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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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glory of his grace mercy and grace meet both in love only they differ thus mercy is love as it helps the miserable and grace is love as it gives good things freely without desert here then is the great designe which God from everlasting carried on that the glorious essence of his free love free-grace should be especially manifested to his Saints that so thy might admire it esteem it honour it and sound forth the praises of it All the other designes of God were but subservient unto this Some reckon up three great designes of the Almighty communicating himself as 1. The glory of his Saints 2. The glory of Christ 3. The glory of himself and especially the glory of his grace 1. That his Saints should be glorious and to that purpose he made heaven and earth and he makes them Lord of all 1 Cor. 3.21 vers 23. 2 Thes 1.10 all things are yours 2. That Christ should be glorious and to that purpose he makes the Saints and gives them to Christ all things are yours and you are Christs And certainly saith the Apostle at the last day Christ shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe 3. That God himself should be glorified he made all things for himself Bring my sons from farre and my daughters from the ends of the earth even every one that is called by my name for I have created him for my glory Prov. 16.4 Isa 43.6.7 Now this is the high designe of God to which all the rest are subservient mark the steps all things are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods i. For God and for his glory the two former designes are to which but not for which God worketh he that buildeth an house that he may lay a sure foundation and that he may raise the frame he gives it the due filling which belongs to it but these are not his proper ends his main designe but that he may have an house for his habitation So God works many things to our glory and that in us Christ may be glorious but the proper end that high designe which he hath in all it is his own glory And yet O my soul consider a little further the plot of our salvation of the Saints glory and of Christs glory as it aimes at the glory of God so especially at the glory of his grace As if we see that one doth this or that in wisdom it is the glory of his wisdome if he do it in strength or power it is the glory of his power if he do it out of grace it is the glory of his grace so God designed the salvation of our soules out of his meer grace favour love he must needs intend to have his grace notified in us and to have it being known accordingly admired and praised and honored by us not but that God must be glorified in his wisdome power justice holiness and his other attributes ay but especially in this it is the grace of God in which he most delighteth even as vertuous Kings affect above all their other vertues to be had in honour for their clemency and bounty So it is with our God the King of Kings Lord of Lords all he doth is to this end that his grace may be manifested to his greater glory And to this end is the glory of Christ and the glory of Christians referred Why Lord that this should be thy plot to save my soul that my soul should praise the glory of thy grace that thy grace should before all worlds think on me for good O how should I but think on thee and thy free-grace How should I but admire it adore it praise it exalted it above Sun and Moon and Starres how should I but cry out with the Apostle Oh the depth of the riches of thy grace for of him Rom. 11.36 and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for ever and ever Amen 2. Consider the counsels of God about thy salvation Ephes 1.11 he worketh all things after the counsell of his own will and with him is counsel and with him is understanding This counsel as we have discovered was primarily about that reconciliation of the riches of his grace and the glory of justice Consider this O my soul thy sin put all the attributes of God to a kind of conflict hereupon was that great and mighty counsel how God should make way for his love and goodness and yet satisfie his truth and justice at last the wisdome of God found out that glorious and wonderful expedient the Lord Jesus Christ Rom 3.25 is not this the meaning of the Apostle whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his Blood to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins Pouder and weigh these words God sets not forth Christ to be a propitiation to declare only his mercy in the forgiveness of sinnes how is there any thing but mercy in the forgiveness of sins yes there is something else there is righteousness also and therefore he hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation that he might declare his righteousness v rs 26. nay see it repeated to declare I say his righteousness that he might be just and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus not that he might be merciful but that he might be just in justifying him that believeth in Jesus This Text Luther had a great deal ado to understand and he prayed much before he could get the right meaning of it This is the great mystery of the Gospel no wonder if a poor man could not reach it This is that which set the infinite wisdome of God on work from all eternity how to find a way to save sinners and to be infinitely righteous notwithstanding Nay yet O my soul consider a little further not only is the mercy of God in this way glorified but the glory of his justice is as much yea more then if the sinner were eternally damned It is made good thus 1. When God appointed a surety his Son and charged our debts upon him to satisfie his justice in that God would not spare his Son the least farthing token I mean not the least degree of punishment hereby the Lord shewes a stronger love to justice then if he had damned ten thousand thousand creatures Suppose a Malefactor comes before a Judge the Judg will not spare the Malefactor but commands satisfaction to the Law this shewes that the Judge loves justice but if the Judges own Son be a delinquent and it appears before all the Country that the Judge will not spare him the Judge now doth more honour justice in this than in condemning a thousand others So when the Lord shall cast many thousands to Hell there to be tormented for ever and ever and ever this shewes that God loves justice but when his own Son shall take our sins upon him
answer the words either relate to the grounds of Religion and so in Gospel-times Christians need not to be taught in these fundamental points for now all know the Lord from the least to the greatest or else these words are an Hebraisme which deny positively when they intend it only comparatively or secundum quid as when God and men are compared together man is vanity lighter than vanity and a very nothing here is a comparison of knowledge in Gospel-times with the knowledge of Israel in those dark times when God brought them out of the Land of Egypt then all was dark and they were fain to teach one another the very Principles the Rudiments of Religion there was very little effusion of Gods Spirit in those times but in Gospel-times saith the Prophet the Spirit of grace and knowledge shall be so abundant that rather God himself shall be the teacher than one man shall teach another There shall be such exuberancy and seas of knowledge under the new Covenant above the Covenant made with his people when he brought them out of Egypt that men shall not need to teach one another comparatively for all shall know the Lord who are taught of God from the least to the greatest An high-way shall be there Isa 35.8 and it shall be called the way of holiness the wayfaring men though fools shall not err therein 7. How is God said to forgive iniquity and never more to remember Sin For the first God is said to forgive iniquity when guilt of sin is taken away and for the second God is said never more to remember Sin in that the Sinner after pardon is never more looked on as a Sinner Is not this the Covenant q. d. I will remove thy Sins and do them away as if they had never been I will blot them out of the Book of my Memory I will obliterate the Writing that none shall be able to read it But you will say If Sin remain still in the Regenerate How are they so forgiven as to be remembred no more Divines tell us of Two Things in every Sin there is macula reatus the Filth and the Guilt This Guilt some again distinguish into the Guilt of Sin which they call the Inward Dignity and Desert of Damnation and the Guilt of Punishment which is the Actual Ordination of a Sinner unto Damnation Now in different Respects we say That Sin remains still in Believers and Sin doth not remain in Believers First If we speak of the Filth of Sin or of the Desert of Damnation so it remains still but if we speak of the actual Obligation of a Sinner to Condemnation so it remains not after Pardon but the Sinner is as free as if he had never sinned But you will say Is not the Filth of Sin done away when Sin is remitted I answer The Filth of Sin is not done away by Remission but by Sanctification and Renovation and because in this Life we have not a perfect inherent Holiness Sanctification at best being but Imperfect and wrought in us by degrees therefore during this Life there is something of the Filth of Sin and especially of the Effects of Original Sin sticking and still cleaving to us But here is our Comfort and herein lies the sweet of the Promise that when God hath pardoned Sin He takes away the Guilt as to Condemnation He acquits the Sinner of that Obligation He now looks upon him not as a Sinner but as a Just Man and so in this Sense He will forgive and never more remember his Sin Ah Christians Take heed of their Doctrine who would have Justification an Abolition of Sin in its real Essence and Physical in-dwelling let us rather say with Scripture that all justified Saints must take down their Top-sail and go to Heaven halting and that they carry their Bolts and Fetters of in-dwelling sin through the Field of Free-Grace even to the Gates of Glory Christ daily Washing and we daily Defiling to the end that Grace may be Grace I have run through all the manifestations of the Covenant of Grace as we have them discovered in the Old-Testament And yet that we may see the better how these things concern us I shall only propound these Two Queries more and then we have done 1. Whether is the Covenant of Grace the same for Substance in all Ages of the World We answer Yea The Fathers before Christ had but one Covenant and we another but the same Covenant of Grac● belongs to us both This appears in that first they had the same Promise secondly they had it upon the same Grounds 1. They had the same Promise as I will be your God and you shall be My People Lev. 26.12 Deut. 33.20 And Happy art thou O Israel saved by the Lord. And The Lord is our King and He will save us They had not only the Hopes of an Earthly Inheritance in Canaan as some fondly imagine but of an Heavenly Inheritance in the Kingdom of God And to this purpose our Saviour speaks expresly Many shall come from the East and West Isa 33.22 Mat. 8.11 and shall sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven 2. As they had the same Promise so they had it upon the same ground that we have John 8.56 Heb. 13.8 even by Faith in Christ Jesus Abraham saw My Day said Christ and Christ is the same Yesterday and to Day and for Ever He is the same not only in regard of Essence but also in regard of the Efficacy of His Office from the Beginning to the End of the World We believe said Peter that through the Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ Acts 15.11 Heb. 4.2 we shall be saved even as they And Vnto us was the Gospel Preached saith Paul as unto them Some may think they had no Gospel but only the Law before Christ But What say you Have we not observed a Thred of the Gospel and of the Covenant of Grace to run through all the Old-Testament from First to Last And How plain is the Apostle For this cause also was the Gospel preached also to them that are Dead Dead long since for he speaks of them who lived in the Dayes of Noah Nay the Apostle to the Hebrews 1 Pet. 4.6 gives us a Catalogue of Old-Testament-Believers By Faith Heb. 11.4 Abel offered up unto God a more excellent Sacrifice than Cain By Faith Enoch was Translated that he should not see Death By Faith Noah being warned by God prepared an Ark. By Faith 5.7.8.13 Abraham when he was called to go into a Place which he should after receive for an Inheritance obeyed and he went out not knowing whither he went These all died in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them Besides these he reckons up the Faith of Abraham Isaac and Jacob and Joseph and Moses and Rahab and Gideon and
yet time might injure them and these words he would have last for ever O that they were graven in the rock for ever Moses and Job are said to have lived at one time now Moses writ the Law in stone and considering that these words were Gospel there was no reason the Law should be in tables of stone and the Gospel in sheets of paper no no it were fit that this should be as firm and durable as that Oh that my words were written Oh that they were printed in a book c. 2. The matter wished or the words he would have written are these I know that my Redeemer liveth and that I shall live again Here 's first his Redeemer and his rising 2. His own rising and his seeing God O this was the matter of his joy his Redeemer must rise again and he must rise too and see his Redeemer it was a point that exceedingly ravished and revived Job and therefore he iterates the same thing over and over I shall see God and I shall see him for my self and I shall see him with my eyes Job 8.56 and not with others As Christ said of Abraham Your father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad So it appears of his Servant Job he saw Christ's day both his first day and his latter day and he rejoyced and was glad Away away all scrupulous doubtfull dumpish thoughts consider what joyes were of old at the foresight of Christs resurrection but especially what joy was all the World over when he rose again from the dead Greg. hom in pasca Job 20.20 Luke 24.41 Apostoli die dominico exhilirati non solum ipsum festivissimam esse voluerunt verum etiam per omnes hebdomadas frequentandum esse duxerunt Juno cent 1 Epist ad Decent 11. 4. then came the Angels from heaven and appeared in white then the Sun danced for joy so it is storyed or shone sooner and brighter than ever it did before then I am sure the Diciples were exceeding glad when they saw the Lord yea so glad that they believed not for joy it is worthy our observing to see how all the primitive Saints were affected with this news and because of it with the very day on which Christ arose some call it The first day of joy and gladness and because of the joy occasioned on this day the Apostles say they devoted the first day of the week to the honour and service of Jesus Christ Augustine applyes the words of the Psalm unto this day This is the day which the Lord hath made let us be glad and rejoyce in it Psal 118.24 Ignatus who lived in the Apostles age and was John's Disciple calls it the Queen the Princess the Lady Paramount among the other weekly dayes Chrysostom calls it a Royal day and Gregory Nazianzen orat 42. saith it is higher than the highest and with admiration wonderfull above other dayes Certainly the Lord's day was in high esteem with the antient Church and the principle motive was because of Christs resurrection from the dead O that on these dayes we could rejoyce in the Lord and again rejoyce it is observed that Many Christians look upon broken-heartedness and much grieving and weeping for sin as if it were the great thing that God delighteth in and requireth of them Baxters method for a setled Peace and therefore they bend all their endeavours that way they are still striving with their hearts to break them more and they think no Sermon no Prayer no Meditation speed so well with them as that which can help them to grieve or weep but O Christians understand and consider saith my Authour that all your sorrows are but preparatives for your joyes and that it is an higher and sweeter work that God calls you to and would have you spend your time and strength in Delight thy self in the Lord psal 37.4 and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart Never take your hearts to be right till they be delighting themselves in their God when you kneel down in Prayer labour so to conceive of God and bespeak him that he may be your delight do so in hearing and reading and meditating and in your feasting on the flesh and blood of Jesus Christ at his Supper Especially improve the happy opportunity of the Lords day wherein you may wholly devote your selves unto this work O spend more of this day in spiritual rejoycing especially in commemoration of Christ's resurrection yea and of the whole work of redemption or else you will not answer the institution of the Lord. SECT VIII Of Calling on Jesus in that Respect 8. LEt us Call on Jesus that is to say 1. Let us pray that Christ's resurrection may be ours and that we may be more and more assured of it Phil. 3.10 Let us say with the Apostle O that I may know him and the power of his resurrection O that I may find the working of that power in my soul which was shewed in the resurrection of Christ from the dead O that the Spirit of holiness which quickened Christ from the dead would by the same glorious power beget holiness and faith and love and all other graces in my poor soul O that Christ would by his resurrection apply his active and passive obedience to me O that he would be to me the Lord of the living and the Prince of life that he would overcome in me the death of sin and that he would regenerate quicken renew and fashion me by the power of godliness to become like himself O that all the vertue power priviledges and influences of Christ's resurrection might be conferred on me and that I might feel them working in me every day more and more 2. Let us praise God for Christ's resurrection and for all the priviledges flowing from Christ's resurrection into our souls 1 Pet. 1.3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath begotten us again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Christ is risen by his resurrection he hath justified sanctified quickened saved our souls and therefore Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ surely God requires a thousand thousand Hallelujah's and that we should bless him upon a thousand-stringed instrument here is fewel enough the Lord kindle a great fire in every one of our hearts to burn out all our lusts and to enflame all our hearts with a love to Jesus Christ Can we ever too much praise him for all his actings in our behalf are not all God's creatures called upon to rejoyce with us and to bless God for his redeeming of us Sing O ye heavens for the Lord hath done it shout ye lower part of the earth Isa 44.23 break forth into singing ye mountains O forrest and every tree therein for the Lord hath redeemed Jacob and glorified himself in Israel This is the duty we shall do in heaven and
he did this alone and it constituted the difference betwixt him as he was high Priest and other Priests for they killed and offered the Sacrifices without as well as he but only the high Priest was to approach the holy of hollies with blood and that but once a year 2. This was Typified by Melchizedech's Priest-hood which the Apostle argues to have been much more excellent then that of Aaron's in as much as Levi Aarons Father payed Tythes to this Melchizedech in Abrahams loyns now Melchizedech was his Type not so much in respect of his Oblation or offering Sacrifice as in respect of his continual presentation and intercession in heaven and therefore the same clause for ever still comes in when Melchizedech is named thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedech Heb. 5.6 7.17 Here then is the agreement betwixt Christ and the high-Priests of old in respect of name both were Priests and in respect of Office both had their oblations and presentations or intercessions with God in Glory 3. In the point of Intercession they agreed in these particulars 1. The high-Priest of old usually once a year went into the most Holy place within the vail and so is Christ our great high-Priest passed into the Heavens within the Vail even into the holy of holies Christ by his own blood entred in once into the holy place Not into the holy places made with hands Heb. 9.12 24. which are the Figures of the true but into heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us 2. The high-Priests of old had a plate of pure Gold upon their Fore-heads which was to bear the iniquity of the holy things that they might be accepted before the Lord Exod. 28.38 and so doth Christ bear the iniquity of our holy things Spiritual Christians here is your comfort you are not able to perform any duty to God but there is a great deal of sin in the same you cannot hear nor pray nor confer nor meditate without much sin but Christ bears all these sins even the iniquity of your holy things and he presents your persons and prayers without the least spot to his Father he is the Angel of the Covenant that stands at the Altar Rev. 8.3 having a golden Censer with much incense to offer it with the prayers of his Saints and so they are acceptable before the Lord. 3. The Jewish high-Priests bore the names of the Children of Israel on a breast-plate of judgment upon their hearts for a memorial before the Lord continually Exod. 28.29 and so doth Christ our great high-Priest bear the names of his people upon his heart before the Lord continually But how is Christ said to bear the names of the Saints upon his heart I answer 1. Continually in presenting of them to his Father as they are in him how is that why he represents them without spot as righteous in his own righteousness Ephes 5.27 Christ loved the Church that he might present it to his Father and in him to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish 2. In this continual remembring of them Psal 112.6 the righteous shall be had in continual remembrance this is the souls comfort in a time of desertion or in an evil day Psal 13.1 if any cry out as sometimes David did how long wilt thou forget me Lord for ever how long wilt thou hide thy face from me Isa 40.14 15 16. Let such a one remember that Christ's redeemed ones are upon his heart and he can not forget them But Zion said the Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me Oh no! can a woman forget her suckling child that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb yea they may forget yet I will not forget thee behold I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands thy walls are continually before me the Sons of Zion are upon Christ's heart and hands and they are ever in his sight 3. In his perpetual loving of them they are near and dear unto him he hath set them as a Seal upon his heart so was the prayer of the Spouse set me as a Seal upon thine heart Cant. 8.6 as a Seal upon thine arme and then it follows for love is as strong as death Christ hath an entire love to his Saints he dyed for them and now he intercedes for them he keeps them close to his heart and there is none shall pluck them out of his hands John 13.1 for whom he loves he loves unto the end Thus far of the agreement betwixt Christ's intercessions and the intercessions of the high Priests of old SECT VI. What the difference is betwixt Christ's intercessions and the intercessions of the high Priests of old 6. VVHat is the difference betwixt Christ's Intercessions and the intercessions of the high Priests of old There is no question but howsoever they might agree in some respects yet Christ officiates in a more transcendent and eminent way then ever any high Priest did before him now the difference betwixt Christ and them and betwixt Christ's Intercessions and their Intercessions may appear in these particulars Heb. 4.14 1. They were called high Priests but Christ is called the great high Priest such a Title was never given to any but Christ whence the Apostle argues for the steadfastness of our profession seeing then that we have a great high Priest that is passed into the heavens Jesus the Son of God let us hold fast our profession 2. The high-Priests then were Aaron and his Sons but Christ our great high-Priest is the Son of God for so he is styled in the same verse the great high-Priest that is passed into the heavens Heb. 4.14 Jesus the Son of God 3. The high-Priests then were but for a time but Christ is a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedech Heb. 5.6 Heb. 7.3 Melchizedech saith the Apostle was without Father without Mother without descent having neither beginning of days nor end of life That is as far as it is known and so is Christ without a Father on earth and without a Mother in Heaven without beginning and without end he abides a Priest perpetually even to the end of the World yea and the vertue of his Priesthood is infinitely beyond all time even for ever and ever 4. The high-Priests then entred only into that place that was Typically holy but Christ is entred into that place that is properly holy he is entred into the Heavens or if you will as into the holy of holies so into the heaven of heavens 5. The high Priests then did not always intercede for the people only once a year the high Priest entred into the holy of holies and after he had sprinkled the mercy-seat with blood and caused a cloud to rise upon the mercy-seat with his
this day of the Lord we look for it and hasten unto it we are glad it is so near and we do what we can to have it nearer with an holy kind of impatience we beg of the Lord Rom 8.22 23 Come Lord Jesu come quickly This was Paul's character We know that the whole creation groaneth and travelleth in pain together until now and not onely they but our selves also which have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our bodies God's children such as have the first-fruits of the spirit the beginnings of true saving grace in them they constantly look and long for the day of full deliverance or of the coming of Christ This the Apostle instanceth in his Corinthians ye come behind in no gift 1 Cor. 1.7 waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and in like manner he writes to his Philippians Phil. 3.20 Our Conversation is in Heaven from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ Tit. 2.13 And to Titus himself he writes the same things We look for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ Now Christians lay this character to heart do you long pant and look for this glorious and second coming of Christ have you any such wishes and sayings of heart and mind as these are Oh that Christ would appear Oh that Christ would now break the Heavens and come to Judgment oh that I could see him in the Cloud and on his Throne oh that his enemies were ruined my sins subdued my soul saved that I might serve him without weariness for ever and ever Surely if these elongations of soul be in you it is a comfortable evidence that your hopes are sound and that Christ will come to receive you to hims●lf and to bring you to glory 3. If we love Christ's appearing then will he appear on our side 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing A true Christian loves Christ's appearing in ordinances and in all the means of grace how much more in his own person but how should we love that we see not O yes there 's a kind of an Idea of Christ and of his glorious appearing in every sanctified soul and in that respect we love him though we cannot see him Who having not seen ye love 1 Pet. 1.8 Verse 7. saith the Apostle and so your love and faith at the appearing of Jesus Christ shall be found unto praise and honour and glory Those that have not seen Christ and yet love the Idea of his sight even they shall appear at the appearing of Christ in praise and honour and glory Is not the Crown laid up for them that love the appearing of Christ is it not a sign of a good cause to love a day of hearing surely the love of Christ's coming cannot consist without some assurance that a soul shall stand upright in the Judgdment He that hath not a confidence in his cause loves not the coming of the Judge no guilty prisoner loves the Sessions or loves the judges presence it is the cry of Reprobates Rev. 6.16 O ye mountains and O ye Rocks fall on us and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the Throne But as for Christ and his Saints O the mutual loves and mutual longings in their breasts The last words that Christ speaks in the Bible and amongst us last words make deepest impressions are Surely I come quickly and the last answer that is made in our behalf is Amen even so come Lord Jesus I know this Character is near the former and therefore I shall pass it over 4. If our works be good then will he reward us according to our works At that great day this will be the trial works are no works Mat. 25.33 34 35 36. Then will he say to them on his right hand come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you for I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in naked and ye cloathed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me Here were works Verse 46. upon which followed the rewards of Heaven for these went into eternal life I know Works are not meritorious and yet they are evidences I know works without Faith are but glisterrings sins and yet works done in faith are signs and fore-runners of eternal glory I know that if all the excellencies of all the moralities of all the men in the world were put together these could never reach glory and yet a cup of cold water given to one of Christ's little ones in the name of a Disciple of Christ shall not lose its reward Mat. 10.24 If a Christian doubt how should I know that my works are of a right stamp I answer 1. Look at the principle is there not something above nature do I not find some new light let out by God that shews a glory and excellency and beauty in good works is there not something in me that makes the same to be sweet or pleasant or agreeable to me 2. Look at the end natural works have no better end than self and creature-respects but in my works is there no aim at something higher than self whatever I do is not this in mine eye that all I do may tend to the honour and glory of God I had need take heed of vain-glory and self applause the Godly at the day of Judgment do not know the good works they did if my aim be at God I shall forget my self as if all I did were swallowed up in God 3. Look at the manner of my doing works Vzzah had a good intention but his work was not good because the manner was not good are my works according to the rule do they carry a conformity to the Law of God Let every man try his own work in this O my soul bring thy works to the touch-stone the Scripture the Rule of goodness is not all thy gold then discovered to be dross the Scripture doth not onely tell of works but tells us the manner of performing them as for instance if rightly done they must be done in zeal in fervency in activity thus Gods people are called a peculiar people zealous of good works a formal customary superficial performance of holy works fails in the manner of performing them what are my works performed in zeal is there not too much of coldness emptiness formality in all I do why thus may I know whether my works are of a right stamp certainly all works duties actings which are not done by a gracious heart through
LOOKING UNTO JESUS A VIEW OF THE Everlasting Gospel OR THE SOULS EYING OF JESUS As carrying on the great Work of Mans Salvation from First to Last By ISAAC AMBROSE Minister of the GOSPEL Isaiah 45.22 Look unto me and be ye Saved all the Ends of the Earth LONDON Printed for Richard Chiswel Benj. Tooke and Thomas Sawbridge 1680. To the Right Honourable WILLIAM Earl of BEDFORD Lord RUSSEL Baron of THORNEHAVGH Right Honourable ONce I made bold to prefix an Epistle to Your Honour before my Book entituled Ultima since which time You have continued with increase Your wonted favours As the Sun that rejoyceth to run his race and is unwearied after his many revolutions so Year after Year have You indefatigably expressed Your great Bounty whereby both my self and family have been exceedingly refreshed As I cannot but in way of thankfulness acknowledge thus much So I shall be a sincere Remembrancer both of your Honour and Your nearest Relations at the Throne of Grace My Lord I have now composed this Work containing a necessary practice and high priviledge of every Christian it is by way of supplement to the other duties set down in my Book call'd Media but because of my large handling it I reserved it for a tract by it self Indeed of all other duties I prefer it as the chief and I exceedingly wonder that before this time it hath not been undertaken by some abler hand Christians ordinarily go to Prayer Sacraments Hearing Reading and Meditation of the Word and sometimes though more seldom they set on the exercise of other Duties as self-trial self-denial the improving of experiences the clearing of evidences extemporary and deliberate meditation c. but in the mean time how is the main the prime employment even the duty of duties of Looking unto Jesus wholly neglected If many or most have been ignorant of it hitherto I think it is high time to discover it to the sleepy world and it may be when day is clear they will walk in the light and bless God for finding out a way wherein they may more immediately have commerce with Jesus Christ I could have wished that others more able had appeared in this service in a particular handling of this excellent subject I find it in print wisht for by a godly Brother where he complains that Christ's love had been so little studied Men have been very swift in searching after other truths but slow in searching after this An ample exact discovery of this love of Christ I say of this love in carrying on our souls salvation from first to last may well be set down amongst the desiderata the desirables of Divines it having been so little handled unless in some parts or pieces by any Surely it is very sad to think that the knowledge of this love of Christ in a continued series being of such necessary and high concernment hath been so little enquired into O what a gallant Gospel-design were it for some one who is acquainted with the Spirit in a large measure to go over the whole History of the Gospel of the everlasting Gospel of Jesus and to observe the glorious shinings of the love of Christ to Believers in all it would be precious if some would take it in hand and perfect it to the purpose but it is sad to think it hath been neglected so long As the Lord hath enabled I have adventured and if for my rashness in not waiting any longer to see if any Star of a greater magnitude would have appeared I must be censured I fly to your Honour for Patronage Nor only for Patronage but I humbly heg of You and Yours to peruse and practise this slender Work who can tell but some of the golden Oile of Grace may come out of Jesus Christ the true Olive-tree even through these Pipes and if so your own experiences will be satisfactory answers to all other censures Sure I am in this exercise however the directions may be weak you will find the advantage of lying at the well-head and so you may drink more sweetly than others that make use only of the streams That you my noble Lord and your vertuous Lady with your hopeful Issue may receive spiritual good by this Treatise and all other helps which God's good providence may put into your hands Is the hearty prayer My Lord Of your Honours thankful faithful though very unworthy servant ISAAC AMBROSE TO THE READER AMongst all the duties I formerly mentioned I omitted one that now I look upon as chief and choice of all the rest This is the duty I call Looking unto Jesus and if I must discover the occasion of my falling on it I shall do it truly and plainly and in the simplicity of the Gospel as thus In the Spring 1653. I was visited with a sore sickness and as the Lord began to restore my health it came into my thoughts what my Jesus had done for my soul and what he was doing and what he would do for it till he saved it to the uttermost In my conceptions of these things I could find no begining of his actings but in that eternity before the world was made nor could I find any end of his actings but in that eternity after the world should be unmade only betwixt these two extremities I apprehended various transactions of Jesus Christ both past and present and to come In the multitude of these thoughts Within me my soul exceedingly delighted it self and that delight stirring up in me other affections for one affection cannot be alone I began to consider of those texts in Scripture which seemed at first to impose the working of my affections on so blessed an Object as a Gospel-duty then I resolved if the Lord Jesus would but restore my health and prolong my life I would endeavour to discover more of this Gospel-duty than ever yet I knew and that my pains therein might not hinder my other necessary labours my purpose was to fall on this subject in my ordinary preaching wherein I might have occasion both to search into Scriptures several Authors and my own heart In process of time I began this work begging of God that he would help me to finish as he inclined me to begin and that all might tend to his glory and the Churches good In the progress of my labours I found a world of spiritual comfort both in respect of the object that I handled Jesus Christ and in respect of the act wherein consisted my duty to him in Looking unto Jesus 1. For the Object it was the very subject whereon more especially I was bound to preach Christ in you the hope of glory said Paul to his Colosians and he immediately adds whom we preach Col. 1.27 28. and unto me who am less than the least of all the Saints is this grace given what grace that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ Eph. 3.8 Ministers ought in duty more abundantly to preach
coming to Christ as a river of much waters is strong in coming home to the Ocean 13. That Christ gives the sense of his own worth and excellency unto them they see now in Christ is wisdome surpassing the brightness of the Sun even all the treasures of wisdome in Christ is power excelling the strength of rocks he is not onely strong but strength it self in Christ is Honour transcending all the Kings of the earth for he is King of Kings and Lord of Lords in Christ is beauty excelling the Rose of Sharon and Lilly of the valleys he is fairer than all the flowers of the field than all the precious stones of the earth than all the lights in the firmament than all the Saints and Angels in the highest heavens 14. That Christ gives the sense of their wants and of the worlds vanity and of his sutable goodness unto them In looking unto Jesus they see themselves in themselves miserable and all other things miserable comforters they have learnt the meaning of that Psalm Psal 146.3 4. Put not your trust in Princes nor in the son of man and in whom there is no help his breath goeth forth he returneth to his earth in that very day his thoughts perish happy is the man that hath the God of Jacob for his God whose hope is in the Lord his God 15. That Christ gives all things every thing unto them All things are yours saith the Apostle whether Paul 1 Cor. 3. 22 23. or Apollo or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods All things are yours First all the Ministers of Christ from the highest to the lowest whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas they are your servants they are men that watch over you for your salvation Secondly the world is yours indeed the world stands but for your sakes if your number were but once compleated quickly would the world be set on fire you will say ay! but how is the world ours we find not this for who hath the world at will why though you have not yet the misery you find in the world the want of wealth as well as the enjoying of it is yours i e. it tends to your advantage Thirdly life is yours it is a fitting a preparing a squaring of you for a better life even for eternity Fourthly death is yours for you shall die just then when it is best for you death shall serve but as a servant to your advantage 1 Tim. 4.8 Fifthly things present and things to come are yours godliness hath the promise of this life and of that which is to come Sixthly I will add the Lord himself is yours take God and look on him in his greatness in his mighty power even this great God the Lord of heaven and earth is yours he is yours and all that he hath is yours and all that he doth is yours and all that he can do is yours I will be thine saith God to Abraham I will be to thee an exceeding great reward Gen. 15.1 Here is a Catalogue an Inventory of a Christians riches have Christ and have all when an Heathen was but asked where all his treasure was he answered where Cyrus my friend is and if any ask you where all your treasure is you may answer where Christ your friend is in this respect you may truly say Ephes 3.8 there is no end of your riches they are called the unsearchable riches of Christ Paul could find no bottom of these riches O who would not look unto Jesus If Christ be yours besides those particulars enumerated in this Text 1 Cor. 3.22 23. God is yours the Father is yours the Son is yours the Spirit is yours all the promises are yours for in Christ they are all made and for him they shall be performed Come let the proud man boast in his honour and the mighty man in his valour and the rich man in his wealth but let the Christian pronounce himself happy only happy truly happy fully happy in beholding Christ enjoying Christ having Christ in Looking unto Jesus You have the Motives of our wants in case of neglect and of our riches in case we are active frequent serious and lively in this Duty But for our further encouragement to fall upon it I shall add a few Motives more SECT VII More Motives to encourage us in this work 1 COnsider your looking on Jesus will maintain your communion with Jesus and is not this worth the while Why Christians what is this communion with Christ but very heaven aforehand hereby we enjoy his person and all sweet relation to his person his death and all the saving fruits priviledges and influences of his death hereby we are brought into Christs banquetting-house Cant. 2.4 held in his galleries his banner over us being love hereby we are carried up into the Mount with Christ that we may see him as it were transfigured and may say with Peter Master it is good for us to be here and let us here build Tabernacles Oh it 's an happy thing to have Christ dwell in our hearts for us to lodge in Christs bosome Oh it s an happy thing to maintain a reciprocal communication of affairs betwixt Christ and our souls as thus he bare our sins take we his healing he endured wounds for us drink we the spiritual balsom that sprang out of his wounds he took upon him our unrighteousness do we cloath our selves with his righteousness he endured pains for us come we to him and take his rest to our souls he embraced our curse and condemnation do we embrace his blessing justification and salvation To this end do we look on Jesus if he hide his face by desertions rest not till we find him if we find him hold him fast let him not go disturb him not out of our hearts by our corruptions Thus if we would prize the presence of Christ how comfortably should we maintain and encrease our Communion with Christ 2. Consider that your daily necessities call for a frequent looking up unto Jesus you have need of Christ you have need that he pray in you and need that he pray for you to your heavenly Father you have need that he work in you and need that he work for you his own blessed will you have need that he present you and yours blameless before his Fathers presence in life and death and at the judgment day there 's not a moment in your life wherein you stand not in continual need of Jesus Christ And can a hungry man forget his bread can the heart that pants for thirst forget the River can a man in bonds forget freedom can a child in distress forget a Father in honour and wealth Oh then let your necessities drive you to Christ and mind you of Christ Is not he the fountain that supplies all wants Christians consult your own
stands in competition with Jesus we have discussed before Many other Motives might be given but let this suffice I have done with the exhortation In the next place I shall lay open to you the particular way of this Duty which all this while I have been perswading to SECT VIII Vse of Direction Vse 3 IS inward experimental looking unto Jesus a choice or an high Gospel Ordinance why then some directions how we are to perform this Duty Practice is the end of all sound doctrin and duty is the end of all right faith now that you may do what you have heard in some good measure I shall prescribe the directions in the next part prescribed But first in the work observe those two parts of the Text the act and object the act is looking unto and the Object is Jesus 1. By looking unto we mean as you have heard an inward experimental knowing desiring hoping believing loving calling on Jesus and conforming to Jesus it is not a bare swiming knowledge of Christ it is not a bare thinking of Christ as Christ hath various excellencies in himself so hath he formed the soul with a power of diverse wayes apprehending that so we might be capable of enjoying those divers excellencies that are in Christ even as the creatures having their several uses God hath accordingly given us several senses that so we might enjoy the delights of them all what the better had we been for pleasant odoriferous Flowers or sweet perfumes if we had not possest the sense of smelling or what good would language or musick have done us if God had not given us the sense of hearing or what delight should we have found in meats or drinks or sweetest things if we had been deprived of the sense of tasting so what pleasure should we have had even in the goodness and perfection of God and Christ if we had been without the faculty and power of knowing desiring hoping believing loving joying and enjoying as the senses are to the body so are these spiritual senses powers affections to the soul the very way by which we must receive sweetness and strength from the Lord Jesus 2. By Jesus who is the Object of this Act we mean a Saviour carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last hence we shall follow this method to look on this Jesus as our Jesus in these several periods 1. In that Eternity before all time until the Creation 2. In the Creation the beginning of time until his coming 3. In his first coming the fulness of time until his coming again 4. In his coming again the very end of time to all Eternity In every of these Periods Oh what a blessed Object is before us Oh what wonders of love have we to look upon Before I direct you how to look on him in these respects I must in the first place propound the Object still we must lay the colours of this admirable beauty before your eyes and then tell you the art how you are to look upon them You may object the Apostle in this Text refers this look only to the passion and session of Christ Bp. Arde. But a worthy Interpreter tells you out of these words That Christ our blessed Saviour is to be looked on at all times and in all acts though indeed then in those Acts more especially Besides we are to look unto Jesus as the Author and finisher of our Faith and why as the Author and finisher of our Faith but to hint out to us that we are to stand still and to behold as with a stedfast eye what he is from first to last You have called us hither say they in Canticles to see your Shulamite What shall we s●e in him What saith the Spouse but as the company of two Armies that is many legions of good sights an Ocean of bottomless depths of manifold high perfections Or if these words be understood of the Spouse and not of Christ yet how many words do we find in Canticles expressing in him many goodly sights Myrrhe Aloes Cinamon all the Trees of Frankincense all the Powders of the Merchants are in him he is altogether lovely he is all every whit of him desirable he is not one single Star but a constellation there is in him a confluence a bundle an army of glorious sights all in one cluster meeting and growing upon one stalk There 's many glorious sights in Jesus I I shall not therefore limit my self to those two especial ones but take all those before me I have now propounded And now if ever stir up your hearts Say to all worldly business and thoughts as Christ to the Disciples Matth 2● 36 Sit you here while I go pray yonder Or as Abraham when he went to sacrifice Isaac left his Servants and Asse below the Mount saying Stay you here and I and the Lad will go yonder and Worship and come again to you so say to all worldly thoughts Abide you below while I go up to Christ and then I will return to you again Christians your selves may be welcom but such followers may not LOOKING UNTO JESUS The Second Book Revel 1.8 11. I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending saith the Lord which is and which was and which is to come the Almighty I am Alpha and Omega the first and the last and what thou seest write in a book and send it to the seven Churches CHAP. I. SECT I. Of the eternal Generation of our Jesus WE must Look unto Jesus the beginner and finisher of our faith we must behold Jesus as with a stedfast eye from first to last As he is Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending the first and the last so accordingly we must Look unto him 1. He is Alpha the beginner so it is in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginner the inceptor the first wheel of our faith Heb. 12.2 and of the end of our faith the salvation of our souls 2 Thes 2.13 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 Now Christ may be called a beginner in respect of the Decree or execution I shall begin with the Decree wherein he begun before the beginning of time to design our happiness for the praise of the glory of his Grace Ephes 1.6 Many depths are in this passage To this purpose we told you that Jesus is Gods Son and our Jesus eternally begotten before all worlds In this first period we shall look on him 1. In relation to God 2. In relation to us 1. In his relation to God who shall declare his generation Isa 53.8 He is Gods Son having his subsistence from the Father alone of which Father by communication of his essence he is begotten from all eternity For the opening of this eternal generation of our Jesus we shall consider 1. The thing begotten 2. The time 3. The manner of begetting 4. The mutual kindness and love of him that begets and of him
Gods purposes are without any alteration the love of Christ after thousands of years is still as the love of a Bridegroom upon the wedding day indeed then ordinarily love is hot and appears much so is Christs love and so is Gods love ever hot there is no moment of time from Eternity to Eternity wherein God rejoyceth not over his Saints as the Bridgroom over his Bride not only as an husband over his wife but as a Bridegroom over his Bride we may say of this purpose of God as it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be World without end O my soul muse and meditate on this purpose of God Isa 55.3 and by consequence on the sure mercies of David it may be it is not always alike sure to thee the love of God as the shining of the Sun doth not always in the fruits of it shining out so gloriously but the Sun keeps his course in a steady way what though it be sometimes clouded what though at times it shine not so gloriously as at high-noon yet the purpose of God according to Election must stand All the Devils in Hell cannot frustrate Gods purpose concerning only one soul John 6.39 this is the Fathers will which sent me saith Christ that of all which he hath given me I should lose none 5. Consider Gods decree concerning thy souls salvation and the means to it As the purpose of God so the decree of God speaks the stability and certainty of the thing decreed The foundation of God standeth sure 2 Tim. 2.16 i The decree of God touching mans Salvation is unchangable If the Laws of the Medes and Persians were so absolute that they could not be reversed then much less can the decrees of God be reversed no man that is not Elected can be Elected and no man that is Elected can possibly be damned My sheep hear my voice saith Christ and I give unto them eternal life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck t●●● out of my hand And it must needs be so for Gods decree is grounded on the Eternal and unchangable will of God and hence we say that there is a certain number of the Elect known only to God which cannot possibly be encreased or diminished John 13 18 I know whom I have chosen saith Christ And yet thou canst not O my soul hence infer that thou mayest be secure for in this decree the end and the means are joyned together of God and they cannot be separated by any man if thou beest not godly never expect to be happy Gods decree of Predestination is as well for the giving of grace as for the giving of glory 6. Consider the Covenant struck betwixt God and Christ for thy salvation If thou wouldst fain be acquainted with the very Articles of it go on then take Scripture along and first on Gods part thou mayest observe and meditate and consider of these particulars 1. That there was a designation and appointment of Christ from all Eternity to the office of Mediatorship John 6.27 Isa 42 1 whence Christ is said to be sealed by the Father for him hath God the Father sealed and chosen of the Father behold my servant whom I uphold mine Elect or chosen one 2. There was a commandment from the Father to the Son which he must obey and submit unto As first he had a command what to teach his people as the Prophet of the Church John 12.49 for I have not spoken of my self saith Christ but the Father which sent me he gave me a commandment what I should say and what I should speak Secondly he had a commandment to lay down his life fore those that were given him John 10.18 no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again this Commandment have I received of my Father 3. There was a Promise from the Father to the Son the Father covenants with him in these things Isa 42.1 first that he will give him the Spirit in abundance Behold my servant whom I uphold I have put my Spirit upon him he shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles Isa 11.1 2 And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and might the Spirit of knowledg and of the fear of the Lord. Secondly that he will give him assistance and help in this great work of Redemption I the Lord have called thee in righteousness Isa 42.6 and will hold thy hand what 's that why I will strengthen thee with my power I will so hold thy hand that thou shalt not be discouraged in the work Isa 42.4 He shall not fail nor be discouraged tell he have set judgment upon the Earth Thirdly that he will give him a blessed success that he shall not labour in vain Isa 53 10 11 he shall see his seed he shall prolong his days and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hands he shall see of the travail of his soul and shall be satisfied Christs suffering were as a womans travail though she suffer many pains and pangs yet she sees her Child at last so shall Christ see many believing on his Name they are the promise made by the Father to the Son Isa 55.5 that Nations that know him not shall run unto him Fourthly that he will give him and his Redeemed ones everlasting glory to Christ himself there is a promise of glory he hath gloryfied thee And to the Members of Christ there is a promise of glory and this promise of glory to them was made known to Christ from everlasting it was one of the secrets of God and Christ brings out that secret from the bosome of his Father Luk. 12.32 and reveals it to his Disciples It is my Fathers pleasure said he to give you the Kingdom Christ knew his Fathers will by the Covenant passing betwixt his Father and him and this will of the Father concerning glory promised to the Saints Christ doth bring forth to light These were the Articles of the Covenant on Gods part now O my soul see them on Christs part in these particulars 1. There was an acceptation of the office to which he was designed by the Father he did not take the office of Mediatorship upon himself but first the Father calls him to it Heb. 5.5 Heb. 1.10.7 and then the Son accepts it Christ glorified not himself to be made an high Priest but he that said unto him thou art my Son to day have I begotten thee he called him and then the Son answered Lo I come 2. There was a promise on Christs part to depend and trust upon God for help And again I will put my trust in him they are the words of Christ to his Father And Isaiah brings in Christ as looking for help from God
read thy name in the Book of Life but search into these fruits and effects of thy election As 1. If thou beest within Gods decrees for salvation then sooner or later God will cause the power of his Word to come with authority and conviction upon thy conscience knowing brethren beloved your election of God for our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but also in power The Apostle speaks thus of others 1 Thes 1.4 5 he might know they were the Elected of God either by his judgment of charity or by a spirit of discerning which was vouchsafed to some in the Apostles times but how comes he immediately to know this truth by this glorious effe●t our Gospel came not in Word only but also in power Oh 't is good to consider with what power the Word preached falls into thy heart doth it convince thee humble thee mollie thee soften thee this argues thou belongest to God The Word preached will be more than the word of a man more than a meer human Oration or verbal declamation where it comes in power Oh! it will be like fire in thy bowels like a two edged Sword in the secret places of thy heart thou wilt cry out verily God is here Oh the power the conviction the meltings of my soul that I feel within me 2. If God hath ordained thee to Salvation then sooner or later God will effectually call thee Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called Rom. 8.30 this calling is a calling of the Soul from sin from amongst the rest of the World unto Jesus Christ it is such a call as enables the soul to follow Christ as Matthew being called by Christ he arose and followed Christ These two are linked together in Pauls golden chain predestination and effectual vocation Mat. 9.9 We are bound to give thanks alway unto God for you brethren ● Thes ●●3 14. beloved of the Lord and why so because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation Wherunto he called you by the Gospel to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ All those that belong to Gods election are sometime or other effectually called by the Word and Spirit of Christ and it must needs be so because as the Lord hath put a difference betwixt his Elect and others before the world was and he will make a final difference betwixt them and others after the end of the World so he will have them differenced and distinguished whilest thy are in this World by this inward effectual operative calling they are men of other minds wills affections dispositions Acts 26 18 Ephes 5.7 8 conversations they are called from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God As the Apostle ye were somtimes darkness but now are ye light in the Lord. Be not ye therefore partakers with them 3. If thou art chosen for salvation then sooner or later thou shalt have true soul-saving justifying faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed When God hath a people to call home to himself he either brings them to the means or the means to them and those that belong to the Election of Grace believe O my soul hast thou this saving faith not a fancied faith a dead faith an easie faith but saving faith such a faith as was wrought in thee by the Word and Spirit with power such a faith as was not in any power to give nor in any power to receive untill God enable thee by his Spirit Rom 8 ●0 Rom. 5 1 then here is thy ground that thou art ordained to eternal life for whom he calls he justifies and we are justified by faith Not that the essence of faith justifies but faith justifies instrumentally in that it lays hold upon that which justifies even the righteousness of Christ Jesus 4. If thou art decreed for salvation then sooner or later the Lord will beget and increase in thee grace holiness sanctification Elect according to the foreknowledg of God the Father 1 Pet. 1.2 through sanctification of the Spirit God predestinates his people unto holiness Ephes 1.4 he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the World that we should be holy and without blame before him If God appoint thee to eternal life he doth here in this World appoint thee to an holy gracious life No sanctification no election no grace no glory thou art to be a precious Jewel here ere God will make thee up at that great day Observe the chain Rom. 8.29 If I be sanctified with the Divine Nature in which glory is begun then I am justified if justified then I have been called according to purpose if called then I was predestinated and if predestinated to means then I was foreknown as one whom God would choose to the end even immarcessible and eternal glory 5. If thou art appointed and prepared for glory then God will give thee a thankful heart for so great a mercy thou canst no more keep in the heart from over-flowing when thou art sensible of this everlasting love then thou canst put bounds to the Sea See Paul praising God for the Election of himself and others after I heard of your faith and love Ephes 1.15 1● Ephes 1.3 4 I cease not to give thnaks and Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ according as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world And what glorious triumphs doth Paul in the person of all the Elect make over all kind of enemies that can be thought of he challengeth every adversary to put forth his sting and why even because God hath Elected Rom. 8.33.39 and nothing can separate them from this unchangeable love this was it that begot his thanksgiving Rom. 7.25 I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. O my soul how is thy heart affected with praise and thankfulness in this matter he that bestoweth great things looks for great return of thanks especially this being all thou canst do 6. If the project counsel love purpose decree and Covenant of God with Christ concerned thee and thy souls happiness then God will crown thee with perseverance and a stedfast continuance in the way of grace thou wast first set in final apostasie and total back-sliding from the ways of God can never befal those that are thus chosen they went from us 1 John 2.19 Mat. 24 ●4 Jer. 32.40 because they were not of us said the Apostle and if it were possible they should deceive the very Elect said Christ but it is certainly impossible and why I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall never depart from me Oh what a blessed mercy is this when there are so many hours of temptation in the world so many blustering storms and tempests that are able to raise up the very
commands it but when I have made a promise to it then I command it and bind it upon my self 2. That our obedience might be more willing and free an absolute Law might seem to extort obedience but a Covenant and agreement makes it clearly to appear more free and willing This is of the nature of the Covenant of grace first God promiseth mercy to be our exceeding great reward and then we promise obedience to be his free and willing people thus we become gods not only by a property founded in his soveraign power love but by a property growing out of our own vo●untary consents we are not only his people but his willing people we give him our hand when we become his and enter into Covenant with him See the expression Ezek. 17.18 ●k 17.18 He dispised the oath by breaking the Covenant when loe he had given his hand We are his as the wife is her husbands ●k 16.8 I entred into Covenant with thee saith the Lord God and thou becamest mine now in marriages free and mutual consent you know is ever given and so it is here 3. That our consolations might be stronger that in all our difficulties and distresses we might ever have recourse to the faithfulness and love of God 1. To the faithfulness of God ●on 17.27 This was David's stay and this may be ours though friends be unfaithful and may deceive yet the Lord is faithful and cannot fail his people his promises are Yea and Amen ●r 1.20 we may build upon it 2. That we might have recourse to the love of God this indeed was the prim end why God delivered his Law in way of a Covenent that he might sweeten and indear hinself to us and so draw us to him with cords of love had God so pleased he might have required all obedience from us and when we had done all he might have reduced us into nothing or at least not have given us heaven for ●n inheritance or himself for a portion but his love is such that he will not only command but he will Covenant that he might further express and communicate his love how then should this but incourage us to go to God in all distresses O what thankful loving thoughts should we have of God that would thus infinitely condescend to Covenant with us 5. What are the good things Promised in this expressure of the Covenant not to reckon up the temporal Promises of riches honour victory peace and protection in a land of Oyle Olive and Honey the great mercies of God are expressed in these terms I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage This is the great Promise of the Covenant it is as great as God himself That we may better see it and know it I shall take it in pieces the gold is so pure that it is pity the least filing should be lost Here God describes himself by these notes 1. By his only eternal and Perfect Essence I am the Lord. 2. By the Plurality of persons in that one essence I am the Lord God Jehovah Elohim 3. By the propriety his people have in Jehovah Elohim I am the Lord thy God 4. By the fruit of that Propriety in reference to Israel which brought thee out of the land of Eygpt out of the house of bondage ●d 6.3 1. I am Jehovah we read that he appeared to Abraham Isaac and Jacob by the name of God Almighty but now he was known to the Israelites by his name Jehovah I am the Lord. Why was it not by that name that he appeared to Abraham Isaac and Jacob no no saith God by my name Jehovah was I not known to them This hath occasioned a question how can this be do we not read expresly that God said to Abraham I am the Lord that brought thee out of Ur of the Chaldees and again I am the Lord God of Abraham thy Father and the God of Isaac Gen. 15.7 Gen. 28.13 how then is it said that by his name Jehovah he was not known unto them This place hath perplexed many of the learned but the meaning seems to be this that though he was known to the Patriarchs by his name Jehovah as it consists of letters syllables and sounds yet he was not experimentally known unto them in his constancy to perform his promise in bringing them out of the land of Egypt until now This name Jehovah denotes both his being in himself and his giving of being or performance to his word and promise thus indeed he was not known or manifested to the Patriarchs they only were sustained by faith in Gods almighty power without receiving the thing promised it is said of Abraham that while he was yet alive Acts. 7.5 God gave him no inheritance in Canaan no not so much as to set his foot on yet he promised that he would give it to him for a possession and to his seed after him and now when his seed came to receive the Promise and to have full knowledg and experience of his Power and goodness then they knew the efficacy of his name Jehovah So upon performance of further promises he saith they shall know him to be Jehovah Isa 49.2 3. Isa 52.6 and thou shalt know that I am the Lord. therefore my people shall know my name they shall know in that day that I am he that doth sepak behold it is I. 2. I am Jehovah Elohim this denotes the plurallity of Persons God in delivering of the law doth not only shew his being but the manner of his being that is the three manners of subsisting in that one simple and eternal being or the Trinity of persons in that Unity of Essence the word signifies strong potent mighty or if we express it plurally it signifies the Almighties or Almighty powers hence the Scriptures apply the general name God to the Persons severally the Father is God Heb. 1.1 2. the Son is God Act. 20.28 and the holy Ghost is God Act 5.3 4. Now God is said to be Author of these Laws delivered in a Covenant-way by Moses that so the greater authority may be procured to them and hence all Law-givers have endeavoured to perswade the people that they had their Laws from God 3. I am the Lord thy God herein is the propriety and indeed here is the mercy that God speaks thus to every faithful Soul I am thy God by this appropriation God gives us a right in him yea a possession of him 1. A right in him as the woman may say of him to whom she is Married this man is my husband so may every faithful soul say of the Lord he is my God 2. A possession of him God doth not only shew himself unto us but he doth communicate himself unto us in his holiness mercy truth grace and goodness hence it is said we have fellowship with the Father and with the
Son Jesus Christ 1 John 1.3 Rev. 3.20 Cant. 1.1 2 Deut. 4.7 and Christ is said to come and sup with us and to kiss us with the kisses of his mouth and to be near to us in all that we call upon him for surely this is the highest happiness of the Saints that God is their God when they can say this they have enough if we could say this House is mine this Town this City this Kingdom this World is mine what is all this O but when a Christian comes at length and sayes this God that made all the world is mine this is enough indeed this is the greatest promise that ever was made or ever can be made to any creature Angels or Men herein if we observe it God gives himself to be wholly ours consider God essentially or personally Consider Jehovah Elohim all is ours God in his essence and glorious attributes communicates himself to us for good and God personally considered as Father Son and Holy Ghost they all enter into Covenant with us 1. The Father enters into Covenant with us he promiseth to be a father to us hence saith the Lord Israel is my Son my first born and again is Ephraim my dear Son Exod. 4.22 Jer. 31.20 Psal 14.11 Psal 103.13 is he a pleasant Child the Lord speaketh as through he were fond of his Children as delighting in them for so it is said the Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him or as pitying of them for so it is said likewise like as a father pitieth his Children so the Lord pitieth them that fear him 2. The Son is in Covenant with us and speaks to us in this language thou art mine how comes that about why I have redeemed thee I have called thee by thy name Isa 43.1 and therefore thou art mine this is Christ's Covenant with us he brings us back to his Father from whose presence we were banished and sets us before his face for ever he undertakes for us to take up all controversies which may fall out between God and us he promiseth to restore us to the Adoption of Sons and not only to the title but to the inheritance of Sons that we might be where he is Joh. 17.24 Heb. 10.14 15 16. 3. The Holy Ghost makes a Covenant with us By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witness and a worker This is the Covenant that I will make with them I will put my Law into their hearts and in their minds will I write them I know the Father is implyed in this yet here is the proper work of the Holy Ghost what the Father hath purposed for us from all Eternity and the Son hath purchased for us in his time that the Holy Ghost effects in us and for us as in our time he applyes the blood of Christ for the remssion of Sins he writes the Law in our hearts he comforts us in our sadness he supports us in our faintings and guides us in our wanderings Now he that effects these things for us and in our behalf he is therefore said to make a Covenant with us Thus Elohim God personally considered Father Son and Holy Ghost are in Covenant with us 4. This is the great promise what can be greater when God said to Abraham I will be thy God Heb. 6.13 what could he give more so when God tells us I am the Lord thy God what could he say more God having no greater to swear by saith the Apostle he swore by himself So God being minded to do great things for his People and having no greater thing to give he gives himself O the goodness of God in Christ I am the Lord thy God 5. Let us see the fruit of this in reference to Israel which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of bondage This was God's promise long before to Abraham know of a surety Gen. 15.13 4. that thy seed shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs and shall serve them and they shall afflict them four hundred years and also that Nation whom they shall serve will I judg and afterwards they shall come out with great substance See here Israel must be strangers in Egypt and serve the Egyptians four hundred years but then he will bring them out of the land of Egypt and out of their servile bondage why this argues that God is Jehovah now he has performed what he had foretold and this argues that God in Christ is our Redeemer for what was this redemption from Egypt but a type of our freedom from sin death and hell here is the work of redemption joyned with that great name Jehovah Elohim to signifie that such a redemption is a clear testimony of a true and mighty God Whether this were laid down only as a peculiar argument to the Jews to keep the Commandments or it belongs also to us being grafted in and become of the same stock with them I shall not dispute this is without any controversie that their bondage was typical and ours spiritual you see the good things promised in this Covenant 6. What is the condition of this covenant on our part as we may gather it hence The condition of this covenant is faith in Jesus which is implyed in the promise I will be thy God or I am the Lord thy God and commanded in the precept built upon it thou shalt have me to be thy God or thou shalt have no other Gods before me But where is faith in Jesus Christ mentioned either in promise or precept I answer if it be not expressed it is very plainly intended or meant God is not the God of Israel but in and through the Mediator neither can Israel take God to be their God but by faith in the Messiah In the prophets we read frequently these exhortations trust in the Lord commit thy self unto the Lord lean upon the Lord and roul thy burden upon the Lord but what the Prophets exhort unto that is commanded in this expressure of the Covenant and who can trust in the Lord or commit himself to the Lord or lean upon the Lord or roul his burthen on the Lord if he be a sinner unless it be in and through a Mediator Israel must walk before God in all well-pleasing and the Apostle tells us that without faith it is impossible to please God But to go further what is the meaning of this first commandment in the affirmative part but to have one God in Christ to be our God by faith it is true Heb. 11.6 there is no mention made of Christ or faith but that is nothing is there is no mention of Love and yet our Saviour discovers and commands it there when the Lawyer tempted Christ Master which is the great Commandment in the Law you know Christs answer Mat. 22.36 37 38. thou shalt love the Lord
thy God with all thy heart with all thy soul and with all thy mind this is the first and great Commandment Mat. 22 36 37 38. Now as our Saviour discovers love there so in like manner is faith and Christ there the necessary consequents But you may object what say we to obedience is not that rather the condition of this covenant thus shining in the Law Indeed the Law and obedience are Correlatives But in this case we are not to look to the Law as meerly mandatory we gave you the sence of the word and how it is used as a covenant of grace remember only this the Law is considered either more strictly as it is an abstracted rule of righteousness holding forth life upon no other terms but perfect obedience or more largely as that whole doctrine delivered on Mount Sinai with the preface and promises adjoyned in the former sense it is a Covenant of works but in the latter sense it is a covenant of grace And yet I dare not say that as the Law is a covenant of grace it doth exclude obedience In some sort obedience as well as faith may be said to be a condition of the covenant of grace I shall give you my thoughts in this distinction obedience to all Gods commandments is either considerable as a cause of life or as a qualification of the subject in the former sense it cannot be a condition of the covenant of grace but in the latter sense it may if by condition we understand whatsoever is required on our part as precedent concomitant or subsequent to the Covenant of grace repentance faith and obedience are all conditions but if by Condition we understand whatsoever is required on our part as the cause of the good promised though only instrumental why then faith or belief in the promises of the covenant is the only condition faith and obedience are opposed in the matter of justification and salvation in the Covenant not that they cannot stand together in one subject for they are inseparable united but because they cannot concur and meet together in one court as the cause of justification or salvation Now when we speak of the condition of the Covenant of grace we intend such a condition as is among the number of true causes indeed in the Covenant of works obedience is required as the cause of life but in the Covenant of grace though obedience must accompany faith yet not obedience but only faith is the cause of life contained in the Covenant 7. Who was the Mediator of this Covenant to this we distinguish of a double Mediator viz. Typical and Spiritual Moses was a typical but Christ was the spiritual Mediator and herein was Moses priviledged above all before him he was the Mediator of the Old Testament Christ reserving himself to be the Mediator of a better Covenant i. of the New Testament Moses received the Law from God Heb. 8.6 and delivered it to the people and so he stood a Mediator between God and the people never was mortal man so near to God as Moses was Abraham indeed was called Gods friend but Moses was Gods favorite and never was mortal man either in knowledge love or authority so near unto the people as Moses was which makes the Jews O wonder to Idolize him to this very day Moses was called in as a Mediator on both parts 1. On Gods part when he called him up to receive the Law all those messages which God sent by him to the people 2. On the peoples part when they desired him to receive the Law for they were afraid by reason of the fire and durst not go up into the Mount Deut. 5.5 mark how he stiles himself as a Mediator At that time saith he I stood between the Lord and you to shew you the word of the Lord He was Gods mouth to them and he was their mouth to God and he was a prevailing Mediator on both parts he prevailed with God for the suspending of his Justice that it should not break out upon the people and he prevailed with the people to bind them in Covenant unto God and to make profession of that Obedience which the Lord required and called for yet for all this I call him not a Mediator of Redemption but Relation A great deal of difference there is betwixt Moses and Christ as 1. Moses only received the Law and delivered it to the people but Chirst our true Moses fulfilled it 2. Moses broke the Tables to shew how we in our Nature had broken the Law but Christ our true Moses repairs it again 3. Moses had the Law only writ in Tables of Stone but Christ writes it in the Tables of our hearts 4. Moses was meer man but Christ is God as well as man Moses was only a Servant in Gods House but Christ is a Son yea Christ is Lord of his own House the Church Moses mediation was of this use to shew what was the true manner of worshipping God but he did not inspire force and power to follow it he could not reconcile men to God as of himself and therefore it appeared that there was need of another reconciler viz. the Lord Jesus Christ 8. What of Christ and of his death do we find in this manifestation of the Covenant I answer 1. In delivering the Law we find something of Christ there is a question whether the Lord himself immediately in his own person delivered the Law Deut. 5 2● and some conclude affirmatively from the Preface God spake these words and said and from that passage of Moses these words the Lord spake unto all your Assembly in the Mount out of the midst of the fire and wrote them on two Tables of Stone and delivered them unto me But others are for the negative and say this proves not that they were pronounced or delivered immediately by God for we find in Scripture that when the Angels were the immediate persons yet the Lord himself is reported to have spoken unto men Gen. 18.2 13. Exod. 3.2 6 7. And Augustine is resolute Aug. de Trin. l. 2. c. 15. that Almighty God himself in the time of the Old Testament did not spake to the Jews with his own immediate voice but only by Christ or by his Angels or by his Prophets and for this Ministerial voice of his Angels some produce these Texts ●cts 7.5 ●al 3.19 who have received the Law by the Ordinance of Angels and wherefore then serveth the Law it was added because of transgressions till the seed should come to whom the promise was made and it was ordained by Angels in the hand of a mediator ●eb 2.2 And if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast c. For my part it hath puzled me at times whether of these opinions to take but others say and I am now as apt to joyn with them as with either of the former that Jesus Christ the second person of the Trinity
Holy One to see Corruption 4. That He Ascended up into Heaven Thou hast Ascended on High Thou hast led Captivity Captive Thou hast received Gifts for Men. 5. That He must be King over us both to Rule and Govern His Elect and to bridle and subdue His Enemies I have set My King upon My Holy Hill of Sion Psal 2.6 7. I will declare the Decree the Lord hath said unto Me Thou art My Son this day have I begotten Thee Acts 13.33 The Lord said unto My Lord Sit Thou at My Right Hand Psal 110.1 2. Heb. 1.13 until I make Thine Enemies Thy Foot-stool The Lord shall send the Rod of Thy Strength out of Zion Rule Thou in the midst of Thine Enemies 6. That He must be Priest as well as King and Sacrifice as well as Priest Psal 110.4 Heb. 5.6 The Lord hath Sworn and will not Repent Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedech Thou lovest Righteousness and hatest Wickedness Psal 45.7 therefore God Thy God hath anointed Thee with the Oyl of Gladness above Thy Fellows i.e. Above all Christians who are thy Fellows Consorts and Partners in the Anointing Sacrifice and Burnt-Offering Thou wouldst not have but mine Ear hast Thou bored Psal 40.6 7. Heb. 10.5 6 7. Burnt-Offering and Sin-Offering hast Thou not required Then said I Loe I come In the Volume of the Book it it written of me That I should do Thy Will O God Mine Ears hast Thou bored or digged open The Septuagint to make the Sense plainer say But a Body hast Thou fitted me or prepared for me Meaning that His Body was ordained and fitted to be a Sacrifice for the Sins of the World when other legal Sacrifices were refused as unprofitable O see how clearly Christ is revealed in this Expressure of the Covenant It was never thus before And thus far of the Covenant of Promise as it was manifested from David till the Captivity SECT VI. Of the Covenant of Promise as manifested to Israel about the Time of the Captivity THE great Breaking-forth of this Gracious Covenant was to Israel about the Time of their Captivity By reason of that Captivity of Babylon Israel was almost clean destroyed and therefore then it was high time that the Lord should appear like a Sun after a stormy Rain and give them some clear Light of Christ and of this Covenant of Grace than ever yet He doth so and it appears especially in these words Behold the days come saith the Lord Jer. 31.31.32 that I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel 33.34 and with the House of Judah not according to the Covenant which I made with their Fathers in the day that I took them by the Hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt which my Covenant they break although I was an Husband unto them saith the Lord but this shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel After those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Law in their Inward Parts and write it in their Hearts and I will be their God and they shall be My People and they shall teach no more every Man his Neighbour and every Man his Brother saying Know the Lord for they shall all know Me from the Least of them unto the Greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their Iniquity and remember their Sin no more In this Expressure of the Covenant we shall examine these Particulars 1. Why it is called a New-Covenant 2. Wherein the Expressure of this Covenant doth excel the former which God made with their Fathers 3. How doth God put the Law into our inward Parts 4. What is it to have the Law written in our Hearts 5. How are we taught of God so as not to need any other kind of Teaching comparatively 6. What is the Universality of this Knowledge in that All shall know me saith the Lord 7. How is God said to forgive Iniquity and never more to remeber sin 1. Why is it called a New Covenant I answer It is called New either in respect of the late and new Blessings which God vouchsafed Israel in bringing back their Captivity with Joy and planting them in their own Land again or it is called New in respect of the Excellency of this Covenant Thus the Hebrews were wont to call any thing Excellent Psal 96.1 New O sing unto the Lord a New Song Psal 96.1 that is an Excellent Song Or it is called New in contradiction to the Covenant of Promise before Christ came In this latter Sense the very same words here are repeated in the Epistle to the Hebrews Heb. 8.8.13 Behold the Dayss come saith the Lord when I will make a New Covenant with the House of Israel and the House of Judah In that He saith a New Covenant He hath made the First Old now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away The New-Covenant is usually understood in the latter Sense it is New because diverse from that which God made with the Fathers before Christ it hath a new Worship new Adoration a new Form of the Church new Witnesses new Tables new Sacraments and Ordinances and these never to be abrogated or disannulled never to wax Old as the Apostle speaks Yet in respect of those new Blessings which God bestowed upon Israel immediately after the Captivity this very Manifestation may be called New Jer. 23.7 8. And in reference to this Behold the Dayes come saith the Lord that they shall no more say The Lord liveth which brought up the Children of Israel out of the Land of Egypt but The Lord liveth which brought up and which led the Seed of the House of Israel out of the North Countrey and from all Countries whither I had driven them and they shall dwell in their own Land 2. Wherein doth the Expressure of His Covenant excel the former which God made with their Fathers I answer 1. It excels in the very Tenor or outward Administration of the Covenant for this Covenant after it once began continued without Interruption until Christ whereas the Former was broken or did expire Hence God calls it a New-Covenant Not according to the Covenant which I made with their Fathers in the Day that I took them by the Hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt which my Covenant they brake although I was an Husband unto them saith the Lord. In this respect it might be called New or at least it may be called an Inchoation of the New because it continued till Christ which no other Expressure of the Covenant did before and so it excelled all the former 2. It excels in the Spiritual Benefits and Graces of the Spirit We find that under this Covenant they were more plentifully bestowed upon the Church than formerly Mark the Promises Jer. 24.6 7. I will set My Eye upon them for Good and I will bring
them again to this Land and I will build them and not pull them down and I will plant them and not bluck them up and I will give them a Heart to know Me that I am the Lord and they shall be My People and I will be their God for they shall return unto Me with their whole Heart Hag. 2.7 8 9. Again I will shake all Nations and the Desire of the Nations shall come and I will fill this House with Glory saith the Lord of Hosts The Silver is mine and the Gold is mine saith the Lord of Hosts the Glory of this latter House shall be greater than of the former saith the Lord of Hosts And I will put my Law in their inward parts Jer. 31.33 34. and write it in their Hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquities and I will remember their Sins no more 3. It excels in the discovery and revelation of the Mediator in and through whom this Covenant was made In the former expression we discovered much yet in none of them was so plainly revealed the time of his coming the place of his birth his name the passages of his nativity his humiliation and kingdom as we find them in this 1. Concerning the time of his Coming Dan. 9.24 Seventy weeks shall be determined upon thy people and upon thy holy City to finish the Transgression and to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the vision and prophesie and to anoint the most holy 2. Concerning the place of his Birth But thou Bethlehem Ephrata Mica 5.2 though thou be little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from of old from everlasting 3. Concerning his Name Vnto us a Child is born unto us a Son is given Isa 9.6 and the Government shall be upon his Shoulders and his Name shall be called Wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the Everlasting Father the Prince of Peace Jer. 23.6 In his dayes Judah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely and this his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son Isa 7.14 and thou O Virgin shalt call his Name Immanuel 4. Concerning the passages of his Nativity that he should be born of a Virgin Isa 7.14 That at his Birth all the Infants round about Bethlehem should be slain Jer 31.15 That John the Baptist should be his Prodromus or forerunner to prepare his way Mal. 3.1 That he should flee into Egypt and be recalled thence again Hos 11.1 I might add many Particulars of this kind 5. Concerning his Humiliation Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows Isa 53.4 yet we did not esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him 5. and with his stripes were we healed He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his Mouth He was taken from Prison and from Judgment 7. and who shall declare his Generation he was cut off out of from the Land of the Living 8. for the transgression of my people was he stricken It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief Therefore I will divide him a portion with the great and he shalt divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his Soul unto Death and he was numbred with the transgressors and he bare the Sin of many and made intercession for t●e transgressors One would think this were rather a History than a Prophesie of Christs sufferings you may if you will take the pains see the circumstances of his sufferings as that he was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zech. 11.12 and that with those thirty pieces of silver there was bought afterwards a Potters field Zech. 11.13 That he must ride into Jerusalem before his Passion on an Ass Zech. 9.9 I might seem tedious if I should proceed 6. Conc●rning his Kingdom Rejoyce greatly O Daughter of Zion Zech. 9.9 Isa 62.11 Mat. 21.5 shout O Daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee he is Just and having Salvation lowly and riding upon an Ass and upon a Colt the Foal of an Ass Behold a King behold thy King behold thy King cometh and he comes unto thee 1. He is a King and therefore able 2. He is thy King and therefore willing wonderful Love that he would come but more wonderful was the manner of his coming He that before made man a Soul after the Image of God then made himself a Body after the Image of Man And thus we see how this Covenant excels the former in every of these respects 3. How doth God put the Law into our inward parts I answer God puts the Law into our inward parts by enlivening or qualifying of a Man with the Graces of Gods Spirit suitable to his Commandment first there is the Law of God without us as we see it or read it in Scriptures but when it is put within us then God hath wrought an inward disposition in our minds that answers to that Law without us for example this is the Law without Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all thy Soul and with all thy Strength Deut. 6.5 Deut. 30.6 To Answer which there is a promise I will circumcise thy Heart and the Heart of thy Seed to Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all my soul now when this promise is fulfilled when God hath put the affections and grace of Love within our hearts when the habit of Love is within answerable in all things to the command without then is the Law put into our inward parts Deut. 13.4 Jer. 32.40 Again this is the Law without Thou shalt fear the Lord and keep his Ordinances and his Statutes and his Commandments to do them to answer which there is a promise I will make a Covenant with you and I will not turn away from you to do you good but I will put my fear into your hearts and you shall not depart from Me now when this promise is accomplished when God hath put the affection and grace of fear within our hearts when the habit of fear is within answerable to that Command without then is the Law put into our hearts Surely this is Mercy that God saith in his Covenant I will put my Law in their inward parts many a time a poor Soul cries out
Cloaths against cold and nakedness House against wind and weather Riches against poverty Physick against sickness Friends against solitariness but God is an alsufficient good he is all in all both to the inner and outward man Are we guilty of Sin there is mercy in God to pardon us Are we full of infirmities there is Grace in God to heal us Are we strong in Corruptions there is power in God to subdue them in us Are we disquieted in Conscience there is that Spirit in God that is the Comforter that can fill us with Joy unspeakable and glorious And for our outward man all our welfare is laid up in God he is the God of our Life Psal 42.8 he is the strength of our Life Psal 27.1 he is a quickning Spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 Which though it be in regard of the inner man yet there it is spoken of the inward man which the Lord shall quicken after death and doth now keep alive by his mighty power for in him we live Acts. 17.28 and move and have our being O my Soul that thou wouldst but ruminate and meditate and consider this promise in all thy wants discontents when means fail and the streames run no more O that thou wouldest then go to the Fountain where the waters run sweeter and more sure Gen. 41.16 for as Joseph said to Pharaoh it is not in me God shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace So may Silver and Gold and such things say to thee It is not in us God shall give enough out of himself have God and have all want God and there is no content in the enjoyment of all It was the Apostles case as having nothing and yet possessing all things 2 Cor. 6.10 Surely he lived to God and enjoyed God and he was an all-sufficient good unto him God may be enjoyed in any condition in the meanest as well as the greatest in the poorest as well as the richest God will go into a wilderness into a prison with his people and there he will make up all that they are cut short of Thy discontents therefore arise not from the want of outward means but from want of inward fellowship with God and if thou dost not find a sufficiency it is because thou dost not enjoy him who is thy all-sufficient good O stir up Faith and consider the Covenant think seriously on this promise I am God all-sufficient I am the Lord thy God 2. Here is the propriety of Saints the Lord thy God O what is this that God is thy God Heaven and Earth Angels and Men may stand astonished at it What that the Great and Mighty God God Almighty and God all-sufficient should be called thy God! Heb. 11.16 It is observable what the Apostle speaks God is not ashamed to be called their God Would not a prince be ashamed to take a Beggar a Runagate a base and adulterous Woman to be his Wife But we are worse than so and God is better than so sin hath made us worse than the worst of women and God is better holier higher than the best of Princes and yet God is not ashamed to own us nor ashamed that we own him as our own I am thy God It is as if the Lord should say use me and all my Power Grace Mercy Kindness as thine own go through all my Attributes consider my Almighty Power consider my Wisdom Councel Understanding consider my Goodness Truth Faithfulness consider my Patience Long-suffering Forbearance all these are thine as thus My Power is thine to work all thy works for thee and in thee to make passage for thee in all thy straits to deliver thee out of six troubles and out of seven my Wisdom is thine to counsel thee in any difficult cases to instruct thee in things that be obscure to reveal to thee the Mysteries of Grace and the wonderfull things contained in my Law my Justice is thine to deliver thee when thou art oppressed to defend thee in thy Innocency and to vindicate thee from the injuries of men what needs more O my Soul think of these all other Gods Attributes say in thy self all these are mine nay more think of God in Christ for otherwise what hast thou to do with God in a Covenant of grace and say in thy heart Jesus Christ is mine my Saviour my Redeemer my head my elder brother his doings are mine and his sufferings are mine his Life and his Death his Resurrection and Ascention his Session and Intercession all are mine nay more if Christ be mine why then all good things are mine in Christ I say in Christ for they come not immediatly but through the hands of a sweet Redeemer and though he be a man who redeemed us yet because he is God as well as Man there is more of God and Heaven and free-love in all our good things than if we received them immediately from God Ravens have their food and Devils have their being from God by creature-right but we have all we have from God in Christ by Covenant-right this surely this very promise is the main and principal promise of the Covenant it is the very substance Soul and life of all O then how careful shouldest thou be to improve the strength of thy mind thoughts and affections on this only subject 4. Consider Jesus in that promise made to David 1 Sam. 23.5 He hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure 1. An everlasting Covenant consider this in the eternal efficacy and not in the outward administration it is Christ that hath built and prepared a Kingdom that shall never fade a spiritual and an heavenly Kingdom which shall never cease and as he hath prepared it so if thou believest he hath entred into a Covenant with thy soul to bestow it on thee it is an everlasting Covenant and he will give thee everlasting Life 2. It is ordered in all things the Covenant of grace is so marshalled and ordered that it stands at best advantage to receive and repel all thy objections Many and many an objection hast thou raised how often have such thoughts been in thee Oh I am miserable I shall not live but die my sins will damn me I am lost for ever And again If God hath made with me a Covenant why then have I something to do on my part for this is the nature of the Covenant to bind on both parts but alas I have failed I can do nothing I can as well dissolve a Rock as make my heart of stone a heart of flesh I can as well reach heaven with a finger as lay hold on Christ by the hand of Faith Have not such arguings as these been many and many a time in thy heart O consider how the Covenant is ordered and marshalled in respect of the Author of it of the Persons interested in it of the parts of which it consists of the end and aim to which it refers
and in some of these if not in all of these thou wilt find thy Objections answered removed routed 3. It is sure God is not fast and loose in his Covenant heaven and earth shall pass away before one jot or title of his Word shall fail consider O my Soul he both can and will perform his Word his Power his Love his Faithfulness his Constancy all stand engaged What sweet matter is here for a Soul to dwell upon what needs it go out to other objects whilst it may find enough here but especially what needs it to bestow it self upon vain things O that so much pretious sand of our thoughts should run out after Sin and so little after grace or after this Covenant of grace 5. Jer. 31.33 34 Consider Jesus in that new Covenant or Promise which God made with Israel and Judah I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their Iniquity and I will remember their Sins no more Oh what an errour is it that there is no inherent righteousness in the Saints there is no grace in the soul of a believer but only in Christ is not this the ordinary Scripture phrase Ezek. 36.27 John 4.14 1 John 2 27. Col. 1.27 Ezek. 1.20 I will put my Spirit within you and the water that I shall give you shall be in you a Well of water springing up into everlasting Life and the anointing which you have received of him abideth in you and Christ in you the hope of glory Observe how the spirit of the Living Creatures was in the Wheels so that when the Spirit went they went and when the Spirit was lifted up they were lifted up even so is the Spirit of Christ acting and guiding and framing and disposing them to move and walk according to his Laws Luk. 17.21 Psal 40.8 The Kingdom of heaven is within you saith Christ and I delight to do thy Will O God saith David yea thy Law is within my heart O my Soul if thou art in Covenant whith God besides the in-dwelling of the Spirit there is a certain spiritual Power or Principle of Grace which Christ by his Spirit hath put into thy heart enabling thee in some measure to move thy self towards God And this Principle is sometimes called a new Life Rom. 6.4 Sometimes a Living with Christ Rom. 6 8. Sometimes a being alive to God Rom. 6.11 Sometimes a revealing of his son in man Gal. 1.15 And somtimes a putting of the Law into our inward parts and a writing of the Law within the heart Jer. 31.33 O consider of this inward Principle it is an excellent subject worthy of thy consideration 2. I will be their God and they shall be my people Consider God essentially and personally God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost God in himself and God in his Creatures this very promise turns over heaven and earth and sea and land and bread and cloths and sleep and the world and life and death into free grace No wonder if God set this promise in the midst of the Covenant as the heart in the midst of the Body to communicate life to all the rest this promise hath an influence into all other promises it is the great promise of the new Covenant it is as great as God is though the heavens and heaven of heavens be not able to contain him yet this Promise contains him God shuts up himself as it were in it I will be their God 2. They shall be my People i.e. They shall be to me a peculiar People Tit. 2.14 The word hath this Emphasis in it that God looks upon all other things as accidents in comparison and his substance is his People they are his very Portion for the Lords Portion is his People Jacob is the Lot of his Inheritance They are his treasure his peculiar treasure Deut. 32.9 Exod 19.5 his peculiar treasure above all People If ye will obey my voice indeed and keep my Covenant then shall ye be a peculiar treasure unto me and above all people for all the earth is mine Observe O my soul all the earth is mine q. d. All people is my people but I have a special interest in my covenanted people they are only my portion my peculiar treasure Blessed be Egypt my People Assyria the work of my hands and Israel mine Inheritance I have made all People Egypt and Assyria and all the world is mine but only Israel is my inheritance the Saints are those that God satisfies himself in the Saints are those that God hath set his heart upon they are children of the high God they are the Spouse that are Married to the Lamb they are nearer God in some respects than the very Angels themselves for the Angels are not in a mystical union so Married to Christ as Gods People are Isa 19.28 O the happyness of Saints I will be their God and they shall be my People 3. They shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. Consider of this O poor Soul thou complainest many a time of thy weakness thou knowest little or nothing why see here a Glorious promise if thou art but in Covenant with God thou shalt be taught of God and then thou shalt know God far more clearly than the Jews of old he will open to thee all his treasures of wisdom and knowledg he will bestow on thee a greater measure of his Spirit so that out of thy belly shall flow Rivers of Living waters John 7.38 We say a good Tutor may teach more in a day than another in a week in a month now the promise runs thus that all thy Children shall be taught of God Isa 54.13 not that private instruction or publick Ministry must be excluded we know these are appointed under the New Testament and are subordinate to the Spirits teaching but that the teachings of God do far surpass the teachings of men and therefore the knowledg of God under the New Testament shall far surpass that under the old herein appears the excellency of Christ's prophetical Office He is such a Prophet as enlightens every man within John 1.9.33 that comes into the World He is such a Prophet as baptiseth with the Holy Ghost and with Fire He is such a Prophet as makes men's hearts to burn within them when he speaks unto them He is such a Prophet as bids his Ministers Luk. 24.32 Mat. 28.19.20 Go teach all Nations and I will be with you and I will
make you able Ministers not of the Letter but of the Spirit He is such a Prophet as teacheth inwardly clearly experimentally and sweetly no man in the world can say this or do this but Jesus Christ the great Prophet of the Church whom God hath raised up like unto Moses or far above Moses Oh my Soul consider if thou art thus taught of God 4. I will forgive their Iniquity and I will remember their Sins no more Rom. 4.7 Consider of this Blessed are they whose Iniquities are forgiven and whose Sins are covered Consider O my soul suppose thy case and thy condition thus As thou livest under Laws of men so for the transgression of those Laws thou art called to account the Judge weighs and gives an impartial and just judgment he Dooms thee to the Axe or Rack or Wheel and because of the aggravation of thy Crime he commands thee to be tortured leisurely that Bones Sinews Lights Joints might be pained for twenty thirty forty fifty years that so much of thy flesh should be cut off every day that such and such a Bone should be broken such and such a day and that by art the flesh should be restored and the Bone cured again that for so many years as is said thou mightest be kept every day dying and yet never die that all this while thou must have no Sleep nor Ease nor Food nor Cloathing convenient for thee that Whips of Iron Lashes and Scourges of Scorpions that Racks Wheels Cauldrons full of melted Lead should be prepared instruments of thy continual horrible terrible Torments in this case suppose a mighty Prince by an Act of free and special Grace should deliver thee from this Pain and Torture and not only so but should give thee a Life in perfect health should put thee into a Paradise of Pleasures where all the honour acclamations love and service of a world of Men and Angels should await thee and where thou shouldst be elivated to the top of all imaginable Happiness above Solomon in the highest Royalty or Adam in his first Innocency where not this mercy wouldest thou not thing it the highest Act of Grace and Love that any creature could extend to his fellow-creature and yet O my Soul all this is nothing but a shadow of grace in comparison of the love and rich grace of God in Christ in the justification of a sinner If thou hast a right to this promise I well forgive thy Iniquity and I will remember thy sin no more Thou art delivered from eternal Death and thou art entitled to an eternal Kingdom O know thy blessedness aright Consider how infinitly thou art engaged to God and Christ and mercy and free-grace This promise sounds forth nothing but grace and blessing grace from God and blessing on us it is grace because nothing but grace and mercy can forgive it is grace because God if he will hath power in his hand to Revenge he doth not pass by sin as men do offences when they dissemble forgiveness they may forgive because they have not power to avenge Dut 32.35 Exod. 36. ●4 it is otherwise with God To me belonges Vengeance and Recompence saith God He is able to destroy and yet he chuseth to forgive this is his Name strong and gracious O my Soul thou art apt to complain what will the Lord forgive my Sins What reason hath God to look on me to Pardon me to pluck me as a firebrand out of the Fire of Hell why should God forgive me But now consider if thy heart be humbled the Lord will do it 1. Because he delighteth in Mercy it is a pleasure to God to forgive Sins Micah 7.18 never did we take more pleasure nor so much pleasure in acting and committing of sin as he doth in the pardoning of sin he is the Father of Mercies 2 Co. 1.3 he delights in mercy as a Father in his Children it doth him good to see the Fruits of his own mercy in taking away the sins of his own people 2. Because it is his purpose which he hath purposed within himself from all Eternity this was the great design of God as you have heard to make his grace glorious in those whom he intends to save he will have the praise of the glory of his Grace Eph. 1.6 2 Thes 1.10 he will not lose his glory he will be admired in his Saints he will make the World to wonder when it shall be known what sin hath been committed by them Rom 9. ●● and pardoned by him And hence it is that Gods people are called Vessels of Mercy that he might make known the Riches of his Glory on the Vessels of Mercy for as Vessels are or may be filled up to the brims so the Vessels of Mercy shall be filled with Mercy up to the Brim that the Riches of his Glory in the pardon of Sin may be seen and known to the wonder of all the world 3. Because it is his Nature and Inclination to pardon Sin this appears 1. In the Proclaiming of his Name the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering Ex●d 34.6 abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity and Transgression and Sin Mat. 11.28 2. In his gracious Invitations Come unto me saith Christ if sin burden you I will ease you 3. In his patience and waiting for Repentance he waits to this very end that he might be gracious Isa 30.18 and that he may have mercy for the Lord is a God of judgment Isa 43.25 4. Because it is his promise to pardon sin I even I am he that blots out thy transgressions for my own sake and will not remember thy sins This promise of Pardon is one of the great blessings of the Covenant of Grace you hear the words in this very expressure of it Jet 31.34 I will forgive their Iniquity and I will remember their sins no more Now come consider O my soul of every particular in this gracious Covenant and O be serious in thy Consideration surely there is too much expence of thy spirit upon vain and transitory and worldly things alas alas thou hast but a short time to live and the strength of thy mind that I call for it is the most precious thing thou hast O then let the business and activeness of thy mind let thy inmost thoughts and deep affections be acted and exercised on this Subject be careful that none of these waters run besides the Mill. If God and Jesus and all thy good be included here why should not thy whole soul be intent on this Why shouldst thou spend it on the Creature why shouldst thou be so subject to carnal griefs and fears surely all these are fitter to be fixed on God in Christ on Jesus in a Covenant of Grace SECT III. Of Desiring Jesus in that respect 3. WE must desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation in a way of
face so the conformity of thy heart and inwards to the Law of God thou obeyest God's Will and delightest in that obedience Thou sayest with David I delight to do thy Will O God yea psal 40.8 thy Law is within my Heart 2. Thou hast a covenant-relation to God and a covenant-interest in God and thou art by covenant as one of the people of God Christ hath thy soul thy body thy affections thy love to the very uttermost God hath a propriety and a peculiarity in thee thou art Christs by Marriage thou hast past over thy self unto him to be his Jewel his Spouse his Diadem his Crown his Servant his Child for ever 3. Then art thou clearly taught to know the Lord thou knowest him in another manner than thou didst before I will establish my Covenant with thee Ezek. 16.60 61. and thou shalt know that I am the Lord. There is a double knowledge 1. A speculative knowledge and thus men may know much but they are not affected according to the things they know 2. A practical knowledge and thus if we know the Lord we shall see in him that excellency and beauty that our Hearts will be affectioned towards him and we shall be able to say that we love him with all our Heart and with all our Soul and with all our Strength 4. Then hath God pardoned thy sins and He will remember thy sins no more But how should I be assured of that Why thus 1. If thou hast sincerely confessed bewailed and forsaken thy sins Wash ye make ye clean put away the evil of your doings from before mine Eyes cease to do evil And presently it follows come now and let us reason together saith the Lord Isa 1.16 18. though your sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wooll Isa 55.7 To the same purpose Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and He will have Mercy upon him and to our God for He will abundantly Pardon 2. If thy heart after many storms and troubles be calmed and quieted through saith in Christ Being justified by faith we have peace with God Rom. 5.1 What hast thou peace with God and hath God still'd thy soul with peace this is an argument of thy sins pardon 3. If thine Heart be singularly inflamed with the love of Christ the Woman that Had many sins forgiven her by Christ Luke 7.47 she loved him much Upon that account she wept and washed his feet with her tears and so wiped them with the hairs of her head she kissed his feet and anointed them with Ointment nothing was too good for Christ who had forgiven her all her sins 4. If thy heart and soul and all that is within be singularly enlarged to praise God for his pardons Ps 103.1 2 3. Bless the Lord O my soul and forget not all his benefits who forgiveth all thine iniquities If thine heart feel his pardons thy mouth will sing his praises and hereby thou may'st be assured that God hath pardoned all thy sins Come now are these O my soul the grounds of thy hopes a lively faith in Jesus an accomplishment in some measure of the promises of the Covenant why these are the fewel of hope if this be thy case act thy hope strongly on Christ and on the covenant of grace say not hope is onely of things future and therefore if I be already in covenant What need I hope For whether thou art in covenant or no it is the main question here nay though it be granted that thou art in covenant and that hope is swallowed up in the compleat presence of its object yet it is not at all diminished but rather encreased by a partial presence As in massie bodies though violent motion be weakest in the end yet natural motions are ever swiftest towards the center so in the hopes of men though such as are violent and groundless prove weaker and weaker yet those that are stayed and natural or rather gracious are evermore stronger and stronger till they procure the utmost presence and union of their object The nearer we come to a fruition of a good the more impatient we are to want it O then hope in Jesus draw on thy hope yet more and more in this Covenant of grace be not content onely with an hope of expectation but bring it on to an hope of confidence or assurance thou canst not fail if thou hangest thy hope on Jesus Christ is not fastened as a loose nail or as a broken rotten hedge in the covenant of grace he is there As a nail in a sure place Isa 22.23 24. and they shall hang on him all the glory of his Fathers house the off-spring and the issue all vessels of small quantity from the vessels of cups even to all the vessels of flaggons Come soul thou art a vessel of small quantity hang all thy weight on Christ he is a nail that cannot break SECT V. Of Believing in Jesus in that Respect 5. WE must believe on Jesus carrying on this great work of our salvation in a way of covenant Many a time Satan comes and hurles in a temptation What Is it likely that God should enter into a covenant with thee yea sometimes he so rivets in this temptation that he darkens all within and there 's no sight of comfort in the soul O but now believe now if ever is the season for faith to act little evidence and much adherence speaks saith to purpose We read of some who could stay themselves upon the Lord whiles they walked in darkness upon the margin and borders of a hundred deaths Psal 23.4 Ps 88.7 David fears no evil though he walked through the valley of the shadow of death for his faith told him that God was with him Heman could say thy wrath lieth hard upon me thou hast afflicted me with all thy waves sure he thought God could do no more to drown him not only a wave or two but all Gods waves were on him and over him and yet he believes Lord I have called daily upon thee Hezekiahs comforts were at an hard pinch ver 9. Mine eyes fail with looking upwards O Lord I am oppressed Isa 39.14 yet praying argues believing Lord undertake for me Christs sense of comforts was ebbe and low when he wept and cryed that he was forsaken of God yet then his faith is doubled as the cable of an Anchor is doubled when the storm is more than ordinary Mat. 27.46 my God my God Poor soul thou standest wondering at this great condescention of God What That God should enter into covenant with me What that God should make such great and precious promises with me Surely these comforts and these priviledges are too high for me or for any soul breathing It may be so and yet be not discouraged
for God will magnifie his grace and therefore he will do this great thing all that thou hast to do and all that God requires of thee in this case is onely to believe indeed thou hast no part in Christ no part in the covenant of grace if thou wilt not believe faith is the condition of the covenant of grace and therefore either believe or no covenant I know it is not easie to believe nay it is one of the hardest things under heaven to perswade a soul into faith What Will the great God of heaven make a Covenant with such a wretch as I am I cannot believe it Why What 's the matter Ah my sins my sins my sins God is a consuming fire against such he cannot endure to behold iniquity little hopes that ever God should enter into a covenant with me But to help on or to allure a soul in consider O thou soul of these following passages 1. Consider of the sweet and gracious nature of God that which undoes broken hearts and trembling souls it is misconceivings of God we have many times low diminishing ex enuating thoughts of Gods goodness but we have large thoughts of his power and wrath now to rectifie these misapprehensions consider his name and therein his nature the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions Sins and will by no means clear the guilty visiting the Iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children and upon the Childrens Children unto the Third and Fourth Generation O terrible Text Exod. 34.6 7 sayes the Soul alas I am guilty of thousands of sins and if this be his Name I am undone woe to me and mine unto the Third and Fourth Generation But consider again and in this description of God we shall find an Ocean of Mercy to a Drop of Wrath a Sea of Oyl to an half drop of scalding Lead For 1. God doth not begin the Lord the Lord that will by no means clear the guilty but the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering this is the first and greatest part of his Name God is loath to speak in justice and wrath he keeps it to the last m●rcy lies uppermost in Gods heart if the sentence must come it shall be the last day of the Assize 2 Many words are used to speak his goodness Merciful Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin here be six several phrases to shew the Riches of his Goodness but when he speaks his wrath what haste makes he over it there 's only two expressions of that it was a Theam he took no delight in Judgment is his Work his strange Work Isa 28.22 for he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of Men. 3. There 's a difference in the expression when God speaks of mercy Lam. 3.33 he expresseth it thus abundant in Mercy keeping Mercy for Thousands But in visiting sins it is not to thousands but only to the Third or Fourth Generation Surely Mercy rejoyceth against Judgment God would shew Mercy to Thousands Jam. 2.13 rather than he would destroy three or four 4. What if by no means God will clear the guilty stubbornly guilty yet never will he destroy humble souls that lye at his feet and are willing to have mercy on his easie terms How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee O Israel Hos 11.8 9. how shall I make thee as Admah How shall I set thee as Zeboim My heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together I will not execute the fierceness of Mine anger I will not destroy Ephraim for I am God and not Man the Holy One in the middest of ●●ee O my soul why standest thou at a distance with God Why dost thou fancy a Lion in the way O b●lieve in God believe in Jesus and believe thy portion in this Covenant of grace have sweet and delightful thoughts of Gods nature and thou wilt not thou canst not sly from him some are of opinion that a soul may fetch more encouragements to believe from the consideration of Gods gracious and merciful nature than from the promise it self 2. Consider of the sweet and gracious nature of Jesus Christ our thoughts of God are necessarily more strange than of Jesus Christ because of our infinite distance from the Godhead but in Christ God is come down into our nature and so infinite goodness and mercy is incarnate art thou afraid O my soul at his name Jah and Jehovah O remember his name is Emanuel the Lyon is here disrobed of his garment of terrour his rough hair is turned into a soft wooll see thy God disrobed of his terrible Majesty see thy God is a man and thy Judg is a Brother mince Jehovah with Jesus and the Serpent wi●l be a rod O that Balsamy name Jesus that name that founds healing for every wound settlement for every distraction comfort for every sorrow but here 's the misery souls in distress had rather be poring on hell than heaven rather frighting themselves with the terrours of justice than staying themselves with the fl●ggons of Mercy O my soul how canst thou more contradict the nature of Christ and the Gospel-description of Christ than to think him a destroyer of men b●t wherein appears the gracious nature of Christ I answer in his being incarnate O how could Jesus have manifested more willingness to save than that the God-head should condescend to assume our nature surely this is ten thousand times more condescention than for the greatest King to become a sly or a toad to save such creatures as toads and flyes 2. In his tender dealing with all sorts of sinners he professed th t he came into the world not to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved He wept over Jerusalem saying O Jerusalem Je●usalem Mat. 23.37 how oft would I have gathered thee as an Hen gathereth her chickens under her wings but ye would not I would but ye would not And when his Disciples would have had fire come down from Heaven to consume tho●e that refused him he reproves them and tells them they know not of what spirits they were of 3. In his care of his own not caring what he suffered so they might be saved Alas alas that the Lord Jesus should pass through a life of misery to a death more miserable to manifest openly to the world the abundance of his love and yet that any soul should suspect him of cruelty or unwillingness to shew mercy Ah my soul believe never cry out my sins my sins my sins there is a gracious nature and inclination in Jesus Christ to pardon all 3. Consider of that office of saving and shewing mercy which Christ hath set up this is more than meerly a gracious inclination Christ hath undertaken and set up an office
Wine without Money or Money-worth Isa 55.2 Rev. 22.17 come and drink of the Waters of Life freely 2. The extent of the Promise in this Covenant of Grace I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh hence the Gospel is compared to a Feast and God invites universally As many as you find Mat. 22.9 bid to the Marriage As persons are in estate so they invite and so they feast now Christ is a great King over all the Earth he hath one House that will hold all he hath one Table that will hold all yea he hath one Dish that will serve all and answerably he invites all Ho every one that thirsteth 3. The forwardness of Christ that gives to every one that asketh according to his Promise John 4.10 Hadst thou but asked said Christ to the Samaritan VVoman I would have given thee living water Mark here the occasion of Christ's words Christ being weary and thirsty by reason of his Journey he asked of the Woman a Cup of water to drink no great matter he asks but a Cup of water and the Woman stands at the Well-side where was water enough yet she gives not but stands wondering that he being a Jew should ask water of her that was a Samaritan well saith Christ thou deniest me a Cup of cold water being weary and thirsty but hadst thou asked of me I would have given thee water of Life Wonderful Christ is more ready to give water of Life the very Spirit of God to a poor sinnner than we are to give a cup of common water to a thirsty Soul Go then thou that hast denied the least mercy and kindness to Christ in any of his Members yet seek Grace from him O look up unto Jesus ask his Spirit intreat him to make thy heart new within thee plead the promise of his Covenant and wait in hope 2 We must praise 1. If we would have the blessing let us seek it with the same mind that God offers it i.e. with a purpose and desire to have Grace exalted thus Moses sought pardon to this very end that his mercy might appear If thou wilt pardon their sin thy mercy shall appear and we shall be thankful unto thee for it Exod. 32.32 so the words are made out by expositros which in the text are either passionately or modestly suspended These are prevailing requests with God when we plead for the Glorifying of his own Grace Father Glorifie thy Name said Christ and presently there comes a voice out of the Cloud I have Glorified it and I will Glorifie it again John 12.28 2. If we have the blessing already then be sure to ascribe the Glory unto him that hath made good his promise unto us who is a God like unto thee Micah 7 18. who passest by the transgressions of the remnant of thy Heritage We should make the praise of his grace to ring through the world that Heaven and Earth might take notice of it and wonder at the grace that hath been shewed us I will mention the loving kindness of the Lord Isa 63.7 and the Praises of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great goodness towards the House of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his Mercies and according to the multitude of his loving Kindnesses See how the Prophet mentions the kindnesses the loving kindnesses the multitude of his loving kindnesses the goodness and the great goodness of God he could hardly get off it he would have God and Grace to have all the Glory O my Soul hath God entered thee into a Covenant of Grace why then bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy Name Psal 103.1 But of this more anon SECT IX Of Conforming to Jesus in that respect 9 WE must conform to Jesus in reference to this Covenant of Grace We are changed by beholding into the same Image 2 Cor. 3.18 If we look unto Jesus in this respect this Look will have such an influence upon us that we shall conform to Jesus But wherein consists this Conformity I answer in these several perticulars 1. God in Christ offers his Covenant to us so we through Christ should embrace his Offer 2. God in Christ keeps Covenant with us so we through Christ should be careful to keep Covenant with him 3. God in Christ hath highly honoured us as we are his People so we through Christ should highly honour him as he is our God 1. God in Christ offers a Covenant of Grace to us so we through Christ should embrace this gracious Offer His Offers have appeared from first to last as 1. To Adam 2. To Abraham 3. To Moses 4. To David 5. To Israel and to Judah Take notice of it in that great promise of the Covenant I will be thy God q. d. Come Soul if thou wilt but have me I am thine here I offer my self my son my spirit Justification Sanctification Adoption Salvation whatsoever I am or whatsoever I have all is thine if thou wilt but accept of me Look over all this wide wide world and if there be any thing in it that can please thy soul and when thou hast gone through all the world then come and take a view of me and see me in my glory beauty and excellency view me in my Attributes and see if thou findest not enough in me worthy of thy acceptance all this and more than this nay more than eye can see or ear can hear or heart can conceive I offer to thee if thou wilt but have me Loe I will he thy God So Christians God is first with us he is the first mover he begins with us before we begin with him I will bring them saith God into the bond of the Covenant Now in this let us conform doth he offer O let us embrace the offer doth he lead the way O let us follow him step by step in that very way as he goes before us Let us not prescribe unto God let not us presume to appoint the Conditions of the Covenant let us not seek to wind about the Promise of Grace to our own Mind and Will let us not say We will have it thus thus and thus it shall be or else we will admit of no conditions of peace But O come take God and Christ upon his own Terms submit to that way of the Covenant and to those conditions of peace which the Lord prescribeth why this is to conform to his gracious offers There is much of this offer of Christ and conforming to Christ and therefore give me leave to enlarge As in the offer God usually scatters some little seeds of Faith in the hearts of those that he will bring to himself so it is worth the while to observe the work of Faith in receiving and accepting of this gracious offer only I shall not herein limit the Lord but I will shew what some
conceive the most usual and ordinary course of Faiths working and of the souls conforming to Jesus Christ in its closing with Christ As thus 1. Faith hearing the great things proposed in the Covenant of Grace it stirs up in the heart a serious consideration of their blessed condition that are in covenant with God Blessed art thou O Israel a People saved by the Lord What Nation in the Earth is like thy People Deut. 33.29 2 Sam. 7.2.3 even like Israel whom God went to redeem for a People unto himself Time was saith the Soul that I counted the proud blessed and the rich blessed and the honourable blessed time was when I placed my blessedness in other things as in Riches Preferments Favour Credit with men but now these are become vile and things of no value Faith makes us change our voice and to speak as the Psalmist Blessed are the People whose God is the Lord. Psal 144.15 2. Faith stirs in the heart a longing desire after this condition good being believed cannot but be desired and longed for Desire naturally springs from the apprehension of any good being made known hence Faith we say is both in the understanding and in the will as it is in the understanding it opens the eye to see and clearly to discern the Blessing of the Covenant as it is in the will it pursues and desires the attaining of the Grace revealed nor are these desires faint desires but very earnest eager violent sometimes it is called a thirsting after God and sometimes a panting after God and sometimes a gasping after God it is such a desire as cannot be satisfied by any thing without God himself 3. Faith stirs in the heart some hope to enjoy this condition I say some hope for Faith being as yet in the Bud or in the Seed though its desire be strong yet hope of obtaining is but feeble and weak hence Faith is taken up with many thoughts fain would the Soul be joyned to Christ but being as yet dismayed with the sense of Sin it stands like the Publican afar off as yet Faith can scarce speak a word to God only with Jonah it can look towards his holy Temple As a poor weak babe who lies in the Cradle sick and weak and speechless only it can look towards the Mother for help the cast of the eye expresseth in some sort what it would say thus Faith being weak it would speak to God but it cannot or dares not only it hath its eye towards Heaven 2 Chr. 20.12 as Jehoshaphat sometimes said Our eyes are towards thee It feels a need and fain would have but sense of unworthyness and the sense of the Law strikes such a fear into the heart that it dares not come near Consider Israels Case and we shall find it parallel to this God proclaims on the Mount I am the Lord thy God what was this but Gods offer to be in Covenant with Israel and yet the terrour of the Thunder was so great that Israel durst not come near a poor Soul hearing the Lord to offer himself to be in Covenant in him Come soul I am the Lord thy God Why alas it dares not come near What am I the Lord or what is my Fathers House that I should enter into a Covenant with the most high God The Soul is unquiet within it self it is hurried to and fro and finds no rest it hears of Peace with God but feels it not there is much ado with the Soul to sustain its hope only Faith sets the mind again and again to consider the promises invitati●●● and all other incouragements which God hath given in his Word 4. Faith stirs in the heart some resolves to go to Gods Throne and to sue for Grace Faith speaks within as they did Jonah 3.9 Amos. 5.15 Who can tell whether the Lord will return And it may be the Lord God of Hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph So Who can tell saith the Soul It may be the Lord will saith the Soul and this begets some resolves as those Lepers in Samaria knew they were sure to perish if they sate still therefore they resolved to try whether the Aramites would save them Or as Esther knowing all was undone if she would not stir she would try whether the King would hold out his Golden Scepter So the poor Soul knowing there is no way but perishing if it continue in its Natural State therefore it resolves to go to God Doth the Lord say Seek my Face Why Jer. 3.22 thy Face Lord will I seek Doth the Lord say Come unto Me Why Behold Lord I come unto Thee for Thou art the Lord our God And now the Soul betakes it self unto God it sends up Complaints of it self it laments its own sinful Rebellions it puts out a whole Volley of Sighs Groans and strong Cryes towards Heaven it confesseth with Grief and bitter Mourning all its former Iniquities it smites with Repenting Ephraim upon its Thigh it lyes down at God's Foot-stool it puts its Mouth in the Dust it acknowledgeth God's Righteousness if He should condemn and cast off for ever and yet withal it pleads for Grace that it may be accepted as one of His It sayes unto God Lord I have nothing to plead why Thou may'st not Condemn me but if Thou wilt receive me Thy Mercy shall appear in me O let Thy Mercy appear take away all Iniquity and receive me graciously Thus the Soul lyes at God's Throne and pleads for Grace 5. As Faith is thus earnest in suing to God for Grace so it is no less vigilant and watchful in observing what Answer comes from the Lord even as the Prisoner at the Bar not only cries for Mercy but he marks every Word which falls from the Judges Mouth if any thing may give him Hope or as Benhadad's Servants lay at catch with the King of Israel to see if they could take occasion by any thing which fell from him to plead for the Life of Benhadad So the poor Soul that is now pleading for Life and Grace it watcheth narrowly to see if any thing may come from God any Intimation of Favour any Word of Comfort that may tend to Peace O let me hear Joy and Gladness I will hear what the Lord will say for He will speak Peace unto His People 6. As Faith waits for an Answer so accordingly it demeans it self 1. Sometimes God answers not and Faith takes on and follows God still and cryes after Him with more Strength as resolving never to give over till the Lord either save or destroy Nay if the Lord will destroy Faith chuseth to die at God's Feet as when Joab was bidden to come forth from the Horns of the Altar and to take his Death in another Place Nay saith Joab but I will dye here Or as when Christ saw no Deliverance come in His Agony He Prayed more earnestly So a poor Soul Luke 22.44 in the Time
only Psal 68.18 John 1.16 but for us He received Gifts for Men said the Psalmist not for Himself meerly but for Men Of His Fulness we receive Grace for Grace saith John His Wisdom to make us wise His Meekness to make us meek and His Patience to make us patient 3. By Faith we look at Christ as Faithful to distribute such Grace unto us as He received for us Heb. 4.2 He is Faithful in all the House of God He is Faithful in dispensing all the Treasures of Grace committed unto Him for His Churches Good He keeps nothing back His Faithfulness will not suffer Him to keep that to Himself which He hath received for us Psal 68.18 Hence as the Psalmist saith He received Gifts for Men so the Apostle renders it He gave Gifts unto Men As he receives so he gives Ephes 4.8 being faithful in all that is committed to Him 4. By Faith we seek God and beg Performance of his Promises according to our need Do we want Wisdom Meekness Patience or any other Grace Faith carries us by Prayer unto the Fountain and in this way waits and expects to receive the Grace we want As the Child by sucking the Breast draws forth Milk for its own Nourishment and thereby it grows in Strength so do we by the Prayer of Faith suck from Christ and from the Promise of Grace and by that means derive Strength to our inner Man to fulfil the Covenant which we have made with God 6. As Faith strengthens us so if at any times by occasion or temptation we fail in our Covenant-keeping Faith recovers us and restores us again to our former Estate I do not say the Covenant can be broken betwixt God and Us we may offend God and fail in the Service of God but till we refuse God and leave God and chuse another Master Lord and Husband besides God there is no Dissolution of the Covenant of Grace Now this a true Believer cannot do He may fall and fall often yet he doth not fall but he rises again he may turn aside but yet he returns again into the way of the Covenant What a sweet Point is this Christians We may and sometimes we do walk weakly in keeping of Covenants our feet slip and we step aside out of God's Path yet Faith brings us back again to God It casts Shame on our Faces that after all the Grace shewed us we should so ill requite God It reminds us of those Promises Return unto Me and I will return unto you Ye have done all this Wickedness Zech. 1.3 1 Sam. 12.20 22. yet turn not aside from following the Lord For the Lord will not forsake his People for his Great Names sake because it hath pleased the Lord to make you his People In the minding of these and such other Promises Faith doth encourage us to return unto God to take words unto our selves and to plead the Covenant of his Grace towards us This VVork of Faith brought Peter back to Christ whereas Judas wanting this Faith lies down in desperate Sorrow never able to rise up or to recover himself O my Soul Art thou acquainted with these Acts of Faith enabling thee in some good measure to keep Covenant with God Then is there a sweet Conformity betwixt Thee and Jesus 3. God in Christ hath highly honoured us as we are his People so we through Christ should honour Him highly as He is our God This is the main End of the Covenant and I shall end with this O my Soul be like to God bear the Image and Resemblance of God thy Father in this Respect He hath humbled Himself to advance thee O then humble thy self to advance Him endeavour every way to exalt his Name We are willing to be in Covenant with God that we may set up our selves that we may sit upon Thrones and possess a Kingdom But we must think especially of setting up the Lord upon his Throne Ascribe Greatness to our God saith Moses Deut. 32.3 make it a Name and a Praise unto Him that he hath vouchsafed to make us his People and to take us into Covenant with Himself Honour Him as he is God but honour Him more abundantly as he is our God Who should Honour Him if his People will not The World knows Him not The Wicked will not seek after God Psal 10.4 God is not in all his Thoughts And Shall God have no Honour Shall He that stretched out the Heavens and laid the Foundations of the Earth and formed Man upon it have no Glory O yes The Lord Himself answers This People have I formed for My Self Isa 43.21 they shall shew forth My Praise Surely God will have Praise from his own People whom he hath taken unto Himself He will be glorifyed in all those that come near Him Lev. 10.3 But How should we honour God I answer 1. We must set Him up as chief and highest in our Esteem Kings acount not themselves honoured if they be not set above other Men And hence God's People have used such Expressions concerning God as do single Him forth beyond the Comparison of all Creatures Thus Moses Who is like unto Thee amongst the Gods Who is like unto Thee Exod. 15.11 2 Sam. 7.22 glorious in Holyness fearful in Praises doing Wonders Thus David Thou art Great O Lord God for there is none like Thee neither is there any God besides Thee according to all that we have heard with our Ears Thus Solomon Lord God of Israel 1 King 8.22 there is no God like unto Thee in Heaven above or in the Earth beneath who keepest Covenant and Mercy with Thy Servants Thus Micah Who is a God like unto Thee Micah 7.18 which passest by the Transgressions of the Remnant of thine Heritage And thus should we rise up in our Thoughts and Apprehensions of God until we come to an Holy Extasie and Admiration of God 2. We must count it our Blessedness and highest Dignity to be a People in Covenant with God Are we Honourable Yet esteem this as our greatest Honour that God is our God Are we low and despised in the World Yet count this Honour enough that God hath lifted us up to be his People Christians if when we are counted as things of nought we can quiet our selves in this that God is our God if when we are persecuted imprisoned distressed we can say with Jacob I have enough because the Lord hath Mercy on me and hath taken me into Covenant with Him surely then we do bear Witness of God before Heaven and Earth that He is better to us than Corn or Wine or Oyl or whatsoever this World affords 3. We must lie under the Authority of every Word of God and we must conform our selves to the Examples of God that is we must labour to become Followers of God and imitate his Virtues It is a part of that Honour which Children owe to their Parents
table or behind a solid partition it stirreth the needle as effectually as if it were within view Shall not he contradict his sences that will say It cannot work because I see it not Oh my Saviour thou art more mine than my Body is mine my sense feels that present but so as that I must lose it but my faith so feels and sees thee present with me as that I shall never be parted from thee 2. It is a very near union You will say how near If an Angel were to speak to you he cannot satisfie you in this only as far as our understanding can reach it and the Creatures can serve to illustrate these things take it thus Whatsoever by way of comparison can be alledged concerning the combination of any one thing with another that and much more may be said of our union with Jesus Christ To give instance out of the Scripture see what one stick is to another being glewed together see what one friend is to another as Jonathan and David who were said to be woven and knit each one to other see how near the father and the child are how near the husband and the wife are 1 Cor. 6 17. 1 Sam. 18.1 Isa 62.5 see what union is between the Branches and the Vine the members and the head nay one thing more see what the the soul is to the body such is Christ and so near is Christ and nearer to the person of every true believer I live yet not I saith Paul but Christ liveth in me John 15.5 1 Cor. 12 12. Gal. 2.20 q. d. as the soul is to the body of a natural man that acts and enlivens it naturally so is Jesus Christ to my soul and body O there is a marvellous nearness in this mystical union 3. It is a total union i.e. whole Christ is united to the whole believer soul and body If thou art united to Christ thou hast all Christ thou art one with him in his nature in his name thou hast the same Image Grace and Spirit in thee as he hath the same precious Promises the same access to God by prayer as he thou hast the same love of the Father all that he did or suffered thou hast a share in it thou hast his life and death all is thine so on thy part he hath thee wholly thy nature thy sins the punishment of thy sins thy wrath thy curse thy shame yea thy wit and wealth and strength all that thou art or hast or canst do possibly for him It is a total union My beloved is mine and I am his whole Christ from top to toe is mine and all that I am have or can do for evermore is his 4. It is an inseparable union it can never be broken I will make saith God an everlasting Covenant with them Jer. 32.40 and I will not turn away from them to do them good I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me This is a glorious promise some poor souls may say True Lord thou wilt not turn away from me I know thou wilt not Oh but I fear I shall turn away from thee Oh alass I turn every day towards sin and Satan Nay saith God I will put my fear in their heart that thou shalt not turn away from me q. d. We shall be kept together for evermore and never be separated Hence Paul triumphantly challenges all enemies on earth or rather in hell to do their worst to break this knot Rom. 8.5 Who shall separate us from the love of God in Christ shall tribulation Distress Famine Nakedness Peril or Sword Come all that can come and see if that blessed union betwixt me and Christ shall ever be broken by all that you can do Thus for this union 2. There is a spiritual communion with God in Christ Both these are the effects of Christs personal or hypostatical union first union to his person and then communion with his benefits union in proper speaking is not unto any of the benefits flowing to us from Christ we are not united to forgiveness of Sin Holiness Peace of Conscience but unto the person of the Son of God himself and then secondly comes this communication of all the benefits arising immediately from this union to the Lord Jesus that as Christ was Priest Prophet and King so we also by him are after a sort Priests Prophets and Kings for being made one with him we are thereby possessed of all things that are his as the Wife is of the wealth of her Husband now all things are yours saith the Apostle whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the World c. Hitherto have we took a view of Christ in his Mothers Womb 1 Cor. 3 21.23 and O what marvails there Did ever womb carry such a fruit Well might the Angel say Blessed art thou amongst Women and well might Elizabeth say Blessed is the Fruit of thy Womb but the blessing is not only in conceiving but in bearing and therefore we proceed SECT VI. Of the Birth of Christ 6. THe birth of Christ now follows Now was it that the Son of Righteousness should break forth from his bed where nine months he had hid himself as behind a fruitful cloud this was the worlds wonder a thing so wonderful that it was given for a sign unto believers seven hundred and forty years before it was accomplished Isa 7.14 therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son A wonder indeed and great beyond all comparison that the Son of God should be born of a Woman that he who is the true Melchizedech without Father and without Mother must yet have a mother-Virgin that he that is before Abraham was should yet be born after Abraham a matter of two thousand years that he who was Davids Son therefore born in Bethlehem should yet be Davids Lord wonderful things are spoken of thee Heb. 7.3 O thou Son of God before he was born the Prophets sing the Sybils prophesie the Patriarchs typisie the Types foretel God promiseth and the Son of God performeth when he was born Angels run errands Gabriel brings tidings the glory of Heaven shines a Star displaies and wise men are the Heralds that proclaim his Birth But come yet a little nearer Let us go to Bethlehem as the Shepherds said and see this thing which is come to pass if we step but one step into his loding Heavens wonder is before our eyes now Look upon Jesus Luke 2.15 look on him as in fulness of time he carried on the great work of our Salvation here now you may read the meaning of Adams Covenant Abrahams promise Moses revelation Davids succession these were but vailes but now shall we draw aside the Curtains come take a view of the truth it self O wonder of wonders whom find we in this lodging a Babe in a Cratch a Mother-maid a
enjoyments for never was Christ so enjoyed in this life but thou hast cause to desire yet more of Christ It is worth thy observation that Spiritual desires after Christ do neither load nor cloy the heart but rather open and enlarge it for more and more Who was better acquainted with God than Moses Exod. 33.18 Phil. 1.23 and yet Who was more importunate to know him better I beseech thee shew me thy glory And Who was more acquainted with Christ than Paul and yet who was more importunate to be with him nearer I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ Further and further union with Christ and communion with Christ are most desirable things and are not these the fruits of his incarnation the effects of his hypostatical personal union more and more peace and love and reconciliation betwixt God and us are desirable things and are not these the fruits of Christs birth the effects of his budding out of the earth was it not then That Righteousness looked down from Heaven That Mercy and Truth met together and Righteousness and Peace kissed each other an higher degree of holiness sanctification likeness to God and Christ are desirable things and are not these the fruits of his circumcision and presentation to the Lord the effects of all those consequents that follow after his birth Come Soul and stir up thy desires true desires are not wavering and dull but resolute and full of quickness observe how the nature of true desires in Scripture is set forth by the most pathetical and strong similitudes of Hunger and Thirst and those not common neither but by The panting of a tyred Hart after the rivers of waters and by the gaping of dry ground after some seasonable showers O then How is it that the passages of thy desires are so narrow and almost shut up Nay How is it that thy vessels are so full of contrary qualities that there is scarce any room in thy Soul for Christ and all his Train Will not the desires of the Patriarchs witness against thee How cryed they after Christs coming in the Flesh Bow the Heavens O Lord and come down Psal 144.5 Psal 144.5 Oh that Thou wouldest rent the Heavens that Thou wouldest come down Isa 64.1 Isa 64.1 Drop down ye Heavens from above and let the Skies pour down Righteousness let the Earth open and bring forth Salvation Isa 45.8 Isa 45.8 Is it possible that their desires should be more vehement after Christ than ours They lived on the dark-side of the cloud but we on the bright-side the vail was upon their hearts which vail is done away in Christ they saw Christ afar off and their sight was very dim and dark But we all with open face as in a glass behold the glory of the Lord. 2 Cor. 3.18 One would think the less any thing is known the less it should be desired O my soul either thou art more ignorant of Christ than the Patriarchs of old or thy heart is more out of frame than theirs suspect the latter and blame thy heart it may be thy turpid and sluggish nature hath layed thy desires asleep if an hungry man will sleep his hunger will sleep with him But O stir up and awake thy desires Present before them that glorious object the incarnation of Jesus Christ it is an object which the very Angels desire to look into and Art not thou more concern'd in it than the Angels is not the fruit of the incarnation thine more especially thine Come then stir up those motions of thy appetite by which the soul darts it self towards the absent good draw nearer and nearer till thou comest to union and enjoyment cry after Christ Judg. 5.28 Why is his Chariot so long in coming Why tarry the Wheeles of his Chariots SECT IV. Of Hoping in Jesus in that Respect 4. LEt us Hope in Jesus carrying on the great Work of our Salvation at his first coming or incarnation Only here remember I speak not of every hope but only of such an hope as is grounded on some certainty and knowledge This is the main question whether Christs incarnation belongs unto me the Prophet tells us that Vnto us a Child is born and unto us a Son is given Isa 9.6 But how may I Hope that this Child is born to me and that this Son is given to me what ground for that Out of these words of the Prophet I shall draw a double Evidence which may be instead of all our first Evidence from the former words Vnto us a Child is born our second Evidence from the latter words unto us a Son is given 1. From the former words I lay down this position unto us a Child is born if we are new born the surest way to know our interest in the birth of Christ it is to know Christ born in us or formed in us Gal. 4.19 as the Apostle speaks The new birth is the effect of Christs birth and a sure sign that Christ is born to us Say then O my soul Art thou born anew is there in thee a new nature a new principle is the Image of God and of Christ in thy soul so the Apostle stiles it 1 Cor. 15.59 the bearing of the Image of the heavenly why then was Christ incarnate for thee if thy new birth be not clear enough thou may'st try it further by these following rules 1. Where this new birth is there is new desires new comforts new contentments Sometimes with the prodigal thou wast content with husks but now nothing will satisfie thee but thy Fathers mansion and thy Fathers feasts sometimes thou mindest only earthly things but now the favour of God the light of his countenance society with him and enjoying of him are thy chief desires This is a good sign David's heart and flesh Psal 84.2 and all breathed after God My soul longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord my heart and my flesh cryeth out for the living God Men truly regenerate do not judge it so happy to be wealthy great and honoured in the world as to have the light of Gods favour shine upon them O my soul dost thou see the glory of the world and thou fallest down to worship it dost thou say in the increase of worldly comfort it is good to be here Then fear thy self but if these things compared with Christ are vain and light and of poor and mean esteem then hope well and be assured that thou art born again and that Christ is formed in thee 2. Where this new birth is there is new words new works new affections a new conversation 2 Cor. 5.17 Acts 9.11 1 Cor. 6.11 Old things are passed away behold all things are become new Paul once a persecutor but Behold now he prayeth And Such were some of you but now ye are washed now ye are sanctified now ye are justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by
the Spirit of our God As every man is so is he affected so he speaks and so he lives if thy life be supernatural so is thy affections so is thy words so is thy conversation Paul lived a life once of a bloody persecutor he breathed out threatenings against all the Professors of the Lord Jesus but now it is otherwise The life which I now live in the flesh Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me O my soul Hast thou the old conversation the old affections the old discourse the old passions thou used to have What Is thy heart a den of lusts a cage of unclean imaginations Then fear thy self there cannot from a sweet fountain come forth bitter streams there cannot from a refined spirit as refined come forth corrupted actions or imaginations a Thorn cannot send forth Grapes saith Christ so neither can a Vine send forth Thornes say we I know there is in the best something of flesh as well as of the spirit but if thou art new born then thou canst not but strive against it and wilt endeavour to conquer it 1 Pet. 3.4 2 Pet. 1.4 Rom. 7.22 2 Cor. 5.17 3. Where this new birth is there is a new nature a new principle Peter calls it the hidden man of the heart the divine nature Paul calls it the inward man the new creature it is compared to a root to a fountain to a foundation and for want of this foundation we see now in these sad times so much inconstancy and unsetledness in some professors themselves many have gotten new and strange notions but they have not new natures new principles of grace if grace were but rooted in their hearts though the winds did blow and storms arise they would continue firm and stable as being founded upon a Rock Never tell me of profession shew outward action outward conversation outward duties of Religion all this may be and yet no new creature you have some bruits that can act many things like men but because they have not an humane nature they are still brutish so many things may be done in a way of holiness which yet come not from this inward principle of renovation and therefore it is but copper and not gold mistake not O my soul in this which is thy best and surest evidence though I call the new birth a new creature my meaning is not as if a new faculty were infused into him that is new born a man when he is regenerate hath no more faculties in his soul than he had before his regeneration only in the work of regeneration those ablities which the man had before are now improved and made spiritual and so they work now spiritually which before wrought naturally As in the resurrection from the dead our bodies shall have no more nor other parts and members than they had before only those parts and members which now are natural shall then by the power of God be made spiritual 1 Cor. 15.44 It is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body there is a natural body and there is a spiritual body so the same faculties and the same abilities which before regeneration were but natural are now spiritual and work spiritually they are all brought under the government of the Spirit of Christ a lively resemblance of this change in the faculties of the soul we may discern in those natural and sensitive faculties which we have common with beasts as to live to move to desire to feel the beasts having no higher principle than sense use them sensually but a man enjoying the same faculties under the command of a reasonable soul he useth them rationally so is it in a regenerate man his understanding will and affections when they had no other command but reason he only used them rationally but now being under the guiding of the Spirit of Christ they work spiritually and he useth them spiritually and hence it is that a regenerate man is every where in Scripture Rom. 8.1 Gal. 5.18 25. said to Walk after the Spirit to be led by the Spirit to walk in the Spirit the Spirit by way of infusing or shedding gives power an ability a seed a principle of spiritual life which the soul had not before and from this principle of spiritual life planted in the Soul flows or springs those spiritual motions and operations as the Spirit leads them out according to the habit or principle of the new creature the divine nature the spiritual life infused Come then look to it O my soul What is thy principle within consider not so much the outward actions the outward duties of Religion as that root from whence they grow that principle from whence they come they are fixed ones setled ones by way of life in thee Clocks have their motions but they are not motions of life because they have no principles of life within Is there life within then art thou born again yea even unto thee a Child is born This is one evidence 2. From the latter words I lay down this position unto us a Son is given if we are Gods Sons The best way to know our Interest in the Son of God it is to know our selves to be Gods Sons by grace as Christ was Gods Son by nature Christians to whom Christ is given are coheirs with Christ only Christ is the first-born and hath the preheminence in all things our sonship is an effect of Christs sonship and a sure sign that unto us a Son is given Say then O my soul Art thou a Son of God Dost thou resemble God according to thy capacity being holy even as he is holy Why then Christ was incarnate for thee he was given to thee If thy sonship be not clear enough thou mayst try it further by these following Rules 1. The Sons of God Fear God If I be a Father Where is my Honour Mal. 1.6 saith God if I be a Master Where is my Fear If I be a Son of God there will be an holy Fear and Trembling upon me in all my approaches unto God I know there is a servile mercinary Fear and that is unworthy and unbeseeming the Son of God but there is a filial Fear and that is an excellent check and bridle to all our wantonness What Son will not Fear the frowns and anger of his loving Father 1 Pet. 1.17 I dare not do this will he say my Father will be offended and I whether shall I go Agreeable to this is the Apostles advice If ye call on the Father pass your sojourning here with Fear 2. The Sons of God Love God and Obey God out of a principle of Love Suppose there were no Heaven or Glory to bestow upon a regenerate person yet would he Obey God out of a principle of Love not that it is unlawful for the Child of God to have an Eye unto the recompence of reward Heb.
Blessed Object here is matter for it to work upon if thou canst possibly rejoyce in any thing at all O rejoyce in the Lord and again I say rejoyce Is there not cause read and spell what 's the meaning of the Gospel of Christ what is Gospel but Good spell or good tidings and wherein lies the good ridings according to its emency is it not in the glorious incarnation of the Son of God Luke 2.10.11 behold I bring you a Gospel so it is in the Original or behold I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all People for unto you is born this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. The Birth of Christ to them that have but touched hearts is the comfort of comforts and the sweetest balm and confection that ever was Oh my Soul what ailes thee Why art thou cast down and disquieted within me Is it because thou art a sinner why unto thee is born a Saviour his Name is Saviour and therefore Saviour because he will save his people from their sins Come then and bring out thy Sins and weigh them to the utmost aggravation of them and take in every Circumstance both of Law and Gospel and set but this in the other Scale that unto thee is born a Saviour surely all thy iniquities will seem lighter than vanity yea they will be as nothing in comparison thereof My Soul doth Magnifie the Lord said Mary and my spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour Luke 1.46.47 Her soul and her spirit within her rejoyced at this Birth of Christ there is cause that every Soul and every Spirit should rejoyce that hath any interest in this Birth of Christ O my soul how shouldest thou but rejoyce if thou wilt consider these particulars 1. God himself is come down into the World because it was impossible for thee to come to him he is come to thee this consideration made the Prophet cry out Rejoyce greatly O thou Daughter of Zion Z●ch 9.9 shout O Daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee he is called a King and therefore he is able and he is thy King and therefore he is willing but in that thy King cometh unto thee here is the marvilous love and mercy of God in Christ Kings do not usually come to visit and wait upon their Subjects it is well if poor Subjects may come to them and be admitted into their Presence to wait on them O but see the great King of Heaven Earth the King of Kings and Lord of Lords stooping and bowing the heavens to come down to thee surely this is good tidings of great joy and therefore rejoyce greatly O Daughter of Zion A little joy is too scant and narrow for this news hearts should be enlarged the doors and gates should be set wide open for this King of Glory to come in as Balaam said of Israel God is with him and the shout of a King is amongst them Num. 23.21 so now may we say God is with us and the shout of a King is amongst us Rejoyce Zion Shout O Daughter of Jerusalem 2. God is come down in flesh he hath laid aside as it were his own Glory whilest he converseth with thee when God manifested himself as on Mount Sinai he came down in Thunder and Lightning and if now he had appeared in Thunder and Lightning if now he had been guarded with an innumerable Company of Angels all having their Swords of vengeance and justice drawn well might poor souls have trembled and have run into corners for who could ever be able to endure his coming in this way but lo poor Soul God is come down in flesh he hath made his appearance as a man as one of us and there is not in this regard the least distance betwixt him and us Surely this is fewel for joy to feed upon O why should God come down so sutably so lowly as in our nature if he would have thy poor soul to be afraid of him doth not this very design intend consolation to thy soul O gather up thy Spirit anoint thy heart with the Oyl of gladness see God himself is come down in flesh to live amongst us he professeth he will have no other life but amongst the Sons of men see what a sweet way of familiarity and entercourse is made betwixt God and us now he is come down in humane frailty 3. God hath took on him our Nature as a vast pipe to his Godhead that it may flow out in all manner of sweetness upon our hearts if God had come down in flesh only to have been seen of us Exod. 33.12 it had been a wonderful condescention and a great mercy if I have found favour in thy eyes said Moses shew me thy way that I may know thee but to come down in flesh and to come down in flesh not only to be seen but to dispatch the great business of our souls Salvation here 's comfort indeed with what joy should we draw water out of this well of salvation Surely the great reason of the shallowness of our Comforts shortness of our Hopes the faintness of our spirits the lowness of our Graces is from the not knowing or the not heeding of this particular Christ in flesh stands not for a Cypher but it is an Organ of life and grace unto us it is a fountain of comfort that can never run dry In this flesh there is laid in on purpose such a fulness of the Godhead that of his fulness we might receive in our measure grace for grace O my soul thou art daily busy in eying this and that but above all know that all the fulness God lies in Christ incarnate to be emptied upon thee this was the meaning of Christ taking on him flesh that through his flesh he might convey to thee whatsoever is in himself as God As for instance God in himself is Good and Gracious and Powerful and All-sufficient and Merciful and what not Now by his being in flesh he suites all this and conveyes all this to thee observe this for thy eternal comfort God in and through the flesh makes all his Attributes and Glory serviceable to thy soul 4. God in our Nature hath laid out the Model and Draught of what he will do unto all his Saints for ever humane nature was never so advanced before what to be glorified above the Angels to be united in a Personal union with the second person of the Godhead surely hence may be expected great matters here 's a fair step for the bringing of our Persons up to the enjoyment of God if God be come down in the likeness of man why then he will bring us up into the likeness of God look what was done to our nature in Christ the very same as far as we are capable shall be done to our persons in Heaven Think of it O my soul why hath God made flesh so
effect the fruit the benefit of his Conception Birth and of the wonderful union of the two natures of Christ may be all thine What dost thou hope in Jesus and believe thy part in this Incarnation of Christ why then pray in hope and pray in Faith what is prayer but the stream and river of Faith an issue of the desire of that which I joyfully believe 2 Sam. 7.27 Thou O Lord God of Hosts God of Israel hast revealed to thy Servant saying I will build thee an house therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this Prayer unto thee 2. We must praise This was the special duty practised by all Saints and Angels at Christs Birth Luke 1.46 Luke 1.68 My Soul doth magnifie the Lord saith Mary and my Spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour And blessed be the Lord God of Israel said Zachary for he hath visited and redeemed his People and Glory to God in the highest said the Heavenly Host only one Angel had before brought the News Luke 2.11 unto you is born this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord but immediately after there were many to sing praises not only six Cherubims as Isaiah saw nor only four and twenty Elders as John saw but a multitude of Heavenly Angels like Armies that by their Heavenly Hallelujahs gave Glory to God O my soul do thou endeavour to keep consort with those many Angels O sing Praises sing Praises unto God sing Praises Never was like case since the first Creation never was the wisdom truth justice mercy and goodness of God so manifest before I shall never forget that last speech of a dying Saint upon the stage Blessed be God for Jesus Christ O my soul living and dying let this be thought on What Christ incarnate for me why bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy Name SECT IX Of conforming to Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus in reference to this great transaction of his Incarnation Looking to Jesus contains this and is the cause of this the sight of God will make us like to God and the sight of Christ will make us like to Christ for as a Looking-Glass cannot be exposed to the Sun but it will shine like the same so God receives none to contemplate his face but he transforms them into his own likeness by the irradiation of his light and Christ hath none that dive into these depths of his glorious and blessed Incarnation but they carry along with them sweet impressions of an abiding and transforming nature Come then let us once more look on Jesus in his Incarnation that we may conform and be like to Jesus in that respect But wherein lies this conformity or likeness to Jesus I answer in these and the like particulars 1. Christ was conceived in Mary by the Holy Ghost so must Christ be conceived in us by the same holy Ghost To this purpose is the seed of the Word cast in and principles of Grace are by the Holy Ghost infused he hath begotten us by the Word saith the Apostle Jam. 1.18 James 1.18 How Mean Contemptible or Impotent Men may esteem it yet God hath appointed no other means to convey supernatural life but after this manner Where no Vision is the People perish where no preaching is there is a worse judgment than that of Egypt when there was one dead in every Family By the Word and Spirit the Seeds of all Grace are sown in the heart at once and the heart closing with it immediatly Christ is conceived in the heart Concerning this spiritual Conception or Reception of Christ in us there is a great question Whether it be possible for any man to discern how it is wrought But for the Negative are these Texts Our Life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 and the Wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth Joh. 3.8 It is a wonderful hidden and secret Conception The holy Ghost sets out that state of unregeneracy in which Christ finds us by the name of Death Eph. 2.1 So that it must needs be as impossible for us to discover how it is wrought as it is impossible for one to know how he receives his own life Some say the first act of infusing or receiving Christ or Grace they are all one is wrought in an instant and not by degrees and therefore it is impossible to discern the manner And yet we grant that we may discern both the preparations to Grace and the first operations of Grace 1. The preparations to Grace are discernable such are those terrours and spiritual agonies which are often before the work of Regeneration they may be resembled to the heating of metals before they melt and are cast into the Mold to be fashioned now by the help of Natural Reason one may discern these 2. Much more may the first Motion and Operations of Grace be discerned by one truly regenerate because that in them his Spirit works together with the Spirit of Christ such are sorrow for sin as sin and seek rightly for comfort an hungring desire after Christ and his Merits neither do I think it impossible for a regenerate man to feel the very first illapse of the Spirit into the Soul for it may bring that sense with it self as to be easily discerned although it doth not alwayes see nor perhaps usually see it is true that the giving of Spiritual Life and the giving of the sense of it are two distinct acts of the Spirit yet who can deny but that both these acts may go together though alwayes they do not go together Howsoever it is yet even in such Persons as in the instant of Regeneration may feel themselves in a regenerate estate this Conclusion stands firm viz. They may know what is wrought in them but how it is wrought they cannot know nor understand we feel the Wind and perceive it in the motions and operations thereof but the Originals of it we are not able exactly to describe some think the beginnings of Winds are from the flux of the Air others from the exhalations of the Earth but there is no certainty so it is in the manner of this Conception or passive Reception of Christ and Grace into our hearts we know not how it is wrought but it nearly concerns us to know that it is wrought look we to his conformity that as Christ was conceived in Mary by the Holy Ghost so that Christ be conceived in us in a spiritual sense by the same Holy Ghost 2. Christ was sanctified in the Virgins Womb so must we be sanctified in our selves following the Commandment of God Be ye holy as I am holy Souls regenerate must be sanctified Every man saith the Apostle that hath this hope in him 1 John 3.3 purifieth himself even as he is pure I know
shew you the Word of the Lord. Deut. 5 5. The Vulgar renders it thus Ego sequestor medius I was a Mediatour a Midler betwixt God and you and so Christ Jesus he is a Mediatour a Midler an Interpreter an Inter-messenger betwixt God and his People 2. The Reasons of Christs being a Prophet were these 1. That he might reveal and deliver to his people the will of his Father 2. That he might open and expound the same being once delivered 3. That he might make his Saints to understand and to believe the same being once opened 1. As a Prophet he delivers to the people his Fathers will both in his own Person and by his Servants the Ministers In his own Person when he was upon earth as a Minister of the Circumcision Rom. 15.8 Heb. 2 3. and by his Servants the Ministers from the beginning of their mission till the end of the World Thus the Gospel is called A great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him Christ in his own personal preaching is said but to have begun to teach Acts 1.1 and the consummate publication was the sending of the holy Ghost to these Select Vessels who were to carry abroad this Treasure unto all the world it was begun by the Lord and it was confirmed by them that were the Disciples of the Lord. In this respect we cannot look on the publishing of the Gospel to the world but as very glorious was there not a resemblance of state and glory in the preaching of Christ You have heard how a forerunner was sent to prepare his way as an Herald to proclaim his approach and then was revealed the glory of the Lord but because the publication was not consummate till afterwards Eph. 4.8 Christ carries it on in greater state afterwards than he did before When he ascended up on high he then led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men as Princes in time of their solemn inauguration do some special Acts of magnificence and Honour they proclaim Pardons open Prisons Create Nobles fill Conduits with wine so Christ to testifie the glory of his Gospel at the day of his instalment and solemn readmission into his Fathers glory he proclaims the Gospel gives gifts unto men for the perfecting of the Saints Ver. 12. for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ 2. As a Prophet he opens and expounds the Gospel Thus being in the Synagogue on the Sabbath-day Luke 4.17 18 21. he opened the book and he found the place where it was written the Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor c. and then he closed the book and said Luke 24.27 this day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears And thus joyning himself with two of his Disciples going towards Emmaus he begun at Moses and all the Prophets and he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself the Prophesies of Christ were dark and hard to be understood and therefore Christ came down from Heaven to discover such truths John 3.13 No man hath ascended up to Heaven i.e. to be acquainted with Gods secrets but he that came down from Heaven the gracious purpose of God towards lost mankind was a secret locked up in the breast of the Father and so it had been even to this day had not Christ who was in the bosome of the Father and one of his Privy Council revealed it unto us hence Christ is called the Interpreter of God Mat. 11.27 no man knoweth the Father save the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him by his interpretation Luke 24.45 Acts 10.14 3. As a Prophet he gives us to understand and to believe the Gospel Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures and thus was the Case of Lydia whose heart the Lord opened he that first opens Scriptures at last opens hearts He is that true light which enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world John 1.9 he enlightens every believer not only with a common natural light but with a special supernatural light of saving spiritual and effectual knowledge now there is no Prophet can do this save only Jesus Christ he only is able to cause our hearts to believe and to understand the matter which he doth teach and reveal other Prophets may plant and water Paul may plant and Apollo may water but he and only he can give the increase other Prophets may teach and Baptize but unless Christ come in by the powerful presence of his Spirit 1 Pet. 2.5 Psal 127.1 they can never be able to save any one poor soul We as lively stones are built up a spiritual house saith Peter but except the Lord do build this house they labour in vain that build it O alas who is able to breath the Spirit of life into these dead stones John 5.25 but he of whom it is written The hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear it shall live Who can awaken a dead soul out of a dead sleep And who can give light unto these blind eyes of ours but he of whom it is written Eph. 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light 3. The Excellencies of Christ above all other Prophets are in these respects 1. Other Prophets were but Types and shadows of this great Prophet even Moses himself was but a figure of him Acts 7.37 A Prophet shall the Lord God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me saith Moses these words Like unto me do plainly shew that Moses was at the best but an image and shadow of Christ now as substances do far excel shadows so doth Christ far excel all the Prophets they were but shadows and forerunners to him 2. Other Prophets revealed but some part of Gods will and only at sometimes God saith the Apostle at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time-past unto the Fathers by the Prophets Heb. 1.1 i.e. he let out his light by little and little till the Day-star and Sun of Righteousness arose Ver. 2. but in these last dayes he hath spoken by his Son i.e. he had spoken more fully and plainly in this respect saith the Apostle the heirs of Life and Salvation were but children before Christs incarnation Gal. 14.1 2. As now we see but through a glass darkly towards what we shall do in the life to come so did they of old in comparison of us their light in comparison of ours was but an obscure and glimmering light Christs discovery of himself then was but a standing behind the wall a looking forth of the window Cant. 2.9 a shewing of himself through the
it was in that hour when he saw an handsel of the fruit of his Disciples Ministry as an earnest of the many thousands that should afterwards come in John 11.15 And I am glad for your sakes that I was not there said Christ when Lazarus was dead But why was he glad It follows to the intent ye might believe He rejoyced if any of his got faith a little more faith more and more faith Luke 19.41 42. 5. From grief in case of sinners not repenting witness his tears over Jerusalem and those speeches of his And when he was come near he beheld the City and wept over it saying if thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes Look as it is with a man carrying to be buried his wife weeps his children weep his friends weep so our Saviour follows Jerusalem to the grave and when he can do no more for it he rings out this doleful passing-bell Mat. 23.37 O that thou hadst known c. 6. From his wishes groanings O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee how often would I have gathered thy children together even as an hen gathers her Chickens under her wings and ye would not In this Argument before we pass it observe we the several passages here 's first the groan Oh! this Aspiration argues a compassionate pang of grief it ran to the very heart of Christ that Jerusalem had neglected their souls salvation Oh Jerusalem Secondly here 's an ingemination or a double calling on Jerusalem O Jerusalem Jerusalem the name doubled expresseth great affection in the speaker as when David doubled the name Absolom it is said the King was much moved 2 Sam. 18.33 and so he cryed O my Son Absolom my Son my Son Absolom thirdly here 's the monstrous sin wherewith the Lord charges Jerusalem Thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee Jerusalem was the very slaughter-house of the Prophets in so much that very few of the Prophets had been murthered elsewhere and so comparatively Christ speaks it cannot be that a Prophet perish out of Jerusalem Fourthly Luke 13.33 here 's Christs willingness to save Jerusalem which he discovers 1. In his frequent applications to it how often q. d. not once nor twice nor thrice but many and many a time have I come to Jerusalem and spoke to Jerusalem and wooed Jerusalem how often 2. In the acting exercising and putting forth of his will how often would I have gathered thy children together The will of Christ was serious though not absolute I know his divine will absolutely considered could not have been resisted but this was * There is voluntas absoluta efficax deceinens infalibiliter producens effectum volitum voluntas conditionata revelata approbationis simplicis complacentia August tract 15. in John not his absolute will but only a will of divine complacency and so he would not have the death of any but that all should live or he speaks here of his humane ministerial will say some and not of his divine many a Sermon had he preached and many an Exhortation had he dropped and every Sermon every Exhortation proclaimed his willingness I would yea that I would have gathered thy children together 3. In resemblance of his willingness Christ would have gathered Jerusalems children as the hen gathers her chickens under her wings in the metaphor Christs care is admirably displayed 1. As the hen with her wings covers the unfeathered chickens 2. As the hen provides for their food not eating her self till they are filled 3. As the hen defends her chickens from the ravenous birds so that to blood she will fight in their defence so hath Christs care been for Jerusalem No bird saith Austin expresseth such tender love to her young ones as the hen doth no fowls so discover themselves to be mothers as hens do other birds we know to be mothers when we see them in their nest but no other way only the hen discovers her self to be a mother when her chickens do not follow her for then her feathers stand up her wings hang down she clocketh mournfully and goeth feebly now in respect of this singular love Christ compares himself to an hen As an hen gathers her chickens so would I have gathered Jerusalem 4. In that he adds so dolefully but ye would not I would but ye would not q. d. in me no care so great as to save your souls in you no care so little as your souls Salvation I strove towards you in acts of love and you strove towards me in acts of ingratitude I would have done you good but you would not receive it I would yea how often would I but ye would not 2. Christs reception of sinners appears yet more in his practise How welcome were all sorts of sinners unto him He casts out none that acknowledged him for the Messiah he turned none away that gave up their souls to be saved by him in his own way This he manifests 1. Parabolically 2. Really 1. Parabolically especially in those three Parables of the lost Groat and of the lost Sheep and of the lost Son I shall instance in this last Luke 15.20 which may well serve for all the rest When the Prodigal was yet afar off his Father saw him and had compassion on him and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him In these words observe 1. His Father sees him before he sees his Father no sooner a sinner thinks of Heaven but the Lord spies him and takes notice of him 2. The Lord sees him whiles he was yet a great way off he was but in the beginning of his way his Father might have let him alone till he had come quite home to his house and it had been a singular mercy to have bid him welcome then but he takes notice of him yet a great way off sinners may be far off from God in their own apprehensions and yet the Lord even then draws near whiles thus they apprehend 3. His Father had pity or compassion on him the Lords bowels even yearn and work and stir within him at the sight of his returning prodigals when Ephraim had bemoaned himself Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised Jer. 31.18 19 ver 20. as a bullock unaccostomed to the yoak why then cries God Is Ephraim my dear son is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I do earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. 4. His Father run there is much in this As 1. It had been mercy though his Father had stood still till his Son had come 2. What a mercy is this that his Father will go and give his Son the meeting 3. But above all oh what abundant mercy
himself which Jesus knowing for he understood his thoughts as well as words first he makes her Appology and then his own the scope givign us to understand that Christ was not of the same superciliousness with the Pharisees but that repenting sinners should be welcome unto him Ver. 47. Ver. 48. Ver. 50. Vse and this welcome he publisheth first to Simon Her sins which are many are forgiven and then to the woman Thy sins are forgiven thee thy faith hath saved thee go in peace I have been long in the proof but a word of use and I have done What is Christ most willing to receive sinners O then be exhorted who would not come to Jesus Christ methinks now all sinners of all sorts should say though I have been a drunkard a swearer an unclean person yet now I hear Christ is willing to receive sinners and therefore I will go to Jesus Christ This is my exhortation O come unto Christ come unto Christ behold here in the name of the Lord I stand and make invitation to poor sinners O will ye not come how will ye answer it at the great day when it shall be said the Lord Jesus made a tender and offer of mercy to you and you would not accept of it Oh come to Christ and believe on Christ as Christ is willing to receive you so be you willing to give up your souls to him the motives to this I may lay down in these particulars 1. The Doctrine of Christ Come unto me and him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out All the arguments of God and Christ of which you have heard the practice of Christ whiles he was upon earth and the heart of Christ now in Heaven lay these together and apply them to your own souls Oh what work will they make 2. The calls of God and Christ as they are frequent in Scriptures consider that Text Ho every one that thirsts come ye to the waters Isa 55.1 Ho he begins proclamation-wise we usually say vocations interjections speak very affectionate motion towards the distressed certainly Christ's love is a very affectionate love he layes his mouth to the ears of those that are spiritually deaf and cryes aloud Ho every one Christ invites all As many as ye shall find bid them to the Marriage Matth 22.9 As the Heavens are general in their influence not one grass on the ground but 't is bedewed so are Christs invitations to his feast not one man in the world but he is invited Ho every one that thirsteth so the Apostle Let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take the water of Life freely Revel 22.17 A thirst and a will is one and the same it is your will that makes up the match if you will but sit down at God's Table if you will but have the honey-comb with the honey if you will but drink his Wine with his milk if you will drink yea drink abundantly of the flaggons of the new wine of his Kingdom why then come Come ye to the waters come unto me and drink Christs arms are spread abroad to receive sinners he calls and knocks and calls and waits and calls and beseeches every word here hath so much sweetness and dearness in it as it plainly speakes him free and willing to receive you if you will but come 3. The wooings of Christ to gain your hearts consider him bowing the Heavens and coming down and laying aside his Robes of Majesty and putting on your filthy garments consider him going about from place to place on no other errand but to gain your hearts and win your Souls and whoever spake such effectual words as Christ spake when he was upon the earth who ever gave such precious jewels to a Bride as Christ gave to his Spouse whoever put on such apparrel as Christ did when he wooed his Church the Prophet wonders at it Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel Isa 63.1 2. and thy garments like him that treadeth in the Wine Fat Isa 63.1 2. Whoever gave such a love-token as Christ gave when he laid down his Life Oh consider him living or dying and say Never like Love to this Ah poor sinner see your Jesus hanging on the Cross dropping out his last blood breathing out his last breath stretching out his dying armes to incircle sinners and come Oh come and throw your selves into his bleeding armes away with all prejudicate opinions who shall say Christ is not willing to save him and not blaspheme eternal love speak truth corrupt hearts speak truth say not Christ is unwilling but you are unwilling I would but ye would not 4. The weepings of Christ if he cannot prevaile Thus we find him in the Gospel expressing himself Luke 19.41 not only in words but in tears And when he was come near Jerusalem he beheld the City and wept over it Luke 19.41 Christ coming to the City and seeing it and foreseeing the desolation that should come upon it his bowels yearned within him towards the People and he mourned secretly within himself q. d. O Jerusalem thou hast had many Priests to advise thee and many Prophets to instruct thee in the wayes of life but now those dayes are gone and past nay the great Prophet of the World is come to woo thee but yet thy heart is hardened and thou wilt not receive the things belonging to thy peace and therefore I will turn my preaching into mourning and sighing O that thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things belonging to thy peace and then his heart even breaks and he weeps again but now are they hid from thine eyes sinners suppose Christ should come and weep over you as he did over Jerusalem saying O ye sinful souls had but you known even you in this your day the things belonging to your peace and suppose that you should see one tear trickling down after another what Christ to weep for you over you Methinks if you had hearts of stone it should melt your hearts surely it is no light matter that makes Christ weep Children weep often but Wise-men seldome yet here the wisest of men weeps for them that would not weep for themselves O Jerusalem Jerusalem SECT IV. Of Christ's easie Yoak and light Burthen 3. FOr the easiness of Christs Yoak and the lightness of Christs burthen Christ delivers it in these words Take my Yoak upon you and learn of me for my Yoak is easie Mat. 11.29 30. and my Burthen is light See the actings of Christ this year in reference to our souls health 1. He commissionates his Apostles to call sinners in 2. He stands ready to receive them if they will but come in 3. He sweetens the way of Christianity to them when they are come in Many fears and jealousies are in the hearts of men of the difficulty austerity and severity
but that to Christ's habitual and actual righteousness is sometimes attributed freedom from Sin and Hell as in Rom. 8.2 Rom. 8.2 The Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin and Death and on the contrary side to Chrst's passive obedience is sometimes attributed a right unto Heaven as in Heb. 9.15 Heb. 9.15 That by means of his death they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance but such places as these are to be understood by a Synechdoche which puts only one part of Christ's obedience for the whole obedience of Christ But I must recal my self my design in this work was not for controversies I leave that to others See Downham Burges Norton c. for my part I am sure I have before me a more edifying work which is to take a view of this Jesus not only for intellection but for devotion and for the stirring up of our affections Thus far I have held forth Jesus in his life or during the time of his Ministry till the last Passover John 13.1 and now was it that Jesus knew his hour was come and that he should depart out of this World unto the Father but of that hereafter our next business is to direct you in the Art or Mystery how we are to look unto Jesus in respect of his Life CHAP. V. SECT I. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation in his Life FRom the Object considered that we may pass to the Act. 1. Let us know Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation during his life We have many Books of the lives of men of the lives of heathens of the lives of Christians and by this we come to know the Generations of old Oh but above all read over the Life of Jesus for that is worth thy knowing To this purpose we have four Evangelists who in Blessed harmony set forth his life and to this purpose we have the Book of the generation of Jesus Christ Now these should be read over and over Mat. 1.1 Hos 6.3 Then shall we know saith the Prophet if we follow on to know the Lord. Ah my soul that which thou knowest of Christ already it is but the least part of what thou art ignorant of We know but in part saith Paul of himself and others the highest knowledg 1 Cor 13 9. which the most illuminate Saints have of Jesus Christ is but defective and imperfect Come then and follow on to know the Lord still inquire after him imitate the Angels who ever desire to stoop down and to pry into the actings of Christ for us men 1 Pet. 1.12 and for our Salvation it is their study yea it is their delight and recreation Paul seemed to imitate them when he said I determine not to know any thing among you but Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 if there be any thing in the world worth the knowing this it is And for thy better knowledg that it may not be confused but distinct 1. Study over those passages in the first year of Christs ministry as the preaching of John the Baptisme of Christ his fasting and temptation in the Wilderness his first manifestation by his several Witness●s his whipping of the buyers and sellers out of the Temple 2. Study over those passages in the second year of Christ's Ministry as those several Sermons that he Preached and because his Miracles were as signals of his Sermons study the several Miracles that he wrought thou hast but a few Instances in comparison of all his Miracles and yet how fruit-are they of spiritual instructions 3. Study over those passages in the third year of Christs Ministry as his commissionating his Apostles to call sinners in his readiness to receive them that would but come in and his sweetning the wayes of Christianity to them that are come in For his yoak is easie and his burthen is light 4. Study over those passages in the last year of his Ministry as the holiness of his nature and the holiness of his Life which appeared especially in the exercises of his Graces of Charity and self-denial and mercy and bounty and meekness and pity and humility and obedience O what rare matter is here for a Christians study Some have took such pains in the study of these things that they have writ large volumes men have been writing and preaching a thousand six hundreth years of the Life of Christ and they are writing and preaching still O my soul if thou dost not write yet study what is written come with fixed thoughts and beat thy brains on that blessed subject that will make thee wise unto Salvation Paul accounted all things but dung or dogs meat Phil. 3.8 for the excellency of the knowledg of Christ Jesus our Lord if thou didst truly understand the excellency of this knowledg thou couldst not but account all things loss in comparison of this one necessary thing SECT II. Of Considering Jesus in that Respect 2. LEt us consider Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation during his Life It is not enough to study and know but we must muse and meditate and consider of it till we bring it to some profitable issue By meditating on Christ we may feel or find a kind of insensible change we know not how as those that stand in the sun for other purposes they find themselves lightned and heated so in holy meditation our souls may be altered and changed in a secret insencible way there is a vertue goes along with a serious meditation a changing transforming vertue and therefore look further O my soul have strong apprehensions of all those several passages of the Life of Christ 1. Consider the Preaching of John Baptist we talk of strictness but shew me among all the Ministers or Saints of this Age such a pattern of sanctity and singular austerity the sum of his sermons was repentance and dereliction of Sin and bringeth forth fruits worthy of amendment of life In the promoting of which Doctrine he was a severe reprehender of the Pharisees and Saduces and Publicans and Souldiers and indeed of all men but especially of those that remained in their impenitency for against them he denounced judgment and fire unquenchable Oh he had an excellent zeal and a vehement Spirit in Preaching and the Commentary upon all his Sermons was his own life he was cloathed in Camels hair his meat was locusts and wild honey he contemned the world resisted temptations despised to assume false honours to himself and in all passages was a rare example of self-denial and mortification and by this means he made an excellent and apt preparation for the Lord 's coming O my Soul that thou wouldst but sit a while under this Preacher or that thou wouldst but ruminate and chew the cud think over his Sermons of repentance and righteousness and temperance and of the
the injury we have done unto God as our Judge and the other is a performance of a service which we owe unto God as our Maker O then how large and full and comprehensive is this life of Christ 2. Consider the excellency the glory of this Object Christ's life is glorious and hence it is that the righteousness of Christ is the most glorious garment that ever the Saints of God did wear It is Marlorat's saying Marlorat Rev. 12.1 that the Church which puts on Christ and his righteousness is more illustrious than the Ayr is by the Sun John thus sets her out in his Vision And there appeared a great wonder in heaven a woman cloathed with the Sun and the Moon under her feet I take this to be a lofty Poetical description of Christ's imputed righteousness imagine a garment were cut out of the Sun and put upon us how glorious should we be O but the righteousness of Christ is much more glorious No wonder if the Church cloathed with the Sun tread the Moon under her feet i.e. if she trample on all sublunary things which are uncertain and changeable as the Moon I count all things but dung saith Paul that I may win Christ Phil. 3.8 9. and be found in him not having my own righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by Faith When Paul compares Christ's righteousness with the glory of the world then is the world but dung O the glory O the excellency of the righteousness of Christ 3. Consider the suitableness of this object Christ's life and the virtue of it is most suitable to our condition Thus I might apply Christ to every condition if thou art sick he is a Physitian if thou fearest death he is the way the truth and the life if thou art hungry he is the bread of Life if thou art thirsty he is the water of Life But not to insist on these words It is the daily complaint of the best of Saints O my sins I had thought these sins had been wholly subdued but now I feel they return upon me again now I feel the springs in the bottom fill up my soul again Oh I am weary of my self and weary of my life Oh what will become of me In this case now Christ's life is most sutable his righteousness is a continual righteousness it is not a Cistern Zech. 13.1 but Fountain open for thee to wash in as sin abounds so grace in this gift of righteousness abounds much more Christ's life in this respect is compared to changes of Garments Thou criest O what shall become of me Oh I feel new sins and old sins committed afresh why but these changes of garments will hide all thy sins Zech. 3.4 if thou art but cloathed with the robes of Christ's righteousness there shall never enter into the Lords heart one hard thought towards thee of casting thee off or of taking revenge upon any new occasion or fall into sin Why here is the blessedness of all those that believe Oh then believe Say not would Christ be incarnate for me would he lead such a life on earth for my soul Why yes for thy soul never speak of thy sins as if they should be any hinderance of thy Faith If the wicked that apply this righteousness presumptiously can say Let us sin that grace may abound and so they make no other use of Grace but to run in debt and to sin with a licence how much rather mayest thou say on good ground Oh let me believe Oh let me own my portion in this righteousness of Christ that as my sins have abounded so my love may abound that as my sins have been exceeding great so the Lord may be exceeding sweet that as my sins continue and encrease so my thankfulness to Christ and glory in God and triumph over sin death and the grave may also encrease Why thus be encouraged to believe thy part in the Lord Jesus Christ SECT VI. Of Loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us during his Life Now what is Love but a motion of the Appetite by which the Soul unites it self to what seems fair unto it And if so O what a lovely Object is the Life of Christ who can read over his Life who can think over his worthiness both in his person relations actions and several administrations and not love him with a singular love That which set the Daughters of Jerusalem in a posture of seeking after Christ was that Description of Christ which the Spouse made of him My Beloved is white and ruddy Cant. 5.10 11.12 13 14 15. the chiefest of ten thousands his head is as the most fine Gold his Locks are bushy and black as a Raven his eyes are as the eyes of Dov●s by the Rivers of water washed with milk and finely set his cheeks are as a bed of Spices and sweet flowers his lips like Lillies dropping sweet smelling myrrhe c. By these are intimated unto us the government of Christ the unsearchable counsels of Christ the pure nature of Christ without any impurity or uncleanness the gracious promises of Christ the soul saving instructions of Christ the holy actions and just administrations of Christ the tender affections and amiable smilings of Christ the gracious inward and wonderful workings of Christ so that he is altogether lovely or he is composed of loves from top to toe there is nothing in Christ but 't is most fair and beautiful lovely and desirable Now as this Description enflamed the Daughters of Jerusalem so to act our loves towards the Lord Jesus Christ take we a copy of the Record of the Spirit in Scriptures see what they say of Christ John 5.39 this was his own advice Search the Scriptures for they are they which testifie of me O my soul much hath been said to perswade thee to Faith and if now thou believest thy part in those several actings of Christ why let thy Faith take thee by the hand and lead thee from one step to another from his Baptism to his Temptations from his Temptations to his Manifestations and so on Is not here fewel enough for Love to feed upon Canst thou read the history of Love for such is the history of Christ's Life and not be all on a flame Come read again there is nothing in Christ but 't is lovely winning and drawing as 1. When he saw thee full of filth he goes down into the waters of Baptism that he might prepare a way for the cleansing of thy defiled and polluted soul 2. When he saw the Devil ready to swallow thee up or by his baits to draw and drag thy soul down to hell he himself enters into the List with the Devil and he overcomes him that thou mightest overcome and triumph with Christ in his Glory 3. When he
man have a quarrel against any even as Christ forgave you so also do ye 1 Pet. 1.15 16. And as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation because it is written be ye holy for I am holy Against this some object how can we be holy as Christ is holy first the thing is impossible and secondly if we could there would be no nee● of Christ But I answer to the first the thing if rightly understood is not impossible we are commanded to be holy as Christ is holy not in respect of equality as if our holiness must be of the same compass with the holiness of Christ but in respect of quality our holiness must be of the same stamp and truth as the holiness of Christ as when the Apostle saith That we must love our neighbor as our self the meaning is Rom. 13.9 not that our love to our neighbor should be Mathematically equal to the love of our self for the Law doth allow of degrees in love accordingly to the degrees of relation in the thing beloved Rom. 12.9 Do good unto all men specially to those of the houshold of faith love to a friend may safely be greater than love to a stranger or love to a wife or child may safely be greater than to a friend yet in all our love to others it must be of the self same nature as true as real as cordial as sincere as solid as that to our selves We must love our neighbor as our selves i.e. unfeignedly and without dissimulation Again I answer to the second Christ is needful notwithstanding our utmost holiness in two respects 1. Because we cannot come to full and perfect holiness and so his grace is requisite to pardon and cover our failings 2. Because that which we do attain unto it is not of or from our selves and so his spirit is requisite to strengthen us unto his service We must be holy as Christ is holy yet still we must look at the holiness of Christ as the sun and root and fountain and that our holiness is but as a beam of that sun but as a branch of that root but as a stream of that fountain For the third how we must conform to this life I answer 1. Let us frame to our selves some Idea of Christ let us set before us the life of Christ in the whole and all the parts of it as we find it recorded in God's Book It would be a large picture if I should draw it to the full but for a taste I shall give it in few lines Now then setting aside the consideration of Christ as God or as Mediator or as Head of his Church 1. I look at the mind of Christ at his judgment will affections such as love joy delight and the rest and especially at the compassions of Jesus Christ O the dear affections and compassions which Christ had towards the sons of men this was his errand from Heaven and while he was upon the earth he was ever acting it I mean his pitifulness Luke 4.18 Psal 147.3 I mean his affections and compassion in healing broken hearts so the Psalmist He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds it is spoken after the manner of a Chirurgion he had a tender heart towards all broken hearts he endeavoured to put all broken bones into their native place again nor speak I thus only of him in respect of his office but as he was man he had in him such a mind that he could not but compassionate all in misery O what bowels what stirrings and boylings and wrestlings of a pained heart touched with sorrow was ever upon occasion in Jesus Christ Matth. 14.1 Mark 6.34 peruse these texts and Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude and he was moved with compassion towards them and he healed their sick And Jesus when he came out saw much people and was moved with compassion towards them because they were as sheep not having a shepherd Mark 1.40 41. And there came a leper to him and kneeling down to him and saying to him if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and Jesus moved with compassion put forth his hand and touched him saying I will be thou clean Then Jesus called his disciples unto him Mat. 15.32 and said I have compassion on the multitude And for the two blind men that cried out Have mercy on us O Lord thou son of David Matth. 20.34 Luke 15.20 it is said that Jesus stood still and he had compassion on them and touched their eyes And the poor prodigal returning When he was yet a great way off his Father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him How sweet is this last Instance that our sense of sinful weakness should be sorrow and pain to the bowels and heart of Jesus Christ you that are Parents of young Children let me put the case if some of you standing in the relation of a Father should see his Child sweat and wrestle under an over-load till his back were almost broken and that you should hear him cry Oh I am gone I faint I sinck I dye would not your bowels be moved to pity and would not your hands be stretched out to help or if some of you standing in the relation of a Mother should see your sucking Child fallen into a pit and wrestling with the water and crying for help would you not stir nor be moved in heart nor run to deliver the Child from being drowned Surely you would and yet all this pity and compassion of yours is but as a shadow of the compassions and dear affections that were and that are in the heart of Jesus Christ O he had a mind devoid of sin and therefore it could not but be full of pity mercy and tender bowels of compassion 2. I look at the grace in Christ O he was full of grace yea full of all the graces of the Spirit Cant. 1.13 14. A bundle of Mirrh is my well-beloved to me My Beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi a bundle of Myrrh and a cluster of camphire denote all the graces of the Spirit as many flowers are bound together in a nosegay so the variety of the graces of the Spirit concenter'd in the heart of Jesus Christ ex gr Matth. 21.5 1. In him was meekness He cometh unto thee meek he had a sweet command and moderation of his anger Num. 12.3 he was meek as Moses nay though Moses was very meek and very meek above all the men that were upon the face of the earth yet Christ's meekness exceeded Mose's as the body doth exceed the shadow 2. In him was humility he saved not the world by his power but by his humility in his incarnation Christ would be humble and therefore he was born of a poor Virgin in a common Inn in his
the troubles of the righteous Psal 34.19 The very word Cedron which signifies darkness denotes this state an horror of great darkness was said to fall on Abraham and then said God Gen. 15.12 13 know of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs and shall serve them and they shall afflict them four hundred years As God made the evening and the morning the first day and second day and third day c. See O the life of Gods Saints is as the evening of troubles and their happiness hereafter is as the morning of Glory God's worst is first with those that are his the way to Canaan is through the wilderness the way to Sion is through the valley of Baca. Through much tribulation we must enter into the Kingdom of God Psal 84.6 Acts 14.22 John 16.33 2 Tim. 3.12 In the world ye shall have tribulation saith Christ yea all that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution saith the Apostle Our rest is not here in this world what is this world but an Ark of travel a school of vanities a fear of deceits a Labarinth of errour a barren wilderness a strong field a tempestous sea a swelling brook a vale of tears full of all miseries 2. It reproves It is the first passage of Christ when he begins his sufferings to go over the Brook Cedron and it is the A B C of Christianity as Bradford said to learn the Lesson of taking up the Cross and following Christ Surely this world is no place and this life it is no time for pleasure God hath not cast man out of Paradise that he should find another Paradise on this side heaven Oh why do we seek the living among the dead Why do we seek for living comforts where we must expect to die daily it is only heaven that is above all winds and storms and tempests and seas and brooks and waves Oh why do we look for joyes in a vale of tears It was an heavy charge that the Apostle James laid upon some that they lived in pleasure upon earth q. d. Earth is not the place for pleasure earth is the place of sorrow of trouble of mourning Jam. 5.5 of affliction Remember that thou in thy life-time receivedst thy good things Luke 16.25 and Lazarus evil things but now he is comforted and thou art Tormented All the pleasure that wicked men have it is upon earth but the condition of the godly is clean contrary Oh 't is sad to out-live our happiness and when we should live indeed then to want our comforts and our joyes Verily I say unto you they have their reward Mat. 6.2 Job 21.13 said Christ of Hypocrites their Heaven is past they spend their daies in wealth or in mirth saith Job of the wicked and in a moment go down to the Grave Alas their best daies are then past and they must never be merry any more Ah fond Fools of Adam's seed to lose Heaven for a little earthly contentment How should this sowr your carnal joyes when you remember all this is only upon earth it cannot be for ever there must be a change of all these things here you laugh and hereafter you must howl no sooner death comes but then you 'l cry Farewel world Oh into what a Gulf am I now falling 3. It instructs Ah my Brethren let 's remember we are pilgrims and strangers upon earth and our way lies over the Brook and Valley of Cedron we cannot expect to enter with Christ into glory but we must first drink of the Brook in the way i.e. we must endure many afflictions variety of afflictions You will say this an hard saying who can hear it I remember when Jesus told his Disciples of his sufferings to be accomplished at Jerusalem Peter takes the boldness to dehort his Master Be it far from thee Mat. 16.22 Lord this shall not be unto thee but Jesus thereupon calls him Satan meaning that no greater contradictions can be offered to the designs of God and Christ than to diswade us from sufferings There 's too much of Peter's humour abides amongst us Oh this Doctrine of afflictions will not down with Libertines Antinomians and the like and hence we believe we have our Congregations so thin in comparison of some of theirs they that can break off the yoke of Obedience and untie the Bands of Discipline and preach a cheap Religion and present heaven in the midst of flowers and strew palms and carpets in the way and offer great liberty of living under sin and reconcile eternity with the present enjoyment shall have their Schools filled with Disciples but they that preach the Cross and sufferings and afflictions and strictness of an holy life they shall have the lot of their blessed Lord i.e. they shall be ill thought of and deserted and railed against Well but if this be the way that Christ hath led us whilest others abide at ease in Zion let us follow him in the valley and over the Brook that is called Cedron Thus far have we observed Christ in the way together with his passage over Cedron we come now to the Garden into which he entred and his Disciples SECT III. Of the Garden into which Christ entred Mat. 26.36 MAtthew relates it thus then cometh Jesus with them unto a place called Gethsemane 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifies in special a Field a Village but more generally a Place as we translate it and this place was called Gethsemane i.e. a valley of fatness Certainly it was a most fruitful and pleasant place seated at the foot of the Mount of Olives accordingly John relates it thus John 18.1 Jesus went forth with his Disciples over the Brook Cedron where was a Garden many Mysteries are included in this Word and I believe it is not without reason that our Saviour goes into a Garden As 1. Because Gardens are solitary places fit for meditation and prayer to this end we find Christ sometimes on a Mountain and sometimes in a Garden 2. Because Gardens are places fit for repose and rest when Christ was weary with preaching working of Miracles and doing acts of Grace in Jerusalem then he retires into this Garden 3. Because a Garden was the place wherein we fell and therefore Christ made choice of a Garden to begin there the greatest work of our Redemption In the first Garden was the beginning of all evils and in this garden was the beginning of our restitution from all evils in the first Garden the first Adam was overthrown by Satan and in this Garden the second Adam overcame and Satan himself was by him overcome in the first Garden sin was contracted and we were indebted by our sins to God and in this Garden sin was paid for by that great and precious price of the blood of God in the first Garden man surfeited by eating the forbidden fruit and in this Garden
Mat. 26.69 Ver. 71. Ver. 73. this fellow was also with Jesus of Nazareth and after a while they that stood by spake themselves surely thou art one of them for thy speech bewrayeth thee q. d. thy very Idiom declares thee to be a Galilean thou art as Christ is of the same Countrey and Sect and therefore thou art one of his Disciples Peter thus surprized without any time to deliberate he shamefully denies his Lord and 1. He doth it with a kind of subterfuge Ver. 70. I know not what thou sayest he seems to elude the Accusation with this Evasion Ver. 72. I know not thy meaning I understand not thy words I skill not what thou sayest 2. At the next turn he goes on to a licentious boldness denying Christ with an Oath I know not the man and lastly he aggravates his sin so far that he grows to impudence and so denies his Lord with cursing and swearing I know not the man here 's a Lie an Oath and a Curse the sin is begun at the voice of a Woman a silly Damosel not any of the greatest Ladies she was only a poor serving-maid that kept the doors but it grew to ripeness when the Men-Servants sell upon him now he swears and vows and curses himself if he knew the Man O Peter is the man so vile Ver. 74. that thou wilt not own him Hadst thou not before confest him to be the Christ the Son of the living God and dost thou not know him to be Man as well as God say is not this the Man-God God-Man that called thee and thy brother Andrew at the sea of Galilee saying follow me and I will make you fishers of men Is not this he whom thou sawest on Mount Tabor shining more gloriously than the Sun Is not this he whom thou sawest walking on the water and to whom thou said'st Lord if it be thou Mat. 14.28 bid me come unto thee on the water How is it then that thou saist I know not the man Surely here 's a sad example of humane infirmity i● Peter fell so foully how much more may lesser stars And yet withal here 's a blessed example of serious through repentance no sooner the Cock crew and Christ gave a look on Peter but he goes out Ver. 75. and weeps bitterly The Cock was the Preacher and the look of Jesus was the Grace that made the Sermon effectual O the Mercy of Christ he looked back on him that had forgot himself he revives his servant's memory to think on his Master's words he sends him out to weep bitterly that so he might restore him mercifuly to his favour again Let us learn hence to think modestly and soberly of our selves yea Vse 1 Cor. 10.12 Rom. 11.20 let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall If Peter could first dissemble and then lie and then forswear and then blaspheme and curse O let not us be high-minded but fear And in case we fall indeed as Peter did yet let us not despair as Judas did but still upon our repentance let us trust in God When Christ looked on Peter he wept bitterly notwithstanding our sins are great yet one look of Christ is full of virtue and enough to melt us into tears O let us not sink in despair but look up to him that he may look down on us Pliny tells us of some Rocks in Phrygia Plin. hist that when the Sun doth but shine upon them they send out drops of water as if they wept tears Peter signifies a Rock and whilst Peter persisted in his sin of denying Christ his heart was hard as the Rock but when Christ the Sun of Righteousness looked uqon him his heart was softned and he dropped tears continually Such is the vertue of Christ's look it turns the Rock into a standing Water and the Flint into a Fountain of Waters Psal 114.8 Lastly let us not decry repentance but rather be in the use and practise and exercise of it Is not here a Gospel precedent † Flevit quidem tanta lachrymarum inundatione ut in maxillis profundos sulcos haberet per quos quasi per quosdam canales aut aquae ductus lachrymae ejus defluebant Clem Quoties galli cantum audiebat in lachrymas prorumpebat per totum vitae tempus negationis culpam frequenter adeo plauxit Idem Mat. 26.67 68 Luke 22.65 Hier. ut citat Guliel statione tertia Christi patientis Mallon de flagellatione Christi c. 6. Clement an ancient Writer of whom Paul makes mention Phil. 4.3 expresseth Peter's repentance to have been so great that in his Checks he made as it were furrows in which as in certain Channels his tears run down the Text tells us he wept bitterly and Clement adds that while he lived as often as he heard a Cock crow he could not but weep and bewail his denial David is another like example All the Night said he I make my Bed to swim I water my Couch with my tears Psal 6.6 David makes mention of his Bed and Couch because there most especially he had offended God It was on his Bed that he committed Adultery and it was in his Couch that he designed and subscribed with his own hand that Vriah must die and hence is it that he waters his Bed and Couch with his tears the very sight of his Bed and Couch brings his sin into his remembrance as the very hearing of the crowing of the Cock ever after awakened Peter to his task of tears that Repentance is a Gospel-Duty we have spoke elsewhere O take heed of decrying it as we are often sinning so let us often repent it concerns us near to be frequent in this duty of bewailing sin and turning to God 6. For the abuses and delusions of the base Attendants offered to Christ the Evangelist tells us then did they spit in his face and buffetted him and others smote him with the palms of their hands saying Prophesie unto us thou Christ who is he that smote thee and as Lude adds many other things blasph●mously spake they against him what those many other things were it is not discovered only some ancient writers say that Christ in that night suffered so many and such hideous things that the whole knowledge of them is reserved only for the last day of Judgment Mallonius writes thus after Caiaphas and the Priests had sentenced Christ worthy of death they committed him to their Ministers warily to be kept till day and they immediately threw him into the dungeon in Caiaphas 's House there they bound him to a stony pillar with his hands bound on his back and then they fell upon him with their palms and fists Others add that the Souldiers not yet content they threw him into a filthy dirty puddle where he abode for the remainder of that night of which the Psalmist Psal 86.6 Psal 69 2. Cant. 3.7 Thou hast laid me in the
lowest pit in darkness and in the deeps and I sink in the deep mire where there it no standing Behold the Bed which is Solomon's or rather which is Christ's for a grater than Solomon is here Behold the flourishing Bed wherein the King of Saints doth lie surely a place most fordid full of stench his other senses had their pain and his smell felt a loathsom savour in this noysom puddle But we need not borrow light from Candles or lesser stars the Scripture it self is plain Observe we these Particulars 1. They spit in his face this was accounted among the Jews a matter of great infamy and reproach Numb 12.14 And the Lord said to Moses if her Father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven dayes We our selves account this a great affront and so did Job Job 30.9 10. I am their song and their by-word they abhor me they fly far from me and spare not to spit in my face Oh that the sweet face of Christ so much honoured and adored in Heaven should be defiled and deformed by their spitting Oh that no place should be thought so fit for them to void their Excrements and Drivel in as the blessed face of Jesus Christ Isa 50.6 I hid not my face saith Christ from shame and spitting I used no Mask to keep me fair though I was fairer than the Sons of Men I preserved not my Beauty from their nasty Flegm but I opened my face and I set it as a Butt for them to dart their frothy Spittle at 2. They buffet him we heard before that one of the Officers strook Jesus with the palm of his hand but now they buffet him some observe this difference betwixt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the one is given with the open hand but the other with the fist shut up and thus they used him at this time Colaphis illi tuber totum caput facies livida forto excusse dentes they struck him with their fists and so the stroke was greater and more offensive By this means they made his face to swell and to become full of Bunches all over One gives it in thus By these blows of their fists his whole head was swollen his face became black and blew and his teeth ready to fall out of his Jaws Very probable it is that with the violence of their strokes they made him reel and stagger they made his Mouth and Nose and Face to bleed and his Eyes to startle in his Head 3. They covered his face Mark 14.65 Mark 14.65 Several Reasons are rendered for it As 1. That they might smite him more boldly and without shame 2. That they might not have that object of pity in their view it is supposed that the very sight of his admirable form so lamentably abused would have mollified the hardest heart under heaven and therefore they veiled and hoodwink'd that alluring drawing countenance 3. That they might not see their own filth in his face however his Beauty was winning yet they had so bedawbed it with their beastly spitting that they began to loath to look upon him It was a nauseous sight saith one and enough to make one spew to look upon it Nauseam ipsis spectatoribus saeditas illa provocabat But whether his splendor or his horror occasioned this veile over his face this is most certain that it veiled not their cruelty but rather revealed it and made it manifest to all the World 4. They smote him with the palms of their hands saying Prophesie unto us thou Christ who is he that smote thee To pass away that doleful tedious night they interchangeably sport at him first one and then another gives him a stroke we usually call it a Box on the ear and being hoodwink'd they bid him a-read who it is that smote him Some reckon these Taunts amongst the bitterest passages of his Passion nothing is more miserable even to the greatest misery than to see it self scorned of Enemies It was our Saviour's case they used this despight for their desport with a wanton and merry malice they aggravate their injury with scorn q. d. Come on thou sayest thou art Christ the Son of the living God and therefore it is likely thou art Omniscient thou knowest all things tell now who is it that strikes thee We have blind-folded thee that thou canst not see us with thy bodily eyes let thy Divinity aread guess tell prophesie who is it now that smote thee last Who gave thee that blow O Impiety without example Surely if his patience had been less than infinite these very injuries would have been greater than his patience In way of Application Vse 1. Consider Christians whether we had not a hand in these abuses for 1. They spit in the face of Christ who defile his Image in their souls who reject his holy and heavenly motions in their hearts 2. They buffet him with their fists who persecute Christ in his Members Saul Saul why persecutest thou me It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks 3. They cover his face Luke 10.16 that do not readily and willingly confess their sins that extenuate their frailties and imperfections with counterfeit pretexts 4. They mock and scoff at Christ that scorn and contemn his Messengers and Ministers He that despiseth you despiseth me saith Christ O that we would lay these things to our hearts and see and observe wherein we stand guilty of these sins that we may repent 2. Consider Christians and read Christ's Love in all these sufferings O un-heard of kindness and truly paternal bowels of pity and compassion who ever heard before of any that would be content to be spit upon to wipe their filths who spit uppn him that would be content to be beat and buffetted to save them from buffets who were the buffetters that would be content to be blind-folded that he might neither take notice of nor see the offences of them that blind-folded him that would be content to be made a scorn to save them from scorn that shall scorn him Christians you that take your name from Christ how should you admire at the infiniteness and immensity of this love of Christ was it a small thing that the wisdom of God should become the foolishness of men and scorn of men and ignominy of men and contempt of the World for your sins sake O think of this And now the dismal night is done what remains but that we follow Christ and observe him in his Sufferings the next day the Psalmist tells us Psal 30.5 Sorrow may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning only Christ can find none of this joy neither morning nor evening for after a dismal night he meets with as dark a day what the passages of the day were we shall observe in their several hours CHAP. II. SECT I. Of Christ's Indictment and Judas's fearful end ABout six in the morning Jesus was
life neither in thought word or deed that being endowed with the Power of Miracles he lovingly employed it in curing the lame and blind and deaf and dumb in casting out devils in healing the sick in restoring the dead to life that as he lived so he dyed for being unjustly condemned mocked stripped whipped crucified he took all patiently praying for his persecutors and leaving to them when he had no temporal thing to give them a legacy of love of life of mercy of pardon of Salvation When the Sermon is done and the Burial is finished let every Mourner go home and begin a new life in imitation of Jesus Christ O my soul that thou wouldst thus meditate and thus imitate that so thy meditation might be fruitful and thy imitation real I mean that thy life and death might be conformable to the life and death of Jesus Christ But of that hereafter SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that Respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the work of our salvation in his death Jesus Christ to a fallen sinner is the chief object of desire but Jesus Christ as crucified is the chief piece of that object Humbled souls look after the remedy and they find chiefly in Christ crucified and hence are so many cryes after bathings in Christ's blood and hiding in Christ's righteousness active and passive Indeed nothing doth so cool and refresh a parched dry and thirsty soul as the blood of Jesus which made the poor woman cry out so earnestly I have an husband and Children and many other comforts but I would give them all and all the good that ever I shall see in this world or in the world to come to have my poor thirsty soul refreshed with that precious blood of the Lord Jesus Christ But what is there in Christ's blood or death that is so desirable I answer 1. There is in it the person of Christ he that is God-man man-God Heb. 1.3 The brightness of his father's Glory and the express Image of his Person it is he that dyed every drop of his blood was not only the blood of an innocent man but of one that was God as well as man God with his own blood purchased the Church Acts 20.28 now surely every thing of God is most desirable 2. There is in it a worth or price Christ considered under the notion of a sacrifice is of infinite worth now this sacrifice saith the Apostle he offered up Heb. 9.28 Heb. 9.28 He offered up not in Heaven as the Socinians would have it in presenting himself before God his Father but upon earth viz. in his Passion upon the Cross No wealth in heaven or earth besides this could redeem one soul and therefore the Apostle sets this against all corruptible things as silver and gold the things so much set by amongst the men of this world Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver 1 Pet. 1.18 and gold but with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot 3. There is in it a merit and satisfaction the Scripture indeed doth not expresly use these words but it hath the sense and meaning of them As in that text Ephes 6.7 He hath made us accepted in the beloved to whom we have redemption through his blood I know there is a different notion in these words for merit doth properly respect the good that is to be procured but satisfaction the evil that is repelled but in Christ we stand not on these distinctions because in his merit was satisfaction and in his satisfaction was merit A great controversie is of late risen up Whether Christ's death be a satisfaction to Divine justice But the very words redeeming and buying do plainly demonstrate that a satisfaction was given to God by the death of Jesus Tit. 2 14. 1 Cor. 6.20 Rev. 5.9 He gave himself for us that he might redeem us ye are bought with a price and what price was that why his own blood Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood i.e. by thy death and Passion Mat. 20.28 1 Tit. 2.6 This was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that ransome which Christ gave for his Elect The Son of man came to give his life a ransome for many or as the Apostle He gave himself a ransome for all the word is here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an adequate price or a counterprice as when one doth or undergoeth something in the room of another as when one yields himself a Captive for the redeeming of another out of Captivity or gives up his own life for the saving of another man's life so Christ gave himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a ransome or counterprice submitting himself to the like punishment that his redeemed ones should have undergone The Socinians tell us that Christ's sufferings and death were not for satisfaction to God but in reference to us that we might believe the truth of his Doctrine confirmed and sealed as they say by his death and that we might yield obedience to God according to the pattern that he hath set before us and that so believing and obeying we might obtain the remission of Sins and eternal Life But the Scripture goes higher in that mutual compact and agreement betwixt God and Christ we find God the Father imposing and Christ submitting to this satisfaction Isa 53.6 1. The Father imposeth it by charging the sins of his Elect upon Jesus Christ The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all not the sins themselves not the evill in them or fault of them but the guilt and penalty belonging to them this God laid upon his Son and charged it upon him he charged it as a Creditor chargeth the debt upon the Surety requiring satisfaction 2. Christ undertook it He was oppressed Ver. 7. and he was afflicted or as some translate It was exacted and he answered i.e. God the Father required satisfaction for sin and Jesus Christ was our Surety answered in our behalf Ver. 12. He bear the Sins of many he bear them as a porter that bears the burthen for another which himself is not able to stand under he bear them by undergoing the punishment which was due for them he bear them as our Surety submitting himself unto the penalty which we had deserved and by that means he made satisfaction to the justice of God Surely Christs death was not only for confirmation of his Doctrine but for satisfaction to God 4. There is in it not only a true but a copious and full satisfaction Christ's death and blood is superabundant to our sins The grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant 1. Tim. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was over-full redundant more than enough Many an humble soul is apt enough to complain Oh if I had not been so great a sinner if I had not committed such and such transgressions there might have been
ones And I looked saith John and behold a door was open in Heaven and the first voice I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me which said come up hither Rev. 4.1 and no sooner was he in the Spirit and entred in but he heard the new song of the four beasts Rev. 5.9 and four and twenty Elders saying to Christ Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seals thereof for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood Come now and gather in all these several particulars there is in Christ's blood inclusively the person of Christ the price of souls a merit and satisfaction a copious and full satisfaction remission of sins reconciliation with God immunity from dangers a passage into glory I might add all other priviledges benefits dignities of the soul for they all flow from the blood of Jesus and they are all contained either expresly or vertually in the blood of Jesus and is not all this worth the looking after O my soul where is thy languor and fainting towards this blessed object Shall Ahab eagerly desire after Naboth's vineyard yea so eagerly desire it that his desire shall cast him upon his bed and is not Christ's blood better than Naboth's vineyard how is it O my soul that thou art not sick on thy bed in thy desires after Jesus when David desired strongly after God's Law he expressed his longings by the breaking and fainting of his soul Psal 119.20 81. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath to thy judgment at all times and my soul fainteth for thy Salvation Oh where be these breakings and faintings 2 Cor. 5.2 strength of desire is expressed by the Apostle by groaning which is the language of sickness Oh where be these groanings after Christ's death when I call to mind that Christ's death is my ransome that Christ's wounds are my salves that Christ's stripes are my cures that Christ's blood is my fountain to wash in and to be clean how should I but pray in this sence His blood be upon us and on our children Oh I am undone except I have a share in this blood why it is only this blood that can heal my soul it is only this Fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem that can quench my thirst and now I have seen the Fountain opened how should I but thirst and cry out with the woman of Samaria O give me this water that I thirst no more John 4.15 But alas I say it I only say it Oh that I could feel it Oh my Jesus that thou wouldst breed in me ardent desires vehement longings unutterable groans mighty gaspings O that I were like the dry and thirsty ground that gapes and cleaves and opens for drops of rain when my spirit is in right frame I feel some desires after Christ's blood but how short are these desires how unworthy of the things desired come Lord kindle in me hot burning desires and then give me the desirable Object SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that respect 4. LEt us hope in Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation in his sufferings and death Heb. 6.11 By this hope I intend only that which the Apostle calls full assurance of hope The main question is Whether I have any part in Christ's sufferings they are of excellent use and of great value to believers but what am I the better for them if I have no part in them or if I say I hope well Oh but what grounds of that hope it is not every hope that is a well grounded hope full assurance of hope is an high pitch of hope and every Christian should strive and endeavour after it now that we may do it and that we may discern it that our hope is not base but right-born that the grounds of our hope in Christ's death are not false but of the right stamp I shall lay down these signs 1. If Christ's death be mine then is Christ's life mine and converse if Christ's death be mine then is Christ's life mine Christ's active and passive obedience cannot be severed Christ is not divided we must not seek one part of our righteousness in his birth another in his habitual holiness another in the integrity of his life another in his obedience of death They that endeavour to separate Christ's active and passive obedience they do exceedingly derogate from Christ and make him but half a Saviour Heb. 7.22 was not Christ our Surety Heb. 7.22 and thereupon was he not bound to fulfil all righteousness for us i.e. as to suffer in our stead so to obey in our stead oh take heed of opposing or separating Christ's death and Christ's life either we have all Christ or we have no part in Christ now if these two be concomitants well may the one be as the sign of the other search then and try O my soul hast thou any share in Christ's life canst thou make out Christ's active obedience unto thy own soul if herein thou art at a stand peruse those Characters laid down in the life of Christ the many glorious effects flowing out of Christ's life into a Believer's soul we have discovered before 2. If Christ's death be mine then is that great end of his death accomplished in me viz. By the sacrifice of himself he hath put away sin even my sin and Heb. 9.26 Eph. 1.7 Dan. 9.24 in him I have redemption through his blood even the forgiveness of sins As on this account he suffered to finish the transgression to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity so if his death be mine I may assuredly say my sins are pardoned and mine iniquities are done away Come then and try by this sign canst thou assure thy self that thy sins are forgiven thee hast thou heard the whispers of Gods Spirit Son or Daughter be of good comfort thy sins are remitted there is no question then but thou art redeemed by his blood thou hast part in his sufferings Indeed this very Character may seem obscure assurance of pardon is the hidden Manna the white Stone which no man knoweth saving he which receives it and feels it and yet if thou diligently observest the Spirit 's actings even this may be known remission of sin and repentance for sin are twins of a birth those two God in Scripture hath joined together If we confess our sins 1 John 1.9 Acts 8.22 Acts 5.31 Luk. 24.46 47 he is faithful and just to forgive our sins And repent and pray if the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee And Christ is a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins And thus it is written and thus it behoved Christ to suffer That repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his Name In this way David assured himself I said I will confess my Transgressions unto
making Christ 's death of none effect O come and with joy draw water out of this well of Salvation Isa 12.3 5. Another cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me the very thoughts of hell seem to astonish my heart methinks I see a little peep-hole down into hell and the devil roaring there being reserved in chains under darkness untill the judgment of the great day and methinks I see the damned flaming and Judas and all the wicked in the world and they of Sodom and Gomorrah there lying and roaing and gnashing their teeth now I have sinned and why should not I be damned Oh why should not the wrath of God be executed on me yea even upon me I answer the death of Christ acquits thee of all Rom. 20.6 Blessed is he that hath a part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power Christ's death hath took away the pains of the second death yea pains and power too for it shall never oppress such as belong to Christ If Hell and Devils could speak a word of truth they would say Comfort your selves ye believing souls we have no power over you for the Lord Jesus hath conquered us and we have quite lost the cause Paul was very confident of this and therefore he throws down the Gauntlet and challengeth a dispute with all commers Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Rom. 8.33 34. it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed let sin and the law and justice and death and hell yea and all the Devils in Hell unite their forces this one argument of Christ's death it is Christ that dyed will be enough to confute and confound them all Come then and comfort your selves all believers in this death of Christ what do you believe and are you confident that you do believe why then do you sit drooping What manner of communications are these that you have as ye walk and are sad Luke 24.17 Away away dumpishness despair disquietness of spirit Christ is dead that you might live and be blessed in this respect every thing speaks comfort if you could but see it God and men heaven and earth Angels and devils the very justice of God it self is now your friend and bids you go away comforted for it is satisfied to the full Heaven it self waits on you and keeps the dores open that your souls may enter We have boldness saith the Apostle to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10.20 by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the veil that is to say his flesh Christ's death hath set open all the golden gates and dores of glory and therefore go away chearily and get you to heaven and when you come there be discouraged or discomforted if you can O my soul I see thou art pouring on sin on thy crimson sins and scarlet sins but I would have thee dwell on that crimson scarlet blood of Christ Oh it is the blood of sprinkling it speaks better things than the blood of Abel it cryes for mercy and pardon and refreshing and salvation thy sins cry Lord do me justice against such a soul but the blood of Christ hath another cry I am abased and humbled and I have answered all Methinks this should make thy heart leap for joy Oh the honey the sweet that we may suck out of this blood of Christ come lay to thy mouth and drink an hearty draught it is this spiritual wine that makes merry the heart of man and it is the voice of Christ to all his guests Eat O friends Cant. 5.1 drink yea drink abundantly O beloved SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus 1. We must pray that all these Transactions of Christ in his sufferings and death may be ours if we direct our prayers immediately to Jesus Christ let us tell him what anguish and pains he hath suffered for our sakes and let us complain against our selves Oh what shall we do who by our sins have so tormented our dearest Lord what contrition can be great enough what tears sufficiently expressive what hatred and detestation equal and commensurate to those sad and heavy sufferings of our Jesus And then let us pray that he would pity us and forgive us those sins wherewith we crucified him that he would bestow on us the vertue of his sufferings and death that his wounds might heal us his death might quicken us and his blood might cleanse us from all our spiritual filth of sin and lastly that he would assure us that his death is ours that he would perswade us That neither death nor life nor Angels Rom. 8.38 39. nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature should be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 2. We must praise the Lord for all these sufferings of Christ Hath he indeed suffered all these punishments for us Oh then what shall we render unto the Lord for all his benefits upon us what shall we do for him who hath done and suffered all these things but especially if we believe our part in the death of Christ in all the vertues benefits victories purchases and priviledges of his precious death oh then what manifold cause of thankfulness and praise is here be enlarged O my soul sound forth the praises of thy Christ tell all the world of that warmest love of Christ which flowed with his blood out of all his wounds into thy spirit tune thy heart-strings aright and keep consort with all the Angels of Heaven and all his Saints on earth sing that Psalm of John the Divine Rev. 1.5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen SECT IX Of conforming to Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus in respect of his sufferings and death looking unto Jesus is effective of this objects have an attractive power that do assimulate or make like unto them I have read of a woman that by fixing the strength of her imagination upon a Blackamore on the wall she brought forth a black and swarthy child And no question but there is a kind of spiritual-imaginative of power in faith to be like to Christ by looking on Christ come then and let us look on Christ and conform to Christ in this respect In this particular I shall examine these Queries 1. Wherein we must conform 2. What is the cause of this conformity 3. What are the means of this conformity as on our parts For the first wherein we must conform I answer we must conform to Christ
earthly men included in him and Christ had all his elect whose names are written in heaven and therefore called Heavenly men included in him so that now whatsoever Christ did it is reckoned by God as if done by us and for us When Christ arose he arose as our head and as a common Person and in God's account we arose with him and in him As among all the sheaves in the Field there was some one sheaf that in the name and room of all the rest was lift up and waved before the Lord so when all were dead Christ as the first-fruits rose again from the dead and by this act of his resurrection all the Elect from the beginning of the World to the end are risen with him and in him He is the first fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15.20 though the Saints are a sleep yet are they vertually risen already with Christ because he is their first-fruits Let this ever be remembred that Christ rose again as the first-fruits as the second man as an head as a common Person 2. That Christ rose again by his own Power this he meant when he said John 2.19 destroy this Temple and in three days I will raise it up He saith not destroy you and some other shall raise it up no no but I even I my self will do it yea and I will do it by my own Power and vertue here is a plain argument of the Divine nature of Christ for none ever did ever could do that but God himself some were raised before Christ was incarnate but not any by himself or by his own proper Power only a Power was imparted to some Prophet by God for that time and turn and so they were raised but Christ rose again not by a Power imparted to some but by his own Power The Widows son of Sarephtah was raised by Elias and the Shunamites son was raised by Elisha both these were raised by others and those others that raised them did it not by their own power but by a power given them from above and therefore though in their life-time they raised others yet being dead they could not raise themselves but Jesus Christ did not only in his life-time raise others but also being dead and laid in his grave and pressed with stones and watched by Souldiers and sought to be deteined by all the Power of darkness yet he as a conqueror by his own Power raised himself he caused all things by the strength of his own arme to give way unto himself I have Power to lay down my life and I have Power to take it up again an equal Power to take it up as to lay it down John 10.18 But against this it may be objected The God of our Fathers raised up Jesus Acts. 5.30 Acts. 3.24 whom God hath raised up having loosed the pains of death In many places the resurrection of Christ is ascribed to his Father how then is he said to raise up himself by his own Power I answer it is true that the Father raised him and yet this contradicts not but that he raised up himself Whatsoever the Father doth I do saith Christ Christ's resurrection is the indivisible work of the blessed Trinity it is a work common to all the three persons there is but one power of the Father and of the Son so that of both it is truly verified the Father raised him and the Son raised himself Mat. 28.2 3. That Christ rose again with an Earthquake and behold there was a great Earthquake for the Angel of the Lord descended from heaven The earth shook at his death and now it trembles at his Resurrection plainly speaking that it could neither endure his suffering nor hinder his rising As a Lion with a Roar is said to make the Bed wherein he lies to tremble so this Lion of the tribe of Judah was able with his voice or sight to make his Bed the earth wherein he lay to tremble no sooner he shakes himself but he shakes the earth at his first motion the earth moves and now was fulfilled that prophesie Psal 114.7 Tremble thou earth at the presence of the Lord at the presence of the God of Jacob. It is not for us curiously to enquire into the cause of this earthquake certainly the cause was above Natures reach it was not any hollow wind got into the bowels of the earth but either it was Christ's rising or the Angels descending the earth either danced for joy that Christ was risen or it trembled for fear that men would no believe his resurrection The Evangelist seems to lay it on the Angel for the Angel of the Lord descended from heaven sure the power of Angels is very great they can move all corporeal things almost in an instant they can stir up tempests they can shake the earth move the waters only all their power is subjected to God's will Bless the Lord all ye Angels that excel in strength Psal 103.20 that do his Will it was the Will of God that now an Angel should take hold on the pillars of the earth and make it shake no wonder if for fear of him the keepers shake Mat. 28.4 and become as dead men and if one Angel be able to shake the earth and to shake the Keepers those armed Souldiers that were set to watch the Tomb what then will Christ himself do when he shall come to judgment the second time with many thousand thousands of Angels Oh now terrible and fearful will his coming be As at Christs Resurrection so at the last Resurrection there will be earthquakes in divers places Mat. 24.7 Christ hath shewed and he will shew himself to be the absolute Lord of heaven and earth see how the earth trembling under his feet doth as it were pay him homage and behold there was a great Earthquake Mat. 28.2 4. That Christ rose again Angels ministring to him An Angel came and rolled back the stone from the door and sate upon it Christs Power was not included in the grave or on the earth but extended to Heaven and to the Hosts therein however the chief Priests and Pharisees conspired together to close him in the earth they sealed the stone and set a watch they made all as sure as possibly they could yet the Angels of heaven are ready to wait on him as their Sovereign Lord. An Angel descended to role away the Stone not that Christ was unable to do it himsef he shook the earth and could he not lift up a stone O yes but thus he would manifest his Power by declaring his Power over the mighty Angels he needed but to say unto his Angel do this and he doth it I find some difference amongst Authors why an Angel should role away the Stone some think it was only for the womens sake that they might go into the Sepulchre and take a view of the empty Tomb and so be satisfied that Christ was
who are of weak judgments and fiery Spirits look to this point least as now when they cannot answer a Separatist they turn Separatists and when they cannot answer an Antinomian they turn Antinomians and when they cannot answer a Seeker Quaker Blasphemer they turn to them so when they cannot answer the subtle Arguments of a Jew they should as easily turn Jews and deny Christ and the resurrection of Christ I mean not to enter into controversies only I shall declare from what heads Arguments of this nature may be drawn As 1. More generally from Gentiles grants Jews concessions typical instructions prophetical predictions 2. More specially from these clear demonstrations that circumstantially and substantially do prove this Christ to have risen again 1. the Arguments in general are 1. From Gentiles grants Pilate that condemned Christ testified in a letter to Tiberius Cesar that Christ was risen again Tertul. l. cont Gent. Egesippus de vito resur Christi and therefore Tiberius desired the Senate to admit Christ into the number of their gods which when they refused Tiberius was incensed and gave free leave to all Christians to profess Christianity And to the Gentiles Sybylla left written these very words He shall end the necessity of death by three dayes sleep and then returning from death to life again he shall be the first that shall shew the beginning of resurrection to his chosen for that by conquering death he shall bring us life 2. For the Jews concessions Josephus Joseph Antiq. lib. 8. c. 9. the most learned amongst the latter Jews acknowledgeth that after Pilate had crucified him he appeared unto his followers the third day accordingly as the Prophets had foretold The Scribes and Pharisees being astonished with the sudden news of his rising again confirmed by the Souldiers whom they set to watch found no other way to resist the same but only by saying as all the Jews do unto this day that his Disciples came by night and stole away his body whiles the Souldiers slept O strange if they were asleep how know they that his Disciples stole away his body and if they were not asl●ep how could a few weak fishers take away his body from a band of armed Souldiers 3. From typical instructions such was Adam's sleep Isaac's laying upon the Altar Joseph's imprisonment Sampson's breaking of the gates of Gaza David's escaping out of Saul's hands Jeremy's deliverance out of the pit the raising of the Shunamites child of the widow of Sarephtahs son of the Temple of Solomon of Jonah from the deep a thousand of these types might be produced which relate to this antitype Christ's resurrection 4. From prophetical predictions Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thine holy one to see corruption Psal 16.10 Psal 16.10 After two dayes he will revive us in the third day he will raise us up Hosea 6.2 Hos 6.2 he will raise us up i.e. his Son united to us or our flesh assumed by his Son Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Psal 2.7 Psal 2.7 Acts 13.33 I laid me down and slept I waked for the Lord sustained me Psal 3 5. Psal 3.5 Above all how plain was the prophesie of Christ himself that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things of the Elders and chief Priests and Scribes and be killed and be ra●sed again the third day Matth. 16.21 Mat 16.21 2. The special Arguments are exceeding many as 1. The Angels Assertion He is not here for he is ris●n as he said come see the place where the Lord lay Matth. 28.6 Mat. 28 6. 2. The great Earthquake And behold there was a great earthquake for the Angel of the Lord ●●cended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone from the door Matth. 28.2 Mat. 28.2 3. The Apparitions of raised bodies and the graves were opened and many bodies of Saints which s●●pt arose and came out of the graves after his resurrection and went into the holy City and appeared unto many Matth. 27.52 53. 〈◊〉 27.52 53 4. The sudden courage of the Apostles whereas a little before they durst not peep out of doors they presently after compassed the whole world and confidently taught that there was no other name given under heaven whereby men may be saved but the Name of ●esus Act. 4.12 Acts 4.12 5. The Martyrs sufferings even for this truth 6. The Adversaries conf●ssions even to this truth 7. The Jews punishments even to this day for not believing this saving truth There is one Rabbi Samuel who six hundred years since writ a Tract in form of an Epistle to Rabbi Isaac Master of the Synagogue of the Jews wherein he doth excellently discuss the cause of their long captivity and extream misery And after that he had proved it was inflicted for some grievous sin he sheweth that sin to be the same which Amos speaks of For three transgressions of Israel and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they sold the righteous for silver Amos 2.6 Amos 2.6 the selling of Joseph he makes the first sin the worshipping of the Calf in Horeb the second sin the abusing and killing of God's Prophets the third sin and the selling of Jesus Christ the fourth sin For the first They served four hundred years in Egypt for the second They wandred forty years in the wilderness for the third They were captives seventy years in Babylon and for the fourth They are held in pitiful captivity even till this day 8. The last Argument on which only I shall insist it is the several Apparitions that Christ made to others after his Resurrection some reckon them ten times others eleven times and others twelve times according to the number of his twelve Apostles Luke 24.34 1. He appeared unto Mary Magdalen apart As a woman was the first instrument of death so was a woman the first Messenger of Life she brought the first tidings of the Resurrection of Christ which is the surest Argument of man's Salvation 2. He appeared to all the Maries together as they returned homewards from the Sepulchre never any truly sought for Christ but with these women they were sure to find Christ 3 He appeared to Simon Peter alone he was the first among men to whom he appeared he first went into the Sepulchre and he first saw him that was raised thence he was called first and he confessed Christ to be the Son of God and therefore Christ appears first to him Mark 16.7 the Angel bade the women to tell his Disciples and Peter that is to say and Peter especially that he was risen and gone before them into Galilee 1 Cor. 15.5 Of this speaks Paul He was first seen of Cephas and then of the Twelve 4. He appeared to the two Disciples journeying towards Emmaus the name of the one was Cleophas and probable it is the other was
Solomon answers that white is the colour of joy Let thy garments be alwayes white and let thy head lack no ointment Eccles 9.8 Mark 9.3 Rev. 7.9 When Christ was transfigured his Rayment was all white no Fuller in the earth could come near it and the Saints in Heaven are said to walk in white Robes And here the Angels are in white to signifie the joy they had in Christ's resurrection from the dead But 4. Why are they one at the head and the other at the feet where the body of Jesus had layen Some answer that as Mary Magdalen had anointed his head and feet so at those two places the two Angels sit as it were to acknowledg so much for her sake Others think it speaks comfort to every one of us if we are but in Christ we shall go to our graves in white and lye between two Angels who are said to guard our Bodies even dead and to present them alive again at the day of the resurrection But in this apparition we see further a question and answer 1. The Angels question Mary Woman why weepest thou May I paraphrase upon these words it is as if they had said O Mary what cause is there for these tears where Angels rejoyce it agrees not that a woman should weep thou couldst before with a manly courage arm thy feet to run among swords when thou camest to the grave and art thou now so much a woman that thou canst not command thine eyes to forbear tears O woman why weepest thou If thy Christ were here in his grave under this Tomb-stone we might think thy sorrow for the dead enforced thy tears but now that thou findest it a place of the living why dost thou stand here weeping dead for if thy tears be tears of love as thy love is acknowledged so let these tears be suppressed if thy tears be tears of anger they should not here have been shed where all anger was buried if thy tears be tears of sorrow and duties to the dead they are bestowed in vain where the dead is now revived and therefore O woman why weepest thou would our eyes be dry if such eye-streames were behoveful for us did not Angels alwayes in their visible resemblances represent their Lords invisible pleasure shadowing their shapes in the drifts of his intentions As for instance when God was incensed they brandished swords when he was appeased they sheathed them in scabbards when he would defend they resembled Souldiers when he would terrifie they took terrible forms and when he would comfort they carried mirth in their eyes sweetness in their countenance mildness in their words savour and grace and comeliness in their presence why then dost thou weep seeing us to rejoyce dost thou imagine us to degenerate from our nature or to forget any duty whose state is neither subject to change nor capable of the least offence art thou more fervent in thy love or more privy to the counsel of our eternal God than we that are daily attendants at his Throne of glory O woman why weepest thou Thus for Paraphrase Iohn 20.13 2. For her answer She saith unto them because they have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid him Here was the cause of Mary's tears 1. They have taken away my Lord. 2. I know not where they have laid him q. d. He is gone without all hope of recovery for they but I know not who have taken him away but I know not whither and they have laid him but I know not where there to do him but I know not what O what a lamentable case is this she knows not whither to go to find any comfort her Lord is gone his life is gone his soul is gone his body is gone yea gone and carryed she knows not whither and do they ask her Woman why weepest thou why here 's the cause They have taken away my Lord i.e. the dead body of my Lord and I know not where they have laid him Where a little of Christ is left and that is lost it is a lamentable loss Mary had sometimes a possession of whole Christ she had his presence she heard his words she saw his divinity in his miracles and in casting seven devils out of her own Body but now she had lost all Christ his presence lost his preaching lost his divinity lost his humanity lost his soul lost and last of all his body lost O what lamentable loss was this Mary would now haven been glad of a little of Christ O ye Angels fill but her arms with the dead body of her Jesus and she will weep no more one beam of that Sun of righteousness would scatter all the clouds of Mary's grief Quest But doth Christ ever leave his totally Answ I answer not indeed but only in apprehension In desertions a Christian may to his own apprehension find nothing of Christ and this was the Case of Mary Magdalen or if Christ desert a soul indeed and truth for desertions are sometimes in appearance and sometimes real yet never doth he forsake his own both really and totally The Lord will not wholly forsake his people 1 Sam. 12.22 for his great Name sake the acts of his love may be withdrawn but his love is still the same it is an everlasting love those acts which are for well-being may be withdrawn Jer. 31.3 but his acts of love that are for being shall never be removed No such good things will God withhold from them that walk uprightly Or Christ may go away for a season Psal 84.11 Isa 54.7 8. John 14.18 but not for ever For a moment have I forsaken thee but with great mercies will I gather thee in a little wrath have I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer It was Christ's promise to his Disciples I will not leave you comfortless or as Orphans but I will come again Though his compassions may be restrained yet they cannot be extinguished as the Sun sets to rise again and as the tender Mother layes down her Child to take it up again so deals Christ with his only for the present it is a sad thing O it is a lamentable thing to lose all Christ though but in our own apprehensions To hear Maries pitiful complaints They have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid my Lord it would make a flint to weep methinks I hear her cryes O my Lord What 's become of Thee Time was that my Soul was an enclosed Garden and the chiefest of Ten Thousands did walk in the shadow of the Trees but now the Fence is down my Love is gone and Sharon is become a desart Time was that I sate at the Feet of my Lord and I received daily Oracles from his Mouth but now he hides himself and will not come at me I pray and he hears
life In some sence then and in a Mystery Christ was a Gardiner but Maries mistake was in supposing him the Gardiner of that only place and not the Gardiner of our souls Souls in desertion are full of mistakes though in their mistakes are sometimes many mysteries 2. Her speech upon her mistake If thou hast born him hence c. we may observe 1. That her words to Christ are not much unlike the answer she gave the Angels only she seems to speak more harsh to Christ than she did to the Angels to them she complains of others They have taken away my Lord but to Christ she speaks as if she would charge him with the fact as if he looked like one that had been a breaker up of graves a carrier away of Corpses out of their place of rest Sir if thou hast born him hence But pardon love as it fears where it needs not so it suspects very often where it hath no cause When love is at a loss he or any that comes but in our way hath done it hath taken him away 2. That something she spoke now to Christ which she had not mentioned to the Angels She said not unto them tell me where he is but reserved that question for himself to answer Come tell me where thou hast laid him q. d. thou art privy to the place and with the action of removing Christ my Lord Oh how she errs and yet how she hits the truth Jesus must tell her what he had done with himself sure it was fittest for his own speech to utter what was only possible for his own power to do 3. That the conclusion of her speech was a meer vant or flourish And I will take him away Alas poor woman she was not able to lift him up there are more than one or two allowed to the carrying of a corps and as for his it had more than an hundred pound weight of myrrhe and other odours upon it sure she had forgotten that women are weak and that she her self was but a woman how was it possible that she should take him away she could not do it well but she would do it though there is no essay too hard for love she exempts no place she esteems no person she speaks without fear she promises without condition she makes no exception as if nothing were impossible that love suggesteth the darkness could not fright her from setting out before day the watch could not fear her from coming to the Tomb where Christ was laid she resolved to break open the seals and to remove the stone far above her strength and now her love being more incensed with the fresh wound of her loss she speaks resolutely I will take him away never considering whether she could or no love is not ruled with reason but with love it neither regards what can be nor what should be but only what it self desireth to do 4. That through all this speech she omits the principal verb she enquires for Jesus but she never names him whom she enquires after She could say to the Angels they have taken away my Lord but now she talks of one under the term of him if thou hast born him hence tell me where thou hast layd him and I will take him away him him him but she never names him or tells who he is this is solaecismus amoris an irregular speech but loves one dialect q.d. who knows not him why all the world is bound to take notice of him he is worthy to be the owner of all thoughts no thought in my conceit can be well bestowed upon any other than him And therefore Sir Gardiner whosoever thou art if thou hast born him hence thou knowest who I mean thou canst not be ignorant of whom I love there is not such another among the sons of men as the psalmist Psal 45.2 he is the fairest among the Children of men or as the Spouse he is the chiefest of ten thousands and therefore tell me some news of him of none but him of him and only of him O tell me where thou hast laid him and I will take him away A soul sick of love thinks all the world knows her beloved and is therefore bound to tell her where he is the daughters of Jerusalem were very ignorant of Christ Can. 5.9 and yet I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem said the Spouse if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love Can. 5.8 Iohn 20.16 2. Christ appears as unknown Jesus saith unto her Mary she turned her self and saith unto him Rabboni which is to say Master Sorrow may endure for a night but joy comes in the morning she that hitherto had sought without finding and wept without comfort and called without answer even to her Christ now appears and at his apparition these passages are betwixt them first he speaks unto her Mary and then she replies unto him Rabboni which is to say Master 1. He speaks unto her Mary it was but a word but O what life what Spirit what quickening and reviving was in the word the voice of Christ is powerful if the Spirit of Christ come alone with the Word it will rouse hearts raise spirits work wonders Ah poor Mary what a case was she in before Christ speak unto her she ran up and down the Garden with O my Lord where have they layd my Lord but no sooner Christ comes and speaks to her by his Spirit and with power but her mind is enlightened her heart is quickened and her soul is revived Observe here the difference betwixt the Word of the Lord and the Lord speaking that word with power and Spirit we find sometimes the hearts of Saints are quickened fed cherished healed comforted in the use of the means and sometimes again they are dead sensless heavy and hardened nay which is more the very same truth which they hear at one time it may be affects them and at another time it doth not the reason is they hear but the Word of the Lord at one time and they hear the Lord himself speaking that word at another time Mary heard the Word of the Lord by an Angel woman why weepest thou but her tears dropped still she heard again the word of the Lord by Christ himself woman why weepest thou and yet she weeps and will not be comforted but now Christ speaks and he speaks with power Mary and at this word her tears are dried up no more tears now unless they be tears for joy and yet again observe the way how you may know and discern the effectual voice of Jesus Christ if it be effectual it usually singles a man out yea though it be generally spoken by a Minister yet the voice of Christ will speak particularly to the very heart of a man with a marvelous kind of Majesty and Glory stampt upon it and shining in it take an humble broken drooping Spirit he hears of the free offer of
after Christ's death was on the first day of the week and the second Church assembly that we read of was again on the first day of the week and after eight days a sign that the Lord's-day Sabbath was on the first day instituted and that the more solemn assemblies of God 's people were henceforth to be on the Lords days Aug. de verb. Aposto Serm 15. It is an usual observation that things and persons which are named the Lords are sacred and venerable in an high degree as the grace of our Lord Rom. 16.24 the spirit of the Lord 2. Cor. 3.17 the beloved of the Lord Rom 16.8 the glory of the Lord 2. Cor. 3.18 the word of the Lord 1 Tim. 6.3 the cup of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.27 Augustine tells us that the Lords resurrection promised us an eternal day that it consecrated unto us the Lords day Surely then this day must needs be venerable a solemn day among us Christians Now it was that as the rising of the Sun dispelleth darkness so Christ the Son of righteousness shined forth unto the world by the light of his resurrection and hence we read of the Apostles observation of this very day above all others The first day of the week the Disciples being come together to break bread Paul preached unto them and concerning the collection for the Saints Act. 20.7 as I have given order to the Churches of Galatia even so do ye upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in store as God had prospered him Charitable contributions 1 Cor. 16.1 2. and Church-assemblies were in use and practise on the first day of the week i.e. on the Lord's day An argument sufficient to me against all the opposers of this sacred truth that the first day of the week is our Christian Sabboth why then Christ arose and at sundry times appeared before his ascention and after his ascention Christ sent down the holy Ghost on that very day and after the sending of the holy Ghost the Apostles then preached the Churches then assembled Charities were then gathered the Lord's Supper was then celebrated Christ's first apparition was on that day and after that day finished not any other apparition before this time And after Eight days 2. For the place it is said to be within probably it was the same house wherein the former apparition was the house wherein Christ celebrated the Passover and instituted the Lord's Supper wherein was the large upper room made ready for Christ In this upper room immediately after Christ's ascension Mark 14.15 was that famous assembly of all the Apostles as we have heard And in this upper room was that other famous assembly of all the twelve when the holy Ghost came down upon them in cloven tongues of fire at the feast of Pentecost and if we may believe tradition Act. 2.1 in this upper room the seven Deacons whereof Stephen was one were elected and ordained And in this upper room the Apostles and Elders of the Church at Jerusalem held that councel the pattern of all councels for the decision of that question whether the Gentiles that believed were to be circumcised Acts 6. in this upper room the Apostles and Disciples frequently assembled for prayer and supplications Yea they continued there with one accord in prayer and supplication And hence Cyril who was Bishop of the place calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the upper Church of the Apostles Acts 15. But of this upper room and of the doors of it being shut we have spoken before 3. For the persons they were his ten Disciples to whom he had appeared formerly only now Thomas was with them and so the number is compleat Acts 1.14 which before was not his Disciples were within and Thomas with them and Why Thomas with them was not Thomas one of them was not Thomas a Disciple of Christ Cyr. Jerus Cat. 16. as well as the rest I grant but Thomas is added because Thomas was not present at the last apparition and this apparition was more especially for Thomas's sake O the admirable love of Christ towards poor sinners observe in Christ are bowels of mercy to his straying sheep the Disciples in danger had fled away from Christ but he will not fly away from them no no he seeks them he stands in the midst of them and he comes again with an Olive branch of peace saying peace be unto you Of all these we have touched before but here is something new a new mercy breaking out on faithless Thomas Christ proves it by lively examples and strong arguments Isa 42.3 that He will not quench the smoaking flax nor break the bruised reed that he came to seek and to save that which was lost Luk. 19.10 that he was sent to bind up the broken hearted and to heal the sick to reduce the abject and to bring to the fold the straying sheep for the sake of one Thomas Christ appears again that to him as well as the rest he might communicate his goodness bequeath his peace and confirm him in this necessary point of faith that he was risen again O the goodness of Christ like as a Father pityeth his children so the Lord pityeth them that fear him Psal 103.13 he that left the ninety and nine in the wilderness to go after that sheep that was lost declares his desire to save sinners Of all that thou hast given me I have not lost one not one of his sheep John 17.12 he may suffer them a while to stray as this one Disciple who continued incredulous for one whole week but a Lord's day comes and then Christ appears in the midst of the candlesticks The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but he is long-suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance Humbled sinners that despaire in themselves may here find encouragement it is their usual cry O my sins 1 Pet. 3.9 these sins are hainous these sins will damn me Oh but consider hath not the Lord pardoned as great sins if thou art wicked consider the Publican if thou art unclean remember Magdalen if thou art a thief a man-slayer muse on that thief that was crucified with Jesus Christ if thou art a blasphemer call to mind the Apostle Paul who was first a Wolf and then a Shepheard first lead and then gold first a Saul and then a Paul if thou art faithless d●ffident an unbeliever one that hast turned thy back on Christ fled away from thy colours look on Thomas he fled away from Christ as soon as any and he is longest from Christ after his Resurrection of all the rest and though his fellow Disciples say They have seen the Lord and that he was risen indeed yet this will not sink into his head he will not acknowledge it Joh. 20.25 but is
that treadeth in the wine-fat q. d. here 's nothing but skars and wounds and blood if thou art so mighty to save How comes thy apparrel to be so red and sprinkled or stained with blood to which Christ answers I have troden the wine-press alone and I will tread them in mine anger I was troad and pressed till the very blood streamed out of my hands and feet and side so pressed that they pressed the very soul out of my body See here Behold my hands and my feet and my side that it is I my self I have tread the wine-press alone But as I was troad so I will tread up he gets and he treads on them that troad on him his enemies of Edom and Bozrah are now like so many clusters under his feet and he tramples upon them as upon Grapes in a fat till he makes the blood spring out of them and all to sprinkle his garments as if he had come out of the wine press indeed See here a double sight his own blood and his enemies blood here 's the blood of the Lamb that was slain and the blood of the Dragon that was troaden upon here 's a show both of his passion and his resurrection of his suffering and triumphing another text of this nature And one shall say unto him What are these wounds in thy hands then he shall answer Those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends Zach. 13.6 I know in the stead of Christ some have imployed these words to the false Prophets as if they had passed through the Churches discipline and so had received their wounds But others refer them to Jesus Christ of whom without controversy the next verse speaks and of whom the first verse of this chapter speaks and to whom after a long Parenthesis the Prophet seems to return And one shall say unto him who was the fountain opened what are these wounds in thy hands or as the Septuagint in the midst of thy hands a wonder it is to see those prints and skars in the hands of Christ and therefore is the question What are these wounds to which Christ answers Those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends i.e. in the house of my beloved the children of Israel my brethren according to the flesh the people of the Jews why these are the wounds they gave me and which now I shew as the signs of my victory and as the marks of my resurrection Thus far of the first head the apparition of Christ 2. For the fruits of this apparition they contain Thomas's confession and Christ's commendation of him in some respects 1. Thomas's confession And Thomas answered and said unto him my Lord my God a few words but of great weight 1. He acknowledgeth Christ a Lord Mat. 28.18 into whose hands are put the very keys of heaven all power is given unto me in heave● in earth 2. He acknowlegeth Christ God whom he saw with his eyes and felt with his hands he looks on not as a meer man but as God and as the second person in the God-head 3. He acknowledgeth Christ to be his Lord and his God this apropriating of Christ is the right character of a faith by which he brings home all the benefits of Christ unto his own soul I shall a while insist on all these 1. He acknowledgeth Christ a Lord How is he a Lord I answer 1. By essence as God is Lord so Christ is Lord the Father is Lord the Son is Lord and the Holy Ghost is Lord and yet they are not three Lords but one Lord. 2. By creation Christ is before all things saith the Apostle and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 This very thing is an argument of his Lordship To us there is but one Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 8.9 by whom are all things and we by him 3. By redemption unction office and Mediatorship unto which he was designed by his Father Act. 2.36 and therefore the Apostle saith that God hath made him Lord and Christ he is a Lord by his office and by the accomplishment of his office in dying rising and reviving he became Lord both of quick and dead For to this end Christ both dyed and rose Rom. 14 9. and revived that he might be Lord both of dead and living And thus he is a Lord in two respects 1. A Lord in Authority to command whom and what he will he only is Lord over our persons over our faith over our consciences to him only we must say Lord what wilt thou have me to do Lord save us or we perish 2. A Lord be is in power he hath power to forgive and power to cleanse he hath power to justifie and power to sanctifie he hath power to quicken and power to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him he hath power to hold fast his sheep and power to cast out the accuser of the brethren he hath power to put down all his enemies and power to subdue all things unto himself in every of these respects Christ is a Lord. True say blasphemers he is Lord by office but he is not Lord by essence as God is Lord No peruse some texts in the Old Testament where the title of Lord is essentially spoken of and we shall find the very same texts and titles applyed to Christ in the New Testament As for instance in Isa 6.5 Woe is me saith Esay for mine eyes have seen the King the Lord of hoasts now this John refers to Christ these things saith Esaias when he saw his Glory Isa 6.5 and speak of him In Psal 68.17 18. the Lord is among them as in Sinai in the holy place thou hast ascended on high thou hast led captivity captive thou hast received gifts for men now this the Apostle applyes to Christ when he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men In Psal 110.1 Psal 110.1 the Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand Joh. 12.41 until I make thine enemies thy foot-stool Now this Jesus Christ applies to himself Psal 68.17 saying that David in spirit called him Lord saying the Lord said unto my Lord. In Isa 40.3 the voice of him that cryeth in the wilderness prepare ye the way of the Lord now this the Evangelist applies to Christ Eph. 4.8 This is he that was spoken of by the Prophet Esay saying the voice of one crying in the wilderness prepare ye the way of the Lord. No wonder if Thomas call Christ Lord why both the Old and New-Testament agree in this that Christ is Lord Lord by creation and Lord by redemption Lord by office and Lord by essence Mat. 2.44 45. Isa 4.5 Mat. 3.3 2. He acknowledgeth Christ to be God as well as Lord my Lord and my God But how is he God I answer not only by participation similitude or in some
Tiberias First Christ appears and works a Miracle he discovers himself to be Lord of Sea as well as Land at his word multitudes of Fishes come to the Net and are caught by his Apostles nor is this Miracle without a Mystery Mat. 13.47 The Kingdom of Heaven is like a drawn net cast into the sea which when it is full men draw to land what is this divine trade of ours but a spiritual fishing the world is a sea souls like fishes swim at liberty in this deep and the nets of wholesome doctrine are they that draw up some to the shore of grace and glory 2. Upon this Miracle The Disciple whom Jesus loved said unto Peter it is the Lord. John is more quick-eyed than all the rest he considers the Miracle and him that wrought it and presently he concludes It is the Lord O my soul meditate on the mystery of this discovery if ever soul be converted and brought home to Christ it is the Lord but oh whither is Christ gone that we have lost so long his converting presence Oh for one Apparition of Jesus Christ till then we may preach our hearts out and never the nearer do what we can souls will to hell except the Lord break their career Ministers can do no more but tell thus and thus men may be saved and thus and thus men will be damned He that believeth on the Son hath eternal life John 3.36 and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life but when they have said all they can it is only God must give the blessing Oh what is preaching without Christ's presence One hearing what mighty feats Scanderbag's Sword had done he sent for it and when he saw it Is this the Sword said he that hath done such great exploits what 's this sword more than any other sword O sayes Scanderbag I sent thee my Sword but not my arm that did handle it so Ministers may use the sword of the Spirit the Word of God but if the Spirits arm be not with it they may brandish it every Sabbath to little purpose when all is done if ever any good be done it is the Lord. No sooner John observes the Miracle that a multitude of fishes were caught and taken but he tells Peter of a blessed discovery it is the Lord 3. Upon this discovery Peters throws himself into the Sea O the fervent love he carries towards Christ if he but hear of his Lord he will run through fire and water to come unto him so true is that of the Spouse Many waters cannot quench love neither can the floods drown it Cant. 8.7 if a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned If I love Christ I cannot but long for communion and fellowship with Christ Vbicunque fueris O domine Jesu c. Aug. Wheresoever thou art O blessed Saviour give me no more happiness than to be with thee if on the earth I would travel day and night to come unto thee if on the Sea with Peter I would swim unto thee if riding in triumph I would sing Hosanna to thee but if in glory how happy should I be to look upon thee Christ's Apparitions are ravishing sights if he but stand on the shore Peter throws himself over-board to come to Christ why now he stands on the pinacles of heaven wasting and beckoning with his hand and calling on me in his Word Rise up my love my fair one and come away O my soul make haste Cant. 2.10 in every duty look out for another Apparition of Jesus Christ when thou comest to hear say Have over Lord by this Sermon and when thou comest to pray say Have over Lord by this Prayer to a Saviour neither fire nor water floods nor storms death nor life principalities nor powers height nor depth nor any other creature should hinder thy passage to Christ or separate thy soul from Christ Consider what I say 2 Tim. 2.7 8. saith Paul and the Lord give thee understanding in all things remember that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my Gospel that Christ was raised is a Gospel-truth ay but do thou remember it do thou consider it and the Lord give thee understanding in all things SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection What desire is we have opened before some call it the wing of the soul whereby it moveth and is carried to the thing it expecteth to feed it self upon it and to be satisfied with it But what is there in Christ's resurrection that should move our souls to desire after it I answer 1. Something in it self 2. Something as in reference unto us 1. There is something in it self had we but a view of the glory dignity excellency of Christ as raised from the dead it would put us on this heavenly motion we should fly as the Eagle that hasteth to eat The object of desire is good Heb. 1.8 but the more excellent and glorious any good is the more earnest and eager should our desires be now Christ as raised from the dead is an excellent object the resurrection of Christ is the glorifying of Christ yea his glorifying took its beginning at his blessed resurrection now it was that God highly exalted him and gave him a name above every name Phil. 2.9 c. and in this respect how desirable is he 2. There is something in reference unto us As 1. Rom. 4.25 He r●se again for our justification I must needs grant that Christ's death and not his resurrection is the meritorious cause of our justification but on the other side Christ's resurrection and not his death is for the applying of our justification as the stamp adds no vertue nor matter of real value to a piece of gold but only it makes that value which before it had actually appliable and currant unto us so the resurrection of Christ was no part of the price or satisfaction which Christ made to God yet is it that which applies all his merits and makes them of force unto his Members Some I know would go further Lucius a learned Writer saith that Justification is therefore attributed to Christ's resurrection because it was the compleat and ultimate act of Christ's active obedience and from hence inferreth that remission of sin is attributed to his passive obedience and justification or imputation of righteousness to his active obedience Goodwin no way inferiour to him Rom. 8.34 faith that justification is put upon Christ's resurrection with a rather who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again not but that the matter of our justification is only the obedience and death of Christ but the form of our justification or the act of pronouncing us righteous by that his
have preached his resurrection oh no he himself would stay in person he himself would make it out by many infallible proofs that he was risen again he himself would by his own example learn us a lesson of love of meekness of patience in waiting after sufferings for the reward Methinks a few of these passages should set all our hearts on a flame of love we love earth and earthly things we dig into the veins of the earth for thick clay but if Christ be risen set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth Oh if the love of Christ were but in us Colos 3.1 2 as the love of the world is in base worldlings it would make us wholly to despise this world it would make us to forget it as worldly love makes a man to forget his God Nay it would be so strong and ardent and rooted in our souls that we should not be able voluntary and freely to think on any thing else but Jesus Christ we should not then fear contempt or care for disgrace or the reproaches of men we should not then fear death 1 Cor. 15.55 57. or the grave or hell or devils but we should sing in triumph O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which giveth us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord. SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection This is the great Gospel-duty we should rejoyce in the Lord and again rejoyce Phil. 4.4 yea rejoyce evermore A Christian estate should be a joyful and comfortable estate none have such cause of joy as the Children of Zion sing O daughter of Zion 1 Thes 5.16 shout O Jerusalem be glad and rejoyce with all thy heart O daughter of Jerusalem Zach. 3.14 And why so a thousand reasons might be rendred but here is one a prime one Christ is risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep A commemoration of Christ's resurrection hath ever been a means of rejoycing in God 1 Cor. 15.20 Some may object what is Christ's resurrection to me indeed if thou hast no part in Christ the resurrection of Christ is nothing at all to thee but if Christ be thine then art thou risen with him and in him then all he did was in thy name and for thy sake Others may object supposing Christ's resurrection mine what am I better how do not all the priviledges of Christ flow from the power and vertue of his resurrection as well as death tell me what is thy state what possibly can be the condition of thy soul wherein thou mayst not draw sweet from Christ's resurrection As 1 Pet. 3.21 1. Is thy conscience in trouble for sin the Apostle tells thee the answer of a good conscience towards God is by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Rom. 4.25 2. Art thou afraid of condemnation the Apostle tells thee he was delivered for our offences and he was raised again for our justification 1 Pet. 1.3 3. Dost thou question thy regeneration the Apostle tells thee he hath begotten us again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 4. Art thou distressed persecuted troubled on every side the Apostle tells thee wherein now consists thy confidence comfort courage to wit in the life of Christ in the resurrection of Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 11. We alwayes bear about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus that the life of Jesus might also be made manifest in our body for we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh And thus Beza interprets those following words knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise us up also by Jesus 14. i.e. unto a civil resurrection from our troubles Paul was imprisoned and in part martyred but by the vertue of Christ's resurrection he foresaw his enlargement And this interpretation Beza grounds on the word following and foregoing wherein Paul compares his persecutions to a death and his preservation from them to a life as he had done before also chap. 1. v. 9 10. 5. Art thou afraid of falling off or of falling away why remember that the immutable force and perpetuity of the new covenant is secured by the resurrection of Jesus Christ Isa 55.3 I will make an everlasting covenant with you even the sure mercies of David this the Apostle applies to the resurrection of Christ as the bottoming of that sure covenant and as concerning that he raised him up from the dead he said on this wise I will give you the sure mercies of David Act. 13.34 6. Art thou afraid of death hell and the power of the grave why now remember that Christ is risen from the dead and by his resurrection death is swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15.55 57. so that now thou mayst sing O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which hath given us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ It is the voyce of Christ thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise Isa 26.19 awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust for thy dew is as the dew of herbs and the earth shall cast out the dead David was so lifted up with this resurrection Psal 16.9 10. that he crys it out therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth my flesh also shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Job 19.23 24 25 26 27. But especially Job was so exceedingly transported with this that he breaks out into these extasies O that my words were now written O that they were printed in a book that they were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever for I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms shall destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another though my reins be consumed within me No man ever since Christ did speak more clearly of Christ's resurrection and his own than Job did here before Christ Observe in it O my soul Job's wish and the matter wished his wish was that certain words which had been cordial to him might remain to memory and this wish hath three wishes in one 1. That they might be written 2. That they might be registred in a book enrolled upon record as publick instruments judicial proceedings or whatsoever is most authentical 3. That they might be engraven in stone and in the hardest stone the rock records might last long
confusions distractions despondences staggering and sinking terrors Mat. 11.28 it will find it something yea it will look on it as a glorious work to discover but the morning Star through so much darkness any thing of life in such a valley and shadow of death 3. The understanding hath yet some brighter believing beams it confidently closeth with this truth that it is the will of the Lord that he should come and live and believe and lay hold on Christ it apprehends the particular designs of mercy to him and doth really principle the soul with this that God doth particularly call invite and bid him come to Christ the Fountain of life for life Now the understanding takes in general Gospel-calls in particular to himself It is my poor languishing soul which the Lord speaks to when he sayes come to me all yea that are weary and I will give you rest Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Surely this is a great work when set home by the Lord that the soul acts in its addresses to Christ in the strength of a particular call from God 2. And now the answer to this call is wrought up in the renewed will as thus 1. The will summons all its confidences and calls them off from every other bottom to bestow them wholly upon Christ and this consists in our voluntary renouncing of all other helps excepting Jesus Christ alone now the soul sayes to Idols Get ye hence Hos 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the works of our hands ye are our Gods Ashur shall not save us Not only cannot but shall not save us now as the soul is dissatisfied in Judgment as to the resting on any thing but Christ alone so the heart and will is disaffected to all other helps but Christ alone now it renounceth its own righteousness and worthyness not only because of their inability to save but mainly because their glory is swallowed up in that unmatchable excellency which appears in the way of life and salvation by Jesus Christ It calls home dependance from every other object 2. Hereupon there is a willing and chearfull receiving of Christ and resignation of our selves to his actual dispose to quicken us and save us in his own way A great part of the answer of Faith to the call of Christ lyes in this for as Faith sees life and salvation in the hands of Christ so it considers it to be given forth in the methods of Christ and so believing lyes not only in assent but consent of heart John 1 1● that Christ shall save us in his own way this is called A receiving of Christ As many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God Many a soul would be saved by Christ that sticks and boggles at his methods they will not pass to happiness by holiness nor set him up as a King and Lord whom they could consent to set up as a Saviour Oh but now Christ that stood at the door and knocked Rev. 3.10 is received in consent hath made up the match and the door is opened that never shall be shut again 3. Upon this follows the souls resting and relying the souls confidence and dependance upon Jesus Christ for life and for salvation this closeth up the whole business of believing unto righteousness those various expressions used in Scripture of committing our way and selves to God of casting our care upon God of rolling our selves on him of trusting in him of hoping in his mercy c. wrapt up faith in this affiance dependance not without some mixture of confidence and resolved resting upon Jesus Christ a clear beholding of God in Christ and of Christ in the promises doth present such variety and fulness of Arguments to bear up hope and affiance that the heart is resolved and so resolved that we commit our selves and give our souls in charge to Christ I know whom I have believed 1 Pet. 4.19 2 Tim. 1.12 and I am perswaded he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day 4. The upshot of all is this that the same close which the soul makes in believing with Jesus Christ as to justification and righteousness is not fruitless to this effect of conveying life and vertue from Jesus Christ as to grace and holiness for that union which then and thereby comes to be enjoyned with Christ is such an union as is fruitful in begetting a quickening power and principle in the heart and this is that which we ordinarily intend by saying saving faith to be operative James 2.16 that faith which brings forth nothing of holiness what is it but a dead faith As the body without the Spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also Justification and sanctification are twins of a birth and hence it is that vivification which is one part of sanctification is wrought in the soul after the self-same manner As first the understanding is illighttened 2. The will is changed 3. All the Affections are renewed 4. The internals being quickened there ensueth the renewing of the body with the outward actions life and conversation And now is fulfilled that saying of Christ in a spiritual sense John 5.25 The hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Now is the soul vivified now it begins to live the life of God now it feels the power of Christ's resurrection and is made conformable to it And immediately upon this joy is made in heaven by the Angels Luke 15.24 God himself applauding it For this my Son was dead and is alive he was lost and is found Thus is the state of vivification wrought I know it is not in all men after one manner for every circumstance the methods of God are exceeding various and we cannot limit the holy one of Israel I have sometimes concerning this desired the communication of other thoughts whom I looked upon as such who had more than ordinary communication with Christ's Spirit and from one of such I received this answer I must profess to you I have in all my speculations in divinity found dissatisfaction in the writings of men in nothing more than is the work of clear and distinct conceptions concerning regeneration which yet is of such a Cardinal importance is that the great doors of heaven move upon the hinges of it the Lord enlighten us more for we see but in part and prophesie but in part For the third question what are the means of this conformity or vivification which we must use on our parts I shall answer herein both to the state and growth of our vivification As 1. Wait and Attend upon God in the ministry of the word this is a means whereby Christ ordinarily effecteth
gone to Heaven surely this was the meaning God would rather that the main points of faith should be learned by hearing than by seeing however Christ's own Disciples were taught the same by sight that they might better teach others which should not see yet the ordinary means to come by faith is hearing Rom. 10.14 17 18. how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard so then faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God And as for the Jews saith the Apostle have they not heard yes verily their sound went into all the earth and their words unto the end of the world 3. He ascended principally by the mighty power of his God-head thus never any ascended up into heaven but Jesus Christ for though Enoch and Elijah were assumed into heaven yet not by their own power nor by themselves it was God's power by which they ascended 2 Kings 2.11 and it was by the help and Ministry of Angels there appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire and Elijah went up by a Whirl-wine into Heaven Acts 1 9. 4. He ascended in a cloud While they beheld he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight Hereby he shews that he is Lord of all the creatures he had already trampled upon the earth walked upon the sea vanquished hell or the grave and now the clouds received him and the heavens are opened to make way for this King of Glory to enter in Mat. 24.30 Mat. 26.4 When Christ shall come again it is said that he shall come in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power and coming in the clouds of heaven Which verifies that saying of the Angel Acts 1.11 This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven He went up in clouds and he shall come again in clouds 5. He ascended in the found of a trumpet not on earth sounding Hosanna but in Heaven Psal 47.5 crying Hallelujah So the Psalmist God is gone up with a shout the Lord with the sound of a trumpet Certainly great joy was in heaven at Christ's ascending thither the very Angels struck up their Harps and welcomed him thither with Hymns and Praises 6. He ascended in triumph as a Roman Victor ascended to the Capitol or as David ascended after his conquest up to Zion Now we read of two triumphal Acts in Christs Ascension whereof the first was his leading of his captives and the second was the dispersing of his gifts the Apostle and the Psalmist joyn both together Psal 68.18 Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men 1. He led them captive who had captivated us Death was led captive without a sting Hell was led captive as one that had lost her victory the Law was led captive being rent and fastened to his Cross as it were Ensign wise the Serpents head being bruised was led before him in triumph as was Golias's head by David returning from the victory and this was the first Act of his triumph 2. He gave gifts unto men this was as the running of Conduits with wine or as the casting abroad of new Coyn or as the shutting up of Christs triumph in his ascension up to heaven what these gifts were we shall speak in the Mission of the holy Ghost only thus much for the present SECT II. Of the place whither he ascended 3. WHither he ascended the Gospel tells us into heaven only Paul saith that he ascended far above all heavens But the meaning is Ephes 4 10. he went above all these visible Heavens into those heavenly Mansions where the Angels and the Spirits of the just have their aboad Or if the highest heavens be included I see no absurdity in it the highest Heaven we usually call The Kingdom of Heaven which is either Heaven material or heaven s●iritual and first for the material Heaven in some sense he may be said to ascend above that both in respect of his Body because the Body of Christ is more glorious than any material Heaven And in respect of his soul because the Soul of Christ is more blessed than all things else whatsoever And 2 For the spiritual Heaven i.e. all Angelical or Heavenly perfections he is said to ascend above them all both in respect of his humiliation because he hath vilified himself below all things and therefore he is worthily exalted above all things and in respect of his perfection because the humane nature of Christ is more excellent than any creature it being joyned to the Godhead by an hypostatical union Some there are that understand this place of Christs ascending far above all Heavens not so much by a l●cal motion as by a Spiritual mutation and exaltation of his person as earth heightned unto a flame changeth not its place only but form and figure so the person of our Saviour was raised to a greatness and glory vastly differing from and surmounting any image of things visible or invisible in this Creation so it is fitly expressed Heb. 7.26 He was made higher than the Heavens he was heightened to a splendor enlarged to a capacity and compass above the brightest and beyond the widest Heavens he transcended all in the spirituallity of his Ascension but I shall not much insist on that SECT III. Of the Reasons why he Ascended 4. WHy he ascended the Reasons are 1. On Christ's part that through his Passion he might pass to glory Luke 24.26 Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and so to enter into his glory I shall not insist on that controversie whether Christ merited for himself this is without controversie that by his Passion I will not say he properly merited but he obtained glory because he humbled himself so low God exalted him above the Grave in his Resurrection above the Earth in his Ascension and above the Heavens in placing him at his right hand And he ascended that all those Prophesies which were foretold of Christ might be accomplished Thou hast ascended on high And his feet shall stand in that day upon the Mount of Olives Psal 68.18 Zach. 14.4 which is before Jerusalem on the East The types of this were Enoch's translation Elijahs's ascension Sampson's transportation of the gates of Gezza into an high mountain the high Priests going into the Holy of Holies Seeing that we have a great high Priest Heb. 4.14 that is passed into the heavens Jesus the Son of God Why all these prophesies types figures must needs be accomplished and therefore on his part it was necessary that Christ must ascend and go into Heaven 2. The Reasons on our part are 1. That in our stead he might triumph over sin death and hell In his Resurrection he conquered but in his
Christs Resurrection and the coming down of the holy Ghost What was the meaning of this but to hold harmony and to keep correspondency with those memorable things as on the day of Pentecost fifty days after the feast of the Passeover the Israelites came to mount Sinai there received they the Law a memorable day with them and therefore called the feast of the Law so the very same day is accomplished that prophesie Out of Zion shall go forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem Isa 2.3 now was the promulgation of the Gospel called by James the Royal Law Jam. 2.8 as given by Christ our King and written in the hearts of his servants by this holy Ghost it seems to shadow out the great difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel the Law was given with terrour in lightning and thunder it discovers sin declares God's Wrath frights the Conscience but the Gospel is given without terrour there was no lightning and thunder now no no the holy Ghost slides down from heaven with grace and gifts and with great joy sits on the heads and in the hearts of his Saints 2. On the Jubilee or fiftyeth year was a great feast whence some observe that the Latines made their word Jubilo to take up a Merry Song though the word be derived from the Hebrew Jobel which signifies a Rams horn for then they blew with Rams horns as when they gathered the people to the Congregation they blew their Silver Trumpets There were many uses of this feast 1. For the general release of Servants 2. For the restoring of Lands unto their first owners who had sold them 3. For the keeping of a right chronology and reckoning of times for as the Greeks did reckon by their Olimpiads and the Latine by their Lustra so did the Hebrews by their Jubilees this falls fit with the proclaiming of the Gospel which is an act or tender of Gods most gracious general free pardon of all sins and of all the sinners in the World now was the sound of the Gospel made known unto all Acts 2.5 out of every Nation under heaven now was that spiritual Jubilee which Christians enjoy under Christ now was the remission published which exceeded the remission of the Jubilee as for as the Jubilee exceeded the remission of the Seventh year i.e. not only seven times but seventy times seven times Mat. 18.22 Lev. 23.17 20 3. On the day of Pentecost they offered the two wave-loaves called the bread of the first fruits unto the Lord. In like sort this very day the Lord of the harvest so disposing it the Apostles by the assistance and effectual working of the Spirit offered the first-fruits of their harvest unto the Lord Act. 2.41 for the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls We see the circumstance of time hath its due weight and is very considerable when the day of Pentecost was fully come then came the holy Ghost SECT VIII Of the persons to whom the holy Ghost was sent 2. FOr the persons to whom the holy Ghost was sent it is said to all that were with one accord in one place Act. 2.1 who they were it is not here exprest yet from the former chapter we may conjecture Acts 1.13 14. they were the twelve Apostles together with Joseph called Barsabas and the Women and Mary the Mother of Jesus and his brethren these all continued with one accord in one place for so was Christs command that they should not depart from Jerusalem but wait for the promise of the Father which saith he ye have heard of me This promise we read of in the Evangelists Act. 1.4 when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father John 15.26 even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he will testifie of me Luke 21.49 And behold I send the promise of the Father upon you but tarry ye in the City of Jerusalem until you be indued with power from on high It was the great promise of the Old Testament that Christ should partake of our humane Nature and it was the great promise of the New Testament that we should partake of his divine Nature he was cloathed with our flesh according to the former and we are invested with his Spirit according to the latter promise For this promise the Apostles and others had long waited and for the accomplishment they were now fitted and disposed 1. They had waited for it from the Ascention day till the feast of Pentecost he told them at the very instant of his Ascention that he would send the holy Ghost and therefore bid them stay together till that hour upon which command they waited Isa 28.16 and continued waiting until the day of Pentecost was fully come He that believeth shall not make hast saith Isaiah surely waiting is a Christian duty for the Vision is yet for an appointed time Hab. 2.3 but at the end it shall speak and shall not lye though it tarry wait for it because it will surely come it will not tarry Well may we wait and wait for him if we consider how God and Christ have waited for us and our conversion and especially if we consider that the Comforter will come and when he comes that he will abide with us for ever But 2. John 14.16 As they waited for the Spirit so they were rightly disposed to receive the Spirit for they were all with one accord in one place Mark here the qualifications of these persons they were all with one accord c. To those that accord in the Spirit given where is nothing but discord jars divisions fractions there is no Spirit of God for the Spirit is the Author of concord peace unity and amity he is the very essential unity love and love-knot of the two persons the Father and the Son even of God with God and he was sent to be the union love and love-knot of the two natures united in Christ even of God with man and can we imagine that essential unity will enter but where there is unity can the Spirit of unity come or remain but where there is unity of Spirit verily there is not there cannot be a more proper and peculiar a more true and certain disposition to make us meet for the Spirit then that quality in us that is likest to his nature and essence and that is unity love concord do we marvel that the spirit doth scarcely pant in us Alas we are not all of one accord the very first point is wanting to make us meet for the coming of the holy Ghost upon us We see the persons to whom the holy Ghost was sent they were they that were together with one accord in one place SECT IX Of the manner how the holy Ghost was sent 3. FOr the manner how he was sent or how he came to these Apostles we may observe these
where they were sitting to signifie that all the other houses in Jerusalem felt none of this mighty rushing wind there was no assembly of Saints in any part of the City but only in this house or if any other assembly might be this Spirit blew upon none of them where these men were not that and only that house is filled where they were sitting And this point of blowing upon one certain place is a property very suitable to the Spirit of God the wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof John 3.8 but canst not tell whence it cometh nor whether it goeth so is every one that is born of the Spirit The Spirit blows where it will and upon whom it will and they shall plainly feel it and others about them not one jot have we not sometimes the experiences of this in our very congregations one sound is heard one breath doth blow and it may be one or two and no more hears the sound or feels the breath inwardly savingly it may be one here and another there shall feel the Spirit shall be affected and touched with it sensibly but twenty on this side them and forty on that side them sit all becalmed and go their way no more moved than when they came into Gods presence Oh that this Spirit of the Lord would come daily and constantly into our congregations Oh that it would blow through them and through them O that it would fill every soul in the assembly with the breath of heaven come holy Spirit awake O North-Wind Cant 4.16 and come thou South-Wind and blow upon our Gardens that the spices thereof may flow out 6. He came down in the form of Tongues As one saith well This Wind brought Tongues even a whole showre of Tongues The Apostles were not only inspired for their now benefit but they had gifts bestowed on them to impart the benefit to more their themselves But why did the holy Ghost appear like Tongues I answer 1. The Tongue is a symbole of the holy Ghosts proceeding from the Word of the Father as the Tongue hath the nearest affinity with the word and is moved by the word of the heart to express the same by the sound of the voice so the holy Ghost hath the nearest affinity that may be with the Word of God and is the expresser of his voice and the speaker of his will 2. The Tongue is the sole instrument of Knowledge which conveighs the same from man to man though the Soul be the Fountain from whence all wisdom springs yet the Tongue is the Channel and the conduit-pipe whereby this Wisdom and Knowledge is communicated and Tansferred from man to man in like manner the holy Ghost is the sole Author and Teacher of all Truth though Christ be the Wisdom of God yet the holy Ghost is the Teacher of this Wisdom to men And hence it is that the holy Ghost appeared in the form of Tongues And yet not meerly in the form of Tongues but thus qualified 1. They were Cloven Tongues to signifie that the Apostles should speak in divers Languages if there must be a calling of the Gentiles they must needs have the Tongues of the Gentiles wherewith to call them if they were debtors not only to the Jews Rom 1.14 but to the Grecians nor only to the Grecians but to the Barbarians also then must they have the tongues not only of the Jews but of the Grecians and Barbarians to pay this debt and to discharge this duty of go and teach all Nations Mat. 28.19 Surely this gift was bestowed for the propagating of the Gospel far and wide The tongues were cloven that the Apostles might speak all Languages and that all Nations of the World whithersoever they came might hear them and understand them speaking in their own Tongues 2. They were fiery Tongues to signifie that there should be an efficacy or fervour in their speaking the World was so over-whelmed with ignorance and errour that the Apostles lips had need to be touched with a coal from the Altar Tongues of flesh would not serve the turn nor words of air but there must be fire put into the Tongue and Spirit of life into the words they speak with such a tongue Christ speak himself when they said of him did not our hearts burn within us Luke 24.32 while he spake unto us by the way and with such a tongue Peter spake at this time Acts 2.73 something like fire fell from him on their hearts when they were pricked in their hearts and said men and brethren what shall we do Oh that we of the Ministry had these fiery Tongues O that the Spirit would put his live-coal into our speeches Oh that our Sermons were warming Sermons may we not fear that the Spirit is gone whiles the people are dead and we are no more lively in our Ministry it is said of Luther that when he heard one preach very faintly cold cold sayes he this is cold preaching here 's no heat at all to be gotten Oh when the Spirit comes it comes with a tongue of fire instead of words sparks of fire will fall from us on the hearts of hearers 3. These cloven tongues sate upon each of them to signifie their constancy and continuance they did not light and touch and away after the manner of butterflies but they sate they abode still they continued steddy without any stirring or starting This was the privy sign by which John the Baptist knew Jesus to be Christ upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on him John 1.33 the same is he which Baptiseth with the holy Ghost It was not only the Spirits descending but the Spirit 's remaining on him Psal 51.10 that was the Sign The Spirit of God is a constant Spirit it abides on the Soul to whom it is given and therefore the Psalmist describes these great Transactions of Christ to this very end that the Spirit might dwell with us thou hast ascended on high Psal 68.18 thou hast led Captivity Captive thou hast received gifts for men yea for the rebellious also that the Lord God might dwell among them Not only that he might stay and lodg for a night as a way-fairing man that comes to his Inn and then is gone in the morning no no but that he might take up his residence and dwell in them I know it is a question whether the holy Ghost may be lost but certainly of the Elect he is never totally or wholly lost only I dare not say but as touching many gifts he may be lost even of the Elect themselves David after his sins was forced to cry Psal 51.11 12. cast me not away from thy presence O Lord and take not thy holy Spirit from me restore unto me the joy of thy Salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit we find here that in respect of some gifts even of regeneration the
Spirit is sometimes lost but that the godly should retain no remnants of the Spirit in their worst declinings I cannot imagine John teacheth expresly whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin 1 John 3.9 a sin unto death for his seed remaineth in him neither can he sin because he is born of God David in his fall lost the joy of his heart the purity of his conscience and many other gifts which he desired to have restored to him but the holy Ghost he had not utterly lost for if so how could he have prayed cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me I have done with the manner of the Spirits mission SECT X. Of the measure of the Holy Ghost now given 4. FOR the measure what or how much of the Spirit was now given this question is necessary because we bring in the Spirits mission after Christ's ascension as if the holy Ghost had not been given before this time That this was the time of the coming of the holy Ghost is very plain but that the holy Ghost was not given before this time we cannot say certainly the Prophets speak by him and the Apostles had him John 20.22 not only when they were first called but more fully when he breathed on them and said unto them receive yea the holy Ghost So that if ye study the reconciliation of these things I know not any way better than to put it on the measure or degrees of the Spirits mission I know some go about to reconcile it thus that the holy Ghost was given before secretly with grace but now he was given in a visible shape with power Others thus that the holy Ghost was before given in respect of Grace and Ministerial gifts but now he was given in respect of vertue or Ghostly ability to work Wonders and to speak with divers Languages But we find that the Prophets and Apostles before this had not only Grace and Ministerial gifts but a miraculous vertue even the Spirit of powerfull and extraordinary operation only here was the difference that before this the Spirit was but sprinkled as it were upon them but now it was poured upon them before this they were gently breathed on and refreshed with a small gale but now they were all blown upon with a mighty wind without controversie a difference there is in the Spirits mission And that some lay down chiefly in these three things As 1. In the manner of the Spirits mission to the old Church the Spirit came usually in dreams or visions or in a low still voice or in some latent ways but now he came in power in evidence and demonstration and therefore it is called Eph 1.17 1 King 19.11 12. the spirit of revelation and knowledge At the apparition of God to Elijah it is said that the Lord passed by and a great and strong wind rent the mountains and break in pieces the rocks before the Lord but the Lord was not in the wind and after the wind an earth-quake but the Lord was not in the earth-quake and ●fter the earthquake a fire but the Lord was not in the fire and after the fire a still small voice and then Elijah wrapped his face in his mantle as knowing the Lords presence was therein the Spirit came not of old save in a vision or dream or in a still small voice but now the Spirit came in a rushing mighty wind in fiery tongues in earth-quakes in so much Acts 4.31 that the place was shaken where they were assembled and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost the Spirit now made choice to come in such apparitions as should have in them a self-discovering property which would not be hidden and here is one difference 2. Another difference is in respect of the Subjects unto whom he was sent before now he came only upon the inclosed garden of the Jews but after the assension of Christ The Spirit was poured upon all flesh now every believer is of the Israel of God every Christian is a Temple of the holy Ghost now we receive the Spirit too or else it is wrong with us for If any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Act. 10.44 45. At Peters Sermon to Cornelius it is said that the holy Ghost fell on all them which hear the Word and they of the Circumcision which believed were astonyed because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy Ghost It was some wonder at first even to the Apostles themselves but in this Sermon Peter acknowledges Act 10.34 35. Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of Persons but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousness is accepted with him Mark In every Nation upon all flesh I will pour out my spirit Here 's another difference 3. One difference more is in the measure of his mission At first he was sent only in drops and dew but now he was poured out in showers and abundance The holy Ghost saith Paul was shed on us abundantly through Jesus our Saviour Tit. 3.6 As there are degrees in the wind aura ventus procella a breath a blast a stiffe gale so we cannot deny degrees in the Spirit the Apostles at Christs resurrection received the Spirit but now they were filled with the Spirit then it was but a breath but now it was a mighty wind And indeed never was the like measure of the Spirit given to men as at this time the Fathers before this and we and our Fathers since this have but as it were a hint of the Spirit to their Epha such a pentecost as this never was but this never the like before or since it was Christ's Coronation-day the day of placing him in his throne when he gave these gifts unto men and therefore that day was all magnificence shewed above all other days Thus for the measure of the Spirit now given to the Church of Christ SECT II. Of the Reasons why the Holy Ghost was sent 5. FOR the Reasons why the Holy Ghost was sent they are several As 1. That all the prophesies concerning this mission might be accomplished Isa 32.15 Isaiah speaks of a time when the spirit should be poured upon us from on high and the wilderness should be a fruitfull field And Zachary Prophesies Zach. 12 10. that in that day I will pour upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem Joel 2.28 29. the spirit of grace and supplication And Joel prophesies yet more expresly It shall come to pass that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesie your old men shall dream dreames your young men shall see visions and also upon the servants and upon the hand-maids in those days I will pour out my spirit and they shall Prophesie This very Prophesie was cited by Peter
Students beat out their brains on lesser subjects what endeavours have there been to dive into the secrets of Nature what volumes have been written of Physicks Metaphysicks Mathematicks and is not this subject Christ is not every of these subjects Christ's Ascension Christ's Mission of the holy spirit of more worth and value and benefit than all those come study that piece of the Bible wherein these are written there is not a line or expression of Christ in the Scripture but 't is matter enough for a whole Age to comment on thou needest not to leave old principles for new discoveries for in these very particulars thou mightest find successive sweetness unto all eternity SET II. Of considering Jesus in that respect 2. LEt us consider Jesus carrying on this work of our salvation for us in these particulars We must not only study to know these things but we must meditate on them till they come down from our heads to our hearts Meditation is the poize that sets all the wheels within a going it were to small purpose to bid us desire hope believe love joy c. if first we did not meditate in meditation it is that the understanding works that the will is inclined to follow that devotion is refreshed that saith is encreased hope established love kindled and therefore begin here O my soul it is a due consideration that gives both life and light and motion to thy actings in all proceedings And to take them in order 1. Consider of Christ's Ascension into Heaven Methinks souls should put themselves into the condition of the Disciples Acts 1.10 When they looked stedfastly towards heaven as Christ went up What shall he ascend and shall not we in our contemplations follow after him gaze O my soul on this wonderfull object thou needest not fear any check from God or Angel so that thy contemplation be spiritual and divine No sooner had Christ finished his work of redemption here on earth but on the Mount called Olivet he assembles with his Disciples where having given them commands he begins to mount and being a little lifted up into the Ayr presently a Cloud receives him into her lap Herein is a clear demonstration of his Godhead Clouds are usually in Scriptures put for the House or Temple or Receptacle of God himself How often is it said that The glory of the Lord appeared in the cloud Exod. 16.10 19 9.-24.16.-34.5 Isa 19.1 psal 104.3 And that He came to Moses in a thick cloud and that he called unto Moses out of the midst of the cloud and that the Lord descended in the cloud Is not the Cloud God's own Chariot Behold the Lord rideth on a swift cloud and O Lord my God thou art very great saith David great indeed and he proves it thus Who maketh the clouds his Chariot Jesus Christ in his ascension to heaven enters by the way into a cloud this was his chariot led by thousands and ten thousands of his Angels psal 68.17 18 The Chariots of God are Twenty thousand even thousands of Angels the Lord is among them in Sinai in the holy place thou hast ascended on high thou hast led captivity captive thou hast received gifts for men Some are of opinion that not only thousands of Angels led this chariot but that many of the Saints which slept and rose with Christ at his resurrection now ascended with him and compassed about this glorious cloud English Annotations on Eph. 4.8 whence they give this for the meaning of the text that when he went up through the ayr and ascended up on high he led captivity captive that is he led a certain number of captives namely the Saints that were long held in captivity of death whose bodies arose at Christ's resurrection and now they accompanied Christ at his triumphant march into heaven However he was attended be not too curious O my soul in this the bright cloud that covered his body discovered his Divinity and therefore here is thy duty to look stedfastly towards heaven and to worship him in his ascension up into heaven O admire and adore But stay not thy contemplation in the cloud he ascends yet higher through the Ayr and through the Clouds and through that sphere or element of fire and through those Orbs of the Moon Mercury Mars of the Sun Jupiter Venus Saturn and through that azure Heaven of fixed Stars and through that first moveable and through those condence and solid waters of the Christaline Heaven nor stood he still till he came to those doors and gates of the Empyreal Heaven called The heaven of heavens in all this triumphant glorious march some tell us of an heavenly harmony made by those Choristers of Heaven Cypr. in Serm. Ascens Psal 4.5 the blessed Angels Some going before and some going after they chant his praises and sing Hallelujahs and that is the meaning of the Psalmist God is gone up with a shout the Lord with the sound of a Trumpet In this meditation pass not over thy duty which immediately follows Sing praises unto God Ver. 6. Psal 68. ● sing praises sing praises unto our King sing praises Sing unto God sing praises to his Name extol him that rideth upon the heavens by the Name ●ah and rejoyce before him Thou hast great cause O my soul to praise him and to rejoyce before him especially if thou considerest that Christ ascended not for himself but also for thee it is God in our nature that is gone up to heaven whatever God acted on the person of Christ that he did as in thy behalf and he means to act the very same on thee Christ as a publick person ascended up to heaven thy interest is in this very ascension of Jesus Christ and therefore dost thou consider thy Head as soaring up O let every Member praise his Name let thy Tongue called thy glory glory in this and trumpet out his praises that in respect of thy duty it may be verified Christ is gone up with a shout the Lord with the sound of a Trumpet And yet stay not by the way but consider further Christ being now arrived at Heavens doors those heavenly spirits that accompanied him began to say Psal 24.7 Lift up your heads O ye gates even lift up your selves yea everlasting doors and the King of glory shall come in to whom some of the Angels that were within not ignorant of his person but admiring his majesty and Glory said again Who is the King of Glory and then they answered The Lord strong and mighty the Lord mighty in battel Ver. 8. Rev. 21.12 and thereupon those Twelve gates of the Holy City of new Jerusalem opened of their own accord and Jesus Christ with all his ministring Spirits entred in O my soul how should this heighten thy joy and enlarge thy comforts in that Christ is now received up into glory every sight of Christ is glorious and in every sight thou shouldst wait
on the Lord Jesus Christ for some glorious manifestations of himself Come live up to the rate of this great mystery view Christ as entering into glory and thou wilt find the same sparkles of glory on thy heart O this sight is a transforming sight We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3.18 even as by the spirit of the Lord. 2. Consider of Christ's Session at God's right hand no sooner was Christ entered into Heaven but he is brought before his heavenly Father and herein was the vision accomplished I saw in the night visions Dan. 7.13 14. and behold one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven and came to the ancient of dayes and they brought him near before him and there was given him dominion and glory and a Kingdom This is that we call his Session at God's right hand a dominion was given him above all creatures yea a dominion above the Hierarchy of all the Angels O the glory of Christ at his first entrance into glory immediatly all the Angels fell down and worshipped him immediately his Father welcomed him with the highest grace that ever yet was shewen Psal 110.1 Come said he sit thou at my ri●ht hand untill I make thy enemies thy footstool One sweetly observes that usually in the several parts of the performance of Christ's office either God is brought in as speaking to Christ or Christ is brought in as speaking to his Father thus when he chose him first to be our Mediator God speaks to Christ Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedech and when Christ came to take upon him our nature Heb. 10.7 Psal 22.1 he spake to his Father Lo I come to do thy will a body hast thou prepared for me Again when Christ hung on the Cross he spakes to his Father Acts 13.33 Heb. 1.13 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me but when Christ rose again from the dead God spake to him Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee and when Christ ascended into heaven God spake to him Son sit thou down at my right hand This was the highest point of Christ elevated now was the prophesie accomplished He shall be exalted and extolled and be very high The Caldee Paraphrast reads it thus He shall be exalted above Abraham Isa 52.13 he shall be extolled more than Moses he shall be very high above the highest Cherubin and Saraphin O my soul meditate on this Session of Christ at God's right hand and thence draw down some vertue and sweetness into thy self what was Christ exalted had he a name given him above every name walk then as becomes those that have so glorious a Head O defile not that nature which in thy Christ was so highly honoured 1 Cor. 6.15 it was the Apostles arguing Shall I take the Members of Christ and make them the Members of an Harlot so argue thou shall I take the Nature of Christ that Nature which he in his Person hath so highly glorified and make it in my Person the Nature of a Devil O my soul walk worthy of such a Lord unto all well-pleasing sith now he is in his Throne at God's right hand O kiss the Son honour the Son with divine worship reverence and submission submit chearfully and willingly to the Scepter of his Word bow to his Name as it is written At the Name the Person the Power the Scepter of Jesus Christ ●●●l 2.10 every knee should bow 3. Consider of the Mission of the holy Ghost no sooner is Christ inaugurated in his Throne Eph. 4.8 John 4.10 but he scatters his coin and gives gifts When he ascended on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men He gave gifts or the gift of gifts the gift of the holy Ghost If thou knewest the gift of God said Christ to the Samaritan woman John 7.39 that gift was the water of Life and that water of life was the spirit as John who knew best his mind gave the interpretation This speak he of the spirit O my soul consider of this princely gift of Christ such a gift was never before but when God gave his Son God so loved the World that he gave his Son and Christ so loved the world that he gave his spirit but O my soul consider especially to whom this Spirit was given Isa 9.6 Rom. 5.5 the application of the gift is the very soul of thy meditation Vnto us a Son is given said the Prophet and Vnto us the holy Ghost is given saith the Apostle And yet above all consider the reasons of this gift in reference to thy self was it not to make thee a Temple and Receptacle of the holy Ghost stand a while on this admire O my soul at the condescending glorious and unspeakable love of Christ in this it was infinite love to come down into our nature when he was incarnate but this is more to come down into thy heart by his holy Spirit he came near to us then but as if that were not near enough he comes nearer now for now he unites himself unto thy person now he comes and dwells in thy soul by his holy spirit O my soul thou hast many in-comes of the world though many are above thee yet many are below thee but Oh what little contentment hast thou in these outward things Come here 's that which will infinitely content thy vast desires Christ is in thee realy in thee by his Spirit will not this content the utmost capacity of an heart surely he is too covetous whom God himself cannot suffice if thou hast Christ thou hast all things and if thou hast the spirit of Christ thou hast Christ himself not notionally not by the habit of grace only but really essentially substantially by his Spirit it is the very spirit of Christ the spirit it self the holy Ghost it self in his own person that is united to thee and dwells in thee nor only comes he in person but he brings along with him all his Train hath he not endowed thee with some gifts hath he not divided a portion and measure to thee in thy place and calling take notice observe it and be thankfull if thou hast a gift of prayer of prophesie of wisdom of knowledge it comes and flows from this holy Spirit Vnto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ. Eph. 4.7 1 Cor. 12.11 Or according to the measure of the spirit who is the gift of Christ. And all these worketh that one and the self-same spirit dividing to every man severally as he will But besides a gift hath he not endowed thee with his grace hath he not planted in thy soul the habit the power the seed the spring the principle of grace hast thou not felt sometimes the excitings
a man would read he must have all these or more than one of these so God hath appointed us three necessary means for our illumination and direction the Word the Ministry and the Spirit What God hath joyned let no man separate if any will foolishly go and set one of these against another when God hath set them all together and made them all necessary assigning to each a several part in the work of our illumination they may abuse God and themselves and go without the light while they despise the necessary causes of it God's evidences must not be separated much less must one be pleaded to the neglect of all the rest as the work within us is not the first testimony but a secondary confirming testimony so doth it not make the first unnecessary or void besides that by the external testimony we must convince other men which by the witness within us we cannot do But this only by the way 2. For the encouragement of our Faith to believe in Christ as in reference to his Ascension Session and Mission of his Spirit 1. Consider of the excellency of this Object what is it but Christ Christ in his Ascendant Culminant Regnant Power Christ in his Marching Conquering Triumphing Postures in his Free and Large and Magnificent Gifts When he Ascended on high he led Captivity Captive and gave Gifts unto Men. O the Glory O the Excellency of Christ in these Respects Verily they are enough to tire out Men and Angels with the only Act of wondering and surveying of their vastness Here is Gospel-Work for all Eternity to dig into this Gold-Mine to roul and turn this Soul-delighting precious Stone to behold enquire and search into these depths and heights of Christ exalted and I believe this is the satiety the top and prime of Heavens Glory to see and wonder at the vertues of him that sits on the Throne at the right hand of God to be filled but never Satiate with the Glory of Christ What Christ ascended Christ set down in Glory and Christ sending down his Holy Spirit here 's a Compendium of all Glories here is one for an heart to be taken with made up of nothing but of several Mysteries of Glory 2. Consider the Power Vertue and Influence of this Object into our souls Salvation oh what a stately Tower have we here erected to see Heaven on Faith may stand as it were on this Mount and see it self in glory Oh the flowings the rich emanations of Grace and Glory that come from hence come let us draw the Well is deep all the drops and dewings that fall on Men or Angels are but as chips in comparison of that huge and boundless body of the fulness of Grace that is in Christ one Lilly is nothing to a boundless and broad Field of Lillies Christ is in these respects the Mountain of Roses oh how High how Capacious how Full how Beautiful how Green could we but smell him who feeds among the Lillies till the Day break and the shadows fly away could we but dive into the Golden Veins of these unsearchable riches of Jesus Christ we should say It is good to be here Oh it 's good to gather up the fragments that fall from Christ his Crown shines with Diamonds and Pearls oh why do we toyl our selves in gathering sticks when to morrow we shall be out of this World and go to Christ come where is our mouth of Faith let us lay to it here let us suck and be satisfied with these Breasts of consolation let us milk out and be delighted with the abundance of his Glory 3. Consider of the suitableness of these Objects to our several conditions you may remember the first cry Was it not love enough for Christ to come down and to visit us here but that he must go up and take us with him no no his love was so great and vast that for our sakes he moves up and down this ravished the Spouse Behold he comes leaping upon the Mountains and skipping upon the Hills Cant. 2.8 Cant. 2.8 Gregory that measured his leaps thus gives them be first leaps from his Fathers Mansion to his Mothers Womb from her Womb to the Cratch from his Cratch to his Cross and from his Cross to his Grave from his Grave up again to Heaven great leaps indeed that shewed both his readiness to love and willingness to save infinite love can never be out-tired with greatest actions But another cries how should I believe that Christ is exalted and that by vertue thereof I shall be exalted when I see my self in a forlorn condition forsaken of God Psal 62.9 and abject amongst Men Alas Man at his best is altogether Vanity yea Men of low degree are Vanity and Men of high degree are a Lye to be laid in the Ballance I am altogether lighter than Vanity how then should I believe any such condition is a Worm a fit or a capable Subject to wear a Crown Yes the Lord is great and he can do great things He raiseth up the Poor out of the Dust 1 Sam 2.8 9. and lifteth up the Beggar from the Dunghil to set them among Princes and to make them inherit the Throne of Glory for the Pillars of the Earth are the Lords and he hath set the World upon them he will keep the Feet of his Saints Why there is my sadness cryes another He will keep the Feet of his Saints if I were but a Saint I could believe this Power but alas I am unholy an unsanctified piece of Clay I am a sinner a sinner of the Gentiles chief of sinners I deserve to be thrown down to Hell rather than to be invested with Glory and to sit in Heaven True but yet the Holy Ghost is given to make thee holy of thy self thou art vile and most vile but hath not the Holy Ghost entred in and took possession of thy Spirit hath he not washed thee with water yea throughly washed away thy blood hath he not anointed thee with oyl and covered thee with silk and decked thee with gold and silver and made thee comely through his comeliness which he put upon thee Why this is the office of the holy Ghost and if thou hast but the in-dwelling of the Spirit this is thy state I know there is a part of thee unregenerate and it will be so whiles thou art on earth but withall there is in thee a new nature another nature there is something else within thee which makes thee wrestle against sin and shall in time prevail over all sin and this is the Spirit of Christ sanctifying of thee Being sanctified saith the Apostle by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Other complaints might be thus brought in but if we understand the meaning the design of Christ in his Ascension Session and mission of his Spirit how might a true faith answer all oh believe believe thy part in Christ's Ascension Christ's Session Christ's Mission of
hear of such a Christ and are we not all in a burning love in a seraphical love or at least in a conjugal love O my heart how is it thou art not love sick how is it thou dost not charge the daughters of Jerusalem as the spouse did Cant. 5.8 I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love 2. For his bounty no sooner was he ascended and set down at God's right hand but he gives gifts unto men and he sends down the holy Ghost This was the Gift of gifts I shall only weigh two Circumstances in this Gift either whereof both dignifies and casts a sparkle of bounty from the Giver into the heart of the Receiver to move him to love As One Circumstance is the greatness of the Giver certainly the preheminence or dignity of any principle ennobleth and enhanceth the effect a gift coming from a great Person carries ever a scent with it of a certain greatness and relisheth either of excellency or superiority or nobility or all It is storied of Charles the fifth that in his wars being ever prest with want of money and so unable to remunerate the services of divers Dutch Captains and Nobles whom he had entertained he used after any great exploit performed by them to call together his Nobles and Camp into such a field and there in the presence of them all to take a Gold chain from about his own neck and to put it about the neck of such a Captain or such a Collonel and so to embrace him and to give him thanks for his gallant service why this they esteemed a greater favour being Circumstanced by such a Person in such a way than if in very deed he had given them a sufficient pay or remuneration O they valued that Chain more than many bushels of the like Gold the very Person of the Emperour hanged at the Chain such a precious Jewel as in warlike conceits a million of Gold could not countervail O my soul if an Emperour thus gained the affections of men how shouldst thou but love Christ the great Emperour of Heaven and Earth Numb 11 17. it was he that gave thee his Spirit it was he that took off the Spirit which is upon him so is the expression of God to Moses and put it upon thee and doth not the Person of Christ the Dignity of Christ inhance the value of the gift as all gifts are signs of love so the love of a great Personage and the gifts issuing from such a love ought more to be accounted than any gifts of any meaner person whatsoever 2. Another Circumstance is the greatness of the Gift this argueth greatness of good will and consequently deserveth a correspondence of a semblable affection Now what greater gift had Christ in store than to give his own spirit the spirit proceedeth from him and is the same essence with himself the spirit is the third Person of the true and only God-head proceeding from the Father and the Son and coeternal coequal and consubstantial with the Father and the Son this appears by those divine Attributes and Properties which are attributed and communicated to the holy spirit As 1. Eternity God never was without his spirit Gen. 1.1 2. In the beginning God created heaven and earth and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters 2. Omnipotency because he together with the Father and the Son createth and preserveth all things By his Spirit he hath garnished the heavens Job 26.13 33.4 1 Cor. 12.11 1 Cor. 2.10 the Spirit of God hath made me and all these things worketh that one and the self-same Spirit dividing to every man severally as he will 3. Omnisciency or the knowledge of all things For the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God 4. Immutability or unchangeableness Men and brethren Acts 1.16 Rom. 5.5 this Scripture must needs have been fulfilled which the holy Ghost spake 5. Infinite mercy or love God is love and the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us 6. Holy indignation even against hi●●en sins They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit Isa 63.10 Acts 5.3 4 9. Eph. 4.30 why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye to the holy Ghost thou hast not lyed unto men but unto God a plain Text for the Divinity of the holy Ghost How is it that ye have agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord Grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption I might add Miracles Mat. 12.28 28.19 1 Tim. 4.1 2 Cor. 3.38 and the institution of Sacraments and Prophesies and Gifts and Graces as the effects of his Divinity I cast out devils saith Christ by the Spirit of God and baptize in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost And the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith And we are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. See now how the holy spirit is God coeternal coequal and consubstantial with God the Father and God the Son is not this a great gift yea as great a gift as possibly can be given what can he more than to give himself and to give his spirit O the bonds of love that are upon man towards Christ in this respect Come my soul and take a view of the Glory and Bounty of Jesus Christ if thy heart be not all brass and iron and stone if there be any fleshiness softness or pliableness in it why then how shouldst thou chuse but love if either beauty or bounty if either Majesty or magnificence can draw thy affection Christ will have it for in him is all O let him be thy all surely if thou hast any thing besides himself he is the Donor of all he is the beauty of all the sum of all the perfection of all yea he is the Author Preserver and Finisher of all SECT VII Of Joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars there is not a particular under consideration but 't is the object of a Christians joy As 1. How should it heighten my joys and enlarge my comforts when I do but consider that Christ is ascended into glory by this it is clear and evident that Christ is accepted of the Father for me or otherwise he should never have been received into Heaven if any frown had been in the face of God surely Christ coming so near God he should have had it if any exception had been against his satisfaction any flaw in our pardons surely Christ should have heard of it yea without question he must have been turned out of Heaven until he had made a full payment of our debts
I need not doubt of my acceptance at the Throne of Grace when Jesus Christ is accepted for me and that I stand in such a relation to Jesus Christ Oh what joy is in this 2. How should it heighten my joyes and enlarge my comforts when I do but consider that Christ is set down at God's right hand Why now he hath the keys of Heaven delivered into his hands Mat. 28.18 All power is given unto him in heaven and in earth and now he can do what he will God the Father hath given away as it were all his Prerogatives unto Jesus Christ John 5.22 All judgment is committed to the Son for the Father judgeth no man Now he is in a Capacity of acting out all his love and the Father's desire to me in the most glorious way he is highly advanced and thereby he hath the advantage to advance me and to glorifie me God hath given into his hands all the treasures and riches of Heaven in bidding him sit down at his right hand he told him that he would have no more to do with the world but that Christ should have all and that Christ should bestow all he had amongst his Saints and that this should be the reward of his death and when once his Saints were come about him and sate with him in his glory 1 Cor. 15.24 why then Christ should resign up again his place And deliver up the Kingdom to God even the Father Oh what joy may enter into this poor dark dungeon disconsolate soul of mine whiles I but think over these glorious passages of my Christ in glory 3. How should it heighten my joyes and fill me with joy unspeakable and full of glory when I do consider that Christ hath sent down his holy Spirit into my heart when sorrow had filled the Apostles hearts John 16.7 because he had told them I must go away he comforts them with this If I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you The spirit is the Comforter and where he comes he fills souls with comforts O what comfort is this to know that the spirit of Christ is my Inmate that my soul is the Temple the Receptacle the House and dwelling of the spirit of God that Christ is in me of a truth and that not only by the infusion of his grace but by the in-dwelling of his spirit surely it is some comfort to a sickly man that he hath a Physitian alwayes in the house with him and to a woman that is near her travail that the Midwife is in the house with her but what comfort is it to a poor soul that the spirit of Christ is alwayes in him John 14.16 I will send you another Comforter said Christ that he may abide with you for ever Christ in his bodily presence went away Mat. 28.20 but Christ in his spirit continues still Lo I am with you alwayes even unto the end of the world he is with us and which is more he is in us for our comfort Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory Not Christ in Sermons which we hear nor Christ in Chapters which we read nor Christ in Sacraments which we receive nor Christ in our heads by high notions nor Christ in our mouths by frequent glorious expressions but Christ in our hearts by his spirit is unto us the hope of Glory The grounds of our comforts in this respect is 1. Christ's Presence it is said of Paul that after a sad shipwrack the sight of some Christian brethren so cheated him Act. 28.15 that upon the sight of them he thank●d God and took courage it is said of Caesar that he cheared the drooping Mariners in a storm by minding them of his presence You carry Caesar how much more should the in-being of Christ solace Saints Lo I am with you O my soul was it not a cordial to the Disciples in a storm that Christ was with them whom the winds and waves obeyed chear up now for if the Spirit be in thee Christ is with thee 2. Christ's Complacency if his Spirit dwell in us how should he but be well pleased with us a man cannot properly be said to dwell in a prison in which he taketh no delight Psal 132.14 the Spirits in-dwelling imports a delight of Christ in such a soul Here will I dwell for I have desired it or delighted in it saith God of Zion though many times drooping Christians viewing their own beggarliness and vileness judge themselves worthy to be detested and deserted and would relinquish themselves if they possibly could yet Christ looketh to the poor and contrite soul as a meet habitation for himself to dwell in Isa 57.15 I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble Spirit 3. Christ's Communications union is the ground of our communion with Christ and the nearer our union the greater is our communion if Christ were only in a believer by the habit of grace the union would not be so great but if Christ be in us by his spirit the union is nearer and therefore the communion will be greater O my soul remember this in all thy straits there can be no creature-want or danger whatsoever wherein the improvement of this in-dwelling of the Spirit may not refresh thee art thou sick the Physitian both of soul and body is within thee art thou sad the Comforter himself that supplies the stead and room of Christ inhabits in thee art thou in exile in banishment imprisonment at greatest distance from thy dearest Friends see Paul's refreshment when they were ready to pull him in pieces and threw him into the Castle even the night following the Lord stood by him and said be of good chear Paul Acts 23.11 Christ will stand by thee nay Christ by his Spirit dwelleth in thee and will speak to thee comfortable words in thy greatest pressures 4. Christ's Witnessings if his Spirit dwell in us we may then be assured of future glory Christ in you the Hope of Glory 'T is a sweet note of a Divine upon it Col. 1 27. Mr. Ash in his Sermon of Christ the riches of the Gospel Acts 8.13 Mat. 27.3 Heb. 12.17 Heb. 6.5 6. Heb. 10.29 The existency of Christ's Spirit in Believers giveth existence to their hopes of Glory The Spirit in us is God's earnest of Glory the Spirit in us doth prepare us for participation in that Glory I look upon this in-dwelling of the Spirit as that which no Hypocrite in the World can lay any claim unto as for gifts or graces an Hypocrite may attain them or somthing like them it is said of Simon Magus that he believed it is said of Judas that he repented and of Esau that he sought his birth-right with tears it is said of some that they partook of the Heavenly Gift and of the Powers of the
World to come and yet fell away and it is said of such others that they trampled upon the Blood of Christ wherewith they were sanctified Thus we find in Scripture-phrase that in an Hypocrite or wicked Man there may be a kind of Faith and repentance a taste of Heaven and of Sanctificatian but where do we find in all the Bible that Christ or the Spirit of Christ is said to dwell in an Hypocrite or wicked Man this only is the great priviledge of a true believer Christ in him the Hope of Glory O the comfort of this in-dwelling of Christ Luke 19.6 If Zacheus hearing that Christ would abide in his House received him joyfully how much greater cause of joy have they who have already lodged him in their hearts John 15.11 These things have I spoken to you said Christ that my joy might remain in you and that your joy might be full And now O my soul spread thy self on this great good Christ's Ascension Christ's Session and Christs Mission of his Holy Spirit What is joy but an effusion of the appetite whereby the Soul spreads it self on what is good to possess it more perfectly the object is sweet and large and therefore the soul had need to spread it self that it may be more united to the Object and touch the good in more of its parts yea if it were possible in every part There is not any particular here before thee but 't is fewel for joy O what joy was in Heaven when Christ Ascended and when Christ sate down at God's right hand and when Christ sent down the Holy Spirit how stood the Angels wondring and admiring at these several passages how did they stoop and look with the bowing of the Head and bending of the Neck as the Word implies 1 Pet. 1.12 and is not thy interest in these transactions more than Angels O rejoyce and again rejoyce suppose thy self in Heaven and that thou hadst a vision of Christ ascended say is he not a pleasant Object In his face there is fulness of joy Psal 16.11 Suppose thy self to have been in Heaven when he first entred into it and when he first sate down at God's right hand and sent down the Comforter to his Saints was not Heaven full of joy methinks the very thought of Christ's bright Face and Christ's white Throne and Christ's Harpers and Heavenly Troops surrounding the Throne and Christ's welcome to his Father both for himself and all his Saints and Christ's carrying thy name upon his Breast before his Father should fill thy soul as full of joy as possibly it can hold O the first-fruits of Emanuel's land that lyes beyond time and death O the joyes that were in Heaven at Christ's first entrance into Heaven O my soul why dost thou not check thy self and lay aside thy sad complaints and forget this Earth and Earthly troubles why dost thou not look up to Jesus Christ and rejoyce in him who hath done all this for thy Salvation either the Spirit of God is not thy Comforter or thou canst not but receive comfort in these passages SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that Respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus I mean 1. Let us pray that we may have our part in these transactions or let us pray for more and more assurance thereof unto our souls for though we do believe yet we may not be without our doubts and in case of doubts what better means than Prayer I believe Lord help my unbelief Lord strengthen my Faith till I come to that plerophory or full assurance of faith that I may know my interest in the Ascension of Christ and Session of Christ and in the Mission of Christ's holy Spirit and if once we are but assured then 2. Praise God for these great transactions of his Son are they not mercies like mountains lying one upon another and reaching up to the very Heavens did not love break out at first in a direct line and as it went along hath it not wound up it self in such a variety of unthought of discoveries as that it amazeth Men and Angels what that Jesus Christ should not only act for us here on earth but also ascend for us into Heaven and sit down there at God's right hand above the Heavens what that all this should be for us and our salvation and to that purpose that he should send down his Spirit into our hearts to fit us and prepare us for his glory Now bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy Name bless the Lord O my soul and forget not all his benefits Psal 103.1 2. I will extol thee my God O King and I will bless thy Name for ever and ever every day will I bless thee and I will praise thy Name for ever and ever One generation shall praise thy works to another Psal 145.1 2 4 7 10 11 12. and shall declare thy mighty acts I will speak of the glorious honour of thy Majesty and of thy wondrous works I will utter the memory of thy great goodness and will sing of thy righteousness Thy Saints shall bless thee they shall speak of the glory of thy Kingdom and talk of thy power and make known unto the sons of men thy mighty acts and the glorious Majesty of thy Kingdom Thy glory is above the earth and heaven Psal 148.13 14. thou also exaltest the horn of thy people the praise of all thy Saints and people near unto thy self O that my soul were but in David's temper thus to breath out the praises of Jesus and to bless his Name SECT IX Of conforming unto Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus in the aforesaid respects A serious beholding of Jesus in his Ascension Session and Mission of his Spirit is enough to change us into the same Image from glory to glory It was the sweet saying of an experienced Saint View a glorified Christ see him as in that relation and condition and you will soon have the sparkles of the same glory on your hearts Christ is now exalted he is now in glory at the right hand of God Col. 3.1 2. O let all our actings be glorious let all our walkings joys breathings be as in glory If ye be risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth I shall not in this transaction lay out many particular conformities to Christ's actings but gather all into one contained in this Text which is heavenly conversation seek things above set your affections above Christ is gone up and Christ is set down at God's right hand and herein if you will conform let your hearts be in Heaven let your affections be in Heaven let your conversations be in Heaven it is the Apostles own practise wherein stood his conformity to Jesus Christ for our
prayer the Priest offered incense within upon the Altar Luke 1.9 10. To signifie that Believers prayers have always need to be helped and sanctified by Christ's intercession and what though the incense was given him we know that Christ himself was given of God God so loved the world John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Son and yet this hinders not but that Jesus Christ gave himself and that he gave himself for an incense too for so the Apostle Ephes 5.2 He hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice unto God for an incense or for a sweet smelling savour in this respect the incense might be given him and yet the incense was his own they were only Christ's merits righteousness satisfaction they are the sweet odour by vertue whereof God accepts of his Saints persons and prayers and it is onely Christ that presents before God that which he is and hath he alone being both offering and Priest we can think of no other Priest in Gospel-times but only Jesus Heb. 6.20 The fore-runner even Jesus Christ made an high-priest for ever after the order of Melchizedech It is Jesus and only Jesus that presents our prayers and sanctifies our prayers and mingles our prayers with his merits and so makes them penetrate sweetly before his God 6. Christ's intercession consists in the presenting of our plea or answer in Heaven to all those accusations that are brought in against our selves And this I take it to be the meaning of the challenge Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect Rom. 8.33 34. it is God that justifies Who is he that condemneth it it is Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right of God who also maketh intercession for us Christ intercedes and who shall condemn Christ takes off all accusations and who shall charge if the Law or Sin or Satan shall dare to accuse our Jesus is ready at God's right hand to answer all There is a vision in Zachariah representing this Zach. 3.1 And the Angel shewed me Joshua the high-priest standing before the Angel of the Lord and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him It was the custom of the accuser to stand at the right hand of the accused Set thou a wicked man over him Psalm 109.6 and let Satan stand at his right hand now here 's Satan standing at Joshua's right hand to accuse him but whereof doth he accuse him that appears in the words following Ver. 3. Joshua was cloathed with filthy garments an ordinary sign of sin as a white garment is a sign of Christ's righteousness so is a filthy garment in Scripture a sign of vileness alas Joshua was defiled with the pollution which he had gotten by the contagion of Babylon and now at his return Satan lays it to his charge but Jesus Christ our great High-Priest steps in and takes off the accusation And the Lord said unto Satan Ver. 2. the Lord rebuke thee O Satan even the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee twice he repeats it to shew the fulness of Christ's intercession q. d. the Lord my God my everlasting Father rebuke and confound thee Satan in this thy malicious opposition against my Joshua and then he goes on in his apology for Joshua Ver. 2. Is not this a brand pluckt out of the fire q. d. is not this one whom of my grace I have reserved amongst my people whom I caused to pass through the fire of mine indignation and shall not my decree of grace stand firm and inviolable towards such or thus Is not this a brand pluckt newly out of the fire of affliction was he not in the captivity of Babylon and is it likely he should be there but he would be defiled with the touch of pitch take a brand and pull it out of the fire and there will be some dust and ashes and filth about it Why Lord says Christ this Joshua is but newly pull'd out of the burning and therefore he must needs have ashes and dust and filth about him Ver. 4. But come saith Christ to his holy Angels take away the filthy garment from him Ver. 4. and come says Christ to his servant Joshua Behold I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee and I will cloath thee with change of rayment And thus Christ took off the accusation that was brought against Joshua by Satan for his filthy garments In like manner doth our blessed Intercessor at this instant if a poor Saint falls into any sin and defiles his garments Satan comes in and takes the right hand of him and accuses him before the Lord but Christ our great High-Priest being at the right hand of his Father he takes up the cause puts in a plea and answers all the accusations of the enemy True Lord this poor soul hath filthy garments but is he not a fire-brand newly pluckt out of the fire was he not in his natural and sinful condition the other day is he not yet partly regenerate and partly unregenerate needs therefore must there be some ashes and dust and filth upon him O my Father my will is That thou consider him in that respect thou knowest his frame and thou remembrest that he is but dust though he have filthy garments now upon him yet I will give him change of rayments I will cloath him with the robe of my righteousness and then thou shalt see no iniquity in Jacob no transgression in Israel Why thus the Lord Christ steps in and answers to all the accusations that are brought in against us by the Law or Sin or Satan to God his Father 1 John 2.1 and in this respect he is truly called our Advocate If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous We have an Advocate that pleads for us that answers for us that in a way of equity grounding all upon his own merits calls for the pardon of our sins and for the salvation of our souls SECT IX How powerful and prevailing Christ's Intercessions are with God his Father 9. HOW powerful and prevailing are Christ's Intercessions with God his Father I answer very much and this will appear if we consider Heb. 8.1 1. That Christ is our great High-Priest to God We have such an high-Priest who is set down on the right hand of the Majesty on high Now 't was the way of God to lend his ear in special manner to the High-Priests and therefore the people usually run to them 1 Sam. 9 9. when they would enquire of God Before time in Israel when a man went to enquire of God thus he spake Come and let us go to the Seer for he that is now called a Prophet or High-Priest was before time called a Seer People were wont to repair to the Priests and the Priests were wont to go to God and good reason for the Priests
thine eternal election I have not lost a Saint in their several ages I produced them and gave them a being and in their times I remembred them and presented their conditions and necessities before thee and now I have not a Saint more in the Book of life there is not another name written to be born on earth and to what purpose should I now continue the world the Saints are they for whom I made the world the Saints are they that hold forth the light of my glory in the world the Saints are they for whom my eternal counsels before the world did work the Saints are they for whom I was content to shed my precious blood when I was in that world below and now their number is compleated I am resolved to unpin the fabrick of the world and take it down it stands but for their sakes and therefore now let the seventh Angel blow his trumpet that the mystery of God may be finished I swear by him that lives for ever Rev. 10.7 ver 6. that time shall be no longer Rev. 11.15 2. No sooner this said but the seventh Angel sounds This seventh Angel saith Pareus is the Arch-angel that proclaims Christ's coming with a great and mighty shout 1 Thes 4.16 For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Arch-angel and with the trump of God The Lord shall descend with a shout but before he descend and I believe upon the very discovery of his coming down there will be a shout in Heaven for so it follows And the seventh Angel sounded and there were great voices in Heaven Pareus in loc if we may believe Commentaries these are the voices of blessed souls and blessed souls and blessed Angels in heaven no sooner Christ bids the Angel sound q. d. summon those blessed souls that were slain for the Word of God Rev. 6.10 Rev. 22.20 and therefore cried How long Lord holy and true summon those blessed souls that have cryed so long Come Lord Jesus come quickly summon all souls and summon all Angels and bid them wait on me now I resolve to go down and to judge the world no sooner I say Christ bids the Angel sound but presently at the joy of this command all the voices in Heaven give up a shout why this is the long-look'd for day the day of perfecting the number of the Saints the day of joyning the souls and bodies of the Saints together the day of convening all the families both of Saints and Angels under one roof the day of bringing up the Bride unto the Lamb and of compleating the Marriage in its highest solemnity and therefore no wonder if at this news great voices and cryes such as are used by Mariners or gatherers of the vintage were made in Heaven O what an addition of joy is this to Heavens joy it self the spirits of the just and the blessed Angels that have lived together in heavens bliss had never such an adventitious joy as this before now they shout and sing a new and blessed Song Rev. 11.15 The kingdoms of this world are become the Kingdoms of our Lord and of his Christ and he shall reign for ever and ever We may call this Heavens triumph for the finishing of God's mystery Now is it that Christ will vindicate his Kingdom and overthrow the power of his enemies they had long set themselves against the Lord and against his anointed the Kings of the earth and the Rulers confederated they ruled all and as much as in them lay excluded Christ but now the Kingdoms of the world will return to Christ and he alone shall rule and thence the winged Choristers of Heaven chant forth this Anthem The Kingdoms of the world are become the Kingdoms of Christ Rev. 11.16 17 18. 3. After this shout The four and twenty Elders which sit before God on their seats fall upon their faces and worship God saying we give thee thanks O Lord God Almighty w●●●h art and wast and are to come because thou hast taken to thee thy great power and h● 〈◊〉 ●●ned and the nations were angry c. By these four and twenty Elders we un●● 〈◊〉 ●ll Gods Saints of the Old and New Testament comprehended under the twe●●● 〈◊〉 ●riarchs and twelve Apostles others would have them to be only those Saints 〈◊〉 Old Testament and therefore called Elders whosoever they are we find they are so glad at this news that Christ will now judge the world that presently they rise off their seats and fall on their faces and first they praise and then they pray 1. They praise God for taking to himself his own power Christ connived as it were till now at the power of his enemies Antichrist and not Christ seemed to rule and to sit in the Temple of God but now Christ is resolved to rule himself and to make all his enemies his footstool and therfore now We give thee thinks O Lord God Almighty Rev. 11.18 2. They pray Christ to go on to judgment 1. Because the nations were angry q. d. they have been angry long enough they have set themselves against Christ and against his Church and therefore now it is time to bridle their wrath and to break them with a rod of Iron O let thy wrath come 2. Because the time of judgment is now accomplished which God had decreed in his eternal counsel and which the Father had put in his own power This time was not for mortals to know Mortalibus ignotum caelestibus vero nunc revelatum a Christo Paraeus in loc Psalm 110.1 but now 't was revealed to these celestial spirits by Christ and therefore they beg Go on Lord Jesus reward now thy Servants Prophets Saints and destroy them which destroyed the earth 4. God the Father is well pleased with Christ's purpose of judging the world The Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand until I make thine enemies thy footstool I know these words were spoke to Christ at his ascension into Heaven yet that hinders not but that now God speaks them again to Christ Heb. 2.8 for as yet saith the Apostle we see not all things put under him and God's purpose was that Christ should rule until he had put all things in subjection under his feet Nay why not these words spoken now rather than before Christ indeed reigned as King ever since his Ascension but now more especially he is to manifest his Kingdom for now is he to judge among the heathen Psal 110.6 now is he to wound the heads of many countries now is he to overthrow Pope Turk and all his enemies and he alone with the Father and the Spirit is to reign in his Elect Saints and Angels Thus all agree that Christ in the latter dayes shall be fully honoured in his Kingly power hitherto Christ hath been much honoured in his Prophetical and Priestly office but not so much
and Powers that captive wicked men at their pleasure even they must be judged by those whom they formerly soyled so then there is no question but they shall judge Only how the Saints shall judge together with Christ is a very deep question For my part I am apt to think that it shall not be directly known ere it be seen or done I shall only relate what others say to this point and so leave you to your liberty of judging what is right 1. Some say that the Saints shall judge the World by presenting their persons and actions by comparing their good examples with the evil examples of all the Reprobates Jude 15. and so they shall convince and condemn the World Behold the Lord cometh with Ten thousand of his Saints to execute judgment upon all and to convince all that are ungodly among them This I conceive to be a truth yet surely this is not all truth 2. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World by way of indicting impleading accusing witnessing c. And I conceive it may be thus too the Saints of the Law more especially accusing the breakers of the Law by the Law Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father John 5.45 there is one that accuseth you to the Father there is one that accuseth you even Moses in whom ye trust And the Saints of the Gospel more especially judging the prophaners of the Gospel Rom. 2.16 by the Gospel in that day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel This likewise is truth but I believe as yet we have not the whole truth Psal 58.10 3. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World after the manner of exaltation glorying and rejoycing to see the vengeance The Righteous shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance he shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked But this their exulting being a constant and perpetual act not for a time but for eternity methinks this present act should be yet somewhat more Rev. 16.17 Rev. 19.1 2. 4. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World by way of assession assent vote suffrage comprobation and the like subordinate and conformable acts And I heard another out of the Altar say even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy judgments And after these things I heard a great voice of much people in heaven saying Allelujah salvation and glory and honour and power unto the Lord our God for true and righteous are his judgments this certainly is truth and commonly so received yet neither is this all truth 5. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World i.e. Christ in the Saints and the Saints in Christ He in them by those Infallible principles of Divine Justice which are imprest in them and they in him by those inseparable bounds of union whereby they wholly relate to him or he and they together as head and members the act of the head imputed to the members and the act of the members acknowledged by the head his Judiciary Act especially as from his Mediatorship and Manhood having a peculiar influence upon them and their Judiciary act in a perfect conformity though not any absolute proportion having a peculiar reference to him And methinks those Texts of Mat. 19.28 Jude 14.15 speak there of Christs and of the Saints judgment as of one joynt act Oh what terror will be to all wicked men when not only Christ but all the Saints shall say of them away with them away with them let them be damned You that are Fathers it may be that your Children will thus sentance you I remember when the Jews told Christ that he cast out Devils through Belzebub the Prince of Devils Mat. 12.7 he answered If I through Belzebub cast out Devils by whom do your Children cast them out therefore they shall be your judges They liked well enough of the Miracles of their Children who were the Disciples of Christ but they could not endure them in Christ and therefore he tells them that their Children whom God hath converted and to whom he had given power to do the same works as he did even they should be their judges to Condemn them And so it may be with you if any of your Children be converted to the Lord and you remain still in a natural estate your very Children shall be your judges and condemn you to Hell But of that anon 6. In this doom which Christ and his Saints shall pass on Reprobates our Saviour tells us of some reasonings betwixt him and them I was an hungred saith Christ and ye gave me no meat I was thirsty and ye gave me no drink c. Mat. 25.42.44.45 Then shall they answer Lord when saw we thee hungry or a thirst or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison and did not minister unto thee and then shall he answer them verily I say unto you inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me As if Christ should have said time was that I was under reproach misery calamity necessity I lay at your doors like Lazarus full of sores and as I thought nothing too much for you so I expected also something from you but oh cruelty to see thy Christ an hungred and not to feed him to see thy Christ a thirst and not to cool or quench his thirst to see thy Christ a stranger and not to give him a nights lodging to see thy Christ naked and not to cover him with a garment who would gladly have covered thee with the robe of righteousness the garment of Salvation O monstrous inhumane heart O prodigious wretch who among the Heathens ever dealt thus with their Idols have any of the Nations starved their Gods turned them out of doors and must I only be slighted away Reprobates you had no mercy on me and now I laugh at your calamity surely he shall have judgment without mercy that hath shewed no mercy They stand wondering at this and cannot remember that ever they saw Christ in such a condition Why Lord say they when saw we thee an hungred or thirsty or naked art thou not he that rose again from the dead and ascended on high and ever since hast been exalted above the highest Cherubims a name being given thee above every name at which name to this day but especially now on this day every knee doth bow of things in heaven and things in earth Phil. 2.9 10. and things under the earth how then could we see thee in such a condition is not this thy second coming in glory and were we alive at thy first coming in humility how can this be oh how shouldst thou charge us with unkindness to thy self surely if we had known thee in need we would have given thee of thy own thou shouldst never have wanted what things we enjoyed but thou shouldst
quo tellus ardeat A time shall come when Sea and earth and all the frame of this great World shall be consumed in flame 3. The Sybills grant this to which the Roman missal seems to allude joyning them with the Prophet David though I know not by what warrant Dies ira dies illa solvet saeculum in favilla teste David cum Sybilla A day of Wrath a day of fire So David with the Sybills doth conspire But to wave all these one Text of Scripture is to me more than all these 2 Pet. 3.10 The Heavens shall pass away with a great noise 2 Pet. 3.10 and the elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up Hence all our Divines agree that a fire shall seaze on the Universe only some difference is amongst Divines whether the World shall be wholly annihilated or renewed by fire Jerome and Augustin and many after them say the end of this fire is for purifying and refining of the Heaven and Earth for all corruptible qualities shall be burnt out of them but they in their substance shall remain still if we ask them to what end shall this neather world be renewed some say for an habitacle of the restored Beasts others for a fitter accommodation of men † Mundus in melius immutatus aperte accommodabitur hominibus in melius immutatis August de civit Dei l. 20. c. 16. and the glorified Saints others for a perpetual Monument of God's Power and Glory Polanus and some of our Moderns are of Opinion that * Polan Syntag l. 6. c. 70. These Heavens and this Earth when purified with those fires and super-invested with new endowments they shall be the everlasting habitations of the blessed Saints But on the contrary others are of the other opinion that all the World with all the parts and works except Men Angles and Devils Heaven and Hell the two mansions for the saved and damned shall be totally and finally dissolved and annihilated And of this opinion were Hilary Clement and all the ancients before Jerome and of our Moderns not a few For my part I rather incline this way because of the many Scriptures that are so express I shall only mention these Job 14.12 Psal 102.25 26. Isa 34.4 Man lyeth down and riseth not till the heavens be no more Of old thou hast laid the foundations of the Earth and the Heavens are the works of thy hands they shall perish but thou shalt endure All the hosts of heaven shall be dissolved and the heaven shall be rolled together as a scroll and all the host shall fall down as the leaf falleth from the Vine Rev. 6.14 and as a falling fig from the fig-tree To which prophesie John seems to allude And the heavens departed as a scrowl when it is rolled together and every Mountain and Island were moved out of their places Again Mat. 24.36 2 Pet. 3.10 heaven and earth shall pass away saith Christ but my Word shall not pass away The day of the Lord will come as a Thief in the night in the which the Heavens shall pass away with a great noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works that are therein 1 John 2.17 shall be burnt up And the world passeth away and the lusts thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever and I saw a great white Throne Rev. 20.11 and him that sate on it from whose face the earth and heaven fled away and they was found no place for them Now I would demand whether being no more as Job and perishing as David and rolling together and falling down like a withered leaf as Isay and passing away as our Saviour and Peter and flying away as John do not include to utter abolition If to these Scriptures I should add one reason I would argue from the end of the Worlds Creation was it not partly for the glory of God and partly for the use of man now for the glory of God the manifestation of it is occasioned by the manifestation of the world unto man if man therefore should be removed out of the world and no creature in it be capable of such a manifestation what would become of his glory And for the use of man that is either to supply his necessity in matter of dyet physick building apparel or for his instruction direction recreation comfort delight now when he shall attain that blessed estate of enjoying God and seeing God face to face these ends or the like must needs be frustrate This argument is weighty and we need no more Only we shall hear an Antagonist's objections and give them their answers and so conclude The Texts more especially objected against this opinion are two the first is that in Rom. 8.21 Rom. 8.21 The creature it self shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God here say the● is an earnest expectation attributed to brute Creatures that they shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Children of God But I answer that no immortal being of the brute creatures is here promised but only a simple deliverance and dismission from the servitude they were in to ungrateful men The Birds Beasts and Fishes do now suffer for our dyet Horses Mules and beasts of that nature do now groan under the burthens of our pleasures or necessities their annihilation therefore to them must needs be a kind of deliverance and at last they shall be delivered at the time of the glorious liberty of the Sons of God the Text will bear it thus † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 10.2 as sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 4.11 1 Cor. 2.15 So Chrysostome expounds it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Creature shall be delivered by the glorious liberty of the Sons of God i.e. When such a deliverance comes to men these shall be freed from their servitude by being not at all having done all the business for which they were ordained or created The second Text is that in 2 Pet. 3.13 2 Pet 3.13 We look for new heavens and a new earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness These words say some imply a purging rather than abolishing a taking off the corrupt qualities only not the substance But I am of another mind and if I must give my sense of the place I say 1. Negatively that by new heavens and new earth is not meant renewed heavens and earth 2 Pet. 3.7 10 is it not punctually in the seventh verse that the heavens and the earth which are now are reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and doth he not descend unto particulars in the tenth verse that the heavens which are
a gracious power to a gracious end in a gracious manner are sins and not such works as shall have the rewards of Heaven Some may object this is an hard saying who then shall be saved I answer 1. By concession very few What is the whole company of Christians besides a very few said Salvian but a sink of vices are they only good works which are thus and thus qualified it were enough to make us all fear all the works that ever we have done But secondly here 's all our hope that in a Gospel-way Christ looks at our good works in the truth of them and not in the perfection of them Rom. 7.18 19 no man goes beyond Paul who when he would do good found evil present with him Alas there 's a perpetual opposition and conflict betwixt the flesh and the spirit so that the most spiritual man cannot do the good things he would do and yet we must not conclude that nothing is good in us because not perfectly good Sincerity and truth in the inward parts may in this case hold up our hearts from sinking as he in the Gospel cryed I believe Lord help my unbelief So if we can but say I I do good works Lord help me in the concurrence of all needful circumstances here will be our evidence that our hopes are sound and that Christ will sentence us to eternal life Come ye Blessed c. and why so For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat c. 5. If we believe in Christ then shall we live with Christ if we come to him and receive him by Faith then will he come again and receive us to himself that where he is there we may be also Good works are good evidences but of all works those of the Gospel are clearest evidences and have clearest promises come then let us try our obedience to the Commandments of Faith as well as Life let us try our submission to the Lord by believing as well as doing Surely the greatest work of God that ever any creature did it is this Gospel-work when it apprehends its own unworthyness and ventures it self and its estate upon the righteousness of Jesus Christ if we were able to perform a full exact and accurate obedience to every particular of the moral Law it were not so great a work nor so acceptable to God nor should be so gloriously rewarded in heaven as this one work of believing in his Son Jesus Christ This is the work to which in express terms salvation John 3.36 Heaven and glory is promised He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and he that heareth my word● and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but he hath passed from death to life And this is the will of him that sent me John 5.24 that every one that seeth the Son and believeth on him may have everlasting life And these things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is Christ the Son of God John 6.40 John 20.31 Acts. 16.31 and that believing ye might have life through his name Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved And if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead Rom. 10.9 Heb. 10.39 thou shalt be saved And we are not of them who draw back unto perdition but of them that believe unto the saving of the soul And these things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God 1 John 5.13 that ye may know that ye have everlasting life Why this above all is the Gospel work to which are annexed those gracious promises of eternal life So that if we believe in Christ how may we be assured that we shall live with Christ O my soul gather up all these characters and try by them Every one can say that they hope well they hope to be saved they hope to meet Christ with comfort though they have no ground for it but their own vain conceits but hope on good ground is that hope that maketh not ashamed say then art thou born again Rom. 5.5 dost thou look and long for the coming of Christ in the clouds dost thou love his appearing art thou rich in good works ready to distribute willing to communicate dost thou obey the commandments of faith as well as life sure these are firm and sound and comfortable grounds of an assured hope Content not thy self with an hope of possibility or probability but reach out to that plerophory or full assurance of hope Heb. 6.11 the hope of possibility is but a weak hope the hope of probability is but a fluctuating hope but the hope of certainty is a setled hope such an hope sweetens all the thoughts of God and Christ of death and judgment of Heaven yea and of Hell too whiles we hope that we are saved from it and are not the Scriptures written to this very purpose That we might have this hope are we not justified by his grace Rom. 15.4 Tit. 3.7 Psal 119.166 psalm 24.11 that we might be heirs in hope heirs according to the hope of eternal life and was not this David's confidence Lord I have hoped for thy salvation why then art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my countenance and my God If I may here enter into a Dialogue with my own poor trembling wavering soul Person why art thou hopeless O my soul wouldst thou not hope if an honest man had made thee a promise of any thing within his power and wilt thou not hope when thou hast the promise the oath and the covenant of God in Christ Soul Yes methinks I feel some little hope but alas it is but a little a very little Person Ay but go on my soul true hope is called a lively hope and a lively hope is an efficacious hope no sooner faith commends the promise unto hope but hope takes it and hugs it and reckons it as its Treasure and feeds on it as Manna which God hath given to refresh the weary soul in the desart of sin go on then till thou comest up to the highest pitch even to that triumphant joyfull expectation and waiting for of Christ in glory Soul Why methinks I would hope I would ascend the highest step of hope but alas I cannot Oh I am exposed to many controversies I am prone to many unquiet agitations though I have a present promise yet I extend my cares and fears even to eternity Alas I cannot comprehend and therefore I am hardly satisfied my sinfull reason sees not its own way and end and because it must take all on trust and credit therefore it falls to wrangling nay Sathan himself so snarles the question and and I am so
apt to listen to his doubts that in the conclusion I know not how to extricate my self Person Sayst thou so surely in this case there 's no cure no remedy but onely the testimony of God's Spirit but saith not the Apostle Rom. 8.16 That the spirit of it self bears witness with our spirit that we are the children of God if a Man or Angel or Archangel should promise Heaven peradventure thou mightest doubt but if the Supream Essence of the Spirit of God bear witness within what room for doubting why this voice of the spirit is the very voice of God hark then enquire O my soul if thou hast but this testimony of the spirit thou art sure enough Soul Oh that it were thus with me oh that the spirit would even now give me to drink of the wells of salvation oh that the spirit would testifie it home oh that he would shine upon and enlighten all those graces which he hath planted in me fain would I come to the highest pitch of hope oh that I could look upon the things hoped for as certainly future Person Thou sayst well O my soul and if these wishes be real then pour out thy self unto God in prayer this was the Apostles method Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing Rom. 15.13 that ye may abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost let this be thy practise pray as he prayed pray thou for thy self as he prayed for others if an earthly Father will hearken to his child Luk. 11.13 how much more will God the Father give the spirit to them that ask the spirit of him Soul Why if this be it to thee Lord do I come O give me the Spirit the witness of the Spirit the first-fruits of the spirit the sealing of the spirit the earnest of the spirit O give me the spirit and let the spirit give me this hope O the hope of Israel and Saviour thereof in the time of trouble why shouldst thou be as a stranger in my soul and as a way-faring man that turneth aside to tarry for a night Come O come and dwell in my soul Come and blow on my garden that the spices thereof may flow out come and fill me with a livelv hope yea Lord excite and quicken and stir up my soul to act this hope yea so illighten or shine upon my hope that I may know that I hope and know that I joyfully expect and wait for the coming of Christ O Let me hear thy voice Say unto my soul I am and will be thy salvation Person Well now thou hast prayed Psal 35.3 O my soul Come tell me dost thou feel nothing stir is there nothing at all in thee that assures thee of this assurance of hope is there no life in thy affections no spark that takes hold on thy heart to set it on flame no comfort of the spirit no joy in the holy Ghost Soul Yes methinks I feel it now begin to work the Spirit that hath breathed this prayer into me comes in as Comforter O now that I realize Christ's coming and my resurrection Psal 16.9 I cannot but conclude with David Therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth and my flesh also shall rest in hope Oh what an earnest is this what a piece hath the spirit put into my hand of the great sum promised not onely that he in great mercy promised me Heaven but because he doth not put me into a present possession he now gives me an earnest of my future inheritance Why surely all is sure unless the earnest deceive me and what shall I dispute the truth of the earnest oh God forbid the stamp is too well known to be mistrusted this seal cannot be counterfeit because it is agreeable with the Word I find in my self an hope a true sincere hope though very weak I find upon trial that I am regenerate that I look and long for the second coming of Jesus that I love his appearance even before hand that my works though imperfect are sincere and true that I believe on the Name of the Son of God and flesh and blood could never work these duties or these graces in me it is only that good spirit of my God which hath thus sealed me up to the day of redemption Away away despair trouble me no longer with a musing thoughts I will henceforth if the Lord enable walk confidently and chearfully in the strength of this assurance and joyfully expect the full accomplishment of my happy contract from the hands of Christ The Lord is my portion therefore will I hope in him Lam. 3.24 25 26. the Lord is good to them that wait for him to the soul that seeketh him it is good that I both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord It is good that I hope to the end 1 Pet. 1.13 for the grace that is to be brought unto me at the revelation of Jesus Christ SECT V. Of believing in Jesus in that respect 5. LET us believe in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation in his second coming Now this believing in Christ is more than hoping in Christ Faith eyes things as present but hope eyes things as future and hence the Apostle describes faith to the substance of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 it is the substance foundation or prop which upholds the building or it is the substance essence existence of things hoped for and consequently absent and a far off to be by a firm apprehension of the believer as already present and real And this is as necessary as the former oh if we could but see things now as they shall appear at that last general day of Judgment how mightily would they work upon our souls I verily think the want of this work of faith is the cause almost of all the evil in the world and the acting of Faith on this subject would produce fruits even to admiration If we could but see that glory of God in Christ and those glorious treasures of mercies that shall then be communicated if we could but see those dreadful evils that are now threatned and shall then be fulfilled would not this draw the hardest heart under Heaven come let us act faith this day as if this day were the last day a thousand years are but as one day to faith it takes hold upon eternal life whensoever it acts it takes present possession of the glorious things of the Kingdom of God even now O then let us believe in Jesus in reference to his second coming to judgment But how should we believe what directions to act our saith on Jesus in this respect I answer 1. Faith must directly go to Christ 2. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh 3. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh made under the Law 4. Faith must go to Christ made under the
for granted that this and no other no better is my case and what say you then if it be so heark then to the voice of our ministry We poor Ministers that love your souls say what you will of us would fain have all this enmity against God and against Christ done away and to this purpose we not onely appear many and many a time upon our knees to God for you but mangre all your opposition against us we could be content to come upon our knees from God to you to beseech you not to provoke your Judge against your souls what is Christ and you at odds is the difference wide betwixt your judge and you I do now in my Masters Name in the Name of God and in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ beseech you to believe I beseech you in Christs Name in Christ's stead be ye reconciled unto God Is not this the Apostles word Now then we are Embassadours for Christ 2 Cor. 5.20 as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christ's stead Christ's Ministers are not onely God's Legates but Christ's Surrogates to make this plain to you when a Prince sends a messenger to another Prince that messenger is onely an Embassador the Prince being not bound to carry the message himself in Person but now Jesus Christ he is the Father's Embassador and Christ is thereby bound to bring the message of peace himself but being necessarily imployed elsewhere in the same design of grace he constitutes us his officers so that we do not come only in the Name of God but in the place of Christ to do that work which is primarily his As the Father hath sent me John 20.21 Gal. 4.14 even so send I you and this was the commendation of the Galathians that they received the Apostle Paul even as Jesus Christ Now weigh our desire we beseech you to believe we beseech you to sign the articles of agreement betwixt Christ and you what shall some base inconsiderable lust stand in competition with Jesus Christ will you not make your peace with your judge whilest you are in a way and before he sit in the Throne behold we give you warning the Judge is at the door now believe and be saved Oh how fain would we tempt you as it were with glory we tender Christ and we offer peace we come in the judges name to beseech you to make ready for him and for Heaven we bring salvation to your very doors to your very ears and there we are sounding knocking Will ye go to Heaven sinners will ye go to Heaven Oh believe in him that will judge you and he will save you 3. Christ by his Spirit moves excites and provokes you to believe Sometimes in reading and sometimes in hearing and sometimes in meditating you may feel him stir have you felt no gale of the spirit all this while John 16.8 It is the spirit that convinceth the world of sin especially of that great sin of unbelief and then of righteousness which Christ procureth by going to his Father observe here it is the work of the spirit thus to convince so that all moral philosophy and the wisest directions of the most Civil men will leave you in a wilderness yea ten thousands of Sermons may be preached to you to believe and yet you never shall till you are over-powred by Gods Spirit it is the Spirit that enlightens and directs you as occasion is saying this is the way walk in it Isa 30.21 It is the spirit that rouzeth and awakeneth you by effectual motions Arise my love Cant. 2.10 my fair one and come away He stands at the door and knocks he stretches out his hand with Heaven in it and he doth so all the day long Rom. 10.21 all the day long have I stretched out my hand and that you may find his yoke easie and his burthen light it is the Spirit that draws the yoke with you and by secret animations and sweet inspirations heartens and enables you to do the work with ease and in this respect the Saints are said to be led by the spirit even as a mother leads her child that is weak and enables it to go the better so the spirit leads the Saints as it were by the hand and strengthens them to believe yet more and more I speak now to Saints if whiles I press you to believe in Jesus you feel the spirit in his stirrings and impetuous acts Rom. 8.24 surely it concerns you to believe it concerns you to be obsequious and yielding to the breathings of God's Spirit it concerns you to co-operate with the spirit and to answer his wind-blowing As you are to take Christ at his word so you are to take Christs spirit at his work if now he knocks do you knock with him if now his fingers make a stirring upon the handles of the bar let your hearts make a stirring with his fingers also O reach in your hearts under the stirrings of free grace obey dispositions of grace as God himself if now you feel your hearts as hot as Iron it is good then to smite with the hammer if now you feel your spirits docile say then with him in the Gospel I believe Lord help my unbelief I believe what I believe when Jesus comes again he will receive me to himself and that I shall be for ever with the Lord Amen Amen SECT VI. Of Loving Jesus in that respect 6. LET us love Jesus as carrying on the great Work of our Salvation for us in his second coming In prosecution of this I must first set down Christ's love to us and then our love to Christ that is the cause and this effect that is the spring and this the stream in vain should we perswade our hearts to love the Lord if in the first place we were not sensible that our Lord loves us John 4.19 We love him saith the Apostle because he first loved us it is Christs way of winning hearts he draws a lump of love out of his own heart and casts it into the sinner's heart and so he loves him Come then let us first take a view of Christ's love to us and see if from thence any sparks of love will fall on our hearts to love him again Should I make a Table of Christ's acts of love and free-grace to us I might begin with that eternity of his love before the beginning and never end till I draw it down to that eternity of his love without all ending his love is as his mercy from everlasting to everlasting he loved us before time in the beginning of time in the fulness of time at this time the flames of his love are as hot in his brest as they were at first and when time shall be no more he will love us still this fire of Heaven is everlasting there is in the brest of Christ an eternal coal of burning love that never never
the flames of God and do we not yet love him hath Christ all this while opened his brest and heart to us saying Friends Doves come in and dwell in the holes of this rock And do we scratch his brest do we turn our backs upon him and requite his love with hatred surely this is more than sin for what is sin but a transgression of the law but this sin is both a transgression of Law and Gospel What to spurn against the warm bowels of love to spit on grace to disdain him who is the white and ruddy the fairest of Heaven Oh the aggravation of this sin ' its an heart of flint and adamant that spits at Evangelick love Law-love is love but Evangelick love is more than love it s the gold the flower of Christ's wheat and of his finest love Oh the many Gospel-passages of love that we have heard Oh the sweet streams of love that we have followed till now that we are come to a Sea of love to an heaven of love to an infinite eternal everlasting love in heaven I want words to express this love of Jesus a Sea of love is nothing it hath a bottom an Heaven of love is nothing it hath a brim but infinite eternal everlasting love hath no bottom no brim no bounds and do we not yet love him do we not yet feel the fire of love break forth if not it is time to turn our Preaching into Praying O thou who art the Element or Sun of love come with thy power let out ●ne beam one ray one gleam of love upon my soul shine hot upon my heart cast my soul into a love-transe remember thy promise to circumcise my heart Deut 30.6 that I may love the Lord my God with all my heart and with all my soul Surely the great Marriage of the Lamb is coming on he will come and welcome all his Saints into his presence he will bid them inherite the Kingdom and put them in a possession of the inheritance and then we cannot choose but love our Jesus with all our hearts and with all our souls onely begin we it here let us now be sick of love that we may then be well with love let us now rub and chase our hearts our dead cold hearts before this fire till we say with Peter Why Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LET us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his second coming Christ delights to have his People look upon him with delight for a soul to be always under a spirit of bondage and so to look upon Christ as a Judge a Lyon or an offended God it doth not please God the Lord Jesus is tender of the joy of his Saints Rejoyce and be exceeding glad saith Christ rejoyce evermore rejoyce in the Lord alwayes Mat. 5.12 1 Thes 5.16 Phil. 4.4 Psal 68.3 and again I say rejoyce Let the righteous be glad let them rejoyce before God yea let them exceedingly rejoyce All that Christ doth to his Saints tends to this joy as the upshot or end of all if he cast down it is but to raise them up if he humble it is but to exalt if he kill it is but to make alive in every dispensation still he hath a tender care to preserve their joy This is the Benjamin about which Christ's bowels beat Let my Children suffer any thing but nothing in their joy I would have all that love my Name to be joyfall in me Oh say some but Christ's day is a terrible day when Christ appears he will make the Heavens and Earth and Hell to shake and tremble Our God shall come and shall not keep silence Psal 50.3 a fire shall devour before him and it shall be very tempestuous round about him True but what 's all this terror but an argument of my Father's power and justice against sinners if thou art Christ's and hast thy part in him not one jot of all this terror belongs to thee The Lord knows how to deliver the godly out of temptations and to reserve the unjust to the day of judgment to be punished 2 Pet. 2.9 He knows how to make the same day a terror to his foes and a joy to his people he ever intended it for the great distinguishing and separating day wherein both joy and sorrow should be manifested to the highest O then let the heavens rejoyce the sea the earth the floods the hills for the Lord cometh to Judge the earth Psal 97.7 8 9. with righteousness shall he judge the World and the people with equity If you find it an hard thing to joy in Jesus as in reference to his second coming think of these motives 1. Christ's coming is the Christians encouragement so Christ himself layes it down You shall see the Son of man coming in a cloud with power and great glory and when these things begin to come to pass Luk. 21.27 28. then look up and lift up your heads for your redemption draweth nigh The signs of his coming are the hopes of your approaching introduction into glory and what should you do then but prepare for your approaching with exceeding joy many evils do now surround you every where Satan hath his snares and the World his baits and your own hearts are apt to betray you into your enemies hands but when Christ comes you shall have full deliverance and perfect redemption and therefore look up and lift up your heads The Apostle speaks the very same encouragement 1 Thes 4.16 71 18. The Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the trump of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air wherefore comfort one another with these words Christ's coming is a comfortable doctrine to all believers and therefore all the Elect that hear these words should be comforted by them Comfort ye comfort ye my people 2. Christ our Saviour must be our Judge the same Jesus that was born for us and lived for us and dyed for us and doth now pray for us will come at last to judge us is not this comfortable you that have heard all his transactions can you ever foget the unweariness of Christ's love in his constant and continual actings for your souls how long hath he been interceding for his Saints how long hath he been knocking at their hearts for entrance it is now above a thousand six hundred years that he hath been praying and knocking and he resolves not to give over till all be his till all the Tribes in ones and twos be over Jordan and up with him in the heavenly Canaan And if this be he that must be our Judge if he that loves our
to God You see now what we mean by this writing of the Law within us 5. How are we taught of God so as not to need any other kind of teaching comparatively I answer 1. God teacheth inwardly In the hidden part thou hast made me know wisdom Psal 51.6 Psal 16.17 saith David and again I thank the Lord that gave me counsel my reins also instruct me in the night season The reins are the most inward part of the Body and the night season the most retired and private time both express the intimacy of divine teaching man may teach the brains but God only teacheth the reins the knowledge which man teacheth is a swimming knowledge but the knowledge which God teacheth Cathedram habet in coelis qui corda doces Aug. is a soaking knowledge God who commanded light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts Mans light may shine into the head but Gods light doth shine into the heart His Chair is in Heaven that teacheth hearts saith Austin 2. God teacheth clearly Elihu offering himself instead of God to reason with Job he tells him My words shall be of the uprightness of my heart Job 33.3 and my lips shall utter knowledge clearly If ever the Word come home to an heart it comes with a convincing clearness So the Apostle Our Gospel came unto you not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost and in much full assurance The word hath a treble Emphasis 2 Thes 1.5 assurance full assurance and much full assurance here is clear work 3. God teacheth experimentally the soul that is taught of God can speak experimentally of the Truths it knows I know whom I have believed saith Paul 2 Tim. 1.12 I have experienced his faithfulness and all-sufficiency I dare trust my all with him I am sure he will keep it safe to that day Common knowledge rests in generals but they that are taught of God can say As we have heard so we have seen they can go along with every truth and say It is so indeed I have experienced this and that Word upon my own Heart In this case the Scripture is the Original and their Heart is the Copy of it as you have heard they can read over the Promises and Threatnings and say Probatum est David in his Psalms and Paul in his Epistles speaks their very Hearts and feels their very temptations and makes their very objections they can set to their Seal John 3.33 that God is true they can solemnly declare by their lives and conversations that God is true and faithful in his word and promises 4. God teacheth sweetly and comfortably Thou hast taught me saith David Psal 119.102.103 and then it follows How sweet are thy words unto my taste Yea sweeter than the Honey to my Mouth He rolled the word and promises as Sugar under his Tongue and sucked from thence more sweetness than Sampson did from his Honey-comb Luther said he would not live in Paradise if he must live without the Word Cum v●rbo in i●s●rr●●e ●●e est ●ie●re Luth 4. tom op●r ●a● but with the Word said he I could live in Hell When Christ put his hand by the hole of the door to teach the heart her bowels were moved and then her fingers drop upon the handles of the Lock sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.5 The teachings of Christ left such a blessing upon the first motions of the Spouses heart that with the very touch of them she is refreshed her fingers drop myrrhe and her bowels are moved as the very monuments of his gracious teachings So in Cant. 1.3 Cant. 1.3 Because of the savour of thy Oynement thy Name is as an Oyntment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Christ in Ordinances doth as Mary open a Box of Oyntments which diffuseth a spiritual savour in Church-Assemblies and this o●ly the spiritual Christian feels Hence the Church is compared to a Garden shut up a Fountain sealed Cant. 4.12 wicked men are not able to drink of her delicacies or smell of her sweetness a spiritual Sermon is a Fountain sealed up the spiritual administration of a Sacrament is a Garden enclosed Sometimes O Lord thou givest me a strange motion or affection said Augustine which if it were but perfected in me Aug. l. 16. Confes c. 40. I could not imagine what it should be but eternal life Christians these are the teachings of God and in reference to this we shall no more teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying know the Lord. Gods teaching is another kind of teaching than we can have from the hands of men there is no man in the world can teach thus and therefore they whom God teacheth need not any other kind of teaching respectively or comparatively 6. What is the universality of this knowledge They shall all know m● from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord The meaning is that all that are in the Covenant of grace shall be so taught of God as that in some measure or other they shall every one know God inwardly clearly experimentally sweetly and savingly I know there are several degrees of this knowledge God hath several Forms in his School there are fathers for experience 1 Joh. 2.12 young men for strength and babes for the truth and being of Grace as one Star differeth from another in glory so also is the School of Christ But here I am beset on both sides 1. Many are apt to complain alas they know little of God! sweet babes consider 1. It is free grace you are stars though you are not stars of the first and second magnitude it is of the Covenant of grace that God hath let into your souls a little glimmering Case Correc instruct though not so much light as others possibly may have in point of holy emulation as one notes well we should look at degrees of grace but in point of thankfulness and comfort we should look at the truth and being of grace 2. If you know but a little you may in time know more God doth not teach all his lessons at first entrance Psal 119.130 it is true The entrance of thy Word giveth Light but this is as true that God lets in his Light by degrees it is not to be despised if God do but engage the heart in holy desires and longings after knowledge so that it can say in sincerity My Soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times Psal 119.20 Others on the contrary ground themselves so learned from this very promise that they exclude all teachings of men The anointing say they teacheth us all things and we need not that any man teach us and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother 1 Joh. 2.27 Jer. 31.34 saying know the Lord for they shall all c. I
is exposed to the view of all Again mountains are subject to Winds and Tempests which shew their Callings must meet with many oppositions and this occasioned Christ to hold up their hearts with Cordials Mat. 5.11 12. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsly for my sake for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you The Ministers of Christ are sure of opposition the Disciple is not above his Master nor the servant above his Lord if they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub how much mo●● shall they call them of his houshold 3. The time when they wer● chosen when it was and after he had continued all night in prayer to God he goes not to Election but first he watches and prayes all the night before this shews the singular care that Christ had in this great employment what to set men apart to witness his Name and to publish to the world the Gospel of Christ this he would not do without much prayer Matth. 14.23 Sometimes we find Christ praying alone as elsewhere Matth. 6.6 He went up into a mountain apart to pray and here on this mountain without any of his Disciples or Domesticks about him he prayes alone thus When thou prayest enter into thy closet saith Christ and when thou hast shut thy door pray to thy Father which is in secret and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly Sometimes we find Christ praying at night In the daytime he was teaching in the Temple Luke 21.37 and at night he went out and abode in the Mount that is called the mount of Olives See Christ in the exercise of his double Office he preacheth all day and prayes all night this Text tells us He continued all night in prayer Night prayers have their special spiritual advantages 1. It is a time fitter for compunction and heart-contrition Psal 6.6 All the night make I my bed to swim I water my Couch with my Tears As some things are by heat parched in the day but cooled in the night so many sins contracted in the day are seasonably repented at night night tears are as sweet dews that cool the heat and pride of our spirits 2. It is a time of silence and free from distraction then all Tumults cease and in the secret of our souls we may silently go and speak with our heavenly Father In this respect we have a blessed example of Christ praying at night and especially now O he was about the great work of sending his Ministers through all the world and therefore now he spends all the night long in prayer to his Father A great and extraordinary work is not to be set upon without extraordinary prayer 4. The company out of whom they are chosen He called unto him his disciples and out of them he chose twelve A Disciple of Christ is one thing and an Apostle of Christ is another thing those were Christs Disciples that embraced Christs Doctrine of Faith and Repentance it was not material to the constituting of a Disciple of Christ whether they followed Christ as many did or they returned to their own homes as some others did The man out of whom the Legions of devils was cast Luke 8.38 39. besought Christ that he might be with him but Jesus sent him away saying return to thine own house and shew how great things God hath done to thee I make no question but Christ at the Election of his Apostles had many Disciples both waiting on him and absent from him and out of them that waited on him his Apostles were chosen Christs Ministers should be first Disciples O how unfit are any to take upon them the Ministry of Christ that were never yet the Disciples of Christ first the grace of God within us and then must that grace of God be discovered by us 5. The number of them that were chosen they were Twelve very propable it is that there was some peculiar reason in this account the number say some was figured out to us in many particulars as in the Twelve Patriarchs Gen. 35.22 Exod. 15.21 in the Twelve Wells of Elim in the Twelve precious stones on the breast of the Priest in the Twelve Tribes of Israel in the Twelve hours of the day Christ tells them of sitting on Twelve Thrones and judging the Twelve Tribes of Israel Mat. 19.28 but I delight not curiously to descant on these things This I am sure that the doings of Christ were done in weight measure and number 6. The end to which they were chosen it was to an Apostleship i.e. that they might be Christs Legates to the Sons of men that they might be sent up and down the world to perswade men to Salvation The dispensers of Gods Word must look to their mission they must not intrude upon so sacred a business before they are sent Now this mission is either extraordinary by immediate instinct and revelation from God which is ever accompanied with immediate and infused gifts and this was the case of the Apostles or ordinary by imposition of hands and Ecclesiastical designation and in this likewise is required fidelity and ability 1. Fidelity it is required of Stewards that a man be found faithful that he defraud not Christ of his purchase which is the souls of men nor men of their price and priviledge which is the blood of Christ that he watch as a Seer that he speaks as an Oracle that he feed as a Shepherd that he labour as an Husbandman that he be instant in season and out of season to exhort rebuke instruct to do the work of an Evangelist to make full proof of his Ministry because he hath an account to make 2. Ability both for right information of the consciences of men and for the seasonable application of truth to particular Circumstances which is that which makes a wise builder Ah! Who is sufficient for these things 2 Cor. 2 16. How should we but detest the presumption of those men who run before they be sent who leap from their manual trades into this sacred and dreadful office unto which heretofore the most learned and pious men have trembled to approach This may inform us of our duty and this may inform you of your happiness Vse 1. Here 's our duty I mean ours of the Ministry Christ ordained his Apostles to preach the Gospel and Paul's motto may be ours Wo unto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 what though I preach the Gospel I have nothing to glory of for a necessity is laid upon me This day Christ sent me on this errand Mat. 10.7 Go preach saying Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Surely the Lord hath put this message into my mouth Repent swearers repent drunkards repent sinners for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Gospel-discoveries are made every day Christ
is arising and shining in our Horizon more and more clearly that great design of Gods love to our souls is manifested in every Sermon on every Sabbath is not this Gospel-preaching what is the Gospel but the Treasure of Gods love in Christ opened to us Oh it is a pleasant work in this respect to be a Minister of the Gospel to be alwayes searching into the Treasures of love and to make them known to poor souls for the gaining of them unto God 2. Here is your Happiness Christ hath not erected any standing Sanctuary or City of refuge for men to fly to for their Salvation but he hath appointed Ambassadors to carry this Treasure unto mens houses where he invites them and entreats them and requires them and commands them and compels them to come in Oh the unsearchable riches of Christ 1. In respect of the Messengers 2. In respect of their Message 1. In respect of the Messengers they were first Apostles now Ministers poor Earthen Vessels Had Christ himself come in his glorified body attended with his Angels it might in some measure have represented his Majesty but alas how would this have dazled your weakness or if Christ had made use of his Angels as he did at his birth to preach his Gospel had they continually come in state and proclaimed Salvation to the Sons of men this would have shewed more glory but alas how unsuitable had this been to your weak conditions here then is the riches of his grace that earthen vessels should carry this treasure that salvation should come out of the mouths of sinful creatures that hearts should be broken souls should believe life should be infused by the ministerial breath of a weak worthless man 2 Cor. 4.7 We have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us Gods power is more Honoured this way than if an Angel had come in person it may be in that Case a sinners Conversion would have been attributed to the power and Efficacy of the Angel but to prevent this and to preserve the glory of his power and grace Christ takes the Treasure and he puts it into Earthen Vessels it is in the Original vessels of shell as precious Pearls are found in Shells so the Pearl is the Gospel and the Shell or Mother of Pearl are the Apostles and Pastors it is true they are Vessels of small price and subject to many knocks and falls yet in them is the most excellent Treasures of the Wisdom of God and of the Gospel of Christ And it is in them on purpose that the excellency may reflect on God and not on them 2. In respect of the Message O the unsearchable riches of Christ What is the message of these men what is the Treasure they bring but the Blood of Christ the Promises of the Gospel the Word of Grace I might sum up all in one word They bring unto men an invitation from heaven to heaven Observe it Christians the Gospel is a message the Lord sends his Son up and down carries him from place to place he is set forth before mens eyes he comes and stands and calls and Knocks at their doors and beseecheth them to be reconciled O the free grace of God! O that mercy pardon preferment eternal life and Salvation should go a begging and suing for acceptance O the love of sin and madness of folly in wicked men to Trample on such Pearls and to neglect so great Salvation when it is tendered unto them O what a heavy charge will it be for men at the last day to have the mercy of God the humility of Christ the entreaties of the Spirit the proclamations of pardon the approaches of Salvation the dayes the years the ages of peace the Ministry of the Word the Book of God the great Mistery of Godliness to rise up in judgment and to testifie against their souls O the condescentions of Christ who are ye that the Lord should send after you what need hath God of you suppose you should go on in the wayes of death and perish everlastingly what shall God lose by it Christ might say If you will go on go on and perish if you love sin so well take your pleasure in it and be damned evermore Ah no saith the mercy of God and the mercy of Christ before that be message after message Isa 28.10 Precept upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little This was the design of Christs chusing his Apostles Go ye into all the world Mark 16.15 and preach the Gospel unto every Creature that poor sinners may turn from sin and be saved SECT III. Of Christ's Reception of sinners 2. FOr Christ's Reception of sinners I cannot limit this only to one year of Christ's Ministry but I shall only mention it this year Now this will appear 1. In the Doctrine of Christ 2. In the Practise of Christ 1. In his Doctrine Christ layes it down expresly Mat. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are Heavy laden and I will give you rest It is no more but come and welcome The Gospel shuts none out of Heaven but those that by unbelief lock the door against their own souls Again All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me John 6.37 and him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out here is laid down the full intent and purpose of God and Christ to pardon and receive sinners the Father is willing and the Son is willing 1. The Father is willing This is the Fathers will which hath sent me John 6.39 that of all which he hath given me I should lose none the Father is engaged in that first he sent Christ on that errand to receive sinners Secondly in that he gave unto Christ all that he would have to be saved by Christ with a charge to lose none Sinners were given to Christ by his Father as so many Jewels to look to and to save 2. The Son is willing for he that cometh unto me saith Christ I will in no wise cast out Christ is so willing to receive sinners as that he sets all his doors open he keeps open house and he casts out none that will but come in and why so John 6.38 For I came down from heaven not to do mine own will but the will of him that sent me 1. I came down from Heaven it was a great journey from heaven to earth and this great journey I undertook for no other purpose but to save sinners Great actions as one sayes well must needs have great ends now this was the greatest thing that ever was done Luke 19.10 that the Son of God should come down from Heaven and what was the end but the Reception and Salvation of sinners For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost had
shall thy God rejoyce over thee look how the joy of a Bridgroom is over his Bride upon the wedding-day surely then if ever all is love and joy so is Christ's joy over his Saints at the last day then begins that joy that never never shall have end there shall be no moment of time wherein Christ will not rejoyce over his Saints for ever after 9. It is the day of Christs perfection Christ as Mediator is not fully perfect till all his members be in glory united to him As an head that wants an arm or hand or leg we say is lame so it is a kind of mistical lameness that Christ our head hath not with him all his members the Saints are little pieces of mystical Christ and it shall not be well till Christ gather in his arms and thighs and pull them nearer to himself in glory and is not this desirable to see the Lord Jesus Christ as Head of the Church in his perfection to see the Son of righteousness with every beam united to him O desirable day Hos 2.18 10. It is Christ's Wedding-day or the Marriage day of the Lamb. The Saints are betrothed to Christ when first they believe in Christ that is Christ's word I will betroth thee unto me Cant. 4.10 and thou art my sister my spouse not my Wife thou art not yet married onely contracted here but at that day the marriage of the Lamb will be compleat and then will the voyce be heard Rev. 19.7 Let us be glad and rejoyce and give honour to him for the marriage of the Lamb is come and his Wife hath made her self ready O the joy that Christ and Saints and Angels and all that belong to Heaven will make at this marriage Blessed are they that are called to the Marriage-supper of the Lamb. One of the seven Angels that came to John in visions Rev. 21 9. talked with him saying Come hither and I will shew thee the Bride the Lambs Wife If the espoused Virgin be willing to be married how is it that we cry not Come Lord Jesus come quickly 1 Cor. 5.24 11. It is Christ's day of presenting his Saints unto his Father he delivers up the Kingdom to God even the Father Then shall he take his Bride by the hand and bring her to his house and present her in all state and solemnity to the Father Is not this a desirable day surely Christ rejoyceth and his very heart even springs again to present his Church unto his Father Father here behold my Bride that I have marryed unto my self It is true a Child may sometimes marry such a one as he may be ashamed to think of bringing to his Fathers house but how mean and sinful soever we are of our selves when once we are marryed unto Christ he will not think it any dishonour no not before his Father that he hath such a bride Father will he say lo here all my Saints of all that thou hast given me I have lost none but the children of perdition these are mine dearly bought thou knowest the price O welcome them to glory 12. It is the day of Christ's glory What glorious descriptions have we in scripture of Christs coming to Judgment The Son of man shall come from heaven with power and great glory and the work no sooner done Math. 24.30 but he shall return again into Heaven with power and great glory Not to mention the essential glory of Christ O the glory of Christ as Mediator all the glory that Ahashuerus could put upon his favourites was nothing to this spiritual and heavenly glory which the Father will put upon the Son it is a glory above all the glories that ever were or ever shall be it is an eternal glory not but that Christ shall at last give up his Kingdom to his Father he shall no more discharge the acts of an Advocate or intercessor for us in heaven onely the glory of this shall alwayes continue it shall to all eternity be recorded that he was the Mediator and that he is the Saviour that hath brought us to life and immortality and upon this ground the tongues of all the Saints shall be imployed to all eternity to celebrate this glory This will be their everlasting Song Vnto him that loved us Rev. 1.5 6. and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen Now is not this a desirable thing do we believe there is such a thing as Christ's mediatory glory and Christ's essential glory as Christ's humane glory and Christ's divine glory and have we no desires to behold this glory surely Christ himself desired it of God he would have his Saints with him where he is that they might behold his glory and shall not we desire it whom it most concerns O the sweet temper of the spouse when she cryed out Cant. 8.14 Make haste my beloved and be thou like a Roe or to a young Hart upon the mountains of spices Come now and run over these particulars surely every one is motive enough to desire this day it is a day of refreshing a day of restoring a day of manifestation of the sons of God a day of adoption and of the redemption of our bodyes a day of Christs coming of Christ's revealing of Christ's appearing of Christ's joy of Christ's perfection of Christ's Wedding of Christ's presenting of his Saints of Christ's glory what are we not yet in a longing frame the wife of youth that wants her husband for some years and expects that he should return from over Sea-lands she is often on the shore her very heart loves the wind that should bring him home every Ship in view that is but a drawing near the shore is her new joy and new reviving hopes she asks of every passenger O saw you my husband what is he a doing when will he come is he not yet Shipped and ready for a return souls truly related to the Lord Jesus Christ should methinks long no less O what desire should the Spirit and the Bride have to hear when Christ shall say to his Angels Make you ready for the journey let us go down and divide the skies and bow the Heavens I 'le gather my prisoners of hope unto me I cannot want my Rachel and her weeping Children any longer behold I come quickly to judge the Nations Methinks every spouse of Christ should love the quarter of the sky that being rent asunder should yield unto her husband methinks she should love that part of the heavens where Christ puts through his glorious hand and comes riding on the Rain-bow and Clouds to receive her to himself I conclude this with the conclusion of the Bible He that testifieth these things saith surely I come quickly Amen Even so Rev. 22.20 come Lord Jesus SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that
respect 4. LET us hope in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his second coming Hope is of good things to come hope is an act of the will extending it self towards that which it loves as future onely the future good as it is the object of hope is difficult to obtain and therein it differs from desire for desire looks at future good without any apprehension of difficulty but hope respects the future good as it is gotten with difficulty Lazy hopes that will not be in use of means though difficult are not true hopes we see many desirable things set before us of which we may say Oh that we had our part and portion of them but shall we go on and search and find out the truth whether we have any part or portion in them or whether we have any hopes of any such thing oh this is worthy our pains come then let us yet make a further progress let us not only desire that it may be thus and so but let us say on some sure and certain grounds we hope it is thus and so we hope Christ will come again John 14.3 and receive us to himself that where he is there we may be also Heb. 9.12 Indeed there is the Christians stay and comfort such an hope is a sure Anchor that will hold the ship in a storm onely because our souls lie upon it we had need to look to it that our hopes be true the worst can say They hope to be saved as well as the best but I fear the hopes of many will be lamentably frustrated Our Saviour brings in many pleading with confidence at the last day for life who shall be rejected with miserable disappointment Many shall say to me at that day Lord Lord c. and I will confess unto them I never knew them depart from me Now to clear this point that our hopes are of the right stamp and not counterfeit hopes I shall lay down some signs whereby we may know that Christ's coming is for us and for our good and for the grace that is to be given us at the revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 4. 1. If we are born again then will his glorious coming be to glorifie us Blessed be the God and Father of Lord Jesus Christ who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope to an inheritance incorruptible Whoever hath the true hope of Heaven John 3.3 he is one that is begotten again so our Saviour Except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God Many things may be done as Herod heard John the Baptist and did many things but except a man be born again those many things are in God's account as nothing When Peter had told Christ that he and his fellow-disciples had forsaken all Math. 19.28 and followed him Then Jesus said verily I say unto you that ye which have followed me in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the Throne of his glory ye shall also sit upon twelve Thrones Judging the twelve Tribes of Israel q. d. Peter you have forsaken all and followed me but know that bare forsaking is not enough but you who have felt the Work of God regenerating your souls upon which ye have followed me ye shall sit upon twelve Thrones In those who are alive at the last day there will be a change and this change will be to them instead of death 1 Cor. 15.51 Behold I shew you a mystery we shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed Certainly in those who at the last day shall sit on Thrones with Christ there must be a change likewise in this life i.e. a new spirit and a new life must be put into them Oh what a change is this suppose a rational soul were put into a beast what a change would be in that Creature suppose an angelical nature were put upon us what a change would there be in us oh but what a change is this when a man is born again of water and of the spirit I must tell you that the highest degree of glory in Heaven is not so different from the lowest degree of grace here as the lowest degree of grace here is different from the highest excellency of nature here because the difference betwixt the highest degree of the glory of Heaven and the lowest degree of grace is only gradual but the difference that is betwixt the lowest degree of grace and the highest excellency of nature is a specifical difference Oh there 's a mighty work of God in preparing souls for glory by grace and this change must they have that must sit on Thrones Come then you that hope for glory try your selves by this is there a change in your hearts words and lives is there a mighty work of grace upon your spirits are you experienc'd in the great mystery of regeneration why here 's your evidence that your hopes are sound and that you shall sit upon Thrones to judge the world Heb. 9.28 2. If we long for his coming then will he come to satisfie our longings Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for they shall be satisfied how satisfied but in being saved Christ was offered to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin to salvation unto them that look for him or long for him shall he appear the second time unto salvation it is very observable how this looking for Christ is in Scripture a frequent description of a true believer in Christ Who are true sincere and sound Christians but such as live in a perpetual desire and hope of Christs blessed coming 2 Pet. 3.12 they are ever looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God Here are two signs in one verse looking for and hasting unto true believers are not only in a posture looking for the coming of Jesus Christ but also as it were going forth to meet Jesus Christ with burning Lamps Luther could say Mat. 6.10 That he was no true Christian neither could he truly recite the Lord's prayer that with all his heart desired not this day of the coming of Christ. It is true that whether we will or no that day will come but in the Lord's prayer Christ hath taught us to pray that God would accelerate and hasten the day of his glorious coming thy Kingdom come i.e. the Kingdom of glory at the Judgment as well as the Kingdom of grace in the Church It is true that the day of the Lord is a terrible day the Heavens and Earth and Sea and Air shall be all on a bone-fire and burn to nothing nevertheless we according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth we that have laid hold upon God and laid hold on him by the right handle according to his promises we look for