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A47369 Sermons, preached partly before His Majesty at White-Hall and partly before Anne Dutchess of York, at the chappel at St. James / by Henry Killigrew ...; Sermons. Selections Killigrew, Henry, 1613-1700. 1685 (1685) Wing K449; ESTC R16786 237,079 422

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the least part of them to the Just Owners but thought they approved themselves faithful Pastors absolved all the Duties of Good Men if they shew'd but Strong Sides and able Lungs stood three Hours as they call'd it in the Pulpit but after that concerned not themselves though their poor Brethren stood as many Days without Meat The continual Burden of their Sermon was The Word of God the Word of God! Frighting the People with a Fear of a Famine of that of which there was no fear viz. of their seditious Doctrines and shutting their Eyes to all other Famine the Want of those things which should cherish the Life of Man But our Lord who was Pastor bonus as well as Doctor bonus a good Shepherd as well as a good Teacher thought Tender Bowels were requisite as well as Tough Sides and fed his Sheep Corporally as well as Spiritually when necessity required he considered that the devoutest Souls stood in need of Meat and that as Man did not live by Bread only so neither did he live by the Word of God only but that Food was necessary as well as Precepts Relief to the Hungry as well as Instruction to the Ignorant In the Church of Rome they have an Order of Fryars-Preachers men of learning and ability to confute Hereticks and another Order which were called Fratres ignorantes the Unlearned Fryars whose business 't is to tend Hospitals and to do other Offices of Charity And though we approve not the bringing of Ignorant Orders into the Church and Clergy yet this double Care of theirs in providing for the Bodies as well as the Souls of men is highly commendable and may be justified by the Practice of the Church in its Earliest and holiest days as we read Acts 6. that there were not only Apostles to preach but also Deacons to serve Tables The People had been our Lords Auditors now three days fasting in a desart place and his compassionate Heart would not dismiss them hungry lest the Dissolution of the Assembly should be the Dissolution of the Souls and Bodies of many of them he resolved therefore to supply by a Miracle what was wanting in the Desart to furnish from the Granaries of Heaven what the Villages did not afford The Word in the Original rendred by our Translators Compassion implies more than a bare Pity viz. that our Lord felt a Strong Impulse or vehement Percussion in his Bowels for the Suffering of the people He wanted not meat himself but he was nevertheless sensible of the hunger of others his own Stomach grip'd him not yet he was pain'd because the Multitude lack'd Sustenance And this is the true nature of Compassion and Goodness it lyes under no Evil it self but yet 't is afflicted for what another suffers it is safe in its own particular and yet agast at the Dangers which it hears of Who is weak says S t Paul and I am not weak who is offended and I burn not That which Flattery does in Pretence and Dissimulation Compassion does in truth and Reality The Satyrist makes the Sycophant if his Patron says 'T is cold call presently for his Furr-Gown though in the midst of Summer and again if he says 'T is hot strip himself of it in the Extremity of Winter Compassion feels the heats and colds the pains and griefs the wants and nakedness of those that are under such Afflictions not apishly imitating but truly suffering their Distresses And our Saviour shewed that this Passion was predominant in him not only at the present but on many other Occasions he sigh'd for the Sick shed tears for the Dead pray'd for his Persecutors upon the Cross c. And now I have said so much of our Lord's Compassion it were to reproach my Auditory and not to exhort them to use any Arguments to shew we ought to sympathize with him in the like Tenderness that when he was all Pity and melted at every Calamity it will ill become us to shew our selves Rock and Steel at the Miseries of our Brethren I proceed to the Object of Christ's Compassion the Multitude I have Compassion on the Multitude Our Lord in journeying from Decapolis and the Regions thereabout had gathered to himself by the power of his Preaching and the sight of his Miracles a great Number of promiscuous People styl'd in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Rabble of the Meaner Sort such as the Priests and Pharisees pointed at John 7. when they said Have any of the Rulers believed on him but only this People who know not the Law and are accursed For the over-weaning Pharisees reckoned the Poor among Publicans and Sinners Reprobates and Harlots esteemed those who had no Name in the State who were capable of bearing no Honour or Office to be also uncapable of receiving any Special Mark of God's Favour according to the Proverbial Speech so common among them Spiritus non requiescit nisi super divitem the Spirit is sent only to Eminent Persons and refuses to rest on the Mean and Abject And yet it was the Distress of these undervalued despised People the Hunger of this condemned reprobated Rabble in their Rulers account not worthy to be fed if with trouble scarce to be starved and who if they did dye through Want the World would find no Want of them that so nearly affected our Lord and so sensibly toucht his very Vitals A Commiseration fit to be transcribed by those that are in Power and Great Place who shew too much of that Anti-Christian Turkish Principle That the Lives of the Vulgar are of no Moment fit only to be sacrificed to the Lusts and Pleasures of the Rich in times of peace and in War to fill up Ditches and blunt the Enemies Sword thus not being content to be at Ease only and out of the Peoples Danger unless they may be also without all Sense of their Misery 'T is said as I remember of Pompey the Great mavult Rempublicam turbari quàm Comam he would rather the Commonwealth should be disordered than his Hair and too many there are of this nice Temper to be deeplier concerned for every trifling Curiosity about their own Persons than for the Publick Good or Evil of their Country and if their Lot be so happy as to exempt them from bearing a part in a General Calamity they easily exempt themselves from feeling any Trouble for it But our Lord shew'd himself of a Publick Spirit for when he was above the Evils and Calamities of Mankind he espoused their Nature to no other End but that he might espouse their Miseries and after he had laid aside his Glory he laid down also his Life for the Salvation of his Creatures he disdained not to converse with the Meanest of the People to instruct their Ignorance to heal their Infirmities to relieve their Hunger And this to teach us That Christians ought to shew Regard where others shew Scorn there to place their Pity and Compassion where the
our Lord for his Violent and Untimely Death I say there was nothing strange or hard to be digested by either of them in this thing For 't was the Practice of them both to sacrifice the Innocent for the Guilty the Unoffending Victimes for Offending Men Nay 't was usual among the Gentiles for the Noblest and most Sacrosanct Persons their Kings and Generals and holy Virgins to devote themselves to Death for the Preservation of their Country Why then should the Devoting of Christ for the Salvation of the Whole World be held irrational and foolish by them Why did they despise in another Religion what they held Honourable in their own And the Jews had yet less reason to be scandaliz'd especially the most Learned among them who were yet only offended who saw their Messiah daily slain before their Eyes in so many Rites and Mysteries the Paschal Lamb the Scape-Goat the Goat for the Sin-Offering in a word all their Expiatory Sacrifices were Prefigurations of Christ's Passion Beside those that were Learned were sensible That the Way of propitiating God by the Bloud of Beasts was of it self Irrational and had no Efficacy in it but as it related to the Bloud of Christ. The Jews therefore with less reason than the Gentiles disclaimed the Messiah coming in the Guise of a Sacrifice and drencht in his own Bloud when 't was his Bloud alone that sanctify'd all their Forefathers and their own Offerings and distinguisht their Temple from a common Shambles or Slaughter-house The reason that the Cross of Christ has given such Scandal in all Times and that so great a Part of the World have thought it Monstrous That a Divine Person should undergo an Ignominious Death arises from the Slight Apprehension Men generally have of Sin and their ignorance of the Malignity of its Nature they look upon it as a mere Transient Act and think that the Guilt of it passes away as soon as the Fact they have no Unkindness to their own Wicked Ways and fansie God has none neither that any Trifle will make Compensation for them or that God will pass them by without any Compensation at all But if they would weigh the Odiousness of Sin to God by its Contrariety to his Holy Nature and the fearful Judgments he has denounc'd against it and that it cannot go unpunisht if God be just and true i. e. if God be God Again if they would consider that the Greatness of an Offence arises in proportion to the Greatness of the Person Offended and then compute what would be a Competent Satisfaction for offending an Infinite and Eternal Deity they would not think it monstrous ut medela responderet morbo that a Divine Person should be found only worthy to do Right to a Divine Person Men may well be astonisht at the Goodness of God and adore his Mercy that he vouchsaf'd to give his Son to be a Ransom for Sinners but none can justly wonder that he requir'd so Honourable an Amends for the Violation of his Majesty or that a less Sanctity than Christ's was sufficient either to intercede for or to Counterpoise the Guilt of the Whole World But as there are those that despise the Cross of Christ and count the Bloud of the Covenant as the Apostle speaks an unholy thing so there are those again on the other side who are no less Enemies to it by ascribing to it what was never the Will or Meaning of our Lord that they should and these are of two Sorts Those of the Church of Rome who Superstitiously and Idolatrously Worship the Cross ascribe to it the Power of driving away Devils conferring Divine Graces and the like The others are those among us who teach That since Christ has Suffer'd all Guilt and Condemnation for Sin is taken away in respect of Believers like those in the Apostles time who affirm'd That after the Faith of Christ was once entertain'd all that was necessary for Salvation was perform'd and men need not be sollicitous for their future Behaviour whether 't were Righteous or Unrighteous But S t Paul Heb. 10.26 stops the mouths of all such as thus pervert the Grace purchas'd by Christ's Death If we sin wilfully says he after we have received the Knowledge of the Truth there remains no more Sacrifice for Sin but a certain fearful looking for of Judgment and fiery Indignation As if he would have said Although Christ cannot be Cut-off any more in his Person yet he may and will be Cut-off again in the Fruits and Benefits of his first Cutting-off from those that abuse them Which Words though spoken of Apostates to the Faith will hold true also of Subverters of the Faith And there is a Passage in this Chapter of Daniel before us well worthy the observation of all those who sin now presumptuously under the Gospel which is this When the Angel had reveal'd to Daniel the Time when the Captivity in Babylon should expire and that the People should return and rebuild Jerusalem and the Temple and not only so but that the long-promis'd and much-desir'd Messiah should be given them and the Prophet thought all was now well and nothing could be added to the Felicity of the Nation immediately it follows that after so many Weeks again for the succeeding Transgressions of the People the so-long'd-for Prince and Saviour the Messiah should be cut-off as if he had never been So that he should be given in a manner and not given unto the Nation but be the Cause of a Second and Greater Destruction than the foregoing Captivity even the final Rejection of the House of Israel And 't is dreadful to consider that the giving of a Saviour to many Christians shall have the like Success that by reason of their Presumption of I know not what Favour and Election of God's and their Continuance in their Unreform'd Lives this Blessing shall be turn'd into a Curse and He that was cut-off For them shall be again cut off From them and the Private State of their Souls like the Publick State of the Jews shall be much more Calamitous after their Redemption than before And now what Use shall we make of this first Branch the Substance of the Angels Prediction the Excision of the Messiah He shall be cut off Shall I exhort you after the manner of the Church of Rome to set before you Pictures of our Lord's Passion representing his macerated and dilacerated Body hanging on the Cross between two Thieves and attended by his Virgin Mother fallen into a Swoun and expect that the like Effects of an o'r-whelming Sorrow may be seen in you No I shall rather desire that all such Pageantry and Ostentation of misplaced Grief may be remov'd far from you and as our Lord directed the Women who wept for him when he bore his Cross to Mount Calvary to spend their Tears on the right Object Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but weep for your selves and your approaching misery So let
also taught however obscurely from the very Beginning That Sin was not to be abolisht without Satisfaction made for it and that no Competent Satisfaction could be made for it but by the Bloud of the Son of God or the Eternal Destruction of the Sinner And if we will make the best Use of this Doctrine we must observe That as the Parts of the Body are framed in so excellent a manner that they serve for more Uses than one as the Nose not only to breathe but to smell the Hand not only to lay-hold with but to strike c. So likewise that the Institution of Sacrifices for expiation of Guilt had two Excellent Designs in it First to shew God's Mercy to Sinners and secondly his Irreconcileable Hatred to Sin And if we look no further in this Matter than on God's Goodness only in accepting so favourable an Exchange as the Bloud of the Sacrifice for the Bloud of the Sinner we defeat one half of his Design which was to shew the Malignant and Mortiferous Nature of Sin in that it could not be purged away by any less Means than Death than either by the Destruction of the Sinner or of some Other in his behalf And therefore though God deal with us after that Royal Manner as the Children of Princes are dealt with who have another Punishment for their Faults or as he dealt with David after his Numbering the People past by in a great measure his Offence and took Occasion from it only to send a Plague on Israel for former Transgressions thus chusing rather to punish David's Ingenuity than his Person to afflict him with beholding the Afflictions of others than by sending any immediately on himself yet if we shew not the like Ingenuity which David did suffer not Our Selves for what we see another suffer when we were the Delinquents I say if as he cry'd out upon the Destruction of the People Lo I have sinned I have done Wickedly but these Sheep what have they done So if we cry not out in Contemplation of what our Proxy suffered on our behalf We have sinned we have done Wickedly but the Lamb of God what has he done to be sacrificed for us We shall forfeit both the Indulgence and Indemnity which God intended us and while we shew our selves Insensible of so high a Benefit we shall be deprived of it and in the next place we must Dye our Selves and Dye to all Eternity And thus we see as the Death of Christ paid to God as a Ransom for Sins ought to be the highest Object of our Joy So the Consideration again on the other side that Nothing but the Death of Christ could pay that Ransom ought to create in us no less than a horrour and Detestation of Sin But yet I know not how we see men precipitately and remorslesly run into all Impiety as if there were no danger in Sin as if Christ had suffered nothing for it as if it were as easily remitted as 't is committed the Price of Iniquity no more than what it cost the Wicked Person to purchase it For certainly if Men did consider at how dear a Rate God's Justice and Wrath were satisfied they would not think the gratifying of every Lust more valuable than the Compensation made for it they would not set more by the Savage Delight of Revenge or the Swinish of Drunkenness than by the Bloud of Christ prefer the Favours of a Light Woman before their Peace with God a cheap Sin before the dearest-bought Redemption A Fool can work a Mischief which may pose a Wiseman to remedy and every Weak Person when he is tempted can commit Sin but none but the Eternal Son of God can remove the Guilt of it when 't is done And 't is the light Reckoning that men make of Sin which brings God's heavy Displeasure upon them for it their thinking so cheaply of the Greatest Offences because the Pardon of them costs them little that provokes him to make them feel what the Weight of Guilt is For 't is but just that those who refuse to understand the pernicious Nature of Sin by the Punishment laid on an Other should understand it by undergoing the Punishment of it themselves who will not learn how Odious it is to God by the Death of his Son should be taught it by their own Confusion Who is there so Ungrateful and Insensible even among the Worst of Men that if a Friend hazard his Life for his Preservation will not acknowledge so great a Benefit and yet the Son of God did not only hazard but lay down his Life to redeem us from Eternal Damnation and few there are that consider it that have so much Compassion as but to ask the Question in my Text What are these Wounds in thy hands resentingly to say Was it possible so Divine a Person should be so Abus'd for me that the Son of God should be buffetted spit on derided torn with Scourges mangled with Tortures and at last nail'd to the Cross for my Disobedience There are those I confess in the Church of Rome who spend a great Part of their Lives in gazing on a Crucifix and weeping over the Pictures of our Lord's Passion in bemoaning his Sufferings and kissing the Representations of his Wounds but alas these do but haerere in cortice stick at the Bark and Husk of the Mystery out of a simple or affected Fondness express their Gratitude to Christ a Wrong Way lament his Sufferings now they are past and he in Glory at the Right Hand of his Father they do not penetrate into the true Purpose and Meaning of his Sufferings as they declare the Malignant Nature of Sin that could not be expiated at a less Rate than the Death of so Divine a Person For this is the true Return that Men should make Christ for his Passion not so much to consider What his Wounds were as For what they were and from thence fly that which was the Cause of his Sufferings The second Reason of the Necessity of Christ's Sufferings I said was To give Men an Example of Obedience The Apostle Heb. 2.17 gives another Reason for Christ's suffering in our Nature viz. that he might be a Merciful High Priest become Compassionate of our Infirmities by the Experimental Knowledge of them in his Own Person But the Reason or Purpose I now speak of is such as is in Reference to Men and not to himself that he might give an Example to the World that God commanded nothing but what was possible to be performed by Flesh and Bloud The last Effort or Endeavour of Heaven to bring Men to Salvation was now essaying and the shortest and most Efficacious Motive was thought to be to give them an Instance of the Fulfilling the Law Precepts are but cold Inducements but an Example fires the Soul with Emulation to do what it sees done before it and Men think it a Disparagement to give out in that which another has enterpriz'd with
of this Pretended Messiah this bold Reprover of our Vices and Confuter of our Traditions no less by Miracles than by Reason and then we shall continue to sit in Moses's Chair lead the People as we please and none will dare to contradict us If we will not shew our selves such Friends to Christ as my Text speaks of who stain'd their hands in his Bloud let us with all Submission of Soul and Singleness of Heart embrace his Doctrines and pay Obedience to his Precepts whether they relate to Faith or to Manners and suffer neither Pleasure nor Profit Reputation among Men or any By-Respect whatsoever to disaffect us to him For the things of this World are at Enmity with Christ and if we set our Affections upon them they will lead us from the Worship of the True God as the Canaanitish Wives did the Israelites to worship Idols and the worst of Idols even themselves Christ himself will appear to us a Deceiver and we shall sooner rescue Barabbas from the Cross than him And let none in these days who have received the Knowledge of the Truth and after extinguisht the Grace of God in their Hearts by fulfilling the Lusts of the Flesh flatter themselves as the Jews did who said If we had lived in the Days of Old we would not have been Partakers of the Bloud of the Prophets So if we had liv'd in Christ's days we would not have used him as the Jews did for this is but a Pharisaical Deception those that hate Christ's Gospel would have shew'd but little Kindness to his Person who crucifie him now by their Wicked Lives would not have spared his very Life if they had liv'd in his days Idem qua idem semper efficit idem the same thing dispos'd in the same Manner will produce the same Effect the same Corruption in the Heart will always bring forth the same Wickedness in the Hands The second Reflection I shall make upon Christ's being wounded in the House of his Friends Is the Part which God performed after the Jews added this Great Wickedness of murdering the Messiah to all their former Impieties For if we look on the Reverse of the Coin as I may say the Vengeance God sent upon them we shall find it stampt in as deep and legible Characters as their Wickedness was engraved on the other Side it being no less than the utter Rejection and Ruine of their Nation and with such Tragical Circumstances as are in no Story to be parallell'd but they are so generally known that I shall spend no time to dilate on them but rather exhort all such who after the manifold Admonitions and frequent Warnings of God still persist in their Sins and are deaf and incorrigible to all his Invitations to Repentance to consider How for the like Refractoriness and Hardness of Heart God suffered his Own People to proceed from Wickedness to Wickedness till they arriv'd at last in profundum malorum into such a Gulph of Perdition that if the most Desperate among them had seen the End of their Rebellious Ways at their first setting-out in the Course of them they would have started back with Horrour at the Prospect The 2 d Kings 5. we read that when the Prophet Elisha foretold to Hazael yet a Private Person and unacquainted with his own Temper what Immanities and Cruelties he would commit when he came to be King of Assyria that he would butcher Men rip up Women with Child dash Infants against the Stones c. He answer'd But what is thy Servant a Dog that I should do these things And the very Scribes and Pharisees who were the Chief Actors in this Days Tragedy when our Lord insinuated to them in the Parable I late mentioned of the Husbandmen consulting to kill the Heir that they would be his Murderers and by it pull certain Destruction on their Nation they reply'd God forbid Not only deprecating the Punishment but detesting the Crime The raw Novice-Sinner knows not at first to what a Villain to what a Devil he will grow Men ought therefore to fear the first Motions of Sin and to suppress the Beginnings of Wickedness if for no other Reason but this Lest they become Worse than they could have imagined it possible for them to have been Who allows himself at first only to Over-reach his Brother by degrees will take from him by Violence or Open Robbery who makes no Scruple to be Factious and Seditious will hardly stop till he arrives at Rebellion and Treason who indulges himself at first in a Negligent Irreverent Performance of God's Service and makes the Church the Scene of his Vanity and not of his Devotion is in the ready Path to proceed from Prophaneness to Atheism But as Sin encreases we have heard that Vengeance also ripens and Encreases says our Lord Whoever falls on this Stone shall be broken but on whomsoever it shall fall it will grind him to Powder The first Sins a man commits dangerously wound his Soul they dash against Christ as an Earthen Vessel does against a Rock but Presumption and Obstinacy in Sinning causes Christ to fall upon the Sinner as a Rock upon an Earthen Vessel which is sure to crush it to Dust. To conclude Though we that are here present are not of the House of Christ's Friends i. e. of his Kindred and Nation yet we have a Nearer and more Excellent Relation to him in that we are of the Houshold of Faith and of the Family of his Church as himself declared when he stretcht forth his Hand to his Disciple saying Behold my Mother and my Brethren for whoever shall do the Will of my Father which is in Heaven the same is my Mother my Sister and my Brother Now if we in our Spiritual Relation shall by our Sins crucifie Christ in his Glory as his Kindred according to the Flesh nail'd him to the Cross when he liv'd on Earth our Wickedness will far exceed theirs as the Wickedness of a Disciple far exceeds that of an Unbeliever the Wickedness of Judas did that of Pontius Pilate and Caiaphas It is our Unspeakable Happiness that Christ was Wounded for us but it will be our Unexcusable Impiety if he be wounded by us 't is again our Strange Felicity that when Others slew him we reap the Benefit of his Death when the Husbandmen Kill'd the Heir that we inherit the Vineyard And if we make that faithful Use of Christ's Death which we ought while the Jews bear the Guilt of his Bloud we shall be purged by it from all our Transgressions and while Eternal Infamy and Wrath cleaves to them Eternal Glory and Felicity shall be our Portion which God of his Infinite Mercy through our Lord Jesus Christ grant to us And to God the Father Son and Holy Ghost be ascribed all Honour Glory c. Amen The Sixth Sermon ROMANS viii 11 But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the Dead dwell in you he that raised up
the enlivening us to a Life of Grace But though this meaning sutes well with S t Paul's Design in this Epistle to confute the Imagination of the Jews that they could obtain Eternal Life by Virtue of the Law of Moses without Faith in Christ Yet the Words of my Text point at the Blessed Immortality the Righteous shall hereafter be Partakers of and are only to be understood after this manner If Christians give themselves up to be led and governed by the Spirit of God in this World which is the Spirit that raised up Jesus they in like manner shall be raised up by it at the Last Day and the more they are quickned to a Life of Grace here the more they may be assured they shall be quickned to the Life of Glory hereafter Many Practical Uses and Advantages might be inferred from hence but I shall collect only this one which may be of great Encouragement to our Christian Industry and Endeavours to lead a Godly Life and that is the Expedition we shall make towards the attaining the Unspeakable Rewards of the Kingdom of Heaven There are three Lives to be attained and all to be attained by the Well-Ordering of One of our Spiritual Life alone in this World if we rise from the Death of Sin to Newness of Life we shall attain by the same Performance three Resurrections to that of perfect Grace to that of perfect Time or Duration and to that of perfect Joy and Glory This I say is so rich a Harvest and to be purchas'd with such Expedition that the Nicest and most impatient of Toil and Difficulties may be encouraged to strive for it Happy is he says S t John that has a share in the first Resurrection i. e. in the Life of Grace for the other are but Corollaries or Additional Complements of this Sanctification is as certain and assured a Way to Glorification as Childhood is the Way to Manhood 't is the Inchoation or Beginning of it and in a sense may be said to be it Those whom he Justify'd says S t Paul those he also Glorify'd as if these were done together and not in process of Time But to proceed The Author secondly of this Grace and Bounty is God And why did not the Apostle express himself so in a Word but used this Circumlocution He that raised up Jesus from the dead Because since Christ's coming in the Flesh and having performed the Work of our Salvation God has left off to govern in the Church immediately by himself and does all things by and through our Lord Jesus Christ. God Created and Drowned the World and wrought all the other wonderful things we read of in the Old Testament in his Own Name as God But now under the Gospel he dispenses all his Mercies as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and we must expect the Gift of Grace the Pardon of Sin Resurrection to Eternal Life and all his other Blessings and Favours from his Relation to his Son It is indeed by the Power of God that all men shall be raised from the Dead but then it is again for the Merits sake of Christ and their Believing in him that they shall be raised to Glory And that we should take notice of the Change of his Name in the New Testament from that he delighted to be called by in the Old is his own Will and Pleasure Says he there By my name Jehovah I will be known but now to us by the Name of his Relation to his Son as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. The Manichees from the Mistake of some Passages and Observations like this raised their detestable Heresie That the God of the Old Testament and the God of the New were two Different Persons the Father of Christ another God from the Creator of the World who sent his Son in the Flesh with a Design to win men from the Creator of the World But these are Wicked and Impious Dotages 't is only an Other Name that God has taken 't is not an Other God that acts among us there is but One God from and to all Eternity whose Name be Blessed for ever The meaning of the Scripture is only to teach us That 't is not God quatenus God that we expect should quicken us at the Last Day but God as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. And this manifests the Perverseness of the Jews who still adhere to Moses and the Synagogue for their hopes of Salvation and the Blindness also of those who perswade themselves they can please God and attain Heaven by Natural and Moral Performances without Faith in Christ But the time permits me not to insist on these things I haste therefore to my last Particular The Means by which God will quicken our Mortal Bodies at the last Day viz. By his Spirit that dwelleth in us This Particle By in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 does not infer any Means that God shall use as Instrumental for the quickening our Mortal Bodies but implies here and in many other places the Motive only or Reason that invites the Agent to perform an Action God will raise us from the Dead as he does all his other Works by his Word or Omnipotent Power but though his Power does the thing yet 't is for something in Men that invites him to do it namely his Holy Spirit which he gave them to that very End and Purpose to dispose and fit them for the receiving Eternal Life David says of himself immediately and Christ typically and of all Faithful People mystically Thou wilt not suffer thy Holy One to see Corruption i. e. God will not leave or forsake the Righteous either in their Life or Death as if he had forgotten them and the Motive of this his Favour to them is Because they are Righteous or Holy Ones And the Psalmist expresses the thing with some Indignation and as if it were an injury to God to imagine that he could suffer in his very Nature that that which was Holy should be swallowed up in the Grave that which was Righteous should perish that which was Incorruptible should see Corruption And indeed there is not only an Incongruity but an Impossibility that this should be For what the Apostle says of Christ's Resurrection God raised him up having loosed the Pains or Bands of Death because it was possible he should be held of them may be said of the Resurrection of all the Faithful with this Difference only That the Impossibility of Christ's being detain'd in the Grave proceeded from his Divine Nature ours from a Divine Promise Nay we may add and with good Warrant That the Impossibility of our remaining in the Grave depends not only on an External Promise but on Something With-in our selves though not Of our selves even on the Spirit of God which dwelleth in us by which we are united to Christ and made Members of his Body he being the Head and our Resurrection must
Wings to their Devotion and raise it to a higher Pitch than the quiet Actings of the Heart alone can do And as a man by vehement Speeches and Emotions of his Body may chafe himself into a greater Degree of Anger so by devout Gestures in Prayer he may heighten and enflame his Zeal 3. Ceremonies are useful in regard of the Beholders The reverent solemn and holy Rites of the Church being suited to the Majesty of the Deity that is worshipp'd excite Faith and a more awful Regard in the Hearts of men and 't was for this very Reason as I said that our Lord used so many Circumstances and Ceremonies in the working of his Miracles For such Visible Performances are many times more Efficacious Lessons than long Harangues and though men affect to appropriate the term of Edification to Sermons only the External Parts of Religion are not without their Edification too and a holy Practice or Custom may make a smarter Impression on the Soul than the Inculcations of a flat and heavy Sermon 4. Ceremonies are useful in regard of the Light they give to many Doctrines which being assisted and seconded by such Sensible Circumstances as Exhibit them to the Eye as well as to the Ear they are the better explain'd and establish'd in the Understanding by the help of two Senses as Differences in Law are by the Mouths of two Witnesses and we may term the Ceremonies which accompany the Precepts of Religion the Jael or Nail that fastens the Substance of them in our Minds as the holy Matron of that Name rivetted the temples of Sisera to the ground Or we may call them the Masorah of the Church for as the Jewish Masorah by an exact and critical Calculation of the Number of Words Syllables and Letters in the Scripture hedg'd in the Text both from Mutilations and Additions So Ceremonies often empale the Substance of Religion and guard it from Innovation and Corruption And may we not then justly condemn the Perverseness of those that make such Out-cries against such Useful such Innocent nay such Necessary things as Ceremonies who decry the same things for Superstition when used in the Church which they allow to be Wisdom when practis'd by our Saviour But Wisdom is justified of her Children impartially and those that have the Ingenuity and Goodness of the People in my Text and no Taint of Pharisaical Pride and Hypocrisie will approve the Rites of our Church as well as her Doctrines and say She has done all things Well She has made the Unanimous in Faith Uniform in Worship added to the Beauty of Truth the Beauty of Holiness neither dressing up the Service of God in that Strumpet-like Attire which the Church of Rome does nor stripping it into that deformed and sordid Nakedness which is seen in the Fanatick and Congregational Assemblies The Tenth Sermon MARK vii 37 He hath done all things well he maketh both the Deaf to hear and the Dumb to speak I Observed in the Testimony or Verdict of the People three things 1. The Appellation or Denomination they give our Lord He or This Man 2. The Kind or Nature of their Verdict it was an Approbation That he had done Well 3. The Extent of their Approbation That he had done All Things well I begin first with the Appellation or Denomination they give our Lord He or This Man The Peoples Appellation here is but a lame and imperfect Acknowledgment of Christ it exprest only one half and the meanest half of his Condition It was not the Style in which Believers in after-times spoke of him who never mentioned him as mere Man but as God or the Eternal Son of God When the Primitive Christians met in their early Devotions before day laudes Christo tanquam Deo canebant they sung Hymns to Christ as to a God as a Heathen could bear witness But however the Appellation of the People was less Honourable at the present it was accepted from them and registred as a Proof of their Ingenuity that they gave Christ the Due of his Actions though under an imperfect Style of his Person God opens the Eyes of mens Understanding and cures the Infirmities of their Souls by Degrees as Christ in the following Chapter cured the Blind mans Eyes who first saw Men like Trees and afterwards Men like Men. 'T was enough upon our Lord's first entering on his Prophetick Office and preaching to the World that the People received his Doctrine and conceived rightly of his Miracles though not of his Divine Nature that they acknowledged him to be a Good Man though not the Son of God Incarnate which at that time was not understood even by the Apostles themselves But then that which was an Ingenuous Expression in those days would be an Injurious or Blasphemous one in these if men should now so far debase Christ as to restrain him to his Humane Nature only and deny his Divine as the Socinians do who allow no higher Title to be due to him than this Man this Man has done all things well this Man was born of a pure Virgin this Man died rose from the Grave ascended into Heaven and sitteth at the right-hand of God and the like And 't is not without good reason that some have doubted whether those that are of this Perswasion are to be numbered among Christians who after so full and perfect a Revelation of Christ apprehend him yet so imperfectly who with a greater blindness if not malice persecute his Divinity than the Scribes and Pharisees did his Humanity use greater Endeavours to destroy the Son of God than they did to destroy the Supposed Son of Joseph and Mary I say though He or This Man was a pardonable appellation from the People who were yet but Raw Auditors of the Gospel yet 't is intolerable coming from Grown Christians and such Elementarii Senes Grey-headed Ignorants as stick still at the first Rudiments of the Faith deserve to be expell'd the School of Christ for their Non-proficiency Saint Paul 1 Cor. 1.12 sharply reproves Believers for saying I am of Paul I of Apollos I of Cephas I of Christ and not only for their Schisms but chiefly for levelling our Lord with his Servants and making him only the Head of a Sect a Partial Minister of mens Salvation when he was the Sole Author and Finisher of their Faith But what shall we say then of those Fanaticks of later times who deny not only the Divinity but Humanity of Christ affirm that what the Gospel says of God Incarnate is not to be understood Historically but Morally not of a Particular Single Person but of all that are True Believers and that themselves are the Godded with God those in whom God is Man'd or Humaniz'd as they delight to Cant. Acknowledge no Saviour or Redeemer of the World but make themselves all to be Christs assume his Attributes and Prerogatives pretend to be without Sin Not that they do not do those things which the Worst of
shew'd them not the Father now in the Person of another but in their Own in his Divine and Omnipotent Power displayed in themselves And this was not only a Plain and Evident but a Gracious Revelation of the Father which as it improv'd their Knowledge of him so it gave them also Demonstrations of his Love and Favour The Father was both gracious to them and present with them before under the Law he was their God and they were his People but after they had embrac'd the Gospel he sent his Son into the World to preach they were admitted into a Nearer Relation and were not only call'd the People and Servants but the Children of God the adopted Brethren of Christ and the Father of Heaven and Earth was appropriated by our Lord no less to them than to himself I go says he to my Father and to your Father to my God and to your God And this being the blessed Condition not only of the first Disciples but of all true Believers since I cannot chuse but take Occasion from hence to say That those Christians are not sensible of their own Priviledge and Dignity that go a Compass to God when they are allowed the Directest and Shortest Way to him who keep a Distance when they are invited and encouraged to make a Near and familiar Address out of an affected Humility move them that they may move her that she may move Christ that Christ may move the Father What a trifling Ambages is this after our Lord has promised an Immediate Access and upon no better ground but because forsooth the like is practised in the Courts of Earthly Princes where Strangers and Unknown Persons are not allow'd to make their Approach to the King without the Introduction of some in Place Alas to the Court of Heaven there comes no Strangers or Unknown Persons all the Suters there are Sons and these use not to implore the help of Servants but being first in Power and Place themselves go directly and boldly to the Throne of the King their Father as S t Paul Heb. 4.16 encourages the Faithful to do Let us come boldly says he to the Throne of Grace and our Lord at the 16 th Verse of this Chapter speaks as if his own Mediation were not always necessary At that day says he ye shall ask in my Name and I say not unto you that I will pray the Father for you for the Father himself loveth you because ye have loved me and have believed that I came out from God Those that believe that Jesus is the Christ as the Apostle says are born of God and begotten of his Spirit and they need no other Advocate to speak for them but the Spirit and such their Propinquity by Faith and to distrust their Interest were to distrust God's Love and Christ's Truth and we may say of such a Diffidence what one says of the like in humane Alliance peccat Qui commendandum se putat esse suis he sins against the Right of Kindred that thinks he needs to be recommended to his own Relations Therefore though we decline not with the ranker Socinians the Intercession of Christ who say He is mere Man and not God and consequently that all Prayers made to him are idolatrous Nor yet comply with the more allay'd and qualify'd Poyson of others of them who allow it lawful to pray to Christ but not necessary yet we may vindicate the Prerogative given to a Disciple in my Text against the Shew of Wisdom in Will-Worship and Humility practis'd in the Church of Rome For we who are rightly instructed in the Close Conjunction of the Father and the Son that teach he is both God and Man know it is indifferent whether we supplicate the Father or the Son whether with our Lord himself we say Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit or whether with S t Stephen Lord Jesu receive my Spirit who praying after this manner is said also to have call'd upon God And in truth when our Lord sends his Disciples in my Text to his Father he neither extinguishes his own Adoration nor Mediation but sends them from his Humane Nature as I may say to meet them again in his Divine And this is the true Importance of his sending them to the Father but they were not capable at this time of receiving the Doctrine of his Divinity for a little before in plain terms without a Figure he had discoursed to them of his Death and Passion and those to whom it was a hard Saying That they should eat his Flesh and drink his Bloud would have thought it a much harder to have heard That he was the Eternal God and could yet be Crucify'd by Wicked men Not willing therefore to force their Reason either by his Argumentation or Authority he let this Mystery alone to be revealed in due time by the Holy Ghost and establisht their Comfort on a Foundation more easie to be conceived by them the Goodness and All-Sufficiency of the Father For however they did believe their Master to be an Extraordinary and Divine Person they could not chuse but believe their God was Greater and if it were a happiness to follow the Son it must be yet a higher Felicity to be Favourites to the Father of whom the whole Family of Heaven and Earth is named Now this being the Condition which a Disciple was left in at his Lord's Departure he had no reason to mourn and languish for his Absence with S t Augustine to desire to see Christum in ore Christ's natural face again while he enjoyed Christum in Patre Christ in the power and presence of the Father When a less Person at his Departure gives us the Favour of a Greater we may say He does not Desert us but bestows his Absence on us But Christ's Care of his Disciples and kindness to them will be seen yet more in the Unlimited Measure in which they were promised God's Favour exprest in these Words Whatsoever ye shall ask he will give it you Which is the next thing I am to explain Whatsoever ye shall ask he will give it you This was a large Promise and yet as largely and stupendiously made good For 1. Such was the Power of a Disciple by Prayer upon Earth that he could cast out Devils chase away all Diseases heal all Infirmities call the Dead out of their Grave and send the Living into it 2. Such was his Power in the Sea that when the Ship was become a Prey to the merciless Element and nothing but Death and Desperation appear'd to all others a S t Paul could say Not one of the Company shall perish And why so Because he had pray'd and God had given him the Lives of them that sail'd with him 3. Such was his Power in Heaven that the Holy Ghost stood press'd and ready as I may say upon the laying-on of the Apostles hands as upon a Sign given to descend in all his various and wonderful
Jesus and their own Prophets and persecuted us and are Contrary to all men 2. Because Love easily forgives Injuries hardly perceives any can never possibly wrong the Party Beloved and the Object or Party Belov'd of Divine Love is all Mankind So that there needs no Admonitions here to suppress Malice or Uncharitable Inclinations for the first Motions of them never arise in the heart to be suppress'd 3. Because Love of all other Vertues of the Soul goes forth of a Mans self and places its Content in the Good it does to another that so hard a Duty to Flesh and Bloud which the Apostle commands 1 Cor. 10.12 Let no man seek his own but every man an Others Wealth is its Choice and Delight No Vertue therefore qualifies us equal to this to perform the Works of Piety Justice and Charity 4. Because of the wonderful Activity of Love in the Soul and enflaming it more than any other Vertue to Great Actions for indeed whatsoever is Vigorously performed is the Effect of Love This Grace is like a Fire in the Heart and makes it restless in what it conceives will be acceptable to the Person beloved it renders it also undaunted in the greatest Difficulties and Dangers and for this reason 't is Faiths chiefest Instrument to conquer the World and the Temptations of it This is the Victory that overcometh the World says S t John even your Faith but then 't is that Faith which as S t Paul speaks worketh by Love 'T is a strange word in the Original which the Apostle uses in that place for working by Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which imports as much as being possess'd with Love as a Demoniack is possess'd with an Evil Spirit which kind of Persons are ordinarily indued with an Unusual Strength to do things which naturally they could not do as the Demoniack that met our Lord out of the Tombs whom no Chains of Iron could hold but he brake them asunder Those that are acted by Love are transported after the like manner to perform things above their own and other mens Measures As the Spouse speaks in the Canticles Love is strong as Death i. e. conquers all things and nothing can stand against it 2 Cor. 5.13 S t Paul says again That for the Love of God and the cause of the Gospel and the sake of the Brethren he had done some things that in the Eye of the World appeared Wild and Extravagant But whether we be Beside our Selves says he it is to God or whether we be sober 't is for your Cause for the love of Christ Constraineth us For the Influence therefore Love has upon all other Good Works as well as for its own Good Nature it is that God so highly Esteems it and 't is no wonder that 't is the Favourite of his Graces when as S t John says God himself is Love and though he be no more Love essentially than he is Wisdom Justice Power or any of his other Attributes yet because he exerts and diffuses his Love more among men and is revealed and made known more by it than by another Attribute it is spoken of as his Sole Being And now after so many Excellent things have been said of this Divine Grace namely That 't is the Summ of the Commandments the Soul of all Vertue the Favourite of God and in a Sense God himself certainly it will be worth our best Endeavours to acquire it and how we may do this is the last thing I am to shew How we may acquire or attain Divine Love That we may take the right course to attain this Vertue we must look upon it as upon all other Vertues partly as a Grace of God's bestowing and partly as that which is to be acquired by our own Labour for there is something of Gift and something of Industry in it First We must look upon it as a Grace of God's Donation For what our Lord says of Faith That all men have it not and S t Paul That no man has it of himself but it is the Gift of God may likewise be said of the Love of God and of our Neighbour We have them not of our Selves but they are Heavenly Gifts born of a Divine Seed and we must not conceive that by our own mere Natural Power and humane Will we can acquire them to the Soul and that we have no more to do but to resolve to obtain them and the Possession will follow But we must seek them by devout Addresses from God and expect them from his Bounty they being as I say Graces as well as the Fruits of our Labour As our Church therefore sets before the Epistle of Charity a Collect or Prayer to God for it Send O Lord into our Hearts the most Excellent Gift of Charity without which all our doings are nothing worth c. we must also supplicate for this Grace before we can hope to attain it But then Secondly 't is also an Acquisition of Labour and to be arriv'd to as other Vertues or Habits by Industry There are that have written of the Art of Vnchaste Love and all the Mysteries of it taught men how to accomplish their Wicked Ends which it would have been happier for them if they had been ignorant of And the Art of Godly Love may be also taught Rules and Precepts given to make men Masters of it And the Way in general to raise our Affections to the Love of God is to take the same course which we do when we betray our selves into a humane Passion reflect on what is Excellent and Amiable in God meditate on his Unparallell'd and Glorious Perfections which are sufficient to ravish us from the Desire of all Earthly things The reason that the Love of many waxes cold and their Affection to God as I may say is without Affection without heat and ardour is because they understand not the Beauties of his Essence and the Glorious Operations of his Power Wisdom and Goodness Men profess to be Worshippers of God to be brought up and skill'd in the Knowledge of him and his Religion but generally they are Strangers to him and his ways and what the Psalmist says of the Ungodly That they care not for God neither is God in all their thoughts I fear without Injustice may be affirmed of most men That they care not for God neither is he in all their thoughts and then what wonder is it si ignoti nulla cupido if men have no longing after a Good that they are ignorant of or at least never weigh and consider The Spouse in the Canticles numbers up and runs over in her Thoughts the manifold Graces that are in Christ which made him so amiable in her own and others Eyes before she sigh'd out her Love for him My Beloved says she is white and ruddy the chiefest among ten thousand again Because of the Savour of thy Ointments therefore do the Virgins love thee There must be some Fewel
for the Flame of Divine Love as well as for that of Carnal and if men excite not their Love to God by the Contemplation of his Sublime Perfections and Goodness their Love will be no better than the dead Carcase of a Passion than the cold Picture of a Flame And if any say A high and abstracted Contemplation of the Nature Properties and Attributes of the Deity is only fit for Philosophers who have Learning and Subtilty to penetrate into them but they come not within the comprehension of Common Men though otherwise Godly I answer Neither need they be solicitous in this matter there are other Motives to stir men up to the Love of God no less Excellent and subjected to the meanest Capacity viz. those which are taken from his Love to us first his manifold and never-to-be-enough-acknowledged Benefits both Spiritual and Temporal especially Spiritual which he has bestowed upon us through Christ Jesus the Son of his Love as the Remission of our Sins the Gift of Grace the Adoption of us to be his Children the Promise of the Kingdom of Heaven c. For when all is done there is no greater Procurer of Love or Motive to it than to be prevented with the Acts of Love Says David Praise the Lord O my Soul and all that is within me praise his holy Name who forgiveth all thy Sin and healeth all thy Infirmities who saveth thy Life from Destruction and crowneth thee with Mercy and Loving-kindness If men would weigh and consider the accursed and dreadful Condition into which the Guilt of Sin had brought them that the Wages of it is Eternal Damnation they would also be sensible how inestimable a Benefit the Remission of Sin and the Gifts of Grace and Glory are And as there can be no greater Motive to winde up mens Affections to God to the highest Pitch than this Exceeding great Love of God to them so there will need no other Instead therefore of heaping up many Motives I shall leave this one to your Meditations and proceed to shew what Inducements we have To Love our Neighbour And now the whole Hour would not suffice me to give a particular account of them some drawn from Mankinds being all at first of one Stock and Kindred others again from the Renewing this Relation between them by their being made Brethren through Grace in Christ and the adopted Children of one Father in Heaven from mens needing one anothers mutual help even the Greatest and Happiest as well as the Poorest and Meanest and the like But all these Inducements however weighty I shall wave at present not having time to insist on them and restrain my self to the one Motive express'd in my Text Because the Love of our Neighbour is one of the two Hooks or Hinges on which all the Law and the Prophets hang has the Honour to support at least one of the Tables of the Commandments one half of the Conditions God requires of men to make them Partakers of his Promises of the Blessings of this Life and of the Glory of that to come And though I said it has the Honour or Dignity to support but One of the two Tables yet there is that inseparable Connexion between the two Tables that he that breaks the one inevitably breaks the other Whosoever says S t James shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one Point he is guilty of all 'T is not possible to offend against the Law and not against the Law-giver 't is not possible to transgress against the Second Table and not to violate the First to hate our Brother and to love God And the School-men on this account make but one Theological Vertue of our Love to God and our Love to our Neighbour and S t John reckons Uncharitable men among Unbelievers the Hater of his Brother and an Infidel to be the same says he If a man says I love God and hate his Brother he is a Lyar and again he is in darkness i. e. without Faith or the Knowledge of God Our Lord also Matth. 25. pronounces That whatsoever Love is shew'd to his Brethren is shew'd to him Inasmuch says he as you have done it unto one of the least of these my Brethren ye have done it unto me and again what is denied to them is denied to him Inasmuch as you did it not to one of the least of these you did it not to me The true Love of God carries with it as a necessary Consequence the Love of our Brother and 't is but a cheap Piece of Hypocrisie and a niggardly Lye to pretend to love God who is above any Material Expressions of our Love and to harden our hearts to our Brethren who stand in need of such things and whom God has appointed and deputed to be the Receivers of such Tribute in his behalf And thus as all the Law and the Prophets hang on these two Commandments The Love of God And the Love of our Neighbour So these two again depend on one another The Summ of all that has been said is this Love is the End of the Commandment all the Numerous Precepts contain'd in the Law point only at this One grand Duty and are but particular Instances and Exemplifications of it Many things in the Law consist more in a Shew of Goodness than of true Goodness and are rather the Way to Righteousness than Righteousness it self all the Typical Ceremonial Ordinances were but ad populum phalerae as 't is said Pomps and Ornaments either to amuse the rude People or to be Helps to their weak Understanding to bring them to the Knowledge of better things while therefore they observed these they learned to be Religious but when they lov'd God and their Neighbour they were Religious Etiam stante Hierosolyma Jerusalem even standing and the Law of the Sabbath being in force the Strict Rest of it yielded to the Works of it and our Lord tells us Matth. 12. None broke and prophan'd the Sabbath more than the Priests toiling in killing and sleying the Beasts for Sacrifice and were yet blameless And upon another occasion of breaking the Sabbath says he I will have Mercy and not Sacrifice i. e. when both cannot be performed he prefers the Works of Mercy or Charity to a Brother before the Outward Duties to God himself And the learned among the Jews perceived that even while they did perform the Outward Works enjoined them by the Law that they were not principally intended in the Law nay that in respect of the Works of Love that they were cancell'd even when they stood most in force that which is said of our Lord 's particular Obedience Psal. 40. Burnt-Offerings and Sacrifices thou wouldest not but a Body hast thou prepared me then said I Lo I come to do thy Will O God! may be said in like manner of the Obedience that is required of all Men that there is a noluisti thou wouldst not have implyed in all Commands concerning them