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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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seale of their Apostleship and make their Ministry instrumentall to convert and build up soules unto Jesus Christ And we must likewise be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Advocates and Patrons of their maintenance It was the saying of an eminent Gentleman in Sr. Benjamin Rudiard the long Parliament that a scandalous maintenance would cause a scandalous Ministry It 's to be observed that Dioclesian did not do so much mischiefe to the Ministry it selfe as Julian did Dioclesian put many to death which was an horrid wickednesse But the Devill put another designe into Julians head to take away all the maintenance of Ministers and put downe Schooles of Learning and Ecclesiasticall Histories will informe us that by consequent Julian did the greater mischiefe For though some particular persons were took out of the way through Dioclesian's persecution yet there arose up others in their stead But the taking away of all their lands and revenues did hinder a succession of Ministers And the robbing of Schooles of learning discouraged many from the study of learned Arts and Sciences 3. Let us all pray for the continuance of Gospell Ordinances 3. Pray for the Continuance of the Gospell in their Liberty and purity This is that which made Israel praise-worthy in the eyes of the Nations Deut. 46. 7. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdome and your understanding in the sight of the Nations which shall heare all these statutes and say surely this great Nation is a wise and understanding people For what Nation is there so great who hath God so nigh unto them as the Lord our God is in all things that we call upon him for ●he Gospell of Christ the Word and Sacraments administred in their purity the Sabbath kept strictly all these will be the praise and glory of our Nation 4. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem both for Civill and Ecclesiasticall peace Pray for Civill peace It 's to me a great wonder that 4. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem amidst all the concussions and revolutions of these times we in joy peace that we ●it under our own Vines and Fig-trees that meum tuum are in some measure preserved that publick Courts of Justice are opened and that the sword is not put to the decision of all controversies We should pray that peace may be continued that all our Officers may be peace and exactors righteousnesse I know none that hath his eyes in his head or grace in his heart that is willing to imbroyl Isai 60. 17. the Nation in another civill war We know by sad experi●n●e the Calamities of War how thankfull ought we to be for the peace we yet in joy and how ought we to pray for the continuance of it that Peace may be extended as a river and righteousnesse like a mighty streame For Ecclesiasticall peace we must pray there are two great Prophecies Zeph. 3. 9. Then will I turn to the people a pure language that they may all call upon the name of the Lord to serve him with one consent And Zach. 13. 9. I will bring the third part through the fire Isai 66. 12. and will r●f●ne them as Sylver is refined and trye them as Gold is tryed they shall call upon my name and I will heare them I will say it is my people and they shall say the Lord is my God There is an Unity of the spirit which we must endeavour to keep and there are seaven Ones mentioned Eph. 4. 4 5 6. One body one spirit one hope one God one faith one baptisme one God and Father of all c. I remember a patheticall speech which Luther useth to the Pastors of the Church of Strusburg Vobis oro perswadeatis c. i. e. I pray you sath he be perswaded that I shall alwaies be as desirous to embrace unity and concord as I am desirous to have the Lord Jesus to be propitious to me Martin Bucer writes to a Godly Minister Quis non vitâ etiam sua redimat submorum isthuc infinitum dissidii scandalum Bucer very high expressions Who would not saith he purchase with his life the removing of that infinite scandall that comes by dissention Wherefore let us study the things that make for peace and edification Let dividing names be laid aside amongst sound Christian Quirites once named Cesars souldiers were pacified O that Christian being named union and reconciliation might be obtained Let us all labour to approve our selves members of the Church of Jesus Christ as living stones in that building The Apostle blames the Corinthians for siding and making partyes 1 Cor. 1. 11 12. It hath been declared to me of you my brethren by them which are of the House of Cloe that there are contentions among you Now this I say that every one of you saith I am of Paul and I am of Apollo and I of Cephas and I of Christ The name of Christian should swallow up names of division Now for Motives the second thing propounded here I shall 1 Motive God will make Jerusalem a praise adde two only 1. That God will make Jerusalem a praise in the earth For first Believe it God will not faile one tittle of his word All the promises made unto Jerusalem shall every one be fulfilled 1. Because he promiseth in their season Psal 48. 1 2. Great is the Lord and greatly to be praised in the City of our God in the mountain of his Holynesse beautifull for situation the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion on the sides of the North the City of the great King And Psal 50. 2. Out of Sion the perfection of beauty God hath shined For Instance Greater shall be the light of knowledge of the Church in the Gospell Isai 11. 9. The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the Sea Isai 60. 1 19. Arise shine for thy light is come and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee Vers 19. The Sun shall be no more thy light by day neither for brightnesse shall the Moon give light unto thee but the Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light and thy God thy glory These great Promises referre unto the Gospell 2. The Church shall be enlarged Isai 51. 1 2 3. Hearken unto me ye that follow after righteousnesse ye that seek the Lord look to the rockes whence ye are hewen c. Look unto Abraham your Father and Sarah that bare you for I called him alone and blessed and increased him For the Lord will comfort Zion he will make her wildernesse like Eden and her desert like the garden of God c. 3. Holynesse shall be improved Deut. 26. 18 19. The Lord hath avouched thee this day to be his peculiar people c. To make thee high above all Nations which he hath made in praise in name and in honour that thou mayest be an holy people unto the Lord thy God as he hath
shall I tell you further of their seven Sacraments and other Trent Doctrines viz Justification by work● Purgatory Indulgences Transubstantiation the Masse praying to Saints I would not at this time conjure up these devils unlesse I had more time to lay them down by a particular confutation I referre you to the learned confutations of Chamier Dr. Whitaker and Dr. Reynolds each one the glory and o●nament of his ●niver●ty and our Nation One of them kills his enemy and hewes him to peeces Another buries him I will give in a few Principles which are not my judgment only though I heartily subscribe thereunto but of many others whose ●ookes I am not worthy to carry after them One is that the Pope is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Antichrist let 's not be afraid 1. The Pope is the Antichrist v. G. Downham to give him his right name a●d call a spade a spade a Whore a Whore Antichrist Antichrist Learned Downham in severall demonstrations abundantly proves the Assertion it s a book worthy your perus●ll K. James ask'd Sir Francis Bacon whether the ●o●e were Antichrist he returned this answer that if a hue and cry were made after Antichrist and he should apprehend the Pope he would make him clear himself of the markes of Antichrist before he would let him goe A Second Principle is this that a Papist cannot goe beyond a 2. A Papist cannot goe beyond a Reprobate v. Mr. Perkins Reprobate I referre you to the Learned and satisfacto●y tract of judicious Mr. Perkins who will give you if you be as willing to re●eive abundant satisfaction in this particular A 3 d. Principle is that there ought to be no Peace no ●econciliation with ●ome I am herein fully of that Reverend Drs●o●inion 3. There ought to be no peace with Rome B. Hall th●t there ought to be no peace with ●ome though I cannot agree with him in saying that Rome is a true Church no more then I can say that a wom●n is honest who is know● to be a common Whore As for Cassander of old Sancta Clara of late who would be reconcilers and joyn the Ark and Dagon Rome and England together for ought I know they may as well reconcile the two Poles as unite those that differ in severall fundamentals A Pottle of Tyber and a Pint of Thames will make a strange Medley Ballderdash Gallimaufrie what shall I call it Christ and Antichrist will not bee thus yoaked Protestantisme and Popery Rome and Geneva can agree no more than fire and water Frigida cum calidis pugnant humentia siccis Lead and Gold cannot agree in the same Furnace no union with Antichrist no peace with Jezabel no reconciliation with Babylon A fourth Principle is this That a Papist living and dying in 4. A Papist living dying in the trusting to his Merits cannot bee saved 5. Babylon is Rome the opinion of his own Merits cannot be saved because he overthroweth the Foundation cuts off that Bough whereon he should lean he overthroweth the Righteousnesse of Christ and without Christs righteousnesse no salvation 5. That Babylon is Rome Vrbs septicollis and shall bee destroyed Rome is that Mother of Fornications and Witchcrafts and herein you have the consent of the most Orthodox and learned Interpreters of the Revelation who concurre in this principle These are the Principles which I am not afraid to own and I am pers●●ded that few or none of you differ from my judgment but beleeve these Principles to be true I will have but one word more for a close of all in my last use Vse 3. For Exhortation which is for exhortation and then I shall dismisse you My Brethren you have heard of the Mercies of this day singular Deliverances singular Testimonies of the loving kindness of the Lord Now what eminent things shall we doe for God What shall we render unto the Lord for all his benefits Let me be your Remembrancer after what manner we should remember the mercyes of this day and then I shall commend you to the grace of God 1. Remember to transmit the memory of this day to your Posterity Let this Anniversary solemnity be kept in record let it bee told by the Father to the children and to the childrens children from Generation to Generation Because some question the truth of the day and look upon it but as a politick invention and Trick of State let us bee more diligent to keep it in memory let us speak one to another of the mercies of this day be well acquainted with the History of the day and let us speak of this deliverance in the house in the field at our down-lying and rising up what things of old what ancient mercies the Lord hath vouchsafed to our Fathers and to us in them May this day be wrote in the Kalendar in Letters of Gold which the Papists would have wrote in letters of blood 2. Remember and praise God for this miraculous deliverance 2. Praise God for the Mercies of this day let our mouthes be filled with the praises of the Lord Ps 107. 8. Le ts take up the Ps 124. and make application let our lips praise the Lord and let us say the name of the Lord be praised let our hearts praise the Lord let all that is within us bless his holy name 3. Remember and be vigilant watch against Papists trust them 3. Remember and be watchfull not we know their equivo●tions we know their blood-thi●sty●ess le ts ever deprecate and ●bhorre any Toleration any connivance or compliance with them no mo●e trusting to them than to Simeon and Levi Brethren in Iniquity in whose habitations were instruments of cruelty Gen. 49. 5 6. Be cu●telous come not near the brinke venture not upon Armini●n F●milistical and other mungril opinions which partly speaks in the language of the Jews and partly in the language of Ashdod Give the Devil his Option he would have for his Agent a. Familist as soon as a Papist for a Familist can aequivocate and tell you he means Christ and him crucified when as he means not the Christ crucified at Jerusalem but a phansie of his own addle brain a Christ in him or a Platonick Christ 4. And lastly shew some tokens for good of your joy and rejoycing 4. Shew some token of thankfulness in the mercy of this day This day is a day of Thanksgiving let it be a day of Almes-giving to cloath the naked and feed the hungry that their loyns may bless you send to such for whom nothing is prepared This day is a feasting day and there ought to be a sending of port●ons one unto another I come in a good day I hope you will not say me my there are many poo●e Housholders and poor Scholars too it 's farre more charity to help them than your wandring Peggars In Florence as I have read there was speciall provision made for such housholders as were poor and
reconciliation to beseech people to be reconciled unto God And having endeavour'd this great work principally in the next place I conjure you and earnestly entreat you as you are Ministers of the Gospell of peace that you would conferre your best endeavours to cement sod●r and unite diss●nting Brethren that they may what in you lies be prevail'd withall to agree together in Unity on Earth who shall agree in Unity in the highest Heavens I plead not in the least for any persons how much soever admired by some who are either unsound in the saith or unholy in life No reconciliation can be expected nor ought to be attempted with * Gal. 5. 20. 21. Idolatries Drunkenesse Heresies and other such like deeds of the flesh I plead only for such as truly fear God who are not only nominall but reall saints Here lyeth the labour and here the work to be reconcilers amongst them and such peace-makers are blessed That I may speak my mind freely for I love plain dealing as for such Reconcilers as Cassander of old and Sancta Clara of late who would joyn together the Ark and Dagon the Ephod and Teraphim I mean Protestantisme and Popery these are to be detested and sent back again to Rome from whence they came † V. Bishop Hall's Treatise No peace with Rome No peace with Rome no quarter ought to be given to Benhadad I may say of them as Jehu said to Ahaziah * 2 King 9. 22. what peace so long as the whoredomes of thy Mother Jezabel and her witchcrafts are so many daies without number As for Ignatius Loyola Father of the Jesuites John of Leyden Ring-leader of the Anabaptists and the rest of their Complices of whose franctick practices we have ample Relations in Print † V. Sleyd Comment Baylyes disswasive they are so farre from any reall endeavours after reconciliation with us as rather like Samsons Foxes they run abroad with firebrands in their tails and so set all the standing corn a fire These are the grand Incendiaries flabella seditionum From Jesuitisme and Anabaptisme all heresies and damnable errors receive their originall At Rome and Munster this counterfeit coine receives it's stamp and impression Hence as out of a Trojan Horse is let out an Ambuscado to destroy the Protestant Religion Therefore ther 's no ground of hopefull successe if we should attempt any reconciliation with them Let them come to us and make serious Confessions and retractations but let not us go to them Let them first abjure their principles and practises though I know not why we should trust a Papist upon his oath till then there can be no possibility of embraceing peace with such who either are of Babylon or for Babylon But what is chiefly in mine eye and aime amounts to this brief issue to perswade all those to unite amongst themselves who are sound in the faith and holy in life Amongst them there are some who come so farre up to us and we hope they may yet come farther if selfe interests make no obstructions as to acknowledge us true Ministers the Church of England a true Church Much is granted to this effect by some * V. Apolog. of the five dissenting Brethren Reverend dissenting Brethren in Print When carnall Interests secular policies and mentall reservations are laid aside and men declare plainly what they would have and when we know once where to finde them and where they will fix then Attempts of Accommodation may attain a happy and comfortable successe That which much concerns us all is to lay to heart and be deeply affected with the divisions of Reuben and to use our utmost endeavour to comprimise differences and make up breaches and animosities lest otherwise we gratify the Jesuit who is the common Enemy who loves to fish in troubled waters or is like an Adder which seeks for shelter in broken walls Let 's leave off contention prius quam sese immisceat so Junius renders the words of Solomon † Prov. 17. 14. Prov. 17. 14. i. e. Let not contention mixe with our affairs For once it being mixed and joyned it 's not easy to unmixe and separate afterwards Wherefore let it be our care and wisdome not to give advantage by our domestick breaches to the wild Boar of Babylon or the subtle Foxes of Munster and Racovia who when they see us a quarrelling one with another they make a prey of us both I well remember about this time 24. yeares ago in the Vespers of our publicke Act there was a Question discuss'd which the * Dr. Wingham of St Johns Respondent held Affirmative An Calviniani quos vocant Lutherani possint in unam Ecclesiam coalescere And in the like solemne Convention another Question 7. yeares ago was affirmed homogeneous to the former by a † Dr. Wilkinson of Christ-Church learned Professor of our University An intersit pacis salutis Ecclesiae vere Evangelicos pium colere syncretismum But especially let 's have recourse unto Scripture What saith the Psalmist * Psal 133. 1. Psal 133. 1. Behold how good and how pleasant it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity I have often fetch 't a ground of hope against many fears from 2. Prophesies The one is † Zeph. 3. 9. Zeph. 3. 9. For then will I turn to the people a pure Language that they may all call upon the name of the Lord to serve him with one consent The other is * Zach. 14. 9. Zach. 14. 9. And the Lord shall be King over all the Earth in that day shall there be one Lord and his name be one † Non satis est si homines agnoscerent unum Deum nisi consentiu●t in re●ta simplici aliqu● fide ita ut celebretur in terrâ nomen unius Dei Calv. in Zeph. 3. 9. Though there be but one Lord yet his name is called on diversly but here is Prophesied an unity of worshipping God And as for unity amongst Brethren this is accounted a fruit of our effectuall calling * Eph. 4. 3. Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace And for the better setting home of this exhortation the Apostle mentions 7. Ones in the following verses viz. One body one Spirit one hope of our calling one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all How pathetically doth the Apostle presse unanimity † Phil. 2. 1 2. If saith he there be therefore any Consolation in Christ if any comfort of love if any fellowship of the Spirit if any bowells of mercies fulfill ye my joy that ye be like minded having the fame love being of one accord and one mind * Numerus binarius eo magis infamis quia primus ausus est discedere ab unitate Pythag Pythagoras used to put a brand of infamy upon the number of two because it first departed from unity But the Apostle propounds the Question
in the negative which hath the force of a strong affirmation † 1 Cor. 3. 3. For whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions are ye not carnall and walk as men Sects and factions have their source and originall from the flesh so * Notandum est etiam hoc loco unde sint factiones sectae in Ecclesia Primum quidem ex carne ut qui sectarii sunt licet videantur esse spiritualissimi revera tamen carnales existant Muscul in 1 Cor. 3. 3. Musculus a judicious Expositor observes Further let me be your remembrancer of that great duty that in an especiall manner concernes the Ministers of the Gospell that is to unite amongst themselves and endeavour to draw in one yoak and as one man † Jude 3. contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints Let the Apostles exhortation be as a frontlet before our eyes and as a Phylactery sewed on the hemmes of our garments * Rom. 14. 19. Rom. 14. 19. Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace and things wherewith one may edify another The Phrase is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we must pursue and run after peace though it may seem to flye from us But we must not take any peace at a venture but that which tends to edification as † Sectemur studium vehemens conservandae pacis requirit Pac● adj●ngitaedificationem mutuam ut non pacem quamvis sed eam tantum praecipi intelligamus quae ad aedificationem pertinet Non aedificat pax in mendacio superstitione idololatria impietate sed in veritate Zech. 8. 19. Veritatem pacem diligite Pareus His duobus concordia aedificatione continentur fere ●m●a charitatis offici● Calv. Pareus and Calvin observe Of all others let the faithfull Ministers of Christ endeavour after a right understanding of each other and a loving correspondence and onenesse of heart and judgment amongst themselves Tell it not in Gath publish it not in the streets of Askelon lest the Popish party triumph when they heare that even the Lords Diamonds cut one another and that there are great animosities evill surmises and bitternesse of speech one towards another amongst some that are truely Godly How sharpe was the contention between two rare men even Paul and Barnabas insomuch as they * Act. 15. 39. departed asunder one from the other In severall Centuries we read of the great variances amongst Euseb L. 5. c. 26. L. 7. c. 3. those who were eminent Lights in the Church as Iraenaeus was at great variance with Victor Cyprian with Stephan Jerome with Austin Basill with Damasus Chrysostome with Epiphanius Cyrill with Theodoret. And their private inconsiderable differences amongst themselves gave great advantage to the common Enemy Satan who as a learned Author observes † Dolebat hoc Diabolus qui semper de fratrum pace torquetur Optat. L. 2. is vexed with the peace of the Brethren but much pleased with their contentions Though it cannot be expected but offences will come and that in the Church militant there will be sounding in our ears the noises of Axes and Hammers and oft times it falls out that Doctors both Godly and learned differ in some things from one another in their judgment Yet every Minister of the Gospell should imitate his Master Christ in being a Reconciler It was storyed of Athanasius that he was in lesser matters dissidentibus Magnes though in weighty affairs he was Adamas an Adamant not to be moved even a Load stone to draw those unto him who differed from him Wherefore abundance of wisdome and candour is required towards such as dissent from us if they keep those Fundamentall Principles of faith and a good conscience Truth ought to be spoke but in * Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est persistentes sinceri in vera doctrina ac fide in charitate Zanch. Love And a lapsed Brother ought to be restored or set in joynt so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports but it must be done by such as are † spirituall and in the Spirit of meeknesse If matters be circumstantiall abundance of gentlenesse moderation and mutuall forbearance ought to be exercised A flint may sooner be broken on a Pillow then an anvile † Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat rem aliquam resarcire collapsam reparare Tarnov in medull Ev. * Si virtutum finis ille sit maximus qui plurimorum spectat profectum moderatio omnium pulcherrima est Ambr. de Panor l. 1. c. 1. And mildnesse in some cases may prevail where roughnesse cannot But if matters be Fundamentall If some cry down the morall Law as an Almanack out of date as some Antimonian Spirits have endeavoured if others cry down Magistracy and Ministery as some Anabaptisticall Spirits have done if some cry down the Christian Sabbath as some * Tilham a pestilent Antisabbataria● who seduceth multitudes at Colchester and writes for the Jewish Sabbath and D. Heylin who in a late book intitled Respondet Petrus discovers himselfe a profest Adversary to the strict keeping of the Lords day Sabbath and decries strict observers thereof and most unworthily asperseth that eminent Light of the Church D. Vsser A. B. at Armagh who though Orthodox as in other things so in his judgment in the Lords day Sabbath yet cannot escape the abuses of D. P. H. which said P. H. is neare a kin to Ismael whose hand is against every man and every mans hand was against him Antisabbatarians have done with much impudence and profanenesse of spirit in these and such like cases let 's not yeild an inch let 's keep our ground Let Luther's heroicall resolution be our pattern for imitation Hic gero titulum cedo nulli It was the prudent Counsell of Athanasius to the Orthodox Brethren that they should by no means receive any pacificatory Letters from George the Arrian Persecutor and † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil Epist 235. Basil in an Epistle to Epiphanius assigns a strong reason why Athanasius gave such Counsell If once saith he we shake off the simplicity of the faith there will be no end of Disputations However let us all confer our heads and hearts together that we may agree so farre as we can still holding * Heb. 10. 23. fast our profession without wavering Let it be our endeavour † Heb. 12. 14. to follow peace with all men and holynesse Let 's preserve a happy union between truth and peace All the truths of God are more pretious then the Gold of Ophir We are commanded to * Prov. 23. 23. buy the truth but are prohibited from selling the least part of it Wherefore we ought all in our severall places and capacities to be valiant for the truth even all steel to the back The truth of God is a good matter and it 's good to be
subscribe that since Christian Religion was profest there was never a Collection of more Godly Orthodox and Learned Divines then in this present Century Yet I am far from excusing or extenuating the Animosities Heart-divisions uncouth unseemly Habits self interests carnal Policies unwarrantable separations and that Latitude which many take unto themselves now adays The good old Puritan would not take an Inch formerly where many now venture to take an Ell. I heartily wish a Reformation thorow impartial that what we condemn in others we may avoid each one in himself O that it might be the main design we drive at to advance the power of godliness and to go before each other in a real example of Reformation Let 's all labor as one man to be found in the Faith and holy in life so that Heresies Blasphemies and all forts of profaneness may be abominated and extirpated And let it be our endeavor to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace So Eph. 4. 3. that according to those Prophesies the accomplishment whereof we daily expect We may all worship the Lord with one consent that the Zeph. 3. 9. Zech. 13. 9. Lord may be one and his name one And let us never forget that the vows God are upon us which we ought to our power to endeavor to keep inviolably in that Solemn National Covenant which was made in a day of distress with our hands lifted up to the most high God Let not that Solemn Oath be accounted as an Almanack out of date lest the Lord send a Sword to avenge the quarrel of a broken Covenant Let 's expostulate with Ezra Should we again break the Commandment Ezra 9. 14. and joyn in affinity with the people of these abominations After Oathes Covenants Days of Humiliation and after so many signal Deliverances shall we again hancker after superstitious Ceremonies a formal Service Book a Lordly Prelacy unwarrantable Separations Schisms Machiavilian Policies self-seeking Interests The Lord forbid that we should be so unthankful for the mercies received and so unmindeful of those particular Duties which God expects from us in our several Places and Callings But I shall not exceed the bounds of a Preface Although this may be accounted a Digression yet I hope may be of some use to the Reader Thus much I was willing to premise as far as I apprehend having a single eye at Gods Glory and the Publick Benefit Wherefore be pleased Reader to peruse deliberately and candidly these three Decads of Sermons Preach'd with much plainness to the Auditors accompanied with a vehement desire to do good and afford the Author thy Prayers who desires a share in the Prayers of all the Israel of God and remains Magdalen-Hall Oxon April 9. 1660. Thy souls servant HENRY WILKINSON To the Reader WHen it was told David after the defeat of Absolom that Ahimaaz the sonne of Zadok came running the King said He is a good man and cometh with good tideings I may truly say so of these Sermons and the reverend Author of them He is a good man and therefore we may be sure that he bringeth good tydings with him He is a right Nathanael a true Israelite without guile an able Preacher a vigilant Governour a faithfull friend a bountifull distributer to whom much of the Character of Aristotles magnanimous man doth exactly agree 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who dares openly to love a friend when others reject him and openly to disprove the faults of those whom others feare and flatter As is the man and his Communication such is his doctrine sound wholsome savory edifying not meerly notionall and suited onely to the fancy but properly calculated for the Conscience and conversation unto which the more any doctrine is fitted the more it is according to the mind of the spirit of Christ speaking in the Word and to the direction of his Apostles who used great plainnesse of speech and such demonstration of the Spirit and power as might manifest the truth to every mans conscience in the sight of God who gave instruction unto others whom they had separated to the work of the Gospell to hold fast the wholsome forme of sound words by sound doctrine to Exhort and Convince gainsaiers to shew in doctrine incorruptnesse gravity sincerity sound speech which cannot be condemned to speak to rebuke to exhort with all Authority to teach men to maintaine good workes for necessary uses to preach such things as are good and profitable unto men Though I have not had opportunity to peruse all these Sermons yet having been an hearer of many of these and finding in those which I have read the same even and serious spirit and withall great variety of profitable matter I may safely commend them to the Christian Reader as Sermons drawn according to these prescripts of the Apostle and consequently very usefull unto publick edification unto which all our studies labours and writings should be subservient Apr. 4. 1660. Thine in our Common Lord EDWARD REYNOLDS The contents of the first Decad. SERM. 1. 1. COr c. 2. vers 2. For I determined not to know any thing among you save Jesus Christ and him crucified p. 1. The Text divided p. 3 and handled 1 Concerning knowledge in Generall p. 4. 5 6. 2 Concerning the knowledge of Christ pag. 7. 8. And this knowledge hath 3 characters Fundamentall excellent and soule-saveing pag. 9. 3 Cautions concerning the use of humane learning pag. 11. 12. 3 Concerning the knowledge of Christ crucified pag. 13. 14. Applic what Ministers must teach pag. 14. 15 16. 2 What all must learne p. 16. 17 18. SERM. II. IEr 45. v. 5. And seekest thou great things for thy selfe seek them not Text devided pag. 22. Severall sorts of seekers pag. 25. 26 27 28 29 30. The Person seeking p. 31. 32 33. Applic Vse 1. For exposition pag. 34. 35 36 37. Vse 2 For direction in 4 Particulars pag. 38. 39 40 41. Vse 3 For exhortation in 4 Considerations pag. 42. 43 44 45 46 47 48. SERM. III. PRov. 11. 30. Hee that winneth soules is wise The Text divided pag. 50. 51. The Doctrine propounded That it 's a choice fruit of wisdome to winne soules unto God pag. 51. Method propounded 1 the proofe of the Poynt pag. 52. 53. 2. 4 Arguments for confirmation p. 53. 54 55. 3. Two Characters of him that is likeliest to winne soules pag. 56. 57 58 59 60 61. 4. Applic. 1. For Humiliation pag. 63. 3. For Direction in 7 particulars pag. 66. 67. SERM. IV. MAtth 13. 45 46. pag. 68. Again the Kingdome of Heaven is like unto a Merchant man seeking godly Pearles who when hee had found one Pearle of great price hee went and sold all that hee had bought it The Context opened pag. 69. 70. The Text divided pag. 71. 72. Two Doctrines raised pag. 73 Doct 1. That every true Believer is a Merchant of goodly Pearles Method propounded 1. By illustrating the
preach Christ but to preach a man's selfe in a vaine glorious affectation of eloquence Herein consists the duty of a Minister for matter to preach Christ only for manner with all humility and him crucifi'd This is the preaching when all 's done this I may terme the very Art of preaching which directly tendes to the Glory of God and the salvation of soules Admit a man be of never so meane a presence and men come to heare him possessed with a prejudicate opinion yet if he labour to divide the word aright and to speake to the conscience rather than the fancy of his Auditors O! what wonders doth the Lord worke by weake meanes As by rammes hornes the walls of Jericho were battered in peeces and by earthen pitchers the huge host of the Midianites was discomfited so by that preaching which the wittes of the times and men that applaud their own fansies accoumpt empty and foolish the Lord workes miraculously in the conversion of soules It 's the Apostles assertion For after that in the wisdome of God the world through wisdome knew not God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to save them that believe Thus having endeavour'd to beat the corne out of the eare suffer me now to grinde it at the mill Application is the life of every sermon Let me then intreat your patience in a few words to presse what hath been said unto your practise and then I shall put a period to my discourse Marlorate out of Calvin drawes two inferences of practice Quid docendum first and then Quid discendum afterwards Christ crucified is the substance of all that we can preach or heare It 's a lesson can be never enough taught and never enough learn'd In the first place seeing this is that lesson which we all ought to teach Fathers and Brethren suffer I beseech you the word of exhortation to conferre your best endeavours to put in practice this excellent method and exquisite art of preaching Wast not this pretious lamp of the sanctuary in making 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 circumstantials the maine imployment What 's this but to tithe mint and cummin and to neglect the weightier matters of the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ther 's one most needfull Doctrine which you ought frequently to inculcate and make deep impressions upon the conscience and that 's the knowledge of Jesus Christ and him crucified I cannot sufficiently admire how sacred is the ministeriall function What a great honour is it to be imploy'd in Embasy for the King of heaven O! what fidelity is requisite in the discharge of so concerning a message You are God's sword hearers beare up that sword which he hath put into your hands The Lord hath promised to be your portion And if I invert the order of the words that they which live upon the Altar ought to serve it it 's a piece of the same truth as well as that The Lord hath so ordain'd that those which serve the Altar should live upon the Altar The readiest way I conceive to suppresse schismes and divisions is by preaching the power of godlinesse This is the way to stop the mouthes of Gainsayers when they see that selfe is not the maine Engineer nor the promoting of a man 's own particular ends and interests but the glory of God and the love of Christ constraines a man then they are put to silence and have nothing to gainsay We read how Moses in his own cause was the meekest man upon the face of the earth yet transported with zeale in the cause of God A spirit of discretion is required in a Christian least he may quickly pluck downe with the one hand what he endeavours to build up with the other Moderation is much talked of it 's a goo● to be desired For oft times it serves as a golden bridle to curbe a passion Calvin in Epist ad Melanct. But Calvin's caution to Melanchth●n is worthy of your observation Take heed saith he that moderation doe not quench thy zeale Meeknesse and silence doth good and is commendable in a man 's own cause It 's a man's glory to passe by a personall injury but when religion suffers and the cause of God lies a bleeding then to be silent argues a spirituall stupefaction as if a man were possessed with a dumbe Divell When men preach their own inventions teaching for Doctrines the traditions of men When men deride the way of holinesse casting nicknames and aspersions of Puritans Precisians and I know not what upon them that so they may render their persons and profession odious just as thy dealt with the Saints in the Primitive Church who were put into beares-skins and then worryed When men are not affrayd to exercise their wits to be witty even unto blasphemy to cast a slur or a jest upon that sacred word by which one day they shall be judged This is not to preach Christ crucifi'd but it 's to crucify him afresh and to put the Lord of glory to an open shame When men like Jehu drive furiously mistaking a passion for zeale and so oft times spoile a good cause in the carriage this is not sutable to that meeknesse that was in Christ Let not then any humour or opinion sway thee ther 's nothing so dangerous in religion as this compliance with humors and fancies and siding for selfe-interests and advantages The Spirit of God must be thy Pilot to s●eare thee and the word of God must be thy compasse and the glory of God ought to be in thy eye as the scope and end of all Take nothing upon trust but imitate those noble Act. 17. 11. Bereans who let nothing passe without due examination For we read that they searched the Scriptures dayly whether those things were so 2. As you have heard what we must all teach so you shall 2 Quid discen dum heare what we must all learne viz Christ crucifi'd Let me then perswade you as Jerome doth in an Epistle to Paulinus Let 's learne that knowledge on earth which will carry us unto heaven May Discamus eam te●ris quorum scientia perseverabit in coelis Hieronymu● in Epist ad Paulinum it never be verifi'd of any of us that we seek our own things and not the things of Jesus Christ and that we resemble Mercuries statue that poynt the way to others but move not one step our selves A good life is the best commentary of a good sermon and the best con●●tation of a slaunder The shepherd hath discharged his duty when by his own example he leads his flock to the waters of comfort We should all labour to be spirituall builders As no noise was heard in Solomons Temple so my heart desires that there may be no differences nor jarrings to be heard among us Quirites was a forcible word with Caesar to suppresse all his souldiers mutinies and shall not the word Christiani be as prevalent with us What said Abraham to Lot Gen.
But let us learne to deny our lawfull pleasures and make our teares our meate and drinke imitating St James whose knees as Eusebius records became like camels hooss by the assiduity of his devotion Where 's the man that spares the more either from his Eusebius Eccle. Hist belly or his back that prostrates himselfe in the dust before the throne of Grace whose soule is alike affected with J●remies to weep in secret for the sins of the times I feare our times are just like those before the deluge eating and drinking and making merry God grant that wee imitate not the Swans who as they say sing sweetly before their Funerall Cast your eyes upon the bleeding condition of Ireland and that which comes neerer home the miserable distractions of the land of our Nativity Is mirth jollity seasonable at a Fast or Funerall Is it a discourse sutable for a dying man to talke of honours high places and promotions shall a man drencht in teares pursue pastimes and pleasures shall humility and lowlinesse change the scene into pride and ambition shall poverty invest it selfe with stately robes shalt thou O Baruch when all the world is in combustion be so spiritually benummed as to have thy heart doting upon the momentany pleasures of this wicked world doth thy heart hanker after thy pleasures and with Lots wife doest thou looke back upon the delights of Sodom Let her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be thy warning peice not to seeke great things for thy selfe Thus having paraphras'd the words I shall prosecute them according to my proposed method intending the question for the doctrinall part of my text and seekest thou great things for thy selfe And the dehortatory answere shall be my use and application seeke them not In the unfolding whereof I shall purposely indeavour to enlarge my selfe in a plaine and familiar discourse making my text my Apology not to seeke great things for my selfe not any sublime composures to gratify any wanton eares of Athens but to condiscend unto the capacity of the meanest Auditor that heares me this day In the prosecution of the words I shall not separate the act from the object they are joyn'd in the sense and therefore I l'e not divide them in my discourse And so I l'e resume them jointly Et quaeris tibi grandia and seekest thou great things And now O Baruch thou sonne of Neriah let me once more on this wise expostulate the matter with thee Is there any such a miablenesse in that thing whereon thy heart is so wholy enamoured doth the object so necessarily conduce to the compleating of thy felicity that with Rachel thou must have it or else die Is thy life bound up in it's life as Jacobs was in Benjamins so that for a moment thou canst not foregoe the fruition of it what is the reason that thou art so possest with so much anxiety of spirit when I see a man bid adieu to all other things and wholly fix himselfe upon one thing alone I presently conjecture that there is some rarity and excellency in that thing which wholy takes up his affections and terminates his acquiescencie as lines in their proper center Let 's then as Moses did turne aside and see what these great things are whether answerable to the report and expectation yea or no. But alas our paines will be to small purpose and the issue parallel to the pains both alike unfruitfull The text calls them great things by which Vatablus and some others understand the gift of prophe●y but this interpretation hath no correspondence with the History and seems Vatablus Theodoretus C. A. Lapide Calv. in Loc. to offer violence to the words But I rather adhere to Theodoret a Lapide Calv. and indeed the generall current of interpreters who by great things understand rest and tranquility an immunity from imminent and apparent dangers a confluence of outward delights and comforts as riches honours and the like Out of an apprehension of the losse of these there arose such grievous complaints and bitter expressions of sorrowes a great infirmity a practise how unsutable unto a servant of God! what was not Baruch promoted to so high an honour as to be the Scribe and Amanuensis of the Lord of Hosts and shall he be so nice and delicate as to account his life more precious then many thousands to preferre his private well-fare before the weale-publick O faint hearted souldier Vriah was of a more Heroicall spirit when David bad him goe home to his house and refresh himselfe after his journey The Arke saith he and Israel and Judah abid in tents and my Lord Ioab and the servants of my Lord are incamped in open feild shall I then goe into my house to eat and to drink and to lie with my wife as thou livest and as 2 Sam. 11. 11. Salu. Bell. Jugur●h thy soule liveth I will not do this thing Marius in Salust discoverd a magnanimous resolution unto his souldiers Doctus sum hiemem aestatem juxta pati humi requiescere e●dem tempore inopiam laborem tolerare A child of God must preferre the welfare of Zion before his private respects and interests he must not dreame of his own personall peace in their publick calamities in times of captivity and Iacobs troubles we must beare a share with them in their sufferings O brave profession of the Kingly prophet Psal 137. 6. If I forget thee O Jerusal●m let my right hand forget her cunning That of Moses must be the good Christians choyce Heb. 11. 25. Rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin which last but for a season But le ts take a narrower survey of these great things and le ts consider whether they be worth the seeking after yea or no. One man seek's rest and quietnesse these are his great things Naomi sought out a rest for Ruth This man would Induction One man seekes rest and quietnesse faine sit under his own vine and under his own figtree hee 's secure with the men of Laish he resembles the whore who sits as a queen and saith no evill shall happen unto her But ye know the wofull end of the men of Laish Their security exposed them to their enemies rage and fury And that Babylonish strumpet shall have death and mourning and famine even all these plagues come upon her in one day Rev. 18. 8. So the foole in the Gospell and Nebuchadnezzar amidst their vaine glorious boastings were cashier'd of all When Amnons heart was merry with wine then was he slaine The hand-writing came out against Belshazzar and numbred his dayes amid'st his carousing and jollities Agag came delicately but was presently hewed in peices before the Lord in Gilgal Sis●ra tooke his sleepe but never awak't but unto eternity When men seeke rest it will fly from them When Job promis'd rest unto himselfe he could not find it my bones saith he are p●irced
after however the prologue may promise a comedy yet the Epilogue will discover a fatall tragedy whatever laughter was extorted was but risus Sardonicus All the pleasures are but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bitter-sweets will there not in all these be bitternesse in the end Thus drawing an induction from these and the rest I may hence collect an universall conclusion That nothing under the sunne is worthy of the labour and pursuite of the sonnes of men Thou then ex meliore luto sictus who art fram'd of a better mold who art imploy'd in a more peculiar service for the God of Heaven O tread not Antipodes be not unsutable to thy Lord and master A shame for a child to be so unlike his Father Tu tibi ipsi quaeris grandia dost thou O Baruch Baruch the person seeking seeke great things thou for thy selfe which is the person seeking and now bespeaks the continuance of your patience This string sounds harsh It 's strange that a man so highly advanc't in the service of God should so much forget himselfe C. A La●ide checks him thus solus vis otiari nil vis pati pro conversione salute C. A Lapide in Loc. populi would'st thou enjoy thy rest alone and venter nothing for the conversion and safety of the people of God There 's an Emphasis in the word wilt thou seeke for thy selfe As supposing the Church and State should be put into one ballance and thy life in another would'st thou desire to outweigh them both Is thy life more pretious then so many millions Would'st thou be advanc't when the Church is brought low Would'st thou warme thy selfe at home by thine own fire when the temple of the Lord is a burning Questionlesse my brethren it 's the duty of a child of God to haue a fellow-feeling of his brethrens calamities to lay to heart their miseries as if they were his own Private interests must give place to publick miseries Particular relations must be swallowed up in the weale publick Private affaires must cease and be suspended when mighty and urgent businesse of Church and state require our helping hand Good old Elyes heart trembled for the Arke of God he could heare with patience the flight of Israel and the slaughter of his sonnes but as soone as the messenger made mention that the Arke of God was taken he fell from off the seat backward by the side of the gate and his neck brake and he died 1 Sam. 4. 18. And his daughter in law Phineas wife bowed her selfe and travailed and called her child I●habod saying the glory is departed from Israel because the Arke of God was taken vers 22. You heare how deeply these two were affected with the Churches misery It were a prudent and profitable course in such times as these wherein we live to read leasurely over the booke of Lamentations that so our hearts might be fram'd into a broken temper And in the fayling of this man of God it should be our wisdome profitably to reflect upon our selves and see where 's our sympathy in these times of nationall calamities I feare most of our Consciences if they be not cauteris'd will give in evidence to the contrary How many are there who grow worse and worse in these perillous times adding d●unkennesse to thirst living in all manner of Epicurisme and sensuality Now Gods judgments are abroad how few are there that learne righteousnesse at home Where 's the man that makes such an excellent use of these distractions as to labour to walke more closely with God and to make his peace with him Where 's the man of Jer●mies temper who makes his head waters and his eyes a fountaine of teares Jer. 9. 1. Who eats no pleasant bread with Daniel who with Job abhorres himselfe and repents in dust and ashes we have many water-breaches and we may feare an innundation It nearly concernes us to put in practise the prophet Jo●ls counsell To turne unto the Lord with all our hearts and with fasting and with weeping and with mourning Joel 2. 12. would we were better acquainted that our Benonies will prove our Benjamins our sons of sorrow the sons of our right hand we should mourn with those that mourn and share with our brethren in their sufferings There 's more comfort to be extracted out of one daies communion with the Saints of God though in a suffering condition then in all the joviall society in the universe It 's storyed of Godfrey of Bullen that he refus'd to be crownd at Jerusalem with a crowne of Gold where Hist of God frey of Bullen in Fullers Holy Warr. Christ was crown'd with a crown of thorns A modest act that would not admit such a vast disproportion between him and Christ and shall we crown our selves with rose buds abate nothing of our former delights amidst all these dangers and perplexities When one ask't Plato how he came to such a perfection of wisdome he returnes this answer plus olei consumpsi in lampade quâm vini in calice that he spent more oyle in the lampe then wine in the cup. May the same be verified of us all And may not the complaint of the Prophet Isaiah Is 22. 12. find us guilty and in that day did the Lord God of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and to baldnesse and to girding with sack-cloth and behold joy and gladnesse slaying Oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine Let us eat and drinke Magnificè tibi prospectum vis in omnibus procellis c. Junius in locum for to morrow we shall die Blessed be God we have fasting daies enjoyn'd by publick authority but have not we just cause to fast for our fasting and mourne and be heartily sorrowfull that we have mourn'd and sorrow'd no more what a fearfull woe is there pronounc'd against those that are at ease in Zion Magnificè tibi prospectum vis in omnibus procellis ac tempestatibus tanquam è portu naufragium publicum prospectare So Junius upon my text tells us wilt thou sit at the haven and see others in a ship-wrack and not beare a share in their sufferings My brethren we sit here in peace our profession is a profession of peace We are Ministers of the Gospell and the Gospell is a Gospell of peace How should we with united hearts pray for the peace of Jerusalem our weapons should be preces lachrymae prayers and teares are the best armour of proofe most sutable to men of our coats The Apostles advise must be put in practise study to be quiet and to doe your own businesse 1 Thes 4. 11. Our eyes must be bedew'd with teares Our soules must be afflicted with sorrow and with our indefatigable supplications never give the Lord any rest untill he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth Isay 62. 6 7. O then give not liberty to thy nor satisfie thy selfe to the utmost though in a lawfull pleasure
luxuriously and live with Dives deliciously every day Peradventure they give their flock a visit at Sheep-shearing time once a year as the High Priest entred into the Temple and then with blood and indeed a Non-Resident is a soul-murderer who maintains his bravery with the price of blood Fathers and Brethren I love not to lay out my Mothers nakedness but my heart burns in love to your souls and I hope and pray that a through Reformation may go on and prosper and that under no pretence whatsoever Non-residency may be dispensed withal for the future it being Materia pr●rsus indisp●nsabilis For this sin the Scarlet Gowns ought to come down in the dust and wear Sack-cloth Statute Tolerations Dispensations for such and such Dignities local Statutes in Colledges dispensing for such a Lecture and for a Living under such a value all these will prove but sorry fig-leaves to cover thy nakedness Will any of these ●leas serve thy turn at the Audit of the great Judge of Heaven and Earth Will they stop the cry of blood It was said in Suetonius Quintili Vareredde l●giones so will it be said Steward give an account of thy Stewardship Sheep-herd give an account of thy flock Isa 56. 10. where then will dumb dogs as the Holy Ghost stiles them and Idol Shepherds appear They will wish that th● hills might fall upon them and the mountains cover them from the face of the Lamb. In the second place suffer I beseech you my Brethren the Vse 2. For Exhortation word of Exhortation I beseech you by the mercies of God in the bowels of Jesus Christ above all your gettings get this wisdom to gain souls In general it concerns every one to do all the offices of Heb. 10. 24. love they can and to consider one another to prov●ke to love and to good works Let Parents do this for their Children Tutors for the in Scholars they are Pro-parents for the time Masters for their Servants one Friend one Neighbor for another Let any one indifferently learn this Art and put it into practice These Scriptures I commend to your serious considerations and continual practice one is Levit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbor and not suffer sin upon him Another is Mal. 3. 16. Then they that feared the Lord spoke often one to another and the Lord hearkned and heard it and a Book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and thought upon his name A third is Heb. 3. 13. Exhort one another daily whilest it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin And in a peculiar and special manner I address my Exhortation unto my Brethren of the Ministry in the Language of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I put you in remembrance 2 Tim. 1. 16. to stir up your gifts Let not good parts be blasted or lie rusty for want of using If such yet remain here unpurged would there were none who keep their Pastoral Livings and their Founders maintenance living here at ease let the Flock sink or swim I recommend those dreadful Imprecations unto their saddest thoughts Zech. 11. 17. Woe to the Idol Shepheard that leaveth the flock the sword shall be upon his arm and upon his right eye his arm shall be clean dryed up and his right eye utterly darkned And 1 Cor. 9. 16. Wo is unto me if I Preach not the Gospel And for such as are set apart for this Calling and as yet have not a Pastoral cure a particular determination ad hic nunc know that you are Ministers of Christ ordained into the universal Church that 's my Judgement for the benefit of the Church of God in general be not idle and lazy saying No man hath hired us Begin betimes and consecrate your strength and marrow to God And if the first-fruit be holy the whole lump will be sancti●ied Neighbor Villages stand in need of your charity many poor souls ready to starve cry as earnestly for spiritual bread as poor Prisoners for corporal bread And the want of a setled Ministry in several places is occasioned by a scandalous maintenance Give me leave to be importunate in my suit and press your duty farther from th●se moving considerations 1. Consider your high and weighty Calling what a great honour it is to be a Minister of Jesus Christ You are called Ambassadors Consid 1. The Ministers weighty calling 2 Cor. 5. 10. Matth. 5. 13. now Ambassadors must pursue the Instructions of their Commissions and your principal instruction is to beseech people to be reconciled to God You are the salt of the earth and if the salt loose its savour wherewith shall it be salted You are lights and lights must not be put under a bushel you are Stewards and Stewards must be faithful you are Laborers and Laborers may not eat the bread of idleness 2. There 's a price put into your hands you have abilities and opportunities Consid 2. A price put into the hands of Ministers health and strength and if God be pleased to give you hearts the business would be soon done and well done you have helps of Learning helps of an ingenuous Education helps of frequent Preachers dividing the Word faithfully amongst you these are as so many prizes put into your hands to get wisdom the Lord give you an heart to make a spiritual improvement of them Two places of Scripture drawing to a close I would gladly fasten upon your thoughts The one is Eccl. 9. 10. What soever thy hand find th to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor kn●wledge in the grave whither thou goest The other is John 9 4. I must work the works of him that sent me whilst it is day the night cometh when no man can work Thirdly and lastly Consider the strictness of your account at the Consid 3. From the day of accompt day of Judgement Then the Lord will say Give account of thy Stewardship Shepheard give account of thy Flock Watch-man hast thou looked to thy Watch Laborer hast thou wrought in my Vine-yard The consideration of the day of Judgement the day of visitation should awaken your spirits and put you upon a carefull provision against that day Vse 3. In the last place let me close up all with a word of direction Vse 3. ●or direction and I have done according to that little experience I have and the Lord forgive me that I have no more I 'le commend a few rules of direction to you 1. Give your selves to Divine Meditation This was Mose's practice Direct 1. To meditate 1 Tim. 4. 13. in the Mount Isaac's in the Field and a duty prescribed by Paul to Timothy Meditate upon these things Meditation is as it were the wing of the soul to carry it unto Heaven and herein a Ministers
of Jordan If lesser afflictions cast thee down low will not greater quite overwhelme thee consider of those things in thy most serious composed thoughts The 4th Use and last is for direction The Question will be askt Use 4. For Direction 1. Direction Come to the mankets what meanes must bee used for the purchase of this pearle In the winding up of all I 'le prescribe a few principall means and forthwith conclude 1. You must come to the markets whilst they last and whilst the shops are open To day is the market and the Ministry of the Gospell shewes forth the most pretious wares Now then come here and buy Mary found Christ in the midst of the Doctors and the blind man lay in the way where Christ came by Jacobs sons must goe to Aegypt to fetch corne The five Virgins are bid to goe to them that sell Matth. 25. 9. The Minister tenders these commodities Sabboths are market daies and the publick assemblies market places sit then at the feet of your teachers come frequently to the meanes of grace This coming is accepted as a kind of price though not meritorious paid to purchase Christ Though grace be free and we cannot bring mony in our hands yet come come come t is thrice ingeminated Isay 55. 1. 2. When you are gone from hence give your selves to reading 2. Direction Give your sel●es to Reading and Meditation meditation and conference Read and search the Scripture bring all with the Beraeans to the touchstone of the word John Husse was converted by reading the Scripture then there was no open vision But the word preached is like the breast milke most nourishing To reading adde meditation meditate of the worth of this Pearle What you read or heare labour to digest by meditation and to meditation adde conference Mal. 3. 16. so those old Disciples spake often one to anoth●r c. 3ly Seek the face of God by prayer They that seek have a promise of finding To aske for Christ and his grace is a Petition suteable to the will of God And as king according to God's will wee have a promise of being heard Let us cry after Christ as hid treasures Lord give me this pearle or else I am undone Le ts resolve with Bernard Nunquam 1 Joh. 5. 14. discedam à te Domine sine te Le ts herein be importunate beggars take no nay no repulse resolving never to be driven away from our Fathers doore 4ly Buy the truth Prov 23. 23. Bee at any cost paines or charges for the Purchase of truth and what 's the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 14 6. I am the way the truth and the life Give all diligence to know the truths recorded in the word of God Bee unwilling to part with the smallest truth Take such a delight and love to the truth as thou wilt leave no meanes unattempted for the purchase of it Every truth is gold and the least shaving of gold is pretious One truth is more worth than a world Not an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of truth shall fall to the ground Therefore thou must study the truth read pray meditate conferre and hear to attain unto the knowledge of the truth 5ly Lastly buy this pearle of price in the season and opportunity when it 's tendred Take the benefit of the present time To every thing there is a season and a time to every purpose under heaven Eccles 3. 1. Let that excellent covnsell make deep impression upon your spirits Is 55. 6. Seeke ye the Lord while he may be found c. And let Jerusalems misery be our warning peece Luk. 19. 42. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid fr●m thy eyes Now is the market it yet lasts blessed be God other the opportunity Neglect not these golden seasons now tendr'd to you It 's now day fall a working whilst its day the night cometh when no man can work Joh. 9. 4. You have here a tender of the pearle of price this day you know not whether you shall live to have a second tender The Lord of heaven set home this word upon your consciences and perswade you speedily readily and cheerfully to sell all you have to purchase this Pearle of price the Lord Jesus who is of superlative value more worth then millions of worlds A Suffering Faith Discovered from Philip. 1. 29. For unto you it is given in the behalfe of Christ not onely SERM. 5. At St. Maries Oxon. Decemb. 24. 1648. to believe on him but also to suffer for his sake THe Apostle having encouraged the Philippians to contend for the faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vers 27. prepares them for encounters with adversaries vers 28. And in nothing terrified by your adversaries which is to them an evident token of perdition but to you of salvation and that of God he tells them plainly what they must meet withall in the reason of the Text. The words containe three generalls A Duty An Object An Ability to performe the same 1. For the duty and that is double to believe and to suffer or Thetext divided it 's but one even a suffering faith 2. For the Object it s twice repeated but one and the same on Christ and for Christ Christ is the object of faith and for his sake we must be willing to suffer 3. Here 's the abilitie to performe both duties of believing and suffering To you it is given None can believe in Christ nor suffer for Christ except it be given from above Before I draw forth the Doctrine I will insist a while in the explanation of the words It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it s gratia gratis data gratia gratum faci●ns Faith is no hearb that groweth in our gardens but it s a plant of our heavenly Father's plantation It s an habit infus'd by the spirit the supernaturall worke of God No morall perswasion no principle of nature no volumes of glimmering Philosophers can make discovery of this pearle Nature is as dimme-sighted as a mole in divine mysteries It s beyond the kenne of a naturall man to discerne spirituall things 1 Cor. 2. 14. But the naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned As John gave Testimonie of Christ John 3. 27. That a man can receive nothing except it be given him from above so it may be said of Faith except it be given thee from above thou canst not receive it It followes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hence its evident that every faith is not a suffering faith when the sonne of man comes shall he find faith on the earth A temporary verball dogmaticall or historicall faith are every where to be found like the Sycamores in the valleyes for abundance But a true saving justifying faith that
or mother or wife or children or lands for my names sake shall receive an hundred fold and shall inherit everlasting life Luke 22. 28 29. Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations and I appoint unto you a kingdom as my Father hath appointed unto me Let them comfort themselves with these four Considerations 1. Their sufferings are for a moment onely but their reward is Consid 1. Sufferings are for a moment eternal 2 Cor. 4. 16 17. For which cause we faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renew'd day by day For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 2. Their sufferings are few but there are many Mansions in Heaven Consid 2. Their sufferings are few Consid 3. Their sufferings are sanctified 3. Their sufferings are sanctified and sweetned by God their Prison is their Palace their Chain their Glory their Dungeon their Paradise 4. In Heaven there 's no more suffering all tears shall be wip'd away from their eyes and when the time of refreshing shal come from the presence of God they shall rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory The dark Vision Unfolded on the Monethly Fast-Day upon Hab. 2. v. 3. For the vision is yet for an appointed time but at the end it shall speak and not lie though it tarry wait for it because it will surely come it will not tarry THe Prophet Habakkuk was one of the last Prophets Sermon 6. At St. Mary's Oxon. Jan. 31. 1648 that Prophesied before the Captivity He lived in sad troublesome times even days of darkness and gloominess and full of darkness And no wonder because they were exceeding evil by reason of varieties of sins and abominations The Prophesie is Dialogue-wise consisting of Expostulations and Answers 1. You have an Expostulation to the Lord against the extream 1. An Expostulation wickedness of the Jews ch 1 2 3. O Lord How long shall I cry and thou wilt not hear even cry out unto th●e ●f violence and thou wilt not hear Why doest thou shew me iniquity and cause me to behold grievance for spoiling and violence are before me and there are that raise up strife and contention 2ly You have the Lords answer threatning great calamities to 2. The Lords Answer the Jews by the cruel oppressive Caldeans ver 5 6 to the 11th inclusive Behold ye among the heathen and regard and wonder marvellously for I will work a work in your days which ye shall not believe though it be told you For lo I raise up the Caldeans that bitter and hasty nation which shall march through the breadth of the land to possess the dwelling places that are not theirs They are terrible and dreadful their judgement and their dignity shall proceed of themselves Their horses also are swifter than the Leopards and are more fierce then the evening wolves and their horse-men shall spread themselves and come from far they shall flie as the eagle that hasteth to eat They shall come all for violence their faces shall sup up the cast wind and they shall gather the captivity as the sand And they shall scoff at the Kings and the Princes shall be a scorn unto them they shall divide every strong hold for they shall heap dust and take it Then thirdly you have another expostulation to the Lord against the Caldeans cruelty ver 12. to the close of the Chapter O Lord thou hast ordained them for judgement O mighty God! thou hast established them for correction Thou art of purer eyes then to behold evil wherefore lookest thou upon th●m that deal treacherously and holdest thy tongu● when the wicked devoureth the man that is more righteous then he And makest men as the fishes of the sea as the creeping things that have no ruler over them They take up all of them with the angle they catch them in their net and gather them in their drag therefore they rejoyce and are glad Therefore they sacrifice to their net and burn incense unto their drag because by them their portion is fat and their meat plenteous Shall they therefore empty their net and not spare continually to slay the nations Fourthly You have Gods second Answer which consists partly of Direction and Commination 1. For direction to wait and live by Faith and patiently to expect deliverance 2. For Commination threatning revenge and ruine to the Churches enemies from ver 5. to the end of the Chapter Lastly You have an excellent Prayer penned in the Prophets name and in the name of the Church intimating our duty in dark times to be more frequently upon our knees and more vehement in Prayer for the Churches deliverance Thus in brief you have the scope of this Prophesy set forth unto you Now to make way to my Text From the precedent words in this Chapter you finde the Prophet upon his warch Notwithstanding the enemies of the Church are in the float of Prosperity and the Church in the ebbe of Adversity yet he questions not Gods vigilant eye of Providence over his People He therefore gets out of the croud and separates himself from the multitude and retires himself from the hurry of earthly intanglements As Watch-men get themselves into some high Turret or fenced Castle to espy Passengers at a distance so doth the Prophet get his thoughts highly raised and gets himself up into a high place remote from all intercourse with and interruptions from the world If with Judicious Calvin we weigh the reason of the Metaphor we shall know that this Tower Speculam intellig●mus esse recessum m●ntis ubi nos subdu●imus a mundo Calv. in Loc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 70. is a recess of the minde wherein we withdraw our selves from the world I will get me upon my rock so the Septuagint There 's safety alone to be found in God He 's the Rock of Ages an impregnable Tower And what●s his intention 1. He waited to see what God would say to him As if he should say It 's onely the word from God that can comfort me that alone will abundantly make amends for all my watching therefore I 'le still remain Sentinel Though I be not suddenly relieved yet I 'le not desert my station Though as yet there be no appearance of comfort yet I know that 't is my duty to tarry til it come I am resolved to wait Gods leasure I will wait for a word of comfort It 's worth waiting for it I 'le wait quietly for it and when it comes I will yield ready obedience thereunto 2. He waited to see what he should say unto God What shall I answer when I am reproved When men and devils reprove me and belch out calumnies against me then I shall bear up against all I have armor of proof to bear off all their reproofs Though they rebuke me never so much and insult
breach of Covenant and resolve to keep that inviolable which we made in a day of distress and for which there will be a day of account we are a sinking kingdom and cry out Lord save us or else we perish Hope even holds us up by the chin We are just as the Israelites coming out of Egypt in straights and intanglements amidst Rocks When they were in Egypt O what servitude did they meet withal and cruel bondage Now they come out of Egypt they meet with difficulties the Enemy overtakes them at Pihahiroth between Migdol and the Sea over against Baal-zephon Pihahiroth was a Cave hem'd in with Rocks Migdol signifieth a Cavernac rumbus inclusae Tower Baal was their God and Zephon signifies ruri speculatus est And see what counsel is given Moses said unto the people Exod. 14. 13. fear ye not stand still and see the salvation of the Lord which he will shew to you to day For the Egyptians whom ye have seen to day ye shall see them again no more for ever We are just as Jehoshaphat was in great straits and know not what to do but his practice must be ours to fall a praying O Lord our God wilt thou not judge them for we have no might against this great company that cometh against us neither 2 Chron. 20. 12. know we what to doe but our eyes are unto thee Hold out hope and thus it will argue and plead The Lord hath delivered us from our enemies we hope he will not suffer us to destroy one another The Lord hath done us much good and wrought miraculous salvations for us we trust he will not now destroy us after he hath done us so much good Joyn Faith Hope and Patience and thou wilt then wait to good purpose Sense fails contrivances are disappointed Faith bids dispute not but believe But Faith grows weak then Hope interposeth its good to hope in God Happy is that man whose hope the Lord is Art thou a tottering ready to fall hope underprops thee Art thou ready to sink hope findes out a twig to lay hold on but hope deferred makes the heart sick Then patience steps in and argueth thus Art thou a Believer consider A Believer makes not haste Hast thou hope thou must wait for that thou seest not quiet thy spirit and vvait upon God cast thy self upon his providence stay upon his wisdom rowl thy self upon his love and vvait quietly for his salvation He that vvaits chearfully submissively and patiently with Faith and Hope is put into a ready capacity of receiving a gracious ansvver from God Thus did the people of God they waited upon a word of Promise and relyed upon God for the fulfilling of the vision and they enjoyed the accomplishment thereof which is the second Head propounded viz. the illustration of the Point from the practice and example of the Saints in former times 2. The Doctrine illustrated by examples 2. I 'le first instance in the promises made to Abraham long before they were fulfilled There were two Promises made to Abraham 1. That the Countrey which God vvould give him should flovv with Milk and Honey 2. That his Seed should be as the Stars of Heaven Here 's Gods Word but his works seem strange to run quite cross unto it This vvould appear to a carnal eye to be a very dark vision Abraham vvas commanded out of his ovvn Countrey Now the Lord said unto Gen. 12. 1. Abraham Get thee from out of thy countrey and from thy kindred and from thy fathers house unto a land that I will shew thee As soon as he came into Canaan there was a Famine he vvas ready to starve There was a famine in the land and Abram went down into Egypt to sojourn Gen. 12. 10. there for the famine was grievous in the land This Promise was not made good till the Israelites vvere seated in Canaan many hundred years after and that his Seed should be as the stars of Heaven this vvas strangely brought about against all humane apprehension as by the sequel may appear for Abraham stayed many years before he had Isaac the childe of the promise and Isaac stayed 20 years before he had a childe and God bad Abraham kill Isaac These vvorks seem directly opposite to the Word of God But vve must not lay too much vveight upon the vvorks and thwarting passages of Gods providence but depend wholly upon the word What God promised unto Abraham was fulfilled every tittle in its season So the vision was dark to the Children of Israel Joseph told them that God would surely visit them and bring them out of that Land yet they must wait the limitted time And it came to pass at the end of the Exod. 12. 41. four hundred and thirty years even the self-same day it came to pass that all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt Hannah Rachel Rebeckah waited Gods time and Sarah waited for a childe though against the ordinary course of nature God had promised and they must vvait upon his Word Seventy years were appointed for the Babyl●nish Captivity The Jews must vvait till the expiration then and not till then came deliverance The impotent Cripple waited 38 years at the Pool of Bethesdah then Christ came and put him into the water and healed him The daughter of Abraham waited 18 years then Christ loosned her from her infirmity The Woman waited 12 years on Physitians who had the bloody Issue and they left her uncured and poverty to boot when that time was expired Christ came and healed her Ten days tribulation were appointed to the Angel of the Church of Smyrna Three days Plague to David God in wisdom hath set certain periods of time known onely to himself all which while he will exercise the Faith and Patience of his children at the end whereof and not before he will relieve and comfort them What time God hath set for Englands deliverance is a grand secret locked up in his Cabinet And whether our eyes may see a right settlement a Peace establisht upon the basis of Truth no man can determine We can say no more then Psal 74. 9. with the Psalmist We see not our signs there is no more any Prophet neither is there among us that knoweth how long Yet let us fall upon our knees and be earnest in Prayer for Zion O that the salvation of Israel were come out of Zion When the Lord bringeth back the captivity of his people Jacob shall rejoyce and Israel shall be glad Let us leave off murmuring and fall a praying let 's take off from anxious cares and adde more fervency to our Prayers let 's not be so saucy as to prescribe times and seasons unto God not to limit the holy one of Israel to times or means It 's a received rule of Augustine Let him Eligal opportunitation qui dat miscricordiam Aug. who shews mercy choose his season We
have seen this duty tracked by the foot-steps of Gods people let us goe and doe likewise In the third place to give in the demonstration of the Point I shall 3. The Doctrine demonstrated draw a threefold Argument from the necessity equity and utility of the duty 1. From the necessity of the duty Ye have need of patience that Arg. 1. Drawn from the necessity of this duty after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise And that is necessary Necessitate praecepti medii For Precepts the Psalmist exhorts R●st in the Lord and wait patiently for him fre● not thy self because of him who prospereth in his way because of the man who bringeth wicked d●vices to pass For evil deers shall be cut off but th●se that wait upon the Lord they shall inherit the earth And the Prophet Zephaniah exhorts Therefore wait ye upon me saith the Lord until Zeph. 3. 8. th● day that I rise up unto the prey for my determination is to gather the nations that I may assemble the Kingdoms to p●ur upon them mine indignati●n even all my fierce anger for all the earth shall be devoured with the fire of my jealousie Wait on the Lord be of good courage and Psal 27. 14. he shall strengthen thine heart wait I say on the Lord. Solomon counsels Say not thou I will recompence evil but wait on the Lord and he Prov. 20. 22. shall save thee David layeth a strict charge upon himself My soul Psal 62. 5. wait thou only upon God for my expectation is from him David could have taken opportunity to have revenged himself on Saul he had him as we say at his mercy but he waited Gods time The Lord 1 Sam. 24. 23. 1 Sam. 26. 23. saith he render to every man his righteousness and his faithfulnesse for the Lord delivered thee into my hand to day but I would not stretch forth mine hand against the Lords anointed David though he had an opportunity yet considered Saul was Gods anointed therefore he would not embrue his hands in his blood 2. Necessitate m●dii For waiting is an instrumental means Gods way of obtaining a grant of the thing desired Simeon waited for the consolation of Israel And behold there was a man in Jerusalem Luke 2. 25. whose name was Simeon and the same man was just and devout waiting for the consolation of Israel and the holy Gh●st was upon him The sons of God waited for their adoption And not onely they but our selves Rom. 8. 23. 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 body And they wait for the coming of Christ So that ye come behinde I Cor. 1. 7. in no gift waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ Waiting prepareth us for the receiving of a mercy whereas murmuring querulous speeches do indispose us for a mercy Whineing strugling and quarrelling provoke God to lash us more but a quiet composed behaviour an humble submission to the will of God is a ready way to obtain the thing desired even a comfortable fruition of our expectation God is most ready to help his people when their hearts most long after him for so runs the Promise I will pour Isa 44. 3. water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground I will pour my spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thine off-sppring After the Church was in pain and travel and endured many throws and hard labor in expectation of deliverance read the gracious answer Thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise awake and sing ye that awell in dust for thy dew is as the dew of hearbs Isa 26. 19. and the earth shall cast out the dead So that waiting works two things 1. It prepares us for a mercy it seasoneth our hearts and disposeth them for the entertainment thereof so that we are as Vessels throughly season'd 2. It sets a higher price and estimate on the mercy when it comes A mercy beg'd by Prayer waited for with Patience will of all others be the sweetest to us in the fruition Hannah had more children after Samuel but none so valued as Samuel the childe of her Prayers Now if deliverance and settlement to the Kingdom come as an answer of our Prayers O how welcome will the deliverance be It 's a comfortable experience recorded of the Church And it shall Isa 25. 9. be said in that day lo this is our God we have waited for him and he shall save us This is the Lord we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation 2. The second Argument shall be drawn from the equity of the Argu. 2 Drawn from the equity of the duty duty It 's all the equity and reason of the World that we should wait upon God we are Creatures and is it not equal that the Creature should wait upon the Creator we are Servants and should not Servants wait upon their Masters Behold as the eyes of servants Psalm 123. 2 look unto the hands of their masters and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until that he have mercy upon us We are children and should not children wait upon their Father These relations intimate the equity of the duty we say that Relations though they be of least entity yet they are of greatest efficacy Doth not the Husband-man wait for the Harvest Doth not the Mother wait for the time of her deliverance Doth not the Patient wait upon the working of the Physick Now God is giving the Kingdom strong Physick a Purge to some a Vomit to others nay have we not just cause to fear that by reason of our Laodicean luke-warmness God will vomit us out of his mouth Let 's wait and see what God will do though we know not yet he knows the reason of his own proceedings God made Nebuchadnezzar a scourage to the Jews and God calls him his servant but because Nebuchadnezzar acted his own malice and revenge God will turn the wheel upon him Jehu was made an Instrument to root out Ahabs Family but because his heart was naught he aimed at the Kingdom for himself God threatens to avenge the blood of Jezre●l upon the house Hos 1. 4. of Jehu God may raise up one to punish another and when they have done God may find out a scourge to punish the punishers themselves These are Gods Acts his strange Acts for so are his judgements Isaiah 7. 20. God will have a razor for that purpose In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razour that is hired namely by them beyond the river by the king of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet and it shall also consume the beard And notwithstanding greatness of
David so to be overwhelm'd in sorrovv for Absalom and in Jonah so to lament the loss of his Gourd The loss of Revenues profits in the Trade Liberty Oh how doth it stick near a man But where 's the acting of Faith Now the just shall live by faith and if any man draw back my soul Heb. 10. 38. shall have no pleasure in him A true Believer lives by Faith when Trading decays Lively-hood and Profit decays Now let 's learn to live by Faith Though thou shouldst loose all there is enough in the Promises to make up all with Interest if thou canst but make them thine ovvn by particular Application Much time is thrown away in passing our censures one upon another reviling this or that instrument I plead not in the least for any but utterly abhor any irregular practices or indirect ways but I press patience and submission unto Gods will to look thorow all instruments and secondary causes unto the first cause to hear the rod and who hath appointed it The Lords voice cryeth unto the city and the man of Micah 6 ● wisdom shall see thy name heare ye the rod and who hath appointed it It 's a doggish quality to snarle at a stone and not look at the hand that throws it Pray then fervently and watch against infidelity and an impatient and murmuring spirit The Lord lay them not unto our charge We might have been in Canaan long ere this had we not been murmurers in the Wilderness I know well that our condition is so lamentable that we can neither bear diseases nor remedies And complaints finde no better entertainment then in those times wherein the best of Historians lived and said in his Presace That complaints Querclae ne tum quidem gratae cum sorsan necessariae Liv. Praef. are not pleasing no not then when they are necessary There 's much bitterness and implacableness upon mens spirits devouring and calumniating one another Such expostulations are rise where is the promise of his coming Where 's the reformation so much spoken of Where 's the removing of the burthens letting the oppressed go free breaking the bread to the hungry cloathing the naked such are peculiar duties for a Fast Is there not rather fasting for strife and debate to smite with the first of wickedness I aggravate these things no further but onely let me tell you as there were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spots in your fasting-Fasting-days Let 's bewail them with tears of blood let 's fast for our former Fastings and be humbled for our out-side Humiliations and lay to heart our negligent services and deprecate that curse that hangs over our heads for performing the work of the Lord negligently The Lord may call us to an account as justly as he did the Jews Zech. 7. 5. Did ye at all fast unto me even to me In the second place I proceed to an Use of Exhortation Let me Use 2. For Exhortation press home the duty of the Text to wait for the fulfilling of the Vision in these concussions and commotions when men are at their wits end and wonder what vvill be the issue Oh let 's take heed of impatience and murmuring let 's bevvare of tumultuous murmuring spirits of tempestuous affections Though there be a storm abroad vve should endeavour after a serene quiet spirit at home A calmness upon our spirits vvill be of singular use for us amidst the fluctuating condition of the Kingdom Every one will be ready to ask What shall we doe How shall we demean our selves in these dark times Such questions as these require an answer and a word spoken in due season is like apples of gold in pictures of silver I will advise nothing as a States-man that 's out of my Sphere nor as a subtle Politician for such Policy is the bane of Religion but from direct warrant out of the Word of God By way of advice I commend unto your thoughts these ensuing Propositions which I take to be Propositions of Eternall Truth 1. It 's unlawful to do any evill that the least good may come Prop. 1. It 's unlawful to do evil that good may come thereof Rom. 3. 8. thereof And not rather saith the Apostle as we slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say let us do evil that good may come whose damnation is just God needs not our lies to maintain his cause This was Rebockah's and Jacob's fault for the compassing of a good end to betake themselves to indirect means This is a broken refuge Isa 28. 15 17. and will fail Because ye have said we have made a Covenant with death and with hell are we at agreement when the over flowing scourge shall passe thorow it shall not come unto us for we have made lies our refuge and under falshood have hid our selves Therefore thus saith the Lord Judgement will I lay to the line and righteousness to the plummet and the hail shall sweep away the refuge of lies and the waters shall overflow the hiding place Augustine is resolute that if it was possible by an officious lie to compass the Redemption of the whole World yet so weighty and universal a good must be rather let fall then brought about by the smallesst evil 2. Another Proposition for confirmation is That no good intentions Prop. 2. Good meanings cannot justifie a bad action 1 Chron. 13. 10 and meanings can ever justifie the doing of any evill action Vzzah's intention was good but because against the rule he was punished with death He invaded the Priests Office and therefore the Lord smote him dead upon the place 3. It 's the duty of Christians to walk by rule and keep close to Prop. 3. We must walk by rule Isa 8. 20. it and that 's the written Word of God To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to these it is because they have no light in them Let 's not be a rule to our selves nor follow extraordinary impulses upon our spirits and revelations but bring all to the touch-stone Let 's try all things and hold fast that which is good and let the Scripture be the Umpire let 's acquiess altogether in its determinations As many as walk according to this rule peace be on Gal. 6. 16. them and mercy and on the Israel of God 'T is not any rule but this rule If an Angel from Heaven Preach any other Doctrine then what is contained in the Scriptures let him be accursed Whatever Seekers Familists Enthusiasts c. pretend to live above Ordinances and so they are indeed as much above Ordinances as a Swine is above a Pearl which it tramples under feet I say all their Lights however new are but Ignes fatui false Lights to lead us into dangerous destructive ways Let 's therefore for every action look unto the rule bring every thing to rule and square all by
but God will send it again to avenge the Jer. 6. 8. quarrel of a broken Covenant My advice from God to you is Be thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my soul depart from thee lest I make th●e Amos 4. 12. desolate and a land not inhabited Therefore thus will I do unto thee O Israel and because I will do thus unto thee prepare to meet thy God O Israel Gather your selves together yea gather together O nation not Zeph. 2. 1 2. 3. desired before the Decree bring forth before the day pass as the chaff before the fierce anger of the Lord come upon yoú before the day of the Lords anger come upon you Seek ye the Lord all the meek of the earth which have wrought his judgement seek righteousness seek meekness it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lords anger And for a close of all The last Use is a Word of comfort to a waiting use 4. For Consolation people Mercy will be the portion of a waiting believing people And when it comes it will be good measure full press'd and running over It will abundantly make amends for all thy waiting for it Oh then confirm the weak hands and strengthen the feeble knees Learn to live by Faith in dying times Whatever thou loosest whether voluntarily or compulsorily let not go thy Faith Wait patiently and silently under dark Visions at the end the Vision shall speak and not lie God is a God of Infallibility and Eternall truth and will not falsifie his promises Though it tarry and thou hast waited long yet wait a little longer it shall come and will not tarry And it will be an exceeding comfort to the Saints when after long waiting for a mercy they can say by happy experience Lo this is our God we have waited for him and he will save us This is the Lord we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation Isa 25. 9. Establishment of Justice Vnfolded in an Assise Sermon Preacht at St. Mary's OXON Upon Amos 5. 15. Hate the evil and love the good and establish Judgement in the gate It may be that the Lord God of hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph AS in Water face answereth face So the Text suits Serm. 7. At St. Mary's Oxon. March 1. 1649. with the solemnity of the day It is a word in due season which I am resolved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without fear or flattery to apply particularly to your consciences as a word both seasonably to be Preacht and profitably to be learnt The Lord make it as profitable to you as it is seasonable for you My Prophet Amos was one of those Prophets which we call the lesser Prophets not of less esteem for his person or matter which he Prophesied then the others but less in quantity and bulk having reduced a great deal of choice matter into a narrower compass He Prophesied before Israels transportation into Babyl●n He was an Herdsman of Tekoah chap. 1. ver 1. furnished with a Prophetical Spirit and commissionated by God for so high an employment v. 3. He Prophesied in a time of monstrous Impieties and severe Judgements He lived in the days of Vzziah and you may read of his horrid attempt in invading the Priests Office and the Judgement written in legible Characters in his Leprous ●orehead And they withstood Vzziah the King and said unto him It p●rtaineth not unto 2 Chro. 26. 18 19. thee Vzziah to burn incense unto the Lord but unto the Priests the sons of Aaron that are consecrated to burn incense Goe our of the sancluary for thou hast trespassed neither shall it be for thine honor from the Lord God Then Vzziah was wroth and had a Conser in his hand to burn incense and while he was wrath with the Priests the leprosie even rose up in his forehead before the Priests in the house of the Lord from besides the incense altar Some particular impieties and reigning abominacions were 1. Idolatry 1. Idolatry Idolatry was so continually practiced as by way of Irony the Lord seems to invite them to heap up the full measure of their sins Come to Bethel and transgress at Gilgal multiply transgressions Amos 4. 4. Hoc est cumulare s●elera sceleribus Calv. in Loc 2. Vnmercifulness Amos 1. 9. and bring your sacrifices every morning and your tithes after three years A second sin was unmercisulness want of bowels of compassion Thus saith the Lord For three transgressions of Tyrus and for f●ur I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they delivered up the whole captivity to Edom and remembred not the broth●rly Covenant A third sin was Oppression Hear this word ye kine of Bashan that 3. Oppression Amos. 4. 1. are in the mountain of Samaria which oppress the poor which crush the needy which say to their masters Bring and let us drink And violence is another sin of the same litter Ye that put far the Amos 6. 3. evil day and cause the seat of violence to come near A fourth sin is Injustice and Bribery I couple them together like 4. Iujustice and Bribery Amos 5. 7 12. to like Ye that turn Judgement to wormwood and leave off righteousness in the earth For I know your manifold transgressions and your mighty sins They afflict the just they take a bribe and they turn aside the poor in the gate from their right A fifth sin is Luxury and Jovialty That chaunt to the sound of the Violl and invent to themselves Instruments of Musick like David 5. Luxury Amos 6. 5 6. That drinke Wine in Bowlls and anoint themselves with the chief Oyntments But they are not grieved for the affliction of Joseph A sixth is Pride Now Judgements are the unhappy issue which 6. Pride sin brings forth Each word is a Thunder-bolt Amos 9. 8 9. Behold the eyes of the Lord God are upon the sinfull kingdom and I will destroy it from off the face of the earth saving that I will not utterly destroy the house of Jacob saith the Lord For lo I will command and I will sift the house of Israel among the nations like as corn is fifted in a sieve y●t shall not the least grain fall upon the earth And particular Judgements are threatned suitable to their sinnes As 1. Famine I also have given you cleanness of teeth in all your 1. Amos 4. 6. cities and want of bread in all your places yet have you not returned unto me saith the Lord. There 's the punishment of Luxury 2. Mildew and Blasting I have smitten you with blasting and mildew 2. Amos 4. 9. when your gardens and your vineyards and your fig-trees and your olive-trees increased the palmer-worm devoured them yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord There 's another punishment of Luxury and Intemperance A third punishment is Pestilence I have sent among you the
Pestilence after the manner of Egypt your young men have I slain with the 3. Amos 4. 10. sword and have token away your horses and I have made the stink of your camps to come up unto your n●strils yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord So that the Pestilence and the Sword accompany each other And wherefore are the Sword and Pestilence sent See Levit. 26. 25. I will bring a sword upon you that shall avenge the quarrel of my Covenant and when ye are gathered together in your cities I will send the Pestilence among you and ye shall be delivered into the hand of the enemy And the Sword is a punishment of their Pride Amos 6 7. Now therefore they shall go captive with the first that go captive and the banquet of them that stretched themselves shall be removed Likewise the Sword is sent for a punishment And for Phantastical Fashions Isa 3. 25. Thy men shall fall by the sword and thy mighty in the war A fifth Judgement is Famine and this is for contempt of the Word Behold the days come saith the Lord God that I will send a famine in 5. Amos 8. 11. the Land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of the hearing the word of the Lord. A sixth Judgement is the enseebling of their strength and weakning of their forces Behold I am pressed under you as a cart is pressed 6. Amos 2. 13 14. 15. that is full of sheaves therefore the flight shall perish from the swift and the strong shall not strengthen his force neither shall the mighty deliver himself neither shall he stand that handleth the b●w and he that is swift of foot shall not deliver himselfe neither shall hee that rideth the horse deliver himself When any abuse their strength and power God will enfeeble it This counsel is commended to our practice Jer. 9. 23. Let not the wise man glory in his wisdome neither let the mighty man glory in his might let not the rich man glory in his riches You have by what hath been sayd a tast of bitter fruites some sinnes and judgments set forth in their proper colours In Israels glass England may see her face The same evils of sinne are rise among us and in part the same evils of punishment have already befallen us and the rest hang over our heads and will fall heavie upon us unless mercy speedily interpose Now amidst varieties of wounds and sores and heavy judgments the Prophet prescribes a soveraigne remedie hee addresseth himselfe to divine exhortations and counsels One is Amos 4. 12. Therefore thus will I doe unto thee O Israel and because I will doe this unto thee prepare to meet thy God O Israel Another which begins Si vobis animus est ad Deum reverti jam abjicite omnes vestras superstitiones Calv. in Loc. Amos. 5. 4 is continued vers 5. 6 14. Thus saith the Lord seek yee mee and ye shall live But seek not Bethel nor enter into Gilgal and pass not to Beersheba for Gilgal shall surely goe into captivity and Bethel shall come to nought Seek yee the Lord and yee shall live c. Now if the question be askt wherein doth seeking of God consist A. In the former verses wee read of injustice vers 7. They turne judgment to wormewood and leave off righteousness and of bribery and cruelty v. 12. They afflict the just they take a bribe Insomuch that the prudent man is amazed and stands admiring in a stupendious reverential silence He dares not revile instruments and murmur at the Providence of God v. 3. Therefore the prudent shall keep silence in that time for it is an evill time Q. Now what 's to be done what particular remedy is to bee prescribed sutable to the disease A. My text makes discovery hereof and informes you what 's the most effectual remedy to heale a wounded Kingdome in the words of the Text. Hate the evil and love the good c. The wordes represent unto you an excellent Medicine and the singular virtue thereof The medicine is made up of three particular Ingredients Text divided 1. Hate the evill There 's the affection of hatred 2. Love the good There 's the affection of love 3. Establish judgment in the gate There 's the exercise of distributive Justice 2. For the virtue it 's soveraign effectual to appease the wrath of God to smooth his brow So it follows It may be the Lord God of hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph I shall briefly open the words and draw forth one doctrine which I shall lay down for the ground-worke of my ensuing meditations Here by evill wee are to understand the evill of sinne oppression violence Idolatry pride mentioned in this prophesie and in a large acceptation under this word all manner of sin is forbidden Sinne is the greatest evill and this ought to be the object of our indignation What God hates wee ought to hate Now as God hates sin so should wee with a perfect hatred abhor hate every evil way By good is meant the right way the way of holiness and virtue Mr Calvin takes notice of the order first to hate sinne then to love that which is good and he conceives the scope of the Prophet to bee this that the Israelites should become new men and by a Syne●doch● Repentance is described in the whole worke from these two parts in hating evill and loving that which is good And because there was abundance of corruption and injustice in their gates in an especiall manner hee inculcates the execution of justice And establish judgment in the gate you have turned judgment into gall and hemlock and by your neglect of justice have provoked God to high displeasure against you Now labour to pacifie him by the impartiall execution of Justice It was the custom of Judges to keep their courts of judicature near the gates of the City so v. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly Isai 29. 21 that make a man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate and turne aside the just for a thing of nought Hereupon followes a strong ground of Incouragement It may bee the Lord c hee could not determine absolutely hee knew not the decree whether an irreversible sentence had passed against them See a notwithstanding mentioned after a signal Reformation 2 King 23. 25 26. And like unto him was no King before him that turned unto the Lord with all his heart with all his soule and with all his might Notwithstanding the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath wherewith his anger was kindled against Judah because of all the provocations that Manasseh had provoked him withall But upon probable conjecturall hopes hee encourageth them God hath been very gracious to a penitent people formerly God was gracious to Manasseh
meanes to move God to extend mercy compassion and deliverance to them Method propounded In handling of this precious point I shall thus dispose of my Method 1. To give in a full proofe from Scripture asserting the truth 2. Contribute some reasons confirming the same 3. Represent the manner how justice must be executed This shall be by way of Direction 4. And fourthly conclude with a word of exhortation and so presse closely the duty of the Text the establishment of Iustice and 1. The Doctrine proved this shall be my particular application I resume what I first propounded to assert the truth of the point See Jer. 5. 1. Run ye to and fro in the streets of Jerusalem and see now and know and seek in the broad places thereof if ye can find a man if there be any that executeth judgment that seeketh the truth and I will pardon it So Ier. 7. 5 6 7. for if you thorowly amend your waies and your doings if you thoroughly execute judgment between a man and his n●ighbour if ye oppresse not the stranger the fatherlesse and the widow and shed not innocent blood in this place n●ither walke after other Gods to your hurt then will I cause you to dwell in this place in the land which I gave unto your fathers for ever and ever So Isaiah 1. 17 18. Learne to doe well seeke Juâgment relieve the oppressed judg the fatherlesse pl●ad for the widdow come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red as crimson they shall be as wool Prov. 29. 4. The King by judgment ●stablisheth the land but he that receiveth gifts overthroweth it In these and sundry other places God promiseth a blessing upon the execution of justice I l'e single out particular instances that what 's asserted may be cleared more evidently When Israel committed both spirituall and corporall whoredome with the daughters of Moab for commonly they goe both together the greatest Idolaters the greatest whoremongers witnesse the Babylonish strumpet at this day Now nothing will appease Gods incensed wrath besides the execution of justice upon the Idolaters The Lord said unto Moses take all the heads of the people and hang them up before the Lord against the Sun that the fierce anger of the Lord may Num. 25. 4. 5 be turned away from Israel And when Moses and the congregation were consulting Phineas stands up and falls a doing Iustice When Phineas the sonne of Eleazar the son of Aaron the priest saw it he rose up from among the congregation and tooke a javelin in his hand and he went after the man of Israel into the tent and thrust both of them thorough the man of Israel and the woman thorough her belly So the Plague was stayed from the Children of Israel Here 's a patterne of singular zeale a man of heroicall courage all steele to the back Compare this with Psal 106. 30. Then stood up Phineas and executed judgment and so the Plague was stayed And you may read the ample reward Numb 25. 10 11 12. The Lord spake unto Moses saying Phineas the sonne of Eleazar hath turned away my wrath from the Children of Israel while he was zealous for my sake among them that I consumed them not in my jelousie wherefore say behold I give unto him my covenant of peace Moses likewise was a man of the same stamp Though in his own cause the meekest yet a man of invincible courage in the cause of God When he was in the mount Aaron makes them a golden calfe the people commit Idolatrie with it the Lord is highly incensed Moses intercedes for them Exodus 3. 11. Moses besought the Lord his God and said why doth thy wrath wax hot against thy people which thou h●st brought forth out of the Land of Aegipt with great power and with a mightie hand He brake the tables vers 19. as so●ne as he came nigh unto the Camp that he saw the calfe and the dancing his anger waxed hot and he cast the Tables out of his hands and brake th●m beneath the mount He burnes the calfe to powd●r strewes it up●n the water and makes the Children of Israel to drink of it vers 20. executes judgment vers 26 27 28. Who is on the Lords side let him come unto me And all the Sons of Levi gathered themselves unto him and he said unto them put every man his sword by his side and goe in and out from gate to gate thorowout the camp and slay every man his brother and every man his companion and every man his neighbour And the Children of Levi did accordingly Compare this with Psal 106. 23. Therefore he said that he would destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood before him in the brach c. Whilst the camp was pestered with an Achan Israel could not stand before their enemies But as soon as Achan was executed the valley of Achor became a doore of hope Hos 2. 14. As long as Jonah was in the ship the storme continued but as soone as he was cast over shipbord there was a great calme Jonah 1. 15. Agag was hewed in pieces by Samuel Baals prophets were slain by Elijah Thus David executed judgment upon the Gib●onites enemies retaliating their mischiefes upon their own pates 2 Sam. 21. 1 6 9. There was a famine in the dayes of David for three yeares and David enquired of the Lord. And the Lord answered it is for Saul and for his bloody house because he slew the Gibeonites vers 6. Let seven men of his sons be delivered unto us and we will hang them up unto the Lord in Gibeah of Saul whom the Lord did chuse And the King said I will give them vers 9. And he delivered them into the hands of the Gibeonites and they hanged them in the hill before the Lord. And see the good successe vers 14. And the bones of Saul and Jonathan his sonn● buried they in the countrey of Benjamin in Zelah in the Sepulchre of Kish his Father and they performed all that the King commanded and after that God was intreated for the Land You see how just David was in executing justice upon those that slew his enemies 2 Sam. 1. 15. David cald one of the young men and said go neer and fall upon him And he smote him that he died So 2 Sam. 4. 12. he commanded his young men and they slew them and cut off their hands and their feet and hanged them up in the poole of Hebron Amaziah slew those that slow his Father Ioash 2 Kings 14. 5 6. The people of the Land slew those that conspired against Amon 2 Kings 21. 24. I might produce for illustration many examples out of humane Authours as that of Zeleucus to his sonne in putting out his eye for Adulterie and such like But I will not light a candle to the sun I keep close to
shee highly deserved it as being one of the worst of Haereticks An ingenuous spirit relents with teares Ille dolet qu●ties cogitur esse ferox Iudgment must bee given with abundance of humanitie and commiseration And now Right Honorable and the rest beloved in the Lord Iesus give me leave for a close of the whole to apply all in a word of exhortation Let mee divide to every one his portion You that sit in Iudgment remember the text Establish judgment Vse for exhortation c. Consider your Authority in what an eminent place you are set lay out your dignity to doe God and your Countrey good service You are a Beacon set upon a Hill the whole country gazeth upon you There are many eyes upon you and if you swerve from the rule of Iustice the people will serve you as the Levite served his Concubine they will quarter your faults and send them up and down the Kingdome with a was it ever thus I commend Jehoshaphats counsell to your serious consideration 2 Chron 19. 6. 7. Hee said to the Judges Take heed what you doe for yee judge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the judgment wherefore let the feare of the Lord bee upon you take heed and doe it for there is no Iniquity with the Lord our God nor respect of persons nor taking of gifts You are summoned and have a charge given you by the spirit of God Psal 2 10. Bee wise now therefore yee Kinges and bee instructed yee Judges of the earth You have the name Elohim Psal 82. 6. I have said yee are Gods and all of you are children of the most high Doe you as God would doe Hee would relieve the oppressed acquit the innocent condemne the nocent stand for the poore man in a righteous cause Hee would have Achans Zimri●s Cosbies Blasphemers Murderers Idolaters Adulterers punished Remember I humbly entreat you that Iustice is God's Legacy and you are Executours and Administratours thereof be carefull to have the will of God performed I beseech your patience in a few humble requests which I shall make unto you before I conclude I intreat you for poore Prisoners for their soules and bodies For To the Judges their soules that they may have some to teach them the Knowledge of God And for their bodies that they may not bee starved in prison lye in a pit wherein is no water Prisons are oft times Nurseries of all wickedness and that which is a place of restraint is imployed in all manner of licentious outrage so that none are more vile and wicked than Iaylours and their Prisoners 2. I intreat you to incourage the faithfull ministry of the Kingdome As for Baals or Bacchus Priests that make God's sacrifice to be abhorred I wish an Ostracisme to them a tumbling out of their places if they evidence not signall Repentance I plead only for men pious orthodox learned help them to bread help them to bookes If the nurse bee starved the child will bee starved Help them to encounter with the mighty who refuse to pay them their dues because they dare not give the Sacrament to them that are Scandalous when as many times such as they refuse are fitter to go a grazing with Nebucadnezzar amongst the beasts of the field Because some Conscientious ministers have refused to give the Sacrament to drunkards swearers and adulterers some have detained their maintenance from them 3. I have a word to speake in behalfe of this University I speak to a Person of learning my argument is maintaine that my Lord which maintaines you Wee desire no Prelaticall Pompe or domination but only our just rights and priviledges that Religion and learning may be countenanced by your Authority 4. I have a word to speak for the Town I beseech you subdue the Ale-houses the Nurseries of the Divell Ther 's a good expedient and a pious worke begun very lately a work-house and some poore are set to worke in it I humbly crave your incouragement and counsell that it may not be crusht in the Bud nor sinke for want of your assistance And you the honourable Bench the Iustices of the County I beseech To the ●ono●●ble bench you to lay forth all your Interests to promote the Kingdome of Iesus Christ Labour to bee as so many instrumentall Saviours for your Countrey punish swearing and blasphemies There is an Act in the beginning of Q. Eliz that such as maintained Heresies condemned by the foure Generall Counsels should be burnt to ashes You have a late Ordinance of Parliament for your warrant nay rather the Ordinance of God Levit. 24. 16. Hee that blasphemeth the name of the Lord h●e shall surely bee put to death and all the congregation shall certainly stone him as well the stranger as hee that is borne in the land when hee blasphemeth the name of the Lord shall bee put to death Try your skill and put forth your skill to subdue the lewd Ale-houses Mr Bolton said in an Assise sermon that it was easier to take Dunkirke than put down an Ale-house Dunkirke was not long since taken would the Ale-houses were put downe You must seare these Hydras else new heads will spring up Give not any just cause to any to complaine that the Justice sweares himselfe and will not punish swearing that the Justice is a good fellow himselfe and will not punish drunkenness I hope better things of you Purge your families keep no swearers drunkards adulterers sabath-breakers within your roofe Give them not harbour for secular Interest but resolve that if they will not serve God let them not serve you according to Joshuas practice chap. 24. 15. If it seeme evill unto you to serve the Lord chuse you this day whom you will serve whether the God's which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood or the Gods of the Amorites in whose land yee dwell but as for mee and my house wee will serve the Lord. Set the 101 Ps as a just standard rule to go by TheMaxime of Constantius was He cannot be faithfull unto mee that is unfaithfull unto God Remember the National Covenant taken in a day of distress for which there will bee a day of account to goe before each other in a reall example of reformation That Covenant is not an Almanack out of date but obligeth us as the Tenour runs all the dayes of our life You the learned Lawyers I have a word to say to you To the Lawyers Doe not patronize unrighteous causes Set not your tongues to sale to bolster a bad cause See Isai 5. 20. Woe unto them that call evill good and good evill and put darkness for light and light for darkness that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter Doe not wire-draw Clients suites Doe not snarle and intangle a cause with needless perplexities to tire out the poore Client with tedious attendances Take heed likewise of base mercenarie silence
Fountaine is opened and men apprehend their thirst they will hasten to the waters 4. The fountaine is opened because God sends messengers to 4. God sends Messengers to invite invite and guides to direct to it The ministers Embass●e is to invite men and women to come unto this Fountaine to perswade them to reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 20. Now then wee are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christs stead to bee reconciled unto God It 's our maine business to beseech and intreat men to take Christ and to come unto this fountaine 5. Now is the day of grace the opportunity season offered from 5. Now is the day of grace God a price put into our hands Now Christ tenders himselfe and his benefits Now the counsel is a word in due season Isai 55. 6 7. Seek yee the Lord while hee may bee found and call upon him while hee is near Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the Lord and hee will have mercy 6. The Lord opens to us upon him and to our God for hee will abundantly pardon 6. The Lord himselfe now opens to us and this is evident because hee knocks for us to open to him Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand 6. The Lord opens to us at the dore and knock if any man heare my voice and open the dore I will come in unto him and I will sup with him and he with mee And the Lord affords us severall Hammers to knock at his dore withall viz. especially 4. Hammers God useth to knock withall 1. The Hammer of his word Every sermon you heare is a 1. Hammer of the word knocking at the do●res of your hearts God makes use of his Messengers as his mouth Jer. 15. 19. Thou shalt stand before mee and if thou take forth the precious from the vile thou shalt bee as my mouth However the Ministers of God be despised and evill intreated Christ accounts the affronts offered to them equall to those hee met withall immediately offered unto himselfe Luk 10. 10. But into whatsoever City you enter and they receive you not goe out into the streets of the same and say even the very dust of your City that cleaveth on us wee shak off against you By the sermons you heare God knocks at your hearts Ezek. 25. and Ezek. 33. 30 31 32 33. They speak each one to another saying Come and heare what is the word that commeth forth from the Lord they sit before thee as my people and heare thy wordes but will not doe them 2. The hammer of his spirit The spirit breatheth upon the waters 2. Hammer of the spirit How many strivinges waitings whispers of the spirit are there to draw us unto God Wee are exhorted not to quench the spirit nor grieve the spirit The Lord will once say as Gen. 6. 3. My spirit shall not alwayes strive with man 3. The Hammer of mercies God knocks at our hearts by mercies peace prosperity Ther 's a prevalent exhortation Rom. 12. 1. 3. Hammer of mercies I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that yee present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service To us he speakes by mercies Wee are brands pluckt out of the burning and have our lives for a prey 'T is mercy wee enjoy peace in our Borders wee are free as yet from the Plague Famine and the sword wee enjoy the peace of the Gospell and the Gospel of peace 4. God knockes sometimes by the Hammers of judgment sometimes 4. The Hammer of Judgments by the Sword Plague and other Calamities though at present we are free our duty is Jer. 6. 8. Bee thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my soule depart from thee lest I make thee desolate and a land not inhabited Wee should learne righteousness at all times especially when judgments are amongst us Isai 26. 9. With my soule have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within mee will I se●k thee earely for when thy judgments are in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learne righteousness Micah 6. 9. Heare yee th● rod who hath appointed it It appeares farther that the fountaine is opened because God God affords the right key One false key is Free-will hath afforded us the right keys to open it There are three false keyes and foure true keyes The first false Key is free-will O saith the sinner I le repent hereafter I shall have time enough But is repentance in thy power Velle naturae malè velle corruptae naturae b●ne velle gratiae Phil. 2. 13. For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure Jam. 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that wee should bee a kind of first fruites of his Creatures Free-will is an Aegyptian reed it will deceive us Jer. 10. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walk●th to direct his steps Sams●ns case is very observable Judg. 16. 20. And shee said the Philistines be upon thee Samson and hee awoke out of sleep and said I will goe out as at other times before and shake my selfe and he wist not that the Lord was departed from him Man can undoe himselfe and marre himselfe but cannot save himselfe Hos 13. 9. O Israel thou hast destroyed thy selfe but in me is thy help 2. A second false key is universal grace and redemption Christ died A 2d false key is universal Redemption for all say some tasted death for every man for Cain and Judas as well as David and Paul many plead and think by this key to open the Fountaine but it 's a false key and will not unlock the fountain Dore. The latter part of the Text which they urge expounds the former they urge Joh. 316. God so loved the world that hee gave his only begotten-Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have life everlasting And that in 2 Cor. 5. 15. And that hee died for all But what followeth that they which live should not h●nceforth live unto themselves but unto him who died for them and rose againe They urge likewise Heb. 2. 9. But wee see Jesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour that hee by the grace of God should tast death for every man The grace and free love of God moved him to bestow this transcendent benefit on his people only not for the whole world Rom. 5. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men to justification of life Here is hended the universality of Christ's body Adam was a common
but when they are got up into the Air. When Gods children are out of their course of duties when they are in Meseck and have their habitation in the Tents of Kedar their spirits are dumpish But when their hearts are set in a right frame when they are exercising holy Duties amongst the society of Saints then are their hearts chearful then are their spirits revived then are they merry indeed 4. Thou complainest of Gods peoples sadness maybe it 's thy company that makes them so They hear thee Swear see thee Drunk O Consid 4. Bad company cause Gods peoples sadness how this troubles them It so troubles the children of God to see any dishonor offered to God as they cannot be merry Psal 119. 136. Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy law But let them come amongst Believers and joyn with them in religious Exercises their wonted joy comes to them again Then their joy is above the joy of Harvest and the dividing of the spoil with the mighty 5. It is not Religion that makes Gods children sad but because Consid 5. Gods people are sad because they are no better they are no more religious They grieve that they can grieve no more They are sorry that they are no more sorry for their sinns They finde many failings they want former Love-tokens and feelings then they mourn and cry out Restore to me the joy of thy salvation They want Gods gracious countenance wherefore they cry out Psal 4. 6. There be many that say Who will shew us any good Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us 6. This Joy is secret an inward thing which strangers shall not Consid 6. Joy is a secret inward thing intermeddle withal A worldly man cannot judge of this Joy Rev. 2. 17. To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden Manna and will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it The joy of the godly is not in outward flashes nor is it to be measur'd by outward aspect This is a hidden thing which so ravisheth their hearts as they cannot utter it Saul could not be merry without a Musitian nor Ahab without Naboth's Vineyard nor Gardiner that bloody Persecutor till he had receiv'd the news of the Martyrs death A godly Mans v Fox Acts and Monum in Q. Mary's Raign joy proceeds from no outward principle A covetous man joys and takes pleasure in his Barns heap'd with Corn and Coffers cramm'd with Gold A voluptuous man joys in Cards Dice Hauks Hounds A Drunkard in his Cups An ambitious man in his Titles Pedegree Preferments But a godly man can rejoyce and be merry without all these His joy ariseth from another principle even the reconciled countenance of God in Jesus Christ Now these Objections being remov'd and my passage thus cleared I come in the second place to prove the truth of the Doctrine 2. The Doctrine proved by particular instances by particular instances And I shall instance in particular Scriptures which give testimony to this truth then in particular persons who by their own experience subscribe to the truth of it And lastly I shall survey the particular ways of godliness and discover the pleasantness of them all and so from an Induction of Particulars sufficiently numbred I shall collect this universal Conclusion That all the ways of godliness are ways of pleasantness 1. For Scripture Testimony meer Quotations would fill a Sermon 1. By Scripture Testimony But I shall gather sparingly from the heap Prov. 22. 17. Bow down thine ear and hear the words of the wise and apply thine heart unto my knowledge for it is a pleasant thing if thou keep them within thee If Pleasure consists in Honors then Wisdom affords it abundantly Prov. 4. 7 8 9. Wisdom is the principal thing therefore get wisdom and with all thy getting get understanding She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a crown of glory shall she deliver to thee Exalt her and she shall promote thee she shall bring thee to honor when thou dost embrace her Prov. 8. 15 16 17 18 and 31. By me Kings reign and Princes decree Justice By me Princes rule and Nobles even all the Judges of the earth I love them that love me and they that seek me early shall finde me riches and honor are with me yea durable riches and righteousness If Life be a pleasure it 's to be found in Wisdom verse 35. For whoso findeth me findeth life and shall obtain favor of the Lord. If there be pleasure in Singing and Rejoycing it 's promised to the people of God Isa 51. 11 12. Therefore the redeemed of the Lord shall return and come with singing unto Zion and everlasting joy shall be upon their head they shall obtain gladn●ss and joy and sorrow and mourning shall flee away I even I am he that comforteth you who art thou that thou shouldst be afraid of a man that shall die and of the son of man which shall be made as grass I 'le instance in particular Persons who by experience confesse the ways of godliness ways of pleasantness They call the Sabbath a delight Isa 58. 13 14. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight not doing thine own ways nor finding thine own pleasure nor speaking thine own words then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord. Nehemiah accounts the joy of the Lord their strength Neh. 8. 10. Then he said unto them Go your way eat the fat and drink the sweet and sena portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared for this day is holy unto our Lord neither be ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength So Habakkuk cap. 3. 17 18. Although the fig-tree shall not bl●ssom neither shall fruit be in the vines the labor of the Olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the f●ld and there shall be no Herd in the stalls yet I will rejoyce in the Lord and will joy in the God of my salvation So David danced before the Ark with all his might He makes it the Character of a blessed Man Psal 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night And his counsel is Psal 37. 4. Delight thy self also in the Lord and he shall give th●e the desires of thine heart And his own practice is Psal 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O God yea thy law is within my heart Psal 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul Psal 119. 16. I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word ver 35. Make me to go in the path of thy commandments for therein do I
as God and Christ are world without end Oh that God would work this consideration and set it home upon your serious thoughts that considering your life daily hastens to an end you might timely and seriously prepare for that life which shall never end The Lord give you grace to make the best use of this moment to beautify your soules to trim up your lampes to walke every day as if it were your last day that so when the Lord summons you by death you may have nothing to do but to die and with comfort and confidence you may breath out your soules into the armes of Jesus Christ Cons 6. There will ●e a day of Judgment 6. Consider there will be a day of judgment for soule and body There 's a day of visitation a day of accompt a generall Assize held for all the world 2 Cor. 5. 10. And Christ's coming is like a theefe in the night There 's a different sentence Matth. 25. viz. Come ye Blessed Go ye cursed A different place heaven and hell no medium no tertium Purgatory is a Popish dream If thou beest not purged here thou shalt never be purged hereafter Body and soule shall be reunited and either be companions in woe or blisse unto all eternity 7. Consider as death leaves thee so judgment will find thee As Cons 7. As Death leaves us so Judgment will find us the tree falls so it lies If thy soule be filthy and guilty and unwasht by the blood of Christ when separated from thy body it will ever so remain in that condition If thou diest unreconciled to Iesus Christ judgment will find thee so and so thou shalt remain even unto all eternity If sanctification be not begun yea and in some measure wrought in this world it will not be wrought in another If here thou hast not the first fruits of the spirit the hansell part of payment thou wilt never reape the whole harvest in another world If thou art not justifi'd by grace nor sanctified by the spirit nor acquitted by the bloud of Christ before thou departest this world death will give a returne unjustif'd unsanctify'd unacquitted and judgment will so find the returne and passe upon thee an irrevocable sentence O then be perswaded so to live as ye may have hope in your deaths and so to die as you would have judgment to find you judgment will neither find you better nor worse then death hath left you 8. Consider the riches of Gods mercy free love and grace abounds exceedingly That thou art yet alive on this side the grave Cons 8. The riches of free grace and mercy hell and judgment and God gives thee this gracious warning God might justly cut thee off in thy wickednesse and send thee to hell speedily But Oh! infinite patience and long suffering Now God expostulates why will ye die oh house of Israel God delights not in your blood see Acts 17. 30. Isai 55. 7. Isai 55. 1. God gives you warning sends his messengers to premonish you to bid you look to your sou●es It 's the whole drift and scope of Gods messengers to perswade you to have a speciall care of your soules Now you have food for your soules now you have sabbaths the desire of daies and many pretious Gospel opportunities It 's free grace you enjoy them For you have forfeited them all Oh! wonderfull mercy that God doth not take the forfeiture Consid 9. This may be the last warning 9. And lastly Consider this for ought any of us know may be the last warning that God will give any of us You may not live to hear another Sermon you may not live to enjoy another sabbath God may say to you because you loath this spirituall Mannah I 'le take it from you Because you misuse my messengers I 'le take them away from you Because you s●eight all the admoniti●ns and counsels for the good of your soule I 'le not have these pearles cast any more before you I will suffer my messengers no more to be abused my pearles no more to be trampled un●er foot this is the last warning I will give y●u my spirit shall no longer strive with you I 'le no longer stand and wait knocking at your dores Brethren we cannot promise to our selves a moment of time we have none of us a lease of our lives VVe are Tenants at will whether many or any shall live to heare any further warnings none of us can determine Let 's therefore be perswaded to look upon these counsels I have given you as for ought you know may be the last warning we may have And Oh! that God would give us grace to take warning VVeigh seriously in your most retired sad thoughts those 9 forementioned considerations and the Lord go along with them The 4th Use shall be for a strict triall and examination whether Use 4. For Examination we take care for our souls yea or no Ask the vilest of people what do ye not take care for your soules They will tell you t' were pitty else they should live But to undeceive the world I le propound some searching queries 1. Dost thou set a higher price of thy soule then all things under Qu. 1. the sun Dost thou foregoe pleasures profits father mother wife children the dearest and nearest relations when they come in competition with or opposition to thy soule Dost thou foregoe thy beloved sins thy constitution sins sins of profit antiquity delight Dost thou take up weapons against thy soules enemies and resolvest never to give over till thou returnest with the trophies of victorie If so it 's apparent that thou lovest thy soule 2ly Dost thou survey the windings diverticles and turnings Qu. 2. of thy soule Dost thou study to know thy soule it's angles and lurking places Dost thou reveiw the breaches in thy soule and endeavourest the reparation of them Dost thou take a twofold Candle the Candle of the word and the Candle of thy conscience and searchest into the meanders recesses and most inward corners of thy soule This is a signe that thou hast a care of thy soule 3ly Dost thou keep strict watch and sentinell over thy soule Qu. 3. Dost thou watch over thy thoughts words and actions As watchmen examine passengers so dost thou examine thy heart call thy selfe to account for vain thoughts misplaced words evill actions and when thou findest them dost thou labour to exterminate them and to execute justice on them Dost thou watch against vagrant lusts not willing to give entertainment to straglers but as thou findest them thou casheerest them if so this is a signe that thou takest care of thy soule 4. Dost thou endeavour to wash and cleanse thy soule A pure Qu. 4. fountain is stil a purging Dost thou purge out thy corruptions Dost thou lament over thy soule for sin water thy couch with thy teares and as sin comes and corruption surprizeth thee art
exprest It 's wrote in such legible Characters 2. A Mercy as he that runs may read it Yet his days c. The words have need of a Paraphrase I shall open them briefly in their order By Spirit Ainsworth understands that holy Spirit of Christ by which he Preached in the Patriarchs and especially in Noah to the disobedient spirits of the old World and exhorted them by the Fathers to amend their lives so I take the Lo-iiddon Non vaginabit Pagninus Grotius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70. Lo-jadon sense to be It followeth Shall not strive The 70 read it My spirit shall not abide But this I take not to be the meaning the word hath many significations it signifies to judge to chide and dispute As if the Spirit of God should say I have set Judges over you I have chid you reproved you argued the case with you sent my servants Noah Enoch Methuselah exhorting you to come and repent but you are incorrigible impenitent you are never the better notwithstanding all my patience forbearance waiting on you trying you therefore now my spirit shall no longer strive with you I will take no more pains with you I will dispute the case no longer but send a Deluge to decide the controversie And so I understand the words In seculum so the 70 read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here you may see an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Abyss of kindness to mankinde So Chrysostome That the Spirit hath ever strove with any is a great mercy But if the Spirit strive by Messengers rising early and going to bed late and by its motions and whispers if the Spirit be still resisted and abused it will leave striving and leave a people inexcusable Luther speaking of this Text saith This was a publick Sermon preached in a Fuit publica concio in publica Synodo proposita Luth. publick Assembly When those that were Gods Messengers spent their spirts in vain and saw that the people were desperate past all hopes of reclaiming they let them alone to take their course and to be filled with their own ways Then here 's a Reason given For that he also is flesh The word sets forth the corrupt nature of mankinde and is here put by way of opposition unto the Spirit It is the same with Animalis or Conqueritur Deus tantopere turbatū esse ordinem d●se positum ut image sua in carnem transformata esset Calv. Centum viginti annos si fo●te conver●antur Cald Paraph Carnalis homo Man that was created after the Image of God hath defaced that Image hath corrupted his way and is become fleshly This God complains of That the order which he put is inverted and his Image transformed into flesh as Judicious Calvin observes Lastly Here 's a gracious reprieval and space allowed for repentance Yet his days c. This is not to be understood as if an hundred and twenty years were the limited term of years for mankinde to live in this world It 's apparent that many after the Flood lived longer But the meaning is that an hundred and twenty years shall be given them if haply they be converted This space God allows them for repentance and they had Noah a Preacher of righteousness and they saw the Ark a building and every stroke strucken The building of the Ark should have been a Monitor of repentance this was great and wonderful long-suffering as we read 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. By which he went and preached unto the spirits in prison which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah The words thus opened contain two fundamental Doctrines 1. That it is a most dreadful judgement upon a people when the Doct. 1 Spirit of God refuseth to strive any longer with them 2. That it is an exceeding great mercy to a people when the Lord Doct. 2 vouchsafeth them time and space for repentance I resume the first and I shall cast the Heads of my Meditations Method of handling the Doctrine into this plain and familiar method 1. I shall assert the truth of the Doctrine from Scripture Testimonies 2. I shall particularly represent unto you how the Spirit may be said to strive with man 3. I shall enquire into the Grounds and Reasons for confirmation of the truth And lastly Conclude with particular Application unto our selves 1. To prosecute the first Head propounded time would fail me 1. The Doctrine proved by Scripture Testimony in Scripture Quotations but I shall gather sparingly from so great a cloud of Witnesses mentioning some select Proofs and leaving the rest to be supplyed in your Meditations Now that this is so great a Judgement for the Spirit of God to leave striving with a people may be exemplified in several persons recorded in Scripture as signal Spectacles of Divine vengeance to Posterity The Lord spared Sodom and Gomorrah a long time Abraham undertakes though dust and ashes to intercede for them He intreats That if fifty righteous persons be found there that they may not be destroyed His request is granted he abates five of fifty and then comes down to forty after that to thirty from thirty to twenty and at last to ten and it is to be observed that God never left off granting till Abraham left off begging They had good Lot to reprove and exhort them and they vexed his righteous soul day by day with their unclean conversation he spent his spirits his counsels admonitions all in vain Now God will spare them no longer the Angel delivered Lot from them and as soon as ever he was gone the Lord destroyed Sodom Gomorrah with Fire and Brimstone Gen. 19. 24 25. The Lord rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of Heaven and he over-threw those cities and all the plain and all the inhabitants of the cities and that which grew upon the ground The Lord waited a long time upon Jerusalem sending his Prophets and warning them he puts them in remembrance of his exemplary Judgements upon others Jer. 7. 13. I spake unto you rising up early and speaking but ye heard not and I call'd you but you answered not therefore I will do to this house c. as I have done to Shiloh He expostulates the case with them Jer. 13. 27. I have seen thine adulteries and thy neighings the lewdness of thy whoredom and thine abominations on the hills in the fields Wo unto thee O Jerusalem Wilt thou not be made clean When shall it once be and Ezek. 18. 32. I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth saith the Lord God wherefore turn your selves and live ye The House of Israel was the Vineyard upon which God had bestowed so much pains cost and charges Isa 5. 1 2 3 4. My well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful Haec omnia usu venisse populo Judaico cum in Babylonica
that godly longest liv'd Patriarch dyed but the year before the Flood came His name signifieth a Messenger of death His death did presage the Flood Thus Austin was taken away by death immediately before the sacking of Hippo where he lived Pareus dyed a little before the taking of Heidelbergh Luther a little before the Germane Wars And we have many Reverend Preachers the Chariots and Horse-men of Israel it were easie to give you a Catalogue of them who of late years have gone to their Graves in peace By all their Ministeries Gods Spirit hath stroven with us and waited for our amendment of life We read Histories that we may not be subjects of History Herodotus tells us of an Inscription upon Legimus historias ne ipsi fiamus historiae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herodo Senacheribs Statue Look upon me and learn to be righteous Peruse the sacred Annals read the History of the old World the destruction of Jerusalem the casting off the Jews to this very day read the History of the Church in all ages acquaint your selves with the History of Germany and Palatinate of later years and be not like many Travellers who are better acquainted with foreign Lands then that of their Nativity Take notice of the acts the strange acts of the Lord in our L●nd Hath not God to this very day continued many faithful Laborers in his Vineyard notwithstanding some of the Prelatical party suppressed what lay in them powerful Preaching yet like the Palm-tree The more it is pressed down the more it grows o● like Pharachs afflicting the Is●aelites Quo magis deprimitur eo magis emergit the more he afflicted them the more they multiplyed and notwithstanding the subtile practices of many what name to give them I cannot tell for they know not what names to give themselves neither know they what they would have I say notwithstanding their Stentorean voices crying down Ministry Sabboths Ordinances yet God graciously confirms them all in their liberty and purity and if we improve not these prices of Grace put into our hands if we hearken not to the calls and whispers of the Spirit of God if we neglect and despise this great salvation tendred in the Gospel the Spirit of God will be gone and take the Ordinances from us or us from the Ordinances The Spirit will threaten this dreadful judgement in the Text to strive no longer And that people are under a most dreadful Judgement with whom the Spirit of God will not strive any longer That Commin●tion runs paralell with this of my Text Hos 9. 12. Though they bring up their children yet will I bereave them that there shall not be a man left yea woe also to them when I depart from them And thus I have dispatcht the first Head propounded namely The assertion of the truth of the Doctrine from Scripture Te●●imonies I proceed in the second place according to my method propounded to make a particular representation unto you how the Spirit may be said to strive with man The Spirit of God though it be a most free agent bloweth 2. The Spirit of God strives seven ways when and where it listeth yet from experience we may discern that it usually strives some of these seven ways viz. By its motions and whispers By the Ministry of the Word By the checks and convictions of conscience By the tenders of mercies By the exercise of patience and long-suffering by inflicting of s●gnal exemplary judgements up●n others And if none of these will prevail by the execution of personal judgements upon our selves Thus ordinarily upon a ground of experience we may discern the several strivings of the Spirit For the enlargement of these particulars 1. The Spirit of God 1. The Spirit of God strives by its motions and inspirations strives by its motions inspirations and sweet whispers when we hear as it were a voice behinde us telling us This is the way walk therein Thus the Spirit of God infuseth holy thoughts holy motions into us We have not one good thought we cannot of our selves think one good thought without the inspiration of the holy Spirit The Spirit of God rebukes sin in us quickens us to our duties moves woes beseecheth us to try conclusions no longer with God nor to offer any violence to the Spirit of Grace but to cherish its sweet motions and hearken to its whispers We may know the Spirit of God from the spirit of delusion the same way we discern good Gold from counterfeit by examining them by the touch-stone of the word of God Isa 8. 20. To the Law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them The Spirit of God directs the●e to the rule of the word It is not any rule that will serve but it is this rule Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God But the Spirit of error directs thee to devised ways it counsels thee to be wise above what is written The word of God is the just Standard we must not adde to it nor take away from it if we would escape that dreadful curse Rev. 22. 18. I testifie to every one that heareth the words of the Prophecy of this Book if any man shall adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this book And if any man shall take away from the words of the Book of this Prophecy God shall take away his part out of the Book of life and out of the holy City and from the things which are written in this Book There be many that pretend to voices dreams revel●tions now adays they would have a Platonick Christ and fain a teaching of the Spirit besides and contrary to the written word Many of them are led like Absoloms followers in their simplicity knowing nothing for whom we must pray as the Prophet did for his Servant Lord open their eyes that they may see and let them read with fear and trembling that dreadful Anathema from the written word Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel unto you then that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed I 'le be your remembrancer of one story 1 King 13. 17 18 19. It was said unto me by the word of the Lord Thou shalt eat no bread nor drink wa●er t●ere nor turn again to goe by the way that thou camest He said unto him I am a Prophet also as thou art and the Angel spake unto me saying Bring him back with thee into thine house that he may eat bread and drink water but he lyed unto him So he went back and did eat bread in his house and drank water The man of God had a sure word of Prophesie the word of God was in his mouth yet he must be hearkning after a new devised word
he that hath no money come ye buy and eat yea come buy wine and milk without money and without price A second is Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest A third invitation is John 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink Rev. 22. 17. A 4th is The Spirit the Bride say Come and let him that heareth say Come and let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take of the waters of life freely The l●st I shall name is the most prevalent obtestation in all the world Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service Put forth thy labor to make a Catalogue of the mercies of God they exceed all Arithmetick measure them their dimensions are infinite The Apostle makes four dimensions breadth length heighth and depth Eph. 3. 18. The mercies of God reach to the Heavens his faithfulness to the clouds All the pathes of the Lord are mercy and truth to such as keep his covenant and testimonies Psal 25. 10. His mercy is from everlasting to everlasting his mercy is above all his works Had we the tongues of Men and Angels we could not sufficiently set forth the mercies of God yet let us summon up all the members of our Bodies and all the faculties of our Souls to praise the Lord for his mercies and tell the wonders which he hath done for the children of men How many National mercies and signal deliverances have we received and we yet are in peace even to a miracle of mercies our fleece is yet dry whil'st others are wet with blood Thousands have faln beside us and ten thousand at our right hands and no evil comes nigh our dwelling What variety of personal mercies do we receive How many deliverances have we received from the Grave being ready to fall in and yet we are reprieved and have space to repent How many deliverances have we received from Fire Water Pobbers unreasonable men and all the plots and projects of Malignant Enemies unto the Gospel of Jesus Christ Further What mercies do we receive for our souls Do we not injoy Sabbaths Ordinances publick assemblies Blessed be God our eyes yet behold our teachers and our Gospel is not driven into corners How many mercies Quot misericordiae tot ora Isa 30. 20. so many mouthes All these mercies have so many mouthes calling upon us to thankfulness and amendment of life Now the holy Spirit of God strives by all these mercies to win us to repentance It is our obliged duty as God strives with us in mercy and loving kindness so we should strive with him in our return of thankfulness and reformation of our lives Every mercy should be a Lord-stone to draw us up to Christ Every mercy should be as a foot-stool to raise us up higher to Heaven Every mercy should be as a Looking-glass wherein we should behold the visible resemblances of the loving kindness of God O then take heed of neglecting the voice of the Spirit when he calls by mercies For if he be neglected when he speaks in the sweet musick of mercies he will speak terrible things in the thunder of judgement 5. The Spirit strives by the exercise of patience 5. Yet further The Spirit strives by the exercise of patience forbearance and long sufferance towards sinners God is not willing that any should perish but that they should repent and be saved O the unwearied patience of a merciful Father How long did God bear with the old world with the Amorites Jerusalem The Lord waits to be gracious he delights in mercy It is his nature to be merciful Judgement is called his act his strange act Isa 28. 21. The Lord will rise up as in mount Perazim he shall be wroth as in the valley of Gibeon that he may do his work his strange work and bring to pass his act his strange act This is to shew his unwillingne●s to punish sinners till needs must He is said to hyer a Razour to shave them as if he had none of his own Isa 7. 20. In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor that is hired namely by them beyond the river by the King of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet See and admire the wonderful patience of God though we provoke him every day O wonderful patience that the Drunkard dies not in his vomit that the Swearers Blasphemers tongues fall not presently out of their heads Still the Lord waits knocking at the doors of our hearts exercising infinite patience and forbearance towards poor sinners He whets his Sword and bends his Bow Psal 7. 12. He might cleave us asunder presently but there we have experience of singular patience God was but six days in creating the world yet as Chrysostome observes he was seven days in encompassing the Walls of Jericho before he destroyed it Patientia laesa fit furor but let us take heed of abusing patience patience abused breaks forth into extremity of fury Mercy pleads I am slighted I am abused I will no more have mercy on them then patience interposeth I will wait longer but patience being abused it pleads I will be no longer tired out nor abused At last comes long-suffering I am gentle and merciful and I will wait longer and longer but if long-suffering be wearied out What will plead for us What will become of us The long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah whilest the Ark was preparing as the apostle Peter speaks 1 Pet. 3. 20. 2 Pet. 3. 9. The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long-suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance We should account the long-suffering of the Lord our salvation Rom. 2. 4. or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long suffering not knowing that the goodness of the Lord leadeth thee to repentance 6. The Spirit of God strives by many signal exemplary Judgements 6. The spirit strives by many signal and exempla●y Judgements inflicted upon others inflicted upon others We have read of the Wars of Jerusalem in Josephus but more pathetically set forth in the ●ook of the Lamentations We have read of the heavy Judgements of God upon Germany and Palatinate We have read of the barbarous butcherings of those blood-sucking Caribals in Ireland upon the Protestant Party We hear now of a Sword letting out blood in Scotland good blood and bad blood being let out together the Sword destroying one as well as another We hear of sad breaches and heart-divisions widened more and more in England You hear a general complaint of poverty and decay of Trade By all these Judgements the Spirit of God strives with us and woes
and the Lord in judgement left them to their choice and in their extremities bade them goe to their gods and see whether they would deliver them The Lord punished contrariety with contrariety If ye will not be reformed by these things Lev. 26. 23. 24. but will walk contrary unto me then will I also walk contrary to you and punish you yet seven times for your sinns And when we refuse to hearken to him when he calls he will refuse to hearken to us in our greatest extremities when we call upon him It 's a broken but a very pathetical speech of Christ to Jerusalem O that thou hadst Luke 19. 4● known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes There is a Critical day set down there is a dreadfull judgement upon those that brought not the Lords offering in its season The man that is clean and is Numb 9. 13. not in a journey and forbeareth to keep the Passeover even the same soul shall be cut off from his people because he brought not the offering of the Lord in his appointed season that man shall bear his sinne The old world gave no heed to Noahs Preaching they neglected the time that God allowed them for repentance No mo●e time was Matth. 25. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 allowed when that was once expired a deluge overwhelmed them The five foolish Virgins sl●mbred and slept when they should have been preparing of their lamps they went to buy oyle and in their absence Christ came and perpetually shut them out Esau sought Heb. 12. 17. ●enedictionem illam exquisiss●t Beza the Blessing carefully with rears yet hee was rejected hee came when it was too late How many mischiefs befall men for neglecting their opportunities All these considerations should be as so many warning-pieces unto us and as so many prevalent incentives to cherish the whispers of the Spirit to take the benefit of the season Now whilst the Lord bids us seek his face our hearts must eccho back Thy face Lord we will seek Let us hearken to the motions of the Spirit and the checks of our conscience let us make much of the Spirit let us take heed of quenching and grieving of the holy Spirit whereby we are sealed unto the day of redemption An Angel swears in the Revelations There shal be no more time How soon Revel 10. 6. ● time may cease the Spirit cease working we cannot tel and time may be swallowed up in Eternity And therefore take this Caution as a word spoken in due season Beware of sadding the Spirit drive him not away from you for once having a repulse for ought you know he may come no more And th●●● have dispatch'd three Heads propounded of my Method I have asserted the truth of the point from Scripture ●e●timonies plainly evidencing the greatnesse of the Judgement when the Spirit of God departs from and will strive no longer with a people I have shewed how many wayes the Spirit usually strives with a people I have given in the reasons for the confirmation of the point In the next place it remains that I should reduce al home unto point of Practise by way of Use and particular Application This Doctrine affords six special Uses For Information Exhortation Reprehension Examination Direction and Consolation In the first place this serves for Information what a dreadfull Vse 1. For Information judgement lyes heavy upon any person whatsoever with whom Gods Spirit will strive no longer Was it not an heavy judgement when Gods Spirit left Saul and an evil spirit was sent to torment him Was it not an heavy case and dreadfull when the Philistines made war upon him and the Lord was departed from him And Samuel said to Saul why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up 1 Sam. 28 15 And Saul answered I am sore distressed for the Philistines make war against me and God is departed from me and answereth me no more neither by Prophets nor by dreames therefore I have called thee c. When Gods Spirit quite leaves a soul then the evil spirit takes possession of it Satan entred into Judas his heart and set him on work to betray Christ and when conscience gave him a bang and made him throw down the mony he felt Hell-fire flashing in him and betook himself to a desperate remedy to be his own executioner So I have read of Julian after he had departed from God and turn'd Apostate he had in his conscience more blows and butcherings Plures ictus laniatus At last when a dart hit him and gave him his fatal wound no man knowing from whence that dart came for it was a signal blow from heaven and was indeed the immediate hand of God at last he confest Thou hast overcome O Galilean thou hast overcome Vicisti Galilaee vicisti Now a little to set forth the greatnesse of the judgement upon those with whom Gods Spirit will strive no longer I le represent it you in these ensuing aggravations When God takes away his Spirit he usually takes away his Ordinances Whilst the Palladium remain'd with the Trojans they Aggrav 1. When God takes away his Spirit he usually takes away his Ordinances thought themselves secure The Jews put great confidence in the Ark they fet the Ark and went to battle with it against the Philistines and afterwards cryed up the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord Herein they were superstitious they f●iled in putting too much confidence in the Temple They were Idolaters and followed Baal and Ashtaroth and thought the Ark would secure them The Ark would no more shelter prophane idolatrous people than the horns of the Altar would secure and shelter a Murtherer Yet questionlesse the Ark of Gods presence was a very great mercy and priviledge The Ark was kept away twenty yeares and they thought it long and the Text saith all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord. The sad report of the losse of the Ark brake Elies heart first and he fell down backward and his neck brake He heard 1 Sam. 7. 2. of the death of his sonnes their death went near but the losse of the Ark went nearer and Phinehas his wife named the child I●habod saying the glory is departed from Israel because the Ark of God was taken She fell in travel upon that sad news and dyed presently 1 Sam. 4. 18 21 22. The taking away Ministers Ordinances Sabbaths are dreadfull judgements upon a people This the Prophet Amos foretels of Behold the daies come saith the Lord that I will send a famine in the Amos 8. 11. land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of hearing the word of the Lord. And Christ himself threarens The kingdom of Matth. 21. 43. God shall be taken from you and given to a Nation bringing forth the
God did beseech 2 Cor. 5. 20. you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God O●r commission may be out of date to morrow Christ now waites till his locks be wet with dew now he calls sinners to repentance He hath sent me on an errand this day to invite thirsty soules to come unto him and he will give them drink to invite those that are heavy laden and he will give them rest It 's my businesse this day to tender Jesus Christ the Fountain opened to presse home the Exhortation of the Holy Ghost Let the wicked forsake his way and Isa 55. 7. 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 Now what answer shall I return unto him that sent me Suffer I beseech you Fathers and Brethren the word of exhortation not to suffer the holy Spirit to spend his sacred breath in vain You have many prizes put into your hands improve them in your several capacities to the glory of God and mutual edification one of another Let Rulers rule with diligence let Governours Tutours Masters of Families all unite their endeavours to promote the Gospel of Jesus Christ and put Joshua's resolution into practise but as for me I and my house we will serve the Lord. O that Josh 24. 15. we could be spirituall Fathers to those that are committed to our charge Governours and Tutours should look upon themselves as Pro-parents and upon the Scholars under them as children and therefore ought to have special care over them and principally to enquire how it fares with their soules what knowledge they have of Jesus Christ What a comfort will it be another day when we can say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us Thou ●ord hast made us spiritual Fathers unto these young Pupiss Now whilst the Spirit stayes waiting upon us whilst we have time talents and opportunities vouchsafed unto us whilest we live under the sound of the Gospel and hear admonitions reproofs and many Exhortations to repentance let us not put off the Spirit with any more delatory answers but resolve with the full purpose of our hearts to cleave unto the Lord. I have two or three plain moving considerations to adde for the better setting home of my Exhortation Consider the brevity of our lives What 's our life but a bubble Consid 1. The brevity of our lives John 4. a flower a vapor a shadow By these resemblances the Holy Ghost sets forth the shortness of our lives We had need be a working while day lasteth I must work the works of him that sent me while day lasteth the night cometh when no man can work A night of death is coming wherein no man can work and we must always remember that the Spirit strives not always not during the whole course of our lives It moves when it pleaseth and on a suddain ceaseth yet at the most it moveth no longer nor striveth no longer but this little moment of time whilst we are on this side the grave After death there will be no more warnings no more admonitions no place left for repentance no Purgatory that 's a Popish dream He that dieth filthy will so remain unto all Eternity Now then my Brethren considering you have but a little time and upon this moment depends Eternity and after death there will be no further tenders of Grace and Mercy let us husband this time to the best advantage Let us prize Sermons Sabbaths and all those Evangelical Dispensations vouchsafed to us more then ever we did Let us redeem the time as we are exhorted Eph. 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 5. 16. buying out or making a good market of the season Every thing is beautiful in its season there 's a season acceptable and there 's a season perilous Let 's come when God calls that 's the accepted time let 's not prescribe a time of our own that 's the perillous season let 's not account time a slight matter for each minute ought to be valued A second consideration shal be drawn from the uncertainty of the Consid 2. The uncertainty of the spirits striving Nil pretiosius tempore heu nil hodie vilius invenitur Bern. Veniet tempus quo vel unam horam ad resi●iscendum redimere mirum quantum optabimus Otho Casmannus spirits strivings If the holy Spirit be rejected its uncertain whether ever he will come again The Spirit will not always bear reproaches indignities If we refuse to give God the glory of his mercy he will shew upon us the glory of his Justice and Power If we will not open when God knocks at our doors he will not open when we knock at his door Unkindness will drive away a friend from our houses When the Spirit invites himself unto us if we will open he will come and dine and sup with us if we refuse this Heavenly guest how shall we escape our destruction will be inevitable This Spirit is often compared to fire nothing more comforting nothing more consuming than fire If thou wilt not suffer the Spirit to purge and refine thee it will consume thee Nothing more comfortable then light warmth and witness of the Spirit Nothing more terrible then the bondage conviction and condemnation of the Spirit Therefore beware of resisting any good motions that the Spirit of God puts into thy heart this day lest if the spirit have a repulse he may go away and never return any more 3. Thirdly Consider the certainty of the day of Judgement 2 Cor. 5. 10. For we must all appear before the judgement seat of Consid 3. The day of Iudgement Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Then there will be an account to be given for all the Sermons which we have heard for all the Sabbaths we have enjoyed for all the motions of the Spirit for all the admonitions reproofs Gospel opportunities and advantages that we have received we should therefore hear a Sermon now as for ought we know we may be presently summon'd by death to appear before the Judgement-seat of Jesus Christ Let us imagine that now we hear this day as if it might be our last day We hear for Eternity Preachers and Hearers shall be called to an account at the great Assise The Lord grant that we may all give up our accounts with joy The third Use shall be for reprehension of those who resist or Use 3. For reprehension stifle the strivings and the sweet motions of the holy Spirit To come to particulars 1. How sad is their condition who are contemners of the sweet motions of Gods Spirit Let them read Rom. 8. 9. If any man hath not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Such
conscience 2. The strivings of a mans own spirit are pacified with natural means are pacified with natural means eating drinking sleeping idle company vain pleasures quiet meer natural convictions But where Gods Spirit strives the soul cannot be quieted but by supernatural means the in omes of God the ravishing consolations of the holy Ghost a white Stone a pardon sealed no mirth sports company can satisfie a wounded conscience onely one remedy is reserved for a perfect cure and that 's the Medicine made up of the Blood of Christ 3. The strivings of a mans own spirit are flashy suddain and soon gone when the judgement ceaseth As soon as the judgement 3. The strivi●gs of a mans own Spirit are flashy and suddain is removed the strivings cease but when Gods Spirit strives it is solid and serious If the Jvdgement be removed and the s●n unpardoned there can be no quiet If the Judgement be over Pharaoh is quiet but no quiet in Davids spirit till the sin be removed Q. 3. A third Quaery is How may we know whether Gods Spirit Q. 3 A. hath effectually stroven and prevailed with us 1. When we hearken to the call of Gods Spirit Psal 27. 8. Thou 1. Wh●● we answe● the call of God● spirit saidst seek my face my heart said unto thee Thy face Lord will I seek 2. When we have the testimonie of Gods Spirit as Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it self beareth witness with our spirits that we are the 2. When we have the spirits testimony children of God 3 When we have the sealing of the Spirit Eph. 1. 13. In 3. When the spirit seals whom after ye believed ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise 4. When we have the earnest of the Spirit Eph. 1. 14. 4. When we have the earnest of the Spirit 5. When we have the spirits anointing 6. When we have the fruits of the Spirit Use 5. For direction 1. Pray for the Spirit 2. Set a high price on the Spirit 3. Cherish the motions of the Spirit 4. Observe the call and knocking of the Spirit 5 When we have the anointings of the Spirit 1 John 2. 20. Ye have an Unction from the Holy One and ye know all things 6. When we have the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22 23 24. Love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance The fifth Use is for direction 1. Pray for the Spirit to sanctifie and cleanse thee No work of sanctification but by the spirit 2. Set an high price of and be a diligent attendant of Gods word The Spirit usually works by the Word The Spirit and Word agree together 3. Cherish the sweet motions of Gods Spirit make much of every holy motion and inspiration O do not grieve nor sad O do not quench the Spirit of God but account Gods long-suffering your salvation God waits and is patient O do not provoke do not abuse his patience 4. Observe all the calls knocking 's and invitations of Gods Spirit The Lord calls by his word by checks of conscience by mercies and by judgements do not then bolt the doors of your hearts nor stand out against all the warnings threatnings and promises all these are upon record Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Lastly Here 's one word of comfort unto all those who make Use 6. For comfort much of the strivings of Gods Spirit These shall be filled with the consolations of the Spirit The Spirit will comfort support help them In Prayer The Spirit helpeth their infirmities Rom. 8. 26. The Spirit purgeth and purisieth them The Spirit of God is their Counsellor in doubts their Comforter in all distresses and the Spirit will guide them by his counsel till he bring them unto glory Doct. 2. It s a● exceeding great mercy c. I now proceed in a few words to the second Doctrine That it is an exceeding great mercy when the Lord vouchsafes unto any person time and space for repentance Here the Lord alloweth to the old World 120 years so long it was that the Spirit of God strove with the old World We read in Gen. 18. 24 25. the Lord staid communing with Abraham making abatements from 50 to 45 from 45 to 40 from 40 to 30 from 30 to 20 from 20 to 10 Was it not a great mercy for the Lord to bear so long with the Amorites They had a long time of forbearance Thus did the Lord deal with Niniveh Jonah 3. 4. Yet forty days and Niniveh shall be overthrown So the Lord waited long on the Israelites Psal 95. 8. Harden not your hearts as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wilderness So Jerusalem Luke 19. 42 44. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes The five foolish Virgins had a time allowed both wise and foolish slept and slumbred but the foolish wanted oyl and lost the accepted season Jezabel had time alloted her Rev. 2. 21. I gave her space to repent of her fornication but she repented not The Reasons are 1. To glorifie the riches of Gods mercy Mercy Reas 1. To glorifie the riches of Gods mercy waits upon us wooing and alluring us to repentance The Lord invites Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let him come c. He calls sinners to repentance He entreateth by his Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5. 20. He waits to be gracious Rev. 3. 20. 2. To glorifie the Justice of God and to leave a people without R. 2. To glorifie Gods justice excuse When mercy patience goodness graciousness long-suffering are all abused what remains but destruction never fruit grow on thee more Cut it down I will take this kingdom from you I will send you a famine of the word These are terrible threatnings 3. The Lord oftentimes is pleased to spare a people longer at the R. 3. God spares a people at the request of his servants request of his servants Luke 13. 8. The Vine-dresser prayed Let it alone yet longer till I dig about it and dung it Gods Ministers pray hard and tug hard at the oar they cry night and day Lord spare try this people a little longer exercise a little more patience towards them let thy Word work upon them they live under the sound of it let it effectually prevail with them The Uses are 1. For admiration O admire the infinite mercies of God who doth thus bear with sinners notwithstanding Use 1. For admiration their provocations yet he tryes waits and allows them a great deal of space when as in Justice he might cut sinners assunder in the midst of their sins This breathes terrors unto all presumptuous sinners who presume Vse 2. For terror of space and grace neither of which is in their own power To some God gives space others he
4. 7. 2. Repent seriously and Evangelically make not a slight matter of so great a work neither rest satisfied in a legal repentance extorted from the fear of Hell and the wrath of an angry God but let it be done Evangelically from the love of God the consideration of the displeasure of so good a God and the sinfulness of sin let those considerations melt thee into tears and cause thee to mourn ingenuously 3. Be continually renewing thy repentance and when thou hast 3 Be renewing thy repentance frequently felt a pardon get it fairer transcribed and renewed through the Blood of Christ His blood cleanseth from all sins And there is redemption through his Blood the forgiveness of sins 4. Be thankful for the space that God gives thee thou canst never 4 Be thankfull for the space given thee 5. Improve every mercy to more saith full performance of duty acknowledge enough the patience and forbearance of God who gives thee time and allows thee space and wher 's his Sword and bends his Bow to give thee warning to escape the blow What shall I render unto the Lord for all his mercies and loving kindnesses Will Eternity be enough to praise the Lord 5. Improve every mercy to more faithful performance of duties The last Use is for comfort unto those who make much of the strivings of Gods Spirit and make the best improvement of the Use 6. For consolation time that God alots them for repentance This will yield them comfort in their lives on their death-beds 2 Kings 20. 3. Remember O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight And to all Eternity Happy are they that have hearkned to Gods call and made a good use of all the means of Grace and spent the allotted time to Gods glory Here they shall reap the first-fruits of Joy and Comfort and hereafter the full Harvest unto all Eternity An Ingagement unto Holyness from the consideration of the Day of Iudgement Unfolded from 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and Godliness THat Christ shall come to Judgement is an Article of our Ser. 4. at St. Maryes Oxon July 27 1651. Faith We profess we believe it yet how many deny it in their practices Some put far from them the evil day or think not of a day of account like desperate Bank-rupts adding more to the score not considering an after reckoning Hence multitudes live as they list without God in the world running into all excess of riot frolicking it in all manner of Epicurism and Voluptuousness thus denying the Day of Judgement by the wickedness of their lives Others are much offended because the day is so long a coming because Christ stays so long they are hot-spurs and will not wait If Gods clo●k strike not according to their Dyal If the Resurrection Day of Judgement Christs second coming be not assoon as they expect they call all in question and propose a question full of Blasphemy and Infidelity both ver 4. Where is the promise of his coming These blasphemous Scoffers ver 4. Arg. 1. Ver. 5. the Apostle consures by several Arguments The world was created by the word of God v. 5. It was not ab aeterno as Philosophers dreamed now the Argument is valid The same God who by his word made the world can by his word destroy it when he pleaseth A second Argument is drawn from experience v. 6. By the Deluge Arg. 2. Ver. 6. the old world was destroyed God bade the water over-flow and destroy man and beast and it did so And the time will come that he will bid the fire to destroy this visible World wherein we no● live and it shall be so v. 7. A third Argument is drawn from the Eternity of God We Ver. 7. Arg. 3. poor Creatures measure things by time we speak of days weeks moneths and years of times past present and to come thus we apprehend but time past present and to come are all one in God His Decree delays not He 's not measured by time Ver. 8. v. 8. If God seem to defer this day yet this is an argument of singular patience mercy and loving kindness not of any slackness Ver. 9. v. 9. Gods long-suffering should be our salvation Gods patience and waiting upon us roads us a Lecture of Repentance O infinite forbearance bowels of mercy opened when as the Lord might cut us asunder in the midst of our rebellions and send us to Hell immediately yet he wooes invites and beseecheth us to repent and he waits and trys us whetting of his Sword bending of his Bow that whil'st the Sword is a whetting and the Bow a bending we should prudently fore-see and take warning that so we might escape the blow The fourth and last Argument to confute those scoffers who Arg. 4 are over curiously inquisitive hasty unbelieving rashly expostulating Where is the promise of his coming This I say is drawn Ver. 10. from the manner of Christs coming v. 10. Hoc additum est saith Calvin ut semper sint in excubiis fideles nec crastinum sibi promittant This may be considered three manner of ways 1. It 's unexpected as Thieves come unlook'd for when men 1. are asleep and most secure then the Thief comes When the old World was secure in the midst of their jollity then came the Flood and swept them away 2. There will be a change of the whole frame of the Universe 2. Matth. 24. 38. 39. Beza Erasmus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. v. 10. The heavens c. Impetum veluti Sibillantis procella declarat So Beza In morem procellae in manner of a storm So Erasmus 3. There shall be an utter conslagration of all things even of those wherein worldlings place their happiness The Mannors Lands goodly Buildings the Wonders and Idols of the World shall be burnt up at that day Now it will be our wisdom neither to question the truth of these things for Truth it self the Lord Jesus Christ hath told us that these things shall come to pass neither ought we to be curiously inquisitive after the particular time when as some of the Jewish Rabbins have been too bold in this pa●ticular neither ought we to be impatient or querulous because it s not yet accomplished 4. Our duty to wait and believe And our main duty and wisdom will consist in this to make preparation to be in Procinctu 4. Hab. 2. 3 4. to have our Garments girt about us to have our Lamps burning and Oyl enough in them against that great day Far be it from me to raise a dust or rake into the Dung-hill of those ancient lately 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hereticks who deny the Resurrection the Day of
Judgement Hac fide vivo the rule of the Scripture is clear and infallible there shall be a day of Judgement All this world shall be dissolved This is a Doctrine most true My Text makes the Application 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Divis. Which words contain a Supposition and an Inference 1. Here 's something supposed Seeing c. It s a Principle undoubtedly 1. to be believed That the Heavens and Earth shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent ●eat Compare this with Psalme 102. 25 26 27. Let 's not introduce nor beleive vain Philosophy which holds amongst many other dotages Quod coeli sunt incorruptibiles To me it 's out of question that he that made them by his word will one day by his word destroy them Now whether the heavens are so perfectly made as in their own nature uncap●ble of corruption is not here to be disputed of or whether the coelestiall influences be as vigorous as at first though a learned Dr. of our own holds the affirmative in that excellent Dr. George Hackwill in his Apology book entitled The Power and Providence of God in the government of the world Yet I shall wave this Question being loath to intermixe any Philosophicall dispute in matters of faith We beleive it We have sure ground plain scripture for our assertion that all these things shall be dissolved 2. Here 's an inference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jts infer'd by way of admiration what manner of persons i. e. we should be eminent in holyness we should act in an extraordinary manner we should be rare singular even a non-such for pietie its Diodats observation upon the place If heaven and Earth be purified by fire what care ought Diod. in loc Calvin in loc we to take to be purged and clensed from our corruptions An ergo nos in terra demersos esse convenit c. saith Calvin on the place The heavens earth shall pass away and shall we be s●allowed up in the earth and not rather meditate on a holy and a godly life The argument I may thus frame There shall at the day of judgment be a dissolution of this visible Globe of heaven and earth therefore we ought in an especiall manner to labour after holyness This is the argument of the Text of incomparable strength But why is it in the Plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is an Hebraisme when the Scripture would express a thing with a greater emphasis it useth the plurall number so Cant. 1. 4 We will remember thy loves thereby inhancing the greatness and multitudes of Christs loving kindness Likewise we read Psal 20. He is the God of our Salvations i. e. that he is the God from whom all Psal 110. 3. salvations come in the most high and eminent way And the Psalmist further specifies Psal 100. 3. Thy people shall be a people of willingnesse to shew their singular readinesse and willingness as if they were all made up of a willing mind and ready spirit for Jesus Christ Thus in the text in all holy conversations and Godlynesse Which expression some referre to dutyes of both tables it s most true that a godly man respects both and labours to keep a Good conscience both towards God and men For the genuine sense of the text Beza gives me full satisfaction Vsurpatur numerus multitudinis ex Haebreorum more ut pietas significetur omnibus suis partibus constans quam pro viribus sectari nos oporteat The scope of all I conceive to be this as if the Apo●●le should thus inlarge himself You are secure and careless you shall be suddenly surprised The day of the Lord will come as a theefe in the night You commit Idolatry with the world your hearts are married to these outward things on a sudden all shall be consumed all wherein you trust shall be burnt up ●owever you put the day of judgment farre of yet it s a coming it s nigher then you are aware of and the heavens and the earth shall be dissolved At that day none but holy persons can hold up their heads with comfort Therefore seriously bethinke your selves anticipate the terrour and sorrow of that day by an holy conversation Make timely provision for that day Labour for holynesse and then you need not fear notwithstanding the burning up of the present world you that are holy here shall behold that day with comfort Therefore now have that day in your eyes in your thoughts in your frequent meditations in your prayers that you may be found blamelesse at that day The words thus divided and expounded presents unto you one entire plain and practicall Doctrine That the serious consideration of the day of Iudgment should in an especiall Doct. manner ingage us unto an holy life and conversation For the unfolding of this excellent and practicall poynt my work will be 1. To prove it by scripture testimonies Method 1. 2. 3. 1. For Scripture Testimony 2. To confirme it by evidence of Reason 3. To improve all to your consciences by particular application 1. For Scripture it contributes abundant testimony to the proof hereof I shall gather sparingly from so great an heap selecting only some more eminent proofes leaving the rest to be supplyed in your serious meditations Peruse v 14 of this chap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But can any walk so Yes Zechary and Elizabeth walk'd so they were both righteous before God walking in all the commandements and ordinances of the Lord blamlesse It was Pauls exercise Acts 24. 16. goe thou and doe likewise Labour to make strait paths Labour to approve thy heart to God always walking as in the presence of God Begge strength from Christ and thou canst doe all things through Christ that strengthneth thee Another proof we have 1 Pet. 4. 7. The end of all things is at hand be ye therefore sober and watch unto prayer The consideration of our latter end should be a forcible argument to perswade us unto sobriety and watchfullness That 's a pregnant proofe of the Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 5. 9 10. Vpon this consideration he layeth down those 3 adverbs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hopeing to gain them over to the practise of them Tit. 2. 11 12 13. This was a motive to him and the rest of the saints to have their conversation in heaven because hence they look for the Lord Jesus Christ You read of a sacred Irony Eccles 11. 9. The meaning is rejoyce in God walk in the wayes of Gods commandements that Ironicall speech commands the contrary Now what 's used by the wise man as a moveing consideration But know that there will be a day of judgment Entertain frequent and serious thoughts concerning it which through the grace of God set home upon thy heart may prevail with the circumspect walking in all holy conversation and Godlyness The consideration hereof should make us look better to our hearts and
that are Masters of Families be exhorted to set up Holynesse in your Families Teach your children and servants to know God keep up your authority give not liberty to them under your roofe to live as they list Abraham gave no toleration he commanded his houshold to keep the way of the Lord. Let all sorts and sexes old and Gen. 18. 19. young learned and unlearned lay this Exhortation to heart I presse holynesse upon you all O that the Priests Motto were writ upon your hearts and lives Holynesse unto the Lord. You cannot say as Sheba the Son of Bichri said We have no portion in David c. as if this concerns not us but holynesse concerns you all you must all follow after holynesse To excite you to your duty I 'll lay down some moving considerations Consid 1. We are elected unto holinesse 2 Thes 2. 13. 1. Consider you are elected unto holynesse not for holynesse nor through praevision of holyness that 's a false Arminian glosse but unto holynesse 2. We are created unto holynesse All the members of our bodies Consid 2. We are created in holynesse Ephes 4. 24. and faculties of our soules should be instruments of holynesse The tongue should speak holily holy communication should drop from the tongue the heart and hand both should be clean as James specifies c. 4. 8. The feet must keep the wayes of Gods commandements Consid ● We are redeemed to be holy Luk. 1. 74. 75. the understanding will affections the whole man all must be holy to this purpose they were created 3. Consider we are redeemed for this end and purpose that we may be holy 4. It 's Gods will that we should be holy 1 Thes 4. 3. Now our Consid 4. It s Gods will that we should be holy wils must be subject unto Gods will He commands us to be holy we should pray for his grace to enable us to perform his command Holynesse is suitable to Gods will and wee have an encouraging promise 1 Joh. 5. 14. 5. ●olynesse is our calling 1 Pet. 1. 15. 1 Thes 4. 7. Wee can Consid 5. Holyness is our calling have no comfort but when we are in a lawfull calling when our wayes are according to Gods wayes wee may hope for Gods gracious protection according to the promise Psal 91. 11. When any commit wickednesse are unclean drunk associate themselves with wicked persons they are out of their calling and so out of Gods special p●ovidence Consider this seriously when you are tempted to Whoredom or any o●her sin God hath not called you unto un●eannesse but unto holynesse 6. Heaven is an holy place only appointed for holy persons Nothing Consid 6. Heaven is a holy place that 's defiled shall enter there Rev. 21. 27. Onely holy persons shall be acquitted before Christs Judgement-seat They only shall enter into the new Jerusalem 7. In heaven there shall bee no other but holy employment Consid 7. In Heaven there is holy employment singing Hosannahs and Hallelujahs to him that sitteth on the throne and to the Lamb for evermore A prophane person hates holy Ordinances and holy employments here on earth Were it possible for him to be in heaven hee would be weary of the employment whereas the Saints shall have their hearts put into such an high and excellent frame as they shall without molestation weariness or intermission be ever setting forth the praises of the Lord. 8. And there will be in heaven the most holy company the holy Consid 8. In heaven there is holy company Trinitie God the Father God the Son God the Holy Ghost the most holy blessed and glorious Trinity There will be holy Angels the spirits of just men made perfect holy Martyrs holy Ministers holy people No company there but all holy company 9. And lastly to close up all Now whilst we live on earth is Consid 9. The present time is the time to labor after holynes the time or never to labour after holynesse now I mean in this time of life we must make provision for eternity This is Gods summons to day if you will hear his voice Delay not a minute longer Resist not the movings of the Spirit great is the danger of resisting the Spirits movings The Lord set home all these considerations upon your hearts and if hereby the Lord should be pleased to gaine any soul to the love and practise of holynesse I should never be enough thankful for the mercies of this day The third Use is for Examination and Tryal Every one will Use 3. For Examination plead for himself and pretend to an holy conversation As it was said When the Son of man comes shall he finde faith on the earth So shall he find an holy conversation a formal Professor a Christian at large are every where to be found like Sycamo●es in the valley for abundance but the power of holynesse an holy circumspect walking are rarely found Now then because its the grand Ministerial duty to distinguish the precious from the vile according to that high commendation and priviledge given as to be the mouthes of God Jer. 15. 19. And because God hath gone forth in a signal exemplary blessing upon this way which hath been so frequently used by old Disciples faithful labouring Ministers whose plain Preaching would it were more revived now adaies It shall therefore be my task to lay forth some distinguishing characters and signs of a gracious sincere heart whose life is accordingly ordered in an holy conversation and by them you may put your selves upon the test and tryal as in the presence of God whether you are such manner of persons in all holy conversation and godlinesse The first sign is spiritual poverty and this consists in the emptying Charact. 1. Spiritual Poverty of the heart of self-confidence self-opinion self-sufficiency and self-righteousnesse whereby a Christian becomes nothing in himself altogether lost undone blind miserable poor and naked He is thoroughly sensible of his own misery and wretchednesse He is apprehensive of his own undone condition and what need he hath of a Saviour such an one Christ pronounceth to be in the state Mat. 5. 3. of blessednesse 2. There followeth the highest prizing and estimate of Jesus Charact. 2. High prizing of Jesus Chr. Christ That soul which is spiritually poor accounts Christ the greatest treasure it apprehends it self blind that Christ may give it eye-salve miserable and lost that Christ may save it naked that Christ may cloath it with his righteousnesse See what an high price the Spo●se puts upon Jesus Christ Cant. 5. 10 11 12 c. He is precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. a plant of renown Ezek. 34 29. Such an high price had the wise Merchant to sell all for him Mat. 13. 45 46. So Moses who preferred the reproach of Christ before Egypts treasure Bradford wept often even at meales because he could not bring his dul heart
carry them with expedition the day of their Massacre was appointed viz. on the thirteenth day of the Month Adar The news hereof was cause of great sorrow and perplexity to the Jews Esther and her Maids fasted Mordecai cries and rends his cloathes but withall Mordecai puts Esther in mind to do what she could for prevention Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time as this Esth 4. 14. A very good argument to make the best use of that providence and prize put into her hands to bee the Jews Advocate After fasting and praying she is steel'd with courage and heroick resolution and so she resolves then will I goe in unto the King which is not according to the Law and if I perish I perish Esth 4. 16. She goeth into the inward Court the King holds forth the Golden Scepter he asks her what her request was shee invites the King and Haman to a Banquet the King and Haman go to her Banquet the King bids her make her request she invites the King the second time and in the mean time Haman braggs of that great honour put upon him whereas the banquet indeed proved but a snare to him The Queen impeacheth Haman of a bloody Plot the King was wroth with Haman they cover Hamans face the Chamberlain informs of a Gallows that Haman had made for Mordecai by the Kings appointment hee was forthwith hanged thereon Further yet to reverse the mischievous device of Haman upon Esthers supplication the Scribes were called and the Posts sent with letters to give liberty to the Jews to stand upon their guard Hamans ten Sons were hanged so that the devices of that wicked Haman fell upon his own pate now the day of sorrow being turned to a good day from a day of mourning to a day of joy and rejoycing it 's high time to set a special mark upon so special a deliverance to set time apart for the commemoration of so eminent a deliverance and this was their practice in the words of the Text. The Jews ordained c. which words containe an institution of Divis two Festivall daies in memorial of that wonderfull deliverance from Hamans intended massacre wherein you have first the names 1. The Names given to the solemn Feasts or Eucharistical dayes Purim i. Lots Pur the Persian word signifies a Lot in Hebrew it signifieth to disappoint and in Greek it signifieth fire the Lot was cast for destruction of the Jews but it fell not on those upon whom the enemy would have cast it it was disappointed and therefore as a Learned B. Andrews man wittily observes that the God of the Hebrews gave an Hebrew Pur to the Persian Pur disappointing the Persian Lot so though it was cast it was not suffered to light upon the people of the Jews and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth fire which was intended to blow up the Parliament blessed be God did not singe any of their garments neither did the smel of fire passe upon them Secondly the strict observation of those daies it 's said should 2. The observation of the dayes not fail among the Jews c. The 70 render the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They take care that they and their children after them every Generation Family and Province and City should keep these dayes thus they hand them over to Posterity and transmit these Records of Deliverance to their childrens children and would have the memory of them perpetuated from generation to generation Thus you have heard the deliverance and the duty ensuing thereupon from the example of the Jews in my Text I commend one observation unto your practise which compriseth the sense of the Text That its the duty of a delivered people to keep mercies upon record and make a thankfull remembrance of signall deliverances and Doct. perpetuate the memoriall thereof from generation to generation This takes in the scope and drift of this Text It 's a word spoken ●n due season the Lord make it as profitable for us as it is spoken seasonably unto us Neither doe we tread in untrackt p●ths I might enlarge my self in a cloud of witnesses We have many Parallel examples of Nations and persons delivered who in perpetuam rei memoriam have set a mark upon the place and upon the day resolving never to let slip the remembrance of the mercies or deliverances vouchsafed never to pass an Act of Oblivion of the loving kindness of the Lord. As for instance the Israelites made Songs of Thanksgiving in memorial of their deliverance from Pharaoh Exod. 15. and from Jabin and Sisera Judg. 5. Jehoshaphat and his people met together at the valley of Beracah to ●raise the Lord. Goliahs sword was kept as a trophy of victory 2 Chr. 20. 26. The Israelites set up stones as Pillars for the remembrance of the drying up of Iordan they used to set a mark upon the place and call it Eben-ezer 1 Sam. 7. 12. And for personal deliverances sometimes they gave significant names as Laeah called her fourth Sonne Judah Now saith she will I praise the Lord. Hezekiah made a Poem of gratitude Is 38. 9. David made multitudes of Psalmes for peculiar deliverances as we may read Psal 7. Ps 18. Ps 34. Ps 52. Ps 54. Ps 57. Ps 59. and least his memory should faile the 38 Psalm and the 70 Psalm have one and the same inscription A Psalme of David to bring to remembrance I need adde no more examples you have here given you good measure full prest and running over Let us goe and do likewise Likewise we have variety of Scripture precepts in this particular there 's a special injunction Deut. 32. 7. Remember the dayes of old There was a special command Deut. 16. 1. Observe the Month of Abib And to remember Amalek as we may read Deut. 25. 17. 18. compared with Exod. 17. 14. The self-same numerical day must be Chronicled Ezek. 24. 2. Balack's and Balaam's mischievous plot are to be remembred Mich. 6. 5. ● Chronicle is required Ps 102. 18. And now let 's enquire into the grounds of this Doctrine Some reasons thereof may be these 1. Because the name and honour of God is from eternity to eternity Reas 1. Because Gods name and honour is from eternity to eternity and it s an evidence of our love to God when wee desire that Gods name may out-live ours Wee poor creat●r●s dust and ashes live but a little while in this world and what 's our life but a vapour a hands-breadth a flower swister than a Weavers Shuttle ●e must therefore tell of the goodness of God in the ears of our children and let them tell it in the ears of their children let 's make a Chronicle of Gods deliverences and leave behind us a standing Record that when we are dead and rotten the memo●ial of Gods deliverances may be reviv'd and the remembran●e of them never faile The Mariners used to hang
s no new thing for Hereticks and Sectaries to look upon their Patrons as Saints Ignatius Loyola Becket c. such are the Papists Saints Machiavel the Politicians Saint John of Leyden the Anabaptists Saint Henry Nicholas the Familists Saint If such as these Circumst 6. Note the persons against whom be Saints I know not what are Incarnate Devils Such kinde of Saints falsly called Saints inlarge at●ns kingdom 6. Note the Persons against whom all this mischief was fram'd against King Queen Prince Lords Judges Knights Citizens Burgesses and after they were destroyed their design was to destroy the Protestants throughout the Land what else doth that prayer of Garnet intimate Gentem auserte perfidam credentium de finibus ut Christo laudes debitas persolvamus alacriter They would have destroyed the Protestant Religion root and branch that as farre as in them lay there might be no memorial thereof What Amilcar the Father of Hannibal said of his sonnes may bee applyed to Seminary Priests and Jesuits hee confest that hee bred them tanquam Leoninos catulos in perniciem Romani Imperii as Lyons Whelps for the destruction of the Roman Empire Hannibal when he was but nine yeares old swore upon the Altar that he would be a deadly enemy unto the people of Rome So the ●esuits are Con●urati Hostes Ecclesiae Reipublicae Protestantium and therefore they leave no stone unturned to destroy Protestantism through the sides of both Houses of Parliament they shot at the whole body of Protestants throughout the kingdom 7. Note the place which they purposed to blow up and that Circumst 7. Note the place was the Parliament House first built by Edward the Confessor their rage was not only against men but walls within the Parliament wals many severe Laws and just were made against them and therefore their rage was against those very walls Thus Polymnestor struck blind out of rage to Hecuba sought to murther all the women he could meet withall Thus Fulvia by thrusting Needles into the Tongue of ●●cero after he was dead sought revenge of his sharp Invectives against her Husband Anthony and Anthony himself after Caesars death warred against the very walls of the Senate●●ouse of Rome this was the mad humour of these savage beasts to destroy buildings and walls 8. And lastly note their cruelty an Epithete I cannot s●udy Circumst 8. N●●e heir cruelty bad enough Shall I call it Savage Farbarous Stupendious nay rather Romish Jesuitical Devillish This was their designe at one blow to destroy Kings Lords and Commens This exceeds Hamans cruelty they were to be put to the sword so it was possible that some might scape here all had gone at a blow these Senatours had been serv'd as Nero would have serv'd his even all had been cut off at one blow not one had escaped The Sicilian Vespers the Parisian Massacre were monstrous cruelties but ther some escaped with their lives and were brands pluckt out of the burning here it was most probable had the blow been given not one could have escaped Abimeleck slew with one stone threescore and ten persons of Gideons sonnes yet Jotham escaped Saul flew fourscore and five Priests yet Abiathar escaped Athaliah destroyed the Seed Royall but Joash escaped The Devil himself left one Messenger ●live alwaies to tell Job bad tydings Job had more favour from the Devil than the Parliament should have had from these desperate villaines but here 's such a mercilesse cruelty that not a man had escaped had this Plot took what a Vesuvius an Aetna an Aceldama a Golgotha had there been What huge piles of torn bodies what havock of Royal and Noble blood What multitudes of Cark●sses so mangled as not to be discerned whose they were This fact bespeaks them not men but Monsters not Monsters but Tygers not Tygers but Incarnate Devils The Rhetorick of Oratours the fabulous phansies of Poets are here at a stand and out-stript in their own art Hell was broken loose and all the Devils in Hell were the inventors of this horrid Treason Had this took place it had exceeded Joels day of blood it had brought all the Kingdome into a Chaos it had been the most dismall ghastly sight that ever eye beheld and when we had been in a maze and perplexity even at our wits end then some forraign force had invaded the land and captivated it to Popery this was the design thus was the plot layd according to the eight forementioned circumstances It was layd as low as hell but when we know not of any danger then appeared deliverance and though we slept the Keeper of Israel neither slumbred nor slept Inter pontem fontem inter calicem labra between the match and the powder the Lord himself appeared and wrought a great salvation for us In the next place as I promised lets in two or three particulars discover what a gracious deliverance the Lord was pleased to 2. A great deliverance vouchsafe unto our fore-fathers And here wee are to note 1. The means of Discovery and that was first of all by Auricular 1. The means of Discovery confession I well remember what I heard this day fourteen years in this ●●lpit by the learned and worthy Primate of Ireland how that Delrius wrote five years before of the Powder Treason and tels of this discovery by Auricular Confession Consitotur maleficus se posuisse pulverem in tali limine magnum inde periculum venturum Dr. Iames V●●er A. B of A●magh It 's much to be observed that Auricular Confession which they layd as a Net to catch others caught themselves Lex non est jus●ior ulla Quam necis Artifices a rte perire sua 2. Observe the season●bleness of a full discovery of this ho●rid 2. The seasonablenesse of the Discovery Treason that which was discovered by Auricular Confession ●id not mention the particul●r place but the night before this horrid villany was to be acted th●ough the miscarriage of a Letter and the Kings Interpretation thereof against Grammatical construction this was discovered and the Devils grand ●ioneere Guido Faux apprehended 3. Observe the just retribution of Gods judgments unto evil men 3. Just retribution causing their iniquities to f●l upon their own pa●e so that destruction befell them who aimed at the destruction of the Parliament It 's recorded of a prophane P●ince that he said that he would ride his horse up to the belly in the blood of the Lutherans but through the just and seasonable revenging hand of God the same night hee was cho●kt with his own blood Thus Haman was hanged on the Gallows which he had prepared for Mordecai This is the Lords doing and it should be marvellous in our eyes This is the day which the Lord hath changed from mourning to joy from destruction to salvation If we then forget the memory of this day may our tongues cleave to the rooss of our mouthes But I proceed
ashamed to begge let these be the objects of your charity Florioes View of Tuscany Doe good to all but especially unto the houshold of Faith this is the speciall duty of such a day as this is to honour God with our substance to distribute our bread to the hungry Wherefore forget not this duty it 's a sacrifice where ●ith God is wel-pleased I commend this duty unto your practice and the Lord stirre up your hearts and cause you to draw forth your hearts to the reliefe of the distressed afflicted especially the poor members of Jesus Chri●● that this may be a good day and a day of rejoycing to you and a good day and a day of rejoycing to them and let the memoriall of this day be Monumentum aere perennius Le ts imitate the Je●s in the Text and use all the care we can that such dayes as these are may never faile nor the memoriall of them perish from our seed The Day of Iudgement Discovered from Rom. 2. 16. In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Iesus Christ according to my Gospel A Serious discourse of the day of Judgement is both seasonable Serm. 7. at St. Maries Oxon. Decemb. 9. 1655. 1. This Doctrine is seasonable 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. and profitable seasonable because as the Apostle informed long agoe there shall come in the last dayes scoffers walking after their own lusts and saying where is the promise of his comming There have been of old multitudes of Hereticks who have decried and endeavoured to expunge this Article out of the Creed concerning the day of Judgement Such were the Sadduces Epicures Dositheans Samaritans Mar●chees Prod●anitae Floriani Symmachiani and of all these Sects the vilest were the Borboritae against whom Augustine made an elaborate Confutation Aug. lib. de Haeresibus ad Quod vult Deum c. 6. V. Act. Mon. vol. 1. Near of kin to those filthy beasts were the Harlots against whom there was long since by King Hen. 2. a Proclamation sent into Northhamptonshire and the lewd Ranters their genuine abhominable off-spring in these last and worst of times Now adaies Hell it selfe is broke loose through the variety of Hereticks who though differing from one another yet all agree against the truth like Herod and Pilate who of enemies were made freinds and they both agreed together against Christ What shal we say when Scepticks Antiscripturists Atheists in print and practice in their works and deeds deny the day of Judgement Surely as at all times so now especially the Preaching of this Doctrine of the day of Judgement is exceeding seasonable 2. This Doctrine is as profitable as seasonable And this will 2. This Doctrine is profitable be evidenc'd by two Reasons which are of great weight and consequence 1. Because the Preaching of this Doctrine is an incentive and a 1. Because it is an Incentive to godlinesse speciall motive to excite unto the practice of godlynesse Why doth God command all men to repent there 's a strong reason used by the Apostle to perswade Because hee hath appointed a day it the which he will judge the world in righteousnesse And from the consideration of the day of Judgement the Apostle draws a strong engagement unto Holyness of life and conversation Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought wee to be in all holy conversation and godlynesse looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God 2 Pet. 3. 11 12. 2. Because this Doctrine of the day of Judgement is the foundation 2 This Doctrine is the foundation of comfort of comfort unto the godly Hence Paul triumphed I have saith he fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith Henceforth there is layd up for me a crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day c 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. Such as have been troubled who belong to Christ they shall have rest as the Apostle saith When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty A●gels and the righteousness of God is engaged for performance 2 Thes 2. 6 7 Seeing it is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you who are troubled rest with us Now to come nearer the words Their connexion and dependance is upon ver 12. For as many as have sinned without Law shall also perish without Law And as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law Although they had not the Moral Law promulgated to them by the Ministery of Moses yet they had the Law of Nature written in their hearts And the Law of Nature though unwritten in Tables of stone shall condemn them that sinned against the written Moral Law What else is the Moral Law but a Transcript more fairly wrote of that Law of Nature which was first wrote in Adams heart Those likewise that sinned against the written Law as the Jews did shall be judged by it For there is a dreadfull curse threatned Deut. 27. 26. Cursed is he that confirmeth not all the words of this law to doe them Now if the Question be propounded When shall this judgement bee executed upon Jews and Gentiles My Text gives in the Answer In the day c. Which words containe a plain assertion and an evident proof of a grand Article of our Faith concerning the day of Judgement Wherein wee may observe 1. A Fundamental Doctrine asserted That at the day of Judgement the secrets of all mens hearts shall be judged by Jesus Christ 2. Here 's a full proof of this assertion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to my Gospel Which is not to be understood as if Paul Secundum quod annuncio per Jesum Christum Hier. Suum appellat ●atione Ministerii Calvin was the Author of the Gospel but onely the Publisher thereof Jerome thus understands the Apostle According to that which I declare by Iesus Christ And this the Apostle calls his own as Calvin observes in respect of his Ministry So that I conceive Paul may be thus understood as if he should say This is the Gospel that Christ my self and all the Apostles have taught This and no other Gospel I preach unto you The words thus opened and divided contain three Doctrines 1. That there shall be a day of Judgement 2. At that day the secrets of all mens hearts shall be judged 3. Iesus Christ shall be the Iudge at that day I resume the first Doctrine in order according to this Method Doct. 1 1. To lay down evident proof for clearing of so great a truth Method 1. 2. 2. To make some usefull improvement of all by particular Application For proof hereof Scripture and Reason both contribute abundantly The Doctrine proved to the evincing and stablishing of us in this Article of ou● Faith I begin with Scripture Testimony which is
c. O! consider seriously there will be a day of Judgment wherein thou shalt be called to an account for all by thoughts words and deeds It 's excellent counsell which Basil gives Cum senseris te ad aliquod peccatum provocari ad mentem revoca formidabile illud judicium hoc quasi fraeno paedagogo utere i. e. when thou art tempted to sin call to mind the dreadfull day of Judgement and this will be as a bridle to curb sinne and as a School-master to instruct us in our duty Let this be a Monitor a Frontlet before thine eyes a perpetual vade mecum In all places and companies consider there will be a day of an account a day of Judgement will come O that this consideration were more frequent in our thoughts Through the grace of God it would be a special preservative against sin 2. Let the consideration of the day of Judgement engage you to Less 2. Labour to be holy holyness of life and conversation That 's the practicall use which the Apostle commends to our practise 2 Pet. 3. 11 12. Onely holy persons shall be able to stand in judgement This consideration moved the Saints to have their conversation in Heaven Phil. 3. 20. 3. This consideration should read us a Lecture of Patience Amidst Less 3. Learn Patience all sufferings persecutions losses crosses hardships evill entreaties amidst all perils at home abroad and among false brethren Let us consider that a day will come which will make amends for all sufferings Be patient saith the Apostle for the comming of the Lord draweth nigh Jam. 5. 8. Let us therefore bee patient under crosses yet a little while and the day of the Revelation of Christ will come when the righteous shall be delivered out of trouble and the wicked shall come in their stead Learne hence by patience to possesse your souls 4. Hence let us be put upon continual watchfulness The time Less 4. Learn watchfulness of Christs coming is like a theif in the night We know not the time to the intent we should alwaies keep strict sentinel alwaies stand upon our watch and be in procinctu like the wise Virgins with our Lamps trimmed and oyle in our Lamps Watchfulness is commended at all times Mark 13. 33 34 35 36. Shake off all security and drowsiness If the Watchmen sleep the City will soon be surprized Invadunt urbem somno vinoque sepultam Let our Saviours caution ring aloud in our eares Luk. 21. 34. Take Less 5. Learn to fear God heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged c. 5. Hence learn to fear God Rev. 14. 7. Ungodly men though Preachers amplifie these things looke upon them but as so many Scare-crows But that which they now fear not shall make them tremble and wish that some Rock would so much favour them as to fall on them and hide them from the wrath of a sin revenging God O Christian fear God and walk in his fear all the day long tremble at the consideration of this day and let it be thy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to work out thy salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. Less 6. Learn compassion and charity 6. And lastly hence learn compassion and exercise of Charity towards the poor Members of Christ Not a cup of cold water but shall be rewarded in that day The visiting the sick the cloathing of the naked the releeving of the distressed shall be all remembred in that day Christ brings them all to remembrance Mat. 25. Let us then cast our bread upon the waters and after many dayes we shall finde it Eccl. 11. 1. The Apostle prayeth for Onesiphorus his benefactor that he might find mercy in that day 2 Tim. 1. 18. What day was that but the day of Judgement and recompense Then God will remember all the Saints good deeds but all their bad deeds shall be blotted out of the Book of Remembrance or brought in only like a cancell'd bond for the further manifestation of the riches of Gods mercy And now here 's onely one Vse more of the Doctrine which shall Use 3. For Consolation be for consolation unto the godly In these respects the consideration of the day of Judgement administers unto them abundance of consolation I shall name a few particulars and so conclude this Doctrine 1. From the nature of the day the Saints reap comfort for that 1 Comfort from the nature of the day day is a day of Redemption a day of restitution a day of deliverance Wherefore in expectation of this day they lift up their heads Luke 21. 28. This is the day of the appearance of Christ and this is the foundation of the Saints comfort Col. 3. 4. 2. Here 's comfort in respect of the Judge and that is Jesus Christ who is their Head their Husband their Elder Brother their 2 Comfort in respect of the Judge Advocate their Intercessour He is their Judge who is their Saviour and he will pronounce the sentence of Absolution Christ is their Judge who hath loved them and washed them in his blood Rev. 1. 5. Christ is their Judge who is their peace and reconciler Eph. 2. 14. 3. Here 's comfort in respect of the sentence which Christ shall pronounce Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared 3 Here● comfort in respect of the sentence for you before the foundation of the world 4. And lastly their happynesse shall be to all eternity Psal 16. 11. 4 This comfort shall be to all eternity And of this presence the godly shall be partakers They shall see the blessed vision enjoy an uninterrupted communion with the holy Trinity I le close up the first Doctrine with leaving you to meditate upon 1 Thes 4. 16 17 18. And so much for the first Doctrine I proceed to the second Doctrine That at the day of Judgement the secrets of all mens hearts shall be judged Though men digge never Doct. 2 so deep yet shall they never bee able to hide any thing from God God will bring every work to judgement Eccles 12. 14. The reasons of the Doctrine may be drawn 1. From the Omniscience of God Psal 44. 21. Hee knew the secret whoredomes of Aholah and Aholibah all the chambers Reas 1. From Gods Omniscience of imagery and all their wickednesses done in the darke Ezek. 8. 12. Darkness and light are both alike to him Psal 139. 12. All things are naked unto him with whom we have to deale Heb. 4. 13. God knoweth all things 1 Joh. 3. 20. So that words secretly whispered actions secretly done nay more thoughts purposes intentions before ever they are thought purposed and intended are fully known to God Thou hast set saith the Psalmist our iniquities before thee our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance Psal 90. 8. A second Reason shall be drawn from the Justice of God which is to render
to every one according to the fruit of their doings And Reas 2. Drawn from Gods Justice this is the end of our appearance before Christs Judgement seat 2 Cor. 15. 10. It 's impossible but that the Judge of all the world should doe right secret Murders secret Adulteries secret Thefts secret Abominations secret Cousenage secret malicious Heart-burnings Murtherous intentions secret Back-bitings Detractings Calumniatings all these shall be made manifest at the day of Judgment Now Justice requireth that as the sinner soweth so hee should reap that as he hath sowen seeds of wickedness so he should reap the fruits of destruction 3. The secrets of men shall be judged for the vindicating acquitting Reas 3. For the acquitting of the godly and clearing of the godly What se●ret wickednesses are unjustly and falsly layd to their charge What calumnies forgeries are invented to blast the name and reputation of those that feare God The Primitive Christians in their night meetings were slandered and such horrible aspersions cast upon them as the Father of Lyes could invent What horrible slanders have been cast on Luther Calvin and other eminent Pillars of the Church How are the Prayers Fasts strict walkings of Gods children traduced reproached and scandalized How do the men of the world reproach the Saints for hypocrisie false-heartedness but at the day of Judgment the innocency of the Saints will be cleared What hard measure doe the godly meet withall from the wicked of the world They are buffeted tormented slain all the day long All they say think and do are misconstrued and reproached But at the grand day of Accompt God will clear where men have reproached God will justifie where men have condemned so that secret Prayers Fasts Watches secret communion with God will appear and be openly known and made manifest to the honour of the Godly and to the shame and infamy of their malicious enemies 4. The secrets of mens hearts shall be judged for the further Reas 4. For the further condemnation of the wicked condemation of the wicked All their cunning conveyances secret pollutions all the impure abhominations of their hearts shall bee layd open in the sight of men and Angels We read Psal 50. 21. I will reprove and set them in order before thine eyes God will at that day set all a mans secret villanies and closset abhominations in order before him And this will adde further to the condemnation of the wicked that their most secret wickednesses shall be disclosed to their eternal confusion and horrour These things being premised I shall inferre three Uses for Ter●our unto the wicked Comfort unto the godly and Counsel to both 1. For terrour unto the wicked Is it so that at that day the secrets Vse 1. For terror unto the wicked of all hearts shall be made manifest and judged then in vain doe hypocrites digge deep and seeke to hide their counsell from the Lord as if they thought themselves secure and undiscovered Though no eye of man can see them yet the eye of God which is tenne thousand times brighter than the Sunne will descry and discover all Then will all varnishes painted glosses vain pretences and out-side professions be discovered and all such who plead for them appear in their colours In vain doe Adulterers wait for the Twi-light as Job speaks c. 24. 15. Though the doors be bolted and though it bee dark night yet the All-seeing eye of God findes out all What shall wee say of secret cheating Tradesmen who thinke themselves secure because man cannot find them out Yet let them know that all their mysteries of cousenage in their Trade all their secret fraudulent dealings shall be discovered at the day of Judgement When men professe one thing and practise another pretending friendship with their mouthes but meditating ruine and destruction in their hearts When men make but Religion a stalking-horse for getting a prey and as a cloak to cover wicked projects When men have no regard to the All-seeing eye of God so they can but escape the eye of men what shall we say of them but put them in mind of the words of the Wise man Eccl. 11. 9. But know thou that for all these things God wil bring thee to judgement Then every vain thought every idle word every lascivious glance all mental reservations all hypocriticall collusions all time-serving complyances self-interests ends and aims shall be all called to account and laid open in the sight of men and Angels 2. Here 's matter of comfort to the godly At that day their secret desires breathings longings and pantings after God shall be Vse 2. For comfort to the godly discovered The broken prayers fighs cries inward compunctions of heart shall be all made manifest The imputations scandals ignominies cast upon the Saints shall then be wiped away Many that have been condemned by men shall be at that great day pronounced innocent Holy Martyrs that laid down their lives for Christ against whom the wicked of the world pronounced a sentence of condemnation shall at that day have a sentence of absolution pronounced by Jesus Christ and bee acquitted before that impartial Tribunal It 's a ground of great comfort to Gods children that God knows their hearts how vehemently their desires are towards him as Psalme 42. 1. Isaiah 26. 9. Though the Saints cannot ofttimes expresse how their hearts stand affected and are not able fully to discover themselves and open their condition to man yet God knoweth their inward groanings their secret breathings vehement desires after Christ Now all these are regarded by God for there is not a tear nor a desire nor a sigh which are not taken notice of by the great God of Heaven and Earth The secret closset devotions fastings prayings meditations which the world knows not of nor understand the value of such divine services all these shall be made known at the day of Judgement Thou seest one chearfull thou knowest not why It 's neither corne nor wine nor oyle nor any thing of the world that revives his spirit It 's onely the light of Gods countenance Psal 4. 6. that's the cause hidden to thee but a childe of God knows it Thou seest another sad and troubled though he may have riches and honours in abundance yet there is a secret damp upon his spirit a secret cause of grief It may be God hides his face from him it may be thou art the cause of his grief he seeth and heareth God dishonoured by thee and this is matter of mourning and sadness to his spirit Let then Gods children amidst all sorrows comfort themselves with the consideration of a day of refreshing a day of restitution a day of redemption and consolation which will one day be at the great and general Assize of the just Judge of Heaven and Earth Thirdly Here 's matter of counsel both to the ungodly godly Vse 3. For counsel to the ungodly 1. To the ungodly Will there
be such a day then 1. ●e counselled to break off your sins by repentance Be sensible of the evil of your doings 2. Kisse the Son hast and delay not to make your peace with Jesus Christ for he is our prayse Eph. 2. 14. 3. Make choice of other paths enter into the way of holyness Isa 35. 8. 2 Pet. 3. 14. Then to the godly Here lyeth your duty 1. To have your thoughts meditations and desires fixed on that day Be longing for the sight of Christ coming in the clouds and pray come Lord Jesus come quickly 2. Comfort your selves with the assurance of Gods love to you so was Paul comforted 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. 3. Let your conversation be in heaven Phil. 3. 20 21. 4. Bee not afraid of death for to the Saints death is a conquered enemy the sting is taken away the Serpents teeth are knockt out What need they be afraid of death who shall be acquitted before the Judges And their Judge is their Advocate their friend their Redeemer Jesus Christ which brings in the last Doctrine Doct. 3 That at the day of judgement Jesus Christ shall be the Judge In handling of this Doctrine I shall give clear proof from Scripture and Reason then answe● several Que●ies and Objections and conclude with particular Application 1. For Scripture proof That Christ shall be judge is plain from 1 The Doctrine proved by Scripture several Scriptures viz. Joh. 5. 22 27. Act. 10. 42. Act. 17. 31. Mat. 28. 18. John 5. 21. Christ for this purpose rose again that he might be Lord over quick and dead Rom. 14. 9 10. and part of his dominion is the last judgement The Reasons why Christ shall be Judge are drawn 1 From equity Reas 1. From equity and retaliation retaliation Christ shall judge those that judged him Christ shall judge Pontius Pilate the High Priest the Jewes c. And this will be for the confusion of Christs enemies that though Christ was reproached buffered crowned with thornes and crucified set at nought by the wicked of the world yet now he shall be in triumph and be the judge of quick and dead Joh. 19. 37. They shall looke upon him whom they have pierced Reas 2. For the comfort of the godly Reas 3. For the terror of the wicked 2. Christ shall be Judge for the comfort of the godly Heb. 2. 11. Eph. 5. 30. Christ is their head redeemer elder-brother intercessour Christ hath promised everlasting life Joh. 3. 36. Joh. 5. 24. 3. For the terrour of the wicked Rev. 1. 7. But in the next place here are many questions to be resolved Q. 1. Is the Father excluded from judgement I answer Neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost are excluded The Father is said to judge by the Son Act. 17. 31. Now judgement is peculiarly by a kind of appropriation ascribed to the Son Joh. 5. 22. Pater occultus Filius manifestus as Austine observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the whole Trinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Son this judgement appertains ●ut 2. It will be asked How shall Christ appear at that day Ans ●e shall 1. Appear visibly This judgement the Father hath committed to Christ God and man ●nd Chris● shall not onely judge according to his divine nature but also according to his humane nature So that Christ shall be seen vissibly and locally Act. 1. 11. Mat. 24. 30. 2. Christ shall come gloriously and this will be cleared in sour Particulars 1. Hee shall come in the glory of his Father Mat. 10. 27. 2. With an innumerable company of Angels Mat. 25. 31. 3. With the sound of the trumpet 1 Thes 4. 16. 4 With Power Mat. 24. 30. 3. Christ shall come suddenly as a theef Mat. 24. 4● As a snare Luk. 21. 34. Unexspectedly Luk. 12. 46. 1 Thes 5. 2 3. A 3. Question is whom Christ shall judge Ans The Scripture is evident Men and Angels 1 For Men universally all Men Rom. 14. 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. both quick ●nd dead Act. 10. 42. 1 Pet. 4. 5. 2 Tim. 4. 1. 2. For Angels Jude v. 6. Rev. 20. 10. A 4. Question is What will be the manner of Christs judging To answer this Question we are to consider the preparation to this judgement the Proceeding of this Judge and the ●ule of judging 1. For preparation That will appear in these particulars 1 1 Consider the preparations to the day of judgement There will be a transmutation of heaven and earth Rev. 21. 4 5. 2 Pet. 3. 10. 2. Christ will appear in a throne of glory Mat. 19. 28. 3. There will be a summoning of all sorts of men quick and dead shall be summoned to appear before the judgement seat of Christ Joh. 5. 28 29. 1 Thes 4. 16 17. 4 There will be a separation and division a placing of the sheep on the right hand and the goats on the left hand Mat. 25. 32 33. 2 Consider the proceedings of the judge 2. Let us consider the proceedings of the Judge Wherein we are to note 1 The books shall be laid open Rev. 20. 12. The devil shall accuse Angels shall be witnesses And no need of their accusation or witness for each mans conscience shall be accuser and witness and judge Every book of conscience shall be opened and there shall be either excuseing or accuseing and Dan. 7. 10. There 's a book of Gods remembrance mentioned Mal. 3. 16. And there is a book of a mans owne conscience which shall be opened at that great day This is the book for rectifying whereof all other Ideoscribuntur omnes Labri ut unus emendetur conscientiae Bern. books were written Now there lyeth no appeal from these books no possibility of falsifying Gods book and the book of Conscience And if any one should plead not done not guilty conscience as good as a thousand witnesses would protest against it 2. In Christs proceeding we are to consider of a different sentence one of absolution the other of condemnation 1 For the sentence of absolution Mat. 25. 34. Come there is a gracious invitation ye blessed there is a comfortable appellation of my Father there is a glorious adoption inherit there is their title and donation the Kingdome there is the royalty of it prepared there is the predestination for you there is the propriety of the Saints from the foundation of the World there is the antiquity the antient tenure before the creation of Adam 2 There is a sentence of condemnation Mat. 25. 14 Depart there 's a barre of exclusion a dreadful dismission from mee there is the punishment of losse the heaviest of punishments Qui te non habet Domine Deus totum perdidit saith Bernard Ye cursed there 's their brand of infamy Into Bernard everlasting fire there 's poena Jensus exquisite unspeakable torments there 's fire to burn and torment and eternal fire no mitigation of pain unto all eternity prepared
this season the Prophet tels us Is 55. 6. And the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. 2. Now is the season to come in and close with God ●now to agree with thine adversary quickly whilst thou art in the way with him so we are exhorted Mat 5. 25. You that are youngest ought to offer your Male to God your marrow vigour best strength even all Consecrate your fresh green years to the service of the Lord Eccl. 12. 1. Remember now thy creator in the daies of thy youth while the evil daies come not nor the yeares draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them and Micah 7. 1. Woe is me for I am as when they have gathered the Summer fruits as the grape gleanings of the Vintage there is no cluster to eat my soul desired the first ripe fruit O that from your childhood with Timothy and Samuel you would labour to know and fear the Lord You that are old give your old age to God and be more serious bewaile with teare of blood your youthfull sinnes In good earnest seek the Lord now though it be the eleventh hour come and work in the Vineyard and because you have delayed the longer which is your great wickednesse you had need for the future work the harder And O! that your last daies might bee your best daies It s an observation of a Reverend Divine That a Greenham young man should honour God with his youth a middle aged man with his strength an old man with his wisdome Wherefore lay aside all delayes demurres apologies and vain excuses and now take the benefit of the season now lay hold on the golden opportunity and labour in this thy day to entertain serious considerations of those things which concern your everlasting peace 3. We must make Religion our businesse Let this be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of works to serve the Lord. The service of God must be Charact. 3. Wee must make Religion our businesse performed seriously and supreamly Mat. 6. 33. Doe not make an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in matters of Religion All other things must bee subordinate and subservient unto the Worship of God Wherefore be exhorted to give God the morning and evening sacrifice Seven times a day saith David I will praise thee Daniel prayed three times a day Let 's not deale so contemptibly with God as to leave the worst of our time that part of the day for God when we are most indisposed for service shuffling over a few prayers between sleeping and waking as if such sleight services would be sufficient Be not deceived God is not God will not be mocked God requires the best of the Flock I have often been offended and it hath been sad upon my heart to hear mock prayers of Beggars from door to door mumbling over a few prayers And I have ever thought it a a shame that such vile wretches should be suffered so to prophane the Ordinance of Prayer and take the Name of God in vain But much more are such to blame who have gifts and abilities and yet content themselves with a formal service and a lazie easie way of worship such tye themselves to forms and prescriptions of Antiquity and will force themselves to crutches not making tryall whether they can goe without The Spirit is worth the asking for and there 's a comfortable promise that God will give the Spirit to those that ask him Luke 11. 13. God promiseth good things to those that ask him Mat. 7. 11. and questionlesse the Spirit of God is a good thing 4. Whatever we doe we must do in Faith if we pray we must Charact. 4. Wee must doe all in faith pray in Faith Jam. 5. 15. If we hear we must hear in Faith What 's the reason of barrennesse and unfruitfulnesse in hearing of the Word It proceeds from the want of Faith Heb. 4. 2. If we receive the Sacrament we must receive in Faith for Faith is the maine qualification in a Receiver The Scripture compares Faith to an eye Zach. 12. 10. to a hand Joh. 1. 12. If we want Faith we have neither eye nor hand Christs body and blood is meat and drink indeed to the Faith of a worthy Communicant Now if Faith be wanting there 's a mouth wanting to feed on Christ The Apostle tels us Heb. 11. 6. That without Faith it is impossible to please God and whatsoever is not of Faith is sinne No services of an unbeleever are accepted in the eyes of God 5. Whatever we doe we must do in the Name of Jesus Christ Charact. 5. All must bee done in the name of Christ Faith makes not God to be ours but in Christ Christ is the object of our Faith the author and finisher thereof No services can bee accepted but in Christ for God will no other way shew mercy but through Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. Christ is our peace Ephes 2. 14. He is the Mediator between God and Man He alone hath trod the Winepresse of his Fathers fury Christ is that brazen Serpent to whom we must look with the eye of Faith else we shall never bee cured of the stingings of the fierie Serpent Christ was typified by the dead Bird the living bird must be dipt in the blood of th●● dead bird otherwise no atonement could be made Christ is that tree whose leaves convey healing to the Nation the fountaine opened for sinne and for uncleannesse Christ is that Shiloh Jacob prophesied of that Star Balaam mentioned that Messias prophesied by Daniel that great Prophet foretold by Moses Christ is that great brazen Altar before the Throne whereon all our Sacrifices ought to be offered Christ is the beloved Son in whom the Father is well pleased He is the new and living way He is the way the truth and life I insist the longer on this and am your Remembrancer of these things though ye know them already and the rather to settle you in the truth against those wicked opinions of some who phansie a Platonick Christ and of others who tell us of a Postern-door for Heathens and are so lavish in their charity as they will bestow a Dowry upon Pagans I shall urge onely two Scriptures for confutation Act. 4. 12. Joh. 17. 3. 6. And lastly let 's performe all the services of God with Reverence Charact. 6. All must bee performed with reverence and godly fear Heb. 12. 28. Wherefore we receiving a kingdome which cannot be moved let us have grace whereby we may serve God with reverence and godly fear The serious consideration of Gods Majesty and Purity should mightily prevaile upon our hearts and strike in us an awefull reverence of the great and glorious name of the Lord our God Whether it be Altar-worship Will-worship or Men-worship I look upon them all as abominable Yet notwithstanding when I cry down superstitious gestures farre bee it from me to cry up irreverent gestures in the worship of God
consecrated unto the Lord And if the first fruits be holy the whole lump will be sanctified Pub. Scipio first went into the Senate to pray before he went into the Capitol to consult Christ was at prayer a great while before day Mark 1. 35. David prevented the night watches The Jewes divided the day into three parts the first was for prayer the second for the study of the Law the third for worke I have read that King Alfred the founder of the ancientest Colledge in our University divided the day into three parts eight houres for prayer study and writing 8 houres for eating drinking and sleeping and eight houres in the affaires of the estate My Brethren let 's all make it our business to serve the Lord with all our hearts Le ts in good earnest with all the members of our bodies and faculties of our souls give up our selves to God Let 's offer all we are and have even a whole burnt offering unto the Lord. Let 's give God the best of the best Let 's not sleep away a morning Sermon and be in our beds when we ought to be in the publicke Congregation Cannot we rise early enough for our secular interest and shall we neglect in the mean time the eternal good of our immortal soules The Queen of Sheba came from the uttermost parts of the earth and the wise men came from the East c. And shal any be so lazy as not to step over their thresholds to hear a Sermon Will men loose this Manna for want of gathering it Men ought to labour more to be good then to bee great and to be more careful to discharge their places of preferment then sollicitous to procure them What seeking riding solliciting undermining what scandalizing supplanting perfidious dealings are every where to be found These waies of unbrotherly dealings are very frequently practiced in these evil daies These things my brethren ought not so to be I fear those times and practises are revived now a daies against which the Prophet Micah complains chap. 7. 3. That they hunt every man his brother with a net Thence an exhortation is inferred v. 5. Trust not in a friend put not confidence in a guide But here lies our duty to doe all we can to promote the honour of God to lay out our selves Interests and all to advance the Gospel of Jesus Christ We seek our selves every where our own honour ease and Interest How greedy are many to get more riches how sollicitous of increaseing their substance But how careless are men of doing their duties and discharging the great trust reposed in them Wherefore the other part of my Use shall in an especial manner be directed to two sorts of Persons viz. Magistrates and Ministers 1. Let Magistrates doe their best in their capacity to promote 1. To Magistrates the glory of God They have great advantages put into their hands and let them remember that they bear not the sword in vaine A Magistrate in Gods cause should be like Levi who knew neither Father nor Mother nor Brother nor Sister Of all others a Magistrate should be a man of zeale and courage he should bring the wheel upon the wicked Be they honourable or worshipful he should not spare them in their wickedness Swearers Drunkards Whoremongers Sabbath-breakers these should be punished and Blasphemers who are as bad as the worst For their abomination is never the less because they have so many to plead for them It 's an old Moral Law never yet repealed that he that blasphemeth the name of the Lord should be put to death Lev. 24. 16. What abundance of good may Magistrates doe How many prizes have they put into their hands to serve God in their places Let none be afraid to be good Let them have this Motto or Monitor in their serious thoughts Those that honour God he will honour but as for those that despise him they shall be lightly esteemed 2. To Ministers 2. Here 's one word to Ministers and so for the present I shall conclude Must God have the best then let Ministers offer to God their prayers studies best paines Luther used to say that prayer Meditation and Tentation makes a Preacher And Bernard used to say Bene orasse est bene studuisse Let all Ministers pray much let them first study their own hearts and then study their sermons which they preach to their Auditors The Preacher studied acceptable words A Minister must be an Interpreter one of a thousand Gods mouth to distinguish the pretious from the vile He must have the tongue of the learned to speak a word in due season I have often thought of Davids resolution to Araunah that he would not offer to the Lord that which should cost him nothing Questionless transcriptions Extemporary effusions vain fancies forced Allegories Wire-drawne Expositions are unbecomeing a Pulpit There 's a curse upon all those that doe the work of the Lord negligently Let 's all endeavour to approve our selves workemen that neednot to be ashamed Thanks be to God There 's a choice company of young men who usually supply this lecture Their spirits are serious and their language savory and they preach solid Orthodox and soule-saving Doctrines I must admire and can neuer enough bless God for the same The saying is no more common than true that the hope of our Church is in our young men I will make no comparisons I wish from my heart that we were all better that we would preach more solidly and more frequently And sor mine own part I am of opinion that those who preach most frequently haveing a single eye at Gods glory these are the best and most profitable Preachers and doe most good to poore soules Let none of us hide our talents in a Napkin Let 's not hide our Candle under a Bushel But let 's imploy frequently this sword of the spirit and draw it out lest Ducentas octoginta sex Conciones quotannis habuit Calvinus ad Popu'ū Lectiones vero centum octoginta sex praeter Epist●las Disputationes c. Beza in vita Calvin● by keeping it in the scabbard it grow rusty for want of using When we read of Chrysostomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I saith he preacht yesterday and to day And of Calvins indefatigable paines as * Beza writes in his life we may be ashamed that we do no more Let not any ordained Minister especially stand idle in the market place and say none hath hired me There are many pulpits empty both here in adjacent Parishes Yo● have places enough to visit were you but of the rare spirit of Amaziah the son of Zichri who did willingly offer himself unto the service of the Lord. Brethren I am jealous over you with a godly jealousy And in love to your soules I am your remembrancer of these things Liberavi animam And so for the present I conclude heartily desireing that what hath been spoken may abide by you
opinion of Religion and think any thing will serve as if any thing were good enough for God Such a slight service was done by Gehazi he went on before and layd his staffe upon the child and there was no appearance of life in the child but the Prophet Elisha layd his hand on the childs hand his mouth on the childs mouth c. and in good earnest set upon the work and the spirit of the child revived It 's the observation of a Reverend Mr. Jerem. Burroughs and precious Divine that of all spirits hee desired to be delivered from a frothy spirit it 's therefore a matter of lamentation and ought in good earnest to be bewailed to consider with what irreverence formalities and slightnesse of the spirit many set upon duty some will pray partly between sleeping and waking so drowsily that they can scarce pronounce their words aright Others will mumble over a few words of course in their beds Neither of these think of that reverence that belongs to the great God of heaven and earth and that he requires the Male the best we can offer unto him A third Impediment is a worldly spirit A heart swallowed up Imped 3. A wordly spirit with the love of the world will never give God the best such spirits wil grudge any thing for God because the world hath seized on their spirits and took up their affections Their breath words conversations even all favours of the world Now this love of the world is the root of all evill and enmity against God Demas forsook the Apostles society The young man preferred earthly treasures before heavenly where the world sits close and the heart is enamoured with the love of the world there Christs riches and his excellencies are undervalued A fourth Impediment is an unbeleeving heart Christ is not a Imped 4. An unbeleeving heart whit regarded amongst unbeleevers onely beleevers account him precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. He that knew the worth of the pearl of price and beleeved there was such vertue in it sold all to purchase it Mat. 13. 46 47. These Impediments being removed some speciall duties ought to be practised 1. Alwaies set before thine eyes the great God of heaven and Dut. 1. Set God before thine eyes earth as omnipresent pure and omnipotent who seeth knoweth and searcheth all hearts This consideration will make thee afraid to present any thing vile and refuse unto so great so holy a Lord God How thou prayest in thy closet what thy secret reserved thoughts are what thy intentions are in any duty all are naked unto that great and glorious Majesty with whom thou hast to deale 2. Labour for sincerity of heart That 's it which will carry thee Dut. 2. Labour for sincerity of heart through all brakes bryars difficulties and perplexities whatsoever It 's said Asa's heart was upright there 's a neverthelesse put in 2 Chron 15. 17. It 's this which comforted Hezekiah when the sentence of death was past against him 2 King 20. 3. It 's that which God requires even truth in the inward parts Ps 51. 6. It 's that which is the cause of rejoycing 2 Cor. 1. 12. Nathaniels character to be an Israelite indeed without guile Joh. 1. 47. The upright are they which love Christ Cant. 1. 4. And they are Gods delight Prov. 11. 20. Their Tabernacle shall flourish Prov. 14. 11. Their high way is to depart from evill Prov. 16. 17. They walk surely Prov. 10. 9. and no good thing will God withhold from them Ps 84. 11. Their end is peace Psal 37. 37. Upright walking with God will carry a man through all troubles whatsoever and in life and death will yeeld matter of abundance of consolation 3. Embrace the present season of Grace Seek ye the Lord whilst Dut. 3. Embrace the present season he may be found call ye upon him whilst he is near Isa 55. 6. Now give God your strength and marrow and lay aside all delayes Apologies and Procrastinations 4. Be much in Prayer and Supplication that what ever thou Dut. 4. Be much in Prayer dost what duty whatsoever service thou offerest unto God that he would accept thee through Jesus Christ As the Ancients held the Plough and prayed so hear and meditate on Gods Word keep the Lords Sabboth holy and pray for a blessing upon all from heaven Blesse Lord his substance Deut. 33. 11. 5. Make Religion thy work the grand design thou drivest Let Dut. 5. Make Religion thy work thy generall calling as a Christian have the preheminence of thy particular calling in the world Seek first the Kingdome of God Mat. 6. 33. The last Use is for Consolation unto those who to the utmost in Vse 5. For Consolation sincerity of heart endeavour to walk before the Lord. Thus Enoch walked with God Gen. 5. 24. Zachary and Elizabeth walked in Gods Commandments blameless Luk. 1. 6. David was a man after Gods own heart Yet the best of Gods children have their failings Jacob confest himself not worthy of the least of Gods mercyes c. David confest himself as foolish as a bruit Beast and wise Agur acknowledged that he had not the understanding of a man It 's a great cause of greif and a burthen to the spirits of Gods dearest children to consider how much they faile in duties Their dulnesse deadnesse disorder of spirit much afflicteth them What I shall further adde shall be comprised in these ensuing considerations Consid 1. Infirmities are incident to the best 1. Infirmities are incident unto the best of Christians I sleep saith the Spouse Paul complains of a body of sin and of flesh and of an antipathy between flesh and spirit 2. Gods children allow not themselves in sinne but mourn Consid 2. Gods childrē allow not themselves in sin Consid 3. Sincerity is accepted Consid 4. Where sincerity is there is an endeavour after more grace Consid 5. Others examples are not just standards Consid 6 Perseverance shall obtaine the Crown for sinne Sinne is their exceeding great grief and burthen 3. Where the heart is sincere it is accepted a willing mind is accepted 2 Cor. 8. 12. 4. Where the heart is sincere it is not contented with what it hath already attained but labours for more grace Phil. 3. 13 14. 5. Consider that others examples and attainments are not that standard for every one to measure himself by No examples but that of Jesus Christ is every way authentique Some will say on one hand Such and such goe no further and will not this serve my turne others say such goe so farre and if I cannot come near them I may justly suspect my self to be an Hypocrite Neither this nor that must determine us 6. And lastly consider that Perseverance shall obtain the Crown Rev. 2. 15. Many beginne well and fly back Of all Apostates are most hated by God But as for such who persevere in Grace and
the dore of the Sanctuary is yet opened and a * Ezra 9. 8. nail is yet left in the holy place you have bread in the morning and in the evening and more plenty of spirituall food on the Sabbath day and week daies then heretofore Much is given unto you and much required from you Where God hath sown so liberally he expects as plentifull an harvest Now you hear the joyfull sound even the word of reconciliation and substance of our Embassie is to intreat you to consider the value and dignity of your Heavenly born being soules and to seek after reconciliation otherwise you are undone to all eternity Now Christ holds out a white flag for a parley of peace now the King of Heaven holds out the golden Scepter O come and touch the top thereof and live The Port-cullis is not yet let down The Judge hath not yet vailed his face The dore of hope is not yet shut up the holy Ghost calls † Isa 55. 6. Seek the Lord whilest he may be found call upon him whilest he is neer ‖ 2 Cor. 6 2. Nemo tam divos habuit faventes crastinum ut possit sibi polliceri Senec. Now is the day of salvation None of us can promise to our selves a morrow no not the least moment of time and if we neglect this golden opportunity and season of grace offered we may never live to have another tendred unto us All the World cannot call back the least minute of time when once it is past it 's like a swift stream or an arrow out of a b●w not to be recalled Wherefore as you consult the eternal good of your immortal souls be intreated to improve all the prizes and Talents that God puts into your hands to get Wisdome withall When the Lord bids you seek his face O that your hearts with all readinesse might return this answer * Psal 27. 8. Thy face Lord will I seek God hath put this word into my mouth and here fixt my thoughts after I had severall other subjects in my eye and hath sent me on this very errand to treat on this great Theame of reconciliation unto God And now what message shall I return unto him that hath sent me What account shall I give at the last day of the entertainment of this word What shall I say more You have life and death set before you this day viz. The happinesse of a reconciled estate and the misery of an unreconciled estate O that the Lord would engage you all to make the better choyce by heark●ing unto this word of reconciliation and unfainedly embracing the same and so your souls shall live † 2. Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I have said and the Lord give you understanding in all things THE MINISTERY OF ANGELLS Heb. 1. 14. Are they not all Ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heires of salvation TO draw down the context to the text we are to Sermon 2. Preached at S. Marye's Oxon. Oct. 3. 1658. Vers 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solis radii sunt ejusdem naturae cum sole ab eodem propagatione distinguuntur avelluntur nunquam hac Metaphorâ divinam filii naturam convenientissime expressit Apostolus Et character ●icitur expressa imago Archetypi Pareus in loc take speciall notice of the Excellency and dignity of Christ represented unto us in this chapter especially Vers 3. Who being the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person and upholding all things by the Word of his Power when he had by himselfe purged our sinnes sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High And by way of Comparison the Apostle further inhanceth the honour and preheminence of Christ For after he had compared Christ with the Angells he sets the Crown on Christs head his name is more excellent than theirs Vers 4. 5. Being made so much better then the Angells as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name then they For unto which of the Angells said he at any time Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee And againe I Will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son Christ is a Son the Angells his servants they may not be worshipped themselves but they must worship Christ Vers 6. 7. Let all the Angells of God worship him Of his Angells he saith who maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire And further honour is ascribed to the Son which is not to Angells Vers 8. 9. Vnto the Son he saith Thy throne O God is for ever and ever a scepter of righteousnesse is the scepter of thy Kingdome Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes And further Christ is a Lord and Creatour the Angells servants and creatures Christ is advanced to the Throne He is the Soveraign Lord of all Vers 13. The Angells ministering spirits subservient to Christ and at his command and when commissionated by him helpfull and serviceable unto all the children of God It is demanded by way of interrogation in the Text Are they not all Ministring spirits c. Which scripture sets forth clearly the Protection of Angells their Ministery and serviceablenesse unto the children of God A point seldome taught yet very usefull comfortable and of singular concernment unto all the children of God! And being that its the duty of the Minister to declare unto people the whole councell of God that which hath oft been in my intention I shall now endeavour to handle with all the perspicuity that I can The words contain a question Are they not all Ministring spirits Divis which being resolved the answer is obvious that the Angells are all Ministring spirits More particularly we are to observe a Description of Angells 1. From their nature Spirits 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exprest 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. From their office Ministring 3. Their commission Sent. 4. Whose Ministers they are 1. Primarily Christs And secondarily Christs children 5. The universality All All the Angells Here 's the universality of the object and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and universality of the subject all the Angells All that are heires none left out none exempted from the benefit of the service of all the Angells of God All that are heires of Salvation all Christs children have interest in their protection Many scruples may be made and many things require explication what requires opening shall be endeavoured in the enlargement of one intire doctrine whereon I purpose to fix Thus I propound it to you That it pleaseth God to make use of the Ministery of Angells for Doct. the good of his Children This is the point I aime at from this
Scripture For the Inlargement whereof I shall propound severall questions and give in Answers to them that shall constitute the doctrinall part of the Text which done I shall draw inferences for our instruction and practice and those shall constitute the use and application For the resuming the first thing propounded The first question is what Angells are I have read many curious Q. 1. What Angells are observations of Fathers and School-men concerning Angells which I conceive not fit to communicate being altogether unwilling to stu●e a Sermon with Curiosities and conjectures which tend not to edification For if Moses knowing the originall of the world had it not revealed what to write of Angels if Col. 2. 18. Demissio illa animi vitiosa parit cultum superstitiosum Monentur hoc in loco Colossenfes ne decepti ab Impostoribus tribuant Angelis cultum divinum Daven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à Nuntiando Stephen who had the heavens opened saw not those orders of Angells what they were if Paul who was taken up into the third heaven saw yet so little of Angells that whosoever will teach so curiously of them he saith they be puft up of a fleshly mind to speak of things which they never saw Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of Angells intruding into those things which he hath not seen vainly puft up by his fleshly mind If John in all his revelations had no such knowledge revealed of Angells then it 's a duty to be modest and sober in inquisitions to be wise unto Sobriety and to avoyd curious speculations of Schoolmen and confine our selves unto the Word of God Now what they are we shall shew from their names and Nature First from their names they are Messengers who carry a Their Name message they are Gods messengers * This name Angell is attributed unto Christ † Gen. 48. 16 The Angell that delivered me from all evill blesse the lads c. ‖ Ex. 23. 20. Behold I send an Angell before thee to keep thee in the way and to bring thee into the place which I have prepared † Nomen non naturae sed officii Aug. * Isa 63. 9. In all their affliction he was afflicted and the Angell of his presence saved them in his love and in his pitty he redeemed them and he bare them and carried them all the daies of old Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nuntius Dei Steph. the Angell of his presence and the Angell of the Covenant Behold I will send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me and the Lord whom yee seeke shall suddenly come unto his Temple even the Mal. 3. 1. messenger of the Covenant whom yee delight in This name of Angell is ascribed there unto John Baptist who came in the spirit of Elias and unto Christ also and likewise to our Ministers pastours and teachrs Rev. 2. 12. Rev. 3. 1. Angells are took for Spirits Messengers of God imployed for the fulfilling of his will and commands in Heaven or in earth And so in my Text. For their Nature Damascene giveth this definition of Angells 2. The Nature of Angells 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Damasc A most pure and perfect intellectuall immateriall and immortall creature created and appointed to be Gods attendants and messengers between God and man Not that God hath any necessity of help or cooperation of his creatures but that he is pleased in his will and pleasure to imploy those Instruments So I will and so I command God only can say and we may not question what he doth But to set down their Nature more fully I 'le take notice of these properties 1. Angells are Spirits He maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flaming fire In that they are called spirits that declares 1. Angells are spirits Psal 104. 4. Spiritus vox naturam declarat flammae vero ●orū potentiam Gomarus Facit Deus instar ventorum velocissimos Ministros eosdemque facit flammam ignis hoc est celerrime instar fulg●ris exequendi jussa paratissimos Pareus in loc their Nature and flaming fire that shewes their power Windes and fire are swift in their motion and so are Angells God makes his Ministers swift like wind and like a flame of fire that is most ready like lightning speedily to execute his commands They are not compounded of matter and forme for Luk. 8. 30. Many Devills entred into one man and the Devills themselves were once Angells of light And though we read that they have appeared in bodily shapes yet we must know that those bodies were assumtitious They might assume a body for a time for the discharge of that particular service they went about And whereas we read of their wings faces hands and tongues all those are to be understood Metaphorically The disciples were terrified and afrighted and supposed that they had seen a spirit And he said unto them why are ye troubled and why do thoughts Luk. 24. 37 38 39. arise in your hearts Behold my hands and my feet that it is I my self handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have Angells are incorporeall and though we read of their eating and drinking as the Angells with Abraham Lot and others we must know that when they assumed bodies God might give them those faculties that belonged to bodies or they might consume the foode and work miraculously above mans apprehension 2. Angells are invisible By him were all things created that are 2. Angells are invisible Col. 1. 16. in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be Thrones Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him And they acted invisibly when they took upon them shapes and assumed bodies for a time indeed they appeared unto men but as spirits they are as Invisible as a mans soule Who hath seen a spirit at any time or the soul of man or an Angell 3. They are Immortall Good Angells are so neither can the● 3. They are immortall Luk. 20. 36. dye any more for they are equall unto the Angells and are the children of God being the children of the resurrection Bad Angells are so Then shall we say to them on his left hand depart from me Matt. 25 41. ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devill an his Angells 4. They neither marry nor are given in marriage Hence Chrysostome 4. They neither marry nor are given in marriage Luk. 10. 33. confutes their opinion who from Gen. 6. 2. by the Sons of God understand the Angells this must needs be a very corrupt exposition because they neither marry nor are given in marriage 5. They are most numerous a great multitude * Gen. 32. 1 2. Jacob went 5. They are most numerous on his way and the Angells of God met him
voice of his Word Blesse the Lord all ye his hosts the Ministers of his that do his pleasure And we pray thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven 3. To celebrate the praises of God * Isa 6. 3. One cried unto another and 3. To praise God said holy holy holy Lord of hosts the whole earth is full of his glory † Luk. 2. 13 14. And suddenly there was with the Angell a multitude of the heavenly host praising God saying glory to God in the highest and on earth peace good will towards men ‖ Rev. 4. 8 9. The foure beasts had each of them six winges about him they were full o● eyes within they rest not day or night saying holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was is is to come 4. To make it their work to preserve Gods glory And I fell 4. To make it their worke to preserve Gods glory Rev. 19. 10. at his feet to worship him and he said unto me see thou do it not I am thy fellow-servant and of thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus worship God for the testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of Prophecy The Angell would not beare with Gods dishonour and would not permit John to worship him 5. To be servants unto Christ When he bringeth in the first begotten 5. to be Christs servants Heo 1. 6. Psal 97. 7. Luk. 1. 19. into the world he saith let all the Angells of God worship him Confounded be all they that serve graven Images that boast themselves of Idolls worship him all ye Gods They brought the message of Christs incarnation I am Gabriell that stand in the presence of God and am sent to speak unto thee and to tell thee these glad tidings They ministred unto him * Mat. 4. 11. Then the Devill leaved him and behold Angells came and ministred unto him † Luk. 22. 43. And there appeared an Angell from Heaven unto him and strengthening him Christ is the head of them and they are his servants ye are compleat in him who is Col. 2. 10. the head of all Principality and Power 6. Angells are serviceable unto men not one but all not any 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Ministratores quos vulgò solemus officiarias vocare Beza Numb 20. 16 2 King 6. 16. a●e exempted They are all ministring spirits in the text And these singular services which they have done and will do for Gods children are upon record They deliver them from dangers When we cried unto the Lord he heard our voice and sent an Angell and hath brought us forth out of Egypt and behold we are in Kadesh a Cittie in the uttermost of thy border Feare not saith the Prophet for they they that be with us are more then they that are with them Who were they but Gods Angells for the Prophets safe-guard 1. The Angell of the Lord incampeth about them that feare him 1. The Angell of the Lord incampeth about the righteous and delivereth them * Dan. 3. 28. Then Nebuchadnezzar spake and said blessed be the God of Shadrach Meshach and Abednego who hath sent his Angell and delivered his servants that trusted in him aad hath changed the Kings word and yeelded their bodies that they might not serve or worship any God except their own God And Daniel makes this acknowledgment My God hath sent his Angell and hath shut ‖ Psal 91. 11. the Lyons mouth that they have not hurt me for asmuch as before him innocency was found in me and also before thee O King I have done no hurt † Dan. 6. 22. He shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all his waies Angels are Protectors Guardians commissionated by God Dan. 10. 13. to protect Gods children The Prince of the Kingdome of Persia withstood me one and twenty daies but lo Michael one of the chiefe Princes came to help me and I remained there with the King of Persia Michael is generally interpreted to be Christ the only Archangell 2. The Angells are of marvellous wisdome to direct counsell 2. Angels are of marveilous wisdome Gen. 24. 7. and advise the children of God The Lord God of heaven which took me from my fathers house and from the Land of my kindred and which spake unto me and sware unto me saying unto thy seed will I give this Land he shall send his Angell before thee and thou shalt take a wife to my son from thence The Lord before whom I walk will send his Angell with thee and prosper thy way and thou shalt take a wife for my son of my kindred and of my Fathers house 3. They comfort Gods children Gen. 32. 2. This is Gods host said 3. Angells comfort Gods children 1 King 19. 5 6 7. Jacob as Elias lay and slept under a juniper tree behold then an Angell touched him and said unto him arise and eate And he looked and behold there was a cake baken on the coales and a cruse of water at his head and he did eat and drinke and laid him down again And the Angell of the Lord came a second time and touched him and said arise and eat because the journey is to great for thee 4. They punish their enemies * Gen. 19. 11 They smote the men that were at 4. Angells punish the saints enemies the dore with blindnesse both small and great so that they wearied themselves to find the dore † 2 King 19. 35. And it came to passe that night that the Angell of the Lord went out and smote in the campe of the Assyrians an hundred fourscore and five thousand and when they arose early in the morning behold they were all dead corpses Herod was made a signall spectacle of pride as is on record ‖ Acts 12. 23 And immediatly an Angell of the Lord smote him because he gave not God the glory he was Rev. 12. 7. eaten of wormes and gave up the ghost They stand for Christ and his Church against Satan and his Angells And there was war in heaven Michael and his Angells fought against the Dragon and the Dragon fought and his Angells 5. They resist the wicked and their attemps Balaam found 5. Angells resist wicked men Num. 22. 22. 6. Angels carry the Saints souls into heaven Luk. 16. 22. 7. They gather the elect unto Christ Mat. 24. 31. Mar. 13. 27. Q. 4. Whether every Saint hath a peculiar Angell his keeper Mat. 18. 10. it so And Gods anger was kindled because he went and an Angell of the Lord stood in the way for an Adversary against him 6. They carry the soules of Gods children into heaven And it came to passe that the begger died and was carried by the Angells into Abrahams bosome the rich man also died and was buried c. 7. They gather the elect unto Christ at the last day He shall send
GODS PROVIDENCE COMMON AND SPECIALL SET FORTH From 2 Chron. 16. vers 9. The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himselfe strong in the behalfe of those whose heart is perfect towards him THE best of men in the Church Militant have Sermon 3. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Oct. 12. 1658. Deut. 32. 5. 2 Chr. 15. 12. vers 16. their failings There 's no gold but hath some ore and drosse in it no wheate without some chaffe none of Gods children but have some spots We need go no further then the Instance of my Text. Asa King of Juda a zealous Reformer one that entred into a solemne Covenant with the Lord one so full of courage as to depose his Mother Maachah for her Idolatry and cut down her Idoll a●d of this King the Holy Ghost gives vers 17. this finall judgment Neverthelesse the heart of Asa was perfect all his daies Yet notwithstanding here are upon Record severall 2 Chr. 16. 10. faults of King Asa viz. putting the Seer into Prison unjustly for pronouncing a full and seasonable reproofe from the mouth of the Lord for oppressing some of the People and in his disease not seeking the Lord but the Physitians Hence the Apostles assertion Jam. 3. 2. is evidently proved That in many things we offend all The Apostles exhortation should be to every one of us instead of a particular Application Be not high minded but feare Let him that Rom. 11. 20. 1 Cor. 10. 12. thinks he standeth take heed least he fall The sinnes of Saints should be our warning peece and hence we should learne caution vigilancy and heart-Inquisition We are men of the like passions and therefore ought to commiserate our Brethren and likewise entertain a holy jealousy over our own hearts considering that we also may be tempted To come to the Text These words were spoken by Hanani the Seer to Asa King of Judah And although they met with no better entertainment then a Prison yet are no whit lesse to be valued Plain faithfull dealing is highly to be prised notwithstanding it meets with course usage almost every where It was Asaes great fault to rely on the King of Syria and not on God vers 7. Likewise he sinnes against the experience of a signall deliverance from the Ethiopians and Lubims vers 8. But what are the best of men if left to themselves Hezekiah a rare King fail'd in the businesse of the Ambassadors of the Princes of Babylon We read God left him to try 2 Chr. 32. 31. him that he might know all that was in his heart This plain-dealing Prophet having charged home and thoroughly aggravated the Kings faul●s layes downe in my Text a strong Reason or Ingagement for him to relye on the Lord For the eyes c. Wherein are observeable a description of Providence of Gods Divis Omni-presence and the speciall manifestation exhibition thereof 1. Here is a descri●tion of Providence by the eyes of the Lord. 1. A description of Prov●dence The eye of the Lord is cleare and ten thousand times brighter then the Sun The eye of God searcheth and penetrates the most secret things It seeth any thing observes discovers pierceth converts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. revengeth All things are naked Diaphanous unto God With him the very inside is outside secret or open dark or light night or day are all one with the great All-seeing God God at once perfi●ly seeth knowes all things by one cleare act of Intuition unico actu simplicis Intelligentiae as Schoolmen say he universally suddenly knowes every thing Creatures know successively per prius posterius But the Creator knowes all at once Yet we must interpose a Caution that wh●n we read of Gods eyes hands feet c. We must not understand them litt●rally and properly but figuratively and improperly or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herein God condescends to our capaci●y and apprehension and speaks after the manner of men And the Rule in Divinity is to be especially observed Q●ae dicuntur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligenda sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The like passage we have in Zechary They are the eyes of the Lord i. e. his Providence Zech. 4. 10. which observes all that is done every where 2. Here is a description of Gods Omni-presence from these 2. A description of Gods Omni presence Deus est sphaera cujus centrum est ubique circumferenti● nusquam words Run to and fro throughout the whole earth Angells are said to be definitive in loco Bodies circumscriptivè but God is in loco repletive His Center is every where and his Circumference no where * Chrysost in Col. 2. Homil. 5. Deus totus in coelo est totus in terra non alternis temporibus sed utrumque simul Aug. de Civ Dei l. 22. c. 29. Chrysostome observes that God is every where i. e. because he fills all places and yet no where i. e. confind to no place Augustine goeth further and saith That God is wholly in Heaven and wholly in earth not by vicissitudes but all at once This is most fully confest by David Psal 139. 7 8 c. Whither shall I go from thy spirit or whither shall I flee from thy presence If I ascend up into heaven thou art there c. The scope of the Psalmist is to shew as judicious † Non est aliquis locus uspium in quo possim à faciè tuâ abscondi Musculus Musculus observes There is not any place any where in which I may be hidden from thy sight 3. Here 's a Manifestation of speciall Providence to the children 3. Gods speciall Providence is toward the upright of God thus described Whos 's heart is perfect toward him i. e. sincere A perfection of parts may and must be attained in this life A perfection of degrees is reserved for another world Now as the generall and common Providence of God extends it selfe towards all the creatures so there is a speciall distinguishing Providence which exerts it selfe and acts vigorously for the Provision Protection and Consolation of those that feare God and walke uprightly before him God puts forth his power to help them so ‖ Vt firmum se exhibeat verto ut robustum se exhibeat erga illos ut robustam potentiam suam exerat in opitulando ipsos Piscat in loc Piscator translates the words So then the sense of the words I conceive to amount to this effect that all things come to passe by Providence nothing by chance in respect of God For he seeth all things and knowes all things All the affaires and transaction in the Universe are manifest to Gods all seeing eye the hidden deeds of darknesse the secretest reservations of the mind and thoughts of the heart are all known to him Further there is no creature whether vegetive sensitive or rationall
we injoy without him all is bitter with him every thing is sweet JERUSALEMS REMEMBRANCERS UNFOLDED ON A SOLEMNE FAST DAY Upon Isaiah 62. vers 6 7. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth UPON perusall of the 1. vers We shall find that Sermon 4. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Jan. 7. 1658. selfe same thing put into practice which is earnestly charged upon us as our grand duty in the Text for Zions sake c. Which words some learned expositors understand to be spoken of the Prophet Isaiah whose prayers were incessant in the behalfe of Jerusalem But I rather concurre with Scultetus Scultet Muscul Musculus c. Who understand them spoken of God promising and not of the Prophet praying For the words are a prophecy of Israels deliverance out of Babylon and of the glory and happinesse that shall be put upon the Church of God And Zion and Jerusalem are a Type of the Christian Church So that God will neither let the world nor the Potentates therein rest untill there be a full cleare and conspicuous deliverance offered for the Church of God Hence the Gentiles shall take notice of such wonderfull works of God Vers 2. The Gentiles shall see thy righteousnesse Vers 2 and all Kings thy glory c. The Church that was so much afflicted Vers 3 and distressed shall be called by a new name vers 3. No more termed desolate but Hephtzibah and Beulah vers 4. And the moving cause of all this is Amor complacentiae For the Lord delighteth in Vers 4 them Which delight is amplified by a similitude Vers 5. For as Vers 5 a young man marryeth a Virgin so shall thy Sonnes marry thee And as the Bridegroome rejoyceth over the Bride So shall thy God rejoyce over thee For the accomplishment of this great work to make the Church a glorious Church the Lord raiseth up eminent Instruments Vers 6. I have set watchmen upon thy walls O Jerusalem Vers 6 Hieronym which shall never hold their peace day nor night c. Jerome understands Angells Prophets Princes Teachers And some conceive that faithfull Governours and faithfull Ministers are here meant by the watchmen of the walls even all such as are in publick place and authority who are diligent in their watch and importunate sollicitors such as will have no nay and will never cease begging but are constant day and night as well in bad as good times in pouring out their hearts in prayer in the behalfe of Jerusalem These things premised I resume the words of the Text wherein there 's offered to our consideration a charge of greatest concernment unto the watchmen For the Lord having promised such eminently usefull Instruments for the effecting these great things promised to Jerusalem and the Lord having given a Character of their fidelity that they shall never hold their peace but shall be busied in praying for or instructing of the people of God in their duty Now the Lord by an Apostrophe directs his speech to those watchmen and chargeth them with the maine duty of the Text Ye that make mention c. 1 Wherein are three things to be observed 1. The perrsons described by a note of distinction to whom Divis the charge is given yee that c. 2. The substance of their charge set down Negatively in two expressions 1. Keep not silence 2. Give him no rest 3. The main end and designe intended that Jerusalem should be made a praise in the earth 4. The duration and continuance of this charge or employment of these persons that make mention of the Lord keep not silence till Jerusalem be establisht i. e. Their prayer must so long continue and they may not cease till Jerusalem be establisht and the gracious promises accomplisht in behalfe of the glorious condition of Jerusalem Before I give you the Doctrines I shall for explication of the words resolve a few Queries 1. What is meant by those that make mention of the Lord Q. 1 Ans Calvin understands them of the Ministers that Preach the Word of God The 70. renders the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the vulgar edition renders it verbatim Qui reminiscimini domini Qui ad memoriam revacatis Dominum Tig●r Tran. So Jerome Vatablus Osiander And our Marginall note in our English translation is Ye that are the Lords remembrancers some conceive this speech to be an Allusion to that standing office in Kings Courts of Remembrancers Corn. A. Lapide upon the place tells us Corn A. Lap in Loc. that the Kings of Judah had Maskirim Admonitores whose office was to put the King in mind of weighty affaires Junius renders the words Qui commemoratis Jehovam Rememorantes Dominum So Vatablus and he gives a marginall note Qui reminisci facitis Domini I shall not peremptorily determine which is the best of these translations Neither shall I confine the duty of the Text only to Ministers They in an eminent manner are the Peoples mouth unto God and Gods mouth unto the people And this duty of being the Lords Remembrancers belongs to them not that God needs any putting in mind or remembrance but that he would have us do our duty by assiduous supplications Yet we may not exclude any of Gods children from practising the duty of the Text in presenting prayers making diligent addresses unto the Throne of grace Though it belong unto all godly men yet in a more speciall manner to Ministers So * Quamvis haec sententià ad pios omnes pertineat tamen praecipue Sacerdotes attingit Cal. Calvin on the place 2. What 's meant by not keeping silence giving God no rest Q 2 Ans These two come to one and the same effect implying that they ought to speak and continue importunate in speaking They should speak aloud and never give over speaking The words are Metaphoricall took from those who are indefatigable sollicitors and will take no deniall Here 's a Character of fervent prayer which gives the Lord no rest i. e. earnestly and incessantly plyeth the Throne of grace and will take no repulse Of this more anon 3. What is meant by Jerusalem Q 3 Ans For Answer Jerusalem is either taken litterally for the place and Metropolis of Judea or rather by a Meton●mia continentis as it signifies the whole body of the Inhabitants there or else Mistically for that Jerusalem which cometh down from above And this is either universall or particular The universall Church is the whole body of believers dispersed through the whole world The particular Church is that wherein we live And this according to judicious Carthwrights division is of one Nation or of a narrrower compasse And the same Learned Author gives distinct definitions of them both A Church saith he of one Nation is that which is gathered under one politick civill government A V.
himselfe not imputing their trespasses unto them and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation This is love beyond compare The duty that belongs unto us is 1. To admire at this great infinite love to get our hearts raised up in the high contemplation of this love 2. Le ts be thankfull we can never be thankfull enough Eternity will be too little to praise God and blesse him for so great love 3. Let love beget love love must be reciprocall 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us 4. Let this love of God cause us to love one another 1 Joh. 4. 11. Beloved if God so loved us we ought also to love one another 5. Let this ingage us to obedience and holynesse in our conversations Joh. 14. 15. If yee love me keep my Commandments Query 2. Wherein consists this love of Christ Ans In dyeing for us The greatnesse of Christs love in dyeing for us may be inhanced in these singularities 1. In that he died voluntarily 2. If we consider the greatnesse of his sufferings 3. If we consider the persons for whom 1. Christ died voluntarily I gave my back to the smiter and 1. Christ died voluntarily my cheeks to those that pluckt of the haire I hid not my face from shame and spitting Isai 50. 6. And Joh. 10. 17 18. Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay downe my life that I may take it againe No man taketh it from me but I ●ay it down of my selfe I have power to lay it downe and power to take it againe This commandment have I received of my Father Christ if he pleased could have defended himselfe from his enemies he could have had legions of Angells in his defence but in obedience to his Father to fulfill the scripture in love to his owne he freely and voluntarily resigned himselfe to his Fathers pleasure and drunk that cup which his Father gave him And question lesse this was great love for Christ freely and willingly to lay down his life 2. Consider the greatness of Christ's sufferings 2. Consider the greatnesse of Christ's sufferings He endured contempt reproach spitting buffetting reviling they called him Samaritan Impostor Devill they scourged him crowned him with thornes wagged their heads at him Insulted over him and at last they put him to suffer that most shamefull painfull cursed death of the Crosse This Crucifixion was a Roman punishment That 's evident from Joh. 18. 31 32. Then said Pilate unto them take ye him and judge him according to your law The Jewes therefore said unto him it is not lawfull for us to put any man to death that the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled which he spake signifying what death he should dye And to set forth the humiliation of Christ you may read Phil. 2. 8. And being found in fashion as a man he humbled himselfe and became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Implying this was the greatest of Punishments Quid dicam in crucem tollere saith Cicero In this punishment of Crucifixion we are to consider these Aggravations 1. Shame 1. The Shame they were crucified usually stark naked Most writers say Christ was so crucified Believe not your painters who put a cloath before him they are teachers of lyes The common custome was that they who were cruci●ied were stript naked as they came into the world and so they suffered ignominy And a further shame and disgrace appeares in this that Christ was crucified without the walls as unworthy to be within the walls Barabbas a theife and murtherer was released and Christ was crucified between two theives as if he had been their Captaine this Circumstance sets forth the ignominy and disgrace put upon Jesus Christ 2. In this punishment of Crucifixion we are to consider a curse 2. A Curse Deut. 21. 23. His body shall not remaine all night upon the tree but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day for he that is hanged is accursed of God that thy land be not defiled which the Lord thy God gives thee for an inheritance There was a legall curse put upon this death Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Now for the Son of God the fountaine of all blessings in whom all Nations of the earth should be blessed to stand upon the Crosse like an accursed man the Sun was ashamed and withdrew his light and the earth trembled 3. In this punishment consider paine extremity of paine a lingring 3. Paine death This was a terrible and dolorous paine His body was extended stretched out like stretching out upon a Rack Of the Passion of Christ we are to understand Psal 22. 14 16. I am poured out like water and all my bones are out of joynt my heart is like wax it s melted in the midst of my bowells For dogs have compassed me the assembly of the wicked have inclosed me they peirced my hands and my feet Where the sinewes met in the palmes of his hands and in the feet where the paine was most acute there they peirced him It was not with Christ as with many who are stupefied and in whom extremity of paine blunteth the sense thereof but Christ was in perfect sense all the while And six houres in extremity of paine he hung upon the Crosse and was sensible as much at the last as at the first Never was any sorrow like unto his sorrow He sweat drops of blood was in an agony was despised rejected reproached and at last was crucified All these Considerations inhance the greatnesse of Christs sufferings and his love towards us 3. Consider for whom Christ died not for friends but enemies 3. For whom Christ died Vers 10. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Not for righteous and good men but for sinners and bad men not for strong but weak not for faithfull subjects but rebells Christ died Now this love is beyond all compare Now the consideration of Gods love and our unworthynesse should ingage us to love and thankfulnesse as * Tantae dilectionis Dei indignitatis nostrae consideratione demittamus Cristas in Dei judicio ac toto corde eum redamemus ut non totos in ●ivam gratitudinis hostiam vicissim consecremus Pareus in Loc. Pareus observes on the place To lay downe his life for his friends had been great love Joh. 15. 13. greater love hath no man then this that a man lay downe his life for his friend But to lay downe his life for enemies for sinners unworthy persons this love is a none such Christ died for the ungodly He said live when they were in their blood Ezek. 16. 6. And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in
shall declare his generation for he was cut off out of the land of the living for the transgression of my people was he striken He hath a peculiar seed Isai 53. 10. Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to griefe when thou shalt make his soule an offering for sinne he shall see his seed he shall prolong his daies and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hands He is the Saviour of his body Eph. 5. 28. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the Church and he is the Saviour of the body He layeth downe his life only for his sheepe Joh. 10. 15. As the Father knoweth me even so I know the Father and I lay down my life for the sheepe Now hence those false doctrines of Generall redemption are discarded altogether Christ doth not pray for all Joh. 17. 9 10. I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me for they are thine And all mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them And we read Joh. 13. 11. He knew who should betray him therefore said he yee are not all cleane He doth not call all justify all nor elect all for only few are chosen and therefore all are not partakers of this distinguishing love Yet notwithstanding these fundamentall truths there are many Objections which I would Answer before I make particular application of this doctrine It s objected that it is unjust for the innocent to be punished Object 1 for the nocent for Christ holy and just to be punished for man that was unjust unholy We are to distinguish of sinne and guilt inherent and sinne and Ans guilt imputed In Christ was no inherent sinne and guilt but there was sinne and guilt imputed For Christ was made sinne for us and took our nature upon him and was our surety And it is no injustice to make a surety pay the debt whereunto he voluntarily ingaged Christ freely voluntarily undertook the great work of reconciliation for lost man and he willingly laid downe his life for his sheepe No man took away his life from him But 2. It s Objected how can Christs blood which was shed above Object 2 1600 yeares agoe be effectuall now This we are to believe that though Christ suffered once yet Ans the vertue of the suffering remaines to all eternity For it was the blood of God This being understood by communication of Idioms of him that was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and man his blood was precious blood cleansing mortifying healing blood The blood of sprinkling which speaks better things then the blood of Abel The Church is the purchase of his blood Act. 20. 28. Take heed therefore unto your selves and to all the flockes which the Holy Ghost hath made you Overseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood This is redeeming blood Eph. 1. 7. In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgivenesse of sins according to the riches of his grace It is peace-making blood Col. 1. 20. And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I say whether they be things in earth or in heaven We are made white in the blood of the Lambe Rev. 7. 14. And I said unto him Sir thou knowest And he said to me these are they which come out of great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lambe We are washed from our sinnes in his blood Rev. 1. 5. And from Jesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first begotten of the dead and the Prince of the Kings of the earth unto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his blood So then Christs blood is a fountaine that can never be drained dry it witnesseth our regeneration 1 Joh. 5. 8. And there are three that bear witnesse in earth the spirit the water and the blood and these three agree in one But 3. It will be Objected if Christ died for sinners then all Object 3 shall be saved otherwise the remedy would not be proportionable to the disease the plaister would not be as broad as the sore 1. There 's a sufficiency of Merit in Christ the Medicine is of infinite Ans value 2. But 2. this medicine is only applied effectually unto some peculiar persons Neither doth this derogate a whit from Christs merits in that his redemption is not equally extended unto all But the riches of his mercy are the more inhanced in that they are effectuall to some 3. It was not the intention of God the Father nor of Christ that all should be redeemed Christs Redemption only is appropriated to believers Joh. 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life 4. Only those have redemption by Christs blood who are redeemed from their vaine conversation and those are Gods children 1 Pet. 1. 18. Forasmuch as yee know that yee were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold from your vaine conversations received by tradition of your Fathers But these are not the whole world for the whole world lyes in wickednesse I shall now come unto Application And I shall make foure Applicat Uses of the Doctrine 1. For Information 2. For Examination 3. For Exhortation Vse 1. For Information 4. For Consolation The first Use is for Information and that in severall particulars 1. Be informed of the greatnesse of the love of God Eph. 2. 4. 1. This is great love But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he hath loved us 1 Joh. 3. 1. Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sonnes of God 2. Be informed that this love is unparrelleld let there be made 2. This love is unparralleld locus à comparatis The love between Jonathan and David is not to be compared to the love of Christ unto his Church Eph. 5. 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himselfe for it The love of a tender Mother is not to be compared to the love of God Isai 49. 15. Can a woman forget her sucking child that shee should have compassion on the son of her womb yea they may forget yet will not I forget thee 3. This love is free undeserved by any Creature Ezek. 16. 6. 3. This love is undeserved And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live There is no fides praevisa to move God The Apostle determines Rom. 9. 11 12 13. For the Children being not yet
profession because they are baptized Christians borne in the bosome of the Church where Christ is knowne descended of Christian Par●nts and yet notwithstanding are ignorant of the life of Christ of the Laver of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Some crye up their Baptisme too much though Infant-Baptisme in my judgment without question is Gods Ordinance as the Jewes did the Temple Templum Domini Templum Domini And yet were altogether unacquainted with the God of the Temple Let such remember He is not a Jew which is one outwardly Rom. 2. 28 29. neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Jew who is inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter But there are others who go yet higher in their own conceits and because they are admitted into Church-fellowship and called Saints and reputed Church Members therefore they think all 's well with them and their condition is very safe But who knoweth not that there are many Nominall Saints which are farre from being Reall Saints Many there are that think it religion enough to joyne in such or such a Society under such or such a Teacher who is a leading Popular man and yet many of them are acted by no other Principle but selfe-interest Compliance with men for carnall advantages Many Matth. 7. 20. shall say saith Christ in that day Lord we have prophecied in thy name and in thy name cast out Devills and in thy name done Luk. 13. 26. wonderfull workes We have eate and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streets but he shall say I tell you I know not whence you are How many Protestants have we at large who are contented with the bare name of Christians yet in their lives are Antichristians To bid such deny their Baptisme renounce Christ they will tell you they would spit in your faces and yet their lives declare them no better then Turkes Jewes Atheists without God in the world It 's a sad thing to consider that the Profession of religion hath amongst many Ti●ular Professors justled out the practice and a bare forme and an outside profession many think sufficient just like one of Machivells principles Take the profession that will do no harme but not the practice of Religion Psal 51. 6. But be not deceived God is not God will not be mocked The Lord requireth truth in the inward parts God will be worshipped in spirit Joh. 4. 24. and in truth All the painted glosses faire outsides formall pretences will be accounted no better than chaffe straw or stubble at the great day of account I am fully perswaded that since Adams Creation there were never so many false conversions as now a daies Many think they are converted when only they are of such or such an opinion Some are turned from Brownists to Semi-Brownists and from Brownists to Anabaptists from them to Familists and afterwards to Quakers Ranters c. And all these boast themselves to be Saints and to be of the Church of Christ though many I censure not all are of the Synagogue of Satan Some poore soules are seduced by false teachers and run like Absoloms followers in their simplicity knowing nothing Such God may in mercy bring home by a thorough change and reformation and make them sensible of their evill waies and back-slidings and in due time deliver them out of Satans snare But multitudes there are which call themselves Saints and Christians and have nothing but the bare name witnesse their lives farre from Saintship and Christianity How greedy are some of filthy lucre ambitious proud boasters idle drones sleepy sluggards eating the bread of idlenesse when they were in a poorer condition they were industrious and laboured abundantly in their callings now being advanced they grow lazie Some in their younger yeares preached often but now they are elder they are more lazie neither preaching frequently themselves nor hearing frequently others that doe and yet none of these but will take it ill if you call them not Christians and Saints too But where 's any thing of the life of Christ Christ watched prayed went about doing good Can they count themselves Disciples who are so unsutable to their Master Is it lawfull to take a Writ of ease and to rest from our labours before we be dead But leaving them hopeing better things of you I proceed to a second Use viz. Examination 2. For Examination The question is wherein consists that Vse 2. For Examination conversa●ion which is answerable unto our profession I shall give an Answer in these distinguishing Characters 1. This Conversation must be a holy Conversation As he that Char. 1. This Conversation must be holy 1 Pet. 1. 15. Mat. 5. 8. Heb. 12. 14. Char. 2. This Conversation must be s●n●●ere 2 Cor. 1. 12. hath called you is holy So be yee holy in all manner of Conversation Gods people are an holy people Heaven is an holy place The Society there an holy Society the imployment an holy imployment and only holy persons shall see the blessed vision Bless●d are the pure in heart for they shall see God Follow peace and ●olinesse without the which no man shall see God 2. This Conversation must be sincere This is our rejoycing even the testimony of a good Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our Conversation in the world It 's called there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I shall not overcuriously stand upon Criticismes whether sincerus sine cerâ or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But yet I cannot let passe the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sol 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 judicio an Allusion to the custome of Eagles who held their young ones before the Sun if they could not look up unto the Sun then were they accompted spurious Surely if our actions cannot endure the test and triall of the Sun of righteousnesse they are to be accompted spurious and illegitimate altogether Sincerity is the constitutive difference of a Child of God and a divisive difference which distingui●●eth one that feareth God from him that feareth him not This is that which will comfort a man in life and in death So it did Enoch whose commendation it was that he walked with God and Gen. 5. 24. Gen. 6. 9. was not for God took him It was Noahs comfort that he was a just man and perfect in his generation And it will comfort us in death if we can sincerely professe with Hezekiah Remember O Lord 2 King 20. 3. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Wherefore it especially concernes us all to labour after sincerity even truth in the inward parts that so we may approve our hearts unto God and make it our daily exercise to keep Consciences void of offence both towards God and towards men 3. This Conversation must be pruden●
Conscience worketh by love and labour for more accession of it and God will accept the quality for the quantity pence for pounds the will for the deed We read Heb. 11. 17. By faith Abraham when he was tried offered up Isaac The faithfull intentions of Abraham was accepted in the accompt of God as a reall performance Let 's all labour to be sincere and upright hearted and this perfection of parts i. e. sincerity will be accepted instead of perfection of degrees which is an absolute perfection without spot or wrinkle which cannot be attained on earth by Militant Saints who are Viatores but only by such who are Comprehensores glorified Saints in Heaven JOY IN THE LORD AS A STRONG GROUND OF COMFORT AGAINST ALL DISCOMFORTS Unfolded from Hab. 3. 18. Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation MY Text is an apposite close of a devout Prophets Sermon 9. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Jan 8. 1659 60. Prayer composed of two excellent ingredients faith and fervency for in the time of Jacobs troubles when sad tidings were renewed every moment and each relation like Jobs disconsolate messengers aggravated the miseries and made them exceeding miserable then my Prophet Habakkuk could discerne a Sun of righteousnesse with healing wings dissipating all Mal. 4. 2. the clouds of sorrowes and miseries I say amidst all these diastrous occurrences this spirituall man by the eye of faith could see a Believer and apprehend his Jesus the God of his salvation this is an evidence of the strength of faith and where faith is it sets the affections a working it 's never idle but alwaies operative as soone as faith gives thee an insight into the beauty and excellency of thy God how sweet and amiable will he be unto thy soule thy affections will be transported with my Prophet I will rejoyce I will joy his expressions were too short they cannot reach his heart and therefore he iterates his resolution hee 's a true lover indeed who delights to discourse of his beloved odject and make frequent repetitions of his love this is an argument of his fervency So then you see as I before intimated that faith and fervency are the essentiall parts of this accurate prayer The words read are promissory and by way of covenant or you may call them a comfortable conclusion drawne from sad and dolefull premissesse Upon perusall of the precedent words you will find matter of terrour and astonishment enough to make you quake and tremble Before him went the Pestilence and burning coles went forth at his feet vers 5. The earth is measured and the Nations are drove a sunder and the everlasting mountaines were scattered and the perpetuall hills did bow vers 6. Unheard of miracles earthquakes against the course of nature the mountaines tremble there 's a great inundation of waters the Sun and the Moon cease from their motion vers 10. 11. And as before there went out pestilence and burning coles or burning diseases so now to adde a complement to the judgment here are arrowes by day which wound as much as the other in the night the speares glitters and the Lord marcheth on in his indignation the heathen feele the sore brunt of it vers 12. Thou didst thresh the heathen in anger Yet out of all these bitter hearbs Gods people can suck sweetnesse For God is good to his Israel Thou wentest forth for the salvation of thy people vers 13. It 's worthy of your notice that amidst greatest extremities God extends his speciall eye of care and providence unto his owne people he never failes to be their Protector It followeth Thou woundest the head of the house of the wicked by discovering the foundation unto the neck i. e. God will pluck these up by the roots that they shall never grow againe By this Me●aphor of a foundation according to * Intelligit quicquid erat stabilitatis in ipsis hostibus hoc fuisse evulsumusque ad collum Calv. in loc Calvins interpretation I understand Whatsoever strength and stability they seem'd to have was quite overthrowne from the top to the bottome The weapons God useth are described vers 4. Thou didst strike through with his staves i. e. God gives them over to themselves and they proove their own executioners and every mans hand was against his fellow Their particular sinnes are mentioned They came out as a whirlewind to scatter me their rejoycing was to devoure ●he poore secretly Behold their insolent rage and precipitant fury Their motions are too violent to hold their rage was against God like unto Senacherib but their tumult came up unto his eares and they fare alike I will saith the Lord put a bridle in thy lipps and a hook in thy nostrills Isa 37. 29. And thus God abaseth the sons of pride but yet their malice ceaseth not their doggish nature discovers it selfe they rejoyce and devoure the poore and that secretly one way or other they are a working if not by open hostility yet by secret plots and underminings so as they may contrive their ruine But view further Gods power and method which he useth for the preservation of his people Thou didst walk through the sea with thine horses through the heapes of great waters this is an Allusion to that wonderfull passage over the red sea Hence learne that in the greatest dangers God makes away for his servants escape And now le ts see how all these wonders affect the Prophet you may guesse at his disease by these symptomes trembling in his belly quivering in his lipps rottennesse in his bones here 's a man of the right stamp you may discerne of what currant mettall he is by his sympathy and fellow feeling of the afflictions of others It 's the duty of a good man to be alike affected with others calamities and miseries as if they were his own To draw downe the Context unto the Text my Prophet is no idle Spectator but he with Mary keepes all these things and ponders them in his heart he makes a soveraingne Compound of bitter Ingredients and with the Laborious Bee he suckes sweetnesse out of the sowrest herbes and with Sampson findes a honey comb in a Lions mouth I meane he makes a dungeon a paradise an abounding misery a superabundant comfort by a wise and spirituall application for come what will come his resolution is inviolably fixt upon a principle of faith that although the figg tree shall not blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines the labour of the Olive shall faile and the fields shall yeeld no meate the flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalles yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation Here is an enumeration of the choysest comforts such as are of highest estimation amongst men The Fig-tree hath much sweetnesse and brings forth good fruit the fruit of the Vine makes
the Lord Psal 3. 8. And from hence the Psalmist drawes a practicall inference Psal 9. 4. I will rejoyce in thy Salvation Hereupon the Kingly Prophet in a hard time when God frowned upon him as they say skilfull Chymists can extract oyle out of a flint found Serenity in this meditation Behold God is my Salvation I will trust and not be afraid for the Lord Jehovah is my strength and my Song he also is become my Salvation Therefore saith the Prophet With joy yee shall draw water out of the wells Isai 12. 3 4. of Salvation In the Prophesy of Obadiah where direfull menaces are threatned against the Edomites and indeed the whole Prophesy may resemble that Scrole of Ezekiel full fraught with mourning Lamentation and woe but the day cleares up and the Catastrophe is most pleasant vers 21. And Saviours shall come upon mount Zion to judge the mount of Esau and the Kingdome shall be the Lords You cannot imagine how welcome redemption is to a Turkish gally slave and in a dangerous skirmish a Rescuer is gratefull Le ts then pawse a while and consider former gratious passages of Gods dealings towards us when we were at our wits end our contrivances were nonplus'd and we knew not which way to turne us and we were ready to perish then the Lord breakes in and discovers wayes and meanes for our preservation Let your particular experiences suggest instances in this particular When there were but a heyre's breadth between us and death then the same God that brought us to the grave raised us up When men and Devills banded themselves in opposition against us when the Pope and his Cardinalls contrived the Spanish invasion and when that miscarried there followed a conspiracy in the Vault a deed of Romish darknesse then appear'd a God of Salvation to blow and scatter their Shipps and afterward to bring deliverance betweene the match and the powder Maugre all the plots and projects of all Achitophells and underminers of Zion blessed be God we are here alive as you see this day to Celebrate the Praises of the God of our Salvation 4. And so I am fallen upon my fourth and last Argument in my 4. My. Text drawne from that propriety My I speak not of a good by heare say in which others have the sole interest but it 's our own The God of my Salvation the pronoune Possessive My reduceth the comfort unto my selfe and intitles me unto it by a particular application The use and vertue of medicines is knowne when they are applied and the most comfortable promises of God and doctrines of Salvation then proove effectuall unto my soule when I make use of them in my life and Conversation How frequently doth David call God the God of our Salvation Moses having a large testimony hereof by the overthrow of Pharaoh and his host breakes forth into this triumphant Song Exod. 15. 2. The Lord is my strength and my song he is become my Salvation he is my God and I will prepare him an habitation my Fathers God and I will exalt him Certainly my brethren Christians would lead more comfortable lifes ever find a heaven upon earth if they could make a profitable Observation of Gods former dealings each one with himselfe in particular Men are apt to sink under the sense of any present evill that presseth them because they reflect not upon Gods former waies of mercies towards them It were an excellent course todraw home such Experimentall Arguments as these I have knowne a famine and felt a pinching season when scarce I could get bread from hand to mouth I out-liv'd that time the divine providence cared for me and carried me through that plunge and distresse I have felt a sore disease and have been in the mouth of the grave and yet I live to praise Gods power I have drunke deepe of the cup of affliction I have been even drencht in my owne sorrowes and yet out of them all the Lord hath delivered me and let his countenance shine upon me I have known feares and troubles dangers and distractions both in Church and state yet the Lord became the Reconciler and brought all to a blessed conclusion and still there 's the same God as full of bowells of compassion to commiserate our calamities as full of power to effect of wisdome to contrive as full of fidelity to performe his owne promises as before and therefore my resolution stands firme and unmoveable that I will wait upon God in the waies of his own mercy and rest in the constancy immutability indeficiency of that God with whom there is no variablenesse nor shadow of change Had men such spirituall prudence as to uphold their hearts by their experiences and review often Gods former proceedings they might with more stablisht and quiet affections expect the salvation of the Lord againe I have resum'd these Arguments as you find them layd downe in my Text A Lord and willing A God and able A Saviour and my Saviour each word severally abounds in comfort and now when they are all united how much do they concurre to the complement and perfection of our joy I told you before to this effect that no condition was ever so disconsolate but still some matter of joy and rejoycing was to be found in God Me thinks I could dwell upon this sweet Theme and say as Peter said at Christs transfiguration It 's good being here For the further discovery of this most excellent and necessary truth be pleased to weigh and seriously consider with me these five cleare and evident demonstrations 1. All joy and comforts are treasured up in God 5. Demonstrations 2. There 's no reall solid joy to be found else-where 3. Amidst the greatest crossesse streights and extremities then is Gods opportunity to send comforts causing them to appeare and shew themselves 4. The least of Gods comforts will make a super abundant recompense for all the discomforts in the world 5. And lastly all the waies and proceedings of God are waies and proceedings of joy and comfort For the further Inlargment of these particulars 1. I say all 1. All comforts are treasured up in God comforts are treasured up in God There must needs be water at the well head there must needs be drops in the Ocean God is the Fountaine and Originall of all our Consolations The earth saith the Psalmist is full of thy riches so is this great and wide Psal 104. 24 25. sea where in are things creeping innumerable both small and great beafis What canst thou want if thou hast made God thy portion thou maist say with Jacob I have enough I have all In Christ all fulnesse dwells Col. 1. 19. In Christo est quicquid requiritur ad Davenant in Loc. con●tituendum perfectum Redemptorem There 's in Christ fulnesse of wisdome to direct fulnesse of power to defend fulnesse of merit to satisfy and effect mans salvation fulnesse of righteousnesse
who muster their forces to make our comforts Ichabod but this joy saith Christ no man taketh from you men cannot give it nor bereave us of it Therefore bid adue to all thy carnall joyes but lay fast hold of and let not goe the joyes of Gods spirit this is the first duty I presse upon you to make God your joy 2. Make God your treasure How sollicitous is a man to get Dut. 2. Make God your treasure pretious treasures how doth he compasse sea and land to get them and when he hath them in his possession how carefull is he to keep them A man of understanding leaves not his Jewells at randome but locks them up safe in a Cabinet now if God be our treasure we will seek him in his Ordinances God is the treasurer and the treasure both this is the only treasure we must seek after if we find not God in one Ordinance le ts go to another if we find him not in the word le ts go to the Sacrament and if we find him not in the Sacrament le ts repaire to our prayers and fall upon our knees if yet we find him not le ts with the spowse make inquiry after him le ts aske the Ministers of Christ nay le ts put all these together and never give of seeking till we have found him whom our soule loveth Now when once we have got him le ts labour to keep him Will a wise man cast dirt upon a pretious Jewell every sinner indeavours to cast dirt upon God Sin is of a besmearing and fullying quality If then thou wouldst preserve thy spirituall treasure and keep the grace of God in thy soule take heed of that which foules and staynes it and that is sinne Oh! Christian be instructed to set upon the work of purification labour to cleanse thy selfe from all pollution of the flesh and of the spirit so that thy soule and body may become a glorious Temple wherein the spirit of God will set up his habitation God is our treasure our faith hope and very life it selfe are reposited in his custody and therefore the Lord Christ should be more pretious unto our soules then thousands of Gold and Silver Oh! how pretious is Christ unto that soule which hath seen and tasted how good the Lord is 3. Make God your refuge What would a man give in such Dut. 3. Make God your Resuge times as these for an Asylum à 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or sanctuary whereunto he may fly and be secure Men promise themselves security some in one place and some in another and they set their hearts upon them But alas the comforts wherein they trust prooves oft times a Jonahs gourd which in one night had it's originall and it's period or an Egyptian reed which will either pierce them or give them the slipp in their greatest extremity But ô blessed man who makes his God his refuge and seeks a hiding place in a divine promise so that hee 's not afraid of evill tydings hee 's not discouraged by the direfull imprecations of blasphemous Rabshekahs of John of Leydens faction Let the extremity be never so bitter yet a true Believer can draw down comfort from a promise which preserves his soule from sinking he knowes how to look beyond men unto his God In such times as these which are sad and perillous times when men are set upon mischiefe and wounder that men run not with them into the same excesse of riot a man that hath a spirituall eye can bring home the promise that the Rod of the wicked will not lye long upon the lot righteous wh●n God hath done with the rod he will cast it into the fire but he will provide Scorpions for their enemies David was perswaded that it would be better for him notwithstanding Shimeis execrations so I am perswaded that for bitter a●d implacable spirits opposite to Magistrates and Ministers now a daies Gods people shall fare the better Let God alone and do not anticipate him in his own worke for all the malice that men and Devills can invent shall work togeather for the good of the people of God David had fainted had he not seen the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the living and Hezekiah had fainted by reason of the huge host of Senacherib but that he believed that God would be their deliverer We have the same God still as good and as gracious as ever he will put a bridle into the lips and a hook into the nostrills of unreasonable men God can help with meanes or without meanes he can help us and that right early When a man out of the strength of Faith can make God his refuge and shelter and hide himselfe under the covert of his wings this man amidst multitude of sorrowes is a man of singular comforts beyond expression and apprehension Now then amidst multitudes of feares and sufferings labour to have recourse unto a divine promise that though friends meanes hopes and comforts may faile thee yet the Lord will never leave thee nor forsake thee He never failes them that put their trust in him The promise runs unto you that feare my name will the son of righteousnesse arise with healing under his wings Mal. 4. 2. If you can thus apply the promise and labour to live by Faith you are fixt upon Mount Zion and shall not be removed Psal 125. 1. 3. And lastly I shall close up all with a word of Direction that Vse 3. For Direction amongst the greatest crossesse and miseries you may still find matter of joy and comfort in God 1. I shall direct you to remoove some impediments 2. To do some duties 1. Remove these foure Impediments The first or which I set in the fore front is earthly mindednesse 1. Imped Earthly mindednesse this is a choake Peare unto the grace of God this and spirituall joy are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incompatible termes A man that is glued unto the world cannot rejoyce in God heel 'e say of his riches as Mica said of his Idolls they have taken away my Gods and what have I more Jacob spake of Benjamin his soule was bound up in the life of the Lad so may I say the life of a worldly minded man is bound up in his riches his riches and joy live and dye togeather Now discourse unto such a man concerning the riches of Christ you talke of Riddles he askes what is thy beloved more then another beloved he wants a spirituall in-sight into Christ The earth is an opacous body interposed between the organ and the object so that he cannot discerne the beauty and excellency that is in Christ a worldly man cannot rejoyce in God 2. Remoove Infidelity when men exercise their sense more 2. Imped Infidelity than their faith and will with Thomas not believe unlesse they see Oh! what enemies are they unto their own comfort Though the Lord should make windowes in heaven could these things be
For any in time of Divine worship to be laughing one upon another it argueth a slight and vain spirit To have ones hat on one side according to the swaggerers fashion or partly off according to a carelesse slovenly fashion hanging in their eyes is a scandalous irreverent offensive gesture whilst the Preacher is a praying Not a Governour among you would approve of such a ridiculous gesture in your inferiours when they come before you Neither would any of you take such gestures for capping you and going bare within the Precincts of a Colledge And yet this unseemly irreverent carriage is used frequently in publique Assemblies even in time of Prayer I mention this with a hope and earnest desire of Reformation for the future upon serious thoughts I recommend unto you a reverentiall frame of spirit Consider the presence of God and of Angels how many eyes are over you both of good and bad wee ought neither to give offence to Jew nor Gentile nor the Church of God Remember the Apostles counsell Phil. 4. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amongst other things the Apostle chargeth us to regard such things as are of good report I have now dispatcht my first head of Discourse which indeed may serve as an Use of Tryal and Examination Whether wee offer unto God a Male the best of our services doe wee offer all from the heart doe wee lay hold upon the Lords season do we make Religion our businesse doe we in good earnest set upon the service of God doe we all in faith and in the name of Christ with reverence and godly fear If in truth and sincerity we can as in the presence of God give affirmative Answers unto these Interrogatories then questionlesse we offer unto God a Male not that there 's any worth or merit in our services for when we have done all we can we are unprofitable servants for there 's neither dignitas operis nec dignitas operantis sed dignatio Domini when there is a willing mind it is accepted By Faith Abraham offered Isaac God knew the willingness and integrity of his heart and it was all one in Gods esteem as if he had actually sacrificed him for God accepted the Will for the Deed. Now in the second place I must make good the proof of my assertion and this I shall briefly doe by giving in evident testimony 2. The Doctrine proved 1. From Scripture from the Scripture For Scripture testimony peruse the whole Levitical Pedagogy In all Sacrifices the best was consecrated to God particularly a Lamb must be without blemish Levit. 3. 7 8. This was for a Peace-offering For a Burnt-offering the Lamb must be of the first year Lev. 3. 9. Why of the first year but because it was esteemed the best and it 's there added it must be without blemish So likewise fine flower mingled with oyle must be offered for a Trespasse-offering Levit. 14. 21. the best of the flowre and the best of the oyle must be offered unto the Lord. In all offerings of Beasts it 's observed that God gives a special command that the inwards and legs should be washt Lev. 1. 13. A young Bullock ought to be without blemish Lev. 4. 3. A Ram ought to be without blemish Lev. 6. 6. The Priests ought to wash themselves What great purification was required before the receiving of the Passeover All these Types proves this Truth that the best and purest service ought to be offered up unto the Lord Abel brought the firstlings of the flock and the fat thereof Gen. 4. 4. He brought God the first fruits of his encrease and the best and fattest of his flock whereas Cain like a niggard cared not what he gave as though any thing would serve the turn wherefore Abel was accepted and Cain rejected Further to instance in all Spiritual sacrifices whereof Carnal sacrifices are but a type what ever duty or services we performe to God must be with the whole man so David profest Ps 119. 10. With my whole hear●t have I fought thee And our love to God must be with all the heart and with all the soul and with all the might Deut. 6. 5. It 's the high commendation of David and all Israel that they played before the Lord with all their might 1 Chron. 13. 8. And it s a singular commendation of Hezekiah 2 Chron. 31. 21. That in every work he began in the service of the house of God and in the Law and in the Commandments to seek his God he did it with all his heart and prospered And to the same purpose we have a parallel commendation of Josiah that rare King 2 Kings 23. 25. That he turned unto the Lord with all his heart and with all his soul and with all his might We read of examples of great sincerity and industry among the Saints of God We find Daniel upon his watch and fasting and praying David mourning and watering his Couch with his tears Jacob wrestling with the Angel and how did he wrestle the Prophet Hosea informes us cap. 12. 4. Yea he had power over the Angel and prevailed he wept and made supplication unto him Let no man deceive himself for it 's not so easy a matter to serve God as he requires It must be no lazy careles service The Apostle gives thanks in the behalfe of the Thessalonians for their work of faith labour of love and patience of hope 1 Thess 1. 3. We read of a straight gate and a narrow way to heaven That the Kingdome of Heaven must be took by violence and onely the violent take it by force We have a work to work and we must work it out Phil. 2. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. And there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1. 10. We have a battle to fight and a race to run We have Methods of Satan to discover strong holds to beat down depths to beware of and devices to find out All these require singular paines and diligence Wherefore we had need take unto us the Divine Panoply we had need to the utmost bend our selves to the service of the Lord We had need conferre our endeavours to the utmost to offer to God a Male this best sacrifice and service unto the Lord. Many uses might be made of this Doctrine as for Exhortation Reproof Examination Instruction and Consolation I shall at present onely six on one onely Use Use 1. For Exhortation Vse 1. Which shall be for Exhortation Men Fathers and Brethren suffer the word of Exhortation to give unto God back again what he hath given unto you the best parts and abilities and endowments the best sacrifices and the best services My exhortation shall be first to all in general and then to two sorts in a special manner 1. To all in general Let me exhort you to give God your marrow and strength of your age the morning of the day your first thoughts in the morning let them be