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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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an Embassadour or Steward only He doth not say his Doctrine is his the Sacraments are his but as he received of the Lord so he delivered to them And this is that for which the Protestants accuse the Roman Church That their Officers arrogate to themselves a Magisterial power in the Church pleading an infallibility in Doctrine by which they anathematize all as hereticks who will not subscribe thereunto The Protestants doe acknowledge a ministeriall power but they will have a magisterial one There must be a supreame visible Judge in the Church say they as there is in Commonwealths else Christ hath not wisely provided in his Church a sufficient remedy against all heresies and schism● Lastly By this he doth exclude any sinfull or wicked end As if he did make the Church subservient to any corrupt interest of his own Officers are for the Church the Church is not for them He that hath a lordly government or despotical saith Aristotle administreth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It 's not the publick good but the personal good he looketh at it is not Res publica but Res propria All tyrannical administrations are for the tyrants profit they Non praesunt ut prosint whereas good Governours they relate to the publick good knowing they are for it not it for them And thus it is in Church-officers all their names are names of care of diligence and labour God hath not set them there for their carnal advantages as if the people were made for them but they are to promote the Kingdome of Christ and to advance the souls of their hearers Alas the Church is Christs Spouse not theirs it 's Christs flock not theirs they died not for it they were not crucified for it neither are believers baptized into their name but the name of Christ Use of Instruction How happy and blessed a thing it is to see the Church of God in unity between Pastors and people the Officers not abusing their power to ambition and tyranny nor the people their liberty to licentiousnesse and wantonnesse when Pastors and people strive not about their respective power but who shall most faithfully discharge their duties to one another All disorder in the Church hath for the most part come in at this breach If a Church be Plebs adunita clero as Cyprian said Church and people united together then what goeth to the dissolving of this tendeth to the destruction of the Church it self How much doth Ignatius if they be his genuine Epistles presse this subjection of people to Pastors And the Apostle Peter doth as earnestly presse a loving and meek government in Officers And no doubt when God is angry with a people then he sends an evil spirit as between Abimelech and the Shechemites which tendeth to the consumption of both Let Ministers therefore carefully avoid all affectation of unlawfull power and people of unlawfull liberty Let Pastours looke upon their people as the Spouse of Christ as purchased by his blood and this will keepe them from lordly dominion and let people look upon Pastours as the Officers of Christ coming in his name to them and this will make them honour them and have them in high esteeme both for their office and works sake But other parts of this Epistle will provoke to greater enlargement herein SERM. CXLVI The Comforting of the afflicted one great part of a Ministers work 2 COR. 1. 24. But are helpers of your joy THe Apostle having removed the negative in his Ministerial power he cometh to affirm the positive which is That we are helpers of your joy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helpers or co-workers for the word relateth to a concurrence with others and therefore by some is made to respect the Corinthians themselves as if he did work with them for the establishing of their joy Others relate it to his fellow-Ministers and workmen in the Lord in which sense he often speaketh of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 16. 21. Phil. 1. 2. 24. Phil. 4. 3. and this is very probable But then 3. others make it to referre to God as if the Apostles did work with God but ministerially and subordinately to the salvation of men and this the Apostle plainly affirmeth 1 Cor. 3. 9. This also may be granted and then the Apostles scope is to shew that they have not indeed any dominion but yet lest any should judge them therefore uselesse and conclude they have no power at all therefore he addeth We are helpers and Ministers under God For though God immediatly created the world without any instruments yet he doth not so in propagation of the Gospel Therefore Stapleton need not be in such rage at Calvin for not taking notice of the word or at Beza for rendring it helpers seeing that Beza doth not thereby exclude a ministerial help but a magisteriall authority which the Papall party pleade for calling it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereas it is rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Neither doth the Ministery immediatly produce spirituall effects in the hearts of hearers though subordinately only but doth externally apply the means of grace in the exercise whereof God doth put forth his glorious power The next thing considerable is the object of this We are helpers of your joy We might have thought he would rather have said your grace or your faith but he saith joy by which some understand heaven and happinesse as the word is used Heb. 12. 1. Matth. 25. 23. This indeed is necessarily implyed and so must not be excluded but the proxime and immediate sense is their spirituall joy and comfort For this is made opposite to that imperious and austere exercise of Church-power which some being guilty of do exceedingly grieve and discourage the hearts of such who fear God as the Prophet Ezekiel complaineth of such fiery Pastors Hence he speaks of heavinesse and sorrow so much in the next Chapter from whence observe That the ministeriall work in a great measure of it consisteth in administring comfort and consolation to such as stand in need thereof Our work is not only to endeavour the conversion of such who are turned aside from God but also the comfort and consolation of such who are sadly dejected We see our Saviour himself after whose example all Ministers are to walk was very carefull heerin Joh. 17. 13. These things have I spoken that my joy might be fullfilled in you not only joy but perfected and compleated joy Therefore when his Disciples were cast down with sorrow about his departure from them how ready and willing is he to suggest all such arguments as might administer joy yea and promiseth his spirit as a Comforter which would effectually set home those arguments upon their hearts This Apostle also how frequent is he in pressing this duty ingeminating of it Rejoyce in the Lord alway again I say rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. Hence he saith to these Philippians cap. 1. 25. that
Ministry or preaching should ever do them any good And therefore you see when Isaiah was sent to preach to the people of Israel Chap. 6● it was not to open their eyes or soften their hearts but the clean contrary to shut their eyes and harden their hearts Do not therefore question the Call of a Ministry if the work of conversion be not so general as might be expected For consider the people are they not like the ground the Apostle speaks of that having often drunk in rain yet bringing forth nothing 〈…〉 sing Heb. 6. 7 8. A terrible place it is if they had been a people bringing forth herbs fit for use then God had a blessing for such ground but because they are only briars and thorns the end is to burnt So that though the Ministry doth not work in a saving way yet it 's in a damning way and this discovers the Call to be of God as well as the former because he punisheth people thus for their unthankfulness and unprofitableness But 2. The Ministry of God is not onely for conversion but edification and building up If therefore God makes the Word usefull for further illumination and sanctification this discovers it to be of God Hence Ephes 4. 13 14. There is a two-fold use of the Ministry spoken of One to perfect and to carry forward to an higher stature in Christ and the other to prevent errours and to safeguard against all heretical wayes Now the edifying and building up of the godly is of great importance The Apostles wrote their Epistles chiefly for this end to increase that godliness which was already begun Lastly The Minister whose call is of God and dischargeth it faithfully shall have a great reward from God They that turn others from their sins shall shine as the stars in the firmament The Apostles shall sit upon twelve thrones whereas those who runne without a Call and work without a Commission their labour is in vain and God will ask Who hath required these things at their hands Yea both they and their Office shall be destroyed so that in stead of a reward they will meet with severe punishment Then on the peoples part it is of great consequence for them to be assured of this Let a man esteem of us 1 Cor. 4. as the stewards of God Oh if you receive the Ministers as from God as having commission from him with what reverence and obedience will this be But especially you will take heed of opposing and setting against them lest ye should be found fighters against God Therefore let the Use of this be of Conviction especially to such who acknowledge us the true Ministers of the Gospel You who receive us as your Ministers and cry out against all those that question their Call Now out of your own mouths you will be condemned if you do not receive their Word as it is indeed the word of God and not of man Oh therefore do you discover the experimental work of the Ministry upon your hearts Let it be said of you as of these Corinthians They were his Epistle to be read and seen of all men You are our walking Sermons all may see what we preach by your lives you are our Sermons to be read and seen of all men SERM. VI. Of the proper and appellative Names of our Saviour Jesus and Christ In what sense he is Jesus a Saviour and how Christ the annointed of the Lord. 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. THe second main particular considerable in this inscription is the Efficient Cause or Author of this Apostolical Office he mentioneth and this is said to be Jesus Christ These words may be considered either absolutely as they declare unto us the Lord Christ Or relatively and respectively to Paul's Apostleship And from both these considerations profitable matter will afford it self In the absolute consideration we may take notice of our Lord and Saviours Description 1. Of his proper Name which yet doth denote his Office Jesus 2. His appellative Name Christ We shall conclude both these at this time And For the first word Jesus Osiander otherwise a learned man hath a singular opinion viz. That Jesus comes from Jehovah only the Hebrew letter Shin is interposed because he is called Shiloh Gen. 49. his conceit being that as Christ himself was compounded of two Natures so ought his Name to be of two names the one viz. Jehovah signifying his Divine Nature and the other Shiloh his humane Nature One Argument he urgeth is from Phil. 2. where God is said to give Christ a Name above all Names Now saith he the Name Jesus was common to many others therefore he had such a peculiar name as none ever had But that is a gross mistake as if Name were there taken for a Word and not for the Person or Office signified thereby No less absurd is his notion also That whereas the word Jehovah was ineffable not pronounceable before a figment of the Rabbins by this addition of 〈◊〉 it is made utterable To this purpose almost Castalio likewise who makes the word compounded of Jehovah and Ish vir as if it were God-man but not only the general consent of all but the reason that the Angel gives of this Name makes it evident that Jesus is the same with Joshua for so the Septuagint render that word sutably to a Greek termination and so comes from Jashang to save and therefore the Angel saith He shall be so called because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall save his people from their sinnes So that this name is very expressive In nomine Jesu totum latet Evangelium The whole Gospel lieth in this name of Jesus or a Saviour The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is so comprehensive that Tully saith The Latinists cannot comprehend it in one word sospitator comes neerest to it In the Old Testament we read of two very eminent that had this name and both of them are made Types of Christ Joshua who lead the people of Israel into Canaan when Moses could not do it So Christ brings us to Heaven which was impossible to the Law and Joshua the high Priest mentioned by Zechary who being first accused because of his despicable garments was afterwards covered more gloriously So Christ our high Priest in the time of his Humiliation was condemned and of no reputation but in his Exaltation was magnified and exalted gloriously The word thus explained we observe That the Lord Christ is a Jesus a Saviour to his people This truth should be sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb to the lost sinner Christ hath some names of terrour and dread as when he is called a Lion and a Judge some again of love and comfort as this of Jesus which as Bernard saith is In ore mel in aure melos not that the name or the sound of words is such and therefore that superstitious custome of bowing at
this Salutation Some think because the work of the Ministry meets with much malice and froward opposition from wicked men which made Paul pray that God would deliver him from unreasonable absurd men who are led only by humours and passions not by Reason and Religion Therefore seeing those that do faithfully discharge their trust meet with little favour and love from men hence it is that he doth in a peculiar manner pray for mercy to them Others they think the word is inserted because of the great difficulty of the Ministry it being a burden too heavy even for Angels shoulders Insomuch that Chrysostome thought Few Church-officers could be saved Seeing then the work is so great so much grace is required to manage it and the best have failings therefore they need the mercy prayed for But this by the way Come we to the Text. In that we may consider the Matter prayed for And the Efficient Cause from whom it is to come The Matter and Benefit is set down in two words which though but two yet comprehend all that a godly heart can desire the first is Grace the second Peace In the original there is a defect and therefore most do supply it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as our Translators Grace be to you Though the Apostle Peter in the salutations of both his Epistles expresseth the word and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be multiplied and so Estius would supply it here but there is no inconvenience to keep to the former Interpretation 2. There is the Cause of this which is two-fold God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ All these parts shall be opened as we take them in order only let us first take notice of the Manner and End of this Salutation in the general That it is not for any earthly or worldly thing but what is spiritual The Grecians they used commonly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their Salutations as the Latines Salve and are relating only to temporal welfare And indeed the Heathens knew no better but the Apostle would lift up our hearts to higher things The Apostle James Chap. 1. 1. writing to the dispersed Tribes useth the word only Greeting which made Cajetan among other reasons reject it as not Canonical as if such a Salutation savoured of an humane spirit But this is no Argument For the Apostles gathered together in a Councel at Jerusalem sending a Letter to the Churches abroad use no more Salutation than that only in that we are to comprehend whatsoever is more expresly in Pauls Salutation Seeing then it s only spiritual things which Paul here doth wish to them Observe That spiritual mercies and priviledges are to be desired above all earthly and worldly ones what soever The Grace of God and Gospel peace is infinitely to be preferred before any outward advantage Psal 4. 6 7. when David had represented the natural desire of every man unregenerated Who will shew us any good He presently demonstrates the clean contrary disposition of those that are godly and spiritual Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us and Thou hast put more gladness into my heart then they have had when their wine or oyl increaseth By David you may judge of all the faithfull they esteem more of the love of God and the sense or perswasion of this more than the whole world Let the prophane bruitish men of the world say as some did in Chrysostomes time whom he reproveth Give me that which is sweet although it choke me So let me have my pleasures my lusts though they damn me The godly on the other side if raised up to this heavenly transfiguration as it were to have the spirit of Adoption enabling them to call God Father and to walk under the light of his grace and favour they will say It is good to be here So that the desires and earnest longings of mens hearts do divide the world into two parts Some and they are only few who with David say As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so do their souls after God Yea Their souls break for the longing they have to God at all times But then others they seek the things of this world in the first place Let them have their pleasures their wealth their honours then with the Reubenites they will sit down and go no further because they see the Land is a good and pleasant Land never desiring to go into Canaan To open this Doctrine consider First That all the while a man is meerly natural and dead in his sins he is not affected with nor can he desire any spiritual mercy Even as dead men are not affected with pleasant sights or melodious sounds No wonder then though we do out of the Gospel shew such all the glory of Heaven yet they will not fall down and worship Christ because they are no wayes sensible or apprehensive of a better good Can a Worm that crawleth upon the ground live the life of an Angel or a man Alas that knoweth nothing but to crawl on the ground and feed on the dust of the earth Thus it is with every carnal man speak to him of the savour of God of the light of his countenance he knoweth no more what you mean than the bruit beast doth what reason is Besides sinne hath so infected and polluted the heart and appetite of every natural man that he calleth good evil and evil good he takes sweet for bitter and bitter for sweet That as the Swine loveth to wallow in its mire and delighteth in that more than in the sweetest garden that is Or as they say of those blind Beetles that live in muck and dung but sweet things do presently kill them thus it is with every natural man he is not only not affected but he is contrarily disposed to heavenly things Rom. 8. The wisdome of the flesh is enmity against God The wisdome the best understanding parts and knowledge that he hath is as full of malice against holy things as a Toad of poison The Greek word doth not only signifie his intellectual but his practical wisdom and affection he doth not say He hath savoury knowledge of heavenly things Sapientia est sapida scientia And as Bernard Sapiens est cui res sapiunt prout sunt Heavenly things savour as heavenly earthly things as earthly But in every natural man his appetite and taste is wholly disordered he finds no excellency loveliness in heavenly things which yet to a gracious heart are matter of exceeding delight and ravishment Hence in the second place Till a man be regenerated till he be made a new creature and endowed with an heavenly heart he is no sutable subject for these heavenly things Every one then as he is affected and disposed so he judgeth if earthly then all his affections move that way if heavenly then they are turned the contrary way As you see in mixed and compounded bodies
the grace of Adoption yet the Apostle confirmeth that speech because we are all his creatures but the good Angels and good men are the sons of God in a more endeared respect We shall not insist long neither upon this though the Scripture make it the treasury of all our consolation only we may briefly consider What it is to be our Father And First It implieth his spiritual begetting us by the Word For before conversion the Devil is our Father we may say Our Father which art in Hell if we were to pray to him as our Saviour told the Pharisees not Abraham but the Devil was their Father and all because we have his likeness upon us and his works we do But when God by his Spirit doth change us and make us to partake of his Divine Nature then we are sons Sonnes by Adoption and sonnes by Regeneration It is not then every one that God is thus a Father to he must have the Image of God and his likeness Therefore though many call him Father yet he is a Judge and an enemy to them because they are contrary to him in nature and actions Secondly As God is thus a Father in respect of a metaphorical generation so also in regard of all his paternal love and care to those that are his No bowels of father or mother are comparable to his Therefore the Prophet Isaiah makes his love to transcend the mothers love and that to her sucking infant Isa 49. 50. Insomuch that all our doubts and fears may presently be subdued if we consider he is a Father Why art thou so disquieted as if like Melchizedech thou were without father and mother Thou art afraid of hell and condemnation but will a Father do thus Again thou doubtest about many earthly and sensible comforts what thou shalt eat or drink and doth not our Saviour say Matth. 6. 8. Your Father knoweth what ye have need of Improve then the relation of a Father think what care love and bowels God hath put into thy heart who art a father to thy children thou never doubtest of thy affections to them but many times of their affections and dutifulness to thee And is not this fatherly affection much more in God Thirdly He is not only our Father but he sendeth his Spirit into our hearts to assure us of this and to be more affected with it Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 6. For whereas in nature there the child by a natural instinct is carried out to his father and to call upon him It is not thus in grace for when God is become our Father then we need the Spirit of God to assure us of this to make us believe it of our selves we should rather conclude he is our enemy and our Judge but this Spirit of God putteth a filial confidence into us Again it doth not only assure us but inableth us against all those doubts and jealousies we have to the contrary to cry Father that denoteth the soul is in a very great agony many objections and oppositions it hath but yet we are enabled against our hearts and against the Devils temptations thus to do Lastly He is a Father and therefore doth afflict us and chastise us for our good Insomuch that it is from his fatherly love to afflict us as well as to give us of his mercies and if as the Apostle urgeth Heb. 12. 9. We reverenced our fathers after the flesh when they chastized us how much rather our Father after the Spirit which cannot miscarry or erre in his afflictions upon us To this Doctrine let us adde the Extension of it Our Father Paul saith not my Father or the father of Abraham and such eminent Saints but our Father Observe God is a Father to the meanest and weakest believer as well as the strongest Hence our Saviour taught all the godly to say Our Father In this expression is implied First Appropriation and application It is not enough to acknowledge God a Father but we must bring this relation home to our hearts Our Father my Father and thy Father Secondly It implieth That God is so the Father of one believer that he is the Father of all the rest Earthly parents have sometimes so many children that they cannot provide for all at least so liberally but God can do as much for any one child of his as if he had no more his riches and inheritance is given to every one All his children are heirs and have as much as if there had been but one child Thirdly There is implied the unity and agreement of all believers amongstthemselves They have one Father why then should there be such divisions amongst them The Apostle Ephes 4. 6. urgeth this one God and Father of all one Lord one Spirit one God and Father These are brought as arguments of unity not meerly because they are one but one ●o believers All believers have but one Lord one Spirit one God and therefore are to manifest this unity Use From both the Doctrines joyned together of Direction with what Evangelical quiet and joyfull spirits we should live upon this divine truth Gods being our Father should be the Gospel harp to drive out every unbelieving and troublesome thought 1 John 1. 3. Truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Sonne Jesus Christ Our fellowship it should be no new or strange thing to us SERM XXVIII Of the Dominion and Lordship of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2 COR. 1. 2. And from the Lord Jesus Christ WE are arrived now to the last particular in this verse and that is the second Principle or Cause of this Grace and Peace prayed for which is Jesus Christ So that the Lord Christ is here conjoyned with God the Father in bestowing of these spiritual mercies In the words therefore we have the Description of Christ 1. By his Name Jesus 2. By his Office Christ Both which we have already considered in the former verse There remaineth therefore the Relation by which he is represented to us and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord. Paul here prayeth for Grace and Peace from Christ our Lord as well as from the Father which is a sure and strong argument of the Divine Nature of Christ for it is God alone that can give these spiritual mercies if Christ were not truly God he could not give these divine priviledges And hence also it followeth That it 's our duty to pray to Christ seeing he is the Author of such mercies The blasphemous Hereticks of late have differed among themselves Socinus and Franciscus Davidis about praying to Christ The later denying it lawfull to call upon Christ in prayer The other granting in the New Testament examples of it as when Stephen said Lord Jesus receive my Spirit c. So that it is lawfull but yet he saith There is no precept to command it But no wonder at this seeing he holdeth That prayer in the general was never a duty
commanded in the Old Testament We see by this Text that if Christ be the fountain of grace and peace as God the Father is then are we to pray to one as well as the other or to the Father in the Name of Christ The heretical exception against this place is That because the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not in the original therefore he would have the word Father relate to Christ as well as to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our as if the sense were From God our Father and the Father of Jesus Christ Indeed our Saviour doth say I go to my Father and your Father John 20. 17. But then he saith my Father in the first place whereas here in the Text it 's said Our Father and afterwards in the heretical opinion should follow The Father of Christ but that Christ in these salutations is meant as a conjoyned cause is very evident John 2. 2. where the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is expressed from the Father and from the Lord Christ the Sonne of the Father A second cavil that needeth a vindication may be in that Christ is said to be Lord as distinguished from God Therefore it may be thought that Christ is not God To this it 's answered That it 's true in the New Testament though Christ be sometimes called God yet the more common title given to him is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially when God the Father and Christ are mentioned together but as when Christ is called Lord it doth not exclude God the Father from being the Lord also So neither when God the Father is called God doth it exclude Christ from being God But you may say Why doth the Scripture if Christ be God and the fountain of grace as well as God the Father alwayes put Christ after God The answer is That though absolutely as God there be an equality yet when personally considered so that divine order is attended unto whereby the Father is of himself alone but the Sonne of the Father especially if we consider Christ as Mediatour so although God yet because in that work he is God-man and in that office inferiour to the Father hence it is that the Scripture speaks of him as the fountain and Christ as the stream or rather second fountain That of God are all things and by Christ are all things It is good to understand these mysteries so farre as the Scripture is a guide to us that we be not involved in those damnable Socinian Doctrines which overthrow these fundamentals That which I shall observe is from the relation attributed to Christ Lord viz. That Jesus Christ is a Lord. Thus he is often called in the Scripture yea Revel 19. 16. he is said to have on his thigh this name King of kings and Lord of lords So 1 Tim. 6. 15. The blessed and only Potentate the King of kings and Lord of lords It 's observed that these titles were given to the Persian Monarchs because of their transcendent dominion but here it is applied to Christ transcendently even to them also for he is said to be the only Potentate as if none were Lord but him Hence it is noted of Augustus as a providential thing That the year Christ was born in he refused to be called Dominus and so some Christian great men would not be called Domini but Domini diminitively out of reverence to Christ but the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so Lord may be attributed to men as well as King and head so that still it be acknowledged he is Lord of lords and that none is Lord like him But let us briefly open this Doctrine that thereby our hearts may be more raised up with this greatness of Christ for he is a Lord not only for his own great dominion and glory but for the believers good and benefit it is matter both of great comfort and encouragement to know that Christ is Lord. And. First We are to consider That Christ hath a two-fold Lordship Kingdom or Dominion The one Divines call Natural and Essential The other Dispensatory and Mediatory The former he hath as God and so is Lord in the same sense that the Father is Lord. The second he hath as he is Mediator God-man and therefore it is in some respects distinct from the former God the Father is not Lord in that peculiar and proper respect as Christ is For although that be true which Divines say That Christs natural or essential Kingdom doth virtually and eminently contain all that his Mediatory doth yet there is some formal respect to be made Now as Christs former Lordship and Dominion was natural and necessary so this may in some sense be said to be given him or as the Scripture saith Act. 2. 36. He was made by the Father both Lord and Christ appointed to be the Lord and the Head of his Church Not that this doth any wayes evacuate his Divine Nature as if because he were made Lord that therefore he was not so essentially for nothing was given Christ to perfect him what he received of his Father in time did only manifest that he was God for none can be Lord and Head of his Church but he who is truly God If therefore as he is Mediator it be said to be given him to be Lord and to have a Name above all Names yet this doth not deny but prove his Divine Nature because none but God can have such power and do such things Secondly This Official or Mediatory Kingdom hath its degrees it is militant and triumphant Militant and so the Lord Christ hath not as yet subdued all his enemies under his feet it doth not follow that Christ is not Lord because every thing is not wholly conquered because there is sinne and the Devil working still For as David was King although still there was a great part to be conquered by him he was King at Hebron when he was not made King over Israel yet he had a right to all before he was in actual possession So it is with our Lord Christ he is made Lord over all only there is time required to bring all things in subjection to him And as for his Triumphant and consummate Kingdom or Lordship that will be at the Day of Judgement when having saved all his people and overcome all their enemies then he shall take the triumph of all his victories And here we may take notice how to understand that difficult place 1 Cor. 15. 24 25. where Christ is said After all enemies are subdued to deliver up his Kingdom to the Father The Socinians urge that to shew that his Dominion and Kingdom will be but for a season whereas the Scripture in many other places maketh his Kingdom to be without end Luk. 1. 32 33. To reconcile this therefore you must know That the Apostle doth there speak of Christs Kingdom as it is militant and in respect of that Dominion and Government which now Christ
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort THe Inscription hath been fully considered we proceed to the other parts of the Chapter which are 1. An Exordium 2. An Apologetical Narration against those calumnies that were charged upon him by the false Apostles This Text is part of the Exordium or his Introductory beginning to what matter he was delivering to them and it is by way of Doxclogie and Thanksgiving For the most part the Apostle begins his Epistles with cordial affectionate blessing and praising of God and that commonly for the gifts and graces which God had bestowed on them he writeth unto but here he blesseth God chiefly for those consolations and supports which he himself had from God and this he doth partly to give all glory and honour to God partly to animate and encourage all to suffer for Christ they would not be losers by it and partly to stop the mouths of his accusers when they should see that all the afflictions he underwent did turn to his and the Churches good Now in this Thanksgiving passage we may observe 1. The praise it self expressed in that word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blessed 2. The Object of it God which is 1. Illustrated from his relative title to Christ The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 2. From his Efficiency which is two-fold The Father of mercies 2. The God of all comfort So that this Text doth represent God in a most sweet comfortable and ravishing relation to us The Apostle stands as it were here upon Mount Gerizzim to bless the people of God we may here stand and see as it were the glory of God passe by It is not the God of all vengeance and fury It 's not the God terrible in his judgements that will not in any wise acquit the guilty but the Father of mercies and the God of all consolation Let then the troubled and grieved soul who looketh alwayes upon God as angry as ready to destroy bring with the widow its cruises and fill them with the pleasant oil that will runne out of this Text. Certainly if David say of Gods word in general That it 's sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb much more is it applicable to this verse I shall begin with the Praise it self in those words Blessed be God Paul you heard begins most of his Epistles in this manner and some have thought that all our prayers should begin with thanksgiving because the heart is hereby raised up sooner to Heaven The consideration of Gods love being like the fire that will put the soul into sweet distillations But certainly the method of prayer whether with confession first or thanksgiving is not commanded but left arbitrary Only this the soul must remember to be as diligent and carefull in praising of God as praying to God To open the word the Scripture speaks of a three-fold Blessing 1. Of Gods blessing of us 2. Of our blessing of God And these differ exceedingly For God blesseth us efficiently by exhibiting his mercies to us We bless God not by adding any good to him but declaratively only Gods benedicere is benefacere his words are works but our blessing as Aquinas on the place is only recognoscitium and expressivum an acknowledgment only and celebration of that goodness which God hath 3. There is mans blessing of man and that is two-fold either Charitativè Matth. 5. 44. which is to be done to our very enemies Psal 129. 8. Thus Job 31. 20. speaketh of it by way of comfort that the poor whom he had refreshed blessed him Or Potestativè and that is when Parents and Ministers such as are in Office and Power do bless their Inferiours and this God doth more solemnly ratifie and confirm Thus the Priests Numb 6. 23 24. were in a solemn manner to bless the people and in this sense the Apostle argueth The less is blessed of the better Heb. 7. 7. And because by blessing the greatness of a thing is set forth hence it is used sometimes for consecrating 1 Sam. 9. 13. Samuel is said to bless the Sacrifice So 1 Cor. 10. 15. The Cup of blessing which we bless Though we must not understand it of a Popish consecration although there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may seem to be one thing And because those who did bless others did commonly come with presents and gifts hence it is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used for gifts and the fruit of liberality 2 Cor. 9. 5 6. The Hebrew word to bless is observed by an Antiphrase to curse so it 's used three or four times in the beginning of Job and 1 King 21. Eustathius saith Aretius observeth also that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Heathens indeed had a superstition that they thought an ill omen in words hence was their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expressing terrible things by gracefull names as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when they cursed so they called it Morbus sacer● But the Scripture doth not attend to that superstition It is for gravities sake that it useth such an expression Though a learned man maketh that phrase in Job to be a Metonymy of the consequent because those do sometimes depart from others to whom they used to wish well saying valere Afterwards that word came to be used for a renouncing of all former friendship so he thinketh the word to bless might signifie that is to renounce God and not own his worship more But come we to the Observation which is That to bless and praise God for all his mercies is a duty that the people of God ought to be carefull and diligent in This cordial hearty blessing of God is greatly neglected some are borne down with the sense of their sins and unworthiness Some are greatly bowed down under the several afflictions God exerciseth them with Others are devoured with the worldly cares and discontents of their soul So that it is a very rare thing to meet with a Christian that walks with such a chearfull humble and thankfull spirit that he studieth all the mercies of God to him and is not willing any fragment should perish As Flies stick always upon the rugged parts of the glass and fall from that which is smooth Thus even Gods own children if they have any affliction if they want but one mercy they would have this doth more trouble and torture them than the thousand mercies they have from God do refresh and revive them That therefore we may make conscience of this duty and be much in that we may as the Apostle enjoyneth Col. 3. 17. In all things whether in word or deed be giving thanks to God Let us consider how much goeth to make a thankfull spirit what will enable us that we shall not alwayes lie among the tombs as it were affright our selves with our own sad thoughts but entertain
our works and giving all to the grace of God who worketh according to his own purpose and will Oh what coals of fire will this be in thy bosome To think why doth God do this to me What moveth him Is God necessitated to it Can he not do otherwise Would he be unjust if he did it not And this further will be aggravated when we consider the mercy comparatively with others that want such if for spiritual mercies we compare them with the damned Angels that are utterly cut off from the least crum of any spiritual mercy though so noble and excellent creatures may not this astonish thee And if thou sayest These are not of the same nature with thee How many are there of the same flesh and bloud in the same vicinity where thou livest of the fame calling and profession yea of the same parentage and yet they are forsaken by God and left to their natural deserts whereas he hath pitched his favour upon thee to justifie sanctifie and at last to glorifie thee Certainly thou art a stock and a stone if such discriminating mercy as this doth not affectionately possess thee In the last place The universality of the mercies thou enjoyest will much heighten in the consideration of them All that thou seest thou hearest thou eatest thou feelest yea thou thinkest and apprehendest is a mercy There is nothing within thee without thee or about thee but it is a mercy To hear is a mercy to see is a mercy to think without madness and distraction is a mercy Every thing that is not hell is a mercy to thee All the creatures as Psal 8. the Sunne the Sturres the beasts of the field are wholly mercies if then a man set himself to meditation after this manner will he not find the goodness of God like Ezekiels waters To ascend higher and higher till they come over his head But to finish at last this Subject take notice of the encouragements to this duty of a thankful blessing and praising soul that so if thy heart at last be throughly raised up to this duty thou mayest praise God for this truth that provoketh thee to praise him And First The more thou blessest God the more wilt thou have cause to blesse him For to the thankfull heart God multiplieth his mercies as many times because thou doest not take notice of his goodness to thee or lookest upon his mercies as a debt to thee or thou takest the mercies God hath given thee and usest them as weapons against him therefore he taketh away thy mercies from thee to make thee prize them the more whereas to the soul that taketh every mercy as the hen every drop of water and immediately looks up to Heaven that will take up every fragment that nothing be lost As thou blessest God declaratively God will bless thee really Christ will bless thee as he did those few loaves by multiplying of them Secondly Consider this is all thou canst do to God for all his several mercies What doth God require of thee after all that he hath done for thy soul and body Is it any thing else but to magnifie his name to give him the glory of it And this doth not at all adde unto the greatness of God he is not made the more perfect and blessed in himself by all the glory thou givest to him So that indeed it is the greatest glory that thou art capable of that God will accept of blessing from thee that he will own praises out of thy mouth that he doth not rebuke thee as Christ did the Devils when they confessed He was the Son of the living God Thirdly This blessing and praising of God will keep thee in a joyfull active and fruitfull way Those that sing at their work dispatch it with greater facility And thus it is the soul filled with cordial thankfulness to God doth more for God then many others who are clogged with dejecting and discouraging thoughts See whether the cause of all thy heaviness yea the prevailing of lusts and passions upon thee be not want of chearfull blessing of God The joy of the Lord is our strength Lastly Consider the example of David how unwearied he is in this work never thinking that his soul doth enough herein and therefore because he cannot discharge this duty to his desire he calls upon all the creatures of the world almost to help him therein yea the very Ice and Snow and such inanimate creatures how much more Angels and men must joyn with him to praise God In Austin's time some were named Deo gratias certainly we should so abound in this duty that it may be truly said unto God as Psal 22. Thou inhabitest the praises of Israel SERM. XXXI How Christ is the Sonne of God And how the consideration thereof is the foundation of all a Christians comfort 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ THe Duty of Blessing with the Object of it being dispatched let us now come to that Amplification and Illustration which the Apostle ufeth in describing of it And The first is From a personal and relative respect The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Even the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That particle is by way of interpretation and explication What he meaneth by God viz. That he doth not take the word as it is often absolutely for the essence of the Divine Nature as common to the three Persons but relatively and in the distinct personality of the first Person and therefore said to be The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ For the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Stephanus observeth may be rendred by Et sed tunc etiam c. as the subject matter requireth The Apostle doth in other places delight to use this expression Rom. 15. 6. 2 Cor. 11. 31. Ephes 3. 14. In which places the Apostle seemeth with much affection and cordial enlargement to make mention of this relative Title in God the Father for this is the treasure of our comfort herein are all our mercies contained that we and Christ have the same Father he by Nature and we by Grace So that we are not to consider of Gods paternal relation to Christ as a speculative doctrinal truth but as practical and the ground of all consolation to us Hence John 20. 17. Christ by way of comfort tells them He ascends to his Father and their Father And indeed without Christ we cannot behold him as a Father but as a severe and dreadfull Judge Only when we say this Doctrine of the Fathers relation to Christ a Sonne is so full of comfort you must not understand it absolutely and nakedly as the second Person in the Trinity but as assuming the humane Nature into a Personal Subsistency Therefore he saith The Father of Jesus Christ which is the description of his Person in both his Natures So that we must not look upon the Sonne as the second Person alone in
the Trinity but as assuming our Nature for otherwise the truth would be no wayes comfortable to us if the Sonne of God had not also been made man The Observation shall be the words in the Text viz. That God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Which truth shall be first explicated and confirmed Doctrinally and then illustrated Practically As for the Doctrinal part the Socinians they have raised up much dust and have obscured the point with their subtill heretical depravations For whereas the Church of God formerly did believe Christ to be the Son of the Father by eternal generation They deny this reason and assert some new ones of their own invention Yea and the Remonstrants also though they assert Christs Sonship from the Father by eternal generation yet they affirm also a second way of communication of this Sonship and that is By a gracious vouchsafing of supream power and glory to him So that they must acknowledge two filiations in Christ the one Eternal by that secret and ineffable generation the other Temporal or in time viz. A gracious communication of supream power and glory to him But this is false as is to be shewed But to explain this Consider First In the Scripture we read of four ways whereby a person may be entituled to be the Son of God and to have God his Father For as for that more common and general notion whereby God is said to be a Father in respect of Creation and so to all men Isa 54. 8. And the Apostle sanctifieth that expression of the Poet For we are his off spring we do not here meddle with And 1. There is a Sonne of God by Creation after the Image of God Thus Adam Luk. 3. ult is called The Sonne of God and the Angels also Job 1. 6. These are the Sonnes of God and have him for a Father because they they were at first created after his Image in holiness 2. God is a Father by gracious Adoption Thus all believers have received The Spirit of Adoption being thereby enabled to call God Abba Father 3. A Person is said to be the Sonne of God by communication of some power and office Thus our Saviour argued from the lesse to the greater That if they were gods to whom the word of God came viz. who were appointed by God to be Magistrates how much more was he God Lastly There is the Son of God by eternal generation and thus Christ is onely Hence he is called His only Sonne Secondly Take notice That Christ is called the Sonne of God only from one respect and that is because of eternal generation from the Father It is not my purpose to enter into a Dispute about this secret and unspeakable mystery This is enough for us to know That Christ is never called the Sonne of God or God said to be his Father but because of that eternal generation as the Apostle proveth Heb. 1. from Psal 27. Thou art my Sonne This day have I begotten thee which is so attributed to Christ that thereby he hath a supereminency to all the Angels who yet are called the Sonnes of God upon a gracious foundation Hence 1. Christ is not called The Sonne of God because he is predestinated to be the Mediator of his people 1 Pet. 1. 20. For he is not therefore the Son of God because fore-ordained to be Head of his Church but this latter doth presuppose and is grounded upon the former because he was the second Person in Trinity and Son of the Father therefore was he ordained thus to be a Mediator for his people 2. Christ is not called the Sonne of God because of his Incarnation or that wonderfull manner of the production of his Humane Nature in the womb Indeed some orthodox Divines and so Maldonate the Papist do grant That Christ was called the Sonne of God because of that extraordinary conception Luk. 1. 32 35. for the Evangelist seemeth to favour such an interpretation because when the Angel had said The holy Ghost should overshadow the Virgin Mary he presently addeth Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Sonne of God Now though these men hold Christ was called thus the Sonne of God because of that extraordinary and peculiar way of the production of his Humane Nature yet they acknowledge his Sonship by eternal generation also But it is well observed by other learned men That it is an impudent concession to the adversaries of Christs Divine Nature to grant Christ is ever called the Sonne of God but because of eternal generation And therefore that expression Therefore also c. is not an argument from the Cause but the Sign That extraordinary conception was not a Cause but a true and sure Sign that he was the Sonne of God and therefore it 's said He shall be called not be the Sonne of God which relateth to the manifestation and notification of it And no doubt the Angel doth allude the ninth of Isaiah where a Virgins bringing forth a Sonne is made a Sign of his being Emmanuel God with us For if this extraordinary conception had been a cause of this filiation he would rather he called The Sonne of the holy Ghost then of God the Father because immediately conceived by him Neither is that of Maldonate true excepting against this interpretation That a pure man might have been so conceived by the holy Ghost and it would not follow that he was God properly For besides that it is a bold assertion to say so we must take this extraordinary conception in its circumstances as it was fo promised by the Prophet and thus it could not agree to any but to God 3. Neither is Christ called the Son of God because of his sanctification and mission into the word as John 10. 35. Nor 4. Because of his Resurrection from the dead His eduction from the earth as it were a womb to life being like a new birth Nor 5. Because of his being placed at the right hand of God Heb. 1. 4. For although in those Texts Christ is proved to be the Sonne of God by his Sanctification and Mission into the world by his Resurrection and by his Exaltation yet not so as if these did make him to be a Sonne So that he was not a Sonne before but by way of declaration and manifestation When these things were done there was a plain discovery that he was the true and proper Sonne of God he was the Sonne of God from all eternity but none could so rise and be exalted but he who was so And therefore the Socinians who make Christ the Sonne of God by degrees by his Incarnation and first and afterwards more perfectly a Son in his Exaltation do most palpably wrest the Scripture The Summe therefore of this Discourse is That as Christ was called the Sonne of man only because born of a woman so the Sonne of God only because by eternal
fit and ready to receive comfort For all the while thou art enlightned only and hast not an heart fitted to receive it thou art like Moses that saw the good Land of promise but he could not enter into it And thus indeed it falls out sometimes that when the mind is enlightned enough yet the heart is heavy They cannot delight and rejoyce in the promise they would gladly do it they heartily pray for it but their heart sinketh down like a stone within them Therefore God hath a further degree in comforting and that is by raising up the heart by making it ready to receive consolation For as God can humble the proud heart and soften the hard heart so he can easily comfort and revive the grieved heart Thus as it is in sanctification it 's not enough for God to illuminate the mind unless he also change the heart and make us to will and to do So it 's not enough for God to teach us our duty about comfort but actually to work the heart for it Hence 2 Cor. 7. 6. you have a notable Attribute given to God God that comforteth those that are cast down Isa 51. 11 12. See there with what command God speaketh That they shall have comfort They shall obtain gladnesse and joy So that as God is above the heart in conversion thus he is also in consolation He will comfort and what man or Devil can hinder it As in matter of grace God declareth as Omnipotency and Sovereignty when he saith I will take away the heart of stone and give an heart of flesh so in matter of consolation I will take away the grieved the troubled the despairing heart and give an heart of joy peace and heavenly rest of soul In the third place God doth comfort removendo prohibens by removing whatsoever is obstructive and destructive of comfort As 1. By chaining up the Devil who is not only an enemy to the graces but also the comforts of Gods people As the holy Ghost is a Comforter so the Devil is the prince of darkness a Tempter to unbelief to sad and soul yea and bodymurdering thoughts God therefore doth restrain him in his temptations in his sad suggestions For we see by Job's instance the Devil cannot go any further than he is licensed by God himself 2. God doth subdue not onely the Devil without but also that corruption within which doth vehemently incline to unbelieving vexing and tormenting thoughts For although a man naturally be in security in self-ease and carnal presumption yet when once awakened for sinne and feeling the terrour of the Lord thereby then we are as peevish as froward against the promises as ever formerly we were against the precepts Adam endeavours to hide himself from God upon his sinne We see in Cain and Judas what sad and dreadfull effects the guilt of conscience would work in every one did not God command those winds and tempests to be still Therefore God doth repress these and thereby we are more ready for comfort 3. God doth by his grace prevent and keep us from sinne he daily preserveth us from many sad falls which if plunged into we should presently chase away all our comfort When David was left and fell into those gross sins all his joy was immediately lost therefore he complaineth of his broken bones and prayeth for joy to be restored to him what horrour what hell would quickly be raised in thy soul every day every night upon every temptation Did not the grace of God preserve thee Spira lost all comfort by Apostasie And thus many Christians did in times of persecution in a great measure by their revolt though they recovered again Therefore little doest thou know how much God worketh for thy comfort by preventing such sins which would make horrible wounds and gashes in thy soul Lastly God comforts thee by delivering thee from all such Doctrines though taught by many of great and eminent learning which yet in their own nature tend to make the heart uncomfortable How wonderfully did God work for the comfort of Luther who professed the unspeakable tremblings and fears of soul he was in and being in captivity by the Doctrine of works as then tought in Popery he could have no comfort but often wished he had never been a man till God comforted him by delivering him from those false Doctrines Thus the Doctrine of the Apostasie of true Saints doth utterly dash all comfort from the believer he must necessarily be in miserable tormenting fears all the day long And so have we done with that immediate way of Gods comforting The Mediate way is by those means which he hath appointed to be as Conduits running wine for us And they are 1. The Scriptures David professeth much quickning and comfort he had by them So Rom. 15. 4. The comfort of the Scriptures They are a cordial a tree of life They direct to comfort exhort to comfort all such as are poor in spirit 2. The Ministers They are sons of consolation and comfort The Word they preach is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the joyfull noise Even the very feet of such who bring the glad tidings are said to be blessed They have a tongue of the learned to speak a seasonable word for such as are contrite in spirit They are not to quench the broken reed Though to the obstinate sinner we bring the hammer and fire of the Word yet to the broken heart we bring balm and oil Lastly God comforts by the Sacraments In them he doth peculiarly seal peace and comfort Therefore is the Lords Supper called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a giving of thanks Thus doth the Lord by these means abundantly provide for our consolation SERM. XXXVII That Believers only are the Subjects of the Comforts and Consolations of God 2 COR. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation THe next particular which followeth in order as the Text stands divided is the Subject whom God doth thus comfort and that is said to be Us who comforteth us that is both us believers in a general sense and us Apostles in a particular manner For they being like Uriah in the fore-front of the battel and more assaulted by the Devil within and enemies without they do need the greater comfort But we shall handle it in the most large sense and observe That God is a God of all comfort unto believers only For this Us in the Text is not only determinative to shew who they are into whose wounds God doth thus pour oyl but also restrictive to such and such only Indeed the wicked ones of the world may have comfort in outward mercies They may rejoyce in the good things of this life and this is acknowledged by Solomon To be a gift of God but these worldly joyes do become a sinne and a curse to them The Poet said well O miseri quorum gaudia crimen habet Their very joyes do become like wine to men in a feavor though refreshing
sinnes when repented of cannot barre off great consolations and indeed such need strong consolations for their great conflicts and agonies If Christ put not both armes under them they hardly keep from fainting away Mary Magdalen and Peter were in a special manner owned and comforted by Christ though they had deeply wounded their souls with sinne We see Paul though so notorious a wretch against Christ yet when converted God doth not upbraid him with former rebellions but in the number of those who have peace and joy he reckons himself and the truth is such are most humble tender and melting under comforts What Lord such a beast such a Devil as I have comfort What Lord I that might have been a Cain a Judas crying out My sins are greater than I can bear That like Dives might have begged for one drop of water to cool my scorching heat but have been denied Shall such an one have comfort and consolation SERM. XXXVIII How God will comfort his People in all both their spiritual and temporal Afflictions which all the Art of Philosophy can never do 2 COR. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation THe second particular in this Text hath been dispatched viz. the Subject whom God comforteth Us Apostles and believers in the general such onely have a right and interest comforts Why such onely have a right will be treated on more opportunely in the procedure of the verse We therefore go forward to the third part of the Text as it stands divided and that is the Object matter wherein this comfort is communicated to us and that is for the nature of it said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tribulation and for the extension of it all tribulation Tribulation The Greek word signifieth Such an affliction as doth even oppresse and squeeze a man as it were Hence it is translated sometimes persecution Act. 11. 19. The Churches afflictions are called persecutions to shew the voluntary malicious endeavours of her enemies who run up and down to seize on such as belong to Christ which implieth also that the godly did not rashly and sinfully put themselves into their enemies hands but that according to Christs command they did flee when their adversaries sought for them And this may be done in faith not in sinfull fear as appeareth Heb. 11. where some are said to hide themselves in caves and holes yet by faith But the word is commonly rendred tribulation having sometimes the epithete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added to it as Mat. 24. 21. And the Latine word tribulation answers the Greek well which say some comes from the flail of the thresher that bruiseth the corn Or as others from thistles that are sharp and vexing Well the word signifieth such a tribulation as is bruising pricking sadly molesting Yet as out of the same root cometh the sweet Rose as well as the sharp prickles so from the same condition shall arise joy as well as grief Observe That there is no tribulation or affliction Gods people can fall into but God will comfort them therein The Text saith all tribulation let it be what it will be Do not say Every tribulation but mine Take heed of thinking thy dungeon is so dark that no ray or beam of this Sunne can come unto thee For as Paul argueth in another case Heb. 2. 8. In that all things are put under subjection to Christ it is manifest he left nothing that is not put under him So in that God comforteth in all tribulation it is manifest that there is no tribulation exempted or left out Take heed of that prophane Question Is God the God of the hils as well as of the valleys Think not that God is limited so as if there were some kind of water that he cannot turn into wine some stones that he cannot convert into bread But let us explain this And First God doth comfort his people in all tribulations for the several kinds of them The tribulations that may fall upon the people of God are of such different sorts that it is very difficult to number them as it is the sand upon the Sea-shore yet we may divide them into these two sorts The soul-troubles in the general or spiritual ones and the external or temporal ones In both these God will not leave his people comfortless Their spiritual troubles they may empty themselves into several chanels As 1. There is a soul-trouble arising in the heart because of Gods displeasure for sinne This trouble David doth sadly groan under many times and this is the greatest evil that the godly can grapple with When God hideth his face from David it 's neither his Kingdom or success or any great prosperity he hath that can be so much as a drop of water to cool his thirsty scorched soul Job also was in this troubled condition when he complaineth That the arrows of the Almighty did stick in him What comfort or joy could Job find in any thing in the world while God was thus frowning on him So that the soul in this case is most remote from comfort Bring him riches honours you do but as they that gave vinegar and gall to Christ for to drink you increase sorrow more yet at last we find both David and Job were comforted God could and did of that chaos and dark confusion they felt within them work much light and joy And certainly if there be any of Gods children that live and die without comfort having no evidence or assurance of Gods favour this is not because God cannot comfort or because God is not gracious and pitifull to such but because God seeth it best not to give comfort to such Seeing therefore it 's God that breaketh the heart it 's he that makes the soul tremble it is he that convinceth of sin and humbleth the soul under it So it is the same God only that can command comforts when he speaketh the word all sorrow and tormenting fears shall flie away as dark mists before the glorious light of the Sun Oh then let such dejected and overwhelmed souls remember the Omnipotency of God in comforting as well as in other things Say O Lord my heart would break and break again if I had nothing but men or Angels to comfort but I have to do with thee who art the Father of spirits and so canst put into the soul gladnesse of heart as well as grace A second spiritual trouble is The want of that sanctifying and mortifying power they desire against their lusts They find the reliques of corruption too prevalent their hearts are not in their own power They complain and say I command my hands and they move as I would have them I stirre my feet and they obey presently but when I charge my soul to be heavenly believing to be chearfull patient it doth not at all yeeld to me Paul Rom. 7. did in a most pathetical manner complain of this conflict and agony with him The
incestuous person whom sorrow had almost swallowed up as a whirlpool These that call for a drop of water as it were to cool their scorching souls and cannot have it To such as these we are to apply our selves with all tendernesse to comfort them as the Apostle exhorted the Corinthians For seeing that a wounded spirit is more hardly born than any outward misery whatsoever no wonder that in this case if ever we come with all comforting medicines to heal them and revive them We read the Lord Christ when he was in those agonies conflicting with the sense of Gods wrath that even he himself had an Angel to comfort him Must Christ the Sonne of God have an Angel sent to comfort him How much more then a poor wretched sinner ready to fall into hell with the burden of his sins This is fully represented by Elihu Job 33. 28. where speaking of a man chastened by the Lord and consuming away so that he doth even abhor to eat his bread If there come an Interpreter a Messenger one amongst a thousand that can shew to such his uprightnesse that make it evident to him that he is no hypocrite but the truth of grace abideth in him then his flesh shall be fresh as a childs he shall pray to God and he will be favourable and he shall see his face with joy See what a wonderfull change such a messenger may make he doth even raise him from the dead he that was pininig away is returned to his youth and this is for spiritual troubles Again in the second place There are outward troubles and it 's our duty to comfort such also and endeavour to turn their water into wine and of such troubles happily the Apostle speaketh chiefly in this Text. For although God be ready to fill their hearts with joy yet he will have this done many times by the help of others because we being members in the same body are to be accordingly serviceable to one another Hence in the second place Every one in trouble doth greatly need the assistance and help of others to comfort them Take the most godly Minister or the most able Christian who have been most eminent and successefull to comfort others yet when they have been tempted and cast down themselves they have not bin able to make use of those directions they have given to others As Physicians though never so able to help others yet in their own diseases they need the advice of others Insomuch that there is no Christian in any trouble can say I need not the comfort of any the help of any I can support and comfort my self well enough Thus Paul Rom. 1. 12. though so eminent an Apostle caught up into the third Heaven yet he did long to see the Romans That he might be comforted with them though that might be in respect of their graces to see this flourish as in other places Ye are my Crown and my Joy if you stand fast in the Lord. But howsoever we see job though so eminent yet not able to pour oyl into his own wounds he is without comfort and cannot help himself Now there are these Reasons Why those who are afflicted though never so able and gracious yea excellently skilfull to comfort others yet they themselves need help from others in their temptations First Because their temptations do darken and obnubilate their own judgements and so they are not able to see that ground and those arguments of comfort which others may It is with them as those who would behold their face in a broken glass or in muddied streams like those that look through a green glass they judge every thing green while judgement is kept clear though faith be weak yet still there is some support but then is the soul wholly cast down when the eye is become darkness when in stead of a Father it apprehends God a Judge when instead of beholding the gracious works of Gods Spirit in themselves they think they see nothing but hypocrisie and rottenness in themselves Oh now how welcome is such an one of a thousand who shew to that man his uprightness Secondly The most eminent in their troubles need comfort from others Because the sense and feeling of their grief doth wholly possesse them so that they mind nothing else Whatsoever it be that is a burden upon them with this they rise and go to bed and groan under it now another Christian is very fit to put them in mind of such promises to remember them of such passages in Scripture which their immoderate sorrow had wholly driven out of their mind The soul of a man cannot be intent to many things at once therefore the sense and feeling of its particular exercise taketh up the whole heart as if there were no Scripture no promise no balm in Gilead for any then to be a Remembrancer a Monitor you forget such a place you remember not what the Scripture delivereth concerning your condition or you do not think of what you have formerly Say with David I will remember the works of the Lord of old Thus I say even the most eminent are so apt to be sensible of what is upon them that they remember not such things as may do them good Thirdly Even the most eminent who are in any trouble they cannot so bear it but they are subject to unbelief to discontent to frowardnesse to many sad exercises of soul And therefore no wonder if they need the help of others to allay that evil spirit in them as Martha said Lord if thou hadst been here my brother had not died So mayest thou say Oh if such a Christian such a Minister had been with me I had not been so impatient I had not been so dejected We cannot be in exercises especially in spiritual desertions and the sense of Gods wrath but withall there will arise much sinne there will be froth and mud that our hearts will send forth In this boiling of the soul there will arise some scumme It is true in Christ although he was under those disconsolate desertions destitute of comfort yet all the while there was no sinne in him no grace was weakned though his comfort was abated his soul was like a glass with pure water in it all the moving and tossing of it up and down could not cause any filth or mud in it but it is otherwise with us our souls have mud a sinfull sediment in the bottome and no sooner are we tossed and moved up and down but this cometh to the top our corruption sheweth it self presently and therefore we need the prayers the advice of others yea rebuke sometimes because like Rachel We refuse to be comforted Fourthly Every one needeth comfort from others in trouble Because the Devil is then most forward and busie He is ready to accuse God to thee and to accuse thee to God He moveth in job's wife that he should curse God and die He
like unto my sorrow wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me So thou shalt call to others to come and see the wonderfull mercies which God hath vouchsafed unto thee But to pour this oyl into the wounds of those that are afflicted consider First That the Lord Christ in all his dispensations still accommodateth himself to the capacity of his people He regards what they can bear like the wise Physician doth not give the strongest Physick that may be to expell the disease but looketh to the infirmity of his Patient We see Christ did this in the promulgation of the truths of the Gospel if that Sunne of righteousnesse had appeared at first in his noon-day light weak eyes would have been offended thereat he did not injoyn them those high observances of fasting c. at first To which purpose also Luk. 5. 27. he useth that notable similitude how no man putteth new wine into old bottles but the bottles break There is regard to be had to the Auditours Paul said 1 Gor. 3. 1. I could not speak unto you as spiritual but as carnal And indeed all may observe that Christ did communicate the knowledge of divine things to the Disciples by degrees I have many things to say unto you Joh. 16. 12. but you cannot bear them now As the Nurse cheweth her meat for the Infant doth not give it whole to him thus did Christ as a Doctor to his Auditours still accommodating himself according to the receptivity of the subject In like manner thus also God doth in laying afflictions upon us He takes notice how frail thou art if this suffering should be brought upon thee it would bruise thee to pieces or if it lay longer on thee it would make thee put out thy hand to wickednesse and therefore he taketh it off in due time If the fourth day would consume thee the third day thou shalt be freed from it The Apostle speaketh fully to this 1 Cor. 10. 13. God is faithfull who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able Above your strength that is not our own natural strength for there is not the least temptation the least affliction but if left to our selves we should fall under it The voice of a maid to Peter before ever he came into any danger made him deny Christ with cursings and swearings Therefore he meaneth the strength which Christ will furnish us with So that the sense is as any temptation cometh so your strength also is supplyed And indeed as long as Christ makes us stand upright so long the affliction cannot hurt us but when we bow and yeild to carnal reasonings then we miscarry As a Pillar as long as it stands firm and upright will bear any weight but when it begins to bow or grow crooked and sloping then it presently falleth We have then here a text full of comfort It is not every affliction every suffering thou maist be exercised with but that for which God hath furnished and prepared thee with strength for We have a notable explication of this Isa 20. 28. where under a parabolical similitude of the divers waies of the Husbandman to thresh out his Corn the lesser grain not requiring such weight as the other is signified that God maketh a difference in our afflictions some are more knotty and difficult then others and therefore they need more strong Physick to free them from their disease The cart wheel is not turned about upon the cummin a rod will serve to beat them out A word will do more to some then a blow to others Secondly God in his dispensations doth not only keep to an equality but he doth superabound his mercy doth overflow The Lord alwaies giveth full heaped measure overflowing In all things Christ hath an overplus There cannot be an hyperbole in his goodnesse to us As Luther said Celum gehenna non patiuntur hyperbolen So neither do the riches and grace of God in Christ For if first we confider Christ comparatively with Adam the one is the original of condemnation the other of justification There we shall see that Christ is not only equal to Adam but exceedeth him transcendeth him You may read Rom. 5. 15. where the Apostle making a Divine collation between Adam and Christ as two heads when he had instanced in Adam how powerfull he was to conveigh sinne and condemnation to all then on the contrary he instanceth in Christ and there he makes an how much more still on Christs side If through the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God through Christ hath abounded to many And Vers 17. If by one death reigned upon many much more they which receive abundance of grace shall reign in life Here you see that though sinne by Adam be very terrible and dreadfull in it self yet if compared with Christ it is but as the Nations to God like a drop or the small dust in the ballance Therefore Christ thought it not enough to remove the evil Adam brought upon us but to do it abundantly with a how much more Thus also if we speak of the grace of Christ in pardoning of sinne we do not meet with grace just equall and no more to remove the guilt of it but it doth overflow Even as the light of the Sunne is not only enough to inlighten thy eyes but for all the world besides Rom. 5. 20. Where sinne abounded grace hath much more abounded Hence the Prophet compareth Gods mercy in pardon of sinne to the Heavens comparatively with the earth which is but as a punctum to it thus are all our sinnes to the grace of God So likewise the righteousnesse of Christ is not a garment too narrow for us or that will just serve to cover our nakednesse and no more but it is an infinite righteousnesse as it is in Christ though the application of it to us be according to our necessity Thus Christ calleth to the Church Cant. 5. I. to drink of his wine abundantly Hence it 's called riches of grace and unspeakable riches of grace And Christ said He came that his people mght have life and that they might have it more abundantly Thus the power of God the favour of God is in abundance Heaven and salvation is in abundance As Christ is our overflowing fountain in all other things so in this of consolation likewise Hence some have received so much comfort from God that they have not been able to bear it They have said They had enough more would even overwhelm For there are those who dyed by joy especially when suddain as well as by grief In the next place let us consider the grounds Why God is thus mercifull that he not just only proportions his comforts to our sufferings but maketh them to exceed And First Because God in these administrations doth chiefly regard his own honour and greatnesse not our deserts Now because God is a great God therefore his mercy is great
Moral Patience Natural Patience I call that which cometh much from the constitution and complexion of their bodies they are more mild quiet and enduring of grief than others Moral patience I call that when men by wisdom and reading of moral precepts can harden themselves heroically to bear the tribulations up on them but Christian patience is that which comes from a regenerated and sanctified nature eying Gods glory his will and command only not regarding other sinister respects So that a Natural Patience a Moral Patience under thy sufferings will not advance thy salvation but that which is Christian You have a notable place for this 2 Pet. 1. 6. To patience godlinesse The Apostle doth there exhort to have the chain of graces linked together not to think it enough to have one grace unless he have all And therefore patience must be added to temperance for that requireth the denial of our pleasures the crucifying of our delights which cannot be without patience but then to this patience we must adde godlinesse implying that though we be never so meek so still so Lamb-like under our troubles yet if godliness be not added to this patient deportment if it be not from divine principles and to divine ends then our patience is greatly defective Look we therefore that when we quietly and patiently suffer it came from the grace of patience not from a counterfeit patience for this is not true gold and so will not enrich us This distinction being premised whereby a Christian may be inabled to know when it is Nature and when it is Grace that doth bear when flesh and blood doth suffer and when a divine Nature within him In the next place let us consider What goeth to the producing of this grace of patience for we cannot of our selves perform this duty of patience no more than a wildernesse can bringforth roses Therefore First The efficient cause of patience is God only The heart of man under any afflictions is like a wild bull in a net there is nothing but raging and repining under every exercise till God give a patient spirit Hence Rom. 15. 5. he is called The God of patience For what a wild unruly bedlam is an unsanctified man under any pressure upon him Like Cain he crieth out It is greater than he can bear Like Jobs wife he is tempted to curse God and so die Doest thou therefore under thy trials want patience Doth it grieve and sadly afflict thee to see thy self so passionate so impassionate Then let this make thee to run to the throne of grace improve this title God is the God of patience Say Oh God it is but speaking the word it is but saying Let there be patience and there will be patience How often have I resolved for patience How often prayed for patience and yet Lord my heart is tormented and tossed up and down like that Lunatick which could not be bound by any chains Not only my tongue but my heart are worse than unruly and savage beasts they may be tamed but this no man only God can tame it It 's God only therefore that maketh in us patience The grace of patience is farre above our power Tertullian wrote a Book of Patience but in the very beginning he apologizeth for himself why he should write of that subject which he had so little experimentally and practically attained unto and he excuseth it thus That he doth as those who are sick they delight to be talking and praising of health So I saith he who am Aeger caloribus impatientiae sick with feavorish impatient heats do delight to write of patience Thus do thou seeing it is more then of thy self thou art able to do The least tryal the least affliction is ready to heat thee with impatience pray to God importunately let him not alone till he blesse thee with this composed patient spirit Say with the same Tertullian Pereat seculum dummodo patientiam lucrifaciam Let the whole world perish so that God will give me patience Secondly As God is the efficient cause so the word of God that is instrumental The Word is like Davids harp to drive out this evil spirit So the Apostle Rom. 15. 14. That we through patience of the Scriptures might have hope When thy impatient flesh doth suggest this and that argument to discontent and repining Oh remember what the word of God saith It is for want of Scripture-consideration of Scripture-arguments that thy heart is so clamorous and unruly such a command such a promise would presently have made all calm and quiet The Heathen adviseth an angry furious man to look in the glasse while he is in those passionate fits that he may see how deformed he is made thereby but how much rather when thy heart hath boiled over with impatient repining thoughts art thou to recover thy self immediately and to look into the Word See what that faith what that requireth and then thou wilt be ashamed and abhorring thy self as a very beast Thirdly Afflictions themselves according to Scripture-expression they work patience also Thus Rom. 5. 3. Tribulation worketh patience Jam. 1. 3. The trying of your faith worketh patience Here you see afflictions are said to work patience but not of themselves it 's the power of God in and through them only as the beast accustomed to the yoke is more tame than at first so when we are constantly exercised with afflictions that they seem to be no new thing then through Gods grace we come to be more ready and willing in a patient enduring of them It is said of Christ himself He learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. not that he could grow properly in grace or be more obedient than he had been formerly but it is spoken in regard of experimental obedience he had the sense and feeling of it more than before but the adopted sons of God they do increase in obedience and patience by the things that they suffer Therefore thou who hast more afflictions than others it is a reproach to thee if they have not taught thee more patience and meeknesse than others Fourthly The exemplary or ideal cause of patience is God and Christ From them we have a most exact and compleat rule of patience Mat. 5. 48. Be ye therefore perfect as your heavenly Father is To be perfect is there to be patient for he had before instanced in the patience of God that even to the unjust he causeth the Sunne to arise and from this inferreth Be ye therefore perfect To be patient and that to enemies may be called perfection because this alone is taught in Christianity To love our friends is acknowledged a duty by all Nations but to love enemies is only professed by Christians Well then may we be patient under all the persecutions reproaches and vexations the enemies of God bring upon us For is not God patient towards them and yet they are more his enemies then
thine He that could immediately be avenged on them he that could command legions of Devils to drag them to hell presently yet with much patience suffereth them God is so patient that as Tertullian Ipsa sibi detrahit ●●de pat His patience detracteth from him he seemeth to be a loser by it For people sinne the more obstinately and wilfully because they meet with impunity Because vengeance is not speedily executed therefore the heart of the wicked is encouraged to evil Eccles 8. 11. It is true indeed if we speak properly we cannot attribute the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to God as if that were an attribute in him The Scripture useth other words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but never 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because God being most absolutely blessed and happy in himself he cannot be under any misery So as to be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be patient under it neither can God be said to pati to suffer in a passive sense yet his goodness his forbearance these are called patience And from the patience of God we may be encouraged to a conformity thereunto Should God be as impatient of thee should he as little endure thy failings as thou canst his dispensations thou hadst been with Dives calling for a drop of water long before this time and not able to partake of it Christ also is a wonderfull examplar cause of patience for him to lay aside the manifestation of his glory to be born of a Virgin to be exposed to such an ignominious death in all which he did seem as Tertullian expresseth it Contumeliosus sibiipsi Injurious and reproachfull to himself which made the Marcionites say He had only a phantastical body thinking it a reproachfull and dishonourable thing to him to have a true real body of the Virgin Mary But this exinanition and emptying of himself doth the more commend and make his patience illustrious Hence 1 Pet. 2. 23. and in other places Christ is commended as a patern to us of patience in all our sufferings and certain never may we more shame and abhorre our selves for all our repining and impatient workings of soul then when we set Christ before our eyes he was as a sheep in the hands of the shearer that opened not his mouth Yet how much did he suffer both from God and man and that without any cause in respect of himself though justly in respect of Gods Covenant with him as our Surety Now though all this was for us enemies to him such who would contemn his love and be ready to crucifie him over and over again yet in these great agonies and unspeakable sufferings he is not impatient Thus we have heard of a patience greater than that of Job even of Christ himself and let his patience shame thee out of thy impatience SERM LIV. Motives exciting us to a patient Submission unto God under all the Afflictions he layes upon us 2 COR. 1. 6. Which is effectual in enduring of the same sufferings which we also suffer WE are yet treating on the manner How the Salvation of believers is promoted by their sufferings which is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In enduring or in patience in a patient enduring It is not my purpose I told you to enlarge my self according as this Subject of patience might require Some things have been spoken to declare the nature of it I shall adde at this time some motives and encouragements to be patient under the most extream sufferings we are put upon And First This consideration may greatly calm and compose our spirits If we sensibly affect our selves with what we have deserved All-impatiency and turbulency of heart ariseth because we are not throughly humbled under our own guilt and unworthinesse for if this were taken notice of we would wonder why dogs should have childrens bread why we should have the least drop of mercy who deserve the deluge of Gods wrath Doest thou at any time find repinings and frettings of heart within thee Do thou presently possesse thy soul with thy wretchednesse and unworthinesse Say Who am I Lord that it is no worse This is not hell nor everlasting damnation that I am in and yet I have a thousand times over deserved that It was this that quieted David's heart under that sour affliction he conflicted with when Absolom had made such a strong conspiracy against him 2 Sam. 16. 11. when Shimei cursed him with such a grievous curse that Abishai had no patience to bear it Why should this dead dog curse my Lord the King saith he let me go and take off his head Who but a David would have been avenged But what tameth Davids heart Let him alone let him curse for the Lord hath bidden him David knew that it was for his sins that Absolom rebelled Shimei cursed and therefore he dare not grudge nor mutter So 2 Sam. 15. 26. while David is compassed about with the same difficulties see how soft his heart is ready to receive any impression But if he say I have no delight in him behold here I am let him do to me as seemeth good to him Thus David's heart is like the vessel cast into the fire it may be put into any form or fashion and what is the reason of it A true humbled spirit under all its unworthinesse Thus the Church Lament 3. 22. though she be in such desolations that she cals to all the passengers who come by to see if there were ever any affliction like hers yet saith she It is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed As wretched as we are we might be worse It is the Lords mercy that we do but taste of his cup of wrath that we do not drink up the dregs Here is a good patern to write after Let thy troubles and exercises be like Nebuchadnezzars furnace heated seven times hotter then ordinary yet thou wilt have cause to say if thou regard thy own guilt It is of the Lords mercy that it is no worse And vers 39. Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sins Art thou a living man not a damned man and doest thou complain Think what if thy condition were like those that are chained up in everlasting darkness gnashing their teeth and roaring out for the endlesse torments that are upon them Wouldst thou not then judge this condition thou art in though afflicted and troublesome to be a mercy Certainly if the damned in hell are bound to acknowledge the justice of God and to give him the glory thereof though it be in their confusion How much rather art thou bound to give God the glory of all his Attributes in these dispensations to thee though bitter to flesh and blood Take heed then of being like Jonah of saying Thou doest well to be angry It is an ease to pour forth thy complaints For what doth God do thee any wrong Doth not the
unmasked and the carnal heart discovered The Gospel either conquers men and maketh them friends or else leaveth them more provoked enemies but the fault is not in the Gospel preached neither are faithfull Ministers the troublers of Israel but thy whoredoms thy idolatries thy lusts are the cause of all this combate Use of Instruction what all godly Ministers and private Christians who are zealous against sinne must look for not from Pagans and Heathens but false carnal Christians that regard no Religion any further then their lusts or advantages may be kept up Will those that live by the sinnes of people ever be willing to have sinne destroyed Do not many as Demetrius say If this way of Religion go on we shall not be able to live any longer And therefore they flie with open mouth against all holy order and good discipline against sinne But know thou that all thy prophanenesse and dissolutenesse doth not so much provoke God as thy opposition of the Gospel and the Ministers thereof Yea we see Paul using a divine imprecation against such in this case which neither Christ or Stephen ever used against those that did put them to death 2 Tim. 4. 14. Alexander the copper-smith did me much evil And afterwards he instanceth wherein He hath greatly withstood our words or preachings It was not any personal or temporal evil that moved Paul but the withstanding of his preaching whereupon he poureth out this prayer The Lord reward him accoeding to his worke Oh dreadfull and terrible imprecation especially coming from one acted by the Spirit of God in delivering of it Use 2. To exhort us seriously and impartially to examine our selves about our motives and grounds which make us to take up the title of Christianity Is it for fear or because of custome the Laws of the Land require it Doest thou not find the divine power of holy truths upon thy soul Then know thy Religion is like thy life a bubble a vapour that will quickly go out Especially we are the more diligently to observe our hearts when we have any profit or preferment when we have any external accomodations by our profession Oh how hard is it then to discern between true and counterfeit whether it be the truth of God the love of God or thy own interest that prevaileth with thee when thy enemies and adversaries shall charge thee with it What a comfort will it be when thy conscience upon good ground can clear thee SERM. LXI Of the different judgement that Faith and Flesh passe upon Afflictions 2 COR. 1. 8. That we were pressed above measure WE have already considered this trouble which came upon Paul in Asia in respect of the occasion of it Let us proceed to the Aggravation of it For out of the strong cometh sweet From this affliction conquered doth arise much encouragement and consolation to those that are followers of Paul And in the Description we have the Aggravation of it from the Quantity 1. We were pressed out of measure 2. The Quality Above measure 3. From the Event So that we despaired of life And in the next verse it is further illustrated from a two-fold end of which in its time Let us take notice of the first particular wherein we have this trouble heightned viz. from the Quantity or Extension of it It was above measure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is applied sometimes to the enduring of a burden Matth. 20. 12. Gal. 6. 2. whether it be a temporal burden or a spiritual Sometimes it is applied to the heavinesse of the eyes by drowsiness Mark 14. 40. In this place it seemeth to be taken from Porters who have a burden imposed upon them more than they are able to stand under or as Chrysostome from ships who are overmuch burdened and so are in danger of being lost And as if there were not emphasis enough in the word pressed he addeth another to aggravate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pareus saith The Scripture never useth an hyperbole because that strictly taken is a lie But this opinion cannot be justified neither is an hyperbole if you do regard the intention of the speaker a lie For such an expression he meaneth not so much the thing signified by the words as when the Evangelist saith The world would not contain all the books that might be written about Christs deeds but thereby to represent to the Reader some further degree then ordinarily is in other things But the Apostle doth not here speak of a verbal hyperbole but a real one that which was above expression The Apostle useth this expression when he speaketh of the riches of Gods grace and power to believers 2 Cor. 9. 14. Ephes 2. 7. Eph. 1. 19. No ordinary expression will serve Paul when he cometh to speak of the admirable and wonderfull riches of Gods grace to those that do believe in him As he thus speaketh of the grace of the Gospel so also of his own sinfulnesse both original and actual there is an hyperbole in both Rom. 7. 13. Original sinne improved and excited by the Commandment is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Above measure sinfull and for his actual wickednesse and impiety Gal. 1. 13. there he saith He did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 persecute the Church but when he cometh to speak of the glory in Heaven there one hyperbole will not serve according to that of Luther Coelum infernus non patiuntur hyperbolen but there he addeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the expression then in the Text we see That this trouble the Apostle was exercised with was no little inferiour trouble but that which was of the most pressing nature that could be that was out of measure heavy and burdensome But you will say How doth this agree with that which we have Paul speaking in the 4th Chapter of this Epistle where he calleth all the afflictions that do befall the godly light Our light affliction vers 17. Can it be light and yes out of measure heavy also It may be answered and reconciled thus It is called light in respect of everlasting glory So that although it be exceeding heavy and pressing in it self yet if compared with the weight of glory hereafter so it is light Or Secondly It may be answered By distinguishing of the times when Paul calleth his affliction heavy it relateth to the time that he was exercised with it For Christianity doth not require Stoicism yea patience is the more admirable by how much the more apprehensive we are of the trouble upon us Thus the Apostle Heb. 12. 11. No chastisement is joyous for the present but grievous Or Thirdly We may speak of afflictions when they are over when we are delivered from them and find the great good they have done to us then we may call them light and judge them nothing to the benefit we received by them But In the fourth place I conceive
be said that the people of God do communicate with Christ in some measure as with his priestly and Kingly Office so with his Prophetical as if they were able to know the mind of God in many things yet we must take heed that such a principle doth not draw us into spiritual delusions For nothing is more ordinary even to a godly man then to take his strong affections and vehement conjectures for impulses and inspirations from God Paul in this trouble did absolutely conclude He should die he had past this sentence upon himself but God had determined otherwise I shall handle this truth more generally than the Text doth intend yet including that also And First Herein the heart of a good man doth deceive him in that he is ready to give such advise to others sometimes which he may apprehend is of God and yet it ariseth from humane perswasion only Those that are godly are constantly and judiciously to examine what is humane and what is divine in them what cometh from God and what from their own spirits Sad and miserable have the deceits of many been in this case No wonder it may be so with a godly man For it hath sometimes fared thus with those who besides the spirit of sanctification have also been endowed with prophetical illumination Nathan 1 Chron. 17. 2. bid David do all that was in his heart when he purposed to build an house to God but we see afterwards God did forbid it It is true there were in the Old Testament false prophets who did wittingly and willingly sinne pretending they had a word from God when it was only a lying spirit in them but of such we speak not Yea we read of a true Prophet of the Lord yet pretending a word from God when he did wilfully dissemble all that while 1 King 13. 18. For when a Prophet had command from God not to eat or drink in his journey This other Prophet perswadeth him to eat saying An Angel of God spake to him for that purpose Here was a great temptation to the former Prophet to eat it could not but work some scruples in him So that from this instance Divines do argue That it is lawfull for a man to goe against scruples But because the Prophet did not but was perswaded against Gods former command therefore he was severely punished But this instance is not fully to my purpose onely from that example we may see That the corruption in man inclineth him to make pretences from God to get the more credit Even as in Paul's time some pretended the Spirit and Revelations about the day of judgement But the example of Nathan is wholly to our purpose and therefore all that fear God are to pray for an exact judgement to discern between things that differ and that more in our selves than others For such is our self-love that we are difficultly brought to know the truth As a sensible object put immediately upon the sense hindereth it in its operations We see Paul very imitable in this thing 1 Cor. 7. in answering that case about marriage which the Corinthians had propounded to him Hence vers 10. 12. how carefull is he to distinguish between that which he had from the Lord directly and was his expressed will and what he advised as a faithfull Officer in the Church Not I but the Lord saith he Hence he concludeth his Discourse in a most humble and modest manner calling it his judgement onely adding I think also that I have the Spirit of God Though you must know that in all this Paul was acted infallibly by the Spirit he speaketh not as an humane Authour in this thing Secondly The godly are deceived when they have some prepossessed principles of errour in them and then think Gods dispensations are to abet and countenance them This hath commonly caused great mistakes whereby men have thought they had Gods approbation to their deceits We see this plainly in the Disciples this false principle they had imbibed that the Messiah would come as a temporal and external King to vindicate their Nation from all the bondage they were under Therefore when Christ speaketh of his Kingdome and his Glory when he speaketh of being exalted they apply all consonantly to their false principles Upon this mistake the sons of Zebedee come to ask Christ for the chiefest places of honour in his Kingdom and upon Christs Ascension in Heaven Act. 1. 6. when he had for fourty dayes together been speaking of the Kingdom of God to them Then they asked him Wilt thou at this time restore the Kingdome of Israel Here you see how much even the Apostles the first fruits as it were of the Spirit were decived But what was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what was the deceitfull foundation in this building Even a carnal and an erroneous perswasion about the temporal dignity and honour of Christ Take then much heed that the first concoction be not nought that there be not Laesum principium some principle received that thou must not so much as question the truth of it and then according to this thou makest many false and erroneous conjectures about Gods proceedings to thee Thirdly Then the godly are very apt to be deceived about Gods wayes to themselves or others when they judge of God after outward and humane appearance When they expect that God should do as some high and mighty Monarch of the world would do We see hom Samuel a man so highly proficient in the fear of God and all integrity yet when he came to choose out the man God had designed for the Kingdom how quickly he mistook and was at a loss 1 Sam. 16. 6 7. For when Eliab came into his presence he said Surely the Lords anointed is here But then observe how God did reprove his humane judgement when he said to Samuel Look not upon his high stature for the Lord seeth not as man seeth adding also the ground of it because man judgeth by outward appearance but God judgeth the heart It is true the godly have this promise that many things shall be manifested to them which to others the Lord will not reveal Psal 25. 14. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him Hence we have that notable expression to Abraham by God when he was purposed to destroy Sodome Gen. 18. 17. Shall I hide from Abraham the thing that I will do and one reason is because he will command his children and his houshold to keep the way of the Lord. We have likewise a very comfortable expression which our Saviour useth to his Disciples John 15. 15. Henceforth I call you not servants for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I have called you friends for all things I have heard of my Father I have made known to you From this it is that some eminently godly men have been endowed with a prophetical spirit and have used much boldness in prayer to
do attain it They take civility for godliness they take the outward performance of religious duties for godliness they take some sudden pangs and fits of devotion for godlinesse Thus they judge copper to be gold But In the next place if they do understand what it is to be regenerated how great a matter it is to be a New Creature then such is their self-love that they presently apply it to themselves and do believe they are such ones For this end is that duty so often commended To commune with our own hearts to try and search our own hearts For this end we are informed of the deceitfulnesse and desperate wickednesse of the heart that no man knoweth it that God only knoweth it Thou boastest of thy heart thou trustest in thy heart Ah poor deluded wretch thou knowest not what a sea of evil thy heart is till grace shine into that dark dungeon thou canst never perceive the loathsome lusts that crawl there Pray therefore to be delivered from this heart-trusting as from hell it self It is this that is the Beelzebub sinne This maketh thee shut thy eyes stop thy ears harden thy heart and therefore till this root be pulled up no preaching no Ministry can do thee any good For the first thing done by converting grace is to take away this trusting in our selves and in stead thereof to work an holy despair in our selves This the Spirit of God doth by convincing of sinne through the Law by this we see our selves a sinfull people and a cursed people we are also convinced of our impotency and insufficiency to help our selves By this we are convinced that it must be the righteousness of another even of Christ himself and not our own that we must appear in when we approach unto God Till therefore thou art in this heart-trusting way as long as this good perswasion and secure thoughts are in thy self thou art wholly out of the way to Heaven This is not the way to Christ if thou art not wounded the good Samaritan will pour no oil into thee if thou doest not judge all things husks and seest thy self ready to famish there will no entertainment be given to thee at thy fathers house Oh then that the Spirit of God would in a mighty and powerfull manner fall upon such sinfull considers that he would shake the very foundations of their souls For as long as this self-trusting a bideth in thee thy condition is incurable if the heart be deceitfull above all things why doest thou believe it above all things Thou believest thy own heart more than Gods word more than the Ministers of God No man doubteth of his heart none questioneth or examineth his heart and therefore cometh not to the Word preached to have that purged to have that cleansed but takes it for an undoubted principle that his heart is good already But how cometh it to be good When was it made good by nature it is full of evil and therefore it can never be sanctified but by the grace of God effectually working by the Ministry Secondly The Scripture instanceth in another object of sinfull trusting that is secret and close but also very dangerous and that is in the righteousnesse we conceit we have and this was the great pharisaical sinne This was the Camels bunch this made them stand in such immediate opposition to Christ that they rejected his Person and Offices They did not look upon themselves as sick and therefore would not admit of a Physician And oh that this sinne had been like Jonah's gourd that sprang up for a day only and presently was consumed but it is a sinne that passeth from one generation to another to put confidence in their own righteousnesse to seek to be justified by the works they do Doth not this reign in Popish spirits in all formalists in civil and moral men Do they not look to be saved to be justified by their works of righteousnesse and charity How often doth the Scripture thunder against this sinne And indeed well it may for it maketh our selves our own Christs our own Saviours It maketh Christ to die in vain Now how natural and imbred a sinne this is appeareth by the Jewes Rom. 10. 3. They went about to establish their own righteousnesse and would not submit themselves to the righteousnesse of faith Hence because this sinne did so reign in the Pharisees our Saviour spake that excellent Parable Luke 18. 9. concerning a Publican humbling himself and sensible of his unworthiness as being justified rather than a Pharisee He spake this saith the Text to certain who trusted in themselves that they were righteous And why doth our saviour make those blessed that mourn that are poor in spirit that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse but to shew in what a blasted and cursed estate they are who put any trust in the good works they do to be justified by them You see then by this how dangerous and damnable a thing that common sinne is which every civil every just and righteous man is apt to lean upon if his eyes were opened and his heart made tender he would not dare to eat or sleep or stay one night in it as good and safe as now he believeth it to be Thirdly Another object of this sinfull secret trusting is in spiritual or Church-priviledges or Ordinances that we have more than others This is also like the Psalmists plague which destroyeth at Mid-day thousands fall dead into hell because of this religious trusting in priviledges and Ordinances They trust in them not regarding what holinesse and godlinesse God doth require of them How palpably did the Prophet Jeremiah reprove this in the Jewes Jer. 7. 4. Trust ye not in lying words saying The Temple the Temple of the Lord are these but amend your wayes and your doings as vers 3. When the Prophet exhorts them to repentance and reformation then they plead The Temple of the Lord and the Ordinances This is so enticing a sinne that in the Christian Church many were perswaded by false Teachers That unlesse they were circumcised and kept up the Rites of the Ceremonial Law they could not be justified Therefore the Apostle speaketh excellently Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision which rejoyce in Christ Jesus and have no confidence in the flesh When it cometh to this that thou doest not trust in Duties or in Ordinances but in Christ in them then art thou a true worshipper of God in the Spirit In the same Chapter Paul layeth upon his own heart what trust and confidence he once had in his being a Jew in being circumcised in his legal righteousness But when it pleased God to reveal Christ to him What doth he trust in these priviledges any longer No by no means for he accounts all things but dung and losse in comparison of that righteousnesse which is by faith in Christ Is not this likewise an universal predominant sinne amongst Christians Do they not
they both agree in this our temporal mercies and spiritual mercies come from God the fountain of them though spiritual mercies have a more special and restrained consideration To affect us with humility and thankfulnesse in this point consider these particulars First That even those mercies which are the effects of natural causes yet they are the gift of God Should he withdraw his concourse no creature were able to performe its usefull operations The fire would not warme us our bread would not nourish us our raiment would not comfort us against the cold So that we are not only to bless God that we have such creatures as these are but that they are usefull We are not only to praise God that we have bread and raiment but that these things can do their office For in these there is a two-fold mercy 1. That God doth provide them for us 2. That when they are provided they put forth their usefulnesse Thus our Saviour alledgeth out of Deuteronomy Mat. 4. 4. Thou shalt not live by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of Gods mouth If God give not a word of blessing our bread cannot nourish us Hence we are also said In God to live and move and have our being Act. 17. 28. Although therefore there are natural causes and these do produce their effects from a natural necessity yet because they are second causes they do therefore depend upon God the chiefest and supream cause both in esse and operari in their being and operation Thus the fire would not burn if God should not give concourse thereunto as appeareth in the case of the three Worthies and the reason which is given by the Dominicans though the Jesuites do not well relish it is that every second cause though it be a natural agent and so determined to operation yet because it is in a potentiality to worke it hath a potentia a power this must be reduced to act by that which is the pure and chief act viz. God himself So that it is not enough for God to give a natural power to produce such an effect unlesse he also actuate that power and goe along with it This is a truth and when believed will draw off our eyes from the creature more so as to set them upon God and to acknowledge him more in all things This then thou art to know That even those natural comforts which flow from natural causes so that it would be a miracle if they should not produce them are yet from the goodnesse and bounty of God Now how often are we unthankfull for these mercies we doe not blesse God for the gift of seeing the gift of hearing the gift of walking Secondly Those comforts which flow from moral causes these also are to be attributed to the gift of God A man that is diligent in his place he may grow to be rich The strongest usually prevail in battel The swiftest they overcome in a race yet where these moral causes are the effect is Gods gift Therefore Solomon observeth that the clean contrary falleth out sometimes Eccles 9. 11. That the battel is not to the strong nor the race to the swift How many are diligent carefull and wise in their places and yet cannot obtain wealth in this world So that even those things which are brought about by the means that we use we must acknowledge they are Gods gift if his blessing be not upon the means they are frustrated Thus the Lord doth instruct Israel against any pride and confidence that might arise as if their power and strength did make them rich For it is the Lord saith he that giveth thee power to get wealth Deut. 8. 18. You see whatsoever wisdome diligence and good husbandry we use yet if any thing come thereby it is the gift of God You have a most significant place for this truth Hag. 1. 6. where the Prophet sheweth whatever we eat or drinke or take care and labour about the Lord can blast it and make it come to nothing Ye eat but have not enough ye cloathe you but there is none warme and he that earneth wages it is to put in a bag with holes Doth not this Text evidently proclaim that the labourer in his wages the tradesman in his buying and selling the husbandman in his plowing and sowing cannot adde one farthing to his efface unlesse the Lord blesse it Thirdly All those comforts we have and gifts either to relieve or refresh us that we have from others we are to account them Gods gifts rather than mens If any man help thee in thy necessities if any man preferre and honour thee thou art indeed to be thankfull unto men that are benefactors but more to God who inclined their hearts to thee Yet how little is this thought upon when we receive courtesies from men kindnesses from men we look upon these alone whereas if God did not move their hearts thou wouldst have found no relief from them It was thus with Joseph he was cast into prison upon the Kings displeasure in all outward appearance the Goaler would have used him with all cruelty yet saith the Text Genes 39. 21. God shewed mercy to Joseph and gave him favour in the sight of the keeper of the prison The Lord hath a command over mens hearts he maketh them mercifull and free to some and again he turneth the hearts of some men against others Now we poor creatures look only upon men as if they did all as if all were in their power But as God commanded Laban who was in a rage against Jacob not to speak an ill word against him So also doth the Lord daily he maketh men thy friends and he raiseth them up to be foes We have likewise a notable instance Exod. 12. 36. when the Israelites were upon their departure the Aegyptians though their cruel enemies who hated and oppressed them yet it 's said The Lord gave them favour in their eyes that they lent them even jewels of gold and silver On the contrary when God was provoked it is said Psalm 105. He turned their heart to his people As David then said when Shimei reviled him bitterly The Lord hath bid him So when thou receivest any favour any mercy from men look up higher than men The Lord hath bid him Mens gifts are much rather Gods gifts yea even what those do for us who are in the most indeared relations and so have principles of nature to instigate them to help thee yet thou art to look upon all their care and love as Gods gift to thee If thy parents have taken care of thee if they have provided for thee if they have looked to thee though it was their duty and they would have been unnatural if they had done otherwise yet do thou look upon it as Gods gift to thee How many parents are given up to unnatural affections How many love their lusts and their whores more than their children So that
is an improper foundation for thy faith As thy faith is hereby a blind faith so thy comfort is but a blind comfort How greatly do the Popish Casuists perplex their people with such cases of conscience and about such superstitious things that they have only tradition for and that it may be not many yeares neither without any stamp or superscription of the Scripture Have not they comfort in their Penances in their Indulgences Will not their Friers and Monks not those slow beasts and idle bellies who from deluded principles of conscience do severely and austeerly mortifie themselves say They have the testimony of their consciences and make a bulwark from thence But where is the rule they go by Is it not tradition On the contrary side in another extream there is the Enthusiast who rejecteth the Scripture as a dead letter and doth adhere only to revelations to pretended workings of Gods Spirit to the manifest light within them Doe not these even boast in their joyes and ravishments Doe they not when unable to answer arguments flie to a light within them But what ground is there for this Is not the Apostles command That we should not believe every spirit but try them 1 John 4. 1. And how must that be but by the Scripture You see then that it is not conscience simply and alone but a Scripture-conscience that is the ground of comfort To leave that and to trust in our conscience is to make our consciences a Bible to attribute infallibility to our selves Now this Scrigture is not only a Rule for our conscience in matters of faith but also of manners of righteousnesse towards man Conscience must witness to thee not only that thou art in the true Religion but also doest walk in holy conversation It must testifie of thy righteousness towards man as well as of Religion towards God This was Paul's continual exercise Act. 24. 26. To have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man There are many voluminous Tractates of Cases of Conscience De jure justitiâ Of Righteousnesse towards man And although the Scripture doth not particularly decide Law-cases yet it layeth down such general rules that by them particulars may easily be decided if our hearts were not corrupt As for example that famous rule What you would have men do to you do ye to them Mat. 7. 12. Our Saviour after he had given religious precepts about prayer c. he addeth this to shew that Religion and righteousness must alwayes go together And Adrian the Emperour was so affected with this Rule saying He had it from the Jews or Christians that he commanded it to be written on the doors and gates of his Palace and before he would punish any offender would inform him of this Rule And our Saviour saith This is the Law and the Prophets A great expression Look then to thy conscience that it take the Scripture for a Rule in its adequate nature For faith and conversation this is no rule for conscience to go by Others do say every one is to look to himself but the word of God that must bear evidence to thee by thy conscience Secondly To the right guidance of our conscience in witnessing to us there is not only required the Word as a Rule But the Spirit of God to enlighten thy mind to receive the true meaning thereof Such are the powerfull delusions of Satan that when he can no longer dethrone the Scripture from its authority but men will appeal to that then he looketh about to advance his Kingdom by the Scriptures ill handled and wrested to corrupt opinions and by this means men are brought into a worse condition and more incurable then those who walk by no Scripture at all For if a man be delivered up to this perswasion that his opinions and wayes are allowed by Scripture warranted by Scripture what way shall we take to reduce him The Apostle Peter telleth us of some unstable and unlearned men 2 Pet. 3. 16. which did wrest the Scriptures to their own perdition And nothing is more ordinary which made Luther say That the Bible was the Hereticks book not in the sense the Papists do accusing it thereby of insufficiency and imperfection But for the dignity of it having such authority that every Heretick would gladly runne to this Sanctuary The Scripture then though a perfect Rule yet is not enough to guide our conscience unless the Spirit of God as is promised lead us into truth As the Sunne though never so full of light yet cannot guide a blind man We grant indeed that the Scripture is but a dead letter and of it self without Gods Spirit doth not enlighten the mind and convert the heart Only we say The Spirit doth this in and by the Scripture and that all mens consciences impulses light revelations and joyes must be examined and stand or fall according to this Rule Let this be granted and then we plead as fervently as any can for the work of Gods Spirit This must enlighten the conscience to be able to understand and believe the things revealed there Hence the Disciples could not attempt their office of publishing the Gospel without this assistance from the holy Ghost John 16. 13. he is said To guid them into all truth To guide them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this signifieth that they did not know the way or if they were in they would quickly divert into by-paths if this Spirit did not guide them When David said The Word was a lamp and light to his feet If we understand it effectually so that it did not only propound the light objectively but that also he was subjectively thereby illuminated this doth necessarily presuppose the work of Gods Spirit No wonder then if so many may be exceedingly acquainted with Scripture be ready with some Texts upon every occasion yet for all that be deluded with errours because they want Gods Spirit to enlighten them and instruct them thereby Let us look upon the Jews the sad dest object in the world at this day they have been so skilfull in the Old Testament that some could remember how many words and syllables were therein and that is read to them daily yet who more maliciously opposite unto the Lord Christ promised in the Old Testament than they are But the Scripture giveth a full reason thereof The veil is upon their eyes And long before there was such a prediction of this spiritual judgement upon them That seeing they should not see hearing not hear lest they understand and be converted Therefore to have a pure and true conscience we must be sure to pray and exercise our selves herein that the Spirit of God would direct us into the true sense and meaning of the Word which is to be expected in the holy use of those means which are necessary to find out the sense thereof For you must not expect that Gods Spirit will immediately reveal the sense of the Scripture without
the understanding was first in the sense the more expedite they are the more vigorous is the understanding Secondly There is required A particular application of Christ and the promises to our selves by faith For herein lieth the efficacy of faith when with Thomas it saith My Lord my God Or with Paul Who loved me and gave himself for me For as the seeing of meat though never so excellent and wholsome doth not nourish but the eating of it So the beholding of Christ revealed in the Word as a Saviour in the general doth not justifie and pardon but the applying of him to be my Christ and my Saviour For this reason faith is called Iohn 6. The eating of Christs flesh and drinking of Christs blood And the Sacrament of the Lords Supper doth require this particular applying act of faith and this is the foundation for our future knowledge till Christ be ours we cannot know he is ours till Christ be received by faith to dwell in our hearts we cannot perceive that he doth dwell there Happily then the Apostle Peter exhorteth us 2 Pet. 1. 5. To adds to faith virtue By that is meant the efficacy and liveliness of faith in receiving of Christ And then to this we must adde knowledge Knowledge is to follow this efficacious application of Christ Now this is the greater work of our faith as to our justification This is that which the Papists do so declaim against and for which Estius calleth us Specialistas Specialists But certainly this is the acting of faith that maketh us rich that bringeth Christ the treasure into our soul and it is this which the Devil doth so oppose in all the godly Hence are all those fiery darts of Satan all those sad and black aggravations of sinne whereby the soul like that woman with the bloody flux is afraid and trembleth to come directly to Christ It is that applying act of faith that the Devil so diligently would keep thee off whereas if thou didst but taste of this honey as Ionathan or rather plentifully fill thy self with it thou wouldst with much spiritual fortitude pursue and conquer all thy spiritual enemies This was the blessed truth that our Reformers rescued out of Popery being enabled thereunto by the word of God as a Rule and the experimental work of grace upon their souls as a sure witnesse to confirm them therein But this is not all Therefore to obtain this knowledge there is required an Internal sense and feeling of the fit frame of our heart whereby we perceive that we are such who do believe and do love God who do repent of our sinnes upon firme and pure grounds For unlesse there be this inward discerning of what is in us how is it possible to arrive at any certainty Now it is this that the Popish adversaries do most batter supposing it to be the weakest part in the Wall It is true say they we believe the Scripture that speaketh generally Whosoever believeth and repenteth shall have his sins pardoned But when you come to the Assumption But I believe I repent here you are subject to many mistakes here you may be deceived And certainly all hypocrites are deluded in this respect They make false applications to themselves through self-love they deceive themselves thinking they have good hearts when they have them not But this doth not inferre that the truly godly are therefore deceived no more then because an Heretick hath great confidence that he is in the truth yet is deceived it followeth that therefore the orthodox man is also in an errour Because men in a dream are deluded doth it follow that men cannot tell when they be indeed awake We must know then That as we have a certain knowledge by the bodily senses we are certain we hear we see So the soul in her immaterial operations hath a sense and feeling of them We feel we know we understand we love we delight These internal motions of the soule are perceived as well as the things of sense and to say we may be decived here and no truth can be discovered is to turn all knowledge into Scepticisme and to hold Nihil scitur yea that that also is not knowne That nothing is knowne And besides it is directly against Scripture No man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of a man 1 Cor. 2. 11. This then being laid as a foundation That a mans own spirit doth feel and percieve what are the motions thereof it followeth That when a man doth uprightly and sincerely love God and walk in his way he doth experimentally discern this he knoweth he believeth he knoweth he loveth God But that this may be done there is required First An humble broken heart and poverty of spirit whereby we are emptied of all our own righteousnesse renouncing every thing that is ours hungring and thirsting after Christ and his righteousnesse Every gracious heart that cometh to the knowledge of its sincerity hath this concomitant disposition there is an humble lowly broken spirit it feeleth it self undone and lost It feareth all that it hath done and therefore can rest no where but on Christ onely Now although many do deceive themselves many doe flatter and delude their owne soules yet where there is this frame of heart there will never be any miscarriage Secondly Besides this brokenness of heart there is required A regular and undistempered disposition in the soul For though the sense cannot be deceived about its proper object hence is that saying Non est disputandum de gustu We must not dispute about taste yet if the palate be diseased nothing is more ordinary than to judge that bitter which is sweet And this falleth out sometimes to the choisest people of God there are troublesome and disquieting temptations upon them they are in blackness and sadness Now in such a case we are no more able to know what we are than we can see our faces in troubled waters So that this due and prepared qualification of the soul must be alwayes present in the judging of our selves As in all faculties whether the intellective or visive if they have any impediment in their operation they cannot produce their convenient operations The understanding in a mad man and in a man fast asleep is wholly hindered in its workings So may the senses be either by some hurt upon the sensitive powers or by the indisposition of the medium or through the distance of the object Thus it is in the soul when sanctified there may be many distempers several impediments which may hinder it from passing a true judgement about its state and therefore the advise of Casuists in such cases is not to seeke for this assurance and evidence but to put forth acts of faith by meere dependance and recumbance on the promises of the Gospel Even as David and Job sometimes did For Job saith Though he kill me yet will I trust in him Job 13. 15. Thirdly This frame
insincere man cannot delight in God and therefore his duties are not constant and perpetual whereas this sincerity doth fill the heart with internal principles of joy readinesse and delight in the wayes of God Hence it is that the favour of God and the light of his countenance enjoyed by faith doe take him off from all the delight he formerly had in other things As Austin who was carried out with a vehement and most flagrant desire after knowledge and learning which made him try all the several Sects of the Philosophers as also to fall into the Maniehee-heresie When it pleased God to make a powerfull sincere and effectual change upon his soul then he said of all the sciences formerly so dear to him Nunc prae illius amore vix veniunt in mentem The love of God made him scarce ever thinke of them This makes grace natural as it were because the principle is within Sixthly Sincerity making a man thus to worke from a principle of readinesse and delight within Therefore it is that he findes grace to be a real lively thing within him Insincerity maketh a man have onely confused and general apprehensions about grace whereas uprightnesse giveth a man a reall taste and experimental feeling of the same within him A man without this reall power of grace under the most glorious profession is but as a pictured man or a painted fire Who were more diligent in the externall study of the Law than the Iewes How greatly did they glory in the knowledge thereof as if they had come out of the Fathers bosome Yet observe what our Saviour saith Iohn 5. 37. to them Ye have neither heard his voice or seene his shape at any time That is either they had not powerfull experimentall discoveries of God upon their soules or though they had heard Gods voice many times in their Ancestours and had seene many apparitions of God by Angels yet because Christs word did not abide in them it 's accounted as if they never had any knowledge at all Hence grace is often compared to life Now as a man that is alive feeleth and knoweth himselfe to be so Thus where this spiritual worke of grace is sincerely putting it selfe forth there the soul hath much reality in the sense of it It maketh a man discourse and conferre about that of which he hath experience as Paul Galat. 2. 26. I no longer live but Christ in me Many speake of grace as some doe of strance Countreyes wherein they never travelled What they have by Books and Mapps that they discover Thus it is with many they know nothing of Regeneration of the New-creature but what they have by Bookes or by hearing of Sermons and therefore have not such a reall evident and clear apprehension of Gods grace as they should have Now it 's sincerity that maketh all things to be reall and in power not in name and words onely And from this reall lively working of grace sincerely in us we come to have much assurance and comfort in our hearts as Paul here in the Text his rejoycing was from the testimony of his conscience concerning his sincerity Therefore the hypocrite he never attaineth to any solid joy or any powerfull assurance about the favour of God towards him This experience of the love of God sincerely and really working in the heart of Peter as fire in the bosome made him againe and againe say to Christ That he loved him And thus Austin in those reall and affectionate workings of Gods grace upon him made him so bold as to say Lib. 10. Confess cap. 6. So Iansenius conjoyneth the words Non dubiâ sed certâ conscientiâ Domine amo te percussisti cor meum verbo tuo amavi O Lord I am sure in my conscience that I love thee Thou hast smitten me and wounded my heart with thy Word and therefore I love thee So that let a man goe on in a formall customary empty way of Religion Let him pray heare and professe Godlinesse but all this while without sincerity and the power of it and afterwards God breake his heart new mould him make him a new creature he will then finde such a wonderfull change and see grace to be such another powerfull thing in his soule over once he thought that he will even stand amazed to see what he is Oh little did I know did I feele what now I doe When some few dropp● of this precious ointment shall fall into his soule then the sweetnesse will be incredible not onely to others but also to himselfe which he findes within him Thus sincerity doth cause reall lively and assured comfortable motions of the soule in heavenly things Not that the sincere are alwayes on this Mount of transfiguration No they are in a wildernesse sometimes as well as in a Canaan but onely this is the nature of sincerity so to doe Thus it is in the Idea though in the subject there are many times divers imperfections and weaknesses To be sure no spirituall thing whether it be of grace or comfort in a Christian heart can be carried on without much combate and conflict SERM. XCIII Of Fleshly Wisdome with some Principles of it 2 COR. 1. 12. Not with fleshly wisdome THe next particular considerable is the manner of Paul's conversation in this world expressed negatively Not with fleshly wisdome This is made contrary to that simplicity and sincerity he had mentioned before Only the expression doth imply a two-fold wisdome the one heavenly and from above This the Apostle doth not deny but at other times doth assume to himself There is a civil prudence necessary in all Church-Officers to feed and govern their flock There is also a spiritual wisdome whereby we are able to understand and to discover the mysteries of God These are an excellent gift of God And therefore 1 Cor. 1. 2 3 4. when the Apostle had renounced all excellency of speech and mans wisdome as he calleth it yet vers 6. he correcteth his expression saying Howbeit we speak wisdome yet not the wisdome of this world So then Mans wisdome the wisdom of the world is the same which is here called fleshly wisdome So that I say the expression doth imply a division of wisdome into heavenly or divine The wisdome from above and that which is carnal or fleshly the Apostle calleth it sensual and devilish Jam. 3. 15 17. Now this wisdome in the Text may be called fleshly 1. Because of the root and original of it which is the sinfull corruption in man For flesh is many times taken for sinfulnesse as well as for weaknesse 2. It may be called fleshly Because it forsaketh the rules given in Gods word that is the proper fountain of wisdome which alone is able to make us wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. and walketh according to the prescripts of humane and sinfull policy 3. It may be called fleshly Because the end and effects of it are onely to advance man
the admirable gifts and efficacious parts of a Ministry but the powerfull grace of God alone is that which doth open the doors of mens hearts Not any tractableness in people therefore the Socinian and Arminian Doctrine is with indignation to be excluded who speak of a probitas naturalis and ingenium docile a natural teachableness in some persons which doth prepare them for the Gospel and that is the reason why some are converted by the word and not others yea they are not afraid to offer violence to that Text which doth so evidently witness against them Act. 13. 48. As many as were ordained to eternal life believed The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they would wrest to signifie some inward Disposition and Qualification men that had fitted themselves But certainly If God so often tell the Israelites that he gave them not that rich Land of Canaan because of their Righteousness or for that they were better than others can we think Heaven and Salvation which was typified by that Canaan shall be obtained by our own worth Nay experience telleth us that sometimes the most prophane have received the Gospel when others more civilized and moralized have been great enemies to it If any have Humility and Meckness which is necessary for the success of the Gospel in his heart that is the gift of God it floweth not from nature Neither Secondly is it any thing in the excellent gifts of any men though they could preach with the tongue of Angels Though the Apostles were designed by Christ to be leaven to leaven the whole World to be salt to season all people yet too many here as the favour of death and some were the more enraged and made more obstinate in fin by how much the more affectionate he was to do them good Yet the Ministry though of it self it cannot roll away this stone or open this door of mens hearts is not therefore useless God hath appointed to convert by it We must not out of Pride refuse to wash in this Jordan as Naaman at first did thinking other waters as good I mean to think that stayiug at home and reading of good Books is as profitable because this is to neglect the instituted means by God and it is just that it thou do not seek God where he is to be found that thou shalt never finde him there where thou seekest him Though this be so yet it is God that openeth the door of mens hearts Paul said An effectual door was opened in a passive fear he doth not say I have opened it Hence Christ speaketh from heaven to the Church of Philadelphia Rev. 3. 7 8. I have set before thee an open door and no man can shut it When Christ will open the hearts of people as he did Lydia's all the rage and violence of the Devil cannot hinder it How many men are wrought upon that of all in the world you would not have exspected it who would have thought such bears should be turned into sheep Thus God sometimes continueth a Ministry to a people which doth a world of good when there are many persecutors many enemies men that have used all their fraud and power to remove it and could not any more stirr it then they could mountains While God hath converting or saving work to do by a Minister though it be but for one soul though all the rest should maliciously conspire against him yet they do imagine things in vain Observe that I place already mentioned 1 Cor. 16. 9. An effectual door was opened and their were many Adversaries There was a large door opened for all that It is true we have that Expression even in the same Chapter Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock and if any man open unto me c. But that place onely implyeth our duty what we are bound to do not our ability He that knocketh must also open the door although the will is not forced in this but God hath insuperable power over it whereby he can make it of unwilling willing 3. It may fall out sometimes that God calleth a man to preach to a people concerning whom their is none or little hope of doing any good Now such who are thus called must continue in their slation obeying the will of God though they see they labour in vain This was Isayes case Ch. 6. when he is commanded by his preaching to make the eyes of the people blinde their hearts heavy It was also Ezekiels case Cha. 3. 7. But the house of Israel will not hearken unto thee for they will not hearken unto me for all the house of Israel are impudent and hard hearted so Cha. 2. 7. Thou shalt speak my words to them whether they will hear or whether they will forbear Thus a Minister lawfully called to a people must not presently think of departing from them because of the little hope that he hath to do good but must patiently and constantly wait upon the Lord in his way The case of a Ministers removeal from a people is of great difficulty and tenderness The causes of his departure may be either Internal which God onely knoweth as Whether it be a pure Zeal to Gods glory or some carnal and sinister respect or External and those externally may be either by some powerfull and cogent Providence of God as some think in the Plague or personal Persecution of the Minister or by the command of Superiours or for want of Maintenance or where he cannot have his health or hy a voluntary dismission of the people or Lastly when there is a manifest Opposition generally against the Ministry so that the madness and malice of the people force him away Thus our Saviour commandeth Matth. 10. 14. Whosoever shall not reteive you when ye depart out of that city shake off the dust of the feet Thereby to signifie say some so God would at last cast off such a people with as much abhorrency as we do the dust of our feet or else thereby to declare that all the labour and pains they had been at should one day give in Testimony against them Thus we read Act. 13. 21. Paul and Barnabas shook off the dust off their feet against the persecuting and unbelieving Jews And Verse 46. Paul speaketh boldly to them Seeing ye put the word of God from you and judg your selves unworthy of Eternall life lo we turn to the Gentiles Thus You see there may be weighty Causes of a Ministers Removeal For they are two rigid who think the Union between Pastor and people is indissoluble like that of marriage Yet among all the Causes nothing is so clear as when a when a people by their wickedness and Opposition do persecute and drive him away or when they are too refractory to the Orders of Christ that he cannot with a good conscience exercise all Ministerial duties amongst them But though this be so The frowardness and unprofitableness of a people must not
sense would be more properly said to erre if under such impediments it did not represent as it doth First One impediment in the sense is the two long distance of the Object from the eye to instance in this senfe As we judg the Sun less than the earth because of the vaste distance from us so that till a man take Astronomical Instruments and correct Sense by Art he misjudgeth about the Suns magnitude thus is it here When we go to judg of Gods Promises to us or his Church we finde not the truth of them because the wayes of God are too remote from us his thoughts exceed ours as much as the Heavens do the earth Therefore we must necessarily erre till we go to the Scripture that is as it were the Artificial Instrumennt whereby we are able to behold that truth in Gods proceedings which otherwise we could not A Second Impediment is the medium indispositum when the means of seeing is Indisposed as when we look upon a stick in the waters or the Sun through a dark cloud Thus many times when we judg of Gods proceedings according to his Promises we look through False mediums we think according to the Principles that men would do in the world as Luther said We would think that God should destroy Pope and Turk immediately but all this is because we look through an indisposed glass in this particular Lastly The eye cannot judg right of its Object when the visive faculty is disturbed when that is infested with any evil humors Thus the spiritual eyes even of a Godly man are in some measure vitiated and therefore are not able to behold that glory of God in carrying on the Affairs of his Church and by those very wayes which we would think tend to the destruction of the things promised by them he doth fulfill them for the wayes of the Lord are wonderfull to us in making good his Promises and commonly they are fulfilled by those means which seem contrary to them even as he cured the blinde man by mingling spittle with clay which he laid upon his eyes And thus the Godly soul may finde how God is true in spiritual Promises to his soul for he obtaineth comfort through desertions the way to Heaven he findes through Hell yea in sanctifying Grace he cometh to higher Degrees in Grace even by his Failings So true is that of Suarez Aliquando substractio gratiae est ad finem gratiae The end of Grace is accomplished by the gradual substraction and suspension of Grace for a time But I must not inlarge herein Lastly This truth of God is the foundation of all Religion and Godliness For if there were no truth in the Scriptures which are Gods truth if there were no truth in the Promises or Threatnings into what a Chaos and Confusion of wickedness would all men fall There would be no difference between Hell and this World So that Gods Truth is a Foundation of all Piety in these three wayes First The truth of God in his Doctrine delivered to the Church is the foundation yea the Essence and soul of his Church In this it doth differ from Jews Turks and Pagans yea from all Heretical Societies That she hath the truth of God and others not So that as the soul● keepeth the body from rottenness and Putrefaction Thus also the truth of God keepeth the Church from being only a Carkase or to have the Name and Title of a Church without the thing it self Secondly The truth of God in his Promises is the great supporter of the hopes of all the Godly By them alone they are enabled to walk with Peter upon the water and sink not because they believe Gods Promises to be true they do therefore renounce all unlawfull Pleasures and Profits they will not leave the fatness and sweetness of them to go to those bryars Thirdly The truth of God in his threatnings That is like a fiery sword to keep them from all evil They know those threatnings are true and that the World and the Devil prove lyars to all those that serve them therefore they awe their hearts with a continuall fear of them And certainly if every wicked man would remember this That Gods threatnings are true they will be made good no wisdome no greatness no power can resist him For how can the stubble withstand the consuming fire this would make them utterly forsake their sinnes But whether thou wilt believe or no Gods Curses will fall upon thee For there is this difference between the Promises and Threatnings The Promises many of them are not made good unto them unless thou do believe believe and thy sinnes are forgiven thee but the threatnings will be made good to thee a prophane sinner whether thou wilt or not Gods Word will have its effect though thou dost desire it might be false SERM. CXVI The personal failings of Ministers are oft cast upon the Ministry it self 2 COR. 1. 18. But as God is true our word toward you was not yea and nay THe next particular considerable is the occasion of that Transition which the Apostle maketh from the word of his Promise in particular to come to them and the word of his Preaching in the general The occasion is from that evill and malevolent Disposition which was in his Adversaries who from any either real or but supposed Imperfections in other things would presently burden his Ministry with it and thereby as much as in them lieth make Paul wholly useless in the Church of God Now because this is the continual stratagem which the Devil useth to make the best Ministry ineffectual and because it is the constant inclination of wicked men to do so therefore I shall pursue this Observation That there is a propensity in wicked and evil minded men to cast all the imperfections of the Ministers of the Gospel upon their Ministry and Doctrine To bring the Truths they Preach either into doubt or disesteem because of some failings yea though they be not real but supposed in their own Imaginations Thus the Adversaries of Paul they did captiously lay hold upon his Promise and failing as they think in that thereby they would render all his Doctrine and Ministry odious that thereby their falshoods and corruptions may have the greater success Thus the wickedness of ungodly men doth constantly bend to this that they may be hardened in their hearts against the Word Preached that they may fortifie themselves with some damnable Principles of others that so the message of the Lord may be rejected Now to illustrate this consider these particulars First That when a Minister either preaches false Doctrine or liveth scandalously or is lazy and negligent in his place then it is lawfull for a people to have an holy and wise zeal against such persons that they may be quickened up to their duties Neither is this to be an enemy to the Office of the Ministry or to endeavour the publique Dishonour of it
out against the Doctrine and Office for any real or supposed failings because it is that which doth most grieve and trouble them It is the Word of God that is a terrour to them that will not let them sin securely theresore they have no care to take but as much as lieth in them to make it no word to make it nothing but the humours of men For all the while they believe this is the Doctrine of God this will reprove me this will damn me they dare not they cannot rise up against God but to delude their soules therefore they run to lies and sinfull refuges whereby they would undervalue this Word and make it nothing but the Opinions of men 3. They fall foul upon the Doctrine presently because herein they think they do the greater despite to the faithfull Ministers of God Herein they think the more to afflict them they know that no glory honour or profit doth so much prevail with him as the honour of his Office and the truth of his Doctrine and theresore that they might shew their mischief and malice the more they would him in that which is dearest 4. They condemn the Doctrine from personal failings because herein they think to justifie themselves the more That there is no such reason why it should be powerfull to reforme or convert them seeing it doth not so to the Minister himself They think they have a good plea for their unprofitableness and unfruitfulness If he be a Physician say they Why doth he not heal himself if he can save others why doth he not save himself as they derided Christ Use of Exhortation To observe and take notice of this subtilty of Satan and the naughtiness of thy own heart in this particular Are not all his workings to prejudice thee against the faithfull Pastor of thy soul Doth not every tale or story doth not every slanderous and lying report presently take off thy Faith and reverence to the word that is preached Oh remember that it is Gods word it is Gods truth whatsoever our failings may be its Gods treasure though it be in an earthen vessel It will be no excuse for thee at the day of judgment to say Lord I regarded not the word I mattered not Sermons I attended not to what they Preached because I thought the Messengers thereof were proud and covetous Will not God arraign thee saying It was my Word howsoever It was my Doctrine my word was not proud or Doctrine Covetous if not for their sakes yet you should have received it for my sake It was not the Ministers Doctrine the Ministers Sacrament but mine The Devil is very busie to destroy thee by this temptation but watch and pray against them SERM. CXVII Of Changing in Matters of Religion 2 COR. 1. 18. Our word toward you was not yea and nay WE are now arrived at the last particular considerable in this Text and that is the firmnesse and constancy of the Doctrine that Paul preached to the Corinthians You heard that malevolent adversaries from a supposed levity in Paul otherwise did presently argue to an inconstancy in his Doctrine And although this was but once they could not charge such an appearing levity upon Paul often It was but at one time yet how ready were they to take an advantage hereby against Gods truth It is true the verity and firmnesse of Gods truths doth not depend upon the esteem of Ministers his word is sure though men be vain and inconstant yet by this instance we see how much it concerneth the Ministers of the Gospel to abound in gravity sincerity and constancy especially so to deport themselves that the Doctrine they preach may not be suspected of changeablenesse as if they would preach that for Gods truth one time which afterwards they would preach to be the Devils lie This is that which Paul doth here renounce Our word toward you saith he was not yea and nay that is it was not light mutable it was not white and black hot and cold but it was alwayes the same constant abiding truth From whence observe That for a Minister to be mutable and contradictory in his Doctrine is very reproachfull to him and makes his Ministry wholly uselesse Sometimes to preach one way as the way of God one opinion as the certain truth of God and then afterwards to preach up the clean contrary this debaseth the person and the office of a man it maketh all his Ministry to be despised They conclude either that such a man thinketh there is no Religion at all or at least that he is either Atheistical believing none or else very ignorant or carnal and self-seeking that with Demetrius the Priest of Diana's Temple doth judge that only Religion which is profitable and therefore measure the truths of Doctrines by their interest and carnal emoluments In the Old Testament we read of many such lying Prophets who did not prophesie according to the visions of the Lord but from the imagination of their own hearts preached to Kings and people such pleasing things as they desired This hath done a world of hurt in the Church of God when the officers therein have not regarded whether the things they preach were Gods truths but whether pleasing to men or no. This was to make the Sunne to follow the Dial and the truth of God shall no longer be truth but while it pleaseth man Now such men that are thus mutable must needs be accounted transgressours by all For so saith the Apostle If I build the things againe I once destroyed I make my selfe a transgressour Galat. 2. 18. This Doctrine deserveth serious examination because as there is much truth in it and thereby much good may be done So occasionally through mistake men may be prejudiced to their own hurt For did not the Papists brand the Reformers at first with inconstancy and perfidiousnesse that they were nothing but Yea and Nay For formerly they came to the Masse they worshipped Images they acknowledged the Pope as well as they But then of a sudden they were all changed then the Pope was Antichrist then the Masse was blasphemous Idolatry then they puiled down their Altars and Images Thus say the Papists they were yea and nay And in our age Are there not many offended because the Ministers of the Gospel do not keep up the same Church-administrations as they once did that they do not pray baptize administer the Lords Supper in the same way as once they did If it was no sinne then why is it now Thus they think there is much inconstancy and levity in Ministers because they see such changes and alterations in their publick administrations Let us therefore abide the longer upon this truth seeing the Text doth give such seasonable advantages thereunto And First You must know That all yea and nay is not bad There may be a time when he that hath been for a Yea a long time in Religion must if ever he will be
Christ herein the world knoweth Insomuch that St Francis or St Dominick or the Virgin Mary or some other Saint these were preached more than Christ Insomuch that we may say Till God raised up our Reformers there was no preaching of Christ Images Saints Pilgrimages and workes of Supererogations these were made the whole of Christianity It is true they would sometimes mention Christ but then they make him but a semi-Saviour they make others to joyne in this worke And although they runne to many plausible distinctions yea would perswade us that they more honour Christ then we doe yet all the water of their Tyber cannot cleanse them herein It was then blessed mercy when the Sunne-shine of the Gospel began to arise so that Christ was exalted in his Glory and his Offices that now there was no more robbery making others equal to him Yea the bold blaspheming picture was not ashamed of this Inscription That the way to Heaven by St Francis was easier than by Christ The Papists then do not preach Christ And as for the Socinian he surpasseth the Papist and deferveth not to be reckoned amongst Christians For although they hold him to be a constituted God and some of them say That religious adoration is due to him yet they say This is meerly from Gods appointment Hence as they dis-robe him of his Deity so they deny him to be a Saviour and Redeemer by way of satisfaction and atonement to the justice of God and therefore make him but as an eminent Prophet and Martyr but having no essential God-head nor procuring by his death any atonement for our sinnes to the vindicative justice of God What cause then have we to rejoyce under the full and exact preaching of Christ where Christ in his Natures in his Offices is so magnified that he alone is to be our Mediatour In his obedience alone in his death alone we put all our confidence For if Christ be not known as the way truth and life If the Natures and Offices of Christ be not understood all the way of consolation of justification of remission of sinne is wholly mistaken Because Christ is not known in his Mediatory Office therefore men either runne into despair and tormenting fears on one side or else into instituted wayes of superstition and supererrogation to the workes of the Law and to merits which hath been the poisonous Doctrine in Gods Church for many yeares together this was the wormwood that was in all their water The Popish Casuists did give consciences troubled for sinne nothing but gall to drink and in stead of healing did provoke and irritate the wound farre more Fifthly Christ is preached when he is set up as the King and Lord of his Church to whose Lawes and commands we are wholly to submit else we shall hereafter finde him to be the great Judge of the world who will judge it in righteousnesse People are deceived when they think Christ must be preached onely as a meer absolute Saviour that though they live in prophanenesse and dissolutenesse yet they are to trust in him as a Saviour Whosoever preacheth Christ thus he preacheth another Christ than what is revealed in the Word Therefore the Doctrines of Antinomians and Libertines who turne the grace of God into wantonnesse are to be abhorred with all abomination though there may be a sinfull setting up of righteousness and our good workes against Christ and his grace so there may be also a licentious conjoyning Christ and wickednesse We must therefore distinguish of what persons we have to do with For as Luther observed well to this effect Comment in Gen. The Antinomians who cry down holinesse and mortification they maintain themselves by my words and doctrin which I have preached but they must remember that when we came out of Popery we found the whole world in pharisaical admiration of superstitious workes as if by them they should be justified and saved which made us so advance Christ But under this pretence to cry down the preaching of the Law to give way to all licentiousnesse as if a Publican living in his sinnes might be saved by Christ though not a Pharisee This is to separate one Scripture from another But you will say If we are onely to preach Christ then we must not preach the Law we must not preach about regeneration and the differencing characters between a temporary believer and a true one we must not then preach repentance holy duties nor the day of Judgement To this it is answered That the right preaching of all these is to preach Christ Therefore the Law is preached hell and damnation are preached that so Christ may be the more welcome that so the grace of the Gospel may be the more conspicuous Even as it is with the Physician it 's health that he aimeth at even while he maketh sick while he putteth to paine and seemeth to take the ready way to destroy and kill The Husbandman while he ploweth and harroweth the ground it is the crop he looketh at in all this So it is with the Ministers of God while they convince threaten terrifie while they informe direct all is to bring you nearer to Christ These are the Ladders to stand upon while Christ is built in you SERM. CXX Our Lord Christ is the Son of GOD. 2 COR. 1. 19. For the Sonne of God Jesus Christ c. VVE heard what was the Subject matter of Pauls Preaching even the Lord Christ who is described from his Natures and Office The first is His Divine Nature in the former words The Son of God What is necessary for the Explication of this shall be brought in the Amplification of the Doctrine which is That The Lord Christ is the Son of God This is the greatest and most glorious Attribute that can be given to him It is for this that all adoration and divine worship is due to him It is for this that we are commanded to put our trust and confidence in him Had he not been truly God he could not have been our Mediator nor purchased our Salvation for us No meer pure creature Man or Angel could accomplish this work but he that is our Saviour must be Immanuel God with us I shall not inlarge my self concerning the dignity of this Subject but briefly dispatch all I shall say at this time And First When we say He is the Son of God the meaning is so that he is truely and properly of the same Nature with God It is not to be understood diminitively as if he were not the most High God and Jehovah but distinctively in respect of the Father he is the Son of the Father so that he hath the true nature with God though not the same personal propriety with the Father As then he is called the Son of man because he hath the same nature of a man so also the Son of God because he hath the true nature of God and therefore Rom. 9. called God
Christ is Jesus a Saviour to his people 2 COR. 1. 19. For the Son of God Jesus Christ c. VVE have in a brief manner declared the former description of Christ in respect of his divine nature The Son of God whose Deity so much oppugned by blasphemous Heretiques is yet the Foundation of our Christianity Therefore those Socinians who would reckon the manner how he is God among the Accessories and not Fundamentals in Religion are justly to be exploded If we believe he is God say they it is enough to salvation but whether he be an essential God or made and constituted one that is not necessary Even as they instance prophanely concerning Alexander to some he was accounted a God to others a man but because both these though different in their Opinions did reverence and obey him as a King that was enough But oh prophane mouth The Lord rebuke such spirits and let not the Godly so much as bid God speed or receive into their houses such as bring this blasphemous Doctrine But let us proceed to the other descriptions of Christ which are partly in respect of his Humane Nature Jesus and partly in respect of his Office Christ. We have already said enough from the first Verse to clear the Grammatical Interpretation of these words as also what the judgments of Learned men are about those two Names So that I may not actum agere I shall insist upon New matter not then delivered and first we Observe That the Lord Christ is a Jesus and a Saviour to his people This Name containeth the glad Tydings of the Gospel If so be the news of a Physician that can cure all Diseases be so welcome to diseased Persons if the year of Jubilee was so acceptable to all those whose Lands were morgaged amongst the Jews and they perplexed in extream Debts how precious and dear should the name of a Saviour be to poor undone sinners who while they look upon themselves only and their own power see no way to escape Eternal wrath Did the Angels so much rejoyce when this Jesus came into the World who were not concerned so much in his Redemption and shall distressed and sinfull man not have his heart leap within him for joy hereat That we may be affected herein let us consider what is implyed in this Title He is a Saviour 2. Of whom he is a Saviour First In that Christ is thus called a Saviour their is necessarily implyed that all mankinde are lost that we are all in an undone and hopeless condition Thus our Saviour Mat 18. 11. For the son of man is come to save that which is lost What blessed words of comfort are here He is come to save it is of his own accord of his own good will he cometh there is no necessity he might have chosen whether he would or no but of his own meer will he is come and then he is come to save that implyeth this is the work he had no other thing to do if man had not been lost he had not come into the world If then it be Christs proper work and Office to save shall we think he will be frustrated therein and then it is to save in that it comprehended all things He came to convert to sanctifie to justifie to glorifie for Salvation includeth all these Hence the Scripture speaketh of the Godly as saved already though but in the way 2 Tim. 1. 9. who hath saved us and called us Lastly He came to save that which was lost actually lost not in danger to be lost not in probability to be lost but lost and then lost that doth imply our hopeless estate It s grace must finde us out it s Christ that must seek us out as the good Shepherd did his wandring sheep So that we see in what condition every man is though never so great wise and learned till he hath an Interest in Christ though a Great man a lost man though a Rich man yet a lost man and that to all Eternity for ever lost till this Saviour doth recover What then hast thou to do but to sit down and bewail thy loss to aggravate thy loss Oh wretched and undone man I have lost God I have lost his image I have lost Eternal glory Is it not a reproach to thee to see how thy heart can mourn and mert for outward losses I have lost my dear Relations I have lost all I am worth and to have it like a stone and a rock in this particular It is one thing to be lost and another thing to be sensible of this All men by nature are lost though they do not feel it though they rejoyce and are carnally jolly but then some few only whose hearts God doth soften by his Grace they feel and groan under this lost estate 2. We are to consider what kinde of Saviour he his and what kinde of Salvation it is And now that is plain he is not a temporal Saviour but a spiritual one so the Angel interpreteth it for he shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 17. 21. In the Old Testament we read that God did raise up his people many temporal Saviours Thus Moses was a Saviour Joshua who hath the same name with Jesus he was a Saviour and the Apostle to the Hebrews maketh Joshua the son of Nun delivering the Israelites from their dangers and enemies so that at last he bringeth them into the Land of Rest to be a Type of Christ our spiritual Saviour who delivereth us from all our spiritual enemies sin and Satan not leaving us till he hath made us sit on Thrones of Glory Now this carnal Opinion that Christ would come as a temporal Saviour did almost infect the whole Nation of the Jews yea the Disciples were leavened with this sower leaven And because some places of Scripture did plainly speak of the lowliness and afflictions of the Messiah and other of his glory and greatness therefore some Jews fancyed two Messiahs one humble lowly and poor the other magnificent and glorious And certainly if Christ had come as a temporal Messias to vindicate his people from all external bondage and to bestow on them outward pomp and greatness this world would have suited with flesh and bloud but it is a spiritual Salvation he bringeth and though natural men do not think so yet this is the greatest Salvation this alone deserveth to be called Salvation To be saved from thy sinnes to be saved from hell to be saved from damnation This is that which alone makes happy The Romans they sacrificed to Jupiter as their Saviour and that was only for temporal Deliverances But with what praise and joy are we to acknowledg Christ our Saviour who doth thus vanquish our most potent and spiritual enemies But no hearer can relish this truth unless he be spiritual he must be like the man of Jericho wounded not in body but in soul crying out I am not a dead
man but a damned man that desireth this oyl to be poured into his wounds 3. As it is a spiritual Salvation so it is an efficacious full salvation Hence he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the abstract Salvation it self and we have an excellent Expression He is able to save those to the uttermost that come unto him Heb. 7. 25. He is not an half saviour he doth not save in part It is true this salvation is not in one instant perfected it is done by degrees the Lord doth not perfectly save us from the spot and blemish of our sinnes There is the guilt of sin the power of sin the filth of sin Now even in this life Christ doth save us perfectly from the guilt of sin so that Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to those that are in Christ Jesus as also from the power of sin he delivereth us so that Sin shall not have dominion over us because we are under grace only for the presence of sin and the lusts thereof exciting and tempting these are left as the Jebusites in the land Christ could perfect his Salvation in one instant but for wise ends he doth it by degrees With him it is easie to save there is no difficulty in it Indeed this salvation is purchased upon hard termes he was willing to be in those Agonies and conflicts he was willing to dy that ignominous death that we might be saved so that he himself seemed to be lost a while that he might save us otherwise by his death he hath obtained a plentifull Salvation There are no sinnes too many or too great from which he cannot save It is true we meet with an expression 1 Pet. 4. 18. That the righteous are scarcely saved which some indeed apply to a temporal deliverance that they do hardly escape outward afflictions for the Apostle had formerly spoken that Judgment must begin at the house of God But if we apply it to the spiritual Salvation of a godly man then it is true even a godly man is scarcely saved Not that there is want or any defect in Christ not that his blood can difficulty do it but because the way to Salvation is so straight a way so contrary to flesh and blood and the Oppositions are so many to retard and divert that therefore he is hardly saved Were it not for the preserving Grace of God keeping of us when we do not keep our selves it is impossible that the most holy man should be saved Yet if we consider Christ himself the Saviour the godly soul may take so much encouragement from his Fulness and see more in him to save then can be with his sinnes yea if all the sinnes of the world were likewise upon his score to condemn and destroy him In the next place let us consider Who they are to whom he is a saviour For though he be a saviour yet it is not of all men the greater part not only of mankinde in the general but of such as are within the Church will be damned Therefore the Apostle distinguisheth mankinde into two sorts of persons 2 Cor. 3. 15. the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as are to be saved and such as are to perish not that this doth redound to the blame of any Decrees of God about the salvation of some men only or to the particularity of Christs death as if some had a desire and would have been saved but Christ would not save them but because in the men to perish their own sinnes do indispose them for salvation and they do wilfully and obstinately thrust it away far from them And then the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are such who by the meer grace of God are saved from Hell that would have been damned as well as others only the Grace of God did from the first to the last preserve them for this Blessedness In this sense it is Act. 2. 47. The Lord added to the Church such as should be saved Not that this word denoteth a present Disposition where by a man doth escape the sinnes of the world though all that are saved shall do that but the mercifull Grace of God pulling them out as he did Lot from Sodom for there it s said When he lingred the Lord being mercifull to him So it is here we are unwilling to come out of this Sodom unwilling to be delivered from our lusts and so are unwilling to be saved But God being mercifull to us by his omnipotent power he changeth our hearts and maketh us of refractory and unwilling ready and obedient Well then who are these saved ones A great Question and necessary For would it not be more than all the world to finde thy self one in the number of these saved ones when thousands and thousands shall perish in everlasting flames I shall not enlarge in this but give some brief Descriptions of them First It 's some of mankinde that he cometh to save not any of the Apostate Angels which doth infinitely commend the love of this Saviour to lost man The Apostle taketh notice of this aggravation Heb. 2. 16. For verily he took not upon him the nature of Angels Who would not have thought Christ would come rather to save lost Angels than lost men Angels are of more noble and excellent natures than men Angels if saved would have done God more service and brought him more glory than men We see if a learned if a great man in place and power be converted how much he may do for God beyond an inferiour man and then much more would a saved Angel have done than the most able men Yet such was the love of God that his only Son must come from his bosome to save lost man But Secondly It is not all lost men that he cometh to save but the humbled sinner the repenting and believing sinner He must be a sinner for if he were not so he needed not a Saviour hence he saith Matth. 9. 13. He came not to call the righteous but sinners to Repentance that is either such as thought themselves righteous that were presumptuously confident thereof or else as others those that are indeed righteous if any such could be Christ came not to them Hence this consideration of being a sinner is not to discourage thee is not to keep thee off from a saviour for if thou wert not a sinner thou didst not need a Saviour Who should come to a saviour but a sinner to the Physician but the sick Hence Paul comforted himself under this when he had been such a Persecutor and Blasphemer that Christ came to save sinners whereof he was chief 1 Tim. 1. 15. But I add it must be the humbled sinner the wounded sinner that feeleth himself perishing as the Disciples in the waters feeling themselves ready to sink cryed out Master save us we perish Matth. 8. 25. So it must be
without the promises He is the heir and therefore contrary to those in the Parable Let us not kill him but obey him and receive him for our Lord and then the inheritance will be ours Canst thou upon good grounds say Christ is mine then thou maist also say all the promises are mine but know Christ cannot be thine upon any other terms than by forsaking all thy sins though never so pleasant and profitable Christ cannot be thine unlesse you leave every thing else for him This is the pearl that we must sell all to make ours and truly no tongue is able to expresse or heart to conceive the desperate condition of those to whom no promise of grace doth belong they are herein like the damned in hell It is true in your extremities in your terrours you will call for mercy cry out for pardon but where is the Christ in whose name this is to be obtained Certainly if Christ be yours the spirit of Christ also subduing your lusts and sins for you SERM. CXXVIII The Promises give glory to God both as they are made by him and beleeved by us 2 COR. 1. 20. And in him amen unto the glory of God by us WE are now arrived at the finall cause or end of Gods promises and their confirmation in Christ which is said to be Gods glory and that by us The Ministers of the Gospel are the instruments who do offer these promises and so God is glorified by their ministerial labours Some copies indeed reade our glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expounding it in this sence that it is the glory of the Ministers of the Gospel to proclaim the year of Jubilee the acceptable time of Gods promises but that is not so probable Some also as we have formerly hinted reade it thus and therefore in him is Amen to the glory of God Thus the Vulgar Latine and one Manuscript Greek copy which Calvin doth commend calling that connexion we have frigida a frigid and cold one whereas this doth notably discover the duty of all beleevers that they are to set to their Amen as a Seal to Gods Promises and certainly it is a blessed thing for the people of God to be nourished up in the Evangelicall Amen We do with more ease use the word Amen optatively Let it be so then confirmatively So it is For if we did give our Amen in this latter sence to the promises our hearts would have full quietnesse and serenity after our prayers when we had cast our burthen upon the Lord then we should no more disquiet our selves with doubting thoughts whether the Lord will fullfill his promises or no. So that this Amen would exclude all ergo's all arguings and doubtful disputations we are apt to molest our selves with Now although we shall not follow those copies that reade it so yet that sence must necessarily be included for then are promises to Gods glory when they are beleeved and received by us Let us then seriously consider the end of Gods promises why hath he taken such a full and sure way for beleevers The Text telleth us it is for the glory of God we would think the promises had this rather for their end to bring salvation to us and so indeed that is a subordinate end but the Apostle he instanceth in the principall and chiefest end of all which is Gods glory And therefore Chrysostome doth well observe upon this Text that this is a sure argument to prevail with God in our Petitions for the accomplishment of Gods promises for though he might neglect our salvation yet he will not his own glory saith he though thy happinesse be no argument yet his own honour will be a motive to prevail so that the words then afford this Observation That the promises of God are made on his part and are to be beleeved on our part to the glory of God When we beleeve Promises we do not only advantage our selves but we also glorifie God This is not sufficiently thought of for we are apt to look upon faith in a Promise as that which is for our comfort our profit only and do not attend that hereby also we do exceedingly glorifie God Hence Abraham is said Rom. 4. 20. to be strong in faith giving glory unto God That the usefulnesse of this doctrine may appear we will consider the Promises first on Gods part who promiseth them and shew how this maketh to the great glory of God and then on the beleevers part while he giveth his Amen to them And for the first Gods glory is exceedingly manifested in promises by these particularly First Hereby his bounty and goodnesse is made known The Lord as you heard formerly was infinitely sufficient in his own self Nothing can adde to the blessednesse of God no more than a feather can to the weight of a mountain Had God created no world or creatures therein he had been altogether happy in himself when he made the creatures It was not for that end that Eve was to Adam to be a meet help to him No it was his plentifull goodness for bonum quo melius eo magis diffusivum God is said indeed to make all things for himself he is the end of all but as Lessius the Jesuite expresseth it he is not finis indigentiae but assimilationis not an end of indigency as if he wanted any thing by us but an end of assimilation and perfection whereby he would reduce the rationall creatures to his own likenesse we may then with enlarged hearts admire the goodnesse of God in all his promises Hath the Lord promised to be gracious to pardon sin to sanctifie and subdue corruptions give glory to God in all these things Be like a David a sweet singer of the praises of God thou maist reade in every promise the glorious attribute of Gods goodnesse and bounty Secondly As we may see the glory of his goodnesse in promises so also the glory of his love We may there reade how great his affections are to us he layeth aside as it were his absolute Majesty his terrible greatnesse and condescendeth to deal with us in a way of promise he giveth us leave by this to have confident and familiar converse with him so that as it was the unspeakable love of God to become man for our sakes thus also it is to become in promise to us so that whereas the Majesty of God might affright us his commands and threatnings might amaze us Now his promises they give us encouragement and we are with Moses admitted as it were to speak to God face to face as one familiar friend to another he giveth us the key when he maketh a promise to come into his chamber of presence when we will or to go in his wine-cellar for all spirituall refreshments when you come with a promise you have a mandamus as it were for every door to open to you and to receive you in These promises
dominion over your faith Because in the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Erasmus thinketh the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be understood as if the sense were We have not dominion over you for your faiths sake Whereupon he enlargeth himself that none is to be compelled to the faith and those saith he who are vehement herein it is that their Kingdom might be more enlarged Hence he wisheth that Text in Peter 1 Pet. 5. 3. Not being lords over Gods heritage c. were written upon all Bishops halls or palaces Vel aureis literis even in golden letters The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore when we urge that place of our Saviours reproving the ambition of the Disciples Mat. 20. 25. The Gentiles exercise dominion but so shall not ye against the political dominion of the Pope and his Bishops Bellarmines solution is frigid It is saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek which signifieth a tyrannical exercise of any power as if such an imperious abuse of power not the power it self were condemned But though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth sometimes aggravate yet that it doth not there appeareth in that the same passage in Luk. 22. 25. is related by the simple Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here in the Text is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle then doth here disclaim all absolute dominion over their faith all lordlinesse over their consciences he may not dictate or prescribe to them what he pleaseth Now if Paul so eminent an Apostle made so not by men but having immediate revelation from God who was also infallible in his Doctrine doth yet disclaim this dominion What mortal man may do it What Minister is equal to Paul Yea this Church of Corinth was wholly planted by him they were converted by him and therefore he might plead more sovereignty over them being not an instructer but a father rather than other yet for all that he challengeth no such primacy So that this Text confoundeth all Papal Church-government with the upholders thereof For how abominable are the expressions of the Popish flatterers affirming That the Pope hath the same tribunal with Christ that he can dispense against Paul ' s Epistles that he can do any thing praeter super and extra jus and that he is to judge all but to be judged of none with such kind of blasphemies Yea Bellarmine doth apply that prophecy of Isaiah Behold I lay in Sion a foundation-stone which doth directly belong to Christ even unto the Pope though secondarily but most blasphemously The Observation is That though Christ hath invested the Officers of the Church with some kinde of ministerial power yet they have not thereby any dominion over the faith of believers They may not preach what they will nor command and dictate what they will Insomuch that although their Pastors say Virtue is a vice and vice a virtue yet the people are bound to believe it as Bellarmine in his first Edition affirmed but afterwards left it out That all such dominion by compulsion and force is excluded from the Ministry appeareth plainly by those two Texts Luk. 22. 15. 1 Pet. 5. 2. Those places do not forbid such a fatherly pastor-like power that Christ hath bestowed upon his Church-officers but a civil domination as also an ecclesiastical-magisterial power in the Church as if we were to believe because they say so No our Saviour absolutely prohibiteth that when he saith Be ye not called masters for one is your master even Christ Mat. 23. 10. Where also we are commanded to call no man father Hence the Papists exceedingly erre in calling those Ancients Fathers thereby urging their dominion over our faith as if we were bound to believe what ever a Father saith Indeed if by Father we mean no more than an Ancient who hath lived long before us so the word may be allowed but they call them so in a doctrinal and authoritative respect as if we might not gain-say them no more than sonnes their father but this doth contradict our Saviours command Christ then is the onely Lord and Head of his Church whatsoever he saith we are commanded to hear him and that for his own authority there is no disputing no doubting no examination allowed of what he saith but all Ministers since the Apostles dayes are subject to errour and may be deceived and withall by their office they are stewards not lords in the family they are Embassadours onely not Princes Now such have a limited power they cannot do any thing of themselves any further than their Commission extends their power doth not extend And truly as was said if the Apostles though infallible would not challenge such a dominion such a commanding power in the Church 1 Cor. 7. 6. I speak this not by commandment but referreth all his doctrine his power and what he did to Christ as the original yea Christ as Mediator referred his doctrine and will to the Father What shall become of those ambitious Diotrephesses who affect a greater power in the Church But the Doctrine needeth explication in several particulars And First Let us see negatively What is not forbidden or disclaimed by the Apostles and then positively What is for the negative 1. The Apostle doth not here exclude that lawfull Ecclesiastical power which the Ministers of God have after a spiritual manner in dispensing of the Ordinances appointed by Christ Some indeed think it is not power or authority but a gift Others that all their power is swallowed up by the Magistrate when he becometh Christian but certainly Christ appointed Pastors and Teachers in his Church till his second coming and gave them power to preach the Word to administer Sacraments to exercise Church-discipline as might at large be proved if this were a fit occasion The Apostle attributeth to himself a power once or twice only he saith it is for edification not destruction 2 Cor. 13. 10. And he telleth these Corinthians If he come again he will not spare 2 Cor. 13. 2. 2 Cor. 10. 6. he saith He was in a readinesse to revenge all disobedience And that command of his To cast out the incestuous person argued his power Yea the names given them that they are called Pastors and Rulers and that the people are to obey them argue plainly there is a spiritual ministerial power appointed by Christ in his Church Of which more largely God assisting in subsequent passages 2. Neither doth this expression imply That the Ministers of the Gospel have their power from the people As if they were Embassadonrs in their name and acted with a power derived from them as some have pleaded for the office is of Christ the designation and application of the person to the office is by the Ministry of the Church but they have not the office it self from them It 's true they are sometimes called The servants of
he had confidence of abiding with them for the furtherance and joy of their faith where you see the more growth and encrease in grace the more joy and it is called the joy of faith because by beleeving we come to partake of this joy Let not then any people nourish prejudices in their hearts against the faithfull Ministers of the Gospel as if they endeavoured only to discourage men to fill the hearts of people with despair to drive them into me●ancholy and turn them out of their wits as prophane persons calumniate for our great work is to provide comfort for such as are fit Subjects to receive it That must alwaies be remembred oyl is for the wounded in soul this wine is not for such who are transported with feaverish lusts of their sinnes but if thy sinnes be a burthen to thee and thou hast cast them off then manna is prepared for thee in this wildernesse then a year of Jubilee is to be proclaimed to thee who didst mourn under thy spirituall debts But let us explicate this Truth And first There is a twofold joy a carnall and worldly joy whereby men delight in the pleasures of ●in and the jolly pastimes and customes that are in the world and there is a spiritual joy arising from Gods love in Christ whereby we are quickened to all holinesse with great delight now God forbid that any Ministers should be helpers of the former joy There have indeed been such unsavoury salt prophane Ministers of the Gospel whose work hath been to strengthen the hands of wicked men to preach peace and mercy to them while wallowing in their sinnes but wo to such Pastors and such a people These are sharply reproved in the Scripture for there alwaies will be such men-pleasers such daubers with untempered mortar as Jer. 6. 14. They heal the hurt of my daughter slightly saying Peace Peace when there is no peace Would you have such a Physician that should flatter you about the wounds of your body saying it will heal it will heal when thou feelest it to putrifie more and more Such spirituall Mountebanks the Prophet Ezechiel complaineth of also cap. 13. 10. They have seduced my people saying peace peace especially at 22. verse these wicked Prophets are said to make sad the hearts of such whom God would not have made sad and strengthened the hands of the wicked by promising them life Thus you see what an unfaithful Minister will do all that he can and dare he will uphold and encourage a prophane person and all that he can and dare he will uphold and discourage vex and grieve such who fear God and whom God would have comforted but such men in time meet with an overflowing storm and great hailstones fallling upon them as v. 11. which shall destroy them and rend the wall down they have daubed up Do not then think this is the joy we should help you in in your prophane pleasures in your superstitious and vain customes to encourage you no this were to deprive both our selves and you of true solid joy Hence in the second place We are to help the joy of those whose grace we have helped before Joy cannot be the first stone in Gods building grace and holinesse is first and then consolation The spirit of God is first a sanctifier and then a comforter So that many people take a preposterous method if they be sick they look the Minister should presently give them comfort there must not a word be said of their sinnes of the necessity of repentance this will make them despair Fond and foolish people why would ye be tickled into hell why would ye be pleased into damnation oh it cannot be that thou shouldst have comfort before godlinesse this would be to falsifie the covenant of God to abuse the seal of pardon applying it to him whom God doth still hold guilty Understand then Gods method and submit thereunto saying I do not expect comfort I would not have the promises of grace applied to me while thus obstinate and impenitent in my sinful waies but if thou art found godly then we are to comfort and to comfort as Isa 40. 1. again and again not giving over till that evil spirit of unbeleef be cast out And this spirituall comfort is seen in two particulars 1. Comfort under the guilt of sinne and truly herein we do a most acceptable work Then it is indeed the tongue of the learned when we speak a word in season to such afflicted spirits how ready and willing are the faithfull Ministers of the Gospel to bring the balm of Gilead to such persons how pittifull and compassionate because they know the terrour of the Lord God hath commanded us to be Messengers of peace and like Noahs dove to come with an Olive-branch assuring them that the waters are abated and oh that God would provide such comforting work for us It is very seldome to meet with such we have work enough to reprove the prophane to instruct the erroneous but how few do need comfort because their sinnes are a heavy burthen upon them In the 2. place we are to help the comfort of the godly in respect of their outward afflictions For they are more chastened than other men there is no godly man but God hath appointed a crosse for him yea sometimes many crosses together Now how necessary is it to have a faithful and wise comforter in such cases for alas our own hearts are full of discouragements and every thing is ready to appear more terrible than it is and the devil he is very ready to make the waters overflow more than they would do So that to administer comfort to such disconsolate persons is the best act of love and the most suitable alms that can be desired Seeing then that grace must be laid as a foundation for comfort Hence in the third place Before the Ministers of the Gospel can administer comfort to unregenerate persons they must necessarily use sharp and bitter means as preparatory there unto Neither are we then to be blamed or judged too cruell and austere but sinne is to be condemned as the cause of it It is your sinne that maketh all bitter things necessary When the Physician administreth bitter Physick which maketh thee exceeding sick is he to be blamed and not rather those peccant humours within us The ground must be plowed up and have its bowels as it were moved ere the good seed can be sown into it The wool must be carded and torn as it were in peeces ere it be made for a garment The stone must come under the hammer and saw ere it be prepared for the building And thus ere the heart of man be fit to receive Gospel-comfort it must be humbled and broken by the Law of God So that we are making way for your comfort even while we denounce the curses of the Law To preach of hell and damnation though it be grievous to you yet
be applyed to you how can ye have comfort if ye live in the waies of sinne doe not any thing that may chase away this comfort if we preach never such comfortable truths if thou by thy negligence and unmortified walking dost deprive thy self of consolation then know the blame lieth in thy self and not in the Ministery Thou criest give me a word of comfort how can we comfort him whom God would not have comforted SERM. CXLVII God only the Lord of our Christian Faith 2 COR. 1. 24. For by faith ye stand THis last clause saith Calvin other Interpreters either take no notice of or else do not clearly instruct about it for whereas it is plain by the causall particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is brought in as an argument of something preceding it is very difficult to finde out the reason Those Interpreters that take notice of it are divided Some do make it a reason of the words immediatly foregoing Paul was a helper of their joy because they stood firmly in the faith for although there were some who denied the resurrection yet that was not the doctrine of the Chuch in general nor was it puhlikely professed by them It is true many abuses there were in practice both civill and religious yet because they did firmly retain the true faith therefore it was that he would not wholly cast them off as no Church Their true doctrine which they professed made him the more hopeful of them and certainly the pure sound faith professed by a Church though otherwise greatly corrupted maketh it to have the essence and life of a Church and withall suggesteth hope that God in time will make them an holy practical Church as well as a sound Orthodox one Hence Paul in his first Epistle to the Thessalonians c. 3. v. 5 6 7. doth much rejoyce in their faith that they stood stedfast therein When I could no longer forbear I sent to know your faith As also Timotheus brought him glad tidings of their faith And again we were comforted in our affliction by your faith and this interpretation is very probable and not to be wholly rejected But then a second is more probable and that maketh it a reason of the former part of the verse We have not dominion over your faith for by faith ye stand stedfast Insomuch that if I Paul or an Angel from heaven should preach unto you another doctrine yet you beleeve in the truth as Gods truth and not mans truth So that God alone hath the dominion over your hearts in beleeving Thus it is a very fit and proper reason Hence Heinsius thinketh there is a transposition of the words which is usuall with Paul and that they should be inserted before the later clause thus Not that we have dominion over your faith for by faith you stand Whether we reade it objectively you stand in the faith or instrumentally by faith you stand it is not much materiall Neither are we to render it in the past signification you have stood because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek as if the Apostle did imply they formerly had indeed stood in the faith though lately they grew wavering for it is usuall to use the preterperfect for the present especially when a continuance or perseverance is intended as Matth. 20 Why stand ye here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idle all the day long Both these interpretations may be conjoyned but because the latter is the most considerable Therefore I shall insist on that and observe That the Christian faith is of that nature that it doth respect and relate unto God only We believe not in men but in God Whether we speak of dogmatical or fiducial faith they cannot have any other bottome to stand upon but the authority of God himself Thus saith the Lord Thus it is written is the ground of all true Christian faith which truth deserve●h explication in some particular Propositions As First There is an humane and there is a divine faith which onely deserveth the name of Christian faith and to which onely the promises of God doe belong An humane faith I call that when men doe beleeve principles of Religion meerly upon humane motives that is the ultimate reason and motive into which their faith is resolved These humane motives are manifold as the Authority of the Church the Authority of Ministers and Pastors our education by parents custome and universality as also the Laws and Edicts of a Magistrate commanding such a Religion to be received and no other Now whosoever maketh this the chief reason of the profession of his faith is upon no better ground than the Turkes is for their Mahumetan the Papists for their Popish faith Insomuch that many Protestants Turkes and Papists though they exceedingly differ in the materials of Religion yet agree in the formali motivo they believe so and so because brought up in it because commanded by their Civil Magistrates It is that which the Papists upbraid us with that our Religion is but a Parliament-Religion or a Queen Elizabeths-Religion because when they established it the Land generally received it Now to this we say That no doubt the generality of people except such as are enlightned by Gods Spirit doe receive even the Christian or true Religion but upon civil and humane respects and therefore when Emperours have been Arrians the people have been Arrians when the Kings of Israel were Idolaters the inhabitants became Idolaters And thus when the Kings of the Earth have been Papists the people have been Papists also So that they cannot object any thing more against the Protestant Religion than we may against the Papist Onely we adde a further position which introduceth a divir●e faith which they overthrow and so by consequence teach no more than an Lumane faith For we hold That every private believer is bound to have an explicite faith of the things necessary to salvation and this faith we say is knowledge the ground whereof is the Authority and Testimony of God in the Scripture So that we doe not believe in Magistrates nor in Ministers nor in the Church trusting our faith and salvation upon them but the word of God onely whereas the Papists do expresly affirm That a private Christians faith is enough to salvation if he content himself with this That he believeth as the Church believeth never troubling himself in reading of books or searching of the Scripture As Valentia's known instance of a Merchant brought in by him disputing What Religion he should be of doth evidently declare So then a Papist as a Papist cannot reach any higher than to an humane faith For though they will not yeeld the Authority of the Church to be an humane Authority yet both reason and experience doth fully convince that But let us come to our own people and sadly bewail the ignorance and stupidity of Protestants in general who are not moved by any divine motives or Scripture-respects to imbrace
their Religion but onely are perswaded herein by external motives very few being able to give a reason of the faith or hope that is in them which yet the Apostle Peter requireth of every man and woman 1 Pet. 3. 15. What reason have they but their fathers example and the Lawes of the Land So that it is meerly accidental that they do receive a true Religion for it had been Heretical and Idololatrical it had been all one to them they would have entertained it however But to this particular you must observe one Caution It 's one thing to speak of the Introductory and Preparatory means of faith and another thing of the ultimate and formal motive or reason why I do believe We do readily grant That the true Churches Ministery may prepare for a divine faith What is Paul and what is Apollo but Ministers by whom ye believe saith the Scripture 1 Corinth 3. Thus Timothy had his faith by the godly education of his Mother and Grandmother Yea John 4. we reade of the woman of Samaria instrumental to bring many people to believe on Christ onely yet observe that expression vers 42. Now we believe not because of thy saying for we have heard him our selves Godly Ministers then and godly parents may be greatly helpfull to us in true believing but then the reason and chief motive is from the Divine Authority of the Scripture declaring this truth We doe not believe in Ministers nor in the Church And thus you must understand that passage of Jehoshaphats Chron. 20. 20. Believe in the Lord your God so shall ye be established believe the Prophets so shall ye prosper Believe in God ultimately but believe the Prophets ministerially So that it would be a fanatick presumption out of a perswasion that onely worketh faith thereby to cast off those usefull helps and means which he hath appointed for the producing of faith In the next general place we are to know That two things are necessarily required to the working of a divine faith The one Effectively The other Objectively The principle that worketh faith in us and the reason or motive thereof The principle that worketh faith in us is God alone None can make the heart of man to believe Scripture-truths but God onely Hence Faith is the gift of God so some are said To believe through grace Act. 18. 27. Is it not plain in the Pharisees notwithstanding they heard our Saviour preach and also saw his wonderfull miracles yet to them it was not given to believe or to know the mysteries of God but to others more unlearned and contemptible it was Hence it falleth out that the most learned men are many times most Atheistical or at least Sceptical and doubting in Religion Insomuch that we are to be importunate with God in prayer that he would both work and increase faith in us Hence Christ is said to be both the authour and finisher of our faith Hebr. 12. 2. It 's the mighty power of God so enlightning and enabling thee that thou doest adhere to the truth For how many specious arguments may be produced against the faith How mutable are many in forsaking the faith they once professed and turn Heretical So that it is a special work of Gods grace to make thee stand firme in the faith especially in times of temptation To be a pillar in the Temple of the Lord and not a reed shaken with every winde is a glorious preservation For it 's plain that it's fancy errour or humour that lead many in Religion and not this holy precious faith Again The second thing necessarily concurring to a divine faith is a Divine testimony it must be Gods word We must have the Doctrine from Christ else our faith is but an humane faith and so our Religion but an humane Religion The Thessalonians are commended by Paul That they received the Word not as the word of men but as it is indeed the word of God and when so received it effectually worketh in those that believe Alas what is the reason there is so little holinesse so little godlinesse It is because there is so little divine faith The truths we preach are not received as the word of God we look no further or higher than to a man in these things we doe not hear and tremble we doe not beleeve and tremble we rise not up with heart-reverence as Eglon though an Heathen did to Ehud when he said He had a message from the Lord. In the third place In that the true Christian faith floweth from such a divine principle and ariseth from such a divine motive Hence it is that no kinde of persons have an absolute Sovereignty over the faith of a believer and whosoever doe arrogate it to themselves they assume the property of the Almighty and most infinite God They arrogate to themselves the peculiar and incommunicable property of Christ which is to be the Head of the Church and a Law-giver in respect of any Doctrine Worship or Ordinances It is true there have been such especially the Pope of Rome who hath thus arrogated to himself setting himself in the Temple of God as God but the blasphemies of such have been written as it were in their fore-heads and hereby they are justly deemed to be a Political or Church-Antichrist as there is a Doctrinal Antichrist But we affirme That no kinde of persons can have dominion over a mans faith seeing it hath such a peculiar reference to God First Not spiritual and Church Rulers or Ecclesiastical Governours If the Apostles would not assume it who then may It is true there are several Texts in Scripture which command us to hear our Pastours to obey them to submit unto them to have them highly in esteeme for their workes sake Such as doe not hear them are to be accounted as Heathens and Publicans They are endowed with power to Admonish and rebuke sharply Yea where obstinacy is in sinners To cast them out of the Church But all this doth not arise to a Magisterial Domination over mens consciences And although they have power to binde and loose which God himself promiseth to confirme in Heaven yet all this is declaratively and ministerially onely How farre there is a decisive power in Councils to extinguish all errours and heresies is not here to be debated This is enough that as no particular person so no Councils though never so oecomenical can say we have dominion over your faith And Secondly No civil power hath dominion over any mans faith No Magistrate can make Articles of Faith can appoint another worship of God or other Sacraments than Christ hath appointed Faith is not Caesar's gift neither can any man believe Praecisè quia vult as Mirandula declareth meerly because he will How farre Magistrates have power in matters of Religion is greatly disputed and determined by the excesse in some and by the defect in others But however no Kings or Emperours can say