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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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is mine The natural man who remains still in the old Family hath nothing to do with these promises he may read over the promises as one may read over another mans Will or Inventory but hath no right to them the promises are like a Garden of flowers paled in and enclosed which no stranger may gather only the children of the Family Ishmael was the son of the bond-woman he had no right to the Family Cast out the bond-woman and her son as Sarah once said to Abraham Gen. 21.10 So the unbeliever is not adopted he is none of the houshold and God will say at the day of judgement Cast out this son of the bond-woman into utter darkness where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Privi ∣ ledge 10 10. If we are children then we shall have our Fathers blessing Isa 61.9 They are the seed which the Lord hath blessed We read that Isaac blessed his son Jacob Gen. 27.28 God give thee of the dew of heaven which was not only a prayer for Jacob but a Prophesie of that happiness and blessing which should come upon him and his posterity * Luther Thus every adopted child hath his heavenly Fathers benediction there is a special blessing distill'd into all that he possesseth Exod. 23.25 Psal 29.11 The Lord will bless his people with peace He will not only give them peace but they shall have it with a blessing the wicked have the things they enjoy with Gods leave but the adopted have them with Gods love the wicked have them by Providence the Saints by Promise Isaac had but one blessing to bestow Gen. 27.38 Hast thou but one blessing my father But God hath more blessings than one for his children he blesseth them in their souls bodies names estate posterity he blesseth them with the upper-springs and the nether-springs he multiplies to bless them and his blessing cannot be reversed as Isaac said concerning Jacob I have blessed him yea and he shall be blessed Gen. 27.33 so God blesseth his children and they shall be blessed 11. If we are children then all things that Privi ∣ ledge 11 fall out shall turn to our good Rom. 8.28 All things work together for good to them that love God 1. Good things 2. Evil things 1. Good things work for good to Gods children 1. Mercies shall do them good 1. The mercies of God shall soften them Davids heart was overcome with Gods mercy 2 Sam. 7.18 Who am I and what is my house c I who was of a mean Family I who held the Shepherds staffe that now I should hold the Royal Scepter Nay Thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while to come Thou hast made a promise that my children shall sit upon the Throne yea that the blessed Messiah shall come of my Line and Race and is this the manner of man O Lord God! as if he had said Do men shew such kindness undeserved See how this good mans heart was dissolved and softned by mercy the flint is soonest broken upon a soft pillow 2. Mercies make the children of God more fruitful the ground beats the better crop for the cost that is laid upon it God gives his children health and they spend and are spent for Christ he gives them Estates and they honour the Lord with their substance the backs and bellies of the poor are the Field where they sowe the precious seeds of their charity a childe of God makes his Estate a golden Clasp to binde his heart faster to God a foot-stool to raise him up higher towards heaven 2. Ordinances shall work for good to Gods children 1. The Word preached shall do them good 't is a savour of life 't is a Lamp to their feet and a Lavor to their hearts the Word preached is Vehiculum salutis a Chariot of salvation 't is an ingrafting and a transforming word it is verbum cum unctione it not only brings a light with it but eye-salve anointing their eyes to see that light the preaching of the Word is the Lattice where Christ looks forth and shews himself to his Saints this golden pipe of the Sanctuary conveys the water of life To the wicked the Word preached works for evil even the Word of life becomes a savour of death the same cause may have divers nay contrary effects * Eadem causa varios habet effectus the Sun dissolves the yce but hardens the clay To the unregenerate and profane the Word is not humbling but hardning Jesus Christ the best of Preachers was to some a Rock of offence the Jewes sucked death from his sweet lips 't is sad that the breast should kill any the wicked suck poyson from that breast of Ordinances where the children of God suck milk and are nourished unto salvation 2. The Sacrament works for good to the children of God in the Word preached the Saints hear Christs voyce in the Sacrament they have his kiss The Lords Supper is to the Saints a Feast of fat things it is an healing and a sealing Ordinance in this Charger or rather Chalice a bleeding Saviour is brought in to revive drooping spirits The Sacrament hath glorious effects in the hearts of Gods children it quickens their affections strengthens their faith mortifies their sin revives their hopes encreaseth their joy it gives a prelibation and fore-taste of heaven 2. Evil things work for good to Gods children Psal 112.4 Unto the upright ariseth light in darkness 1. Poverty works for good to Gods children it starves their lusts it enricheth their graces James 2.5 Poor in the world rich in faith Poverty sends to prayer when God hath clipped his childrens wings by poverty they flie swiftest to the Throne of Grace 2. Sickness works for their good it shall bring the body of death into a consumption 2 Cor. 4.16 Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day like those two Laurels at Rome when the one did wither the other did flourish when the body withers the soul of a Christian doth flourish How oft have we seen a lively faith in a languishing body Hezekiah was better on his sick bed than upon his Throne when he was upon his sick bed he humbles himself and weeps when he was on his Throne he grew proud Isa 39.2 Gods children recover by sickness in this sense out of weakness they are made strong Heb. 11.34 3. Reproach works for good to Gods children it encreaseth their grace and their glory 1. Disgrace encreaseth their grace the Husbandman by dunging his ground makes the soile more rich and fertil God lets the wicked dung his people with reproaches and calumnies that their hearts may be a richer soile for grace to grow in 2. Reproach encreaseth their glory he that unjustly takes from a Saints credit shall adde to his Crown the Sun shines brighter after an Eclipse the more a childe of God is eclipsed by reproaches the brighter he shall shine in the Kingdom of
Frankincense and Myrrhe ver 9 11. In the third Chapter the Evangelist records his Baptisme in the fourth his tentations in the fifth his preaching which Chapter is like a rich mine every veine hath some gold in it There are four things in this Chapter which offer themselves to our view 1. The Preacher 2. The Pulpit 3. The Occasion 4. The Sermon 1. The Preacher 1. The Preacher Jesus Christ The best of Preachers He went up He in whom there was a combination of vertues a constellation of beauties He whose lips were not only sweet as the hony-comb but did drop as the hony-comb his words an Oracle his works a Miracle his life a Pattern his death a Sacrifice He went up into a mountain and taught Jesus Christ was every way enobled and qualified for the work of the Ministry 1. Christ was an intelligent Preacher He had the Spirit without measure John 3.34 and knew how to speak a word in due season when to humble when to comfort We cannot know all the faces of our hearers Christ knew the hearts of his hearers He understood what Doctrine would best suit with them as the husbandman can tell what sort of graine is proper for such a soyle 2. Christ was a powerful Preacher He spake with authority Matth. 7.29 He could set mens sinnes before them and show them their very hearts John 4.29 Come see a man which told me all things which ever I did That is the best Glasse not which is most richly set with Pearle but which shows the truest face Christ was a Preacher to the conscience He breathed as much zeal as eloquence he often touched upon the heart-strings What is said of Luther is more truly applicable to Christ He spake as if he had been within a man He could drive the wedge of his Doctrine in the most knotty piece He was able with his two-edged sword to pierce an heart of stone Never man spake like this man John 7.46 3. Christ was a successeful Preacher He had the Art of converting souls John 10.40 Many beleeved on him yea persons of rank and quality John 12.42 Among the chief Rulers many beleeved He who had Grace poured into his lips Psalm 45.2 could pour grace into his hearers hearts He had the Key of David in his hand and when he pleased did open the hearts of men and make way both for himself and his Doctrine to enter If he did blow the Trumpet his very enemies would come under his Banner upon his Summons none durst but surrender 4. Christ was a lawful Preacher as He had his Unction from his Father so his Mission John 8.18 The Father that sent me bears witnesse of me Christ in whom were all perfections concentred yet would be solemnly sealed and inaugurated into his Ministerial as wel as Mediatory Office if Jesus Christ would not enter upon the work of the Ministry without a Commission how absurdly impudent are they who without any warrant dare invade this holy Fuction There must be a lawful admission of men into the Ministry * Nemo in Ecclesia debet publice concionari nisi rite vocatus Austin Heb. 5.4 No man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron Our Lord Christ as he gave Apostles and Prophets which were extraordinary Ministers so Pastors and Teachers which were initiated and made in an ordinary way Ephes 4.11 and He will have a Ministry perpetuated Matth. 28.20 Lo I am with you alway even unto the end of the world Sure there is as much need of Ordination now as in Christs time and the time of the Apostles there being then extraordinary gifts in the Church which are now ceased Object 1. But why should not the Ministry lye in common Hath the Lord spoken only by Moses Num. 12.2 Why should not one preach as well as another Answ Because God who is the God of order hath made the work of the Ministry a select distinct Office from any other As in the body natural the members have a distinct office the eye is to see the hand to work you may as well say why should not the hand see as well as the eye because God hath made the distinction He hath put the visive faculty into the one and not the other So here God hath made a distinction between the work of the Ministry and other work Quest Where is this distinction Answ 1. We finde in Scripture a distinction between Pastor and People 1. Pet. 5.2 The Elders or Ministers I exhort Feed the flock of God which is among you If any one may preach by the same rule all may and then what will become of the Apostles distinction Where will the flock of God be if all be Pastors 2. God hath cut out the Minister his work which is proper for him and doth not belong to any other 1 Tim. 4.13 Give attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine give thy self wholly to them or as it is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be thou wholly in them This charge is peculiar to the Minister and doth not concern any other It is not spoken to the Tradesman that he should give himself wholly to Doctrine and Exhortation no let him look to his shop it is not spoken to the plough-man that he should give himself wholly to preaching no let him give himself to his plough It is the Ministers charge the Apostle speaks to Timothy and in him to the rest who had the hands of the Presbytery laid on them and 2 Tim. 2.15 Study to shew thy self approved a workman that needeth not to be ashamed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rightly dividing the word of truth This is spoken peculiarly to the Minister Every one that can read the Word aright cannot divide the Word aright So that the work of the Ministry doth not lye in common it is a select peculiar work As none might touch the Arke but the Priests none may touch this Temple-office but such as are called to it Object 2. But if a man hath gifts is not this sufficient I answer no as grace is not sufficient to make a Minister so neither gifts The Scripture puts a difference between gifting and sending Rom. 10.15 How shall they preach unlesse they be sent If gifts were enough to constitute a Minister the Apostle should have said How shall they preach unlesse they be gifted but he saith Unlesse they be sent As in other callings gifts do not make a Magistrate The Attorney that pleads at Bar may have as good gifts as the Judge that sits upon the Bench but he must have a Commission before he sit as Judge If it be thus in matters Civil much more Ecclesiastical and Sacred which are as Bucer saith Maximi mementi things of the highest importance Those therefore that do usurp the Ministerial work without any special designation and appointment do discover more pride than zeale They act out of their sphere and are guilty
but so it is Prov. 1.22 How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity Sin is the poyson of the soul yet men love it and he who loves his sin hates a reproof 2. Sin possesseth men with a lunacy Luke 15.7 People are mad in sinne Jeremiah 50.38 THEY ARE MAD ON THEIR IDOLS When sickness grows so violent that men lie raving and are mad they then quarrel with their Physitian and say he comes to kill them So when sin is grown to an head the disease turned to a frenzy then men quarrel with those that tell them of their sins and are ready to offer violence to their Physitians it argues wisdom to receive a reproof Prov. 9.8 Rebuke a wise man and he will love thee A wise man had rather drink a sharp potion than dye of his disease 4. If sin be a soul-sickness then do not feed this Branch 4 disease he that is wise will avoid those things which will increase his disease if he be feaverish he will avoide wine which would inflame the disease if he have the stone he will avoid salt meats he will forbear a dish he loves because it is bad for his disease why should not men be as wise for their souls Thou that hast a drunken lust do not feed it with wine thou that hast a malitious lust do not feed it with revenge thou that hast an unclean lust make not provision for the flesh Rom. 13.14 He that feeds a disease feeds an enemy Some diseases are starved Starve thy sins by fasting and humiliation Either kill thy sin or thy sin will kill thee 5. If sin be a soul-disease and worse than any other Branch 5 then labour to be sensible of this disease There are few who are sensible of their soul-sicknesse they think they are well and ayle nothing they are whole and need not the Physitian 'T is a bad Symptom to hear a sick dying man say he is well The Church of Laodicea was a sick Patient but she thought she was well Rev. 3.17 Thou sayest I am rich and have need of nothing Come to many a man and feele his pulse ask him about the state of his soul he will say he hath a good heart and doubts not but he shall be saved What should be the reason that when men are so desperately sick in their souls and ready to drop into hell yet they conceit themselves in a very good condition 1. There is a spiritual cataract upon their eye they see not their soars Laodicea thought her self rich because she was blind Rev. 3.17 The god of the world blinds mens eyes that they can neither see their disease nor their Physitian Many blesse God their estate is good not from the knowledge of their happinesse but from the ignorance of their danger when Hamans face was covered he was near execution Oh pray with David Lighten mine eyes that I sleep not the sleep of death Psal 13.3 2. Men that are sick think themselves well from the haughtinesse of their spirits Alexander thought himself awhile to be the son of Jupiter and no lesse than a God what an arrogant creature is man though he be sick unto death he thinks it too much a disparagement to acknowledge a disease either he is not sick or he can heal himself If he be poysoned he runs to the herb or rather weed of his own righteousnesse to cure him* Rom. 10.3 3. Men that are sick conceit themselves well through self-love He that loves another will not credit any evil report of him Men are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-lovers 2 Tim 3.2 Every man is a Dove in his own eye therefore doth not suspect himself of any disease he will rather question the Scriptures verity than his own malady 4. Self-deceit and the deceit of the heart appears in two things 1. In hiding the disease the heart hides sin as Rachel did her fathers images Gen. 31.34 Hasael did not think that he was so sick as he was he could not imagine that so much wickednesse like a disease should lie lurking in him 2 Kings 8.13 Is thy servant a dog that he should do this great thing As the Viper hath his teeth hid in his gums so that if one should look into his mouth he would think it an harmlesse creature So though there be much corruption in the heart yet the heart hides it and draws a vail over that it be not seen 2. The heart holds a false Glasse before the eye making a man appear fair and his estate very good The heart can deceive with counterfeit grace hence it is men are insensible of their spiritual condition and think themselves well when they are sick unto death 5. Men take up a reverend opinion of themselves and fancy their spiritual estate better than it is through mistake And this mistake is double 1. They enjoy glorious priviledges they were born within the sound of Aarons bells they were baptiz'd with holy water they have been fed with Manna from heaven therefore they hope they are in a good condition Judg. 17.13 Then said Micah Now I know the Lord will do me good seeing I have a Levite to my Priest But alas this is a mistake outward priviledges save not What is any one the better for Ordinances unlesse he be better by Ordinances A childe may die with the breast in its mouth Many of the Jews perished though Christ himself were their Preacher 2. The other mistake is set down by the Apostle 2 Cor. 10.12 They measuring themselves by themselves and comparing themselves amongst themselves are not wise Here is a double Error or mistake First They measure themselves by themselves That is they see they are not so bad as they were therefore they judge their condition is good A Dwarf may be taller than he was yet a dwarf still the Patient may be lesse sick than he was yet far from well a man may be better than he was yet not good Secondly They compare themselves amongst themselves They see they are not so flagitious and profane as others therefore they think themselves well because they are not so sick as others This is a mistake one may as well die of a Consumption as the Plague One man may not be so far off heaven as another yet he may not be near heaven One line may not be so crooked as another yet not strait To the Law to the Testimony the Word of God is the true Standard and measure by which we are to judge of the state and temper of our souls Oh let us take heed of this Rock the phancying our condition better than it is let us take heed of a spiritual Apoplexy to be sick in our souls yet not sensible of this sicknesse What do men talk of a light within them the light within them by nature is not sufficient to shew them the diseases of their souls This light tells them they are whole and have no need of a Physitian Oh what
falling away from grace would make a believer wear Cains mark which was a continual shaking and trembling in his flesh they would spill a Christians cordial and break a link of the chain of salvation 2. Let us try whether our grace be true There is something Use 2 looks like grace which is not Chrysostom saith the Divel hath a counterfeit chain to all the graces Trial. and he would deceive us with it Lapidaries have wayes to try their precious stones let us try our grace by a Scripture touchstone the painted Christian shall have a painted Paradise 1. The truth of grace is seen by a displacency and antipathy against sin Psal 119.104 I hate every false way Grace sets it self against complexion-sins Psal 18.23 and against the sins of the Times Rev. 2.2 2. Grace is known by the growth of it growth evidenceth life Dead things grow not a picture will not grow An hypocrite who is but a picture of Religion doth not grow a good Christian grows in love to Christ in humility in good works Psal 92.12 Hos 14.5 He shall grow as the lilly his branches shall spread and his beauty shall be as the Olive-tree and his smell as Lebanon When the Spirit of God distills as dew upon the soul it makes grace flourish and put forth into maturity 3. True grace will make us willing to suffer for Christ Grace is like gold it will abide the fiery trial 1 Pet. 1.7 And if upon a serious scrutiny and trial we find that we have the right jewel the grace of God in truth Col. 1.6 this will be a death-bed cordial we may with Simeon depart in peace being assured that though we cannot resist death yet we shall overcome it Use 3 3. Let me lay down two or three directions for the attaining of grace Direction 1. If we would be enriched with this jewel of grace let us take pains for it we are bid to make an hue and cry after knowledge and to search for it as a man that searcheth for a vein of gold Prov. 2.2 3. Our salvation cost Christ blood it will cost us sweat 2. Let us go to God for grace * Incassum laborat qui aliunde virtutes sperat quam à Domino virtutum he is called the God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 We could lose grace of our selves but we cannot find it of our selves * Domine errare potui redire non potui Austin The Sheep can wander from the Fold but cannot return without the help of the Shepherd Go to the God of all grace God is the first Planter the Promoter the perfecter of grace God is the Father of lights Jam. 1.17 He must light up this candle of grace in the soul grace is in his gift it is not an impropiriation but a donative Oh then go to God in prayer lay thy heart before him Lord I want grace I want an humble believing heart and thou art the God of all grace all my springs are in thee Oh enrich me with grace deny me not this before I dye What is gold in the bag if I have no oyle in the Lamp Give me that anointing of God I read in thy Word of the fruits of the Spirit * Gal. 5.22 Lord my heart is a barren soile plant some of these supernatural fruits in me that I may be more useful and serviceable Lord I cannot be put off with other things Who wilt thou give grace to if not to such as ask and are resolved not to give over asking 3. If you would have grace engage the prayers of others in your behalf he is like to be rich who hath several stocks going he is in the way of spiritual thriving who hath several stocks of prayer going for him If you had a childe that were sick you would beg the prayers of others thou hast a soul that is sick sick of pride lust sick unto death oh beg the prayers of godly friends that God will heal thee with his grace a Moses and Jacob have much power with God Believers can prevail sometimes not only for themselves but for their friends Jam. 5.16 A godly mans prayers may do you more good than if he should bestow upon you all his lands of inheritance 4. If you would have grace frequent the means of grace lie at the pool of Bethesda wait at the posts of wisdoms door Inward grace is wrought by outward means the preaching of the Word is Gods Engine that he useth for working grace it is called the rod of his strength Psal 110.2 and the breath of his lips Isa 11.4 By this he causeth breath to enter out of this golden pipe of the Sanctuary God empties the golden oyle of grace into the soul the Ministry of the Gospel is called the Ministry of the Spirit 2 Cor. 8. because the Spirit of God ordinarily makes use of this to work grace this Ministry of the Spirit is to be preferred before the Ministry of Angels Quest Quest Why is the Word preached the ordinary means to convey grace why not conference or reading Answ Answ The reason is because God hath appointed it to this end and he will grace his own Ordinances 1 Cor. 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it pleased God What reason could be given why the waters of Damascus should not have as soveraign vertue to heal Naamans leprosie as the waters of Jordan only this because the Lord did appoint and sanctifie one to this work and not the other if therefore we would have grace let us wait where the Manna falls and there expect the dew of the Spirit to fall with Manna the power of God goes along with his Word How should we delight in Ordinances Sleidan saith there was a Church in France formerly which the Protestants call'd Paradise as if they thought themselves in Paradise while they were in the house of God those Ordinances should be our Paradise which are the power of God is salvation PROV 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life The spiritual watch THIS Book of the Proverbs is full of many Divine Aphorismes other parts of Scripture are like a golden chain the Verses are linked together by Coherence this Book is like an heap of gold Rings many precious sentences lie scattered up and down in it as so many jewels or sparkling Diamonds That title which some have given to Peter Lombard Solomon might justly challenge to be Master of the Sentences Solomon was the wisest of Kings as his Kingdom was a Map of the worlds glory so his Head was an epitome of the worlds wisdom He was endued with a Divine Spirit while he did write the Holy Ghost did dictate and surely among all his golden sentences none is more weighty and important than this Keep thy heart with all keeping for out of it are the issues of life Agitur de vitâ The Text is about matter of life and death the
the nature of the Sun is light so Gods nature is love The three persons in the Trinity are all love 1. God the Father is love Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that God should part with Christ out of his bosome the Son of his love and lay this jewel as it were to pawn for our salvation oh unparalleld love never was such love showed to the Angels 2. God the Son is love how did Christ love his Spouse when he died for her his sides drop'd blood his heart drop'd love such a vein of love was opened in him that our sins could not stench love was the wing on which Christ did fly into the Virgins womb Christ incarnate hre was love covered over with flesh and Christ on the Cross here was a book of love laid open before us to read in Per vulnera viscera 3. God the Holy Ghost is love his appearing in the likeness of a Dove show'd his nature the Dove saith Pliny is an amicable creature it is without gall what are all the motions of the Spirit but tenders of love what is the Zeal of the Spirit but the print of love why doth this blessed Spirit as a suitor come a woing to sinners but that they may know he is in love thus all the persons in the Trinity are love and the more we shine in the grace of Love the more we resemble the God of Love 6. Argument enforcing love is from the sweet Relations we stand in one to another we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fellow-Citizens Ephes 2.19 we all expect one heaven we shall shortly live together and shall we not love together we are souldiers of the same band 2 Tim. 2.3 ours must be the fight of faith not the fight of contention our strife must be who shall love most we are branches of the same Vine and shall we not be united we are stones of the same building and shall we not be cemented with love nay we are brethren Acts 7.26 Sirs ye are brethren why do ye wrong one to another Use 1. I might here take up a lamentation and steep my Use 1 words in tears to consider the decay I had almost said the funerals of this grace among Christians Terras Astraea reliquit the fire of brotherly love is almost ready to go out instead of the fire of love the wildfire of passion I have read of one Vitalis who hazarded his life to succour his distressed friend but sure such Vitales are dead in this age fratrum quoque gratia rara est The Text saith See that ye love one another but our times have made a bad Comment upon this Text how do Christians reproach censure maligne one another the Text saith love fervently but they hate fervently instead of the bond of love behold the apple of strife we live in the frigid zone the love of many waxeth cold Many live as if they had been born upon the Mountains of Bether the Mountains of division and as if they had been baptiz'd in the waters of Meribah the waters of strife Do the wicked unite nay do the Divels unite there was in one man a Legion which is according to Varro seven thousand six hundred twenty two shall there be more harmony among Divels than among Christians For these divisions of the godly there are great thoughts of heart Oh Christians turn your hot words into salt tears how do the enemies of Religion insult to see not only Christs Coat but his Body rent for these things let our eyes run down Consider the ill consequence where love is wanting the absence of this grace brings forth divisions and they are dangerous For 1. Divisions bring an opprobrium and scandal upon Religion they make the wayes of God evil spoken of as if Religion were the fomenter of envy and sedition Julian in his Invectives against the Christians said that they lived together as Tigers rending and tearing one another and shall we by our animosities and contentions make good Julians words this will make others affraid to embrace the Christian Faith There is a story in Epiphanius of Miletius and Peter Bishop of Alexandria both Confessors of the Orthodox Religion both condemned to suffer who being together in prison upon a small difference sell into so great a Schisme that they drew a partition between each other in the prison and would not hold communion in the same worship of Christ for which notwithstanding they both suffered which division grew scandalous and did more hurt than their persecution did good 2. Divisions advance Satans Kingdom The Divel hath no hope but in our discords * Nibil spei nisi per discordias Cornel. Tac. St. Chrysostom observes of the City of Corinth when many zealous converts were brought in Satan knew no better way to damme up the current of Religion than by throwing in a bone of contention and dividing them into parties one was for Paul and another for Apollo but few for Christ Use 2. Be Exhorted to cordial and fervent love See that Use 2 ye love one another Exhort Oh that this sweet spice might send forth its fragrant smell among Christians Oh that the Branch 1 Lord would rain down some of these silver showers of love upon the hearts of Christians which are for the most part like the Mountains of Gilboa which have none of this heavenly dew upon them They say of the stones of the Temple they were so closely cemented as if there had been but one stone in the Temple it were to be wished that the hearts of Christians were so sweetly cemented in love as if there were but one heart Let me commend this grace of amity and love to Christians under a double notion 1. As you are members of a body politick The whole nation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Political body now it should be with the body Politique as it is with the natural body all the members of the body have a sweet sympathy they all work for the good of the whole that there be no Schisme in the body 1 Cor. 12.25 So it should be in the body politique 2. You are membra Ecclesiae members of the Church of God you bear Christs Name you wear his Livery therefore you must be sodred together in affection It is a sad Omen and presage when the joynts of the same body shall be loosed and the knees shall smite one against another If yet men will live at variance nourishing a Viper in their bosoms I shall offer two things to their serious consideration 1. An uncharitable person is an unregenerate person Titus 3.3 We were sometimes disobedient serving divers lusts living 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in malice and envy as if he had said Before grace came we were fill'd and ready to burst with this poyson of malice the Apostle describing a natural condition calls it the gall of bitterness Acts 8. He that lives in bitter strife is in the gall bitterness A
have gain'd in the Trade of godliness and are fill'd with the fruits of the Spirit will not this be a great comfort to you he who is full of good works God will gather the fruit and blesse the Tree 2. Obedience gives comfort at death what a joy was it to St. Paul when he came to die that he could make that sweet appeal 2 Tim. 4.7 I have kept the faith that is Paul had kept the Doctrine of Faith and had lived the life of faith Oh with what comfort may a Christian lay his life down when he hath laid his life out in the service of God! This was a death-bed Cordial to King Hezekiah Isa 38.3 Remember O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth A man may repent of his fruitless knowledge but never did any man repent of his obedience when he came to die never did any Christian who is going to rest with God repent that he had walked with God 6. What is the end of all Gods administrations but obedience what are all Gods Promises but perswasions to obedience what is the end of all Gods threatnings which stand as the Angel with a flaming sword in their hand but to drive us to obedience Deut. 11.28 A curse if ye will not obey What is the voice of mercy but to call us to duty the Father gives his child money to bribe him to ingenuity The fire under the Still makes the Roses drop the fire of Gods mercies is to make the sweet water of obedience distill from us mercy as Ambrose saith is a medicine which God applies to us to cure our barrenness what are all the examples of Gods justice upon non-proficients but allarums to awaken us out of the bed of sloth and put us into a posture of service Gods rod upon others is a Fescue to point us to obedience if God hath not his end in respect of duty we cannot have our end in respect of glory 7. Motive consider what a sin disobedience is that is a sad Scripture Jer. 44.16 As for the word thou hast spoken to us in the Name of the Lord we will not do Disobedience is 1. A sin against Reason are we able to stand it out in defiance against God 1 Cor. 10.22 Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie are we stronger than he it is as if the thorns should set them selves in battel array against the fire will the sinner go to measure arms with the great God what Solomon saith of laughter Eccles 2.2 the same may be said of Rebellion it is mad 2. Disobedience is a sin against Equity we have our subsistence from God in him we live and move and is it not equal that as we live upon him we should live to him justitia jus suum cuique tribuit is it not just and fitting that as God gives us our allowance we should give him our allegiance If the General give his Souldier pay the Souldier is to march at his command not only by the Law of Arms but the Law of equity 3. Disobedience is a sin against Conscience God by Creation is our Father so that Conscience binds to duty Mal. 1.6 If then I be a Father where is my honour 4. Disobedience is a sin against our Vows We have taken the oath of Allegiance Thy vows are upon me O God Psal 65.12 We have many vows upon us our Baptismal vow our Sacramental our National our Sick-bed vows here are four cords to draw us to obedience and if we slip these Sacred Knots and cast these cords from us will not God come upon us for Perjury If oaths will not bind us God hath chains that will 5. Disobedience is a sin against our Prayers We pray Thy will be done So that by Non-obedience we confute our selves and live in a contradiction to our own prayers That man who is self-confuted is self-condemned 6. Disobedience is a sin against Kindness 'T is a disingenious sin it is a kicking against Gods bowels a despising the riches of his goodness Rom. 2.4 Therefore the Apostle links these two sins together 2 Tim. 3.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Disobedient Unthankful and this dies a sin of a Crimson colour One calls ingratitude The Seminary of sin * Pet. Crinitus l. 2. Poem It is an epitomizing sin Brutus his unkindness went deeper to Caesars heart than the stab Ingratus hoc unum benefacit cum perit 7. Disobedience is a sin against Nature Every creature in its kinde obeys God 1. Animate creatures obey him God spake to the Fish to set Jonah ashore and it did it presently Jonah 2.10 What are the Birds thankful Hymms as Ambrose calls them but tributes of obedience 2. Inanimate creatures obey God The Stars in their course fought against Cisera Judg. 5. The Wind and the Sea obey him Mar. 4.41 The very Stones if God give them a Commission will cry out against the sins of men Hab. 2.11 The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beam out of the timber shall answer it If men should be silent the stones would in some manner have testified of Christ Luk. 19.40 At Christs Passion the Rocks did rend Mat. 27.51 Which tearing Rhetorique was a voice to tell the world that the Messiah was now crucified Shall every creature obey God but man O Christian think thus with thy self if God had made me a stone I should have obeyed him and now that he hath made me rational shall I refuse to obey This is against Nature There are none that disobey God but Man and the Divel and can we finde none to joyne with but the Divel 8. Disobedience is a sin against Self-preservation * 1 Pet. 4.17 Disloyalty is treason and by treason the sinner is bound over to the wrath of God 2 Thes 1.7 8. The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire taking vengeance on them who obey not the Gospel He that refuseth to obey Gods will in Commanding shall be sure to obey his will in Punishing The sinner while he thinks to slip the Knot of Obedience twists the Cord of his own Damnation Thus ye have seen the sin of Disobedience set out in its bloody colours Be wise now therefore O ye Kings be instructed ye Judges of the earth serve the Lord with fear Kiss the Son left he be angry Kiss Christ with a kiss of love Kiss him with a kiss of loyaltie When his wrath is kindled but a little blessed are all they that put their trust in him Psal 2. ult 9. The Benefit of obedience Psal 19.11 In keeping his precepts there is great reward Obedience is Crowned with happiness So saith the Text happy are ye c. If this argument will not prevaile what will Quest But what happiness Answ All kind of blessings are poured upon the head of Obedience as the precious oyl was poured on Aarons head 1 Temporal blessings Deut. 28.3 4 9. Blessed shall be
the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy ground blessed shall be thy basket and thy store c. If thou shalt keep the Commandements of the Lord thy God c. He that hath a fruitful Heart shall have a fruitful Crop God will make him to thrive in his Estate And his basket shall not only be full but blessed God will bless what he hath Here is not only the Sack full of corn but money in the mouth of the Sack 2. Spiritual blessings Exod. 19.5 If ye will obey my voice indeed then ye shall be a peculiar Treasure to me above all people You shall be my Portion my Jewels the Apple of my eye I will give Kingdoms for your ransome Jer. 7.23 Obey and I will be your God I will make over my self to you by a deed of gift What a Superlative distinguishing mercy is this Psal 14.4 Happy is that people whose God is the Lord. 3. Eternal blessings Heb. 5.9 Christ became the author of Eternal salvation to all them that obey him It is a salvation that bears date to eternity Oh then who would not be in love with obedience while we please God we pleasure our selves * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer II. We are ready to say as Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.9 But what shall we do for the hundred Talents Ye see brethren you are no losers by Obedience who did ever kindle a fire on Gods Altar for nought Mal. 1.10 3. I shall lay down some Rules to help Christians in Use 3 their Obedience Direction that it may be the Sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to God Obedience must have these four Ingredients in it It must be cordial Deutr. 26.16 The Lord thy God hath commanded thee to do these statutes thou shalt therefore keep and do them with all thy heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 6.17 Ye have obeyed from the heart * Obedienta non servili metu sed cordis affectu servanda non timore poenae sed amorae justitiae Obedience without the heart is like fire on the Altar without Incense The heart is the seat of Love and 't is Love perfumes every duty The heart makes service a Free-will offering else it is but a tax Cain brought his sacrifice not his heart it was rather a mulct than an Offering Without the heart our Religion is like the Angels assuming dead bodies those bodies did eat and drink and walk but they had no soul to animate them They did movere not vivere how many do but assume the duties of Religion Obedience without the heart is hypocrisie How canst thou say I love thee when thy heart is not with me Judg. 16.15 2. Obedience must be extensive it must reach to all Gods Commandments 1 King 9.4 Luke 1.6 Quest But who can arrive at this Answ Though we cannot keep all Gods Commandements Legally yet we may Evangellically A good Christian 1. Consents to the equity of the whole Law Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy and just and good he sets his seal to every Law 2. He doth make conscience of every Law David had respect to all Gods Commandments Psal 119.6 his eye was upon all every command hath such authority upon a Christian that he knows not how to dispence with it though he fail in every duty yet he dares not neglect any duty 3. A child of God desires to keep every command Psal 119.5 O that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes what a child of God wants in strength he makes up in will Rom. 7.18 To will is present The regenerate Will stands bent to all Gods Precepts 4. The gracious soul mourns that he can do no better when he fails he weeps O wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 O this unbelieving heart how am I clog'd with corruption The good I would I do not Thus doth a Child of God lament his failings and judge himself for them and this is in a Gospel sense to keep every Law Unsound hearts as they are slight in their obedience so they are partial some duty they will dispense with some sinne they will indulge in this thing the Lord pardon thy servant 1 King 5.18 The Hypocrite will walk in some of Gods statutes not in all like a foundred Jade that will not set all his feet upon the ground but favours one foot Such foundered Christians there are who halt and limp and favour themselves in some things though it be to the hazard of their souls Herod could as well die as leave his Incest True obedience is universal as the Papists say we owe to our Mother the Church an Unlimited subjection its true here we owe to our God Unlimited obedience 3. The third Ingredient into obedience is Faith Heb. 11.6 Without faith it is impossible to please God therefore it is call'd the obedience of faith Rom. 16.26 Abel is said by faith to offer up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abetter sacrifice than Cain Sacra solet magnis rebus inesse fides Faith is a vital principle without it all our services are dead * Sicut in arbore quicquid pulchritudinis inest ex radice proficiscitus ita in anima quicquid decorum ex fide Aug. Therefore the Scripture speaks of dead works Hebr. 6.1 But why must this silver thread of faith run through the whole work of obedience I answer because faith looks at Christ in every duty and so both the person and offering is accepted Ephes 1.6 He hath accepted us in the beloved We are not accepted through our duties but through the beloved Faith looks at the Merit of Christ to take away the guilt and the Spirit of Christ to take away the filth which cleaves to the most angelical services thus it procures acceptance The High Priest under the Law looked at Christ in all when he offered up the Sacrifice he laid his hand upon the head of the beast slain which did point at the Messiah Exod. 29.10 So Faith laies its hand in every Gospel-sacrifice upon the head of Christ his Blood doth cleanse and the sweet Odours of his Intercession do perfume our holy things Now Faith looking up to Christ in every Duty finds acceptance Nay Faith doth not only look at Christ but it unites to Christ as the Siens is graffed into the stock Believers are part of Christ Christ and the Saints make one body Mystical no wonder then if God casts a favourable aspect upon those services which Believers present to him 4. Obedience must be constant Revel 2.26 He that keepeth my works unto the end to him will I give the morning star Faith must lead the Van and Perseverance must bring up the Rear There is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something still remaing for a Christian to do Non currenti sed vincenti datur corona Aug. and he must not leave work till the night of death comes on Mnason of Cyprus an old Discilple Acts 21.16 what an honour is it for one