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A86269 Nine select sermons preached upon special occasions in the Parish Church of St. Gregories by St. Pauls. By the late reverend John Hewytt D.D. Together with his publick prayers before and after sermon. Hewit, John, 1614-1658. 1658 (1658) Wing H1634A; ESTC R230655 107,595 276

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promises for the difference lies in these respects following 1. That above it differs from that below in degrees of Excellency that here below is grounded on Faith which beholds the promises of God darkly but that above is grounded on a clear sight and a perfect vision 2. That hope below is attended with sighs and sadnesses that above without sorrow all sighing and sorrow being removed from their hearts whose tears are wiped away with the light of Gods Countenance 3. This below hath weaknesses and imperfections but that above is a confirmed hope thus our hope even to the day of Judgement shall not be abolished in Heaven in regard of Essence it remains but in regard of weaknesses it ceases For till Gods promises be accomplished there is yet hope in exercising that act that may bring us to the enjoyment of the highest manifestation of Divine Love 2. The more principall objects not in this life onely that is not onely for the things of this life but the things of a better life for though hope looking to God it refers to the things of this life for subsistance yet it chiefly respects the things of the other life the resurrection of the flesh c. other hopes may promise eternall but will but serve as figge leaves other hopes may bring to the fruition of what we hope for but cannot give satisfaction but such is the excellency of this hope as it will supply so much as faith can beleeve or hope desire so that as it would be desperateness to cast away this anchor so again madness to cast it off as needless the Saints which should be climbing Heaven it would be folly for them to ply this hope about this life when we may have it about a better to hope in this life onely is unchristian and lesse then Christianity will not give us the hope of an eternal life to follow Christ onely to get possession of outward comforts is but to starve our souls while we feed our bodies with the loaves of pretended Sanctity for he that will be Heir to Christs Kingdome must expect to be crown'd with thornes temporal felicity having no entailment upon his discipleship persecution being their portion and their sufferings part of their triumph So that each true Beleever must joyn in the Chorus with the song of Saint Paul pathetically exprest in the words of my Text If in this life onely we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable FINIS A SERMON ON St. THOMAS Day SERMON V. St. IOHN 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnesse unto the truth c. Introduction ENvie and Malice the inseparable companions of a vicious heart are alwayes in unwearied motion untill they have found out some convenient means whereby to bring about their abominable ends and rather then be disappointed of unhallowed thoughts or wicked words they will not cease to speak evil of the way of truth yea by them those are accounted enemies that speak the truth thus wicked Ahab salutes the Prophet Elijah Have I found thee O my enemy 1 Kings 21.20 So that it seemes he accounted that holy person no lesse then his souls adversary for telling the truth so persecuted they the Prophets of old and the malice of men and devils have been so persecuting in all ages that the Church hath not found where to rest for the Saints wandred up and down afflicted and tormented yea they wandred about saith the Apostle in sheeps-skins and goats-skins c. of whom the world was not worthy Heb. 11.38 And in this the Disciple was not before or above his Lord for no better entertainment had Christ himself and he is pleased to say To this was I born for this cause came I into the world c. Which words have a double aspect and Ianus-like appear with a double face the one looking upon Christ the other upon Christians the one concerns our Saviour the other respects our selves For 1. If you respect the day so they look at Christ not onely as this is the Lords Day but as it is the Advent-Sunday instituted for the Advent or coming of Christ in the Flesh 2. It looks upon Christ as coming in his Ordinances and administrations to his people 3. It looks upon his coming in gracious visitations as on this day by his power coming to deliver the Church Militant from sinne and misery to be a Church triumphant in glory and thus my Text hath reference to the several comings of Christ But that 's not all the words not onely concern Christ but they have reference unto Christians also and that in a threefold respect for they eye all the errours and mislookings of the times 1. They look upon the grosse opinions of those that say the Scepter of Christ and the power of earthly Kings stand in opposition one to another and thereupon cry down all rule and all authority saying like the heathen Let us break their bands in sunder c. Psal 2.3 It is true Christ had the Title of a King yet neither that nor himself made any impeachment of Caesars Lawes and though he denied not himself to be a King yet he refused to dethrone Caesar for he saith expresly my Kingdome is not of this world So then you see he is not in opposition to the Kings of the earth he came not to take away earthly Kingdomes but to give an Heavenly Kingdome and therefore he saith Give to Caesar the things that are Caesars c. We must obey the temporal Lord for his sake who is the Heavenly Lord for they who yeild not obedience to temporal Kings for Christs sake who hath commanded it have as yet made no glorious entrance into the Kingdome of Heaven for love to Christ and submission to Caesar may and do dwell together in the same heart 2. The words look upon mens works as they are Christians who in defence of lawful Superiours with their swords in their hands had rather die fighting then betray their liberty by a cowardly resignation of their lives and fortunes and also as Christians they have learnt of Christ their Head to pay Tribute where lawfully it is demanded for if any might have rebelled and refused the same none more lawful and able then our Saviour who could at his pleasure command more then twelve legions of Angels to assist him and could command all the treasures of the earth as King and Lord thereof yet refused the glory of the one to pay lawful tribute and the innumerable force of the other that with silence he might answer Caesars Deputy for he came to bear witness of the truth and he will rather lose his life then his obedience 3. That none that would be thought a Christian might think himself unconcerned the words look upon all men but especially upon those that in pretended religious yet persecuting times are ready to betray the truth rather
NINE SELECT SERMONS Preached upon special occasions in the Parish Church of St. Gregories by St. Pauls By the late Reverend JOHN HEWYTT D. D. Together With his publick Prayers before and after SERMON LONDON Printed for Henry Eversden at the Greyhound in St. Pauls Church-yard and Tho. Rooks at the Holy Lamb at the East end of St. Pauls near the School TO The Right Honourable LADY THE Lady Mary Hewyt Relict of the late Reverend JOHN HEWYT D. D. Madam THe principal intent of our publishing these ensuing Sermons is no other then Edification and for the avoiding all suspition of being accounted spurious and illegitimate we have assumed the boldnesse to dedicate them to your Ladiship with a confident hope of your Honourable Protection and that whereas heretofore they have been beneficiall to his Auditory they may now prove no lesse successful to the intelligent Reader it being pity the Works of so Famous and Eminent a Divine should be raked up in the embers of Oblivion And though they have no other Originall then the Pen of a ready Writer yet such diligent care hath been imployed in emitting them to the World that we doubt not but you will conclude we have endeavoured the perpetuating the memory of your Pious Consort For here lurks no Snake under these Verdant Herbs nor Poysonous Serpent under these Fragrant Flowers in this inclosed Garden growes no Root of Schisme no slip of Error no fruit of Disobedience but within this pleasant Grove are such variety of refreshing contentments to be found as may delight your Ladiship amidst your more Solitary Cogitations and yet these are but parts of that Image which ere long we hope to erect and in a larger Volume We shall crave leave to as we doe at present subscribe our selves Madam Your Ladiships humbly devoted Servants H. E. T. R. THE EPISTLE TO THE READER Courteous Reader IT was not popular applause nor private interest that induced us to expose these ensuing Discourses to publick view but only an ardent desire to draw a Landskip of the reverend Authors abilities and though but in Transitu to give a dark representation of that glorious light which continually with unwearied beams did radiate the Souls of his faithful Auditory They are but the shadows of a faithful life therefore be not displeased to find them fall short of the living Voice such curious pieces cannot be drawn without the concurrence of sable lines so that if thou find them halt and only with a crooked finger to point at the Authors stile be not discouraged thereat nor with a prejudicate opinion deem this naked Babe illegitimate because destitute of a Patron for thou wilt find assuredly they are the true off-spring of that worthy Parent and want only the Fathers hand to lead them into and preserve them from a captious world Lay aside all partiall interests and we are bold to presume that thou canst not but with unspeakable profit give them perusal we are sensible of the many calumnies that will be cast upon our persons for this innocent work having already in part undergone the reproach of some malicious tongues who have indeavoured to render the Sermons abortive and our selves contemptible in the eyes of a deceived multitude nor are we able to divine what acceptance they will gain at the hands of any But we question not ingenious Reader whoever thou art but that thou wilt love the picture for the persons sake and wilt impute whatever defect shall be found therein to the want of the Authors pen and not the ignorant or willing mistake of the Perusers thereof for they are notes taken by the pen of a ready VVriter the swiftness of whose motion is able to overtake the most voluble tongue yet thou canst not but know that sometimes the smallest hair interposing it self will make a breach in the fullest sentence thereby interrupting the perfect sense therefore our care hath been extended to the utmost that no remarkable fault might appear obvious to the most critical Reader still indeavouring that those sacred truths which formerly have been beneficial to the intelligent Hearers when preached by the reverend Author may now prove advantageous to the eternal welfare of every Soul that shall peruse them which is the earnest desire of Reader Thy unfeigned Friends and Servants H. E. T. R. A Table of the Titles and Texts of the Sermons contained in this Book MErcy and Iudgement 2 Sermons Page 1. 28. Psal 130. v. 3. If thou Lord wilt be extreme c. A Nativity Sermon page 62. Saint Luke 2. v. 7. And she brought forth her first-born son c. A Funeral Sermon p. 81. 1 Cor. 15.19 If in this life onely we have hope in Christ Testis Fidelis or the faithful witness Five Sermons upon 18. St. Iohn v. 37. To this end was I born c. whereof 1. Upon St. Thomas day p. 106. whereof 1. Upon Christmas day p. 126. Three more upon the same Text on several occasions Dr. Hewit's publique Prayer before Sermon O thou that hearest Prayers unto thee shall all flesh come for our help standeth in thy name O Lord which hast made heaven and earth we beseech thee therefore let the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be now and evermore acceptable in thy sight O Lord our strength and our Redeemer O Most glorious and most powerfull Lord God whose dwelling is so far above the highest heavens that thou humblest thy self but to look upon the things that are in heaven and that are in earth thou art omnipotent and omnipresent dost whatsoever thou wilt both in heaven in earth in the sea and in all deep places thou art about our beds and about our paths thou spyest out all our wayes understandest all our thoughts long before we thought O Lord when we look up unto thee and consider thee to be a God of so pure eyes as that thou canst not behold iniquity without indignation and wrath and when we look within our selves and see that world of corruption that lyeth hidden in our breasts and those innumerable acts of transgressions that have stained both our persons and our lives we cannot but be confounded and ashamed before thy face and are not able to open our mouths for our sins witnesse against us and our iniquities are as sore burdens too heavy for us to bear they cry up to heaven for vengeance against us and it is of thy infinite patience and longsuffering towards us that thou hast not long since powred upon us the Vials of thy wrathfull indignation nor sentenced us to the pit of eternall destruction Lord who can tell how oft he offendeth The sinfulnesse of our natures the sins of our lives the sins of our souls and the sins of our bodies our secret and whispering sins our crying and open sins our idle and wanton sins our presumptuous and deliberate sins the sins we have committed to please our selves and the sins we have committed to
please others the sins we have committed in our own persons and the sins we have occasioned others to commit the sins we know and the sins we know not the sins that we have so long striven to hide from others knowledge that we have even now hid them from our own memories these O Lord are more in number then the sands upon the Sea shoar or the Stars of Heaven which cannot be numbred We have sinned against the light of Nature and against the light of Grace against thy Law and against thy Gospel against thy Promises and against thy Threats against thy Mercies and against thy Judgements against all vows and promises and resolutions of better obedience against the reproofs of thy word against the many motions of thy good Spirit in our souls against thy Fatherly admonitions against thy loving corrections against the many fearfull examples of thy Judgements against the infinite obligations of thy favours and against the checks of our own consciences These things have we done and because thou held thy tongue we have also thought wickedly that thou art altogether such an one as our selves or that either thou dost not see or dost approve or wilt not severely punish the crimes that we have so long doted on If thou Lord God shouldest be extream to mark what is done amisse Lord who is able to abide it but with thee there is mercy and with thee there is plenteous redemption and thou desirest not the death of him that dies but rather that be should turn from sin and be saved and seeing that without thee it is not possible for us of our selves to be able to please thee Lord turn us to thee and we shall be turned for thou art the Lord our God Draw us and we shall run after thee draw us by the cords of love and with the bands of loving kindnesse work powerfully upon our spirits by thy holy Spirit work contrition in our hearts and godly sorrow for all our sins even a sorrow to repentance and repentance to salvation never to be repented off Break these hard and stony hearts of ours by the hammer of thy word mollifie them by the oyle of thy grace smite these rocky hearts of ours by the rod of thy most gracious power that we may shed forth rivers of tears for all the sins we have committed Lord make us grieve because we cannot grieve and to weep because we cannot weep enough O that thou wouldest humble us more and more under the true sight and sense of all our ungodlinesse of all our wickednesse and of all our unworthynesse And O thou Father of mercies have mercy on us O Lamb of God that takest away the sins of the world have mercy upon us thou that takest away the sins of the world take away the world of our sins they are too heavie O Lord for us to bear thou only art able to bear them and thou didst bear all our sins upon thine own body upon the tree O thou that wast wounded for our sins and bruised for our transgressions we beseech thee let the chastisement of our peace be upon thee and do thou by thy stripes heal us Hide us most gracious Redeemer hide us from the wrath of God in the glorious skars of those meritorious wounds which thou didst suffer for us and by the vertue of them create peace in heaven for us by reconciling the Father to us And O thou that wast our Saviour on earth we beseech thee be thou our Advocate in heaven be thou our High-priest still offering up thy self a Victim to the Father for us and besprinkle us with thine own most pretious bloud that through that bloud of sprinkling our persons our services and the desires of our souls may be acceptable to the Father Be thou our King set up thy throne in our hearts dismantle and disgarison all the strong holds and fortifications of sin that sin may no longer have dominion over us but do thou rule and over-rule us enable us to do thy will write thy Commandements in our hearts and thy Statutes in our inward parts put thy fear into our souls that we may fear thee and love thee and diligently live after thy commands Be thou our Prophet leading us into all truth Oh do thou inform us and teach us the way wherein we should go and do thou guide us by thine eye be thou the voice behind us still directing us this is the way walk in it guide us by thy counsels here and hereafter receive us unto thy glory And O Holy Spirit the Comforter do thou help our infirmities and with thy unutterable groans make intercession for us And thou that workest both to will and the deed in us of thine own good pleasure put into our hearts good desires and let the continuall assistance of thy grace help us to bring the same to good effect plant in our souls the love of thy name graffe in our hearts true Religion nourish us with all goodnesse and of thy great mercy keep us in the same so long as we have to live make us to love that which thou commandest and to desire that which thou hast promised that among the sundry and manifold changes and chances of this mortall life our hearts may surely there be fixt where true joyes are to be found And thou that sheddest the pretious ointments of thy grace upon all thy faithfull people O do thou open the eyes of our souls that we may see thee who art invisible that beholding thy glorious but invisible presence in all our actions we may be so awfully affected towards thee that whether either the Devil shall tempt us or the world shall allure us or our own carnal lusts and sinfull affections shall incline us to commit any wickednesse thy Holy Spirit O Lord may in all things so direct rule and overrule our hearts and awaken our consciences to aske us How shall we dare to commit any wickednesse and sin against thee Gratious God keep us from sinning against thee though it were to gain the whole world for it will not profit us to gain the whole world and lose our own souls help us rather we pray thee to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling and to give all diligence to make our calling and election sure Help us to eschew and decline all the occasions all the opportunities that have betrayed us unto sin and to hate the very garments spotted with the flesh O Lord with what affliction soever thou shalt punish us do not punish us with spirituall judgements and desertions give us not over to our own hearts lusts to our own vile lewd and corrupt affections give us not over to hardnesse and impenitency of heart but make us sensible of the least sin and give us thy grace to think no sin little committed against thee our God but that we may be humbled for it and repent of it and reform it in our lives and conversations
and keep us from presumptuous sins O let not them get the dominion over us but keep us innocent from the great offence O Lord our strength and our Redeemer And sanctifie unto us all thy methods and proceedings with us fitting us for all further tribulations and trials whatsoever thou in thy divine pleasure shalt be pleased to impose upon us give us patience and constancy and resolution and fortitude to undergoe it that though we walke through the valley of the shadow of death we may fear no ill knowing that thou O Lord art mercifully with us and that with thy rod as well as with thy staffe thou wilt support comfort us and that nothing shall be able to separate us from thy love which is in Jesus Christ our Lord. For whose sake we beseech thee be thou mercifull as to us so to all mankinde we are all O Lord the work of thy hands gratious God if it be thy will make us all the sheep of thy pasture thou hast made us all of one common mould Lord if it be to thy glory make us all partakers of one common Salvation but inspire continually thine universall Church with the Spirit of truth unity and concord and grant that all they that do confesse thy holy name may agree in the truth of thy holy word and live in unity and godly love Thou hast promised O Lord that the gates of hell shall not prevail against thy Church perform we beseech thee thy most gratious promises both to thy whole Church and to that part of it which thou hast planted and now afflicted in these sinfull Lands and Nations wherein we live Arise O Lord and have mercy upon our Sion it is time that thou have mercy upon her yea the time is come for thy servants think upon her stones and it pities them to see her in the dust Lord maintain thine own cause rescue the light of thy truth from all those clouds of errours and heresies which do so much obscure it and let the light thereof in a free profession break forth and shine again among us and that continually even as long as the Sun and Moon endureth To this end blesse us all and above us all blesse all those to whom thou hast given a right for to govern thy people Lord enable them with thy power as well as thou hast invested them with authority to govern the people committed to their charge in peace wealth and godlinesse And thou in whose hands are the hearts of all men and turnest them which way soever thou wilt turne the hearts of the disobedient that the streams of their obedience may run within its proper channell and all flow to the ocean of thy glory And blesse thy Church with Pastors after thine own heart that they may feed thy people with knowledge and understanding that they may teach thy way unto the wicked and convert sinners unto thee and in all things and above all things they may seek thy honor and glory And for the continuance of thy Gospel among us restore in thy good time to their severall places and callings and give grace O heavenly Father to all the reverend Fathers of the Church and other Orthodox Clergy that they may both by their life and Doctrine set forth thy true and lively word and rightly and duely administer thy holy Sacraments let thy blessing be upon the labours of all those whom thou hast commissioned to preach thy word as this day to thy people be with me the meanest and unworthiest of all thy servants O that thou wouldst work wonderfully in me for me and by me make me a happy instrument of much glory to thy name and of much good to thy Church and people And to all thy people every where give hearing ears understanding hearts conscientious souls and obedient lives especially to this Congregation here present that with meek hearts and due reverence they may hear and receive thy holy word truly serving thee in righteousnesse and true holinesse all the dayes of their lives And we beseech thee of thy goodnesse O Lord to comfort and succour all those that in this transitory life be in trouble sorrow need sicknesse or any other adversity these especially that are commended to our devotion we humbly recommend to thy Fatherly goodnesse those whom thou hast visited with thine hand upon the bed of sicknesse O Lord look down from heaven behold visit and relieve those thy sick servants look upon them with the eyes of thy mercy give them comfort and sure confidence in thee defend them from the danger of the enemy and keep them in perpetuall peace and safety through Jesus Christ our Lord. Hear us Almighty and most mercifull God and Saviour extend thy accustomed goodnesse to those thy servants who are grieved with sicknesses visit them O Lord as thou didst visit Peters wives mother and the Captains servant so visit and restore unto those sick persons their former healths if it be thy will or else give them grace so to take thy visitation here upon earth that after this painfull life ended they may dwell with thee in life everlasting And for those thy hand-maids that draw near to the time of their travel thou who art the presant help in the needful time of trouble stand by them and save them preserve them in the danger of Childe-bearing make them joyfull Mothers of gratious Children bring them to thy holy Baptism bring them up in thy holy and true Religion till thou finally bring them to thine everlasting kingdom And accept of the thankfull hearts of those thy servants whom thou hast delivered from the great pain and perill of childe-birth grant we beseech thee most mercifull Father that they through thy help may both faithfully live and walke in their vocations according to thy will in this life present and also may be partakers of everlasting glory in the life to come through Jesus Christ our Lord. And whoever else desire our prayers thou knowest all their names and all their several necessities whether at Sea or at Land in this Land or in others Lord we humbly recommend them all unto thee beseeching thee to visit them with thy salvation and according to the desire of their souls as it shall be for thy glory and their eternal good Lord grant them their hearts desire and all for Jesus Christ the righteous sake in whose blessed name and words we further call on thee as he himself hath taught and commanded and encouraged us in his holy Gospell saying Our Father c. SERM. I. PSAL. 130. v. 3. If thou Lord wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it I Will sing of Mercy and of Judgement saith the Kingly Prophet the two everlasting Armes O Lord by which thou upholdest and suppottest the beings of mortal Creatures the two everlasting wings by which the eternal majesty of Heaven covers immortal Spirits with unspeakable goodness which like the two
Cherubims seated upon the Ark of Gods glory cast continually their unspotted eyes upon the rotten raggs of Humane frailty aiming still at mans felicity How else could dust and ashes expect continued life from such dry bones as was and is still the foundation of mans body for should Heavens propitious eye glance forth nothing but renewed smiles upon our actions and mercy alwayes sit hovering over our Tabernacles we should quickly ingulf our spirits in the bottome of miserable security or on the contrary should but the direful hand of Omnipotency it self draw forth his glittering sword against our weak resistance unto what a paralytick posture would such an appearance strike us as coming from him whose very breath can speak us into nothing Oh then with what bowed knees and humble hearts should every soul of us kiss the very remembrance of a Iesus coming not onely to save them that believe but to work a present reconcilememt betwixt the Justice and Mercy of God the Father that now the one as well as the other or rather with united consent both together may conspire and joyn issue in the great work of mans redemption for could your drowsie spirits but lend an ear to the pleasant dialogue that continually passes betwixt these glorious Attributes now you should hear Justice calls for the Sanctuaries ballance to weigh all the actions of the sons of men and with a Mene Mene Tekel c. finde such dusty performances of no validity in Heavens account and so poor we being in Adam wilfully lost are now necessarily fallen short of immortal bliss Thus is our sentence irrecoverable and no door of hope left for our escape till Mercy that eternal beam of love stand forth and present the all-sufficient merit of a dying Saviour as full satisfaction for the sins of the whole world pleading that faithful covenant made by Justice it self that whosoever believes shall not perish but have everlasting life Which faith is the golden pillar that bears up the stately structure of mans everlasting glory the only hand by which the promises of a better life are made ours the sure entail by which the inheritance purchased in common is become mine in particular it is the onely voice by which holy David could make an echo that would reach from the lowest deeps to the highest Heavens Out of the deeps have I called unto thee O Lord Lord hear my voice as you may see verse the first of this Psalme nay it is the very nerve and sinewe of all pious Devotion for if you peruse the whole Psalme you will find it is nothing else but a rehearsal of religious petitions and serious exhortations In his petitions you 'l find his soul big with holy affiance spiritual confidence grounded on Gods word promising and his own Experience tasting In his Exhortations like a faithful Physician he prescribes nothing but what is attested to with his own and others Probatum est making mercy both the beginning and the end the principal and the final cause of Happiness but in both he keeps the eye of humility placed upon the raggs of mans unworthiness as justly demeriting eternal wrath were God exact in remunerating our actions for so he closes up the summe of his requests in the words of my Text If thou Lord wilt be extreme to marke what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it In which words please to consider two general parts 1 An antecedent in these words If thou Lord be extreme to marke what is done amiss 2. A Consequent in the other words who can abide it Or if you will look on them 1 In the Thesis 2 In the Hypothesis 1 In the Thesis wherein you have Gods extremity in punishing 2 In the Hypothesis There you have mans misery in suffering And now my Text in its situation is not unlike a pleasant Grove presenting to your view variety of pleasant Trees each bough thereof being richly laden with delicious goodly fruit not onely delightful to the eye but beneficial to the Taste or if you will your Conceptions may behold most costly Arras enriched with the lively story of Gods bounty and mans felicity mutually interwoven in the same peece but if you list to change the scene and have the true parts more neerly acted you may gain a precious enterview of Gods omnipotency displayed in its several Dispensations and management of Humane affairs where Justice and Mercy the twins of royalty discovering on the one Hand Gods free benevolence in bestowing and mans utter unworthiness for so large a guerdon on the reverse parts your sight is presented with the Almighties just severity in punishing together with mans reaping misery the true fruit of his sin In fine that I may unbowel this sacred writ take the substance thereof distilled into these four observations 1 It s the Corruption of mans nature to do amiss 2 God is not alwaies extreme to marke and punish what 's done amiss 3 God can when he pleases be extreme in marking and punishing what is done amiss 4 If God be extreme in punishing man must needs be extreme in suffering These are the four streams that naturally run their division from this pleasant spring that voluntarily tenders its silver drops to refresh the heart of every pious Christian which makes me beg your patience and zealous attention whilst in order I make these glorious truths to pass before the spiritual eye of your intelligent souls And first of the First namely It s the corrupt nature of man to do amiss As its the nature of man to be doing so it s the corruption of that nature to be doing amiss and though God see and observe all the actions of discomposed and distempered man yet it s onely the obliquity of those actions his severity intends to reward with punishment for every action simply considered in it self is good and no way meriting unspeakable torment but every such action contracts eternal guilt as performed by and prersisted in of sinful man whose customary nature and naturall custome is to do evil for as things are in being so they are in operation Can a man gather grapes of thornes or figgs of thissles saith our Blessed Saviour Or can any man bring a clean thing out of an unclean was the question put by holy Iob. Ever since man eat the forbidden fruit man himself hath become a barren tree and cumbred the ground for ever since man voluntarily fell man hath been under a necessity of sin a necessity I say proceeding not from Gods peremptory decree but his feeble and corrupted will for its a voluntary necessity should I set open the door of this defiled cage and present to your view the misery lapsed mans unhappiness hath reduced him to or give you but a glimpse of those polluted birds whose habitation is in the house of every soul by nature or but read a Lecture of mans depraved condition I could do it in no other language then that of
world whose impatient billows serve but to force them so much the nearer dangers brink therefore let no man please himself in any sensual enjoyments for they are the wicked mans portion and as we are unwilling to undergo thei smart so let us refuse their seeming pleasure lest we find such gilded pills to be but the forerunner of a bitter potion 4 Tasting comes in also for its share in the unprofitable merchandise sinne hath brought poor man as the return of all his unlawful actions indeed it s holy Davids Exhortation that we should tast and see how good the Lord is but happy is the man that hath so much wisdome for we are so vitiated with the practice of evil that we have no palate at all to relish heavenly food minding rather to patch up our decaying carcases which are daily veterascent and mouldring away then the taking hold of any opportunity that may lead us to partake and tast of those immortal joyes whose duration runs parallel with eternity Temptations to evil alwaies appearing big with a promising fruition of pleasantness so that with Eves deceived eye we are often prevailed with to trie and taste their goodness fleeing from all holy consultation till with her we pay no less then the smart of a troubled mind for the satisfying of an unbridled lust I question not but your own experience can sadly witness the truth of this assertion that impatient and immoderate desires after carnal pleasures alwayes return laden with the intolerable burden of grief and sorrow 5 Touching which is the fifth sense that suffers with us and for our transgression evil appetites being borne do also grow up with us the consideration whereof induced me the rather to stretch the line of your patience to a particular enumeration thereof that so beholding our vileness we might be brought to consider that the sins of our bodies and senses such as are lusts will wither in time and decay of themselves but sinful habits and spiritual wickedness which vitiate and corrupt the mind except in this life they be put off by grace will continue to infect and oppress our souls to eternity of how much concernment then is it for us all to lay hold on those things that will stand by and witness for us in a day of trouble We see the drowning man will catch at a straw rather then let pass any thing that with safety may bring him to the shore and our selves are curious and careful to lay hold on those means that will either purchase or preserve temporal safety oh why then should we not be as wise for our spiritual estate to lay up treasure where neither moth nor rust can come to decay or lessen it In a word by all that hath been said it plainly appears that the subject of sinne is the soul and the body is the instrument that subject works by therefore sinne is said to reign in our mortal bodies so then the proposition is true not onely of them that with Ahab sell themselves for sinne making merchandise of that invaluable gemme which a righteous man would purchase with the loss of life it self could any thing but the blood of God make redemption thereof or them that make a league with sinne and death but even the saints of God also make too true a proof of this assertion Holy David a man after Gods own heart is sometimes found following the devises of his own though his freedome therefrom cost him no less then a bedewed couch or broken bones such fruit must all the sowers of sin expect to gather Nay holy Iob gives the same testimony against himself in 9. Iob 20. If I justifie my self my own mouth shall condemne me If I say I am perfect it shall also prove me perverse And if the task would not procure wearisomness to your patience I might in tracing holy ground present you with variety of examples out of sacred Writ Lot was no sooner delivered from devouring fire but himself presently burnes in unnatural lust Noah hath not long escaped the floods of waters but himself is drowned in a deluge of wine and he that was to be the rock upon which Christ will build his Church he himself falls from the spiritual rock Christ Jesus and if this be done in the green tree what will come of the drie that are no sooner tempted but yield assaulted but embrace it like the willing bulrush continually sink into its nourishment the filth and mire of a roaring sea so that the Pelagians impeccant purity and the Donatists unspotted sanctity are but Apochryphal and will never be inserted into the Christians Creed for we must say with holy David in the words of my Text If thou Lord wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss Lord who can abide it And the reasons of it are cleare 1 Because not onely our nature alone is found active in evil but it hath drawn in the will and affections also to be its companions in sin a truth which but now I have preacht to your ears my whole time for the most part hitherto being spent in the narration of our corruption both in soul and body of the rebellion of each against other and both against God so that if we eye our selves as the objects of Gods anger nothing but everlasting destruction can be expected the soul sins and the sin is conveyed thereunto by the organs of the body which by a free consent are joyned in rebellion against the Father of lights whose vengeance if severe in reckoning must be expected to destroy us 2 Because its easier in it self for man to do amiss than to walk uprightly for there must be the concurrence of all circumstances to denominate an action good whereas the defection and want but of one will make it become evil Our very conception is in sin therefore needs must there be facility for us to do amiss we need run no further then little infants who are but our selves multiplied for example in this kind how much difficulty and industry is required to work in them one moral action that may beare the name of goodness when on the contrary great restraints and much severity can scarce withhold them from multiplied acts of evil Nay that you may as soon bind a wolf with the guts of a tender kid as seek to bridle an impenitent wretch with the cords of love for by nature we are all King Solomons fools who make it our pastime to do evil but to do good have no understanding 3 That perfect symmetry of righteousness that obtaineth life if there be found therein but the obliquity of one act the demerit thereof will be eternal wrath so saith St. Iames 2. chap. 10. For whosoever shall keep the whole law and offend in one point is guilty of all Good reason then have we to stand in awe and sin not to watch over our wayes and be circumspect a little leven will leven the whole lump the smallest
sin unrepented of is able to damne us and the least law transgrest is sufficient to procure our damnation whereas Christs infinite merit onely can obtain our salvation for the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God St. Iames 1.20 By all which you cannot but understand the truth of our assertion namely it s the corrupt nature of man to do amiss together with the reasons thereof I shall briefly make some application to our selves and so in order pass on to the second doctrine propounded Use 1 Fall down to prayer and cry out with holy David Enter not into judgement with thy servants O Lord for in thy sight shall no flesh living be justified if in the gold of Angels there was much dust found if those pure spirits were charged with folly what extremity of madness and intolerable ire may we expect as the wages of our unrighteousness For if thou Lord be extreme to mark what is done amiss who can abide it you have seen the doctrine cleared let us a little apply it and so pass on to the last conclusion Application Oh consider this ye that forget God lest he destroy you lest he tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver you Fear ye not me saith the Lord will ye not tremble at my presence which have placed the sand for the bound of the sea Jeremiah 5.22 fear not them that can kill the body but are not able to kill the soul but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell saith our Saviour 10. S. Mat. 28. for patience provoked turns to the greatest fury and when the malevolous planet of Gods anger shall fall upon our heads like the flying roll in the 5. of Zach. it will dread nothing but everlasting destruction Oh how should all our pulses beat at the remembrance of Gods wrath for sins how contracted our span of of time and how trembling should our clay cottages appear how much better were it for us to measure out the ground by our length before him and in humility to kiss the rod then with impudent foreheads to stand it out against his vengeance how should we with speed lay hold and fix upon all means that may bring us near unto himself how willing should we be with the silken cords of his favour to be led to repentance seeing he is so loth to be severe and waits that he may be gracious to us and withal considering that if God be extreme in punishing man must needs be extreme in suffering which brings me to the fourth and last conclusion That if God be extreme in punishing man must needs be extreme in suffering When thou with rebukes dost chasten man for sin thou makest his beauty to consume like a moth saith holy David Ps 39.12 But it were well if onely his beauty were gone and his outward comeliness done away but he adds as a greater misery every man is but vanity and every way miserable for what happiness can be expected when Gods heavenly countenance looks with anger upon us for who can bind up that which God in wrath layes open who can speak peace to that soul whom he afflicts or if he withdraw who can comfort us and who can abide his justice when he is severe and looks upon us with the eyes of fiery indignation surely none for then the body will but begin the pain of the soul and the soul endure the grief of both then you may hear the Shunamites child cry out my head my head holy David complaines that his heart is melted like wax before the sun then it is that king Asa is sick indeed from head to foot that holy Iob is sitting upon the dunghil and cursing the day of his birth then oh then indeed it is that King David cryes out his strength is dryed up like a potsheard and that he is become like a Pelican in the wilderness there you shall hear Hezekiah chatter like a crane and mourn like a Dove for when God is extreme in his judgements man must needs be miserable in suffering even in the outward man and yet all these are but the beginning of sorrow as our Saviour saith in comparison of those calamities that will overtake us when our breath shal be turned into sighs our eyes into fountains of tears and our hearts like mournful harpes shall be hung upon the willowes of contrition and our organical musick into the voice of them that weep all which are but as so many doleful witnesses of our sufferings when God shall come to visit for our transgressions so that you see the doctrine cleared and the truth thereof in lively examples illustrated One word of application and then my whole discourse shall be concluded Application Oh be astonished and wonder at the rich mercy of God all you that go on in an uninterrupted course of sinning that God hath not long since made you the subjects of eternal wrath oh let the greatness of his patience encourage you not to go on but repent of your sins lest your destruction come unawares as an armed man and there be none to deliver you Let me therefore exhort all men to make their peace with him betimes before death makes a separation between them and their chiefest happiness before your souls be swallowed up in misery and drowned with an overflowing deluge of useless tears the onely Emblemes of a too late repentance which shall never be wiped off with the smallest remnant of mercy or drunk up with the least spunge of pitty and fatherly compassion for then the Lamb slain for the redemption of your souls repenting will be found no lese then Iudahs Lion enthroned to condemne both soul and body for wilful and impenitent sins so that we must all conclude with the words of my Text If thou Lord wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it Regi seculorum immortali invisibili soli Deo honor gloria Amen SERM. II. PSAL. 130. V. 3. If thou Lord be extreme c. Introduction THe glory of the Shepherd is the thriving of the Sheep as Saint Chrysostome saith and the fatness of Christs Lambs is the strength of their graces by the one the outward man is refreshed but with the other the inward spirit is rejoiced and in both the glory of God is highly exalted Heavens spotless eye endures not to behold leprous Souls with any other look besides that of vengeance nor can the Creature ever expect to see its Creators face without a renewed mind For without Holiness no man shall ever see God Heb. 12.14 We are but stubble to his consuming fire so that while we are in a state of sinning we are liable to damnation Heb. 10.13 It being a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God whose just severity will wound the hairy scalp of such as willfully go astray why then should we be so stupidly ignorant as
to passe on in a way of sin casting all fear of danger behind us as if we were able to encounter devouring fire or dwell with everlasting burning especially when we consider but our own frame we cannot but know we are but dust and that which is our mould will soon decay and withal remembring our time is but short and the word redde rationem backt with a Thou fool may this night be given suddenly and then assuredly as the tree falls so it lies and in the same condition must we appear at Gods Tribunal Oh then with what circumspection should our actions be performed lest any evil or vicious habits should square themselves to joyn with us in our holiest Oblations because we pretend service to him whose power in a few words can write great Monarchs into trembling and can make a hair Adrian 4. or the kernel of a raisin as mortal as a Goliahs spear and can with ease blow down our bubling lives into nothing for the time is coming when not astuta verba but pura corda as Saint Bernard saith not fair words but honest hearts will prevail and commend us to him who judgeth all things for he will infatuate all fallacious wisdom and self-destroying wit For thou art the God that hast no pleasure in wickedness nor shall any evil dwell with thee saith holy David Psal 5.4 So that Holiness is now the onely path that leads weary and wandring souls to the Paradise of Celestial Blisse all other wayes being severely kept against us by the flaming sword of Gods irreconcileable anger and hatred against sin and sinners for no unholy thing shall enter much lesse remain in the Holy City all such shall be cast out Rev. 21.27 A good nature like a shallow brook may empty it self into the narrow river of Humane love but perfect Holiness and real Sanctity is only that noble stream which carries the soul to Heaven and loses it in the Ocean of infinite Blisse You may for a time sport your selves with the fire of lustful pleasures but ere you are aware the flame thereof will not onely sindge your gilded wings of ambitious desires which so long bore you up with the breath of popular applause but also consume your soul and body in endless woe and misery for when God shall come in flaming fire he will render vengeance to all that are ungodly not enduring longer to have the cry of our sins to come up before him and therefore holy David well considered this Meditation when he broke forth with the words of my Text If thou Lord will be extreme to mark what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it In which words we have already considered two general parts 1 An Antecedent 2 A consequent Or if you will here is 1 The Thesis 2 The Hypothesis In the first you have Gods extremity in punishing In the second you have mans misery in suffering for he saith If thou Lord be extreme to mark what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it From which sacred concession we have enedavoured to wind up the sum and substance of holy Davids intention into these four bottoms or doctrinal conclusions viz. 1 It is the corruption of mans nature to do amiss 2 God is not alwayes extreme to punish man when he hath done amiss 3 God can when he pleases be extreme in punishing man when he hath done amiss 4 If God be extreme in punishing man must needs be extreme in suffering Thus far our general division hath had its equal course and our progress in the dispatch of these truths hath but quitted the first and made entrance upon the second which together with the two latter acompanied with your patience shall at this time terminate my hours discourse And that I may with the more benefit to your understanding proceed therein I shall onely lead your memories back to the second conclusion namely Doct. 2 The mercy of God is such he will not alwaies be extreme to mark what 's done amiss Examples of Gods patience and long forbearance have no where such lively representations as in our selves whose unconsumed lives are nothing else but a series of continued mercy nor is there any rational account to be rendred for the same save onely that it is the good will of him that dwelleth in the bush whose glory is not to be given to another and that he will have mercy on whom he will have mercy c. Which he doth 1 For his name sake Exodus 34.6 2 For his natures sake which is alwaies prone to shew mercy 3 For his glories sake and that 1 In general 2 In particular 1 In general it is the constant language of holy Scripture as you have already heard 2 In particular he is not extreme for his Glory sake which is great in many respects I In respect of his judgements for they are his strange work and never had he felicity in executing the same but with an unwilling willingness is alwayes constrained to visit for the sins whether of nations cities or particular persons witness his sending the Gospel to the lost sheep of the house of Israel his low condescention to Abraham when he became Advocate for Sodom and his own tears over Ierusalems approching ruine yea and witness the repentings that were kindled in his bowels for revolting Ephraim but mercy is his delight because he waits to be gracious 2 Great in respect of time for the mercy of God endures for ever in Ps 136. As his power is unlimited so neither can bounds be set to his mercy sun and moon heaven and earth these all have their periods but the rich treasure of Gods mercy shall have no end I have seen an end of all perfection but thy commandement is exceeding broad saith holy David Ps 119.96 All the attributes of God like himself are from everlasting to everlasting 3 Great in extent of place for his mercy reaches unto the clouds Psal 36.6 7. Thy mercy O Lord is in the heavens and thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds Thy righteousness is like the great mountains thy judgements are as a great deep Lord c. Gods extended grace makes its full appearance not onely in delivering from danger but in supplying our wants not onely in saving our bodies from temporal evils but in redeeming our souls from eternal damnation for with him is great deliverance 4 Great in extent of plenty for God is rich in mercy Eph. 2.4 But God saith the Apostle who is rich in mercy for the great love wherewith he loved us c. as if St. Paul had spoke his mind in larger phrases thus You are poor and needy you want blessings temporal and spiritual and know not whither to flee for succour and supply so that the narrowness of your hearts imagines Gods free hand is straitned but let no such scruple bear rule in your minds for with God is so great a treasure of grace as never can be exhausted
racketed from one temptation to another till at last he hazard eternal ruine reeling from one extreme to another untill he fall into perpetual misery Therefore to conclude let me implore every soul that expects and looks for eternal life as who doth not to get cleansed from all your iniquities whether secret or open latent or revealed before you come unto the brink of misery from whence is no return before your feet stumble upon the dark mountains wherein is no security let no iniquity ever have any more dominion over you get all your actions salted with true grace that God may smell a sweet savour in your holy devotions and pious services knowing that your best performances are but gilded appearances and glittering abominations if God should with severity inspect them so that we must all say with holy David in the words of my Text If thou Lord shouldst be extreme c. FINIS SERM. III. LUKE 2.7 And she brought forth her first-born son and wrapped him in swadling-clothes and laid him in a manger because there was no room for them in the Inne Introduction GOd is a most pure Act never was he idle but alwaies in being even when this world was not in being he was in himself love and nigh enough to himself yet when he was so he thought of some eminent act of bounty wherein to produce an Idea of his goodness and accordingly wills thoughts to himself of shewing mercy to mankind for yet he would do good to all therefore all his wayes are good his being and well-being envied as yet by none no not by Satan the first parent of malice and grand enemy both of Gods unspeakable glory and mans eternal felicity not enduring to entertain the least thought of seeing humane nature deified yet God to shew the freedome of his love in rich mercy stamps his own Image upon man for it was his goodness as well as his power that he made us good as well as men but what was at first made good we soon made sin for God made man upright but he hath sought out many inventions so that had not God redeemed us we had been miserable to all eternity much rather had our souls not been then not be happy When man was made holy and had sinned though such iniquity deserved the ruine of what he was before having defaced that image yet God is prone to mercy when provoked goodness would rescue that part of himself from ruine for scarce one had sinned but one was promised to save the Son of God was promised and presented to the Patriarchs being revealed to them by his promises and foretold by his Prophets that God would send his Son he saw a fit vessel wherein he would inclose his son viz. the Blessed Virgin and therefore he sends his Angel to provide a lodging telling her that she was highly honoured of God Luke 7.3 and she shall conceive in her womb and bring forth a Son and shall call his name Iesus that God would give him a name above every name and of his kingdom there shall be no end she examined and believed the Angels Message and and was found with child of the holy Ghost Luke 1. the power of the highest over-shadowing her But loe she is summoned to another travel for there is a decree from Augustus Caesar and behold she takes no small pains to obey for though her appearance might have been excused yet she would not disobey the lawful magistrates command the custome of women is on Mary but alas desolate Virgin she is driven to that pass that having no room in the inne necessity compels her to make a chamber of the stable and to turne the manger the place wherein is laid the food of beasts into a Cradle the now onely receptacle for the bread of life and at once both mother and midwife for she brought forth her first-borne son and wrapt him in swadling-clothes and laid him in a manger because there was no room for them in the Inne In which words consider with me these four general parts 1 A Virgins travail 2 A mothers tenderness 3 A childs poverty 4 The peoples inhospitality 1 A Virgins travail She brought forth her first-borne sonne 2 A mothers tenderness She wrapped him in swadling-clothes 3 A childs poverty laid in a manger 4 The peoples inhospitality There was no roome in the Inne I begin with the first 1. The virgins travail she brought forth her first-born son Wherein consider 1. The person she 2. The birth brought forth 3. The fruit her first-born child 1. For the woman she was a virgin but what a virgin to bear to bring forth a son a wonder and she her self cryes out I know not a man well might the Prophet Ierem. say Behold a Virgin and the Prophet Isai likewise yet she is the same Isa the 7.14 vers but that Christ was conceived of the holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary is an article of our faith not of our understanding best known is the manner to him that hath the power virgins are not usually pregnant yet the spirit ingenders flesh we take it not from his nature but power the Holy Ghost produces the man Christ not of himself but by his power Christ begotten of himself as one with the Father sending him on the great errand of mans salvation for all the three Persons in the sacred Trinity have a share in this great work the Father begetting the Son begotten and the Holy Ghost produced him at the fulness of time I call the Holy Ghost Father as his shadow the virgin his mother as his substance or the matter of his person whereby he is called the son of man that by this means he might be joyned to our nature and so become surety for us as for example we christians are born of water of the spirit are not called the sons of water but of the spirit because of the spirit we are made one with Christ and are thereby become the sons of God that Christ was conceived of the Holy Ghost and of Mary is most certain but for our sakes called the son of Mary and not of the Holy Ghost yet hath the son an equality with the spirit and is perfect God as well as man therefore is it that the Holy Ghost concurs with Mary in the conception both agree to make Christ but not one way for t is his the shadow hers the substance hers the carkase his the quintessence how could it be but a holy thing being of the Holy Ghost though she had sin yet Christ took none from her because he would expel it from her for had Christ been born of an Harlot of Mary Magdalen yet she could not have contaminated his integrity but commended his power and mercy he could have sanctified the most sinful person and unhallowed womb Being conceived of the holy Ghost he took our flesh but not our corruption can the sun shine untainted on the
Christians by cruel usage and at last destroy them yea such hath been the lot of Gods Saints in all ages thus to be persecuted and destroyed for the Prophet Elijahs must be in danger the Ieremies in prison the Disciples lose their goods and the holy Confessors pay their tribute of allegiance to Almighty God with pain and the Martyrs with their lives and though these afflictions may seem terrible to Christians to suffer for the Truth yet the highest of them is no more than lawful and necessary if called thereunto for the pious hearts of true Christians have alwayes thus testified to the Truth witness Saint Paul What mean you to weep and break my heart for I am ready not to be bound only but to die at Ierusalem for the Name of the Lord Iesus Acts 21.13 and Acts 20.24 He saith elsewhere Neither do I account my life dear unto my self so that I might finish my course with joy It is remarkable to consider the way which Almighty God took to support his Disciples and Servants in despight of the wisdom and malice of the Iews for the planting of his Church in Christianity that it will appear almost incredible to hear what were the afflictions of the Church how intolerable her sufferings that had they not had one to support them who was Almighty and All-sufficient it had been impossible they should have continued stedfast but they had not only the inward support of the Spirit to strengthen but the outward example of our Saviours Passion to incourage them unto a conformity to him both in doing and suffering and so nearly did the Saints copy out one anothers lives that their spirits were seemingly converted into one anothers bodies and one would have thought that the dying bloud of the one was infused into anothers veins for no sooner was one cut off by the hands of cruelty but God presently inspired another with faith and patience to witness to his Truth and the torturing of the body made but the mouth speak the louder in witnessing unto the Truth So that by what you have already heard you may see Christian Profession is no secure kind of living for he that believes in Christ must be no niggard of his life for the Truth when God cals to bring him home by death Indeed it is yet our happiness that in these cloudy dayes we are not brought to the fire and faggot for the tryal of our faith God only knows when and upon whom that heavy lot must fall and in what manner it will come this we are not able to demonstrate but by the luke-warmness of most mens zeal in the truth of Religion it is to be feared that when those dayes do come that many will turn from Christ rather than burn for the Truth because it appears that many untrained souls are so wedded to their lusts that they had rather lose their interest in Gods love then forgoe one darling sin many do so love the works of vanity that they have made shipwrack of faith and turned their eares unto fables and when you shall read or hear of these then may you imagine those locusts are come upon the earth spoken of by St. Iohn in the 9th of the Revelation 8 9. verses which had power to torture men and like Scorpions with their power able to sting them to death then beware lest you be led into the errors of the wicked 2 St. Pet. 3.17 but be you stablished in the known acknowledged and established Church of England which I dare be bold to say for doctrine and discipline is more purely true and truly pure from errors than any Christian Church or Congregation whatsoever and shall be ready to prove them so when occasion shall call me thereunto for the Truth of God will remain pure notwithstanding the malice of gain-sayers and therefore we should defend it with all our might for the Truth will spread it self though there be no other place but Pulpits to declare it in nor no other witnessing but by preaching nor no witnesses but Prophets but yet many in their lowest condition have yet highly exalted God by a faithful testimony to his Truth and though this life be encombred by sickness and infirmities yet this readiness to suffer shall be able to silence any gain-sayer when thou art not able to witness much because of thy weakness yet do as much as thou canst do your best and God will accept it though mean if from a willing mind for it will be nothing to suffer by martyrdome when we consider it is for so great a prize as is the Truth of God and will be to our souls if we continue stedfast therein for still in every age God will keep some defenders of the Truth and why may not we be the persons therefore should God call us to it and we refuse to suffer for the Truth it would be but a just judgement for God to take his Gospel from us and give it to a more faithful people for so the Apostles were commanded to serve the Iews Acts 13.46 the Truth of God in the House of God had dwelt among us for many years together in much serenity till of late years it hath been tossed upon the troubled waters therefore let us in our words and works witness to it lest he take it from us also and give it to others that will give it better entertainment than we have done Therefore let all of us make it our prayer unto Almighty God Oh Lord rather let our hearts witness to the Truth that thy Truth may witness unto us then by our not witnessing for thee we come to be destroyed by thee let thy Truth dwell with us here that we may dwell with thee hereafter Brethren let not your faith be shaken or moved by tribulations or any kind of sufferings whatsoever knowing this that after you have fought a good fight and kept the faith there shall be laid up for you and all other his faithful Servants a Crown of righteousness which the righteous Iudge shall give you at that day 2 Tim. 3.7 8. and to this end were we born and for this cause we all came to the Christian world the Church of God that we in our estates and callings lives and deaths should bear witness to the truth Testis fidelis OR The faithful Witness SERMON IX St. IOHN 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witness unto the truth THe pattern of all Presidents and the life of all that is good in man is the God in man the man in God the man Christ Jesus who in his birth was a pattern of humility in his life of innocence in his death of patience in all a pattern of holiness as it is the marrow of Religion to worship God in spirit and Truth and to serve him with truth in the inward man so the iniquity of a Christian consists in not doing what he did
is but a lame consent yeilded by constraint for he that by a Tyrant is compelled with force of punishment to deny the Truth doth in a sort deny and not deny he denies it outwardly with his lips but his heart greives inwardly for the same because his conscience bears witness to the Truth but he that with a wicked life is given wholly to sin that he hath all his delights in it that man hath made himself perfect in evil 4. From the more full signification we do signifie more of wickedness to be in us by our works than by our words he sits at a farre greater denial of truth that denies it by a wicked life than he that denies it onely with his lips for fear of death though both these are great aggravations since in our lives words and works we are to bear witness to the Truth for to this end were we born and for this cause came we into the world c. Application Our Saviour bids Let your light so shine before men c. Saint Matthew 5.6 then we may hence learn that those that should light others to Heaven by their Doctrine must not darken their way by the evil example of an unholy life and not only must Ministers but people also let the light of holiness appear visible in their lives When God places a man a private Christian in the lower Orbe he puts him there to shine like a starre bright and clear in his own sphere Christians should shine and bear witness in their lives and be cautious how they walk because every sin puts a dimness upon the soul and darkness internal can expect no other but to go to darkness eternal and therefore St. Peter saith that our good works should make those that look on us as evil doers glorifie God in the day of visitation 1 Saint Peter 2.12 There be some that must believe in Christ throughout the world and witness his Truth to unbelievers by a holy life and why may it not belong to us but if on the contrary we be found to live as they live how shall they be brought to believe as we believe It was the saying of a Heathen If I did see the Christians lives better I should think their faith better than mine Religion and the Doctrines of Faith are often disgrac'd by wicked Professors 1 Tim. 1.6 7. the rebellion of a Christian that is a Servant though to an Heathen Master brings a scandal both upon God and on holy Religion Sure I am God and Religion is very much disgrac'd and the Gospel dishonoured and the Church of Christ abused by the wicked lives of those that are called the Sons of the Church Oh therefore that by holy lives judicious reading faithful hearing and constant studying and meditating in the wayes of God and the Truths of God we would make our selves able and ready to give an account of the hope that is in us that so both in our knowledge and practice we bearing witness to the Truth here on earth we may have the truth in our consciences to bear witness to our selves that we are the Sons of God that so he that ascended into Heaven to take possession of his own Glory may in time bring us thither who himself affirmed and after whose example we should walk that as he was born and came into the world to bear witness to the truth so we should also account of our selves that we were born and that we came into the world that we might bear witness to the truth that we came into the world this Christian world to witness to the truth as common Christians that we came into the world the Church of God as members thereof to justifie that faith by a holy life unto which our parents had baptized us still indeavouring to carry the same mind in us that was in Christ Jesus that as he did so we came into the world to bear witness to the truth for he justified himself before the judgement-seat of Pilate saying in the words of my Text To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witness to the truth The end of the Sermons Dr. Hewit's publique Prayer after Sermon O HOLY HOLY HOLY Lord God of heaven and earth heaven and earth are full of the majesty of thy glory Glory be to thee O Lord glory be to thee glory be to thee glory be to thee for all those infinite favours which thou of thine infinite goodnesse hast voucsafed to us who are lesse then the least of all thy mercies for the fountain of all mercies Jesus Christ in whom thou hast loved us with an everlasting love before ever we or the world were made that thou hast created us after thine own Image and redeemed us by the bloud of Jesus Christ when we were utterly lost that thou hast called us with an holy calling and in some measure sanctified us by the graces of thy holy Spirit that thou hast spared us thus long and given us so long and so large a time of repentance when as thou mightest have cut us off in the midst of our transgressions whilst we were rebelling against thee Blessed be thy name O Lord for all thy mercies vouchsafed unto us thy mercies to allure us thy promises to wooe us thy patience and long-suffering towards us to lead us to repentance thy corrections to reclaime us thy judgements to affright and better us blessed by thy name for all opportunities of wel-doing for all hinderances of evill-doing for all the good purposes and resolutions thou hast put into our hands to draw our souls from the dregs of sin and ignorance into the glory of thy Saints for any assistance that thou hast given to any of us in any holy performance for the Communion of thy Saints the aide of their counsels the benefit of their Prayers the comfort of their conversations the protection of thy Holy Angels for all corporall spirituall temporall and eternall mercies mercies concerning this life and mercies concerning the life to come Blessed be thy name for thy mercies to us all the dayes of our lives thy mercies unto us this present day for the light thereof the greater light the light of thy truth to shine into our soules to guide our feet into the way of all truth For that portion of Scripture wherein thou hast been pleased to reveal thy self unto us at this time Lord though it be sowne in much weaknesse do thou raise it up in great power let it not be as water spilt upon the ground but let it be as seed sown in good ground that it may take deep root downward in our hearts by faith and bring forth much fruit upwards in our lives and conversations to the glory of thy holy name to the edification of thy Church and people and to the salvation of our souls in the day of Jesus Christ to whom with thy self and holy Spirit we desire to