we fetch it there And faith is the hand of the soul. Now because faith in the new Covenant is an emptying grace and likewise because as it is a grace that empties the soul so it fastens upon another thing whereupon it relies for faith is an uniting grace as well as an emptying grace now faith emptying and uniting so it makes us stand And likewise faith as it drawes it hath a drawing vertue an attractive force it is a radical grace it is like a root when it knits to Christ it sucks out and drawes vertue from him every touch of faith drawes spiritual strength and vertue so it causeth us to stand by the attractive vertue it hath And then it is the force of faith likewise to make things present For therein it differs from hope hope looks upon things as absent now the things that hope looks on as things remote and distant in time and place faith makes them present therefore it is said to be the evidence of things not seen Now that that makes the soul to be strong and able to stand it must be somewhat present however the full possession of things be reserved not for faith but for vision for comprehenders in heaven where faith ends and determines yet notwithstanding faith drawes so much for the present it sets things to come so far present with such evidence and force as it upholds the soul and makes it stand It is the evidence of things not seen And thereupon it hath a kind of omnipotent power to make things that are not to be Heaven and glory and happinesse they are not for the pesent but faith looking on them in the authority of God and the divine promises faith makes them present by a kind of almighty power that it hath laying hold on an almighty power and hereupon it upholds the soul it is the prop and stay of the soul as in Heb. 11. it signifies to stay up to hold up as a pillar even from this vertue it hath to make things to come present You see then what it is to stand and how faith is fitted for this purpose because as I said it is the grace of the new Covenant emptying us and drawing us to Christ from whom we draw all vertue and because it makes things to come as present By faith wr are set in a right frame and condition again as by want of faith we fell The same grace must set us right for want of which we fell How came we to fall at the first You know Adam hearkened to his wife Eve and she hearkened to the Serpent they trusted not in God they began to stagger at the promises to stagger at the Word of God Satan robbed them of the Word He observes and continues the same Art still to take the Word from us and to
cause us to stagger and doubt whether it be true or no. He comes between us and our rock the Word of God So Adam fell Now we must be restored by the contrary to that we fell we fell by unbelief and distrust by calling Gods truth in question we must learn to stand again by the contrary grace by faith Thus you see the termes something unfolded By faith ye stand To clear it a little further There be four degrees of a slent that the soul hath to any thing The first is a slight assent that we call opinion that is with some fear that it may be otherwise that is a weak a pendulous assent It is a wavering assent it yields not a certain assent Opinion is a weak thing it may be so I but it may not be so it is with a fear of the contrary The second degree of assent is that that hath a better ground that is the assent to grounds of reason a man hath reason to yield and assent to and those reasons satisfy the soul and rest the soul something thereafter as the strength of them is And that assent we call knowledge science this is founded upon grounds of reason There is a third kind of assent and yielding that the soul hath that we call believing which is meerly upon the credit of him that speakes though we know no reason why the thing should be so but only the person it may be is a person of credit and wisdome and knowledge and thereafter as we conceive well of him thereafter we fasten our faith and assent to his authority so that assent to the authority of the speaker we call beliefe The fourth degree of assent is when we do not only assent to the thing because we have reason so to do and arguments or because we have some man to confirm it by authority but because we feel it to be so by experience and by taste As a man assents that fire is hot and that sweet things are so not from reason altogether or from the speech or rehearsing of another man but because he feeles it so indeed he assents to it from experience Now you will say How come we then to stand by faith As faith especially relies upon the authority of God upon Gods Word so we stand by faith because it assents to an authority But Gods Word gives reasons too therefore faith assents to the authority of Gods Word first and then we see divine reason enough too when we once believe God And then experience in Divine things too after we believe there is an incredible sweetnesse in divine things there is a knowledge with a particular taste There is never a Divine truth but it hath an evidence in it when a man believes it once that a man may say I know whom I have believed from experience let the speakers of the things be what they will let them apostatize from that that they have spoken after a man believes he will see the things themselves have Divine reason in them as well as Divine authority stablishing of them Some Divine truths are altogether upon Divine authority we see no other reason but that God hath said it but some truths are both credible and intelligible Credible because God hath said it and there is reason to prove it as a man may prove by Divine reason that all shall work for the best why The Apostle faith We love God and God hath called us according to his purpose therefore all things shall work for them that God hath called to them that answer his Divine call There is both reason and comfort so it is credible as it hath divine truth and intelligible as it hath comfort There are homogeneal reasons with divine authority God doth not only presse us with authority but he gives us reasons Besides this there is experience for the doctrine of divine providence and of the corruption of nature and the doctrine of comfort in the Mediatour Christ altogether The doctrine of faith the doctrine of the issue of all troubles for good we find these by experience however the teacher that teach●…h them perhaps may have no sense of them himself let him apostatize and do what he will our faith stands upon them partly because God saith so that is the chief and because there is reason for them and because we find it so by experience in many divine things these three both reason authority and experience concur in faith But to come a L●…de further What doth faith it self stand most on by which we stand that which we stand o●… must stand it self Let us examine a little what faith it self stands on by which we stand I shewed you before partly by Divine authority and experience which gives some light to it but we will follow it a little further That faith by which we stand must stand it self therefore it cannot be opinion it must be faith It must not be bare science neither it must be science that hath faith faith must come in Now faith looks to Divine revelation especially it looks to truth revealed from God now faith looking to the Word of God it builds and pitcheth and bottoms it self upon Divine truth Divine authority Divine revelation which we call the first truth the first verity And not only so but faith that it may stand the better hath together with the Word of God the seales for God hath added Sacraments as Seales to the Word that helps the Word to us at least Gods Word is true enough of it self in regard of him but he condescends to us and therefore that faith may stand the better that we may build upon his Word there are his Sacraments there are seales together with his Word and his oath too Again that his Word may be the better foundation for faith it is conceived under the manner of a Covenant the Evangelical part of it the Covenant of Grace wherein God in Christ promiseth to forgive our sins to accept us to life everlasting if we believe in Christ It is a gracious Covenant God condescends to make a Covenant that faith may stand shall not I believe him that hath made a Covenant and bound himself by Covenant that he will do so Nay in the Covenant of grace faith layes hold upon this that he will fulfill and perform both conditions himself both his part and our part For the same truths that are a Covenant are a Testament too in the Gospel A Testament bequeathes things without a covenant and therein it differs from a covenant A Testament is I bequeath and give this Now whatsoever Christ in the Covenant requires because that in the Gospel he makes good the Covenant as a Testament If we believe and repent Now he hath promised to give repentance and belief in the Covenant of grace to all that attend upon the meanes and expect the performance of the Covenant from him For we can no
their worst if you will needs fear I will tell you whom you shall f●…ar Fear him that can cast both body and soul into hell So if we be forced to suffer the losse of any thing that is good in the world or be cast into any ill condition what saith S. Paul The troubles and afflictions of the world are not worthy of the glory that shall be revealed Let us set that glory before us and that will prevail against that all the world can threaten or take from us what is all to it nothing Therefore by faith we stand we keep our own standing and withstand all oppositions whatsoever Oh but what if there come more subtile temptations end the Lord himself seemes to be our enemy that we have sinne and God is angry and we see he followes us with afflictions that are evidences of his anger how shall we stand now and keep our selves from despair This is a fiery dart of Satan when a man hath sinned and conscience is awakened to make him sink in despair O but faith will make the soul to stand in these great temptations against those fiery darts faith puts a shield into the hand of the soul to beat back all those fiery darts For faith will present Christ to God Indeed I have been a sinner but thou hast ordained a Saviour and he is of thine own appointing of thine own a●…ting a Saviour of thine own giving and thou hast made a promise that Whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have everlasting life I cast my self upon thy mercy in him hereupon faith comes to withstand all such fiery temptations whatsoever nay against God himself Lord thou canst not deny thine own Saviour thou ●…mest to be an enemy and though I be a sinner and have deserved to be cast into hell yet I come to thee in the Name of thy Son that is at thy right hand and pleads for me by vertue of his blood shed for me I came in his Name thou canst not refuse thy owne Son For all temptations when a man hath faith in him it will send Satan to Christ to answer for him Go to Christ he is my husband he hath paid my debts he hath satisfied for my sins So that whatsoever the temptation be make it as subtle as you will there is a skill in faith to stand against it and to beat back all the fiery darts of Satan Therefore to end all we see here what an excellent estate a Christian is in above all others that he hath a better standing then others have not onely a better standing in Religion then the Papists have but in the profession of Religion he hath a better standing then common professors why he stands by faith by sound faith He stands not upon opinion or because he hath been bred so he stands not upon his wit because he sees reason for it he stands upon faith and faith stands upon divine authority he stands partly upon his own experience that seconds faith Those then that care not for Religion what standing have they those that stand only in pleasures and profits and in the favour of great men what standing have they They stand as the Psalmist saith in slippery places There is no man but if he nave not faith he stands slippery though he be never so great if he be a Monarch alas what is it to stand a while all these things are but uncertain though they yield present content they are but uncertain contentments the Wise-man saith they are but vanity they are like the reed of Egypt that will not uphold they will not sustein the soul in the time of trouble there is nothing that a man can stand upon and fasten his soul upon if he be not Religious that will hold scarce the fit of an ague that will hold in the pangs of death even in the entrance of it that will hold in terrours of conscience How little a trouble will blow away all those that stand on so weak a foundation as an earthly thing is For they have but an Imaginary good to speak of and that Imagination is driven out by the sense of the contrary Let contrary troubles come and all their fooles Paradise and their happinesse they had before is at an end it goes no deeper then Imagination All the things in this world stablish not the heart Those that do not stand by faith in the favour of God in Christ let their standing be what it will it will soon be over turned by any temptation they can stand out against nothing Therefore let us labour above all things in the world to have that faith strengthened by which we stand and let us often be encouraged to strengthen our faith by all means that we may stand the better upon it and try our faith before we trust it it is that that we must trust to and stand to in life and death Therefore let us often think Is my faith good is it well built Let us oft put this query to our soules I believe the Religion I professe but upon what grounds I believe the truths in the Word of God but upon what grounds have I a clear understanding of them because they are divine doth the Spirit of God open them and shew a light in the Scripture that is divine doth the Spirit of God give me a relish of the Scriptures above all the pleasures in the world Do I find God speaking to my heart in the Word do I find the Spirit of God with his Ordinance then my knowledge and my faith will hold out I can stand by that faith in the Word that is wrought by the Spirit and fastened upon the Word with the Spirit But if I believe the Religion I professe only because the State doth so and if the King and State should do otherwise I would change my Religion or if it be because my parents were so or my friends and Patron is of that religion whom I depend upon or because I see greater seeming reason for this then for the other I can hold argument for this and not for the other Alas this will not hold But labour to know the truth of the Word of God by experience as much as we can and by the Spirit of God giving evidence to our soules from the inward grounds of Scripture that it is the Word I know whom I have trusted I know the promises are good I have felt them in my soul the Spirit hath reported them to my soul they are sweeter then all the things in the world It is a sure Word I bottome upon it I have found the comfort of it before therefore I will build upon it We can never stand unlesse we can make our knowledge spiritnal it is but acquisite knowledge else We fall in three things vilely we labour that our knowledge of Religion be spiritual and fetched divinely out of the Word of God together with the Spirit We
sincerity by pleading corruptions By pleading afflictions Order in sincerity 1. A deep foundation 2. Faith 3. Love Simile Sincerity extends to all a mans life Wicked men have fits of goodnesse God judgeth by the tenour of our life Observ. Christianity may stand with converse in the world Observ. Religion makes a man converse in the world untainted Reason A Christian hath a spirit above the world Grace increased by opposition Not to tempt God by rushing into ill company Object Answ. Times appointed by God Halting in Religion brings danger Observ. We must have our conversation in sincerity while we live here Depravers of goodnesse blamed Observ. A true Christian best where he is best known Christians substantial not painted Use. To approve our selves most where we are best known Simile Ministers win by Life as well as Doctrine Wisdom either 1. Natural Simile Politick wisdome 3. Spiritual 4. Fleshly wisdom Wisdome what Carnal wisdome what Why fleshly wisdome Flesh what The Soul placed between good and evil Wisdome according as the man in whom it is All carnal men have not fleshly wisdome Observ. Fleshly wisdome where there is not sincerity Doctr. Gods Children no●… ruled by fleshly wisdome Reason 1. It is Gods enemy 2. It is our enemy Reason 2. It is base Reason 3. They must mortifie it Reas. 4. It doth all the mischief in the world It hinders from good It sets it self against good It hinders from reforming of ill It hinders from suffering It provokes to evil It keeps in ill Carnal wisdome mistaken Ground of Credulity Jealousie Use. To disclaim fleshly wisdome A great Judgement to begiven up to our selves August Use 2. To get our hearts changed Get assurance of salvation See the vanity of earthly thingse Not to walk by fleshly wisdome breeds joy To repent of carnal devices Gods Children not led onely by the rules of reason Christians renouncing fleshly wisdome have a better guide Quest. Why t●… Apostle names Grace not Wisdome Answ. Wisdome not from our selves but Gods Grace 2. We are guided not only by wisdome but other Graces 3. Our want of wisdome supplyed by grace Gods wisdome for us more then in us Why weaker christiani are sometimes safer Obser. A Christian needs wisdome 1. To avoid dangers 2. Because of the likenesse between good and evill 3. In regard of hindrances and helps to good 4. Good is not good without it 5. Good is hid under evil Wisdome may be bad Use. To go to God for wisdome God gives wisdome for the things of this life Men leaving Gods wisdome miscarry Use. Reproo●… of those that subordinate Religion to State-Policy Observ. True wisdome toucheth Conversation Use. Bad livers no bodies in Religion Grace two-fold 1. The favour of God 2. Something wrought in us 1. A Change 2. Particular graces 1. Heavenly light 2. Love 3. Hope Patience 4. Faith 3. Exciting applying strengthening Grace Doctr. All our wisdom from Grace Every thing necessary to heaven a grace Use. Not to ascribe any thing to our selves God ready to give Grace Reason Christ hath undertaken it Presumption Against Despair Consider our parts and duty Beg assistance of God Go to Christ. Go to the Promises Renounce Carnal Wisdome Incouragements to be guided by Grace Quest. Answ. Signes of being led by Grace 1. To renounce carnal wisdome Sign 2. Simplicity Sincerity Sign 3. The strength of Grace Sign 4. In men of great parts By abasing his gifts and parts In men of weaker parts Sign 5. From the ground of his actions Sign 6. Graces are together Every Grace of use to a Christian Sign 7. When a man provides for his best good Help 1. Submit all to the Spirit of Grace Self-denyal 〈◊〉 Humility 3. High esteem of wisdome 4. To acquaint our selves with God 5. To meditate on the free love and Grace of God 6. Challenge the Covenant of Grace Popery founded on carnal wisdome 1. In the Government 2. In their Worship 3. Opinions Best Statesmen who Observ. A Christian uniform Abuse of signes Observ. God is wise for those that walk by Grace Observ. Gods Children have place in the conscience of others Use. To approve our selves to mens consciences Trust what S. Paul's good conceit of the Corinthians Reason 1. Reason 2. Reas. 3. To entertain good conceits of others Saint Paul's resolution to hold to the end S. Paul's sourse to persevere How the Corinthians were S. Paul's rejoycing To imitate S. Paul in this Resolution The glory of a good life To take God in our resolutions Saint Paul's comfort Things of the world uncertain To examine what we acknowledge Men deceived in the death of others Danger of ill company Aggravation of Hell-torments Ground of ill mens cruelty To be constant in good courses Observ. A sign of a good estate to acknowledge him that hath told us of our sins Use. Tryal Acknowledgment what Christ acknowledged in the Minister Acknowledge Christ what Who acknowledgeth not Christ. To acknowledge the Word To acknowledge the Minister Ministers joyned with Christ in acceptance and neglect Doctr. A faithful Minister the joy of the people Reason He brings Christ the cause of joy Original of our joy Christ must be opened by the Ministery Use of the Ministery Ministers wooers for Christ. Ministers a gift of God The Ministery a great blessing Why God brings men to heaven by men Gods benefits come by the Ministery Use. To rejoyce in enjoying Gids Ordinance Doct. The peoples good is the Ministers joy 1. The matter of his joy 2. A meanes to increase his joy 3. The seal of his Ministery 4. To evidence that he was a good man Use. To be good under the Ministery Good communicative Wicked men draw others to sin Use. To labour to make others good The misery of opposers of goodnesse Not to leave Churches for some corruptions Observ. Christ hath a Day Simile Doctr. Christians rejoycing as it will be at the last day What will avail at the last day who take the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Application to the Sacrament How we are acquainted with Christ. To acknowledge Christ in the Sacrament what Thoughts of Judgment make us painful Observ. Good as far as may be to cherish a good opinion of others Reason 1. Reason 2. Not to cast off men for infirmities Use. Encouragement to inferiours to give occasion of good hope Observ. Personal presence hath a special power Use. To esteem Gods Ordinance Object Answ. Saint Paul's end in coming to Corinth Observ. Holy men work from holy ends Use. To look to our aimes in our actions Doctr. The preaching of the Gospel a special grace Reason It is the means to work all good in us Use. To esteem the Word as a Grace How to come to be thankful Doctr. Those that are in the state of Grace need a second grace Reason 1. From inward opposition Reas. 2. From without Reas. 3. From new temptations Reason 4. From the time to come Reason 5. From Satan Reason 6. From the capacity of the soul.
abuse Promises of this life 2. Gods Promises wondrously performed 3. God deferreth his performance To wait Gods time Believe contraries in contraries To have Amen for Gods Amen Complaint of Unbelief Faith in the Promises honours God Why God honors faith so much To make the Promises familiar How to make use of former examples What use to make of the story of our own lives Comfort in the false dealing of men To deceive trust odious Comfort in all changes in the world How the Word of the Lord endures for ever To rely constantly on the constant Promises To observe how God daily fulfills his Promises 1. For temporals 2. For spirituals Turn Promises into Prayers Labour to know the Promises Work the Promises on our hearts Evidences of believing the Promises 1. They breed joy 2. They quicken to obedience 3. They purge 4. They quiet the soul. 5. A staying of t●…e soul when all i●… contrary 6. Faithfulnesse in our Promises to God Quest. Answ. God gives grace to perform the Covenant God promiseth the things be requires Promises Legacies Covenant a Testament Threatnings of God Amen as well as Promises 7. Opposition of flesh and fleshly men Carnal men despise those that trust in Gods Promises To go to God in Christ to perform the promises How to think of Christ. All in the world nothing without Christ. Observ. Gods glory manifested in the Gospel More then in the Creation Our estate in Christ better then Adam's Glory of Gods Justice His Mercy Wisdome Power Truth To see Gods Attributes in Christ. To honour God by believing the Gospel Glory of God by the Ministery Observ. A double Amen 1. In Gods Promises 2. In our Faith Necessity of application Difference between faith and presumption Observ. Stablishing grace necessary Reason 1. In regard of our indisposition 2. In regard of oppositions Difference between true Christians and others Degrees of faith Observ. Christ the foundation of our stability 1. Our Judgment stablished in Christ. 2. Our Will 3. Our affections A Christians stability more then Adam's or Angels None are firm but Christians Observ. God onely can stablish the soul. 1. By shewing our misery and Christs excellency The ground of believing Gods Word Reason of Apostasie The reason of unfruitfulnesse The reason of Despair Spiritual knowledge necessary Observ. God will stablish us 1. Because he is constant All of Grace from God Ground of a Christians not falling away God stablisheth b●… working stablishing graces Fear Wisdome Faith Peace To value all good Christians The Spirit works as we are in the body Bond of communion of Saints Use. To give God the glory of our stablishing Strengthen radical graces 1. Humility 2. Faith 3. Knowledge Knowledge must be spirituall 1. Be acquainted with Gods Word 2. Take no scandal at those that shrink 3. Retain the truth in love 4. Practise truths ●…nown 5. Be frequent in holy conference 7. Pray to God to stablish us 8. Be spiritually poor 9. Hate lukewarmnesse Use 2. Examination of our stablishing 1. When it is grounded on the Word 2. When weak men overcome strong temptations 2. By freedome from base fears cares c. Examine our knowledge Examine our course of life None but a Christ an truly couragious in death 2. Desire of Christs coming Why God useth so many several words to sec●… us What the Spirit is an Earnest of The Spirit an Earnest 1. For security 2. It is part of the whole 3. An Earnest is little to the whole 4. It serves the party receiving it 5. It is never taken away Observ. A Christian man be assured of his estate in grace All in the work of Redemption is for that end Christians not alike assured at all times Double act of saith 1. Direct 2. Reflect The reflect act may be hindred Naughty hearte content with a state of doubling Observ. Gods Children may be assured they shall held out to the end Grace and glory differ but in degrees Observ. Those that look to be happy must first be holy Observ. We may be assured from a little measure of grace The Spirit appears not in all graces at once A Christian is a mixed creature Use 2. To examine the truth of grace We may know grace is true though little 1. The soul mournes that it is little 2. Wait 3. To wait with Patience 4. Constancy 5. To purge our selves 6. Desire of accomplishment Cautions 1. When conscience is wounded 2. Have been carelesse 7. Growth in grace 8. Quieting of the soul. 9. True gold will endure the tryal 10. It will persevere Christians get strength by their falls To labour for assurance Earnest given for our sakes To labour against unbelief Earnest the work of the Spirit 1. He proceeds from Father and Son 2. He only can quiet the soul. How to know we have the Spirit 1. By life and motion 2. By transforming us 3. By Conflict 4. By supernatural obedience 5. It dwells in us 6. It mortifies sin 7. It leads us 8 It is a Spirit of adoption 9. It teacheth to pray 10. And to wait Directions to have the Spirit 1. Attend Gods means 2. Not to grieve the Spirit 1. By cherishing Lusts. 2. Obey the Spirit 3. Pray for the Spirit The Spirit makes impregnable No thankfulnesse without the Spirit No joy without the Spirit No will●…ngnesse to dye without it Parts of the Verse Observ. Mans nature prone to suspition Grounds of suspition 1. The infirmity of men 2. Guiltinesse 3. From Probabilities Suspition more then fear lesse then judgment Suspition what Suspition makes the worst construction Why the Devil cherisheth suspition Mischief from suspition Observ. To labour to avoid suspition Suspition a Canker That that is suspected is made unprofitable God labours ●…o free himself from suspition Christ labours to be freed from suspition Sin must be censured and judged Doctr. Gentle courses first to be used Reason 1. It is suitable to ●…ns nature Reason 2. To Gods disposition Reason 3. To the carriage of our salvation Reason 4. Gods course Reason 5. It is most successeful Reason 6. It is tasting Use. To deal gently with others Doctr. When gentle means prevail not severe must be used Reason Men must not spare that God may Against selfr●…spects in reproos of sin Use. People to be willing to bear of their sins How to prevent severity in others Vexation in hell to those that were cherished in sin Three-fold correction 1. Private admonition 2. Before others Definition of an Oath None but good men should take an Oath To swear by none but God Invocation in an Oath Imprecation Oath to be taken onely in serious matters An Oath must be 1. In Truth 2. In Judgment 3. In Justice Against equivocation An oath only in matters in determinable Oath lawful Ordinary Swearing forbidden Object Answ. Swearing without good life nothing Object Answ. Custome no plea for swearing Object Answ. Company no excuse for swearing Swearing ordinarily argues a vile heart Original of common swearing 1. Atheisme 2. Cherishing passion 3. Affectation 4. Shame Men should abstain swearing in love to the Kingdome For love to the●…r own sam lies Conscience of less●…r oathes Ordinary Swearers curse themselves A Christians life a kind of oath Doctr. No man hath dominion over anothers faith 1. What it is not to have dominion over the faith of others What ●…ranny over the faith of others is Quest. Answ. The Church of Rome domineers over the faith of others 1. By Traditions 2. Will-worship 3. That the Pope cannot erre A grand lie that hinders their Reformation 4. Church Judge of Controversies 5. In the intentio●… of the Minister in the Sacrament Confession Satans malice to sit in Gods throne Popery would subdue all Use. To be thankful for freedome from this tyranny How to think of Popery Grounds of spiritual Tyranny Salvation termed joy why Doctr. 1. The state of a Christian is joy Nature teacheth it God gives matter of joy 1. Freedom from ill 2. The good they are brought to Reason 1. That God may have glory Reason 2. It makes active in doing good Reason 3. And able to suffer ill Reason 4. To encourage others Doctr. 2. The Word unfolded helps this joy To comfort what The Ministers helpers of joy 1. By shewing people their ill 2. By shewing the remedy 3. By advice Light Liberty Victory 4. By forcing it as a duty 5. In death Object Answ. Ministers trouble the joy of carnal men Object Answ. Private means will not comfort when publick are neglected Object Answ. The sorrow caused by the Ministery tends to joy Simile Object Answ. Simile Comfort what Use. To esteem the Ministery To open the case of our soules to spiritual Physitians Doctr. 3 Ministers but helpers not the authours of joy Simile Gods Spirit only specks comfort 1. He only knowes our hearts 2. He only can set down the soul. Use To look for comfort from the Spirit by the means Not to idolize the Ordinances why S. Paul varies the phrase Observ. Faith breeds joy 1 Faith takes away all that may discourage 2. It shewes Gods love in Christ. Pedigree of joy Use. To try if our joy be good 1. If it spring from the Word 2. It springs from faith 3. It is above discouragements or allurements 4. It is with humility Standing what meant by it Quest. Answ. Why our stand ing is by faith Four degrees of assent 1. Opinion 2. Knowledge 3. Believing 4. Experience How we stand by faith Quest. Answ. What faith it self stands on God our Father The nature of God Observ. The foundation of faith out of us Faith withstands opposition Quest. Answ. How we stand by faith when conscience is awakened for sin The firmnesse of a Christians standing If our knowledg of Scripture be not spiritual 1. We fall into sin 2. To despair 3. To Apostasie The Sacrament strengthens faith Faith the radical grace
upon many carnall wretched persons that are led with a false confidence all their life that trust in the creature trust in friends and riches that will not trust in God and will not be taught to number their dayes in their life time it is just with God to their very death with false confidence when they come to death to suffer them to perish in their false confidence and so to sink into hell It is just with God to suffer them to have Atheists about them or weak persons that shall say Oh you shall do well enough and then even out of a very desire to live they are willing to believe all and so they dy without all shew of change and as they live so they dy and are wretched in both The life of a wicked man is ill his death worse his estate after death worst of all and this is one way whereby God suffers men to fall into the snare of the Devill when he suffers not those that are about them to deale faithfully St. Paul received the sentence of death that it might force him not to trust in himself but in God that raiseth the dead The second thing that is observable hence out of this first part which is the negative part is this that Gods children are prone to trust in themselves The hearts even of Gods deare children are prone in themselves if they be left to their own bent and weight to self-confidence and will not hold up in faith and affiance in God further then they are lifted and kept up by a Spirit of faith which God puts into them It was not in vain that God used this course with blessed St. Paul here is an end set downe that he might not trust in himself What was he in peril to trust in himself Alas St Paul though he were a holy excellent man yet he was a man and in the best man there is a double principle a principle of nature of corrupt nature and a principle of grace and he works according to both principles there is an intermixture of both in all his actions and in all his passions too in his sufferings Corruption shews it self in his best deeds and his best sufferings in every thing That we should not trust in our selves that is in any thing in our selves or out of our selves in the creature it is all one We see by the example of S. Paul that the best are prone to trust in themselvs All this hard usage of S. Paul that he received the sentence of death it was that he should not trust in himself What was there danger in St. Paul to trust in himself a man that had been so excercised with crosses and afflictions as he had been no man more one would think that he had been scoured enough of pride and self-confidence the whippings and misusings the stocks the dungeons c. would not all this work pride and self-confidence out of the Apostle No so deeply it is invested into our base nature our trusting to present things that we cannot live the life of faith we cannot depend upon God whom we cannot see but withother eyes then nature ●…h it is so deeply rooted in our nature that the blessed Apostle himself must have this great help to be taught to go out of himself and to depend upon God we see in what danger he was in another place to be lifted up with the revelations he was fain to have a prick in the flesh a Messenger of Satan to buffet him Hezekias his heart was lifted up as the Scripture speaks in his treasures that he shewed to the King of Babylons Ambassadours as if he were such a rich Prince And so holy David in numbring the people to shew what a mighty Prince he was it was his vaine confidence therefore God put him to a strange cure he punished him in that that he gloried in he took away so many of his people And so Hezekias was punished in that he sinned in he was fain to have a purge for it his treasure was taken away and carried to Babylon I said in my prosperity saith holy David I shall never be moved The best are Subject to false confidence to trust in themselves One reason partly because there is a mixture of corruption in us while we live here and corruption looks to this false principle in us that will never be wrought out with all the afflictions in the world till death make an end of corruption there will be a false trust in our selves and in the creature we cannot trust God perfectly as we should doe Again The reason is because the things of this life are usefull and commodious unto us and we are nouzelled up in the use of them and when Satan doth amplifie them in our fancie to be greater in goodness then they are opinion sets a greater worth on them if there were no Devill but he presenting these things in all the lusture he can he helps the imagination which he hath more to doe with then with all the parts of the soul and the soul looks in the glass of opinion upon these things and thinks they are goodly great matters learning and wisdom honour and riches looking upon them as they are amplified by the false fancie of others and the competition of the world wherein we live every man is greedy and hastie of these things All men have not faith for better things therefore they are mad of these So the competition of others and the inlarging our conceits upon them above their worth these make us put greater confidence in them and then we come to trust in our selves and in them and not in God Naturally we cannot see the nothingness of the creature that as it came out of nothing so it will turn to nothing but because it is sensible these good things are sensible and present and necessarie and usefull and naturally we live by our senses therefore we place our delight in them that when they are taken away all the soul goes with them As he that leans upon a crutch or any thing when that is taken away down he fals so it is with a man by nature he trusts to these things when they go his soul sinks together with the things Even as it is with those that are in a stream when they are in a running stream they are carried with the stream so all these things go away they are of a fleeting condition we see them not in their passage when they are gone we see them past we see not our selves vanish by little and little out of this life we see not the creatures present we see not death and other things beyond death as we should by the eye of faith so things passe and we passe with them the stream and we run together it must be a great measure of faith that must help this We are prone to trust to sensible things naturally we know what it is