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A10650 An explication of the hundreth and tenth Psalme wherein the severall heads of Christian religion therein contained; touching the exaltation of Christ, the scepter of his kingdome, the character of his subjects, his priesthood, victories, sufferings, and resurrection, are largely explained and applied. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne; by Edward Reynoldes sometimes fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford, late preacher to the foresaid honorable society, and rector of the church of Braunston in Northhampton-shire. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1632 (1632) STC 20927; ESTC S115794 405,543 546

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beleeve his kingdome of glory and salvation but they shall be made subject to the sword of his wrath and that without any hope of escape or power of opposition for God himselfe shall do it immediatly by his owne mighty power Hee will interpose his owne hand and magnifie the glory of his owne strength in the just confusion of wicked men So the Apostle saith that The Lord will shew his wrath and make his power knowne in the vessels fitted for destruction Rom. 9.22 Two meanes the Apostle sheweth shall be used in the destruction of the wicked to effect it The presence or countenance and the glorious power of the Lord 2 Thes. 1.9 The very terrour of his face and the dreadfull Majesty of his presence shall slay the wicked The kings of the earth and the great men and the rich men and the chiefe captaines and the mighty men those who all their life time were themselves terrible and had beene acquainted with terrours shall then begge of the mountaines and rockes to fall upon them and to hide them from the Face of him that sitteth upon the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe Revel 6.15 16. Esai 2.10 whence that usuall expression of Gods resolution to destroy a people I will set my face against them O then how sore shall the condemnation of wicked men bee when therein the Lord purposeth to declare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the glorious strength of his owne almighty arme Here when the Lord punisheth a people he onely sheweth how much strength and edge he can put into the Creatures to execute his displeasure But the extreme terrour of the last day shall be this that men shall fall immediatly into the hands of God himselfe who hath said Vengeance belongeth unto me and I will recompence Heb. 10.30 31. And therefore the Apostle useth this expostulation against Idolaters Doe we provoke the Lord to jelousie Are we stronger than he 1 Cor. 10.22 Dare we meete the Lord in his fury doe we provoke him to powre out All his wrath Psal. 78.38 He will at last stir up all his wrath against the vessels that are fitted for it And for that cause he will punish them himselfe For there is no Creature able to bring all Gods wrath unto another there is no vessell able to hold all Gods displeasure The Apostle telleth us that wee have to doe with God in his Word Heb. 4.13 but herein he useth the ministery of weake men so that his Majesty is cover'd and wicked men have a veile upon their hearts that they cannot see God in his Word When thy hand is lifted up namely in the threatnings and predictions of wrath out of the word they will not see for it is a worke of faith to receive the word as Gods word and therein before-hand to see his power and to heare his rod Mic. 6.9 Other men belye the Lord and say it is not he But though they will not acknowledge that they have to doe with God in his word though they will not see when his hand is lifted up in the preparations of his wrath yet they shall see and know that they have to doe with him in his judgements when his hand falleth downe againe in the execution of his wrath So the Lord expostulateth with them Ezek. 22.14 Can thine heart endure or thine hands bee strong in the dayes that I shall deale with thee The Prophet Esay resolves that question The sinners in Sion are affraid fearefulnesse hath surprised the hypocrites namely a fearefull looking for of judgement and fiery indignation as the Apostle speakes Heb. 10.27 Who amongst us shall dwell with the devouring fire who amongst us shall dwell with everlasting burnings Esai 33.14 that is in the words of another Prophet Who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fiercenesse of his anger His fury is powred out like fire and the rockes are throwne downe by him Nahum 1.6 Confirmations of this point we may take from these considerations First the quarrell with sinners is Gods owne the controversie his owne the injuries and indignities have beene done to himselfe and his owne sonne the challenges have beene sent unto himselfe and his owne Spirit And therefore no marvell if hee take the matter into his owne hands and the quarrell so immediatly reflecting upon him if he be provoked to revenge it by his owne immediate power Secondly revenge is his royalty and peculiar prerogative Deut. 32.35.41 from whence the Apostle inferres That it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10.30 31. And there are these arguments of fearefulnesse in it First it shall be in Iudgement without mercy Iam. 2.13 there shall be no mixture of any sweetnesse in the cup of Gods displeasure but all poison and bitternesse there shall not bee affoorded a drop of water to a lake of fire a minute of eafe to an eternity of torment Secondly it shall be in fury without compassion In humane judgements where the law of the state will not suffer a Judge to acquit or shew mercy yet the law of nature will force him to cōpassionate grieve for the malefactor whom he must condemne There is no Judge so senselesse of anothers miserie nor so destitute of humane affections as to pronounce a sentence of condemnation with laughter But the Lord will condemne his enemies in vengeance without any pittie I will laugh saith the Lord at your calamity I will mocke when your feare commeth Prov. 1.26 Thirdly it shall bee in revenge and recompence in reward and proportion that is in a full and everlasting detestation of wicked men the weight whereof shall peradventure lye heavier upon them than all the other torments which they are to suffer when they shall looke on themselves as scorned and abhorred exiles from the favour and presence of him that made them For as the wicked did here hate God and set their hearts and their courses against him in suo aeterno in all that time which God permitted them to sinne in so God will hate wicked men and set his face and fury against them in suo aeterno too as long as he shall be Judge of the world Thirdly this may be seene in the inchoations of hell in wicked men upon the earth When the doore of the conscience is opened and that sin which lay there asleepe before riseth up like an enraged Lion to fly upon the soule when the Lord suffers some flashes of his glittering sword to breake in like lightening upon the Spirit and to amaze a sinner with the pledges and first fruits of hell when he melteth the stout hearts of men and grindeth them unto powder what is all this but the secret touch of Gods owne finger upon the conscience For there is no creature in the world whose ministerie the heart doth discerne in the estuations and invisible workings of a guilty and unquiet spirit Fourthly the torments of wicked angels
men on the earth The Gospell is the Patent and Charter of a Christian all that hee hath to shew for his Salvation the treasure of his wealth and priviledges all that he hath to boast in either for this life or another the armory of a Christian all that he hath to hold up against the temptations and conflicts of his sorest enemies the only toole and instrument of a Christian all that he hath to doe any action of piety charity loyalty or sobriety withall the onely glasse of a Christian wherein he may see his owne face and so learne to deny himselfe and wherein he may see the face of God in Christ and so learne to desire and to follow him So that upon the matter for any man to be ignorant of the Gospell is to unchristian himselfe againe and to degenerate into a heathen Powre out thine indignation upon the heathen that know thee not Ignorance makes a man a very heathen This I say and testifie saith the Apostle that you henceforth walke not as other Gentiles walke in the vanity of their mind for you have not so learned Christ. It is not the title nor the profession which maketh a man a reall Christian and distinguisheth him from other heathen men but the learning of Christ in his Spirit and Gospell For as he who was onely outwardly and in the flesh a Jew might be uncircumcized in his heart so he who is onely in title and name a Christian may be a heathen in his heart and that more fearefully than Sodome and Gomorrah or Tyre and Sydon because he hath put from himselfe the Salvation of the Lord and judged himselfe unworthy of eternall life Lastly if there bee indeed such power in the Gospell wee should labour to beare witnesse unto the testimony which God giveth of his Word in a holy conversation It is a reproach cast upon the ordinances of God when men doe in their lives denie that vertue which God testifieth to be in them Wicked men are said to crucifie Christ againe to put him to shame to make God a liar not that these things can so really bee but because men in their evill lives carry themselves as if indeed they were so And in this sense the Gospell may bee said to bee weake too because the pride of men holds out against the saving power thereof But these men must know that the word returneth not empty unto God but accomplisheth some worke or other either it ripeneth weeds or corne There is thunder and lightning both in the word if the one breake not a heart the other will blast it if it bee not humbled by the word it will certainly bee withered and made fruitlesse Shall the clay boast it selfe against the fire because though it have power to melt wax yet it hath not power to melt clay Is it not one and the same power which hardneth the one and which softneth the other Is not the word a sweete Savor unto God as well in those that perish as in those that are saved Certainly there is as wonderfull a power in adding another death to him who was dead before which upon the matter is to kill a dead man as in multiplying and enlarging life And the Gospell is to those that perish a Savor of death unto death such a word as doth cumulate the damnation of wicked men and treasure up wrath upon wrath If it doe not convert it will certainly harden if it doe not save it will undoubtedly judge and condemne The Lord doth never cast away his Gospell hee that gave charge to gather up the broken meate of loaves and fishes that nothing might bee lost will not suffer any crumme of his spirituall manna to come to nothing Yet wee finde the Lord giveth a charge to his Prophets to preach even there where hee foretold them that their words would not bee heard Thou shalt speake all these wordes unto them but they will not hearken to thee thou shalt also call unto them but they will not answere thee Sonne of Man I send thee to the Children of Israel to a rebellions nation they are impudent Children and stiffe hearted Yet thou shalt speake my words unto them whether they will heare or whether they will forbeare for they are rebellion it selfe They will not hearken unto thee for they will not hearken unto mee For all the house of Israel are impudent and hard hearted Certainly when the Lord taketh paines by his Prophets to call those who will not heare hee doth it not in vaine they shall know at length that a Prophet hath been amongst them Therefore as the Apostle saith that the Gospell is a sweet Savour even in those that perish So wee finde those messages which have contained nothing but curses against an obstinate people have yet been as honie for sweetnesse in the mouth of those that preached them I did eate the roule saith the Prophet and it was in my mouth as honie for sweetnesse and yet there was nothing in it written but lamentations and mourning and woe Ieremie did not desire the woefull day but did heartily say Amen to the false Prophets in their predictions of safety yet in regard of his ready service unto God and of that glory which God would worke out unto himselfe in the punishment of that sinfull people the word of Prophesie which was committed unto him was the joy and rejoicing of his heart so that in all respects the Gospell of Christ is a word of power and therein wee doe and must rejoice Wee observed before that this Rod of strength is both Sceptrum Majestatis and Pedum Pastorale Both the Scepter of Christ as hee is a King and his Pastorall staffe as hee is a Bishop It denoteth the Administration of Christs Kingdome which consisteth in the dispensing of his Gospell as it is a word of Majesty and of care So then here are as I before observed two observations yet remaining to bee noted out of these words Virga Virtutis the Rod of thy strength The first that the Gospell of Christ accompanied with his Spirit is a word of great glory and Majesty For wee must ever make these concomitants wee preach the Gospell saith S. Peter with the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 1 Pet. 1.12 And indeed the Spirit is peculiar to the Gospell and not belonging to the Law at all if wee consider it alone by it selfe under the relation of a distinct covenant For though as it proceedeth out of Sion that is as it is an appendix and additament unto the Gospell it tend unto liberty and so cōmeth not without the Spirit yet by it selfe alone it gendreth nothing but bondage And therefore when the Apostle sheweth the excellency of the Gospell above the Law hee calleth one a ministration of death and of the letter the other a ministration of the Spirit and life To shew that properly the Spirit belongeth unto the Gospell of grace
condition and therefore not within the comprehension of an earthly understanding It is a wisedome which is from above The holy Ghost likewise is a Revealer of the Gospell unto the faithfull He was sent that hee might Convince the world not onely of sinne but of righteousnesse and judgement too which are Evangelicall things The spirit searcheth all things even the deepe things of God that is his unsearchable love wisedome and counsell in the Gospell Therefore the Gospell is called The Law of the spirit of life and the ministration of the spirit and the Revelation of the spirit and No man can call Iesus Lord but by the holy spirit that is though men may out of externall conformity to the discipline and profession under which they live with their mouthes acknowledge him to be the Lord yet their hearts will never tremble nor willingly submit themselves to his obedience their conscience will never set to its seale to the spirituall power of Christ over the thoughts desires and secrets of the soule but by the over-ruling direction of the holy Ghost Nature taught the Pharises to call him Beelzebub and Samaritan but it is the Spirit onely which teacheth men to acknowledge him a Lord. Christ is not the power nor the wisedome of God to any but to those who are called that is to those unto whose consciences the Spirit witnesseth the righteousnes which is to bee found in him So then the Publication of the Gospell belongeth unto men but the effectuall teaching and revelation thereof unto the soule is the joynt worke of the holy Trinity opening the heart to attend and perswading the heart to beleeve the Gospell as a thing worthy of all acceptation Thus the Gospell is a Glorious thing in regard of the Originall and Authour of it From whence wee may inferre that what-ever men thinke of the ministerie and dispensation of the Word yet undoubtedly the neglect and scorne which is shewed unto it is done unto Christ himselfe and that in his glory he that receiveth not his Word rejecteth his person and the sinne of a man against the words which we speake in the name and authority of Christ and in the dispensation of that office wherewith he hath entrusted us is the same with the sinnes of those men who despised him in his owne person You will say Christ is in heaven how can any injuries of ours reach unto him Surely though he be in heaven which is now the Court of his royall residence yet hee hath to doe upon earth as one of the chiefe territories of his dominion and in the ministerie of his Word hee speaketh from heaven still He it was who by his Ambassadour Saint Paul came and preached Peace to the Ephesians who were afarre off His spirit it was which in the Prophets did testifie of his sufferings and glory Hee it was who gave manifest proofe of his owne power speaking in his Apostles He then who refuseth to obey the words of a Minister in the execution of his office when hee forewarneth him of the wrath to come and doth not discerne the Lords voice therein but in despight of this ministeriall citation unto the tribunall of Christ will still persist in the way of his owne heart and as he hath beene so resolveth to continue a swearing blasphemous luxurious proud revengefull and riotous person thinking it basenesse to mourne for sinne and unnecessary strictnesse to humble himselfe to walke with God and yet because all men else doe so will professe his faith in the Lord Iesus that man is a notorious liar yea as the Apostle speaketh he maketh God a liar too in not beleeving the record which he giveth of his Sonne which is that hee should wash away the filth and purge out the bloud of his people with a spirit of judgement and a spirit of burning that he should sit as a refiner and purifier of silver purging his priests that they might offer unto the Lord an offring in righteousnesse Hee walketh contrary to that Covenant of mercy which he professeth to lay hold on for this is one of the great promises of the Covenant I will sprinkle cleane water upon you and you shall be cleane from all your filthinesse and from all your idols will I clense you I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes Hee walketh contrary to the quality of that feare of God which yet he professeth to feele as well as others For the feare of the Lord is a cleane thing He walketh contrary to the vertue of that bloud with which notwithstanding hee professeth to bee sprinkled for the bloud of Christ cleanseth not onely the lives but the very consciences of men from dead workes that is makes them so inwardly labour for purity of heart as that they may not be conscious to themselves of any though the most secret allowed sinne He walketh contrary to the fruitfulnesse of that grace which alone he professeth to boast in for the Spirit of grace which is powred from on high maketh the very wildernesse a fruitfull field He walketh contrarie to the properties of that faith by which alone he hopeth to be saved For true faith purifieth the heart and therefore a pure heart and a good conscience are the inseparable companions of an unfained faith And therefore what-ever verball and ceremonious homage hee may tender unto Christ yet in good earnest he is ashamed of him and dares not preferre the yoke of Christ before the lusts of the world or the reproaches of Christ before the treasures of the world Why should it be treason to kill a Judge in his ministerie on the bench or esteemed an injurie to the state to doe any indignitie to the Ambassadour of a great prince but because in such relations they are persons publike and representative ut eorum bona malaque ad Rempublicam pertineant why should the supreme Officer of the kingdome write Teste meipso in the name and power of his Prince but because he hath a more immediate representation of his sacred person and commission thereunto Surely the case is the same between Christ and his Ministers in their holy function And therefore we finde the expressions promiscuous sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Gospell of Christ and sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My Gospell sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The preaching of Iesus Christ and sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My preaching In the vertue of which synergie and co-partnership with Christ and with God as he saveth so we save as he forgiveth sinnes so we forgive them as he judgeth wicked men so wee judge them as he beseecheth so we also beseech saith the Apostle that you bee reconciled and receive not the grace of God in vaine Wee by his Grace and he by our ministerie He therefore that despiseth any conviction out
for themselves The Lord is not at our left hand to succor us in our idlenesse and negligence but at our working hand to give successe to our honest endeavors The sword of the Lord doth not fight without the sword of Gedeon Iudg. 7.18 In the miracles of Christ when hee fed and feasted men hee never created wine or bread of nothing but blessed and so changed or multiplied that which was by humane industry prepared before Our Savior had fish and bread of his owne and yet hee would have his Disciples put in their net and catch and bring of their owne to note unto us that Gods power and providence must not exclude but encourage mans industry Ioh. 21.9 10. Hee protecteth us in viis nostris non in praecipitiis in our wayes not in our precipices or presumptions Psal. 91.11 So long then as the Church is valiant and constant in withstanding the enemies of her peace prosperity God is undoubtedly with her to blesse that courage and to strengthen that right hand so long as Moses held up his hand God fought for Israel There was Ioshuas sword and Moses his hand or prayer and upon those Gods blessing Exod. 17.12 13. And they were all to concurre If the sword should cease the Prayer would doe no good for God will not bee tempted If the Prayer faint the sword is in vaine for God will not bee neglected As in a curious Clock stopp any wheele and you hinder the whole motion If God promise to bee present Ioshua must promise to bee couragious Iosh. 1.5.6.9 Secondly to note unto us the care and militarie wisedome of Christ our Captaine to meete with and to prevent our enemies and to intercept their blowes against us for wee may observe in the Scripture that Satan plieth the right hand of the Church laboureth to weaken and assault us where there is most danger towards him Let Satan stand at his right hand Psal. 109.6 That is either give him over to the rage of Satan that hee may bee hurried to execute his will or set Satan to hinder him in his mischievous intents Thus Satan stood at the right hand of Ioshua the high Priest to resist him Zech. 3.1 Noting the assiduous and indefatigable endeavors of Satan to resist disappoint and overthrow the workes of the worthies in Gods Church I would have come unto you even I Paul once and againe but Satan hindered us 1 Thess. 2.18 And to divert the strength of men upon his service And therefore to rebuke him and to shew to the Church that our strength is from him and due unto him hee also stands there to outvie the temptations and impulsions of Satan These are the two expositions which are given of these words The Lord at thy right hand Now though of all places of Scripture there is indeed but one literall sense yet when two are given which both tend unto the same generall scope and are suteable not onely to the analogie of faith but to the meaning mainely aimed at by the Holy Ghost in the place and when there is no apparant evidence in the face of the Text for preferring one before the other I thinke it is not unfit to embrace both and so something I shall touch upon both senses Shall strike through or wound or make gore bloudie Kings in the day of his wrath The word is Hath stricken through Kings It is a Prophesie of things future spoken as of things to bee done To strike thorow notes a complete victory and full confusion of the enemie an in curable wound that they may stagger and fall and rise up no more and that affliction may not arise a second time Nahum 1.9 1 Sam. 26.8 The onely difficulty is what is meant by Kings for which wee must note that the Kingdome of Christ is spirituall and his warre spirituall and therefore his enemies for the most part spirituall Therefore I take it wee are hereby to understand the most potent enemies of Christ whether spirituall wee wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers and spirituall wickednesse in high places Ephes. 6.12 2 Cor. 10.4 Or Carnall as heathen and wicked men Psal. 2.8 9. The fat and the strong enemies of the Church Ezek. 34.16 Our spirituall enemies in Scripture are called Kings Satan the Prince of this world the God of this world the Prince of the power of the aire The King of the locusts c. Sinne and originall concupiscence is a King Let not sinne raigne in your mortall bodies And the Earthly enemies of Christ are called Kings The ten Hornes that is ten Kings make warre with the Lambe The Kings of the earth stood up and the rulers were gathered together against the Lord and his Christ and Death which is the last enemie is a King The King of Terrors that raigneth over men A●d over all these Kings doe the victories of Christ reach Some by Kings understand the Romane emperors who are called Kings 1 Pet. 2.13.17 And their overthrow for persecuting the Church But since all sorts of Christs enemies are called Kings in Scripture and all of them doe push at his Kingdome in the Church I see no ground why wee may not by Kings understand them all with their subjects armies and associates As in great victories the Lords and principall men are said to be overcome when the servants and souldiers are routed and slaine In the Day of his wrath That is when time hath ripened the insolency and malice of the enemie when his fury is fully stirred up and provoked when the just and full time of his glory is come That it may appeare that they are overcome not by time or chance or humane power or secular concurrence but onely by the power of his wrath hee will doe it Christ is never destitute of power but in wisedome hee hath ordered the times of his Church when to have his Church suffer and beare witnesse to him and when to triumph in his deliverances So the meaning of this clause is this when the day of recompence is come when the sinnes and provocations of his enemie is ripe when the utmost period of his patience is expired 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the fixed and unmoveable day which hee hath set bee the probabilities never so poore preparations never so small the expectations never so low the meanes in humane view never so impossible yet then by his wrath hee will utterly and incurably wound his enemies both spirituall and temporall that they shall not rise a second time He shall judge amongst the Heathen The word judgement noteth both Government and Punishment The Lord shall judge his people and repent himselfe for his servants when hee seeth that their power is gone Deut. 32.36 There to judge noteth government The Lord standeth up to plead and to judge his people Esai 3.13 That nation whom they serve will I judge Gen. 15.14 There to judge noteth punishment Here it is taken
the Lord is said to be at the Right Hand of his Church 485 Christs enemies kings 487 All praise and honour to bee given unto God for the Power and Office of Christ. 489 Christ is present and prepared to defend his people from their enemies 491 Christ in his appointed time will utterly overthrow his greatest enemies 493 Satans enmitie is in Tempting 494 Satans enmitie is in Accusing 495 How the Spirit of judgement overcommeth corruptions 495 How Christ overcommeth his potent adversaries in the world 498 There is a constituted time wherein Christ will be avenged of his enemies 502 1. VVhen sinne is growne to its fulnesse 503 which is knowne by its Vniversality 504 which is knowne by its Impudence 504 which is knowne by its Obstinacie 504 2. VVhen the Church is throughly humbled and purged 506 3. VVhen all humane hopes and expectations are gone 506 Christs victories are by way of pleading and disceptation 509 A torrent of curses betweene man and Salvation 515 The Necessity of Christs Sufferings 522 The Greatnesse and Nature of Christs Sufferings 521 522 The Power and vertue of Christs Resurrection 524 AN EXPOSITION OF THE HVNDRETH AND TENTH PSALME PSALME 110. vers 1. The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole CHRIST IESVS the Lord is the Summe and Center of all divine revealed truth neither is any thing to be preached unto men as an object of their faith or necessary element of their salvation which doth not some way or other either meete in him or refer unto him All Truths especially divine are of a noble and pretious nature and therefore whatsoever mysteries of his Counsell God hath been pleased in his Word to reveale the Church is bound in her ministerie to declare unto men And Saint Paul professeth his faithfulnesse therein I have not shunned to declare unto you all the Counsell of God But yet all this Counsell which elsewhere he ca●s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the testimonie of God he gathers together into this one conclusion I determined not to know any thing amongst you that is in my p●eaching unto you to make discovery of any other knowledge as matter of consequence or faith but onely of Iesus Christ and him crucified And therefore Preaching of the Word is called preaching of Christ and Ministers of the Word Ministers of Christ and learning of the Word Learning of Christ because our Faith our Workes and our Worship which are the three essentiall elements of a Christian the whole dutie of man and the whole will of God have all their foundation growth end and vertue only in and from Christ crucified There is no fruit weight nor value in a Christian title but only in and from the death of Christ. The Word in generall is divided into the Old and New Testament both which are the same in substance though different in the manner of their dispensations as Moses veild differ'd from himselfe unveild Now that Christ is the substance of the whole New Testament containing the Historie Doctrine and Prophesies of him in the administration of the latter ages of the Church is very manifest to all The old Scriptures are againe divided into the Law and Prophets for the historicall parts of them doe containe either typicall prefigurations of the Evangelicall Church or inductions and exemplary demonstrations of the generall truth of Gods justice and promises which are set forth by way of Doctrine and Precept in the Law and Prophets Now Christ is the summe of both these they waited upon him in his transfiguration to note that in him they had their accomplishment First for the Law hee is the substance of it hee brought Grace to fulfill the exactions and Truth to make good the prefigurations of the whole Law The ceremoniall Law he fulfilled and abolished the morall Law hee fulfilled and established that his obedience thereunto might be the ground of our righteousnesse and his Spirit and grace therewith might bee the ground of our Obedience And therefore it is called the Law of Christ. 2 For the Prophets he is the Summe of them too for to him they give all witnesse He is the Author of their Prophesies they spake by his Spirit and he is the object of their Prophesies they spake of the grace and salvation which was to come by him So that the whole Scriptures are nothing else but a Testimonie of Christ and faith in him of that absolute and universall necessitie which is laid upon all the world to beleeve in his name It is not onely necessitas praecepti because wee are thereunto commanded but necessitas medii too because he is the onely Ladder betweene earth and heaven the alone mediator betweene God and man in him there is a finall and unabolishable covenant established and there is no name but his under heaven by which a man can be saved In consideration of all which for that I haue formerly discovered the Insufficiency of any either inward or outward principle of mans happinesse save only the Life of Christ I have chosen to speake vpon this Psalme and out of it to discover those wayes whereby the Life of Christ is dispenced administred towards his Church For this Psalme is one of the cleerest and most compendious prophesies of the Person and Offices of Christ in the whole Old Testament and so full of fundamentall truth that I shall not shunne to call it Symbolum Davidicum the Prophet Davids Creed And indeed there are very few if any of the Articles of that Creed which we all generally professe which are not either plainely expressed or by most evident implication couched in this little modell First the Doctrine of the Trinitie is in the first words The Lord said unto my Lord. There is Iehovah the Father and My Lord the Sonne and the sanctification or consecration of him which was by the Holy Ghost by whose fulnesse he was anointed unto the Offices of King and Priest for so our Saviour himselfe expounds this word Said by the sealing sanctification of him to his office Ioh. 10.34 35 36. Then wee have the Incarnation of Christ in the word My Lord together with his dignitie and honor above David as our Savior himselfe expounds it Matth. 22.42.45 Mine that is my Sonne by descent and genealogie after the flesh and yet my Lord too in regard of a higher sonship We have also the S●fferings of Christ in that he was consecrated a Priest v. 4. to offer up himselfe once for all and so to drinke of the brooke in the way Wee have his Eluctation and conquest over all his enemies and sufferings his resurrection he shall lift up his head his Ascension and Intercession sit thou on my right hand And in that is comprised his Descent into Hell by S. Pauls way of arguing That he ascended what is it but that hee descended first into the lower parts of the earth Eph. 4.9
Wee have a Holy Catholick Church gathered together by the Scepter of his Kingdome and holding in the parts thereof a blessed and beautifull Communion of Saints The Lord shall send forth the Rod of thy strength out of Sion Rule thou in the midst of thine enemies Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power in the beauties of holinesse from the wombe of the morning thou hast the dew of thy youth Wee have the last Iudgment for all his enemies must bee put under his feete which is the Apostles argument to prove the end of all things 1 Cor. 15.25 and there is the day of his wrath wherein he shall accomplish that judgment over the heathen and that victorie over the Kings of the earth who take counsell and bandie themselves against him which he doth here in his word beginne We have the Remission of sinnes comprised in his Priesthood for hee was to offer Sacrifice for the remission of sinnes and to put away sinne by the Sacrifice of himselfe Eph. 1.7 He. 9.26 Wee have the Resurrection of the Bodie because he must subdue all his enemies under his feete and the last enemie to bee subdued is death as the Apostle argues out of this Psalme 1 Cor. 15.25 26. And lastly wee haue life everlasting in the everlasting merit and vertue of his Priesthood Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek and in his sitting at the right hand of God whither he is gone as our forerunner and to prepare a place for us Heb. 6.20 Ioh. 14.2 and therefore the Apostle from his sitting there and living ever inferreth the perfection and certaintie of our salvation Rom. 6.8.11 Rom. 8.17 Eph. 2.6 Col. 3.1 2 3 4. 1 Cor. 15.49 Phil. 3.20 21. 1 Thess. 4.14 Heb. 7 25. 1 Ioh. 3.2 The Summe then of the whole Psalme without any curious or artificiall Analysis wherein every man according to his owne conceite and method will varie from other is this The Ordination of Christ unto his Kingdome together with the dignitie and vertue thereof v. 1. The Scepter or Instrument of that Kingly power v. 2. The strength and successe of both in recovering maugre all the malice of enemies a Kingdome of willing subjects and those in multitudes unto himselfe v. 2 3. The Consecration of him unto that everlasting Priesthood by the vertue merit whereof he purchased this Kingdome to himselfe v. 4. The Conquest over all his strongest and most numerous adversaries v. 5 6. The proofe of all and the way of effecting it in his sufferings and exaltation Hee shall gather a Church and hee shall confound his enemies because for that end he hath finished broken through all the sufferings which hee was to drinke of and hath lifted up his head againe Vers. 1. The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole Here the Holy Ghost beginnes with the Kingdome of Christ which hee describeth and magnifieth ● By his unction and obsignation thereunto The Word or Decree of his Father The Lord said 2 By the Greatnesse of his person in himselfe and yet neernesse in bloud and nature unto us My Lord. 3 By the Glorie power and heavenlinesse of this his Kingdome for in the administration thereof he sitteth at the right hand of his Father Sit thou at my right hand 4 By the Continuance and Victories thereof Vntill I make thy foes thy footstoole The Lord said Some read it certainly or assuredly said by reason of the affinity which the originall word hath with Amen from which it differs onely in the transposition of the same radicall letters Which would afford this observation by the way That all which Gods saies of or to his Sonne is very faithfull true For which cause the Gospell is by speciall Emphasis called The Word of Truth Eph. 1.13 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A faithfull saying worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1.15 Or most worthy to be beleeved and embraced For so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being applied unto the Gospell signifie Ioh. 1.12 Ioh. 3.33 Act. 17.11 Being opposite unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 13.46 But the principall thing here to bee noted is The Decree appointment Sanctification and sealing of Christ unto his Regall Office For the Word of God in the Scripture signifies his Blessing Power P●easure Ordination Man liveth not by bread alone but by every word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God Matth. 4.4 That is by that command which the creatures have received from God to nourish by that Benediction and Sanctification which maketh every Creature of God good unto us 1 Tim. 4.5 Gods saying is ever doing something his words are operative and carry an unction and authoritie along with them Whence we may note That Christs Kingdome belongs to him not by usurpation intrusion or violence but legally by order decree investiture from his Father All Kings raigne by Gods providence but not alwayes by his approbation They have set up Kings but not by mee they have made Princes and I knew it not Amos 8.4 But Christ is a King both by the providence and by the Good will and immediate Consecration of his Father He loveth him hath given all things into his hand Ioh. 3.35 He judgeth no man but hath committed all judgment to his Sonne Ioh. 5.22 That is hath entrusted him with the oeconomie and actuall administration of that power in the Church which originally belonged unto himselfe He hath made him to be Lord and Christ Act. 2.36 Hee hath ordained him to bee Iudge of quicke and dead Act. 10.42 Hee hath appointed him over his owne house Heb. 3.2.6 He hath crowned him put all things in subjection under his feete Heb. 2.7 8. Hee hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name Phil. 2.9 Therefore hee calleth him My King set up by him upon his owne holy hill and that in the vertue of a solemne decree Psal. 2.6 7. But wee must here distinguish betweene Regnum naturale Christs naturall Kingdom which belongeth unto him as God coessentiall and coeternall with his Father and Regnum oeconomicum his Dispensatory Kingdom as he is Christ the Mediator which was his not by Nature but by Donation and unction from his Father that hee might be the Head of his Church a Prince of Peace a King of Righteousnesse unto his people In which respect he had conferr'd upon him all such meete qualifications as might fit him for the dispensation of this Kingdome 1 God prepared him a Bodie or a Humane nature Heb. 10.5 and by the grace of personall and Hypostatica●l union caused the Godhead to dwell Bodily in him Col. 2.9 2 He anointed him with a fulnesse of his Spirit not such a fulnesse as Iohn Baptist and Stephen had Luk. 1.15 Act. 7.55 which was still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulnesse of a measure or vessel a
those men who stand at defiance with the power of Christ speaking in his servants The Apostle saith there is no escape left for those who neglect so great salvation Heb. 2.3 And yet this is the constant folly and cry of naturall men We will not have this man to raigne over us Let us breake their bands asunder and cast away their cords from us But First Every man must be subject to some King either Christ or sinne for they two divide the world and their Kingdomes will not consist And the subjects of sinne are all slaves and servants no liberty amongst them Ioh. 8.34 Whereas Christ makes all his subjects Kings like himselfe Revel 1.6 and his is a Kingdome of Righteousnesse peace and joy Rom. 14.17 Secondly If men by being the subjects of sinne could keepe quite out from the judgment and Scepter of Christ it were something but all men must one way or other be subdued unto him either as sonnes or as captives either under his grace or under his wrath As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to mee Rom. 14.10 11. Hee must bee either a savor of life or of death either for the rising or the fall of many in Israel either for a sanctuary or for a stumbling block All must either bee saved by him or judged by him There is no refuge nor shelter of escape in any Angle of the World for his Kingdome reacheth to the uttermost corners of the earth and will finde out and fetch in all his enemies Thirdly the matter were not great if a man could hold out in the opposition But can thine heart endure or thine hands bee strong saith the Lord in the day that I shall deale with thee Ezek. 22.14 What will yee doe in the desolation which shall come from farre when you are spoiled what will yee doe where will you leave your glory what will become of the King whom you served before It may bee thy mony is thine idol and thou art held in thraldome under thine owne possessions But what will remaine of a mans silver and gold to carry him through the wrath to come but onely the rust thereof to joyne in judgment against him It may bee thou servest the times and fashions of the world rejoyceth in thy youth in the wayes of thy heart and in the sight of thine eyes But thou must not rise out of thy grave in thy best cloaths nor appeare before Christ like Agag gorgeously apparelled Thou must not rise to play but to be judged It may bee thou servest thine owne lust and anothers beautie but what pleasure willt there be in the fire of lust when it shall bee turned into the fire of Hell or what beauty wilt thou finde on the left hand of Christ where the characters of every mans hellish conscience shall bee written in his face Thou servest thine owne vainglorie and affectations but what good will it bee to bee admired by thy fellow prisoners and condemned by thy Judge In one word thou servest any of thine owne evill desires foolish man here they command thee and there they will condemne thee they are here thy Gods and they will bee there thy devils The Second particular in the description of Christs Kingdome is the greatnesse and neernesse of his person unto David My Lord. David calleth him my Lord upon a double reason by a Spirit of Prophesie as foreseeing his incarnation and nativitie out of the tribe of Iuda and stock of Iesse and so hee was Davids Sonne and by a Spirit of Faith as beleeving him to be his redeemer and salvation and so hee was Davids Lord. A virgin shall conceive and beare a Sonne there we see his incarnation and descent from David and shall call his name Immanuel God with us there wee see his Dominion over David As man so he was his Sonne and as Mediator so he was his Lord. As Man so he was subject unto Mary his Mother and as Mediator so hee was the Lord and Savior of his Mother Luk. 2.51 Luk. 1.46 47. As Man hee was made for a little while lower than the Angels that hee might suffer death but as Mediator God and Man in one person so he was made much better than the Angels all the Angels of God were his subjects to worship him and his Ministers to waite upon him Heb. 2.7.9 Heb. 1.4.6.7 So then the pronoune Mine leads us to the Consideration of Christs Consanguinity with David as he was his Sonne and of his Dignity above David as hee was his Lord. From hence wee learne That though Christ was Man yet hee was more than a bare man For jure naturae no Sonne is Lord to his Father Domination doth never ascend There must be something above nature in him to make him his Fathers Soveraigne as our Savior himselfe argueth from these words Matth. 22.42 45. Christ then is a Lord to his people he had Dominion and was the salvation of his owne fore-fathers A Lord. First By right of the Creation For hee is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 which the Apostle makes the argument of his Soveraignitie To us there is but one Lord Iesus Christ by whom are all things and wee by him 1 Cor. 8.6 Secondly By a right of Sonship and Primogeniture as the chiefe the first borne the Heire of all things Hee is not in the House as Moses was a Servant but a Sonne over his owne House Heb. 3.5 6. That is hee was not a Servant but Lord in the Church as the Apostle else where gives us the same distinction We preach Christ Iesus the Lord and our selves Servants 2 Cor. 4.5 For in the Scripture phrase the first borne notes Principality Excellencie and Dominion I will make him saith God my first borne higher than the Kings of the earth Psal. 89.27 So in Iob The first borne of death is the same with the King of terrors Iob 18.13 14. and so the Apostle saith That the Heire is the Lord of all Gal. 4.1 and therefore from his primogeniture and designation to the inheritance of all things he inferreth his preeminence and honor even above the Angels Col. 1.18 Heb. 1.2.4 Thirdly By the right of his Vnction Office and mediatorship unto which he was designed by his Father He was to have in all things the preeminence For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1. 18 19. Where by fulnesse either wee must understand fulnesse of the God head bodily as the Apostle speakes Col. 2.9 Or fulnesse of the Spirit of Grace which S. Iohn speakes of Iob. 1.16 Ioh. 3.34 And in both respects he is a Lord over all in one by the Dignity of his Hypostaticall union in the other by the grace of his heavenly unction and in both as Mediator and head in the Church Therefore the Apostle saith That God hath made him Lord and Christ Act. 2.36 and by the accomplishment of his office
in dying rising and reviving he became Lord both of the dead and living Rom. 14.9 Revel 5.12 And thus he is Lord in two respects First A Lord in Power and strength Power to forgive sinnes Power to quicken whom hee will Power to cleanse justifie and sanctifie Power to succor in temptations Power to raise from the dead Power to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him Power to hold fast his sheepe Power to cast out the accuser of the brethren Power to put downe all his enemies and to subdue all things unto himselfe Secondly A Lord in Authoritie To judge to anoint to imploy to command whom and what hee will He onely is Lord over our persons over our faith over our consciences To him onely we must say Lord save us lest wee perish to him onely wee must say Lord what will thou have me to doe And such a Lord Christ was to his owne fore-fathers They all did eate of the same Spirituall meate and all dranke of the same Spirituall drinke even of that rock which was Christ 1 Cor. 10.3 4. He was the substance of the Ceremonies the Doctrine of the Prophets the accomplishment of the Promises the joy and salvation of Patriarchs and Princes the desire and expectation of all flesh The Gospell to us a History and narration and therefore delivered by the hand of witnesses to them a promise and prediction and therefore delivered by the hand of Prophets The Apostles entered into the Prophets Labours and were servants in the same common salvation these as sowers and they as reapers these as preachers of the seed hoped and they as preachers of the same seed exhibited The ancient Iewes then were not saved by bare temporall promises neither was their faith ultimately fixed upon Ceremonies or earthly things but as their preachers had the same Spirit of Christ with ours so the Doctrine which they preached the faith and obedience which they required the salvation which they foretold was the same with ours As the same Sun illightens the starres above and the earth beneath so the same Christ was the Righteousnesse and salvation both of his fore-fathers and of his seed They without us could not be made perfect that is as I conceive their faith had nothing actually extant amongst themselves to perfect it but received all its forme and accomplishment from that better thing which was provided for and exhibited unto us For the Law that is the carnall Commandement and outward Ceremonies therein prescribed made nothing no grace no person perfect but the bringing in of a better hope that is of Christ who as hee is unto us the hope of glory so hee was unto them the hope of deliverance for he alone it is by whom wee draw nigh unto God doth perfect for ever those that are sanctified Heb. 7.19 Heb. 10.14 If Christ then be our Lord wee must trust in him and depend upon him for all our present subsistence and our future expectations For he never faileth those that wait upon him He that beleeveth in him shall not bee ashamed And indeed faith is necessary to call Christ Lord. No man can call Iesus Lord but by the Spirit Because other Lords are present with us they doe with their own eye oversee and by their owne visible power order and direct us in their service But Christ is absent from our senses Though I have knowne Christ after the flesh yet henceforth saith the Apostle know I him no more Therefore to feare and honor and serve him with all fidelity to yeeld more absolute and universall obedience to his commands though absent though tenderd unto us by the Ministerie of meane and despicable persons than to the threates and Scepters of the greatest Princes to labour that not only present but absent we may bee accepted of him to doe his hardest workes of selfe-deniall of overcomming and rejecting the assaults of the World of standing out against principalities powers and spirituall wickednes of suffering and dying in his service needs must there bee faith in the hart to see him present by his Spirit to set to our seale to the truth authoritie and Majesty of all his commands to heare the Lord speaking from heaven and to finde by the secret and powerfull revelations of his Spirit out of the word to the soule evident and invincible proofes of his living by the power of God and speaking mightily in the Ministery of his Word to our consciences Therefore when the Apostle had said Wee are absent from the Lord hee presently addes We walk by faith That is we labor to yeeld all service and obedience to this our Lord though absent because by faith which giveth presence to things unseen and subsistence to things that are yet but hoped wee know that hee is and that hee is a rewarder of those that diligently seeke him And indeed though every man call him Lord yet no man doth in truth and sincerity of heart so esteeme him but those who doe in this manner serve him and by faith walke after him If I be a Master saith the Lord where is my feare Malach. 1.6 It is not every one that saith Lord Lord but hee that doth my will that trembleth at my word that laboureth in my service who declares himselfe to be mine indeed For the heart of man cannot have two Masters because which way ever it goes it goes whole and undivided Wee cannot serve Christ and any thing else which stands in Competition with him First because they are Contrary Masters one cannot bee pleased or served without the disallowance of the other The Spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy that is grudgeth and cannot endure that any service should be done to the Lord. For the Friendship of the World is enmitie against God Iam. 4.4 5. And therefore saith the Apostle If any man love the World the love of the Father is not in him and the reason is because they are contrarie principles and have contrary Spirits and lusts and therefore must needs over-rule unto contrary services Secondly because both Masters have employments enough to take up a whole man Satan and the World have lusts to fill the whole head and heart of their most active and industrious servants for the Apostle saith that all which is in the World is lusts And the heart of man is wholy or most greedily set in him to doe that evill which it is tasked withall Eccle. 8.11 The all that is in man all his faculties all his affections the whole Compasse of his created abilities are all gone aside or turned backward there is no man no part in man that doth any good no not one Psal. 14.3.53.3 Christ likewise is a great Lord hath much more businesse than all the time or strength of his Servants can bring about Hee requireth the obedience of every thought of the heart 2 Cor. 10.5 Grace and edification and profit in all the words
enriched to be stedfast unmoveable abundant in the worke of the Lord to doe his will as the Angels in heaven doe it yet in many things they faile and have daily experience of their owne defects But here is all the comfort though I am not able to doe any of my duties as I should yet Christ hath finished all his to the full and therefore though I am compassed with infirmities so that I cannot doe the things which I would yet I have a compassionate advocate with the Father who both giveth and craveth pardon for every one that prepareth his heart to seeke the Lord though he be not perfectly cleansed 1 Ioh. 2.2 2 Chron. 30.18 19. Secondly Against the pertinacie and close adherence of our corruptions which cleave as fast unto us as the very powers and faculties of our soule as heat unto fire or light unto the Sunne Yet sure we are that he who forbad the fire to burne and put blacknesse upon the face of the Sunne at midday is able likewise to remove our corruptions as farre from us as he hath removed them from his owne sight And the ground of our expectation hereof is this Christ when he was upon the earth in the forme of a servant accomplished all the Offices of suffering and obedience for us Therefore being now exalted farre above all heavens at the right hand of Majestie and glory he will much more fulfill those Offices of Power which he hath there to doe Which are by the supplies of his Spirit to purge us from sinne by the sufficiencie of his grace to strengthen us by his word to sanctifie and cleanse us and to present us to himselfe a glorious Church without spot or wrinckle He that brought from the dead the Lord Iesus and suffered not death to hold the head is able by that power and for that reason to make us perfect in every good worke to doe his will and not to suffer corruption for ever to hold the members It is the frequent argument of the Scripture Heb. 13.20 21. Col. 2.12 Eph. 1.19 20. Rom. 6.5 6. Rom. 8.11 Thirdly against all those firie darts of Satan wherby he tempteth us to despaire and to forsake our mercie If he could have held Christ under when he was in the grave then indeed our faith would have been vaine we should be yet in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17. But he who himselfe suffered being tempted and overcame both the sufferings and the temptation is able to succor those that are tempted and to shew them mercie and grace to helpe in time of need Heb. 2.17 18. Heb. 4. 15 16. Lastly against death it selfe For the Accomplishment of Christs Office of redemption in his resurrection from the dead was both the Merit the Seale and the first fruits of ours 1 Cor. 15.20 22. Thirdly The sitting of Christ on the right hand of his Father noteth unto us the actuall Administration of his Kingdome Therefore that which is here said sit at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole the Apostle thus expoundeth He must raigne till he hath put all enemies vnder his feete 1 Cor. 15.25 And he therefore died and rose and revived that he might be Lord both of dead and living namely by being exalted unto Gods right hand Rom. 14.9 Now this Administration of Christs Kingdome implies severall particulars First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The publication of established Lawes For that which is in this Psalme called the sending forth of the rod of Christs strength out of Sion is thus by the Prophets expounded Out of Sion shall goe forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem Esai 2.3 Mich. 4.2 Secondly The conquering and subduing of subjects to himselfe by converting the hearts of men and bringing their thoughts into the obedience of his Kingdome Ministerially by the word of reconciliation and effectually by the power of his Spirit writing his Lawes in their hearts and transforming them into the image of his word from glorie to glorie Thirdly Ruling and leading those whom he hath thus converted in his way continuing unto their hearts his heavenly voice never utterly depriving them of the exciting assisting cooperating grace of his holy Spirit but by his divine power giving unto them all things which pertaine unto life and godlinesse after he had once called them by his glorious power Esai 2.2 Ioh. 10.3 4. 1 Cor. 1.4 8. Esai 30.21 1 Pet. 2.9 2 Pet. 1.3 Fourthly Protecting upholding succouring them against all temptations and discouragements By his compassion pittying them by his power and promises helping them by his care and wisedome proportioning their strength to their trials By his peace recompencing their conflicts by patience and experience establishing their hearts in the hope of deliverance Heb. 2.17 Ioh. 16.33 1 Cor. 10.13 2 Cor. 1.5 Phil. 4.7 19. Rom. 15.4 Fifthy Confounding all his enemies First Their projects holding up his Kingdome in the midst of their malice and making his truth like a tree settle the faster and like a torch shine the brighter for the shaking Secondly Their Persons Whom he doth here gall and torment by the Scepter of his word constraining them by the evidence thereof to subscribe to the Iustice of his wrath and whom he reserveth for the day of his appearing till they shall be put all under his feete In which respect he is said to stand at the right hand of God as a man of warre ready armed for the defence of his Church Act. 7.56 Fourthly the sitting of Christ on the right hand of God noteth unto us his giving of gifts and sending downe of the Holy Ghost upon men It hath been an universall custome both in the Church and elsewhere in dayes of great joy and solemnitie to give gifts and send presents unto men Thus after the wall of Ierusalem was built and the worship of God restored and the Law read and expounded by Ezra to the people after their captivitie it is said that the people did eate and drinke and send portions Nehem. 8. 10 12. The like forme was by the people of the Iewes observed in their feast of Purim Ester 9.22 And the same custome hath bin observed amongst heathen Princes upon solemne and great occasions to distribute donations and congiaries amongst the people Thus Christ in the day of his Majestie and Inauguration in that great and solemne triumph when he ascended up on high and led captivity captive he did withall give gifts unto men Eph. 4.10 Christ was notably typified in the Ark of the Testament In it were the Tables of the Law to shew that the whole Law was in Christ fulfilled and that he was the end of the Law for Righteousnesse to those that beleeve in him There was the golden pot which had Manna to signifie that heavenly and abiding nourishment which from him the Church receiveth There was the Rod of Aaron which budded Signifying either the miraculous incarnation of Christ in a Virgin or
of their adoption which is the hansell and earnest of their inheritance and thereby begetteth a lively hope an earnest expectation a confident attendance upon the promises and an unspeakable peace and security thereupon by which fruits of faith and hope there is a glorious joy shed abroad into the soule so ful and so intimately mingled with the same that it is as possible for man to annihilate the one as to take away the other For according to the evidence of hope and excellencie of the thing hoped must needs the joy there from resulting receive its sweetnesse and stability By all this which hath been spoken of the mission of the Spirit in such abundance after Christs sitting at the right hand of God wee should learne with what affections to receive the Gospel of salvation for the teaching whereof this Holy Spirit was shed abroad abundantly on the Embassadors of Christ and with what heavenly conversations to expresse the power which our hearts have felt therin to walke as children of the light and as becommeth the Gospell of Christ to adorne our high profession and not to receive the grace of God in vaine Consider first that the word thus quickned will have an operation either to convince unto Righteousnesse or to seale unto condemnation as the Sunne either to melt or to harden as the raine either to ripen corne or weeds as the Scepter of a King either to rule subjects or to subdue enemies as the fire of a Goldsmith either to purge gold or devoure drosse as the waters of the sanctuary either to heale places or to turne them into salt pits Ezek. 47.11 Secondly according to the proportion of the Spirit of Christ in his word revealed shall be the proportion of their judgment who despise it The contempt of a great salvation and glorious Ministery shall bring a sorer condemnation Heb. 2.2.4 If I had not come and spoken unto them saith our Savior they had not had sinne Ioh. 15.22 Sins against the light of nature are no sins in comparison of those against the Gospell The earth which drinketh in the raine that fals often on it and yet beareth nothing but thornes and briars is rejected and nigh unto cursing Heb. 6.7 8. Thirdly even here God will not alwayes suffer his Spirit to strive with flesh there is a Day of Peace which he calleth our day a day wherein he entreateth and beseecheth us to be reconciled but if we therein judge our selves unworthy of eternall life and goe obstinately on till there be no remedy he can easily draw in his Spirit and give us over to the infatuation of our owne hearts that we may not be cleansed any more till he have caused his fury to rest upon us Ezek. 24.13 We see likewise by this Doctrine wherupon the comforts of the Church are founded namely upon Christ as the first comforter by working our Reconciliation with God and upon the Spirit as another comforter testifying and applying the same unto our soules And the continuall supply and assistance of this Spirit is the onely comfort the Church hath against the dominion and growth of sinne For though the motions of lust which are in our members are so close so working so full of vigor and life that we can see no power nor probabilities of prevailing against them yet we know Christ hath a greater fulnesse of Spirit than we can have of sinne and it is the great promise of the new covenant that God will put his Spirit into us and thereby save us from all our uncleanesses Ezek. 36.27 29. for though we be full of sin and have but a seed a sparkle of the Spirit put into us and upheld and fed by further though small supplies yet that little is stronger than legions of lust as a little salt or leven seasoneth a great lump or a few drops of Spirits strengthen a whole glasse full of water Therefore the Spirit is called a Spirit of judgment and of burning because as one Iudge is able to condemne a thousand prisoners and a little fire to consume abundance of drosse so the Spirit of God in and present with us though received and supplied but in measure though but a smoaking and suppressed fire shall yet breake forth in victory and judgment against all that resist it In us indeed there is nothing that feeds but onely that which resists and quencheth it But this is the wonderfull vertue of the Spirit of Christ in his members that it nourisheth it selfe Therefore sometimes the Spirit is called fire Esai 4.4 Matth. 3.11 and sometimes Oyle Heb. 1.9 1 Ioh. 2.27 to note that the Spirit is nutriment unto it selfe that that grace which we have received already is preserved and excited by new supplies of the same grace Which supplies we are sure shall be given to all that aske them by the vertue of Christs prayer Ioh. 14.16 by the vertue of his and his Fathers promise Ioh. 16.7 Act. 1.4 and by the vertue of that Office which he still beares which is to be the head or vitall principle of all holinesse and grace unto the Church And all these are permanent things and therefore the vertue of them abideth their effects are never totally interrupted Fiftly and lastly this sitting of Christ at the right hand of God noteth his intercession in the behalfe of the whole Church and each member thereof Who is he that condemneth saith the Apostle it is Christ that is dead yea rather that is risen againe who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us Rom. 8.34 But of this Doctrine I shall speake more fitly in the fourth verse it being a great part of the Priesthood of Christ. I now proceed to the last thing in this first verse the continuance and Victories of Christs Kingdome in these words untill I make thy foes thy footstoole Wherin every word is full of weight For though ordinarily subdivisions of holy Scripture and crumbling of the bread of life be rather a loosing than an expounding of it yet in such parts of it as were of purpose intended for models and summaries of fundamentall Doctrine of which sort this Psalme is one of the fullest and briefest in the whole Scriptures as in little maps of large countries there is no word wherupon some point of weighty consequence may not depend Here then is considerable the terme of duration or measure of Christs Kingdome Vntill The Author of subduing Christs enemies under him I the Lord. The manner thereof ponam and ponam scabellum Put thy foes as a stoole under thy feete Victory is a relative word and presupposeth enemies and they are expressed in the text I will but touch that particular because I have handled it more largely upon another Scripture and their enmitie is here not described but onely presupposed It shews it selfe against Christ in all the Offices of his Mediation There is enmity against him as a Prophet Enmity against his Truth
of their profession is not any experimentall goodnesse which they have tasted in him for by nature men have no relish of Christ at all but onely selfe-love and private ends wherby Christ is subordinated to their owne commodities Men are herin just like the Samaritans of whom Iosephus reports that when Antiochus persecuted the Iewes they then utterly disavowed any consanguinity with them denied their Temple on mount Gerosim to be dedicated to the great God and declared their linage from the Medes and Persians but when before that Alexander had shewed favour unto the Iewes and remitted the tribute of every seventh yeare they then claim'd kindred with that people and counterfeited a descent from the tribes of Ephraim and Manasse that thereby they might enjoy the priviledges of those people whom otherwise they mortally hated And so we finde that in the Vastation of the Citie of Rome by the Gothes and Barbarians when there was but one onely refuge allowed the Romanes for the safety of their lives namely to fly unto the Christians Churches those very enemies of Christ and his profession who before had persecuted him and after returned to their malice againe were yet then as hasty to fly unto his Temples and to assume the Title of his Servants as they were after ungratefully malitious in reproaching Christian Religion as if that had been the provocation of those calamities And may we not still observe amongst Christians at this day many men who contrary to the evidence of their judgment and peace of their consciences conforme themselves unto the vanities courses companies of this evill world and like cowards are affraid to adventure on a rigorous and universall subjection to the truth of Christ dare not keepe themselves close to those narrow rules of S. Paul to abstaine from jesting which is not seemly to avoid all appearances of evill to reprove the unfruitfull workes of darknesse to speake unto Edification that their words may minister grace unto the hearers to rejoyce alwayes in the Lord to give place unto wrath to recompence evill with good to be circumspect and exact in their walking before God and all this meerly out of suspicion of some disrespect and disadvantages which may hereupon meete them in the world of some remoraes and stoppage in the order of those projects which they have contrived for their private ends Now if such purposes as these doe sta●tle men from a punctuall and rigorous profession of the Gospell of Christ and his most holy wayes notwithstanding our vow in Baptisme doe as strictly binde us therunto as unto the externall title of Christianity suppose we that the same or greater disadvantages should now as in the primitive times attend at the naked and outward profession of Christ would not such men as these fall into downright apostacy and deny the Lord that bought them certainly our Savior hath so resolv'd that case in the very best sort of unregenerate men noted in the stony ground when times of persecution happen that they are brought to the triall who it was whom in their profession they loved Christ or themselves the excellencie of the knowledge of him or the secure enjoyment of secular contentments they will then certainly fall away and be offended Matt. 13.21 so profound and unsearchable is the deceitfull heart of man that by that very reason for which men contend for the outward face and profession of Religion because they love their pleasures and profits which without such a profession they cannot peaceably enjoy they are deterred from a close spirituall and universall obedience to the power thereof because thereby likewise those pleasures and profits are kept within such rules of moderation as the nature of a boundlesse and unsatisfiable lust will not admit This is a certaine rule in love that the motions and desires thereof are strong and therefore in any thing which the soule loves it therin strives for excellency and perfection and this rule holds most true in religion because when the so●●e loves that it loves it under the apprehension of the greatest good and therefore by consequence sets the strongest and most industrious desires of the soule upon it Therefore the Apostle saith that the Love of Christ namely that love of him which is by the Holy Ghost shed abroad in our hearts constraineth us to live unto him and to aspire after him who died for us and rose againe Love is as strong as death it will take no deniall It is the wing and weight of the soule which fixeth all the thoughts and carrieth all the desires unto an intimate unitie with the thing it loves stirreth up a zeale to remove all obstacles which stand betweene it worketh a languor or failing of nature in the want of it a liquefaction and softnesse of nature to receive the impressions of it an egresse of the Spirits and as it were an hast of the soule to meet and entertaine it Whence those expressions of the Saints in holy Scripture Comfort me with apples stay me with flagons for I am sick of love my soule breaketh for the longing which it hath unto thy judgments at all times The desire of our soule is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee My soule thirsteth for God yea for the living God when shall I come and appeare before God We that have the first fruit of the Spirit groane within our selves waiting for the adoption even the redemption of our Bodies O that my wayes were directed that I might keepe thy commandements with my whole heart have I sought thee I have stuck unto thy testimonies I will delight my selfe in thy commandements thy statutes have been my songs my soule fainteth for thy salvation c. By all which we see that a true love of Christ doth excite strong desires and an earnest aspiring and ambition of the soule to walke in all well-pleasing and to be in all things conformable unto him What the Apostle saith of Spirituall hope we may truly say of love which is the fundamentall affection and root of all the rest He that hath it indeed in him purgeth himselfe even as Christ is pure The Love of the World and the things and lusts of the world may indeed consist with the formall profession but no way with the truth or power of a true love to Christ or his government For love is ever the principle and measure of all our actions such as it is such likewise wil they be too Fourthly something like love there may be in naturall men unto Christ grounded upon the historicall assurance and perswasion of his being now in glory attended by mightie Angels filled with all the treasures of wisdome knowledge grace power and other excellent attributes which can attract love even from an enemie and that he hath and still doth procure such good things for mankinde in their deliverance from the guilt of sin and from the wrath to come as of which might
they but have an exemption from his spirituall government and a dispensation to live according to their owne lusts stil no man should be more greedily desirous As Sampson met the Lion as an enemie when hee was alive but after he was slaine he went unto him as to a table there was onely terrour while he lived but honey when hee was dead so doubtlesse many men to whom the bodily presence of Christ and the mighty power and penetration of his heavenly preaching whereby hee smote sinners unto the ground and spake with such authoritie as never man spake would have beene unsufferably irkesome and full of terrour as it was unto the Scribes and Pharisees can yet now that he is out of their sight and doth not in person but onely by those who are his witnesses torment the inhabitants of the earth pretend much admiration and thankfull remembrance of that death of his which was so full of hony for all that come unto him for as particular dependencies and expectations may make a man flatter and adore the greatnesse of some living Potentate whose very image notwithstanding the same man doth professedly abominate in other tyrants of the world who are dead or upon whom he hath not the same ends so the selfe-same reason may make men in hypocriticall expressions flatter fawne upon Christ himselfe who is absent and yet hate with a perfect hatred the very image of his Spirit in the power of his Word and in the lives of his people The very Scribes and Pharisees who blasphemed his Spirit and contrived his death could yet be contented to be gainers thereby for see they confesse It is expedient for us that one die for the people Lastly a false love to Christ may be grounded upon a false conceit of love to his ordinances For as it is certaine that he who loves the Word and worship of Christ as his doth love him too who is the Author of them so it is certaine likewise that that love which is sometimes pretended unto them may indeed in them fix upon nothing but accidentall and by-respects This people saith the Lord to his Prophet come and sit before thee as my people and they heare thy words but they will not doe them for with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousnesse Here is love in pretence but falshood in the heart what then was it which in the Prophet they did thus love That presently followes Thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice and can play well on an instrument Ezek. 33.31 32. that is it is not my will which in thy ministery they at all regard but onely those circumstantiall ornaments of gracefull action and elocution which they attend with just alike proportion of sensuall delight as an eare doth the harmony of a well tuned instrument for as a man may be much affected with the picture of his enemie if drawne by a skilfull hand and yet therein love nothing of the person but only the cunning of the workman who drew the peece So a man who hates the life and Spirit of the Word of God it selfe as being diametrically contrary to that spirit of lust and of the world which rules in him may yet be so wonderfully taken with that dexteritie of wit or delicacie of expression or variety of learning or sweetnesse of speech and action or whatsoever other perfection of nature or industry in the dispencers of that Word are most sutable to his naturall affections as that he may from thence easily cheat his owne conscience and ground a misperswasion of his love to Gods Word which yet indeed admireth nothing but the perfections of a man Nay suppose he meete not with such lenocinia to entice his affection yet the very pacification of the conscience which by a notorious neglect of Gods ordinances would haply be disquieted or the credit of bearing conformity to Ecclesiasticall orders and the established service of God in his Church or some other the like sinister respect may hold a man to such an externall faire correspondence as by a deceitfull heart may easily be misconstrued a love of Gods ordinances Nay further a man may externally glory in the priviledge of Gods oracles hee may distinctly beleeve and subscribe to the truth of them he may therin heare many things gladly and escape many pollutions of the world and yet here hence conclude no cleerer evidence of his love to Christ in his word than the unbeleeving Iews or Herod or Ahab or Simon Magus or the foolish Virgins and apostates all which have attained to some of these degrees could have done For the cleering then of this great case touching the evidence of a mans love to Christ wee must first know that this is not a flower of our owne garden for every man by nature is an enemie to Christ and his Kingdome of the Iews minde wee will not have this man to raigne over us and the reason is because the image of the old Adam which we beare is extremely contrary to the heavenly image of the second Adam unto which wee are not borne but must bee renewed And this is certaine our love is according to our likenesse he who hath not the nature and Spirit of Christ can never love him or move towards him For love is like fire congregat homogenea it carrieth things of a nature to one another Our love then unto Christ must bee of a spirituall generation and it is grounded upon two causes First upon the Proportion which is in him unto all our desires or capacities upon the evidence of that unsearchable and bottomlesse goodnesse which is in him which makes him the fairest often thousand even altogether lovely For that heart which hath a spirituall view of Christ will bee able by faith to observe more dimensions of love and sweetnesse in him than the knowledge of any creature is able to measure In all worldly things though of never so curious and delicate an extraction yet still even those hearts which swimme in them and glut upon them can easily discover more dregs than Spirits nothing was ever so exactly fitted to the soule of man wherein there was not some defect or excesse something which the heart could wish were away or something which it could desire were tempered with it But in Christ and his kingdome there is nothing unlovely For as in man the all that is is full of corruption so in Christ the all that hee is is nothing but perfection His fulnesse is the center and treasure of the soule of man and therefore that love which is therupon grounded must needs be in the soule as an universall habit and principle to facilitate every service whereby we move unto this center for love is the weight or spring of the soule which sets every facultie on worke neither are any of those commandments grievous which are obeyed in Love
owne vices But now first the power of Christ in his Church is universall there is in him all power and no weaknesse no power without him or against him and therefore no wonder if from a fulnesse of power in him and an emptinesse in his enemies the argument of continuance in his kingdome doth infallibly follow for what man if hee were furnished with all sufficiencie would suffer himselfe to be mutilated and dismembred as Christ should if any thing should prevaile against the Church which is his fulnesse Againe this power of Christ is supported with wisdome it can never miscarry for any inward defect for the wisdome is proportionable to the power this All power and that All the treasures of wisdome Power able by weaknesse to confound the things which are mighty and wisdome able by foolishnesse to bring to nought the understanding of the prudent and both these are upheld by righteousnesse which is indeed the very soule and sinewes of a kingdome upon which the thrones of Princes are established and which the Apostle makes the ground of the perpetuitie of Christs kingdome Thy throne O God is for ever and ever a scepter of righteousnesse is the scepter of thy kingdome Hebr. 1.8 Thirdly the quality of Christs kingdome is to be a Growing kingdome though the originals thereof be but like a graine of mustard-seed or like Eliahs cloud to a humane view despicable and almost below the probabilities of subsistence the object rather of derision than of terrour to the world yet at last it groweth into a widenesse which maketh it as catholike as the world And therefore that which the Prophet David speakes of the Sunne the Apostle applies to the Gospell Rom. 10.18 to note that the Circle of the Gospell is like that of the Sunne universall to the whole world It is such a kingdome as groweth into other kingdomes and eats them out The little stone in Nebuchadnezzars vision which was the Kingdome of Christ for so Ierusalem is called a stone Zech. 12.3 brake in peeces the great Monarchies of the earth and grew up into a great mountaine which filled the world Dan. 2.34 35. for the kingdomes of the earth must become the kingdomes of the Lord and of his Christ Revel 11.15 Therefore the Prophets expresse Christ and his kingdome by the name of a Branch which groweth up for a standard and ensigne of the people Esay 11.1.10 Zech. 3.8 A branch which growes but never withers It hath no principles of death in it selfe and though it be for a while subject to the assaults of adversaries and forren violence yet that serves onely to trie it and to settle it but not to weaken or overturne it The gates of hell all the powers policies and lawes of darknesse shall never prevaile against the Church of Christ he hath bruized and judged and trodden downe Satan under our feet He hath overcome the world he hath subdued iniquitie hee hath turned persecutions into seminaries and resurrections of the Church he hath turned afflictions into matters of glory and of rejoycing so that in all the violence which the Church can suffer it doth more than conquer because it conquers not by repelling but by suffering And this shewes the sacrilege and sawcinesse of the Church of Rome which in this point doth with a double impiety therefore pervert the Scriptures that it may derogate from the honour of Christ and his kingdome And those things which are spoken of the infallibility authority and fulnesse of power which Christ hath in his body of the stability constancie and universalitie of his Church upon earth doth arrogate onely to the Pope and his See at Rome As the Donatists in S. Augustines time from that place of the Spouse in the Canticles Tell me O thou whom my soule loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocke to rest in Meridie excluded all the world from being a Church save onely a corner of Africa which was at that time the nest of those hornets So because Christ sayes his Church is built upon a rocke and the gates of hell shall not prevaile against it therefore the Romanists from hence conclude all these priviledges to belong to them and exclude all the famous Churches of the world besides from having any communion with Christ the Head That scornefull expostulation which Harding makes with that renowned and incomparable Bishop under whose hand hee was no more able to subsist than a whelpe under the paw of a Lion shall wee now change the song of Micheas the Prophet Out of Sion shall come the Law and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem and sing a new song out of Wittenberg is come the Gospell and the Word of the Lord from Zurich and Geneva may most truely and pertinently be retorted upon himselfe and his faction who boldly curse and exclude all those Christian Churches from the body of Christ and the hope of salvation who will not receive lawes from Rome nor esteeme the Cathedrall determinations of that Bishop though haply in himselfe an impure diabolicall and intolerable beast as by their owne confessions many of them have beene to be notwithstanding the infallible Edicts of the Spirit of God and as undoubtedly the Word of Christ as if S. Peter or Saint Paul had spoken it an arrogancie than which there is scarce any more expresse and characteristicall note to discerne Antichrist by It is true that Christs regal power doth alwaies shew forth it selfe in upholding his Catholike Church and in revealing unto it out of his sacred Word such necessary truths as are absolutely requisite unto its being and salvation but to binde this power of Christ to one man and to one See as if like the Pope he were infallible only in S. Peters chaire is the meere figment of pride and ambition without any ground at all raised out of a heape and aggregation of monstrous presumptions of humane and some most disputable others most false conceits of which though there be not the least vestigia in sacred Scriptures yet must they be all first wrested in for indubitate principles and laid for sure foundations before the first stone of Papall authoritie can bee raised As first that the externall and visible regiment of the whole Church is Monarchicall and that there must be a predominant mistresse Church set over all the rest to which in all points they must have recourse and to whose decisions they must conforme without any hesitancie or suspition at all whereas the Apostle tels us that the unity of the Church is gathered by many Pastors and Teachers Eph. 4.11 12 13. for as if severall needles bee touched by so many severall Loadstones all which have the selfe-same specificall vertue in them they doe all as exactly bend to one and the same point of heaven as if they had beene thereunto qualified by but one so in as much as Apostles Prophets Evangelists Pastors Teachers come all instructed with one and
whence can they come there is no Creature strong enough to lay upon them a sufficient recompence of paine for their sinne against the Majestie of God And for the disputes of Schoole-men touching corporall fire in hell and the manner of elevating and applying corporall agents to worke upon spirituall substances they are but the intemperate nicities of men ignorant of the Scriptures and of the terrour of the Lord who is himselfe a consuming fire The divels acknowledge Christ their Tormentor and that when hee did nothing but rebuke them there was no fire nor any other creature by him applied but onely the Majesty of his owne word power and person which wrung from them that hideous cry Art thou come to torment us before the time Matth. 8.29 Lastly consider the heavinesse of Christs owne soule his agonie and sense of the curse due unto our sinne when he was in the garden the trouble astonishment and extreme anguish of his soule which wrought out of his sacred body that woefull and wonderfull sweat Whence came it all wee reade never of any divels let loose to torment him they were ever tormented at his presence We reade of no other Angels that had commission to afflict him we reade of an Angell which was sent to strengthen him Luk. 22.43 There is no reason to thinke that the feare of a bodily death which was the onely thing that men could inflict upon him was that which squeezed out those drops of bloud and extorted those bitter and strong cries from him There were not in his innocent soule in his most pure and sacred body any seeds or principles of such tormenting distempers his compassion towards the misery of sinners his knowledge of the guilt and cursednesse of sinne was as great at other times as now What then could it else be but the weight of his Fathers justice the conflict with his Fathers wrath against the sinnes of men which wrought such extremity of heavinesse in his soule And hee was our suretie he stood in our stead that which was done to the greene tree should much more have beene done to the dry If God layd upon him the strokes which were due unto our sinne how much more heavie shall his hand be upon those whom he throughly hateth But shall not the Angels then be executioners of the sentence of Gods wrath upon wicked men I answere The Angels shal have their service in the comming of the Lord. First as Attendants to shew forth the majestie and glory of Christ to the world 2 Thes. 1.7 Matth. 24.31 Secondly as executioners of his will which is to gather together the Elect and the reprobate to binde up the wicked as sheaves or faggots for the fire Matth. 13.30.24.31 But yet still the Lord interposeth his owne power As a Schoolemaster setteth one scholar to bring forth another unto punishment but then hee layeth on the stripes himselfe But why is it said that the Father shal put Christs enemies under his feet doth not Christ himselfe do it as well as the Father yes doubtlesse God hath given the Sonne authority to execute Iudgement also and put into his hands a rod of iron to dash his enemies to peeces like a potters vessell for whatsoever things the father doth these also doth the sonne likewise Ioh. 5.19.27 Psal. 2.9 But we are to note that the subjecting of Christs enemies under his feete is a worke of divine power And therefore though it be attributed to Christ as an Officer yet it belongeth to the Father as the Fountaine of all divine operations So God is said to have set forth his Sonne as a propitiation Rom. 3.25 and yet the Sonne came downe and manifested himselfe Phil. 2.7 8. Heb. 9.26 The Father is said to have raised him from the dead Act. 2.32 Rom. 6.4 and yet the Sonne raised himselfe by his owne power Iohn 10.18 the Father is said to have set Christ at his owne right hand in heavenly places Ephes. 1.20 and Christ is said to have sate downe himselfe on the right hand of the Majestie on high Heb. 1.3.10.12 The Father is said to give the holy Ghost Ioh. 14.16 and yet the Sonne promiseth to send him himselfe Ioh. 16.7 so here though the Sonne have received power sufficient to subdue all his enemies under his feete for he is able to subdue all things unto himselfe Phil. 3.21 yet the Father to shew his hatred against the enemies of Christ and his consent to the victories of his Son will likewise subdue all things unto him 1 Cor. 15.27 28. O then that men would be by the terrour of the Lord perswaded to fly from the wrath to come to consider the weight of Gods heavie hand and when they see such a storme comming to hide themselves in the holes of that Rocke of mercy It is nothing but Atheisme and infidelity which bewitcheth men with desperate senselesnesse against the vengeance of God And therefore as the Lord hath seconded his Word of Promise with an oath that they might have strong consolation who flye for refuge to lay hold on the hope which is set before them Heb. 6.17 18. So hath hee confirmed the Word of his threatnings with an oath too If I lift up my hand to heaven and say I live for ever I will render vengeance to mine enemies I will reward them that hate me Deut. 32.40 41. and againe The Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iacob surely I will never forget any of their workes Amos 8.7 and againe I have sworne by my selfe that unto me every knee shall bow Esai 45.23 and this he doth that secure and obdurate sinners might have the stronger reasons to flye from the wrath which is set before them O nos miseros qui nec juranti Deo credimus How wonderfull is the stupidity of men that will neither beleeve the words nor tremble at the oath of God Hee warneth us to fly from the wrath to come and we make haste to meete it the rather wee fill up our measure and commit sinne with both hands greedily with uncleane and intemperate courses we bring immature deaths upon our selves that so we may hasten to hell the sooner and make triall whether God be a liar or no. For this indeed is the very direct issue of every profane exorbitancy which men rush into Every man hath much Atheisme in his heart by nature but such desperate stupidity doth wonderfully improve it and bring men by degrees to the hellish presumption of those in the Prophets The Lord will not doe good neither will he doe evill It is not the Lord neither shall evill come upon us the Prophets shall become winde and the word is not in them The dayes are prolonged and the vision shall faile this man prophesieth of things afarre off of doomes day of things which shall be long after our time Vnto these men I say in the words of the Apostle though they sleep and see nothing and mocke at
feete two manner of wayes Either by way of subjection as Servants unto him and so hee hath dominion over all the workes of Gods hands and hath all things put under his feete So the Apostle saith that God hath set him at his owne right hand in heavenly places farre above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not onely in this world but also in that which is to come And hath put all things under his feete and gave him to bee the head over all things to the Church Which S. Peter expresseth in a like manner Hee is gone into heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and authorities and powers being made subject to him Or secondly by way of victorie and insultation and so all Christs enemies are put under his feete Which is the most proper way For the members of Christ are indeed under the head So wee finde that the sheepe of Christ are in his hands No man shall pluck them out of my hand And the Lambes of Christ are in his armes and bosome Hee shall gather the Lambs with his arme and carry them in his bosome But the enemies of Christ are under his feete to bee trampled upon till their bloud bee squeezed out and his garments stained with it All the multiplied multitudes of the wicked in the world shall bee but as so many Clusters of ripe grapes to bee cast into the great winepresse of the wrath of God and to bee troden by him who went forth on a white horse conquering and to conquer till the bloud come out of the winepresse even unto the horse bridles And this is an usuall expression of a totall victory in holy Scripture the laying of an adversary even with the ground that hee may bee crushed and trampled upon This was the curse of the Serpent that hee should crawle with his belly upon the dust of the earth and that the seed of the woman should bruize his head And it is the curse of Gods enemies that they should lick the dust and that the feete of the Church and the tongue of her dogs should bee dipped in the bloud of her enemies Thus David put the people of Rabbah under harrowes and Iehu trod Iezabel under his horses feete And therefore the Church chooseth that phrase to expresse the greatnesse of her calamity by The Lord hath trodden under foote all my mighty men in the midst of mee hee hath called an assembly against mee to crush my yong men The Lord hath trodden the Virgin the Daughter of Iuda as in a wine-presse Now this putting of Christs enemies as a stoole under his feet notes unto us in regard of Christ two things First his Rest and secondly his Triumph To stand in the Scripture Phrase as I have before observed denoteth Ministery and to Sit Rest and there is no posture more easie than to sit with a stoole under ones feet Till Christs enemies then be all under his feet he is not fully in his Rest. It is true in his owne person he is in Rest he hath finished the worke which was given him to doe and therefore is entred into his rest Hee hath alreadie ascended up on high and led captivity captive yet in his members he still suffers though not by way of paine or passion yet by way of Sympathy or compassion he is touched with a feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4.15 As by the things which he suffered he learned obedience towards God so by the same sufferings hee learned compassion and thereupon mercy and fidelity towards his members for no man can be more tenderly faithfull in the businesse of another than he who by his owne experience knoweth the consequence and necessity of it And therefore he is said to be afflicted in all the afflictions of his people and the Apostle tels us that the afflictions of the Saints fill up the remainders or that which is behinde of the sufferings of Christ for as the Church is called the fulnesse of Christ who yet of himselfe is so full as that he filleth all in all neither doth the Church serve to supply his defects but to magnifie his mercy so the Churches sufferings are esteemed the fulnesse of the sufferings of Christ although his were of themselves so full before as that they had a consummatum est to seale up both their measure and their merit and therefore our sufferings are called his not by way of addition or improvement unto those but by way of honour and dignitie unto us they shew Christs compassion towards us and our union and conformitie to him but no way either any defect of vertue in his or any value of merit in ours or any ecclesiasticall treasure or redundancie out of a mixture of both very profitable they are for the edification of the Church but very base and unworthy for the expiation of sinne very profitable for the comfort of men but very unprofitable to the justice of God So then though Christ rest from suffering in himselfe yet not in his Saints though the Serpent cannot come to the head yet it is still bruizing of his heele Here then the Apostles inference is good there remaineth therefore rest unto the people of God and that such a glorious rest as must arise out of the ruine of their enemies when the wicked perish they shall see it and rejoyce and shall wash their feet in the bloud of their adversaries The revenge of God against his enemies is such as shall bring an ease with it Ah saith the Lord I will ease me of mine adversaries I will avenge me of mine enemies Esay 1.24 This is the comfort which the Lord giveth his people that they shall be full when their enemies shall be hungry and that he will appeare to their joy when their enemies shall be ashamed This must teach wicked men to take heed of persecuting the members of Christ for they therein are professed enemies to him whom yet they would seeme to worship This is certaine that all the counsels and resolutions which are made against the subjects or lawes of Christs kingdome are but vaine imaginations which shall never be executed He will at last avenge the quarrell of his people and in spight of all the power or malice of hell make them to sit actually in heavenly places with him whom he hath virtually and representatively carried thither alreadie And it should comfort the faithfull in all their sufferings for Christs sake Because hereby they are first Conformable unto him Secondly they are Associates with him Thirdly they are assured that they are in a way to rest for saith the Apostle it is just with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you who are troubled rest when the Lord Iesus shall be revealed from heaven And inasmuch saith Saint Peter as you are partakers of Christs sufferings when his glory shall be revealed
an escape from himselfe the priviledge wherof hee did afterwards in vaine lay hold on And thus will Christ deale with his enemies at the last day Here they trample upon Christ in his word in his wayes in his members They make the Saints bow downe for them to goe over and make them as the pavements on the ground They tread under foote the bloud of the covenant and the Sanctuary of the Lord and put Christ to shame here and there their owne measure shall bee returned into their owne bosome they shall bee constrained to confesse as Adonibezek as I have done so God hath requited mee Yea this they shall suffer from the meanest of Christs members whom they here insulted over They shall then as witnesses and as it were co-assessors with Christ judge the very wicked Angels and tread them under their feet They shall take them captives whose captives they were and shall rule over their oppressors All they that despised them shall bow themselves at the soles of their feete They who gathered themselves against Sion and said let her bee defiled and let our eye see it shall themselves bee gathered as sheaves into the floore and the Daughter of Sion shall arise and thresh them with hornes of iron and with hooves of brasse Then saith the Church shee that is mine enemies shall see it shame shall cover her which said unto mee Where is the Lord thy God Mine eyes shall behold her Now shall shee bee troden downe as the mire of the streetes Even so let all thine enemies perish O Lord but let them which love thee bee as the Sunne when he goeth forth in his might Lastly herin wee may note the great Power and wisedome of Christ in turning the malice and mischiefe of his enemies into his owne use and advantage and in so ordering wicked men that though they intend nothing but extirpation and ruine to his Kingdome yet they shall bee usefull unto him and against their owne wills serviceable to those glorious ends in the accomplishing wherof hee shall bee admired by all those that beleeve As in a great house there is necessary use of vessels of dishonour destinated unto fordid and meane but yet dayly services so in the great house of God wicked men are his utensils and houshold instruments as footstooles and staves and vessels wherin there is no pleasure though of them there may bee good use The Assyrian was the Rod of his anger his axe wherwith hee pruned and his Saw wherwith hee threatned his people Pharoah was a vessell fitted to shew the glory and power of his name It is necessary saith our Savior that offences come and there must bee heres●es saith the Apostle Because as a skilfull Physitian ordereth poysonfull and destructive ingredients unto usefull services So the Lord by his wisedome doth make use of wicked mens persons and purposes to his owne most righteous and wonderfull ends secretly and mightily directing their wicked designes to the magnifying of his owne power and providence and to the furthering of his people in faith and godlinesse VERSE 2. The Lord shall send the Rod of thy strength out of Sion Rule thou in the mids of thine enemies THis Verse is a continuation of the former touching the Kingdome of Christ and it containes the forme of its spirituall administration Wherin is secretly couched another of the Offices of Christ namely his Propheticall Office For that is as it were the dispensation and execution of his regall Office in the militant Church The summe of this Administration consists in two principall things First in matters military for the subduing of enemies and for the defence and protection of his people Secondly in matters civill and judiciall for the government preservation and honor of his Kingdome And both these are in this Psalme The former in the latter part of this verse Rule thou in the midst of thine enemies The other in the third verse Thy people shall bee willing c. and the way of compassing and effecting in the former words of this verse The Lord shall send forth the Rod of thy strength out of Sion Every King hath his jura Regalia certaine roiall prerogatives and peculiar honors proper to his owne person which no man can use but with subordination unto him And if wee observe them wee shall finde many of them as exactly belong unto Christ in his Kingdome as to any secular prince in his First unto Kings doe belong Armamentaria publica the Magazins for military provision and the power and disposition of publike armes Therefore hee is said by the Apostle to Beare the sword because armes properly belong unto him and unto others under his allowance and protection So to Christ alone doth belong and in him onely is to bee found the publike armorie of a Christian man The weapons of our warfare are mighty onely through him Nay hee is himselfe the armour and panoply of a Christian and therefore wee are commanded to put on the Lord Iesus Againe via publica is via regia the high way is the King● way wherin every man walketh freely under the protection of his Soveraigne So that Law of faith and obedience under which wee are to walke which S. Paul calleth the Law of Christ is by S. Iames called Lex Regia a roiall Law and a Law of Libertie in which while any man continueth hee is under the protection of the promises and of the Angels of Christ. Againe Bona adespota seu incerti Domini Lands that are concealed and under the evident claime of no other person or Lord doe belong unto the Prince as hee that hath the supreme and universall dominion in his countries And this is most certainly true of Christ in his Kingdome if any man can once truly say Lord I am not the servant of any other Master no other King hath the rightfull dominion or peaceable possession of my heart hee may most truly from thence inferre Therefore Lord I am thy servant and therefore Lord my heart is thine True it is Lord our God that other Lords besides thee have had dominion over us but now by thee onely will wee make mention of thy name Againe Vectigaliae and Census Tributes and Customes and Testifications of homage and fidelity are personall prerogatives belonging unto Princes and as the Apostle saith Due unto them for that Ministerie and Office which under God they attend upon So in Christs Kingdome there is a worship which the Psalmist saith is Due unto his name They which came unto the Temple which was a type of Christ were not to come empty handed but to bring Testimonies of their reverence and willing subjection unto that worship When Abraham met Melchisedek a figure of Christ as from him hee received a blessing so unto him hee gave an expression of a loyall heart the tenth of the spoiles When the people of Israel entred into
the land of Canaan which was a type of Christs Church which he should conquer unto himselfe if any people accepted of the peace which they were first to proclaime they were to become tributaries and servants unto Israel So it is said of Salomon whose peaceable kingdome was a type of Christs after his many victories that he bond-service upon all the nations about Israel and that those princes with whom he held correspondence brought unto him presents as testimonies of his greatnesse and wisedome So when the wise men the first fruits of the Gentiles after Christ exhibited came to submit unto his kingdome they opened their treasure and presented him with gifts gold frankincense and myrrh Againe Monetarum leges valores the authorizing and valuations of publike coines belong unto the prince onely it is his image and inscription alone which maketh them currant Even so unto Christ onely doth belong the power of stamping and creating as it were new ordinances in his Church nothing is with God nor should be currant with us which hath not his image or expresse authority upon it Neither can any man falsify or corrupt any constitution of his without notable contempt against his royall prerogative Againe Iudicium or potestas judiciaria a power of judging the persons and causes of men is a peculiar royalty the administration whereof is from the prince as the fountaine of all humane equitie under God deposited in the hands of inferiour officers who are as it were the mouth of the prince to publish the lawes and to execute those acts of justice and peace which principally belong to his owne sacred breast And so Christ saith of himselfe The Father hath committed all judgement unto the Sonne and hath given him authority to execute judgement Againe Ius vitae necis A power to pardon condemned persons and deliver them from the terrour of the Lawes sentence is a transcendent mercie a gemme which can shine only from the diadems of Princes Now unto Christ likewise belongeth in his Church a power to forgive sinnes it is the most sacred roialty of this prince of peace not onely to suspend but for ever to revoke and as it were annihilate the sentence of malediction under which every man is borne There are likewise Ornamenta Regia regall Ornaments a Crowne a Throne a Scepter and the like Thus we finde the Romanes were wont to send to those forraine kings with whom they were in league as testimonies and confirmations of their dignity scipionem eburneum togam pictam sellam curulem an ivorie scepter a roiall robe and a chaire of state And the like honours wee finde in the Scriptures belonging unto Christ that hee was crowned with glory and honour and that hee had a Throne and righteous scepter belonging to his kingdome Thus we have seene in severall particulars how Christ hath his Royalties belonging to his kingdome Some principall of them we finde in this place A throne a scepter ambassadours armies for the right dispensing of his sacred power We will first consider the words and then raise such observations as shall offer themselves First what is meant by the Rod of Christs Strength or his Strong Rod It notes a thing which a man may leane upon or lay the whole weight of his body on in his wearinesse But being spoken of Christs kingdome wee take it for a scepter or rod of majestie I will not hold you with the variety of acceptions in Expositors Some take it for the branch that groweth out of that roote of Iesse Some for the wood of the crosse Some for the body of Christ borne of a Virgin Some for the kingdome of Christs power taking the signe for the thing signified Some for the power of his mightie workes and preaching That of the body and of the crosse of Christ except by them wee understand the vertue of Christ crucified I conceive to be not so pertinent to the purpose of the Prophet The rest agree in one But for the more distinct understanding of the words wee may consider out of the holy Scriptures what things were sent out of Sion And we finde there two things First the word of the Lord or his holy Gospell The Law shall proceed out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem Mic. 4.2 Secondly the spirit of the Lord which was first sent unto Sion for at Hierusalem the Apostles were to wait for the promise of the Father Act. 1.4 and from thence was shed abroad into the world upon al flesh Act. 2.17 and both these are the power or strength of Christ. His word a Gospell of power unto salvation Rom. 1.16 2 Cor. 4.7.10.4 and his spirit a spirit of power 1 Cor. 2.4 2 Tim. 1.7 which is therefore called the finger and the arme of the Lord Luk. 11.20 Matt. 12.28 Esai 53.1 so by the Rod is meant the Gospell and the Spirit of Christ. Secondly what is meant by Gods sending this Rod of Christs strength It notes the manifestation of the Gospell we knew it not before it was sent The donation of the Gospell we had it not before it was sent the invitations of the Gospell we were without God in the world and strangers from the Covenant of promise before it was sent The Commission of the Dispensers of the Gospell they have their patent from heaven they are not to speake untill they be sent Thirdly what is meant by sending it out of Sion It is put in Opposition to mount Sina from whence the Law was sometimes sent with thunders and fire and much terrour unto the people of Israel Ye are not come saith the Apostle unto the mount that burned with fire nor unto blacknesse and darknesse and tempest c. but yee are come unto mount Sion and unto the City of the living God the heavenly Ierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Covenant c. Heb. 12.18.24 and the Apostle elsewhere sheweth us the meaning of this Allegoricall opposition betweene Sina and Sion betweene Sarah and Hagar namely the two covenants of the Law and of Grace or of bondage and liberty Gal. 4.24 25. Sion was the place whither the tribes resorted to worship the Lord the place towards which that people praied the place of Gods mercifull residence amongst them the beauty of holines the place upon which first the gift of the holy Ghost was powred forth and in which the Gospell was first of all preached after Christs Ascension We may take it by a Synechdoche for the whole Church of the Jewes unto whom the Lord first revealed his Covenant of Grace in Christ Act. 3.26 Act. 13.46 Rom. 2.10 Rule Thou that is Thou shalt rule which is a usuall forme to put the Imperative for the future Indicative It is not a command which hath relation unto any service but it is a promise a commission a dignity conferred
glory or the glorious Gospell Christ the prince of life yea the Word of life and the Gospell the Word of life too Christ a Iudge and the Word of Christ a Iudge too The word which I have spoken the same shall judge you at the last day Christ a Saviour and Salvation unto men Mine eyes have seene thy Salvation And the Gospell of Christ a Salvation too wee know saith Christ to the woman of Samaria what we worship for salvation is of the Iewes The force of the reason leads us to understand by Salvation the Oracles of God which were committed unto that people for out of them only it is that we know what and how to worship and this is not unusuall in holy Scriptures If the Word saith the Apostle spoken by Angels was stedfast and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord c Where we finde Salvation set in opposition to the Word spoken by Angels which was the Law of God or the ministerie of condemnation and therefore it must needes signifie the Gospell of Christ. Be it knowne unto you saith the Apostle to the unbeleeving Iewes that the salvation of God that is the Gospell of God as appeareth plainely by the like paralell speech in another place is sent unto the Gentiles and that they will heare it So the Apostle saith that the engraffed Word is able to save the soules of men All which and many other the like particulars note unto us That as Christ is the Power and Image of his Father so the Gospell is in some sort of Christ For which reason the Apostle as I conceive calleth the Gospel the Face of Iesus Christ God who commanded the light to shine out of darkenesse hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. Where is it that wee behold the glorie of God but in a glasse and what is that glasse but the word of God as S. Iames cals it Iam. 1.23 Christ is not pleased any other wayes ordinarily to exercise his power or to reveale his glory but in these ordinances of his which wee dispense Therefore hee walketh in his Church with a sword is his mouth and with a Rod in his mouth to note that hee giveth no greater testification of his strength than in the Ministery of his Gospell which is therefore sometimes called a sword a hammer a fire sometimes onely a savor of life and death to note the mighty working thereof that can kill as well by a sent as by a wound as well by a breath as by a blow To consider this point a little more distinctly This Power of the Gospell of Christ appeares in both those regards as it is a savor of life unto life and as it is a savor of death unto death Towards his Church who shall bee saved and towards his enemies who shall perish Many wayes is the Gospell of Christ and his Spirit a Rod of strength unto his Church First in their Calling and conversion from the power of Satan unto God Satan is a strong man and hee is armed hath a whole panoply and full provision of militarie instruments and which is a great advantage hath both the first possession and the full love of the hearts of men before Christ attempts any thing upon them And therefore that which pulleth a man from under the paw of such a Lion and forceth him away from his owne palace must needs bee much stronger than hee And therefore the Apostle commendeth the power of the word by this argument that it is a sword fit to overcome principalities and powers and rulers of the darknesse of this world and spirituall wickednesses in heavenly places Againe the old Man in our nature is a strong man too a Raigning King which setteth himselfe mightily against the word and will of Christ and cherisheth the disease against the remedie And by that likewise the Apostle commendeth the power of the Gospell that it is mighty through God to the pulling downe of strong holds and imaginations or fleshly reasonings When Christ still'd the windes and the Sea with but two words Peace bee still they were exceedingly amazed at his power and said one to another what manner of man is this that even the windes and the Sea obey him The conversion of a man is a farre greater worke than the stilling of the Sea that will bee sometimes calme of it selfe when the furie of the winde ceaseth The wicked indeed are like the Sea but not at any time but like a troubled Sea when it cannot rest The Sea wee know is subject unto severall motions An inward boyling and unquietnesse from it selfe its ordinary fluxes and refluxes from the influence of the moone many casuall agitations from the violence of the windes and from its owne waves one wave precipitating impelling and repelling another So are the hearts of wicked men by the foaming estuations and excesses of naturall concupiscence by the provisions and materials of sinfull pleasures by the courses of the world by the solicitations and impulsions of Satan by a world of hourely casualties and provocations so tempestuous that they alwayes cast out upon the words and actions of men mire and dirt Now in the dispensation of the word by the ministery of a weake man Christ stilleth the raging of this Sea quels the lusts correcteth the distempe●s scattereth the temptations worketh a smoothnesse and tranquillity of Spirit in the soule of a man Surely when this is done the soule cannot but stand amazed at its owne recovery and admire that wonderfull and invisible power which could so suddenly rebuke such raging affections and reduce them unto calmenesse and beauty againe What ailed thee O thou Sea that thou fleddest and thou Iordan that thou wert driven back yee mountaines that yee skipped like Rams and yee little hils like Lambes It is an expression of Gods power towards his people in their triumphall entrance into the Land of Canaan Wee may apply it to the conquest and possession which the word takes of the soules of men What ailed a man that hee was driven back from his owne channell and made suddenly to forget his wonted course what ailed those strong and mountainous lusts which were as immoveably setled upon the soule as a hill upon his base to fly away at the voice of a man like a frighted sheepe what ailed those smaller corruptions and intemperancies which haply had before lost their names and were rather customes and infirmities than sinnes to flie away like lambes from the word of Christ A man went into the Church with a full tide and streame of lusts every thicket in his heart every reasoning and imagination of his
estate which shall be tendred unto them To admire adore and greedily embrace any termes of peace and reconciliation which shall be offered them To submit unto the righteousnesse and with all willing and meeke affection to bend the heart to the Scepter of Christ and to whatsoever forme of judicature and spirituall government he shall please to erect therein And this magnifies the strength of this Rod of Christs Kingdome that it maketh men yeeld upon any termes when we see the little stone grow into a mightie mountaine and eat into all the Kingdomes of the world when wee see Emperours and Princes submit their necks and scepters to a doctrine at first every where spoken against and that upon the words of a few despicable pe●sons and that such a doctrine too as is diametrally contrary to the naturall constitution of the hearts of men and teacheth nothing but selfe-deniall and this for hope of reward from one whom they never saw and whom if they had seene they should have found by a naturall eye no beauty in him for which hee should bee desired and this reward too what-ever it be deferred for a long time and in the interim no ground of assurance to expect it but onely faith in himselfe that promiseth it and in the meane time a world of afflictions for his names sake How can we think that a world of wise and of great men should give eare most willingly unto such termes as these if there were not a demonstrative and constraining evidence of truth and goodnesse therein able to stop the mouths and to answer the objections of all gain sayers Of this point I have spoken more copiously upon another Scripture Secondly there is a Conviction unto condemnation of those who stand out against this saving power of the Gospell and Spirit of grace driving them from all their strong holds and constraining them perforce to acknowledge the truth which they doe not love Thus wee finde our Saviour disputing with the Jewes till no man was able to answer him a word and as he did so himselfe so hee promised that his messengers should doe so too I will give you a mouth and wisdome which all your adversaries shall not be able to gain-say nor resist And this promise wee finde made good the enemies of Steven were not able to resist the Spirit by which hee spake And Apollos mightily convinced the Jews shewing by the Scriptures that Jesus was Christ And this the Apostle numbreth amongst the qualifications of a Bishop that he should be able by sound doctrine to convince the gain-sayers and to stop the mouthes of those unruly deceivers whose businesse it is to subvert men for this is the excellent vertue of Gods Word that it concludeth or shutteth men in and leaveth not any gap or evasion of corrupted reason unanswered or unprevented Thus wee finde how the Prophets in their ministery did still drive the Jewes from their shifts and presse them with Dilemma's the inconveniences whereof they could on no side escape either there must be a fault in you or else in God who rebuketh you but now what iniquity saith the Lord have your fathers found in me that they are gone far from me Have I beene a wildernesse unto Israel or a land of darknesse wherefore say my people we are lords we will come no more unto thee O my people what have I done unto thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against mee I raised up of your sonnes for Prophets and of your young men for Nazarites Is it not even thus O yee children of Israel Here the Scripture useth that figure which is called by the Rhetoritians Communicatio a debating and deliberation with the adverse party an evidencing of a cause so cleerely as that at last a man can challenge the adversary himselfe to make such a determination as himselfe shall in reason judge the merits of the cause to require How shall I pardon thee for this and how shall I doe for the daughters of my people Set me in a way determine the controversie your selves and I will stand to the issue which your owne consciences shall make O inhabitants of Ierusalem and men of Iudah judge I pray you betweene me and my Vineyard that is doe you your selves undertake the deciding of your owne cause When a band of armed men came against Christ to attach him and at the pronouncing but of two words I am he fell all downe backward to the earth we must needs confesse that there was some mightie power and evidence of Majesty in him that uttered them what thinke wee can he doe when hee raigneth and judgeth the world who did let out so much power when he was to die and to be judged by the world Now Christ raigneth and judgeth the world by his Word and that more mightily after his ascending up on high and therefore he promiseth his Apostles that they should doe greater workes than himselfe had done When I shall see a man armed with scorne against Christ in his Word standing proudly upon the defence of his owne wayes by his owne wisdome and wrapping up himselfe in the mud of his owne carnall reasonings by a few postulata and deductions from Gods Word to bee enforced to stoppe his owne mouth to be condemned by his owne witnesse to betray his owne succours and to bee shut up in a prison without barres when I shall force such a man by the mighty penetration and invincible evidence of Gods Word to see in his owne conscience a hand subscribing to the truth which condemnes him and belying all those delusions which he had fram'd to deceive himselfe withall who can deny but that the rod of Gods mouth is indeed Virga virtutis a rod of strength an iron rod able to deale with all humane reasonings as a hammer with a potsherd which though to the hand of a man it may feele as hard as a rocke yet is too brittle to endure the blow of an iron rod Strange it is to observe how boldly men venture on sinnes under the names of custome or fashions or some other pretences of corrupted reason contrary to the cleere and literal evidence of holy Scriptures the most immediate and grammaticall sense whereof is ever soundest where there doth not some apparant and unavoidable errour in doctrine or mischiefe in manners follow thereupon Men will justifie the cause of the wicked for reward and by dexterity of wit put a better colour upon a worser businesse as hath beene observed of Protagoras and Carneades and yet the Lord saith expressely Thou shalt not speake in a cause to wrest judgement thou shalt keepe thee far from a false matter for God whom thou oughtest to imitate will not justifie the wicked Men will follow the sinfull fashions of the world in strange apparell in prodigious haire in lustfull and unprofitable expence of that pretious
moment of time upon the abuse or right improvement whereof dependeth the severall issues of their eternall condition though the Lord say expresly Bee not conformed to this world they that walke according to the course of the world walke according to the Prince of the power of the aire The Lord will punish all such as are clothed with strange apparell who take up the fashions of idolaters or other nations or other sexes as that place is differently expounded Nature it selfe teacheth that it is a shame for a man to weare long haire nay Nature it selfe taught that honest Heathen to stand at defiance with the sinnes of his age and not comply with the course of the world upon that slight apologie as if the commonnesse had taken away the illnesse that which committed by one would have been a sin being imitated after a multitude were but a fashion To conclude this particular The Apostle is peremptory Neither fornicators nor idolaters nor effeminate nor covetous nor theeves nor drunkards nor revilers nor extortioners shall inherit the kingdome of God and the consciences of many men who yet will never yeeld to the conclusion cannot choose but subsume as the Apostle goes on such are some of we nay and such we will be too But now if we should bespeake these men in the word of the Prophet Produce your cause saith the Lord bring forth your strong reasons saith the King of Iacob they should finde at the last their reasons to be like themselves vanity and lighter than nothing that the Word of the Lord will at last prevaile and sweepe away all their refuge of lyes Secondly the power of the Word towards wicked men is seene in Affrighting of them there is a spirit of bondage and a savour of death aswell as a spirit of life and libertie which goeth along with the Word Guilt is an inseparable consequent of sinne and feare of the manifestation of guilt If the heart be once convinced of this it will presently faint and tremble even at the shaking of a leafe at the wagging of a mans owne conscience how much more at the voice of the Lord which shaketh mountaines and maketh the strong foundations of the earth to tremble If I should see a prisoner at the barre passe sentence upon his Judge and the Judge thereupon surpriz'd with trembling and forced to subscribe and acknowledge the doome I could not but stand amaz'd at so inverted a proceeding yet in the Scripture wee finde presidents for it Micatah a prisoner pronouncing death unto Ahab a King Ieremie a prisoner pronouncing captivitie unto Zedekiah a King Paul in his chain preaching of judgment unto Felix in his robes and making his owne Judge to tremble It is not for want of strength in the Word or because there is stoutnesse in the hearts of men to stand out against it that all the wicked of the world do not tremble at it but meerly their ignorance of the power evidence thereof The Devils are stronger and more stubborne creatures than any man can be yet because of their full illumination and that invincible conviction of their consciences from the power of the Word they beleeve and tremble at it Though men were as hard as rocks the Word is a hammer which can breake them though as sharp as thornes and briars the Word is a fire which can devour and torment them though as strong as kingdomes and nations the Word is able to root them up and to pull them downe though as fierce as Dragons and Lions the Word is able to trample upon them and to chaine them up Thirdly the power of the Word is seene towards wicked men in that it doth judge them Sonne of man wilt thou judge wilt thou judge the bloudy Citie saith the Lord yea thou shalt shew them their abominations To note that when wicked men are made to see their filthinesse in the Word they have therby the wrath of God as it were seal'd upon them He that rejecteth mee the Word which I have spoken the same shall judge him at the last day saith our Saviour And if all prophecie saith the Apostle and there come in one that beleeveth not or one unlearned he is convinced of all hee is judged of all and the secrets of his heart are made manifest Nay the Word doth in some sort execute death and judgement upon wicked men Therefore it is said that the Lord would smite the earth with the rod of his mouth and with the breath of his lips would slay the wicked And againe I have hewed them by the Prophets I have slaine them by the words of my mouth And therefore the Word of the Lord is called fury by the Prophet to note that when wrath fury is powred out upon a land they are the effects of Gods Word If a pestilence devoure a city and a sword come and gleane after it it is the Word only which flayes they are but the instruments which are as it were actuated and applied by the Word of God to their severall services Therefore it is that the Prophet saith that wise men see the voice of God and heare his rod. A rod is properly to be seene and a voice to bee heard but here is a transposition and as it were a communication of properties betweene the Word of God and his punishments to note that towards wicked men there is a judging and tormenting vertue in the Word For judgement saith our Saviour am I come into this world that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blinde If it be here objected that Christ saith of himselfe The Son of man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them and that he came not to condemne the world but that the world through him might bee saved I answer that there are two events of Christs comming and by consequence of his Gospell The one principall and by him intended the other accidentall and occasionall growing out of the ill disposition of the subject unto whom he was sent The maine and essentiall businesse of the Gospell is to declare salvation and to set open unto men a doore of escape from the wrath to come but when men wilfully stand out and neglect so great salvation then secondarily doth Christ prove unto those men a stone of offence and the Gospell a savour of death unto death as that potion which was intended for a cure by the Physitian may upon occasion of the indisposednesse of the body and stubborne radication of the disease hasten a mans end sooner than the disease it selfe would have done So that to the wicked the Word of God is a two-edged sword indeed an edge in the Law and an edge in the Gospell they are on every side beset with condemnation if they goe to the Law that cannot save them because they have broken it
charge even the great men of the world It is true the ministers of the Gospell are servants to the Church In compassion to pitty the diseases the infirmities the temptations of Gods people in ministerie to assist them with all needfull supplies of comfort or instruction or exhortation in righteousnesse in humility to waite upon men of lowest degree and to condescend unto men of weakest capacitie And thus the very Angels in heaven are servants to the Church of Christ. But yet we are servants onely for the Churches good to serve their soules not to serve their humors And therefore we are such servants as may command too These things command and teach Let no man despise thy youth And againe These things speake and exhort and rebuke with all authority Let no man despise thee No ministers are more despicable than those who by ignorance or flattery or any base and ambitious affections betray the power majesticall simplicity of the Gospel of Christ. When we deliver Gods message we must not then be the servants of men If I yet please men I were not then the servant of Christ saith the Apostle To captivate the truth of God unto the humours of men and to make the Spirit of Christ in his Gospell to bend comply and complement with humane lusts is with Ionah to play the runnagates from our office and to prostrate the Scepter of Christ unto the insultation of men There is a wonderfull majesty and authority in the word when it is set on with Christs Spirit He taught men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as one who had power and authority or priviledge to speake as one that cared not for the persons of men and therefore where ever his spirit is there will this power and liberty of Christ appeare for he hath given it to his ministers that they may commend themselves in the consciences of those that heare them that they may harden their faces against the pride and scorne of men that they may goe out in armies against the enemies of his kingdome that they may speake boldly as they ought to speake that they may not suffer his word to be bound or his Spirit to be straitened by the humors of men Againe we should all labour to receive the word in the power thereof and to expose our tender parts unto it A Cocke is in comparison but a weake Creature and yet the crowing of a Cocke will cause the trembling of a Lion What is a Bee to a Beare or a Mouse to an Elephant and yet if a Bee fasten his sting in the nose of a Beare or a Mouse creepe up and gnaw the trunke of an Elephant how easily doe so little Creatures upon such an advantage torment the greatest Certainely the proudest of men have some tender part into which a sting may enter The conscience is as sensible of Gods displeasure as obnoxious to his wrath as subject to his word in a prince as in a beggar If the word like Davids stone finde that open and get into it it is able to sinke the greatest Goliah Therefore wee should open our consciences unto that word and expect his spirit to come along with it and receive it as Iosiah did with humility and trembling Wee should learne to feare the Lord in his word and when his voyce cryeth in the city to see his name and his power therein Will ye not feare me faith the Lord will ye not tremble at my presence who make the sand abound to the sea No Creature so swelling and of it selfe so strong and incroaching as the sea nothing so small weake smoothe and passable as the sand and yet the sand a creature so easily removed and swept away decreed to hold in so raging an Element What in appearance weaker than words spoken by a despised man and what in the experience of all the world stronger than the raging of an army of lusts and yet that hath the Lord appointed to tame and subdue these that men might learne to feare his power Againe it should teach us to Rest upon God in all things as being unto us all-sufficient a sunne a shield an exceeding great reward in the truth and promises of his Gospell The word of God is a sure thing that which a man may cast his whole weight upon and leane confidently on in any extremity All the Creatures in the world are full of vanity uncertaineties and disappointments and then usually doe deceive a man most when he most of all relies upon them and therefore the Apostle chargeth us not to trust in them But the word of the Lord is an abiding word as being founded upon the Immutability of Gods owne truth he that maketh it his refuge relieth on Gods omnipotency and hath all the strength of the Almighty engaged to helpe him Asa was safe while hee depended on the Lord in his promises against the hugest host of men that was ever read of but when he turned aside to collaterall aides hee purchased to himselfe nothing but perpetuall warres And this was that which established the throne of Iehoshaphat and caused the feare of the Lord to fall upon the kingdomes of the lands which were round about him because he honoured the Word of God and caused it to be taught unto his people Whensoever Israel and Judah did forget to leane upon Gods word and betooke themselves to humane confederacies to correspondence with Idolatrous people to facility in superstitious compliances and the like fleshly counsels they found them alwaies to be but very lies like waxen and wooden feasts made specious of purpose to delude ignorant commers things of so thinne and unso●id a consistence as were ever broken with the weight of those who did leane upon them Let us not therefore rest upon our owne wisedome nor build our hopes or securities upon humane foundations but let us in all conditions take hold of Gods Covenant of this staffe of his strength which is able to stay us up in any extremities Againe since the Gospell is a word of such soveraigne power as to strengthen us against all enemies and temptations to uphold us in all our wayes and callings to make us strong in the Grace of Christ for ever a Christian mans knowledge of the Word is the measure of his strength and comfort wee should therefore labour to acquit our selves with God in his Word to hide it in our hearts and grow rich in the knowledge of it In heaven our blessednesse shall consist in the knowledge and communion with the Father and with his Sonne Iesus Christ. So that the Gospell and the Spirit are to us upon earth the preludes and supplies of heaven for by them onely is this knowledge and communion begun And that man doth but delude himselfe and lye to the world who professeth his desire to goe to heaven and doth not here desire to know so much of God as he is pleased to afford to
of the Booke of God and he that obeyeth not doth despise for the Lord calleth disobedience rebellion stubbornenesse and a rejecting of his word 1 Sam. 15.22 23. He that persisteth in any knowne sinne or in the constant omission of any evident dutie fighteth against Christ himselfe throweth away his owne mercy stoppeth his eares at the entreaties of the Lord and committeth a sinne directly against Heaven And if he so persist God will make him know that there is flaming fire prepared for those that obey not the Gospell of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Thes. 1.8 Therefore whensoever we come unto the Word read or preached wee should come with an expectation to heare Christ himselfe speaking from heaven unto us and bring such affections of submission and obedience as becommeth his presence Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith unto the Churches I will heare what God the Lord will speake for he will speake peace unto his people Christs sheepe discerne his voyce in the dispensation of the Gospell and will not know the voice of strangers And this was the honour of the Thessalonians and the men of Berea that in the preaching of the Word they did set themselves as in Gods presence expecting in it his authoritie and receiving it in his name Dareth any man to rush with a naked weapon into the presence of his prince and with scorne to throw backe his owne personall commands into his face againe And shall wee dare to come armed with high thoughts and proud reasonings and stubborne resolutions against the majesty of the Lord himselfe who speaketh from heaven unto us Receive with meeknesse saith the Apostle the ingrafted Word which is able to save your soules The word doth not mingle nor incorporate and by consequence doth not change nor save the soule but when it is received with meeknesse that is when a man commeth with a resolution to lay downe his weapons to fall downe on his face and give glory to God he that is swift to wrath that is to set up stout and fretfull affections against the purity and power of the Word to snuffe against it and to fall backward like pettish children which will not be led will be very slow to heare or to obey it for the wrath of man doth not worke the righteousnesse of God A proud hearer will be an unprofitable liver Ever therefore come unto the word with this conclusion It may be this day will God strike me in my master veine I am an usuall profaner of his glorious name a name which I should feare for the greatnesse and love for the goodnesse and adore for the holinesse of it hee will peradventure lay close to my conscience that guilt which himselfe hath declared to be in this great sinne that whatsoever is more than yea and nay is sinne unto me and whatsoever is sin is Hell to my soule I am a vaine person a companion of loose and riotous men It may bee the Lord will urge upon my conscience the charge of his owne word not to companie with fornicators to have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darkenesse not to follow a multitude to doe evill and that though hand joyne in hand yet sinne shall not goe unpunished I am unprofitable loose and rotten in my discourse and hee will ply mee with his owne authority that for every idle word I must render an account I am full of oppression and unjust gain and the Lord will now urge the instructions of Nehemiah the restitution of Zacheus upon me In these or any other the like cases if a man can come with Saint Pauls temper of hart not to consult with flesh and bloud but Lord what wilt thou have me to doe or with the answer of Samuel Speake Lord for thy servant heareth or with the resolution of Cornelius I am here present before God to heare all things that shall bee commanded of God I am come with a purpose of heart to cleave unto thy holy will in all things Here I am in my sinnes strike where thou wilt cut off which of mine earthly members thou wilt I will not arme it I will not extenuate it I will not dispute with thee I will not rebell against thee I will second thee in it I will praise thee for it This is to give God the glorie of his owne Gospell It is not to part from a little monie towards the maintenance of the word or to vouchsafe a little countenance to the dispencers of it and yet alas how few are there who repay unto the ministers of the Gospell that double honor which God and not they hath given unto them but to part from our lusts and to suffer our old man to be crucified which giveth honour to the Word If a man had thousands of rammes and tenne thousand rivers of oyle and would bee content to part from them all for Gods worship If a man had children enough and in a famine of the word would buy every sermon which hee heareth with the sacrifice of a Sonne yet all this would not give glorie enough to the ordinance of God Men naturally love their lusts the issue of their evill hearts better than their lands or the children of their body if Herods son stand in the way of his ambitious security it were better to be his Hog than his childe The losse of cattell and fruits and water and light and the first-borne of all the land was not enough to make Pharaoh let goe his sinne hee will once more rush into the midst of a wonderfull deliverance of Israel and venture his owne and his peoples lives for but the bondage of his enemies and the satisfaction of his lust To doe justly then to love mercy and to walke humbly before God to acknowledge his name in the voyce of the minister and to put away the treasures of wickednesse out of our hands this onely is to give God the glory which is due unto his Word Mic. 6.6 10. Secondly the Gospell is glorious in the promulgation publishing of it unto the world And this may appeare whether we consider the initiall Promulgation in Christs owne personall preaching Or the plenary Revelation thereof in the sending of the holy Ghost to those selected vessels who were to carry abroad this treasure unto all the world For the former wee may note that there was a resemblance of state and glory observ'd in the preaching of Christ. A Forerunner sent to prepare his way and to beare his sword before him as a Herald to proclaime his approach and then at last is revealed the Glory of the Lord. And thus we may observe how we sent his Harbingers before his face into every Citie and place whither he himselfe would come that so men might prepare themselves and lift up their everlasting gates against this Prince of Glory should enter in When one poore ordinary man
that it doth not onely sanctifie men but preserve their holinesse in them If it were not for the treasure of the word in the heart every little thing would easily turne a man out of his way and make him revolt from Christ againe How easily would afflictions make us mistrust Gods affection to us and so change ours unto him for this is certaine His Love to us is the originall of our love to him make us murmure repine struggle fret under his hand if in the Gospell wee did not looke upon them as the gentle corrections of a Father who loves us as the pruning and harrowing of our foules that they may bring forth more fruit Except thy Law had beene my delight I should have perished in mine affliction My affliction would have destroied me and made mee perish from the right way if it had not beene tempered and sanctified by thy Word It wrought so with that wicked king of Israel Behold this evill is of the Lord what should I waite upon the Lord any longer what profit is there to walke humbly before him or to afflict our selves before him who will not see nor take knowledge of it but continue to be our enemie still But the Gospell teacheth a mans heart to rest in God assureth it that there is hope in Israel and balme in Gilead that they which beleeve should not make haste to limit or to misconstrue God but waite for his Salvation which will ever come in that due time wherein it shall be both most acceptable and most beautifull Againe how easily would Temptations over-turne the faith of men if it were not daily supported by the Word what is the reason that the sheepe of Christ will not follow strangers nor know their voice that is will not acknowledge any force nor subscribe in their hearts to the conviction or evidence of any temptation which would draw them from God but onely because they heare and know the voice of Christ in his Gospell and feele a spirit in their owne hearts setting to its seale and bearing witnesse to that truth from whence those solicitations would seduce them The Apostle foretold the Elders of Ephesus at his solemne departure from them that grievous wolves would enter in amongst them that some of themselves would arise speaking perverse things to draw away disciples after them And the maine remedie which the Apostle gives them against this danger was I commend you to God and to the Word of his grace which is able to build you up c. Noting that it is the Word of God which keepeth men from being drawne away with perverse disputes And the same intimation he gives them in his Epistle unto them Hee gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers That we henceforth be no more children tossed to and fro and carried about with every winde of doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftinesse whereby they lye in waite to deceive The more richly the word of God in the love and evidence thereof doth dwell in any man and enable him to prove all things the more stedfastly will he hold that which is good and stand immoveable against the sleights and solicitations of men Againe how easily would our owne evill hearts gather a rust and unaptnesse for service over themselves if they were not daily whet and brightned upon the Word of God That onely it is which scrapeth away that leprosie and mossinesse which our soules are apt to contract out of themselves A man may lose all that hee hath wrought all the benefit of what hee hath done already and all the strength to doe any more onely by not abiding in the Doctrine of Christ. Hee onely is no doer of the Word who looketh in it as a man on a glasse and presently forgetteth the image and state of his conscience againe it is onely hee that continueth therein who is a doer of the worke and blessed in his deed He that treasureth up the Gospell in his heart and laboureth to grow rich in the knowledge thereof can never be turned quite out of his way or become an Apostate from the grace of Christ. Lastly it is a glorious Gospell in regard of those noble and majesticall endowments with which it qualifieth the soule of a Christian for there is no nobility to that of the Gospell It giveth men the highest priviledge in the world to bee called the Sonnes of God to bee kings and priests before him to be a Royall priesthood a holy nation a peculiar people a nation of priests Nothing doth so honour a land as to bee the seate of the Gospell It was the honour of the Iewes that unto them were committed the Oracles of God Therefore the Arke is called the Glory of Israel and Christ the glory of Israel and the excellency of Iacob neither is there any thing else allowed a man to glory in save onely this that hee understandeth and knoweth the Lord in his word It putteth magnanimity into the breasts of men high thoughts regall affections publike desires and attempts a kinde of heavenly ambition to doe and to gaine the greatest good The maine ends of a Christian are all high and noble The favour of God the fellowship of the Father and the Son the Grace of Christ the peace of the Church his trafficke and negotiation is for heaven his language the Dialect of heaven his order a heavenly order innumerable companies of Angels and the spirits of just men made perfect A holy man who hath the spirit of his minde raised and ennobled by the Gospell is an Agent in the same affaires and doth in his thoughts desires prayers emulations pursue the same high and heavenly ends for the advancement of the glory of Christ and demolishing the kingdome of Satan with the blessed Angels of God His desires looke no lower than a kingdome a weight of massie and most superlative exceeding glory That which other men make the utmost point even of their impudent and immodest hopes the secular favours and dignities of the world these put lowest under their feet but their wings the higher and more aspiring affections of their soule are directed onely unto heaven and heavenly things They no sooner are placed in the body of Christ but they have publike services some to preach some to defend all to pray to practise to adorne the profession they have under-taken For indeede every Christian hath his talent given him his service injoyn'd him The Gospell is a Depositum a publike Treasure committed to the keeping of every Christian each man having as it were a severall key of the Church a severall trust for the honour of this kingdome deliver'd unto him As in the solemne Coronation of the Prince every Peere of the Realme hath his station about the Throne and with the touch of his hand upon the roiall Crowne declareth the personall
duty of that honour which hee is called unto namely to hold on the Crowne on the head of his Soveraigne to make it the maine end of his greatnesse to study and by all meanes endeavour the establishment of his Princes Throne so every Christian as soone as he hath the honour to be called unto the kingdome and presence of Christ hath immediately no meaner a depositum committed to his care than the very Throne and Crowne of his Saviour than the publike honour peace victorie and stability of his masters kingdome The Gospell is committed to the custody of the Bishops and Pastors of the Church to preach it They are as it were the Heralds and Fore-runners of Christ to prepare his way into the soules of men To the custody of the Princes and Judges of the earth to defend it to be a guard about the person and truth of Christ to command the obedience and to encourage the teaching of it The Gospell is the Law of Christs Throne and the princes of the world are the lions about his Throne set there to watch and guard it against the malice of enemies And therefore it is recorded for the honour of David that he set in order the courses of the Priests and appointed them their formes and vicissitudes of Service Of Salomon that he built adorned and dedicated a Temple for Gods solemne worship Of Iosiah that hee made the people to serve the Lord their God Of Ezekiah that he restored the service and repaired the Temple of God that he spake comfortably to the Levites who taught the good knowledge of the Lord that hee proclaimed a solemne passeover that hee ordered the courses of the Priests and Levites that hee gave commandement concerning the portion of their due maintenance that they might be encouraged in the Law of the Lord a patterne worthy the admiration and imitation of all Christian princes in spight of the sacrilegious doctrine of those men who would rob them of that power and office which God hath given them for the establishment of his Gospell and it was imitated by the first Christian Prince that ever the world had Lastly the Gospell is committed to the keeping of every Christian to practise it to adorne it to pray for it to be valiant and couragious in his place and station for the truth of it And for a man to neglect these duties is to betray and dishonour the Kingdome of Christ and to degenerate from that high and publike condition in which God had placed him Againe it putteth a spirit of Fortitude and boldnesse into the hearts of men Boldnesse to withstand the corruptions of the times to walke contrary to the courses of the world to out-face the sinnes and the scornes of men to be valiant for a despised truth or power of religion not to be ashamed of a persecuted profession to spread out contra torrentem brachia to stand alone against the power and credit of a prevailing faction as Paul against the contradiction of the Iewes and Peter and Iohn against a Synode of Pharises and those invincible champions of Christ Athanasius against the power of Constantius the frequent synodicall conventions of countenanced heretiks and the generall deluge of Arrianisme in the world Ambrose against the wrath and terrour of the emperour of the world to whom having imbrued his hands in much innocent bloud that holy Father durst not deliver the bloud of Christ. Chrysostome against the pride and persecution of the Empresse Eudoxa Luther against the mistresse of fornications the princesse of the earth and as himselfe professed if it had beene possible against a whole citty full of divels The Christians of all ages against the fire fury and arts of torment executed by the bloudy persecutors of the Church Nay further the Gospell giveth boldnesse against that universall fire which shall melt the Elements and shrivell up the heavens like a role of parchment Herein saith the Apostle is our love made perfect that we may have boldnesse in the day of judgement because as he is so we are in this world that is we have his image in us and his love shed abroad in our hearts and therefore wee are able to assure our hearts before him and to have confidence towards him Now he who hath boldnesse to stand before God to dwell with consuming fire and with everlasting burnings who can get the Lord on his right hand and put on the Lord Jesus though he bee not out of the reach or beyond the blow yet is hee above the injurie of the malice of men they may kill but they can never overcome him I am he that comforteth you who art thou saith the Lord that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and forgettest the Lord thy Maker c What an invincible courage was that of Eliah which retorted the slander of Ahab upon his owne face I have not troubled Israel but thou and thy fathers house And that of Micaiah against the base request of a flattering Courtier who thought God to bee such an one as himselfe that would magnifie and cry up the ends of a wicked king As the Lord liveth what the Lord saith unto me that will I speake And that of Amos against the unworthy instructions of Amaziah the priest of Bethel Thou saiest prophesie not against Israel and drop not thy words against the house of Isaac therefore thus saith the Lord Thy wife shall be an harlot in the citie and thy sonnes and thy daughters shall fall by the sword and thy land shall be divided by line and thou shalt dye in a polluted land and Israel shall surely goe into captivitie forth of his land And that of Ieremiah who boldly gave the lye to Irijah the captaine of the ward It is false I fall not away to the Caldeans The time would faile if I should speake of the unbended constancy or as the Gentiles stiled it obstinacie of Ignatius Polycarp Iustin Cyprian Pionius Sabina Maximus as those infinite armies of holy martyrs who posed the inventions tyred out the cruelties withstood the flatteries and with one word Christiani sumus overcame all the tyrannies quenched the fire and stopped the mouthes of their proudest persecutors Againe the Gospell putteth a kinde of lustre and terrour on the faces of those in whom it raigneth and maketh them as the Law did Moses to shine as lights in the world and to bee more excellent than their neighbours worketh in others towards them a dread and awfulnesse Though Ieremie were a prisoner cast-into the dungeon and in such extremity as he was there likely to perish yet such a majestie and honor did God even then put upon him and that in the thoughts of the king himselfe that he could not be in quiet till hee consulted with him about the will of the Lord and by his many conferences with him made it plainely appeare that hee stood in
awe of his person and prophesies So it is said That Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a just and a holy man and observed him to note that Holinesse maketh mens persons and presence dreadfull to the wicked by reason of that grace and majestie which God hath put into them The whole Councell of Scribes and Pharises they who afterwards gnashed on Stephen with their teeth were forc'd to acknowledge the majestie of holinesse shining upon him They stedfastly looked on him and saw his face as it had beene the face of an Angell The mighty power of the Gospell of Christ maketh unbeleevers fall on their faces and confesse of a truth that God is in those who preach it This wee finde verified in the poore astonished keeper of the prison into which Paul and Silas had been cast he sprang in and came trembling and fell downe before them and brought them forth and said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sirs which is an honourable appellation fit rather for Princes than for prisoners what must I doe to be saved It is true that naturally men hate Christ and his servants but this is not as a man hateth a Toade which hee can easily crush with a simple hatred but as a man hateth a Lion or as a Malefactor hateth his Judge or as a Theefe hateth the light with a compounded hatred mixed with a feare and dread of that majestie within them Which Majestie hath sometimes shined so brightly even under torments and persecutions that it hath forced from Heathen Emperours a desire of the Christians Prayers sometimes not astonished onely but converted the adversaries Lastly the Gospell bringeth liberty and joy into the hearts of men with it The liberty a Glorious liberty Rom. 8.21 and the joy a glorious joy 1 Pet. 1.8 therefore the Gospell is called a Gospell of great joy Luke 2.10 Liberty is so sacred a thing that indeed it belongs in the whole compasse of it onely to the Prince for though other men be free from servitude yet they are not free from subjection Now the Gospell giveth a plenary freedome to the consciences of men they may be commanded by their owne consciences but their consciences cannot be commanded by any but by Christ. The Sonne hath made them free from all others that he onely might be the Lord over them These are those noble effects of the majestie of the Gospell in the hearts of men and all so many severall evidences of that glorie which belongs unto it Now then to draw some inferences from this most usefull and excellent doctrine of the glory of the Gospell we learne from thence first what liberty and what sincerity the Ministers of Christ ought to use in the administration of this his Kingdome in the Word First What Libertie The Officers of a Prince who goe before him to prepare his way make bold to strike and to scatter those unruly throngs of men who presse too neere upon his sacred person We are the Messengers of Christ sent before-hand with his royall proclamation of peace to make roome in the hearts of men for him and to open their everlasting doores that this King of Glorie may enter in We may therefore boldly smite with the Rod of his mouth wee must cry aloud and not spare pull downe mountainous lusts subdue strong holds take unto us iron pillars and brasen wals and faces of flint to roote up to pull downe to batter and destroy not to teach onely but to command with all authority and to commend our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God This use the Apostle maketh of the Glorie of the Gospell seeing we have such Hope that is seeing in this glorious Gospell we have the dispensation of a blessed Hope unto men or the revelation of Christ who is unto us the Hope of Glorie or the assured confidence of doing excellent workes by the vertue of this so glorious a word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We use great boldnesse or liberty of speech for why should he who bringeth unto men glad tidings of glorious things which offereth unto them the blessed Hope of Eternall life bee affraid or ashamed of his Office Though Rome were the seate and that emperour the first Dedicator of the persecutions of the Church yet even unto that place the Apostle was not ashamed to preach the Gospell of Christ because it was the Power of God unto Salvation There is no shame in being a Saviour And therefore it is both the honour and duty of the dispencers of the Gospell to speake boldly as they ought to speake and of the people to pray that that excellent Spirit might ever accompanie so glorious a message This was the prayer of the Primitive Saints for the Apostles of Christ Grant unto thy servants that with all Boldnesse they may speake thy Word And this duty lies upon us with an heavie necessitie For first wee are dispensers of all Gods counsell there must not be a Word which God hath commanded that we should refuse to make knowne unto the people for the things revealed are for them and their children Thus we finde when the Angell of the Lord brought forth the Apostles out of prison he gave them this command Goe stand and speake in the temple to the people all the words of this life and certainely some of these words will require boldnesse When wee lay the axe to the roote of the tree when wee how off mens very members when we snatch them like brands out of the fire when wee make them to see their owne faces in the Law of liberty the face of a guilty and therefore cursed conscience there will be neede of much boldnesse A Chirurgian who is to search an inveterate wound and to cut off a putrified member had not need to be faint-hearted or bring a trembling hand to so great a worke Secondly the severest message we are sent withall and which men are most unwilling to heare is for them expedient No newes could be so unwelcome to the Apostles as to heare of Christs departure Because I have said these things sorrow hath filled your hart neverthelesse I tell you the truth it is expedient for you that I goe away The first newes which we bring unto men is of Christs absence of their false conceits and presumptions of their being in him of the distance and unacquaintance which is betweene them of our feare of them and their condition and in all this we are not their enemies because we tell them the truth As it is our office to speake so it is the peoples duty and profit to heare all things which shall be told them of God for all Scripture as well that which reproveth and correcteth as that which teacheth and instructeth in righteousnesse is profitable and tends to the perfection of the Saints All his precepts concerning all things are right The contempt of one is virtually and
latebrae dedecoris lurking places for uncleane lusts to hide themselves under or to escape away while the corrupt fancies of men stand gazing at that which pleaseth them as Agag when he was gloriously arrayed thought nothing of the bitternesse of death or Sisera of the naile and the hammer while he saw nothing but the milke and the butter Some there are not unlike Praxiteles the Painter in Clem. Alex who made the silly people worship the image of his strumpet under the title and pretence of Venus who by sleight and cunning craftinesse impose upon weake and incautelous hearers the visions of their owne fancie the crude and unnourishing vapours of an empty wit things infinitely unsutable to the majestie and seriousnesse of the foundation in the Gospel for the indubitate truth of God in his Word which with reverence may it be spoken is nothing else but to put the holy Prophets and Apostles into a fooles-coat But how-ever these men may please and puffe up themselves in the admiration of their owne wind yet certaine it is that the Gospell of Christ doth as much scorne humane contemperations as a wall of marble doth a roofe of straw or the Sunne at noone doth the light of a candle And therefore the palate of those who cannot away with the naked simplicitie of the Gospell without the blandishments of humane wit who must needs have Quailes to their Manna is hereby discovered to be manifestly distempered with an itch of lust and their eyes blinded by the god of this world Secondly this glory of the Gospell may teach us what admiration and acceptation it should finde amongst men even as it doth with the blessed Angels themselves This is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation worthy to be received with all readinesse of mind worthy to be gazed upon like the Starre of the Wisemen with exceeding great joy worthy to be enamel'd in the crownes of Princes and to be written in the soule of every Christian with a beame of the Sun That Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners And indeed the faithfull have ever found beauty in the feet of those that bring them glad tidings of this their King that is in the comming of this Word of grace and salvation unto them which is the usuall phrase of the Scripture setting forth more abundantly the mercy of the Lord who did not choose one fixed place for his Gospell to reside in and unto which all nations who would have benefit by it should take the paines to resort as hee did for the Iewes at Ierusalem but hath made it an itinerary salvation and hath sent it abroad to the very doores of men who else would never have gone out of doores to seeke it what man in a sad and disconsolate estate would not spread wide open his heart and let out his spirits to run upon the embraces of that man who was comming unto him with a message of more lovely and acceptable newes than the very wishes of his heart could have framed to himselfe When Ioseph was sent for out of prison unto Pharaohs Court when Iacob saw the chariots which were brought to carry him unto Ioseph his sonne how were they revived and comforted after their distresses When Caligula the Emperour sent for Agrippa the same which was afterwards smitten by the Angel whom Tiberius had bound in chaines and cast into prison caused him to change his garments and cut his haire it seemes that long and ugly haire was then the fashion of discontented prisoners and placed a Diademe on his head made him Tetrarch of Iturea and Trachonitis and Governour of Judea and for his chaine of iron gave him another of gold of equall weight as the Historian relateth he saith that men were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they could not beleeve so wonderfull a change for things of extraordinary goodnesse are very difficultly beleeved When the Lord turned againe the captivitie of Sion we were like them that dreame the thing was so incredibly sutable to their desires that it seemed rather the imaginary wish of a dreame than a deliverance really acted as Peter when he was delivered out of prison thought he had seene a vision Iacob could not at first beleeve the newes of the life and honour of Ioseph his sonne and the Disciples for very joy were not able to beleeve the Resurrection of Christ. Now what are all the good tidings to the Gospell which is a Word of salvation which opens prisons and lets out captives which brings our King unto us and makes us kings too which gives us such a joy as the whole world cannot rob us of Your joy shall no man take from you The joy which Caligula gave unto Agrippa Claudius might have taken from him as he did after from Agrippa his sonne and though he did not yet we see the Angell did But the joy of the Gospell is unvariable the Angels themselves to whom one might thinke the joyes of men should seeme but small call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a great joy Luke 2.10 It is the joy of a treasure infinitely more worth than all which a man hath besides A joy of a triumphall harvest and of victorious spoiles wherein there is not onely an escape from dangerous hazard but a large reward of peace and plenty It is a full joy there is no sorrow mingled with it nay it is all joy and therefore there is nothing but sorrow without it All joy in it selfe and all joy in the middest of opposition too A joy in the heart like gold in the mine which turneth every thing about it into joy Divers temptations take not away one scruple of it no more than fire doth of gold it is all joy still My brethren saith the Apostle count it all joy when you fall into divers temptations It turneth the reproches of men into riches nay in the middest of all other tribulations it is our peace and our glory Therefore being so full of joy when once a right apprehended needs must it likewise be worthy of all acceptation too And therefore the Prophet calleth the time of the Gospell tempus acceptabile the acceptable time or yeare of the Lord which Baronius falsely understands of the first yeare of Christs preaching onely since the Apostle useth the same phrase for the whole time of evangelicall dispensation And indeed if we looke into the Church we shall see what worthy acceptation this Gospell hath found Zacheus made haste and received Christ into his house gladly so did the brethren at Ierusalem receive the Apostles so did the men of Berea receive the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all readinesse of minde or forward affection so did the Galatians receive Saint Paul with the honour of an Angell yea even as Christ Iesus himselfe for indeed Christ and his Gospell goe still together the man in the Gospell sold
God ever have beene and ever will be to the worlds end esteemed for wonders and markes and mad-men and proverbs of reproch And hereby the Lord doth provide to make his Gospell more glorious because hee giveth men hearts to suffer scorne and reproch for it To receive the word in affliction and yet with joy is an exemplary thing which maketh the sound and glory of the Gospell to spread abroad Now then if persecution bee thus an appendant to the Gospell every man must resolve to receive it in some affliction when he must be put to discard his wicked companies to shake off his flattering and sharking lusts to forsake his owne will and wayes to runne a hazard of undeserved scorne disreputation and misconstructions in the world and yet for all this to set an high price upon the pretious truths of the Gospell still is not this to receive the Word in much affliction And surely till a man can resolve upon this conclusion I am ready to be bound and to die for the name of Iesus I count not my life much lesse my liberty peace credit secular accommodations deare so I may finish my course with joy Lord my will is no more mine but it shall be in all things subject unto thee hee can never give such entertainment to the Word as becommeth so glorious a Gospell All his seeming profession and acceptation is but like the Gadarens courtesie in meeting of Christ which was onely to be rid of him Matth. 8.34 Lastly we should from hence learne a further Christian dutie which is to adorne this glorious Gospell in an holy conversation This use the Apostle every where makes of the Gospell of Christ that wee should walke as becommeth the Gospell that we should in all things adorne the doctrine of God our Saviour that we should walke worthy of him who hath called us unto his kingdome and glory that we shew forth the vertues of him who hath called us out of darknesse into his marvellous light that we should not receive so great a grace as the ministery of reconciliation in vaine but that wee should walke sittingly to the holinesse and efficacie of so excellent a rule as becommeth a royall nation a people of glory a peculiar and selected inheritance even zealous of good workes It was once the expostulation of Nehemiah with his enemies should such a man as I flie from such men as you such should be our expostulation with Satan and our owne lusts should such men as wee are who have the Gospell of Christ for our rule conforme our selves unto another Law Is not this the end why the Gospell is preached that we should live unto God Doth it become the sonne of a King to goe in ragges or to converse with meane and ignoble persons Now by the Gospell we have that great honour and priviledge given us to be called the sons of God and shall we then walke as servants of Satan Would any Prince endure to see the heire of his crowne live in bondage to his own vassall and most hated enemie Herein is the greatest glory of the Gospell above the Law that it is a Law of life and libertie a Word which transformeth men into the Image of Christ and maketh them such as it requireth them to be So that to walke still according to the course of the world as we did before is as much as in us lies to make the Gospell as weake and unprofitable as the Law How doe you say we are wise saith the Prophet and the Law of the Lord is with us Certainely in vaine made he it the pen of the Scribe is in vaine That is the priviledge of having the oracles and ordinances of God committed unto us will doe us no more good if we walke unworthy of so great a grace than if those ordinances had never beene written or revealed to men Here then it is needfull to enquire in what manner we are to adorne and set forth the glory of the Gospell To this I answer that the first and greatest honour wee can doe unto the Gospell is to set it up in our hearts as our onely rule by which we are to walke that we preferre it above all our owne counsels and venture not to mingle it with the wisdome and reasonings of the flesh that wee raise up our conversation unto it and never bend it unto the crookednesse of our owne ends or rules As yee have received Christ Iesus the Lord so walke yee in him saith the Apostle that is fashion your conversation to the doctrine of Christ let that have the highest roome and the over-ruling suffrage in your hearts There is all wisdome in the Gospell it is able to make men wise unto salvation that is there is wisdome enough in it to compasse the uttermost and most difficult end And what can the reasonings of the flesh contribute to that which was all wisedome before and which can throughly furnish a man unto every good worke This glory Saint Paul though a man of great learning of strong intellectuals of a working and stirring spirit qualities very unapt to yeeld and be silent did at the very first revelation thereof give unto the Gospell Immediatly saith he I conferr'd not with flesh and bloud I did not compare the Gospell of Christ with the principles of my carnall wisdome I did not resolve to dispute against Gods grace or to conforme unto this mystery no farther than the precepts of mine owne reason or the coexistence of mine owne secular ends and preferments would allow but I captivated all my thoughts and laid downe all the weapons of the flesh at Christs feet resting onely on this Word as a treasury of wisdome and yeelding up my whole heart to be in all things ordered by this rule It is an horrible boldnesse in many men to wrest and torture and distinguish the Gospell into all shapes for their owne lusts sake As we see what shifts men will use to make the way of life broader than it is by looking upon it thorow their owne multiplying glasses what evasions and subterfuges sinne will finde out to escape by when the letter of the Word presseth sore upon them O how many sinnes might men escape how wonderfully might they improve the Image of Christ in their hearts if they did with David make the Law their counsellor and weigh every action which they goe about those especially which they have any motions of reluctancie in the spirit of their minde unto Non in statera dolosa consuetudinum sed in recta statera scripturarum not in the deceitfull balance of humane custome but in the balance of the Sanctuary the holy Scriptures If they would seriously remember that they must alwayes walke in Christ Coloss. 2.6 make him the rule the way the end the Judge the companion the assistant in all their workes that as the members of the body doe
trust in themselves or their friends is because they are assured of their care and good-will to helpe them But if men did compare the affections of Christ to other succours they would rather choose to build their hopes and assurances on him This consideration of the care and the power of God made the three Children at a point against the edict of an idolatrous King Our God is able to deliver us and hee will deliver us And this made Abraham at a point to offer his sonne without staggering because he rested upon the promise and the power of God who was able to raise him from the dead from whence in a sort he had received him before namely from a dead body and from a barren wombe And this is the ground of all diffidence that men consider not the power and the care of God towards them but conceive of him as if he had forgotten to be gratious as if he had cast them out of his sight as if he had given over his thoughts of them and that maketh them feare second causes and seeke unto things which cannot profit And therefore the Lord suffereth second causes to goe crosse to faile and disappoint a man because he loveth to be glorified by our dependance on his all-sufficiencie and protection Hee suffereth friends to faile to be off and on promises to be uncertaine assurances to vanish projections and frames of businesses to bee shattered that men may know how to trust him for man being impotent in himselfe must needs have something without himselfe to subsist upon Now when a man findeth the creatures to be deceitfull and second causes vaine and considereth that God is I Am a most certaine rewarder of those that diligently seek him then the soule findeth it good to draw neere to God to live under his fidelitie and to cast all its care on him because he careth for it And indeed a right judgement of God will helpe us to imploy our faith in any condition In wealth men are apt to trust in their abundance to stand upon their mountaine and to say I shall never be moved But now in this estate if a man conceive aright of God that it is he who giveth strength to be rich who giveth riches strength to doe us good that hee can blast the greatest estate with an imperceptible consumption and in the midst of a mans sufficiencie make him bee in straits that hee can embitter all with his sore displeasure and not suffer the floore nor the winepresse to feed him In great wisdome and deepe counsels if a man consider that the counsell of the Lord shall stand and that hee can turne the wisdome of oracles into foolishnesse and catch the wise in their owne craftinesse In great provisions of worldly strength and humane combinations if he consider that God can take off the wheeles and amaze the phantasies and dissipate the affections and melt the spirits and way-lay the enterprises of the hugest hosts of men that he can arme flies and lice and dust and wind and starres and every small unexpected contingencie against the strongest opposition it must need make him set his rest and hang his confidences and assurances upon an higher principle Againe in povertie and the extremest straits which a man can be in if he consider that God is a God as well of the valleyes as of the hils that he will be seene in the mount when his people are under the sword and upon the Altar that the Lord knoweth the dayes of the upright and will satisfie them in the time of famine that when the young Lions famish for hunger they which live not by the fruits on the earth but by their prey they which can feed of the dead bodies of those other creatures whom a famine had devoured yet even then hee can provide abundantly for his that when things are marvellous unto us then they are easie unto him that when they are impossible unto us then they are possible with him that he can lead in a wildernesse and feed with an unknowne and an unsuspected bread that when the light of the Sun and the Moone shall faile he can be an everlasting light and glory to his people that as a Father so he pitieth and as an heavenly Father so he knoweth and can supply all our needs that when we are without any wisdome to disappoint or strength to withstand the confederacies of men when they come with chariots of iron and walls of brasse even then the eyes of the Lord runne to and fro to shew himselfe valiant in the behalfe of those that walke uprightly that he can then order some accident produce some engine discover some way to extricate and to cleere all then will a man learne to be carefull or distracted in nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thankesgiving make his request knowne unto him who is at hand and who careth for him The like may be said of mens spirituall condition when men despaire as Cain that their sinne is greater than can be forgiven the onely ground is because they judge not aright of God in Christ they looke not on him in his Gospell as a God that careth for them they doe not leane upon the staffe of his strength Despaire is an affection growing out of the sense of sin and wrath as it is malum arduum instans ineluctabile an evill too heavie to be borne and yet impossible to be removed All victory ariseth either out of an inward power of our owne or by the assistance of forren power which is more than our owne Now then when we despaire because of sinne this commeth first from the consideration of our owne everlasting disability to breake thorow sin by our owne strength and this is a good despaire which helpeth to drive men unto Christ. Secondly it commeth from a misconceiving either of the Power or Care of those which might assist us sometimes from the mis-judging of Gods power for the forgivenesse of sinnes is an act of omnipotencie and therefore when the Lord proclaimeth himselfe a forgiver of iniquitie transgression and sinne he introduceth it with his titles of power The Lord the Lord God Gracious and mercifull c. To pardon malefactours is a power and royaltie which belongeth onely unto Princes There is much strength required in bearing burdens and therefore patience especially towards sinners is an act of power and impatiencie ever a signe of impotencie And therefore the weakest affections are ever most revengefull children old men sicke or indigent persons are ever most subject to anger and least able to concoct an injury so that to conceive sin greater than can be forgiven is to mis-judge the omnipotencie of God but ordinarily despaire proceedeth from the mis-judging of Gods affection and good-will towards men the soule conceives of him as of one that hath utterly cast off all
care or respect towards it This is an errour of Gods benevolence and the latitude of his mercy and heighth of his thoughts towards sinners Hee hath declared himselfe willing that all men should be saved he hath set forth examples of the compasse of his long-suffering his invitations run in generall termes that no man may dare to preoccupate damnation but looke unto God as to one that careth for his soule Let a mans sinnes be never so crimson and his continuance therein never so obdurate I speake this for the prevention of despaire not for the encouragement of security or hardnesse yet as soone as he is willing to turne God is willing to save as soone as he hath an heart to attend God hath a tongue to speake salvation unto him Wee see then the way to trust in Christ is to looke upon him as the Bishop of our soules as the Officer of our peace as one that careth and provideth for us as one that hath promised to save to the uttermost to give supplies of his Spirit and Grace in time of need to give us daily bread and life in abundance to bee with us alwayes to the end of the world never to faile us nor forsake us And we may hereby learne our dutie one to another to put on the affections of members and the minde of Christ in compassionating considering and seeking the good of one another in bearing one anothers burthens in pleasing not our selves but our neighbour for his edification for even Christ pleased not himselfe that man cannot live in honour nor dye in comfort who liveth only to himselfe and doth not by his praiers compassions and supplies imitate Christ and interest himselfe in the good of his brethren Now the ground of all this power majestie and mercie of the Gospell is here set forth unto us in two words First it is the strength of Christ Secondly it is sent by God himselfe The Lord shall send the Rod of Thy strength out of Sion Here then we may first note That the Gospel is Christs owne Power and strength and the Power of God his Father by whom it is sent abroad So the Apostle cals it The Power of God unto Salvation and the demonstration of the Spirit and of Power that our faith should not stand in the wisedome of men but in the Power of God Therefore in one place we are said to be taught of God and in another to be taught of Christ in one place it is called the Gospell of the blessed God and in another the Gospell of Christ to note that whatsoever things the Father doth in his Church the same the Sonne doth also and that the Father doth not make knowne his will of mercie but by his Sonne that as in the Sonne he did reconcile the world unto himselfe so in the Son hee did reveale himselfe unto the world No man hath seene the Father at any time but the Sonne and he to whom the Sonne shall reveale him Christ is both the Matter and the Authour of the Gospell As in the worke of our Redemption he was both the sacrifice and the Priest to offer and the Altar to sanctifie it So in the dispensation of the Gospell Christ is both the Sermon and the Preacher and the Power which giveth blessing unto all He is the Sermon Wee preach Christ crucified saith the Apostle wee preach not our selves but Christ Iesus the Lord. And he is the Preacher See that yee refuse not him that speaketh Hee came and preached peace to those afarre off and to those that were nigh And lastly he is the Power which enliveneth his owne word The dead shall heare the voice of the Sonne of man and they that heare shall live for as the Father hath life in himselfe so hath he given to the Sonne to have life in himselfe My sheepe heare my voyce and I know them and they follow me and I give unto them eternall life c. He is the Lord of your faith we are but the Helpers of your joy He is the Master in the Church wee are but your servants for Iesus sake He is the chiefe Shepheard the Lord of the sheepe the sheepe are his owne we are but his Depositaries entrusted with the ministerie of reconciliation unto us is committed the dispensation of the Grace of God So then the Word is his but the service ours From whence both the Ministers of the Word and they which heare it may learne their severall duties First we should learne to speake as the Oracles of God as the Servants and Stewards of a higher Master whose Word it is which wee preach and whose Church it is which we serve We should therefore doe his worke as men that are set in his stead preach him and not our selves There can bee no greater sacrilege in the world than to put our owne image upon the Ordinances of Christ than to make another Gospell than we have received Saint Paul durst not please men because hee was the servant of Christ neither durst he preach himselfe because hee was the servant of the Church For hereby men doe even justle Christ out of his owne throne and as it were snatch the Scepter of his kingdome out of his owne hand boldly intruding upon that sacred and uncommunicable dignitie which the Father hath given to his Sonne onely which is to bee the Authour of his Gospell and the totall and adequate Object of all Evangelicall Preaching This sacrilege of selfe-preaching is committed three manner of wayes First when men make themselves the Authors of their owne preaching when they preach their owne inventions and make their owne braines the seminaries and forges of a new faith when they so glosse the pure Word of God as that withall they poison and pervert it This is that which the Prophet calleth lying visions and dreames of mens owne hearts which Saint Peter cals perverting or maketh crooked the rule of faith and Saint Paul the huckstering adulterating and using the Word of God deceitfully Which putteth mee in minde of a speech in the Prophet The Prophet is the snare of a fowler in all his wayes Birds wee know use to be caught with the same corne wherewith they are usually fed but then it is either adulterated with some venemous mixture which may intoxicate the bird or else put into a ginne which shall imprison it and such were the carnall Preachers in the Prophets and in Saint Pauls time who turned the truth of Christ into a snare that by that meanes they might bring the Church into bondage The occasions and originals of this perverse humour are first without men the seducements of Satan unto which by the just severity of God they are sometimes given over for the punishment of their owne and others sinnes Secondly within them upon which the other is grounded as Pride
effectually that is it doth not consummate nor accomplish any perfect worke but onely in those that beleeve in the rest it proves but an abortion and withers in the blade Secondly with love and readinesse of minde without despising or rejecting it No man can bee saved who doth not receive the truth in love who doth not receive it as the primitive Saints did with gladnesse and readinesse of minde as Eli though from the hand of Samuel a Child as David though from the hand of Abigail a woman as the Galatians though from the hand of Paul an infirme and persecuted Apostle For herein is our homage to Christ the more apparent when we suffer a little childe to lead us Thirdly with meeknesse and submission of heart reverencing and yeelding unto it in all things Wresting shifting evading perverting the word is as great an indignity unto Christ as altering interlining or rasing a patent which the King hath drawen with his owne royall hand is an offence against him Patience and effectuall obedience even in affliction is an argument that a man esteemes the word to bee indeed Gods owne word and so receives it Hee onely who putteth off the old man the corrupt deceitfull lusts of his former conversation and is renewed in the Spirit of his minde is the man that hath heard and been taught by Christ that hath received the Truth in him Againe in as much as the Gospell is the Rod of Christs owne strength or the instrument of his arme who hath beleeved our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed and the instrument is no further operative or effectuall than according to the measure of that impressed vertue which it receiveth from the superior cause therefore wee should learne alwayes to repaire unto Christ for the successe of his word For he onely is the teacher of mens hearts and the author of their faith To him onely it belongeth to call men out of their graves and to quicken whom hee will Wee have nothing but the ministerie he keepeth the power in his own hands that men might learne to waite upon him and to have to doe with him who onely can send a blessing with his word and teach his people to profit thereby Another ground of the power of the word is that it is sent from God The Lord shall send forth the Rod of thy strength From which particular likewise wee may note some usefull observations as First that Gods appointment and ordination is that which gives being life majesty and successe to his owne word authority boldnesse and protection to his servants When hee sendeth his word hee will make it prosper When Moses disputed against his going down into Egypt to deliver his brethren sometimes alleaging his owne unfitnesse and infirmity sometimes the unbeliefe of the people this was still the warrant with which God encouraged him I will bee with thee I have sent thee doe not I make mans mouth I will bee with thy mouth and teach thee what thou shalt say I was no Prophet neither was I a Prophets Sonne saith Amos but I was an heardsman a gatherer of sycamore fruit And the Lord tooke me as I followed the flock and said unto mee Goe prophecie unto my people Israel And this made him peremptory in his office to prophecie against the idolatry of the Kings Court and against the flattery of the Priest of Bethel And this made the Apostles bold though otherwise unlearned and ignorant men to stand against the learned councill of Priests and Doctors of the Law Wee ought to obey God rather than men Vpon which Grave was the advice of Gamaliel If this counsell or worke bee of men it will come to nought But if it bee of God yee cannot overthrow it lest haply yee bee found even to fight against God For to withstand the power or progresse of the Gospell is to set a mans face against God himselfe Secondly in as much as the Gospell is sent forth by God that is revealed and published out of Sion wee may observe That Evangelicall learning came not into the world by humane discovery or observation but it is utterly above the compasse of all reason or naturall disquisition neither men nor Angels ever knew it but by divine revelation And therfore the Apostle every where calleth it a Mystery a great and a hidden Mystery which was kept secret since the world began There is a Naturall Theologie without the world gathered out of the workes of God out of the resolution of causes and effects into their first originals and out of the Law of nature written in the heart But there is no naturall Christianity Nature is so farre from finding it out by her owne inquiries that shee cannot yeeld unto it when it is revealed without a Spirit of faith to assist it The Iewes stumbled at it as dishonorable to their Law and the Gentiles derided it as absurd in their Philosophy It was a Hidden and secret wisedome the execution and publication whereof was committed onely to Christ. In God it was an Eternall Gospell for Christ was a lambe slaine from before the foundations of the world namely in the predeterminate counsell decree of his father but revealed it was not till the dispensation of the fulnesse of time wherein he gathered together in one all things in Christ. The purpose and ordination of it was eternall but the preaching and manifestation of it reserved untill the time of Christs solemne inauguration into his Kingdome and of the obstinacy of the Iewes upon whose defection the Gentiles were called in Which might teach us to adore the unsearchablenesse of Gods judgements unto former ages of the world whom hee suffered to walke in their owne wayes and to live in times of utter ignorance destitute of any knowledge of the Gospell or of any naturall parts or abilities to finde it out For if these things bee true First that without the knowledge of Christ there is no salvation This is eternall life to know thee and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifye many Secondly that Christ cannot bee knowen by naturall but Evangelicall and revealed light The naturall man cannot know the things of the Spirit of God because they are spiritually discerend The light shined in darknesse and the darknesse was so thick and fixed that it did not let in the light nor apprehend it Thirdly that this light was at the first sent onely unto the Iewes as to the first borne-people excepting onely some particular extraordinary dispensations and priviledges to some few first fruits and preludes of the Gentiles He sheweth his word unto Iacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel Hee hath not dealt so with any nation Hee hath not afforded the meanes of salvation ordinarily unto any other people the world by wisedome knew him not Fourthly that this severall
Sonnes of men the incorruptible and precious bloud of Christ the exceeding great and pretious promises of the Gospell the word of the Grace of God and of the unsearchable riches of Christ. Now it is required of stewards that a man bee found faithfull that hee defraud not Christ of his purchase which is the soules of men nor men of their price and priviledge which is the bloud of Christ that hee neither favour the sinnes of men nor dissemble the truth of God that hee watch because hee is a seer that hee speake because he is an oracle that hee feed because hee is a shepheard that hee labour because hee is a husband-man that hee bee tender because hee is a mother that hee bee carefull because is a father that hee bee faithfull because he is a servant to God and his Church in one word that he bee instant in season and out of season to exhort rebuke instruct to doe the worke of an Evangelist to accomplish and make full proofe of his ministery because he hath an account to make because hee hath the presence of Christ to assist him the promises of Christ to reward him the example of Christ his Apostles Prophets Evangelists Bishops and Martyrs of the purest time who have now their palmes in their hands to encourage him It was Christs custome to enter into their Synagogues on the Sabbath-dayes and to read and expound the Scriptures to the people It was S. Pauls manner to reason in the Synagogues and to open the Scriptures on the Sabbath dayes Vpon Sunday saith Iustin Martyr All the Christians that are in the cities or countries about meete together and after some Commentaries of the Apostles and writings of the Prophets have been read the Senior or President doth by a Sermon exhort the people and admonish them to the imitation and practice of those divine truths which they had heard read unto them And S. Austen telleth us of Ambrose that hee heard him rightly handling the word of God unto the people every Lords day Yea it should seeme by the Homilies of S. Chrysostome that hee did oftentimes preach daily unto the people and therefore wee frequently meete with his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yesterday this and this I taught you And Origen intimateth this frequency of expounding the Scriptures in his time if saith hee you come frequently unto the Church of God and there attend unto the sacred Scriptures and to the explication of those heavenly commandements thy soule will be strengthened as thy body with food And our Church in her Ecclesiasticall Constitutions hath provided for the continuance of so faithfull and pious a custome injoining every allowed Preacher to have a Sermon every Sunday in the yeare and in the afternoone besides to spend halfe an houre in Catechizing the yonger and ruder sort in the Principles of Christian Religion The neglect of which most necessary dutie no man can more bewaile nor more urge the necessity thereof than those who looking abroad into the world have experience of more thick and palpable darknesse in the mindes of men concerning those absolutely necessary Doctrines of the passion merits and redemption of Christ and of faith in them than men who have not with their owne eyes observed it can almost beleeve And that too in such places where Sermons have been very frequently preached I will close this point with the as●ertion and profession of Holy Austen Nothing saith he is in this life more pleasant and ●asie than the life of a Bishop or Minister if it be perfunctorily and flatteringly executed but then in Gods sight nihil turpius miserius damnabilius and it was his profession that hee was never absent from his Episcopall service and attendance upon any licentious and assumed liberty but onely upon some other necessary service of the Church Touching the abilitie required in the discharge of this great office there are as I conceive two speciall branches thereunto belonging First Learning for the right information of the consciences of men that men may not pervert the Scripture Secondly Wisedome or spirituall prudence for seasonable application of the truth to particular circumstances which is that which maketh a wise builder For this latter it being so various according to those infinite varieties of particular cases and conditions which are hardly reducible unto generall rules I cannot here speake but referre the Reader to the grave pious counsels of those holy men who have given some directions herein For the other two great workes there are which belong to this high calling Instruction of the Scholer Conviction of the Adversarie Vnto the perfection of which two services when wee duly consider how many different parts of learning are requisite as knowledge of the tongues for the better understanding of the holy Scriptures by their originall idiome and emphasis of the arts to observe the connexion and argumentation and method of them of ancient customes Histories and antiquities of the Babylonians Persians Greeks and Romanes without insight whereinto the full meaning of many passages of holy Scripture cannot bee cleerly apprehended of Schoole learning for discovering repelling the subtilty of the adversaries a thing required in a Rhetorician by Aristotle and Quintilian insomuch that Iulian the Apostate complained of the Christians that they used the weapons of the Gentiles against them and threfore interdicted them the use of Schooles of learning Lastly of Histories and Antiquities of the Church that wee may observe the succession of the Professors and Doctrines hereof the originals and sproutings of heresie therein the better to answere the reproaches of our insolent adversaries who lay innovation to our charge I say when wee duly consider these particulars wee cannot sufficiently admire nor detest the saucinesse of those bold intruders who when they have themselves need to bee taught what are the first Principles of the Oracles of God become teachers of the ignorant before themselves have been Disciples of the learned and before either maturity of years or any severe progresse of studies have prepared them boldly leape some from their manuall trades many from their grammar and logick rudiments into this sacred and dreadfull office unto which heretofore the most learned and pious men have trembled to approach To these men I can give no better advice than that which Tully once gave unto Aristoxenus a musitian who would needs venture upon Philosophicall difficulties and out of the principles of his art determine the nature of a humane soule Haec magistro relinquat Aristoteli canere ipse doceat Let them spend their time in the worke which best befits them and leave great matters unto abler men Thirdly and lastly unto this call is requisite the imposition of hands and the authoritative act of the Church ordaining and setting apart and deriving actuall power upon such men of whose fidelity and ability they have sufficient evidence
for hands are not to bee laid suddenly on any man to preach the word and to administer the Sacraments and to doe all those ministeriall acts upon which the edification of the people of Christ doth depend I have now done with the first of Christs regalities in the Text which was the Scepter of his Kingdome Now to speake a word of the second which is Solium the Throne of his Kingdome The Lord shall send the Rod of thy strength out of Sion Which notes unto us First that the Church of the Iewes was the chiefe originall Metropolitan Church of all others Therefore our Savior chargeth his Disciples to Tarry in the City of Ierusalem till they should bee indued with power from on high The Apostle saith that they had the advantage or precedence and excellencie above other people because unto them were committed the Oracles of God To them did pertaine the Adoption and the glory and the covenants and the giving of the Law and the service of God and the promises Of them was Christ after the flesh All the Fathers Patriarchs Prophets Apostles and writers of the Holy Scriptures were of them There is no Church can shew such Priviledges nor produce such authentique records for her precedency as the Church of the Iewes Therefore they are called by an excellency Gods first-borne and the first fruits of the creatures they are called The Children of the Kingdome whereas others were at first Dogs and strangers Their Titles Sion Hierusalem Israel are used as proper names to expresse the whole Church of God by though amongst the Gentiles Christ Iesus though hee came as a Savior unto All yet hee was sent to bee a Prophet and a Preacher onely unto them Therefore the Apostle calleth him the Minister of the Circumcision that is of the Iewes and hee saith I am not sent but unto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel And when hee gave his Apostles their first commission he sent them onely into the Cities of the Iewes the Gentiles were incorporated into them were brought in upon their rejection and refusall of the Gospell tooke the Christians of Iudea for their patterne in their profession from that Church were Rules and constitutions sent abroad into other Churches as binding and necessary things To that Church the Churches of the Gentiles were debtors as having been made partakers of their spirituall things and though they bee now a rejected people yet when the fulnesse of the Gentiles is come in Israel shall be gathered againe and made a glorious Church And in the meane time their dispersion tended unto the conversion of the Gentiles For though they were enemies to the faith of Christians yet they did beare witnesse unto those Scriptures out of which the Christians did prove their faith And there is no greater evidence in a cause than the affirmative testimony of that man who is an enemie to the cause If the Church of Rome had such evidences as these out of the booke of God to prove their usurped primacie by how proud and intolerable would they be in boasting thereof and obtruding it unto others who are now so confident upon farre slenderer grounds And from hence we may learne to take heed of the sinnes of that people which were principally the rejecting of the corner stone and the putting off the Gospell of Christ away from them as every obstinate and unbeleeving sinner doth from himselfe This is that which hath made them of all nations the most hated and the most forsaken and hath brought wrath to the uttermost upon them because when Christ came unto his owne they received him not Because of unbeliefe they were broken off saith the Apostle and thou standest by faith be not high-minded but feare for if God spared not the naturall branches take heed lest he also spare not thee And we should likewise learne to pray for the fulnesse of the Gentiles and for the restoring of this people unto their honour and originall priviledges againe for we are their debtors we entred upon the promises which were made to them and therefore good reason we have to doe for them now as they did for us before We have a little sister or rather an elder sister and shee hath no brests the oracles and ordinances of God are taken from her What shall wee doe for our sister in the day when shee shall be spoken for Cant. 8.8 Secondly this notes unto us the calling of the Gentiles into the fellowship of the same mystery which was first preached unto the Iewes that they might be the daughters of this mother Church that they may take hold of the skirt of the Iew and say We will go with you for we have heard that God is with you The Church of Ierusalem was set up as a beacon or an ensigne or a publike sanctuary to which the nations should flie as doves to their windowes Of this merciful purpose some evidences and declarations the Lord gave before in Rahab Iob Ninive the Wise-men and others who were the preludes and first fruits of the Gentiles unto God and did after fully manifest the same in his unlimited commission to his Apostles Goe preach the Gospell unto every creature And now alas what were we that God should bring us hitherto Saint Paul saith that we were filled with all unrighteousnesse that we did neither understand God nor seeke after him A●l our faculties were full of sinne and the fulnesse of all sinne was in us we were ruled by no lawes but the course of the world the Prince of the aire and the lusts of the flesh without God in this world and without any hope for the world to come Here vessels of lust and poyson and fitted to be hereafter vessels of destruction and misery We were no nation a foolish people a people that sought not nor inquired after God and yet his owne people hath he set by and called us to the knowledge of his love and mercie in Christ. And that not as many other Gentiles are called who heare of him indeed and worship him but have his doctrine corrupted and overturned with heresie and his worship defiled with superstition and idolatry but hee hath for us purged his floore and given unto us the wheat without the chaffe he hath let the light of his glory to shine purely upon us onely in the face of Iesus Christ without any humane supplements or contributions How should we praise him for it and as wee have received Christ purely so labour to walk worthily in him How should we runne to him that called us when we knew him not How should we set forward and call upon one another that we may flie like doves in companies unto the windowes of the Church How earnestly should wee contend for this truth the custodie whereof he hath honoured us withall How should we renue our repentance and remember our
in sincerity as hypocrites some not so much as in externall conformity as evill workers The heretike corrupteth Christ the schismatike divideth him the hypocrite mocketh him the prophane person dishonoreth him and all deny him Let us then learne to look unto our hearts for we may slatter Christ when we doe not love him we may inquire and seeke early after him and yet have no desire to finde him wee may come unto his schoole as untoward children not for love of his Doctrine but for feare of his rod we may call him husband and yet bee wedded to our owne lusts we may be baptized in his name so was Simon Magus we may preach him so did the false brethren we may flocke after him so did the multitude who followed him not for his words or miracles but for the loaves we may bow unto him so did his crucifiers wee may call upon his name so did the hypocrites that said Lord Lord and yet did not enter into the kingdome of heaven we may confesse and beleeve him so doe the very divels in hell we may give him our lips our eyes our tongues our knees our hands and yet still our kingdome our throne our hearts may bee Satans And all this is to make him but a mock-king as the Jewes did when indeed we crucifie him Note thirdly Christs Word and Spirit are stronger than all adverse opposition This is his Glory that his kingdome commeth in unto him by way of Conquest as Canaan unto Israel Therefore at the very first erecting of his kingdome when in all presumption it might most easily have beene crushed he suffer'd his enemies to vent their utmost malice and to glut themselves with the bloud of his people that so it might appeare that though they did fight against him they could not prevaile against him but that his counsell should still stand and flourish and should consume and breake in pieces all the kingdomes which set themselves against it that they all should be affraid of the Ensigne of the Gospell and should fly from it This jealousie of God for his Church may be seene in frustrating the attempts and pulling off the wheeles on which the projects which are cast against his Church doe move as hee dealt with Pharaoh Hee can dissolve the confederacies shatter the counsels cast a spirit of treachery unfaithfulnesse and mutinous affections into the hearts of his enemies as hee did into the Midianites and into the children of Ammon Moab and Edom when they gathered together against his people He can infatuate their counsels and make them the contrivers and artificers of their owne ruine as we see in the consultation of Rehoboam with his young men and of Ieroboam in his idolatrous policy and of Haman in his gallowes He can defeat their expectations and disannull their decrees and make his owne Counsell alone to stand But when all this is done this is onely to rule in spight of his enemies But besides this his Kingdome fetcheth his enemies under and in some sort ruleth over their consciences and striketh them to the ground maketh the divels in hell the stoutest of all sinners to tremble breaketh the rockes asunder affrighteth judgeth sealeth hardeneth thresheth revengeth the pride of men and maketh them before-hand to taste the bitternesse of that damnation which waketh over them and commeth swiftly against them Let us take heed then of being Christs enemies in opposing the power and progresse of his word the evidence and purity of his Spirit in the lives of men It is but to make a combination to pull the Sunne out of heaven or for a wave to contend with a rocke for as the ruines of a house are broken on the things upon which they fall so are the enemies of Christ which gather together against his Church and fall upon the rocke at length ruined by their owne malice Sampsons foxes were themselves burnt amongst the corne which they fired The land brought forth corne the next yeere againe and it may be more plentifully by reason of that fire but the foxes never came up any more Even so can the Lord deale with those enemies which waste and depopulate his Church make them the authors of their owne utter confusion and bring forth his Church with shouting and with doubled graces Who then is the man that desireth tranquillitie of life and securitie against all evill Let him become a subject in this conquering kingdome and cast himselfe under the banner and protection of Christ and he cannot miscarrie He that walketh uprightly walketh surely The Name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous flieth unto it and is safe The Lord is a Sunne and a shield a Fountaine of all good Grace and Glorie will hee give and no good thing will hee with-hold from them that walke uprightly and a protection against all evill I will not be affraid of ten thousand of men saith the Prophet David that compasse me about When there is no light nor issue nor in nature possibility of escape he can open a doore of deliverance to relieve his Church As a man in the kings high-way is under the kings protection so in Christs way we are under his protection Let us then never repine at the miscarriages of the world nor murmure against the wise proceedings of God in the severall dispensation towa●ds his Church on earth when he punisheth he doth it in measure lesse than our sinnes deserved and when we search and try our wayes and returne unto him hee knoweth how to worke his owne glory in our deliverance Those stones which are appointed for a glorious building are first under the saw and the hammer to be hewed and squared and those Christians in whom the Lord will take most delight he usually thereunto fitteth by trials and extremities Hee that is brought to tremble in himselfe may with most confidence expect to rejoyce in God Note fourthly this is the honour of Christs kingdome to be a peaceable quiet and secure kingdome not onely after the victory but in the midst of enemies This man saith the Prophet of Christ shall be the peace when the Assyrian the enemie is in the land Wee have peace in him when wee have tribulation in the world Christ saith of himselfe I came not to send peace but a sword and yet the Apostle saith That hee came and preached peace to those which were afarre off and to them which were neere How shall these things be reconcil'd Surely as a man may say of a Rocke Nothing more quiet because it is never stirr'd and yet nothing more unquiet because it is ever assaulted so wee may say of the Church Nothing more peaceable because it is established upon a Rocke and yet nothing more unpeaceable because that rocke is in the midst of seas windes enemies persecutions But yet still the Prophets Conclusion is certaine The worke of righteousnesse is
peace and the effect of righteousnesse quietnesse and assurance for ever VERSE 3. Thy people shall be willing in the Day of thy Power in the Beauties of Holinesse from the wombe of the morning thou hast the dew of thy youth THe Prophet before shewed the Raigne of Christ over his enemies hee now speaketh of his Raigne over his people and describeth what manner of subjects or souldiers Christ should have I will not trouble you with varietie of expositions occasioned by the many Metaphors and different translations but give in a few words those which I conceive to be most literall and pertinent to the place Thy people that is those whom thou dost receive from thy Father and by setting up the standard and Ensigne of thy Gospell gather to thy selfe Shall be willing the word is willingnesses that is a people of great Willingnesse and Devotion or as the originall word is elsewhere used Psal. 119.108 shall bee free will offerings unto thee The Abstract being put for the Concrete and the plurall for the singular notes how exceeding forward and free they should be as the Lord to signifie that his people were most rebellious saith that they were Rebellion it selfe Ezek. 2.8 So then the meaning is Thy people shall with most readie and forward cheerefulnesse devote consecrate and render up themselves to thy governement as a reasonable sacrifice shall bee of a most liberall free noble and unconstrained spirit in thy service they shall bee Voluntaries in the warres of thy Kingdome In the Day of Thy Power or Of thine Armies by these words wee may understand two things both of them aiming at the same generall sense First so as that Armies shall bee the same with Thy people before In the Day when thou shalt assemble thy Souldiers together when thou shalt set up thine Ensignes for them to seeke unto that is when thou shalt cause the preaching of thy Gospell to sound like a Trumpet that men may prepare themselves in armies to fight thy battels then shall all thy people with great devotion and willingnesse gather themselves together under thy Colours and freely devote themselves to thy militarie service Secondly so as that by Power or Armies may bee meant the Meanes whereby this free and willing Devotion in Christs people is wrought that is when thou shalt send foorth the Rod of thy strength when thou shalt command thy Apostles and Ministers to goe forth and fight against the kingdomes of Sinne and Satan when thou shalt in the dispensation of thine Ordinances reveale thy Power and spirituall strength unto their Consciences then shall they most willingly relinquish their former service and wholly devote themselves unto thee to fight under thy banners and to take thy part against all thine enemies In the Beauties of Holinesse This likewise wee may severally understand Either in thy Holy Church Which may well so bee called with allusion to the Temple at Ierusalem which is called The Beauty of Holinesse Psal. 29.2 and a Holy and Beautifull house Esai 64.11 and a glorious high throne Ier. 17.12 And hither did the tribes resort in troopes as it were in armies to present their free will offerings and celebrate the other services of the Lord. Or else wee may understand it Causally thus In the Day of thy Power that is when thou shalt reveale thy strength and Spirit and in the Beauties of Holinesse that is when thou shalt reveale how exceeding beautifull and full of lovelinesse thy Holy wayes and services are then shall thy people bee perswaded with all free and willing devotion of heart to undertake them Or lastly thus as the Priests who offered sacrifices to the Lord were cloathed with Holy and Beautifull garments Exod. 28.2.40 or as those who in admiration of some noble Prince voluntarily follow the service of his warres doe set themselves forth in the most complete furniture and richest attire as is fit to give notice of the noblenesse of their mindes for beautifull armor was want to bee esteemed the honor of an armie So they who willingly devote themselves unto Christ to bee Souldiers and Sacrifices unto him are not onely armed with strength but adorned with such inward graces as make them Beautifull as Tirza comely as Ierusalem faire as the Moone cle●re as the Sunne and terrible as an armie with banners All which three Explications meete in one generall which is principally intended that Holinesse hath all beauties in it and is that onely which maketh a man lovely in the Eyes of Christ. From the wombe of the morning thou hast the dew of thy youth There is a middle point after those words The Wombe of the Morning which may seeme to disjoine the clauses make those words referre wholly to the preceding In which relation there might bee a double sense conceived in them Either thus In the Beauties of Holinesse or in Holinesse very beautifull more than the Aurora or wombe of the morning when shee is ready to bring forth the Sunne And then it is a notable metaphor to expresse the glorious beautie of Gods wayes Or thus thy people shall bee a willing people from the very wombe of the morning that is from the very first forming of Christ in them and shining forth upon them they shall rise out of their former nakednesse and security and shall adorne themselves with the beautifull graces of Christs Spirit as with cloathing of wrought gold and rayment of needle-worke and shall with gladnesse and rejoycing with much devotion and willingnesse of heart bee brought unto the King and present themselves before him as Voluntaries in his service But because the learned conceive that the middle point is onely a distinction for convenient reading not a disjunction of the sense I shall therefore rest in a more received exposition Thy Children shall bee borne in great abundance unto thee by the seed of thy word in the wombe of the Church as soone as the morning or sunne of righteousnesse shall shine forth upon it As the dew is borne out of the coole morning aire as out of a wombe distilling down in innumerable drops upon the earth so thine elect shall bee borne unto thee by the preaching of thy word and first approach of thy heavenly light in innumerable armies And this explication is very suteable to the harmonie of Holy Scripture which useth the same metaphors to the same purpose in other places The Remnant of Iacob saith the Prophet shall bee in the middest of many people as a dew from the Lord. And Christ is called the Bright-morning-starre and the Day-spring and the Sunne of Righteousnesse and time of the Gospell is called the time of Day or the approach of Day So that from the wombe of the morning is from the heavenly light of the Gospell which is the wing or beame wherby the Sunne of Righteousnesse revealeth himselfe and breaketh out upon the world as the rising Sunne which rejoyceth like a Giant to runne
by Satanicall injections and immutations to be the forge of loose vaine unprofitable and uncleane thoughts The understanding to earthly wisdome vanity infidelity prejudices misperswasions fleshly reasonings vaine speculations and curiosities c. The will to stiffenesse resistance dislike of holy things and pursuite of the world The conscience to deadnesse immobilitie and a stupid benummednesse to slavish terrours and evidences of hell to superstitious bondage to carnall securitie to desperate conclusions The affections to independence distraction excesse precipitancie c. In temporall conditions there is no estate of health wealth peace honor estimation or the contraries unto these no relation of husband father magistrate subject c. unto which Satan hath not such suteable suggestions as by the advantage of fleshly corruptions may take from them occasion to draw a man from God Lastly in regard of our actions and imployments whether they be Divine such as respect God as acts of pietie in reading hearing meditating and studying his Word in calling upon his name and the like or such as respect our selves as acts of temperance and sobriety personall examinations and more particular acquaintance with our owne hearts or such as respect others as acts of righteousnesse charity and edification Or whether they be actions naturall such as are requisite to the preservation of our being as sleepe and diet or actions civill in our callings or recreations in all these Satan laboureth either to pervert us in the performance of them or to divert us from it There is then no condition facultie relation or action of a Christian man the which is not alwayes under the eye and envy of a most raging wise and industrious enemie And therefore great reason there is that Christians should be Military men well instructed in the whole armour of God that they may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devill and to quench all his firy darts It is our calling to wrestle against principalities and powers and spirituall wickednesses in high places to resist the devill to strive against sinne to mortifie earthly members to destroy the body of sinne to denie our selves to contradict the reasonings of the flesh to checke and controule the stirrings of concupiscence to resist and subdue the desires of our evill hearts to withstand and answere the assaults of Satan to out-face the scornes and despise the flatteries of the present world in all things to endure hardnesse as the souldiers of Iesus Christ. Our cause is righteous our captaine is wise and puissant our service honourable our victory certaine our reward massie and eternall so that in all respects great encouragements we have to be voluntaries in such warre the issue whereof is our enemies perdition our Masters honour and our owne Salvation The third thing observed was the through and universall Resignation and devotednesse of Christs people unto him Thy people shall be willing or a people of great devotion in the day of thy Power From whence I shall gather two observations First They that belong unto Christ as his people are most throughly and willingly subject unto his government doe consecrate resigne and yeeld up their whole soules and bodies to serve in his warres against all his enemies For the distinct understanding of which point we are to observe first that by nature wee are utterly unwilling to be subject unto Christ. The carnall minde is enmitie against God it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can bee For if Christ be over us the body of sinne must dye it once crucified him and he will be reveng'd upon it By nature wee are willingly subject unto no Law but the Law of our members nor to no will but the will of the flesh full of contumacie rebellion and stoutnesse of spirit against the truth and beauty of the word or wayes of God The Love of corrupted nature is wholly set upon our owne wayes as an untamed heifer or a wilde asse men wander and goe about and wearie themselves in their full compasse and swinge of lust and will not be turned And therefore it is that they bid God depart from them and desire not the knowledge of his wayes that they leave the paths of uprightnesse that having crooked hearts of their owne they labour likewise to pervert and make crooked the Gospell of Christ that they may from thence steale countenance to their sinnes contrary to that holy affection of David Make my way strait before me that they snuffe and rage and pull away the shoulder and fall backward and thrust away God from them And hence it is that men are so apt to cavill and foolishly to charge the wayes of God first as grievous wayes too full of austerity narrownesse and restraint I knew that thou wert an austere man and this is an hard saying who can beare it The land is not able to beare all his words There is a Lion in the way a certaine damage and unavoidable mischiefe will follow me if I keepe in it Thus as Israel when they heard of Giants and sonnes of Anak had no heart to Canaan but cried and whined and rebelled and mutined and in their heart turned back into Egypt that is had more will to their owne bondage than to Gods Promise so when a naturall man heares of walking in a narrow way with much exactnesse and circumspection that come what baite of preferment pleasure profit or advantage will yet hee must not turne to the right hand or to the left nor commit the least evill for the greatest good that as the people in the wildernesse were to goe onely where the cloud and pillar of Gods presence led them though hee carried them through giants terrours and temptations so a Christian must resolve to follow the Lambe whither soever he goeth He then turneth backe to his iniquities and refuseth to heare the words of the Lord. Secondly as unprofitable wayes for who will shew us any good is the onely language of carnall men What can the Almighty doe for us say the wicked in Iob It is in vaine to serve God what profit have we that we have kept his ordinances c If we must take our conscience along in all the businesses of our life there will be no living in the world notwithstanding the Lord saith that his words doe good to those that walke uprightly that godlinesse hath the Promises even of this life that God will honour those that honor him Thirdly as unequall and unreasonable wayes as a strange a mad and a foolish strictnesse rather the meteor of a speculative braine than a thing of any reall existence rather votum than veritas a wish or figment than a solid truth And from such prejudices as these men grow to wrestle with the Spirit of Christ to withstand his motions to quench his suggestions
and to dispute against him This people are as they that strive with the priest such a bitter and unreconcileable enmity there is betweene the two seeds Secondly we may observe that notwithstanding this naturall aversenesse yet many by the Power of the Word are wrought violently and compulsorily to tender some unwilling services to Christ by the spirit of bondage by the feare of wrath by the evidences of the curse due to sinne and by the wakefulnesse of the conscience They have turned their backe unto me and not their face saith the Lord that notes the disposition of their will But in the time of their trouble they will say Arise and save us that notes their compulsorie and unnaturall devotion They shall goe with their flockes and their heards that is with their pretended sacrifices and externall ceremonies to seeke the Lord but they shall not finde him hee hath withdrawne himselfe As when the Lord sent Lions amongst the Samaritanes then they sent to enquire after the manner of his worship fearing him but yet still serving their owne Gods But this compulsory obedience doth not proceed from a feare of sinne but a feare of hell And that plainely appeares in the readinesse of such men to apprehend all advantages for enlarging themselves and in making pretences to flinch away and steale from the Word of Grace in consulting with carnall reason to silence the doubts to untie the knots and to breake the bonds of the conscience asunder and to turne into every diverticle which a corrupted heart can shape in taking every occasion and pretext to put God off and delay the payment of their service unto him Thus Felix when he was frighted with the discourse of Saint Paul put it off with pretence of some further convenient season and the unwilling Jewes in the time of reedifying the temple at Jerusalem This people say the time is not come the time that the Lords house should bee built in slighting the warnings and distinguishing the words of Scripture out of their spirituall and genuine puritie and so belying the Lord and saying It is not he The word of the Lord saith the Prophet is to them a reproach they have no delight in it that is they esteeme me when I preach thy words unto them rather as a slanderer than as a Prophet Wouldest thou then know the nature of thy devotion Abstract all conceits of danger all workings of the spirit of bondage the feare of wrath the preoccupations of hell the estuations and sweatings of a troubled conscience and if all these being secluded thou canst still afford to dedicate thy selfe to Christ and be greedily ambitious of his image that is an evident assurance of an upright heart Thirdly we may observe that by the Power of the Word there may yet be further wrought in naturall men a certaine Velleit●e a languide and incomplete will bounded with secret reservations exceptions and conditions of its owne which maketh it upon every new occasion mutable and inconstant When the hypocriticall Iewes came with such a solemne protestation unto the Prophet Ieremie The Lord bee a true and faithfull witnesse betweene us if we doe not according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee unto us c. I suppose they then meant as they spake and yet this appeares in the end to have beene but a velleitie and incomplete resolution a zealous pang of that secret hypocrisie which in the end discover'd it selfe and brake forth into manifest contradiction when Hazael answered the Prophet Is thy servant a dog that hee should doe thus and thus he then meant no otherwise than hee spake upon the first representation of those bloudie facts he abhorred them as belluine and prodigious villanies and yet this was but a velleitie and fit of good nature for the time which did easily weare out with the alteration of occasions When Iudas asked Christ Master is it I that shall betray thee though a man can conceive no hypocrisie too blacke to come out of the hell of Iudas his heart yet possible and peradventure probable it may be that hearing at that time and beleeving that wofull judgement pronounced by Christ against his betrayer It had beene good for that man if he had never beene borne he might then upon the pang and surprizall of so fearefull a doome secretly and suddenly relent and resolve to forsake his purpose of treason which yet when that storme was over and his covetous heart was tempted with a bribe did fearefully returne and gather strength againe When the people returned and inquired early and remembred God their Maker they were in good earnest for the time and yet that was a velleity and ungrounded devotion their heart was not right towards him neither were they stedfast in his Covenant When Saul out of the force of naturall ingenuity did upon the evidence of Davids integritie who slew him not when the Lord had delivered him into his hands relent for the time and weepe and acknowledge his righteousnesse above his owne he spake all this in earnest as he thought and yet wee finde that hee afterwards return'd to pursue him againe and was once more by the experience of Davids innocencie reduc'd unto the same acknowledgement The people in one place would have made Christ a King so much did they seeme to honour him and yet at another time when their over-pliable and unresolved affections were wrought upon by the subtile Pharises they cried against him as against a slave Crucifie him crucifie him so may it be in the generall services of God men may have wishings and wouldings and good liking of the truth and some faint and floating resolutions to pursue it which yet having no firme roote nor proceeding from the whole bent of the heart from a through mortification of sinne and evidence of Grace but from such weake and wavering principles as may bee perturbed by every new temptation like letters written in sand they vanish away like a morning dew and leave the heart as hard and scorched as it was before The young man whom for his ingenuity and forwardnesse Christ loved came in a sad and serious manner to learne of Christ the way to heaven and yet wee finde there were secret reservations which he had not discerned in himselfe upon discoverie whereof by Christ he was discouraged and made repent of his resolution Mark● 10.21 22. The Apostle speaketh of a Repentance not to be repented of 2 Cor. 7.10 which hath firme solid and permanent reasons to support it therein secretly intimating that there is likewise a Repentance which rising out of an incomplete will and admitting certaine secret and undiscerned reservations doth upon the appearance of them flag and fall away and leave the unfaithfull heart to repent of its repentance Saint Iames tels us that a double-minded man is unstable in all his wayes Iam. 1.8 never uniforme nor
constant to any rules Now this division of the minde stands thus The heart on the one side is taken up with the pleasures of sinne for the present and on the other with the desires of salvation for the future and now according as the workings and representations of the one or other are at the time more fresh and predominant in like maner is sinne for that time either cherished or suppressed Many men at a good Sermon when the matter is fresh and newly presented while they are looking on their face in the glasse or in any extremitie of sicknesse when the provisions of lust doe not relish for the present when they have none but thoughts of salvation to depend upon are very resolute to make promises vowes and professions of better living but when the pleasures of sin grow strong to present themselves again they returne like a man recover'd of an ague with more stomacke and greedinesse to their lusts againe As water which hath been stop'd for a while rusheth with the more violence when its passages are opened A double heart is like the boles of a Scale according as more weight is put into one or other so are they indifferently over-rul'd unto either motion up or downe When I see a vapour ascend out of the earth into the aire why should I not thinke that it will never leave rising till it get up to heaven and yet because the motion is not naturall but caused either by expulsion from a heat within or by attraction from a heat without when the cause of that ascent is abated and the matter gathers together into a thicker consistence it growes heavie and fals downe againe Even such is the affection of those faint unresolved desires of men who like Agrippa are but halfe-perswaded to believe in Christ. But now lastly wee must observe that in the day of Christs power when he by his word and Spirit worketh effectually in the hearts of men they are then made free-will offerings Totally willing to obey and serve him in all conditions The heart of every one stirreth him up and his Spirit maketh him willing for the worke and service of the Lord Exod. 35.21 They yeeld themselves unto the Lord and their members as weapons of righteousnesse unto him 2 Chron. 30.8 Rom. 6.19 They offer and present themselves to God as a living Sacrifice and therefore they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an oblation sanctified by the Holy Ghost Rom. 12.1 Rom. 15.16 Therefore they are said to come unto Christ by the vertue of his Fathers teaching Ioh. 6.45 To runne unto him Esai 55.5 To gather themselves together under him as a common head and to flow or flock together with much mutuall encouragement unto the mountaine of the Lord Hos. 1.11 Esai 2.2 3. To waite upon him in his Law Esai 42.4 To enter into a sure covenant and to write and seale it Nehem. 9.38 In one word To serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing minde 1 Chron. 28.9 when the heart is perfect undivided and goeth all together the minde will bee willing to serve the Lord. This willingnesse of Christs people sheweth it selfe in two things First in begetting most cordiall and constant Enmitie against all the enemies of Christ never holding any league or intelligence with them but being alwayes ready to answere the Lord as David did Saul Thy servant will goe and fight with this Philistime Hee that is a voluntary in Christs armies is not disheartned with the potencie policie malice subtlety or prevailing faction of any of his adversaries Hee is contented to deny himselfe to renounce the friendship of the world to bid defiance to the allurements of Satan to smile upon the face of danger to hate father and mother and land and life to be cruel to himselfe and regardlesse of others for his masters service Through honor and dishonor through evill report and good report through a Sea and a wildernesse through the hottest services and strongest oppositions will hee follow the Lambe whither soever he goeth though he receive the word in much affliction yet hee will receive it with joy too Secondly in begetting most loving constant and deare affections to the mercy grace glory and wayes of God an universall conformity unto Christ our head who was contented to take upon him the forme of a servant to have his eare bored and his will subjected unto the will of his Father I delight to doe thy will ô my God yea thy Law is within my heart Psal. 40.8 And as hee was so are all his in this world of the same minde judgement Spirit conversation and therefore of the same will too Now this deare and melting affection of the heart toward Christ and his wayes whereby the soule longeth after him and hasteth unto him is wrought by severall principles First by the Conviction of our naturall Estate and a through humiliation for the same Pride is ever the principle of disobedience They were the proud men who said unto Ieremie thou speakest falsly the Lord hath not sent thee Ier. 43.2 And they were the proud men who hardned their necks and withdrew the shoulder and would not heare and refused to obey Nehem. 9.16 17 29. A man must bee first brought to denie himselfe before hee will bee willing to follow Christ and to lug a crosse after him A man must first humble himselfe before he will walke with God Mic. 6.8 The poore onely receive the Gospell The hungrie onely finde sweetnesse in bitter things Extremities will make any man not onely willing but thankfull to take any course wherin hee may recover himselfe and subsist againe when the soule findes it selfe in darknesse and hath no light and begins to consider whither darknesse leads it that it is even now in the mouth of Hell under the paw of the roaring lion under the guilt of sinne the curse of the Law and the hatred and wrath of God it cannot chuse but most willingly pursue any probability and with most inlarged affections meete any tender of deliverance Suppose wee that a Prince should cause some bloudy malefactor to bee brought forth should set before his eyes all the racks and tortures which the wit of man can invent to punish prodigions offenders withall and should cause him to tast some of those extremities and then in the middest of his howling and anguish should not onely reach out a hand of mercy to deliver him but should further promise him upon his submission to advance him like Ioseph from the iron which enters into his soule unto publike honor and service in the state would not the heart of such a man bee melted into thankfulnesse and with all submission resigne it selfe unto the mercy and service of so gracious a Prince Now the Lord doth not onely deale thus with sinners doth not onely cause them by the report of his word and by the experience of their own guilty hearts to feel the weight fruitlesnesse
unto obedience If he be grieved and made retire for he is of a delicate and jealous disposition if hee turne his wind from our sailes alas how slow and sluggish will our motion be How poore our progresse Vpon these and severall other the like grounds may the best of us bee possessed with feares discomforts and unwillingnesse in Gods service But yet Fifthly none of all this takes off the will a Toto though it doe a Tanto but that the faithfull in their greatest heavinesse and unfitnesse of spirit have yet a stronger by as towards God than any wicked man when he is at best for it is true of them in their lowest condition that they Desire to feare Gods name Nehem. 1.11 That the desire of their soule is towards the remembrance of him Esay 26.8 that they are seriously displeased with the distempers and uncomfortablenesse of their spirit Psal. 42.5 that they long to be enlarged that they may run the way of Gods Commandements Psal. 119.32 That they set their affection unto God and his service 1 Chron. 29.3 That they prepare their heart to seeke the Lord God 2 Chron. 30.19 That they strive grone wrestle and are unquiet in their dumpes and dulnesse earnestly contending for joy and freedome of Spirit Psal. 51.8.11.12 In one word that they dare not omit those duties which yet they have no readinesse and disposednesse of heart to performe but when they cannot doe them in alacrity yet they doe them in obedience and serve the Lord when he hideth his face from them I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will looke againe towards thy holy Temple Ionah 2.4 He that feareth the Lord will obey his voice though he walke in darknesse and have no light Esay 50.10 So then the faithfull have still thus much ground of comfort that God hath their wils alwaies devoted and resign'd unto him though thus much likewise they have to humble them too the daily experience of a back-sliding and tired spirit in his service and should therefore be exhorted to stirre up the spirit of grace in themselves to keepe fresh and frequent their communion with Christ. The more acquaintance and experience the heart hath of him the more abundantly it will delight in him and make haste unto him that it may with Saint Paul apprehend him in fruition by whom it is already apprehended and carried up unto heavenly places in assurance and representation As long as wee are here there will be something lacking to our faith some mixture of unbeleefe and distrust with it 1 Thess. 3.10 Marke 9.24 corruptions temptations afflictions trials will be apt to beget some feares discomforts wearinesse and indisposednesse towards Gods service The sense whereof should make us long after our home with the Apostle grone and wait for the adoption even the redemption of our bodies for the manifestation of the sons of God for though we are now sonnes yet it doth not appeare what we shall be 1 Ioh. 3.2 should make us pray for the accomplishment of his promises for the hastening of his Kingdome where we shall be changed into an universall spiritualnesse or purity of nature where those relickes of corruption those strugglings of the law of the members against the law of the minde shall be ended those languishings decayes ebbes and blemishes of grace shall be removed where all deficiencies of grace shall be made up and that measure and first fruits of the Spirit which we here receive shall be crowned with fulnesse and everlasting perfection Here we are like the stones and other materials of Salomons Temple but in the act of fitting and preparation no marvell if we be here crooked knottie uneven and therefore subject to the hammer under blowes and buffets But when we shall be carried to the heavenly building which is above and there laid in there shall be nothing but smoothnesse and glory upon us no noise of hammers or axes no dispensation of Word or Sacraments no application of censures and severity but every man shall bee filled with the fulnesse of God Faith turned into sight Hope turned into fruition and Love everlastingly ravished with the presence of God with the face of Iesus Christ with the fulnesse of the holy Spirit and with the communion and societie of all the Saints And so much for the first observation out of the third particular concerning the willingnesse of Christs people There was further therein observed the Principle of this Willingnesse In the day of thy power or of thine armies that is when thou shalt send abroad Apostles and Prophets and Evangelists and Doctours and Teachers for evidencing the Word and Spirit unto the consciences of men Whence we may secondly observe that the Heart of Christs people is made willing to obey him by an act of Power or by the strength of the Word and Spirit It is not barely enticed but it is conquered by the Gospell of Christ 2 Cor. 10.4 5. And yet this is not a compulsory conquest which is utterly contrary to the nature of a reasonable will which would cease to be it selfe if it could be compell'd but it is an effectuall conquest The will as all other faculties is dead naturally in trespasses and sins And a dead man is not raised to life againe by any enticements nor yet compell'd unto a condition of such exact complacencie and suteablenesse to nature by any act of violence So then a man is made willingly subject unto Christ neither by meere morall perswasions nor by any violent impulsions but by a power in it selfe supernaturall spirituall or Divine and in its manner of working sweetly tempered to the disposition of the will which is never by grace destroyed but perfected Therefore the Apostle saith that it is God who worketh in us to will and to doe Phil. 2.13 first he frameth our will according to his owne as David was said to be a man after Gods owne heart and secondly by that will and the imperate acts thereof thus sanctified and still assisted by the Spirit of grace he setteth the other powers of nature on worke in further obedience unto his will And therefore the Prophet David praised God that had enabled him and his people to offer willingly unto the service of Gods house and prayeth him that he would ever keepe that willing disposition in the imaginations and thoughts of the hearts of his people 1 Chron. 29.14.18 Therefore the Apostle saith that Our faith standeth not in the wisdome of men but in the power of God 1 Cor. 4.5 Therefore likewise it is called The faith of the operation of God who raised Christ from the dead Col. 2.12 For the more distinct opening and evidencing this point how Christs people are made Willing by his power I will onely lay together some briefe positions which I conceive to be thereunto pertinent and proceed to that which is more plaine and profitable First let us consider the nature of the will which is to
to the wayes of grace as there is in any The consideration whereof may justly humble us in our reflexion upon our selves whom neither the promises of heaven can allure nor the bloud and passions of Christ perswade nor the flames of hell affright from our sinnes till the Lord by the sweet and gracious power of his holy ●●irit subdue and conquer the soule unto himselfe If a man should rise from the dead and truly relate unto the conscience the woefull and everlasting horrors of hell if a mans naturall capacity were made as wide to apprehend the wrath fury and vengeance of a provoked God the foulenesse guilt and venome of a soule fuller of sins than the heavens of stars as the most intelligent divels of hell doe conceive them If an Archangell or Seraphim should be sent from heaven to reveale unto the soule of a naturall man the infinite glory of Gods presence the full pleasures of his right hand the admirable beauty of his wayes the intimate conformity and resemblance between his divine nature in himselfe the Image of his holinesse in the creature the unsearchable and bottomlesse love of Christ in his Incarnation and sufferings the endlesse incomprehensible vertue pretiousnesse of his bloud and prayers yet so desperately evill is the heart of man that if after all this God should not afford the blessed operation and concurrence of his owne gratious Spirit the revelation of his own arme and power upon the soule to set on those instrumentall causes it would be invincible by any evidence which all the cries and flames of hell which all the armies and hosts of heaven were able to beget There is no might or power able to snatch a man out of the hands of his sin but onely Gods Spirit Notable are the expressions which the holy Ghost every where useth to set forth this wretched condition of the heart by nature wilfulnesse and selfe-willednesse We will not hearken we will not have this man to raigne over us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 many wils in one Rebellion and stubbornenesse stoutnesse of heart contestation with God and gain-saying his Word Impudence stiffenesse and hard-heartednesse mischievous profoundnes and deepe reasonings against the Law of God pertinacie resolvednesse and abiding in mischiefe they hold fast deceit obstinacie and selfe-obduration They have hardned their neckes that they might not heare Impotencie immoveablenesse and undocilenesse their heart is uncircumcised they cannot heare there is none that understandeth or seeketh after God scorne and slighting of the messages of the Lord where is his Word Where is the promise of his comming Incredulity and belying the Lord in his Word saying it is not he Who hath beleeved our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed Wrestling resisting and fighting with the Word rejecting the counsell of God vexing and striving with his holy Spirit ye have alwayes resisted the holy Ghost Rage and fiercenesse of disordred affections despising of goodnesse trayterous heady and high-minded thoughts Brutishnes of immoderate lust the untamed madnesse of an enraged beast without any restraint of reason or moderation In one word a hell and gulfe of unsearchable mischiefe which is never satisfied It is impossible that any reasonable man duly considering all these difficulties should conceive such an heart as this to be overcome with meere morall perswasions or by any thing lesse than the mightie power of Gods owne grace To him therefore we should willingly acknowledge all our conversion and salvation So extremely impotent are we O Lord unto any good so utterly unprofitable and unmeet for our Masters use and yet so strongly hurried by the impulsion of our owne lust towards hell that no precipice nor danger no hope nor reward no man or Angell is able to stop us without thine owne immediate power and therefore Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name onely be attributed the glory of our conversion Againe by this consideration we should be provoked to stirre up and call together all our strength in the Lords service to recover our mispent time to use the more contention and violence for the kingdome of heaven when wee consider how abundant wee have beene in the workes of sinne in the pursuing of vast desires which had neither end nor hope in them O how happie a thing would it be if men could serve God with the same proportion of vigour and willingnesse of mind as they served Satan and themselves before I was never tired in that way I went on indefatigably towards hell like a swift Dromedary or an untamed heifer I pursued those evill desires which had vanity for their object and misery for their end no fruit but shame and no wages but death But in the service of Christ I have a price before mee an abiding Citie an enduring substance an immarcescible crowne to fix the highest of my thoughts upon I have the promises of Christ to strengthen me his Angels to guard his Spirit to lead his Word to illighten me In one word I have a soule to save and a God to honour And why should not I apply my power to serve him who did reach forth his owne power to convert me A long way I have to goe and I must doe it in a spanne of time so many temptations to overcome so many corruptions to shake off so many promises to beleeve so many precepts to obey so many mysteries to study so many workes to finish and so little time for all my weaknesses on one side my businesses on another mine enemies and my sinnes round about me take away so much that I have scarce any left to give to God And yet alas if I could serve God on earth as he is served in heaven if I had the strength of Angels and glorified Saints to doe his will it would come infinitely short of that good will of God in my redemption or of his power in my conversion If God should have said to all the Angels in heaven there is such a poore wretch posting with full strength towards hell goe stand in his way and drive him back againe all those glorious armies would have beene too few to blocke up the passage● betweene sin and he● without the concurrence of Gods owne Spirit and power they could have returned none other answer but this we have done all we can to perswade and turne him but he will not be turned If then the Lord did put to his owne power to save me great reason there is that I should set my weake and impotent faculties to honour him especially since hee hath beene pleased both to mingle with his service great joy liberty and tranquillity here and also to set before it a full a sure and a great reward for my further animation and encouragement thereunto The fourth thing observed in this Verse was the attire wherein Christs people should attend
upon his service In the Beauties of Holinesse These words referre to those before and that either to the word People or to the word willing If to People then they are a further description of Christs Subjects or Souldiers they shall be all like servants in Princes Courts beautifully arraied like the Priests of the Law that had garments of beauty and glory and so Schindler expounds it In societate sacerdotum If to the word willing then it notes the ground and inducement of their great devotion and subjection unto Christs kingdome that as the people came up in troopes to the Lords house which was the Beauty of his Holinesse or as men doe flocke together to the sight of some honorable and stately solemnity so Christs people should by the beauty of his banners be allured to gather unto him and flye in multitudes as Doves unto their windowes Which way ever wee understand the words we may from them observe First That Holinesse is a glorious and a beautifull thing The holy oile with which all the vessels of the Sanctuary were to be consecrated was a type of that Spirit which sanctifieth us and maketh us Kings and Priests unto God and it was to be compounded of the purest and most delicate ingredients which the art of the Apothecary could put together Therefore our Saviour still calleth his Spouse the fairest of wom●n to note that no other beauty in the world is to be compared with Holinesse Therefore our Faith and Holinesse is called a Wedding Garment at which solemnitie men use above all other to adorne themselves with their costliest and most beautifull attire Therefore we are said to Put on the Lord Iesus and to Put on bowels of mercie and humblenesse of minde and meekenesse c. and therefore likewise the Church is compared to a Bride decked in her choicest ornaments and jewels broidred worke silke fine linnen bracelets chaines jewels crownes gold silver perfect comelinesse garments of salvation and of praise robes of righteousnesse c. And Christ the husband of this Spouse the chiefest and most amiable of ten thousand even altogether lovely The Desire of all Nations and the allurement of all hearts that can looke upon him And Ierusalem the palace of this glorious couple described by the most pretious and desireable things which can bee thought on Iaspar the wall gold the pavement pearle the gates pretious stones the foundation and the Lord the light thereof Of our selves by reason of sinne we are full of filthinesse and deformity in flesh and spirit clothed with filthy garments and overspread from the head to the foot with blaines and putrefactions It is only the holy Word of God which maketh us cleane from our filthinesse and from all our pollutions By the washing of water through the Word Christ sanctifieth us that he may present unto himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle that it might be holy and without blemish Ephes. 5.27 And therefore the Apostle Saint Peter exhorteth Christian women to adorne the inner man of the heart with the ornament of a meeke and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God whose pure eye they ought rather to please than the wanton eye of man of great price 1 Pet. 3.3 4. And the truth hereof may bee proved even from the practice of hypocrites themselves for no man will counterfeite villanies and make a shew of the vices which indeed hee hath not except he be desperately thereunto swayed by an humor of pleasing his wicked companions And therefore Saint Austin complaineth of it as of a prodigious corruption of his nature that he did sometimes belie himselfe to his wicked associates and boasted of the wickednesse which he durst not practise No woman will paint her selfe with dung or spread inke upon her face It must be beautifull in it selfe which any man will ordinarily counterfeit so that Holinesse hath the prerogative of an enemies suffrage which is one of the strongest evidences to testifie the beauty and excellency thereof This point will more distinctly appeare if we consider either the Author Nature properties or Operations of this Holinesse First the Author is God himselfe by his spirit The very God of peace sanctifie you wholly saith the Apostle and the God of peace make you perfect in every good worke to doe his will Therefore the spirit is called a spirit of Holinesse by the power whereof Christ rising from the dead was declared to bee the Sonne of God to note the answerablenesse betweene raising from the dead or giving life where there was none before and the sanctification of a sinner Therefore the Apostle calleth it the renewing of the Holy Ghost and the forming of Christ in us the quickning and creating us to good workes By all which we may note that what Beautie the Creation brought upon that emptie and unshaped Chaos when it was distributed into this orderly frame which we now admire or what beautie the reunion of a living soule unto a dead and gastly body doth restore unto it the same beautie doth Holinesse bring unto the soule of a man which was filthy before But yet further we must note that God did not make man as other ordinarie Creatures for some low and inferior use and yet Salomon saith that they were made all beautifull in their time but there was a pause a consultation a more than common wisedome power and mercie revealed in the workemanship of man for God made man for his owne more peculiar delight company and communion one whom hee would enter into a more intimate league and covenant withall The Lord hath set apart the man that is godly for himselfe This people have I formed for my selfe they shall shew forth my praise I will magnifie the beautie of my glorious vertues in those whom I have sanctified for my selfe Thus wee finde what perfect comelinesse the Lord bestowed upon his people when he entred into Covenant with them and made them his owne one which was alwayes to leane on his bosome and to stand in his owne presence Ezek. 16.8 14. The Church is the Lords owne House a Temple in the which hee will dwell and walke it is his Throne in which he sitteth as our Prince and Law-giver And in this regard it must needs bee extraordinarie beautifull for the Lord will beautifie the place of his Sanctuary and will make the place of his feet glorious Now then if by Holinesse we are made Gods building and that not as the rest of the world is for his Creatures to inhabite but as a Temple for himselfe to dwell in as a gallerie for himselfe to walke and refresh himselfe in certainely Holinesse which is the Ornament and ingraving of this temple must needs be a glorious thing for there is much glory and wisedome in all Gods workes Secondly if we consider the
if he observe any faculty naked and neglected The actuall and totall breach of any one Commandement Totall I meane when the whole heart doth it though haply it execute not all the obliquitie which the compasse of the sinne admits is an implicite habituall interpretative and conditionall breach of all His soule stands alike dis-affected to the holinesse of every Commandement and hee would undoubtedly adventure on the breach of this if such exigences and conditions as misguided him in the other should thereunto as strongly induce him He that hath done any one of these abominations hath done all these abominations in Gods account Ezek. 18.10 13. There being then in a Christian man a suteable life and vigour of holinesse in every part and a mutuall conspiring of them all in the same wayes and ends there must needs likewise be therein an excellent beauty Thirdly growth and further Progresse in these Proportions for it is not onely uprightnesse and Symmetrie of parts which causeth perfect beauty and comelinesse but stature likewise Now Holinesse is a thriving and growing thing The Spirit is seede and the Word is raine and the Father is an Husbandman and therefore the life of Christ is an abounding life Ioh. 10.10 The rivers of the Spirit of Grace spring up unto Eternity Ioh. 7.36 As Christ hath no Monsters so neither hath hee any Dwarfes in his mysticall body but all his grow up unto the pitch of perfection which it becommeth them to have in him even unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Ephes. 4.12 13. The meaning of the Apostle is that Christ is not alwayes an infant in us as when he is first formed but that he doth Grandescere in Sanctis as Musculus well expresseth it that he groweth up still unto the stature of a man for wheresoever there is faith and holinesse there is ever ingenerated an appetite for augmentation Faith is of a growing and Charitie of an abounding Nature 2 Thes. 1.3 By the Word of truth as by incorruptible seed wee were begotten and by the same Word as by the sap and milke are we nourished and grow up thereby This affection holinesse ever workes as it did in the Disciples Lord increase our faith and in David Strengthen O God that which thou hast wrought for us Fourthly besides the Rectitude Harmonie and Maturitie which is in Holinesse there is another propertie which maketh the Beautie thereof surpasse all other Beautie and that is Indeficiencie The measure of Christ must be the Rule of our growth but Christ never was overtaken by old age or times of declining He never saw corruption so wee must proceede from strength to strength like the Sunne to the perfect day but there is no sinking or setting of Holinesse in the heart They that are planted in Gods House doe still bring forth fruit in their Old age and are even then fat and flourishing As our outward man decaieth so our inward man groweth day by day Our Holinesse is a branch of the life of Christ in us which doth never of it selfe runne into death and therefore is not apta nata of it selfe to decay for that is nothing but an earnest inchoation and assurance of death That which waxeth old saith the Apostle is ready to vanish away Heb. 8.13 Fourthly and lastly if we consider the Operations of Holinesse that likewise will evidence the Beautie thereof for it hath none but gratious and honourable effects It filleth the Soule with Joy Comfort and Peace All Joy unspeakeable and glorious joy peace quietnesse assurance songs and everlasting joy It maketh the blinde see the deafe heare the lame leape the dumbe sing the wildernesse and parched ground to become springs of water It entertaineth the soule with feasts of fatted things and of refined wines and carrieth it into the banquetting-house unto apples and flagons It giveth the soule a deare communion with God in Christ a sight of him an accesse unto him a boldnesse in his presence an admission into most holy delights and intimate conferences with him in his bed-chamber and in his galleries of love In one word it gathers the admiration of men it secures the protection of Angels and which is argument of more beautie than all the creatures in the world have besides it attracteth the eye and heart the longings and ravishments the tender compassions and everlasting delights of the Lord Iesus I have insisted on those properties of holinesse which denote inward beautie because all the graces of the Spirit doe beautifie inherently But the word properly signifying Decus or Ornatum outward adorning by a metaphor of rich apparell expressing the internall excellencie of the soule notes unto us two things more First that the people of Christ are not only sanctified within but have interest in that unspotted holinesse of Christ wherewith they are clothed as with an ornament So the Priests of God are said to be clothed with righteousnesse and we are said to put on Christ And the righteousnesse of Christ is frequently compared to long white robes fit to cover our sins to hide our nakednesse and to protect our persons from the wrath of God so that to the eye of his justice we appeare as it were parts of Christ as when Iacob wore Esau's garment he was as Esau to his father and in that relation obtained the blessing God carrieth himselfe towards us in Christ as if we our selves had fulfilled all righteousnesse as if there were no ground of contestation with us or exception against us And this is indeed the beautie of holinesse The modell prototype and originall of all beautie Secondly from the metaphoricall allusion as it is usually understood it notes unto us likewise that all the people of Christ are Priests unto God to offer up sacrifices acceptable unto him by Iesus Christ. They have all the priviledges and the duties of Priests To approach unto God wee have libertie to enter into the holiest by the bloud of Iesus to consult and have communion with him to be his Remembrancer for as his Spirit is his Remembrancer unto us hee shall bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you so is he our Remembrancer unto God to put him in minde of his mercy and promises to make mention of him and to give him no rest To know and propagate his truth this was the office of the Priest to be the keeper of the knowledge and to teach it unto others and this knowledge in the Gospell doth overflow the earth and make every man in a spirituall sense a Priest an instructer and edifier of his brother To offer to him such sacrifices as hee now delighteth in the sacrifices of thanksgiving the sacrifices of a broken and contrite spirit the sacrifices of praise confession good works and mutuall communicating unto one another in one word the sacrificing of a
and to love any of thy words Thy Law is my Counsellor I will bee ruled by it it is my Physitian I will bee patient under it it is my Schoolemaster I will bee obedient unto it But who am I that I should promise any service unto thee and who is thy Minister that hee should doe any good unto me without thy grace and heavenly call bee thou therefore pleased to reveale thine owne Spirit unto mee and to worke in mee that which thou requirest of mee I say if a man could come with such sweete preparations of heart unto the word and could thus open his soule when this spirituall Manna fals down from heaven he should finde the truth of that which the Apostle speaketh Ye are not straitned in us or in our ministerie wee come unto you with abundance of grace but yee are straitned onely in your owne bowels in the hardnesse unbeliefe incapacity and negligence of your owne hearts which receiveth that in drops which falleth downe in showres Note 3. As it is a divine so it is a secret and undiscerned Birth As the winde bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but caust not tell whence it cometh nor whither it goeth So saith our Savior is every one that is borne of God Ioh. 3 8. The voluntary breathings and accesses of the Spirit of God unto the soule whereby hee cometh mightily and as it were cloatheth a man with power and courage are of a very secret nature and notwithstanding the power thereof bee so great yet there is nothing in apparance but a voyce of all other one of the most empty and vanishing things As Dew fals in small and insensible drops and as a Childe is borne by slow and undiscerned progresses as the Prophet David saith Fearefully and wonderfully am I made Such is the birth of a Christian unto Christ by a secret hidden and inward call Vocatione Altâ as S. Austen calleth it by a deepe and intimate energie of the Spirit of grace is Christ formed and the soule organized unto a spirituall being A man heares a voyce but it is behinde him hee seeth no man hee feels a blow in that voyce which others take no notice of though externally they heare it too Therefore it is observable that the men which were with Paul at his miraculous conversion are in one place said to heare a voyce Act. 9.7 and in another place not to have heard the voyce of him that spake unto Paul Act. 22.9 They heard onely a voyce and so were but astonished but Paul heard it distinctly as the voyce of Christ and so was converted Note 4. As it is a Divine and secret so is it likewise a sudden birth In naturall generations the more vast the creature the more slow the production an Elephant ten years in the wombe In humane actions magnarum rerum tarda molimina great workes move like great engines slowly by leasure to their maturity but in spirituall generations Children are borne unto Christ like Dew which is exhaled conceived formed produced and all in one night Paul to day a Woolfe to morrow a Sheepe to day a Persecutor to morrow a Disciple and not long after an Apostle of Christ. The Nobleman of Samaria could see no possibility of turning a famine into a plentie within one night neither can the heart of a man who rightly understands the closenesse and intimate radication of sinne and guilt in the soule conceive it possible to remove either in a sudden change yet such is the birth of men unto Christ Before shee travelled shee brought forth before her paine came she was delivered of a man-Childe The earth bringeth forth in one day and a nation is borne at once It is spoken of Ierusalem the mother of us all Esai 66.7 8. VERSE 4. The Lord hath sworne and will not Repent Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedeck FRom the Regall Office of Christ and the Administration thereof by the Scepter of his Word and Spirit to the conquering of a willing people unto himselfe the Prophet now passeth to his sacerdotall office the vigor and merit whereof is by the two former applied unto the Church Therefore wee may observe that though the tribes were interdicted confusion with one another in their marriages Num. 36.7 Yet the Regall and Leviticall Tribes might interchange and mingle blouds to intimate as I conceive that the Messiah with relation unto whose lineage that confusion was avoided was to bee both a King and a Priest Thus wee finde Iehoiada the Priest married Iehoshabeath the Daughter of King Iehoram 2 Chron. 22.11 And Aaron of the Tribe of Levi tooke Elish●ba the Daughter of Amminadab who was of the tribe of Iuda Exod. 6.23 Numb 1.7 In which respect I suppose Mary and Elizabeth the Wife of Zatharie the Priest are called Cousins Luk. 1.36 In the Law indeed these two Offices were distinct Our Lord saith the Apostle sprang out of the Tribe of Iuda of which Tribe Moses spake nothing concerning Priesthood Heb. 7.14 And therefore when King Vzziah incroached on the Priests Office hee was smitten with a Leprosie 2 Chron. 26.18 21. But amongst the Gentiles amongst whom Melchizedek is thought to have beene a Priest it was usuall for the same person to have been both King and Priest The words containe the Doctrine of Christs Priesthood The Quality of it Eternall The Order not of Aaron but of Melchizedek The foundation of both Gods immutable decree and counsell hee cannot repent of it because hee hath confirmed it by an Oath I shall handle the words in the Order as they lie The Lord hath sworne Here two things are to bee enquired First how God is said to sweare Secondly why hee swears in this particular case of Christs Priesthood The former of these the Apostle resolves in one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 6.17 Hee interposed in or by an oath namely himselfe for that is to bee supplied out of the thirteenth verse where it is said that bee sware by himselfe So elsewhere it is said that he sware by the excellency of Iacob that is by himselfe Amos 8.7.6.8 By my selfe have I sworne saith the Lord that in blessing I will blesse thee Gen. 22.16 The meaning is that God should denie himselfe which hee cannot doe 2 Tim. 2.13 and should cease to bee God if the word which hee hath sworne should not come to passe So that usuall forme as I live is to be understood let me not be esteemed a living God if my word come not to passe so elsewhere the Lord interposeth his holinesse I have sworne by my Holinesse that I will not lie unto David Psal. 89.35 As impossible for him to breake his word as to bee unholy For the second question why God swears in this particular I answer First and principally to shew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The immutable and irreversible certainty
of what hee speakes Heb. 6.17 I have sworne by my selfe the word is gone out of my mouth and it shall not returne c. Esai 45.23 Thus wee finde God confirming the unmoveablenesse of his covenant by an Oath Esai 54.9 10. Psal. 89.34 35. When the Lord doth onely say a thing though his word bee as certaine in it selfe as his oath for it is as impossible for him to lie as to forsweare himselfe yet there is an implicite kinde of reservation for the altering revoking or reversing that word by some subsequent declaration As in the covenant and Priesthood of Aaron though God made it for a perpetuall ordinance yet there was after a change of it for the weaknesse and unprofitablenesse thereof So when the Lord sent Ionah to preach destruction unto Ninive within fortie dayes though the Denuntiation came not to passe yet was it not any false message because it was made reversible upon an implicite condition which condition the Lord is pleased sometimes in mercy to conceale that men may bee the sooner frighted out of their security upon the apprehension of so approching a danger At what time saith the Lord I shall speake concerning a Nation and concerning a Kingdome to pluck up and to pull downe and to destroy If that Nation against whom I have pronounced turne from their evill I will repent of the evill that I thought to doe unto them Ier. 18.7 8. But when the Lord sweares any absolute Act or promise of his owne for the Revocation whereof there can no other ground de novo arise than was extant at the time of making it and yet was no barre nor hinderance unto it namely the sinne of man he then by that oath seales and assures the immutability thereof to those that rely upon it Secondly it is to commend the excellencie and preeminencie of that above other things which hath this great seale of Heaven the Oath of God to confirme and establish it Inasmuch saith the Apostle as not without an oath hee was made Priest by so much was hee made a surety of a better Testament Heb. 6.20 22. and this is a consequent of the former for by how much the more abiding by so much the more glorious is the Ministery of the Gospell If that which is done away were glorious much more that which remaineth is glorious 2 Cor. 3.11 The more solemne and sacred the institution was the more excellent is the Priesthood Now this Oath was that Seale of God by which hee designed and set apart his Sonne for that great Office in a more solemne manner of ordination than was to others usuall Him hath God the Father sealed Iohn 6.27 It was but Hee hath said unto others ye are Gods but it is He hath sanctified to his Sonne Iohn 10.34 36. Thirdly It is to commend Gods great compassion and good will for the establishing of the hearts of men in comfort and assurance He therefore confirmed his promise by an oath That by two immutable things wherein it is impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold on the hope which is set before us Heb. 6.17 18. an oath even amongst men is the end of all controversie the determination and composing of all differences how much more when hee sets his Seale upon his mercy and covenant should the hearts of men bee secure and lay fast hold thereon without doubt or scruple Therefore wee finde the Saints in the Scripture make mention of the Oath of God for establishing their hearts against feares or dangers Thou wilt performe the truth to Iaakob and the mercy to Abraham which thou hast sworne to our fathers from the dayes of old Micah 7.20 Thy bow was made quite naked according to the oathes of the tribes even thy Word Hab. 3.9 that is Thou didst make it appeare to thine enemies that thou didst fight for thy People and remember thy Word or Covenant of mercy which thou didst sweare unto Abraham the Father of the faithfull and so oftentimes new ratifie unto his seed the Tribes which proceeded from him And this is the ground of all the Churches comfort and stabilitie for alas wee every day deserve to have God abrogate his Covenant of mercy with us but hee is mindefull of the Oath which hee hath sworne Deut. 7.7 8.9.5 There was wickednesse enough in the world to have drawne downe another flood after that of Noah the same reason that caused it did remaine after it was removed Genes 6.12 13.8.21 But Gods Oath bound him to his mercy Esay 54.9 The meaning then of this first Clause is this The Lord to shew the immutability of his Counsell the unchangeablenesse of Christs Priesthood the excellencie of it above the Priesthood of Aaron the strong consolation which the Saints may there hence receive hath sealed it by an Oath so that he is a Priest by a decree which cannot be revoked It notes unto us the Solemne call of Christ unto the office of Priesthood as before of King verse 1. He did not usurpe this honour to himselfe as Nadab and Abihu did when of their owne heads they offered strange fire unto the Lord nor incroach upon us as Vzziah but hee was ordained and begotten and called of God thereunto after the order of Melchisedech Heb. 5.5.10 Hee was sanctified and sent and had a commandement and a worke set him to doe Iohn 10.18.36.37 In which respect hee was called a Servant or a chosen officer formed for a speciall imployment Esay 42.1.49.5.53.11 Phil. 2.7 here then is the consent of the whole Trinitie unto Christs Priesthood First the Fathers consent in his Act of ordination for him hath God the Father sealed Iohn 6.27 Thou art my Sonne this day have I begotten thee Heb. 5.5 6. Secondly The Sonnes by voluntary susception and vadimonie for mankinde for he was the Suretie of the Covenant Heb. 8.22 The Apostle joyneth these two together Heb. 10.9 10. Loe I come to doe thy Will O God there was Gods Will and Christs submission thereunto in which regard he is said to sanctifie himselfe Iohn 17.19 There was a Covenant betweene God and Christ Christ was to undertake an office of service and obedience for men to offer himselfe a sacrifice for sinne to be made of a woman under the Law c. And for this God was to prolong his dayes to give him a seed and a Generation which could not bee numbred a Kingdome which cannot bee bounded a portion with the great and a spoyle with the strong a Name above every name to set a joy and a glory before him after hee should have finish●d his worke c. Thirdly here is the consent of the Holy Ghost which did hereunto anoint him which came along with him which formed him in the wombe of the Virgin and descended upon him in his solemne susception of this office in Iohns Baptisme by which Spirit he was consecrated warranted and
fitted it to the manifestation of his glory and mercy to the reconciliation of him and his creature and to the exaltation of his Sonne secondly the Sonne is willing hee chearfully submitted unto it Heb. 10.9 and freely loved us and gave himselfe unto us Gal. 2.20 thirdly the sinner is willing and accepteth and relieth upon it as wee have seene at large before in the third verse so that there can bee no injury done to any party where all are willing and where all are glorified Fourthly that an innocent person may thus in Iustice and equity suffer for a nocent there is required besides these acts of ordination in the supreme of submission in the surety and of consent in the delinquent first an intimate and neere conjunction in him that suffereth with those that should have suffered Severall unions and conjunctions there are as Politike between the members and subjects in a state and thus is a commonwealth universally sinfull a few righteous men may as parts of that sinfull society be justly subject to those temporary evils which the sinnes of the society have contracted and the people may justly suffer for the sinnes of the Princes 2 Sam. 24.17 and hee for theirs 1 Sam. 12.25 secondly Naturall as betweene parents and children so the Lord visited the sinnes of Dathan upon his little ones Numb 16.27.33 thirdly Mysticall as betweene man and wife so the Lord punished the sinnes of Amaziah the priest of Bethel by giving over his wife unto whoredome Amos 7.17 and wee see in many cases the husband is liable to be charged and censured for the exorbitancies of his wife fourthly Stipulatory and by consent as in the case of fidejussores or obsides who are punished for the sinnes of others whom they represent and in whose place they stand as a caution and muniment against injuries which might be feared as we see in the parable of the prisoner committed to the custody of another person 1 King 20 39-42 fifthly Possessory as betweene a man and his goods and so wee finde that a man was to offer no beast for a sinne offering but that which was his owne Levit. 5.6 7. Now in all these respects there was in some manner conjunction betweene us and Christ He conversed amongst men and was a member of that Tribe and society amongst whom he lived and therefore was together with them under that Romane yoke which was then upon the people and in that relation paid tribute unto Caesar hee had the nature and seed of man and so was subject to all humane and naturall infirmities without sinne Hee was mystically married unto his Church and therefore was answerable for the debts and misdemeanours of the Church He entred into covenant and became suretie for man and therefore was liable to mans engagements Lastly hee became the possession in some sort of his Church whence it is that we are said to receive him and to have him 1 Ioh. 5.12 not by way of Dominion for so we are his 1 Cor. 6.19 but by way of communion and propriety and therefore though wee cannot offer him up unto God in sacrifice for our sinnes yet we may in our faith and prayers shew him unto his Father and hold him up as our owne armour and fence against the wrath of God Rom. 13.14 Secondly there is required in the innocent person suffering that he have a free and full dominion over that from which hee parteth in his suffering for another As in suretiship a man hath free dominion over his money and therefore in that respect he may engage himselfe to pay another mans debt but he hath not a free dominion over himselfe or his owne life and therefore he may not part with a member of his owne in commutation for anothers as Zaleucus did for his sonne nor be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to lay downe his owne life for the delivering of another from death except in such cases as the Word of God limiteth and alloweth But Christ was Lord of his owne life and had therefore power to lay it downe and to take it up And this power he had though he were in all points subject to the Law as we are not solely by vertue of the hypostaticall union which did not for the time exempt him from any of the obligations of the Law but by vertue of a particular command constitution and designation to that service of laying downe his life This commandement have I received of my Father Ioh. 10.18 Lastly it is required that this Power be ample enough to breake thorow the sufferings he undertaketh and to re-assume his life and former condition againe I have power to lay it downe and I have power to take it up So then the summe of all is this by the most just wise and mercifull will of God by his owne most obedient and voluntary susception Christ Jesus being one with us in a manifold and most secret union and having full power to lay downe and to take up his life againe by speciall command and allowance of his Father given him did most justly without injury to himselfe or dishonour to or injustice in his Father suffer the punishment of their sinnes with whom he had so neere an union and who could not themselves have suffred them with obedience in their owne persons or with so much glory to Gods justice mercy and wisdome If it be here againe objected that sin in the Scripture is said to be pardoned which seems contrary to this payment and satisfaction To answer this wee must note first that in the rigour of the Law N●xa seq●itur caput the delinquent himselfe is in person to suffer the penaltie denounced for the Law is In the day that Thou eatest thou shalt dye and the soule that sinneth it shall die Every man shall beare his owne burthen Gal. 6.5 So that the Law as it stands in its owne rigour doth not admit of any commutation or substitution of one for another Secondly therefore that another person suffering may procure a discharge to the person guilty and be valide to free him the will consent and mercy of him to whom the infliction of the punishment belongeth must concurre and his over-ruling power must dispence though not with the substance of the Lawes demands yet with the manner of execution and with that rigour which bindes wrath peremptorily upon the head onely of him that hath deserved it So then wee see both these things doe sweetly concurre first a precedent satisfaction by paying the debt and yet secondly a true pardon and remission thereof to that partie which should have paid it and out of mercy towards him a dispencing with the rigor of that Law which in strictnesse would not admit any other to pay it for him Thus wee see how Christ hath suffered our punishment Secondly hee did all obedience and fulfilled all actions of righteousnesse for us for such an high Priest became us who is holy harmelesse undefiled
separate from sinners Heb. 7.26 Hee came not into the world but for us and therefore hee neither suffered nor did any thing but for us As the colour of the glasse is by the favor of the Sunne-beame shining through it made the color of the wall not inherent in it but relucent upon it by an extrinsecall affection so the righteousnesse of Christ by the favor of God is so imputed unto us as that wee are quoad gratiosum Dei conspectum righteous too In which sense I understand those words Hee hath not beheld iniquitie in Iacob neither hath he seen perversenesse in Israel Num. 23.21 Though it is indeed in him yet the Lord looketh on him as cloathed with the righteousnesse of Christ and so is said not to see it as the eye seeth the color of the glasse in the wall and therefore cannot behold that other inherent color of its owne which yet it knoweth to bee in it Now of this Doctrine of Iustification by Christs righteousnesse imputed wee may make a double use First it may teach us that great dutie of selfe-deniall wee see no righteousnesse will justifie us but Christs and his will not consist but with the deniall of our owne And surely what-ever the professions of men in word may bee there is not any one dutie in all Christian Religion of more difficultie than this to trust Christ onely with our salvation To doe holy duties of hearing reading praying meditating almesgiving or any other actions of charity or devotion and yet still to abhorre our selves and our workes to esteeme our selves after wee have done all unprofitable servants and worthy of many st●ipes to doe good things and not to rest in them to owne the shame and dung of our solemne services when we have done all the good workes wee can to say with Nehemiah Remember mee ô my God concerning this and spare me according to the greatnesse of thy mercie Nehem. 13.22 and with David To thee ô Lord belongeth mercie for thou renderest to every man according to his worke Psal. 62.12 It is thy mercy to reward us according to the uprightnesse of our workes who mightest in judgement confound us for the imperfection of our workes To give God the praise of our working and to take to ourselves the shame of polluting his workes in us There is no Doctrine so diametrally contrary to the merits of Christ and the redemption of the world thereby as justification by workes No Papist in the world is or can bee more contentious for good workes than wee both in our Doctrine and in our prayers and in our exhortations to the people We say no faith justifieth us before God but a working faith no man is righteous in the sight of men nor to bee so esteemed but by workes of holinesse without holinesse no man shall see God hee that is Christs is zealous of good workes purifieth himselfe even as hee is pure and walketh as hee did in this world Here onely is the difference we doe them because they are our Dutie and testifications of our love and thankfulnesse to Christ and of the workings of his Spirit in our hearts but wee dare not trust in them as that by which wee hope to stand or fall before the tribunall of Gods Iustice because they are at best mingled with our corruptions and therefore doe themselves stand in need of a high Priest to take off their iniquity Wee know enough in Christ to depend on we never can finde enough in our selves And this confidence wee have if God would ever have had us justified by workes hee would have given us grace enough to fulfill the whole Law and not have left a Prayer upon publike record for us every day to repeat and to regulate all our owne Prayers by forgive us our trespasses For how dares that man say I shall be justified by my workes who must every day say Lord forgive mee my sinnes and bee mercifull unto mee a sinner Nay though wee could fulfill the whole Law perfectly yet from the guilt of sinnes formerly contracted wee could no other way bee justified than by laying hold by faith on the satisfaction and sufferings of Christ. Secondly it may teach us confidence against all sinnes corruptions and temptations Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died c. Satan is the blackest enemie and sinne is the worst thing hee can alleage against mee or my soule is or can bee subject unto for Hell is not so evill as sinne In as much as Hell is of Gods making but sinne onely of mine Hell is made against mee but sinne is committed against God Now I know Christ came to destroy the workes and to answer the arguments and reasonings of the Devill Thou canst not stand before God saith Satan for thou art a grievous sinner and he is a devouring fire But faith can answere Christ is able both to cover and to cure my sinne to make it vanish as a miste and to put it as farre out of mine owne sight as the East is from the West But thou hast nothing to doe with Christ thy sinnes are so many and so foule surely the bloud of Christ is more acceptable to my soule and much more honourable and pretious in it selfe when it covereth a multitude of sinnes Paul was a persecutor a Blasphemer and injurious the greatest of all sinners and yet hee obtained mercy that hee might be for a patterne of all long-suffering to those that should after beleeve in Christ. If I had as much sinne upon my soule as thou hast yet faith could unlade them all upon Christ Christ could swallow them all up in his mercy But thou hast still nothing to doe with him because thou continuest in thy sinne But doth hee not call mee invite me beseech mee command me to come unto him If then I have a heart to answer his call hee hath a hand to draw me to himselfe though all the gates of Hell and powers of darknesse or sinnes of the world stood betweene But thou obeyest not this call True indeed and pittifull it is that I am dull of hearing and slow of following the voice of Christ I want much faith but yet Lord thou dost not use to quench the smoaking flax or to breake the bruized reed I beleeve and thou art able to helpe mine unbeleefe I am resolved to venture my soule upon thy mercy to throw away all mine owne loading and to cleave onely to this planck of salvation But faith purifieth the heart whereas thou art uncleane still True indeed and miserable man I am therefore that the motions of sinne doe worke in my members But yet Lord I hate every false heart I delight in thy Law with mine innerman I doe that which I would not but I consent to thy Law that it is good I desire to know thy will to feare thy name to
due to the Ministers of the Gospell by a Law of Iustice. It is a wrong and foolish Apologie to pretend the punishment for the continuance of the fault The poverty of many men is doubtlesse a just recompence for their neglect of the honor of the Gospell For God hath ever severely punished the contempt and dishonor done to his messengers 2 Chron. 16.10.12 2 Chron. 24 21-25 2 Chron. 26.19 20. 2 Chron. 36.16 17. Wheras on the other side doe thou deale faithfully with God fulfill to thy power his appointment and decree that they which preach the Gospell may live by the Gospell and then hearken unto God Honor the Lord with thy substance and the first fruits of all thine increase so shall thy barnes bee filled with plenty and thy presses burst out with new wine Prov. 3.9 10. Consider now from this day and upward from the day that the foundation of the Lords Temple was laid consider it Is the seed yet in the barne From this day I will blesse you Hag. 2.18 19. Yee are cursed with a curse for ye have robbed me even this whole nation Bring yee all the Tithes into the store-house that there may be meat in mine house and prove mee herewith saith the Lord of Hoasts if you will not doe it out of duty yet doe it out of experiment If I will not open you the windowes of heaven and powre you out a blessing that there shall not be roome enough to receive it Mal. 3 9-12 There was never any man lost by paying God his Dues there was never any man thrived by grudging or pittancing the Almighty I will conclude this point with the Apostle It is his Doctrine faithfull Ministers are worthy of double honor And it is his Exhortation Render to all their Dues Tribute to whom Tribute Custome to whom Custome feare to whom feare Honor to whom Honor Rom. 13.3 Note lastly The Priesthood of Christ is an everlasting Priesthood Hee also was without Father and without Mother without beginning of dayes or end of life As man without a Father as God without a Mother The same yesterday and to day and for ever His name was Everlasting Father His Gospell an Everlasting Gospell He was a lamb slaine from the beginning of the world The vertue of his bloud goes backward as high as Adam He was foreordain'd before the foundation of the world 2 Tim. 1.9 The redemption of those that transgressed under the first Testament the remission of sinnes that were past were procured by this Sacrifice Heb. 9.15 Rom. 3.25 It goeth downward to the end of the world he must raigne till all be put under his feete and he must raise up all by the power and vertue of his victory over death Ioh. 5 26-29 And lastly it goeth onward to all immortality for though the Acts and administration of his Priest-hood shall cease when hee shall have delivered the Kingdome to his Father and have brought the whole Church into Gods presence yet the vertue and fruits of those Acts shall bee absolutely eternall for so long as the Saints shall bee in heaven so long they shall enjoy the benefit of that Sacrifice which did purchase not a lease or expiring terme but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an endlesse life an everlasting glory an inheritance incorruptible that fadeth not away reserved in the heaven for them VERSE 5. The Lord at thy Right hand shall strike through Kings in the day of his wrath VERSE 6. Hee shall judge amongst the Heathen he shall fill the places with dead Bodies Hee shall wound the heads over many Countries IN the former part of the Psalme we have had the description of Christs offices of King and Priest together with the effect thereof in gathering a willing people unto himselfe Now here the Prophet sheweth another effect of the powerfull administration of these offices containing his victories over all his enemies allegorically expressed in a Hypotiposis or lively allusion unto the manner of humane victories wherein first I shall in a few words labour to cleere the sense and then the observations which are naturall will the more evidently arise The Lord at thy right hand To lay aside their exposition who understand these words of God the Father the words are an Apostrophe of the Prophet to those at whose right hand the Lord Iesus is Some make it an Apostrophe to God the Father a triumphall and thankfull prediction of that power and Iudgement which he hath given to this his Benjamin the Sonne at his right hand Because that thereby the phrase retaineth the same signification and sense which it had in the first verse As if David had said O God the Father of all power and majesty worthy art thou of all praise thanksgiving and honor who hast given such power to thy Sonne in the behalfe of thy Church as to smite through Kings and judge heathen and pull downe the chiefe of his enemies and to subdue all things to himselfe and these read it thus O Lord hee that is at thy right hand shall strike through Kings c. Others make it to be an Apostrophe to the Church and so to bee a phrase not expressing Christs exaltation as verse 1. But his care and protection over his Church his readinesse to assist and defend his owne people against all the injuries and assaults of adverse power Salomon saith A wise mans heart is at his right hand but a fooles heart is at his left Eccl. 10.2 That is his heart is ready and prepared to execute any wife counsels or godly resolutions as the Prophet David saith My heart is prepared ô God my heart is prepared I will sing and give thankes But a fooles heart when hee should doe any thing is like his left hand to seeke of skill unactive and unprepared when hee walketh by the way his heart faileth him vers 3. And this readinesse and present helpe of God to defend and guide his Church is expressed frequently by his being at the right hand thereof Because the Lord is at my right hand I shall not bee moved Psal. 16.8 Hee shall stand at the right hand of the poore to save him Psal. 109.31 I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand saying unto thee feare not I will helpe thee Esai 31.13 As if David had said Bee not dismayed nor cast downe ô yee subjects of this King as if being exalted to Gods right hand hee had given over the care and protection of his people for as hee is at the right hand of his Father in glory and majesty so is he at your right hand too standing to execute judgement on your enemies and to reveale the power of his arme towards you in your protection Now the reasons of this phrase and expression as I conceive are these two First to note that Christs power providence and protection doe not exclude but onely strengthen assist and prosper the ordinary and just endeavors of the Church
are likely to assault them to teach them in every condition as well possible as present how to walke acceptably before God Phil. 4.11 13. Another great enemie of the Kingdome of Christ is the lust of our owne evill nature The carnall minde is enmitie against God for it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8.7 Phil. 3.8 Enmity in grieving vexing and quenching the holy Spirit in us and lusting enviously against his grace Iam. 4.4 5. And here also Christ overcommeth by the prevailing power of his Spirit giving us more Grace demolishing the kingdome of sinne and judging the prince of this world which before did rule in the children of disobedience And this he doth by the judgement Seat and Scepter of his Spirit in the heart for the judgement of the Spirit is too hard for the principality of Satan Ioh. 16.11 The Spirit of Christ is a victorious Spirit He bringeth forth his judgement unto victory Matth. 12.20 Esai 4.4 Hee worketh out by degrees the drosse and impurity of our nature and services First by faith fixing upon better promises and hopes than lust can make 1 Ioh. 5.4 Heb. 11.24 26. Secondly by watchfulnesse eying corruptions and so stirring up those arguments and principles which are strongest against them Iob 31.1 Psal. 39.1 Thirdly by leading us to more acquaintance with God in knowledge love and communion Iob 22.21 1 Ioh. 1.3 and so fetching more wisedome and strength from him for this is the way that wee get all our strength even by learning of him Phil. 4.12 Fourthly by inclining the heart to hate and to complaine of corruptions to bemone it selfe as Paul and Ephraim did Rom. 7.23 Mark 9.24 Ier. 31.18 19. Fifthly by bringing the heart into the light there to approve and judge its actions Ioh. 3.20 by setting it alwayes in Gods eye that it may not sinne against him Psal. 16.8 Sixthly by convincing the heart of the beauty and excellencie of Grace of the unlikenesse of sinne to God and so making the soule more full of desires for the one and against the other Esai 26.8 Ezek. 36.31 and thus kindling lust against lust Gal. 5.17 Seventhly by being alwayes a present Monitour and Watchman in the soule to supply it with spirituall weapons and reasonings against the temptations of lust Esai 30.31 Ioh. 14.26 Lastly in one word by daily supplies from the residue of Spirit which is in our head whereby according to the proportion and exigence of the members he floweth into them Mal. 2.15 Phil. 1.19 This is that seed that leaven that vitall instinct which is ever in the heart setting it selfe against the workings and life of lust and by little and little wasting it away as fire doth water The grand instrument of Satan and lust who are the two leaders in this warre against Christ is the wicked world The power malice wisedome learning or any other either naturall or acquir'd abilities of evill men for even in an earthly respect by the word kings we are not onely to understand those Monarchs and princes of the earth who set themselves against Christ but all such as excell in any such worldly abilities as may further that opposition It notes the strength policie pride and greatnesse of minde or scorne of subjection which is in the heart against Christ. So that king heere stands in opposition to subject they who reject Christs yoke and breake his bonds asunder and will not have him to raigne over them those are the kings in the Text. And these also will hee smite through and confound by the Power of his Word and the strength of his arme The Lord gave the Word great was the company of those that published it Kings of armies did fly apace and she that tarried at home divided the spoile Psal. 68.11 12. Tophet is ordained of old for the king it is prepared Esai 30.33 Come and gather your selves together unto the Supper of the great God That ye may eate the flesh of kings and the flesh of captaines and the flesh of mightie men and the flesh of horses and of them that sit on them and the flesh of all men both free and bond both small and great c. Revel 19.17 18. As for those mine enemies which would not that I should raigne over them bring them hither and slay them before me Luk. 19.27 Be wise now ye kings be instructed ye Iudges of the earth Serve the Lord with feare and rejoyce with trembling kisse the Sonne lest he bee angry and ye perish from the way when his wrath is kindled but a little Thus the Lord overthroweth his Churches enemies and protecteth it against al their greatest preparations most formidable power And this he doth severall wayes sometimes by diverting their forces from his Church into some other necessary channell or ambitious designe of their owne Thus Rabshakah and his hoast were called from Iudah 2 King 19.7 8. so the Lord promised his people that when they went up to appeare before him thrice a yeere he would divert the desires of their enemies from their land Exod. 34.24 Thus Iulian the Apostate having but two maine plots to honour as he supposed his government and his idols withall the subduing of the Persian and the rooting out of the Galileans as he called them was prevented from this by being first overthrowne in the other for the prosperous successe of which expedition he vowed unto his idoll-gods a sacrifice of all the Christians in the Empire as Gregorie Nazianzen relateth Sometimes by infatuating and implanting a spirit of giddinesse and distraction in the enemies of his Church making them destitute both of counsell and courage When God would punish Babylon which was a type of the enemies of Christs Kingdome hee made their hearts melt that they should bee amazed at one another and their faces should be like flames Esay 13.7 8. that is not onely pale like a flame but rather as I conceive full of varietie of fearefull impressions and distracted passions nothing so tremulous so various so easily bended every way with the smallest blast as a flame so their feare should make their bloud and spirits in their faces to tremble quiver and varie to come and goe like a thinne flame in them so God threatneth to mingle a perverse spirit to make the spirit of Egypt faile in them and their wisedome to perish Esal 19.1 2 3 14 17. and thus likewise the Lord dealt with Iulian in that Persian expedition he put a spirit of folly in him to burne his ships and so to put a necessity of courage in his people as the old Gauls did against Caesar and then to leave them all destitute of necessary releefe Sometimes by ordering casualties and particular emergencies for the deliverance of his Church a thing wonderfully seene in the histories of Ioseph and Ester Thus as a man by a chaine made up of s●verall links some of gold others of silver other
that proceed out of our mouth Eph. 4.29 a respect unto the glory of God in whatsoever workes wee goe about 1 Cor. 10.31 The whole soule body and Spirit should bee Sanctified throughout and that even till the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ 1 Thess. 5.23 Christ hath service much more than enough to take up all the might strength studies abilities times callings of all his servants Businesses towards God and himselfe worship feare Communion love prayer obedience service subjection businesses towards and for our selves watchfulnesse repentance faith sincerity sobriety growth in grace businesse towards other men as instruments and fellow members exhortation reproofe direction instruction mourning rejoycing restoring releeving helping Praying Serving in all wayes of love So much evill to bee avoided so many slips and errors to bee lamented so many earthly members to bee crucified so much knowledge and Mysteries to bee learned so many vaine Principles to bee unlearned so much good to bee done to my selfe so much service to bee done to my brother so much glory to bee brought to my Master every Christian hath his hands full of worke And therefore Christ expostulateth it as an absurd thing to call him Lord Lord to professe and ingeminate a verball subjection and yet not to doe the things which hee requires Luk. 6.46 The third thing observed touching the Kingdome of Christ is the Glorie and Power thereof intimated by his sitting at the Lords right hand Gods right hand in the Scripture is a Metonymicall expression of the strength power majesty and glorie that belongs unto him This is mine infirmitie saith the Psalmist but l will remember the yeares of the right hand of the most high Psal. 77.10 Where wee finde Gods power under the metonymie of a right hand opposed to the infirmitie of his servant My infirmitie and weake faith made me apt to sinke under the sense of Gods displeasure but when I called to minde the experiences of Gods former power in alike distresses I recollected my Spirits and was refreshed againe So the right hand of the Lord is said to spanne or extend the heavens Esai 48.13 And the Psalmist expresseth the strength and salvation of the Lord by his right hand Psal. 118.14 15 16. and his fury is the Cup of his right hand Hab. 2.16 And he strengthneth and helpeth and upholdeth his people by the right hand of his Righteousnesse that is by his Power and faithfull promises which in their weaknes strengthens them in their feare and flagging helps them in their sinking and falling upholds them Esai 41.10 So the Psalmist saith of wicked men that their right hand is a right hand of falsehood Psa. 144.11 that is either confidence in their owne power will deceive themselves or they will deceive others to whom they promise succour and assistance Therfore Gods right hand is cald the right hand of Majesty Heb. 1.3 and the right hand of power Luk. 22.69 To sit then at Gods right hand noteth that great Honor and Judiciarie Office and plenitude of power which God the Father hath given to his Sonne after his manifestation in the flesh in his nativity and justification by the Spirit in his resurrection he was then amongst other dignities received up into glory 1 Tim. 3.16 This wee finde amongst those expressions of honor which Salomon shewed unto his Mother that shee sate at his right hand 1 King 2.19 And herein the Apostle puts a great difference betweene Christ and the Leviticall Priests that they stood daily Ministring but Christ after his Offering Sate downe on the right hand of God Heb. 10.11 12. noting two things First That Christ was the Lord and they but Servants for standing is the posture of a Servant or Minister Deut. 10.8.17.12 Ezek. 44.24 and not sitting Luk. 17.7 Secondly that their worke was daily to bee repeated wheras Christs was consummate in one offering once for all after which hee rested or sate downe againe This fitting then of Christ at the right hand of Majestie and glorie notes unto us first The great Exaltation of the Lord Christ whom God hath highly honoured and advanced and given a name above every name First his Divine nature though it cannot possibly receive any intrinsecall improvement or glory all fulnesse of glory essentially belonging thereunto yet so farre forth as it was humbled for the oeconomie and administration of his office so farre it was readvanced againe Now he emptied and humbled himselfe not by putting off any of his divine glory but by suffering it to be overshaddowed with the similitude of sinfull flesh and to be humbled under the forme of a Servant as the light of a candle is hidden in a darke and close Lanterne So that Declaratorily or by way of Manifestation he is in that respect magnified at Gods right hand or as the Apostle speakes declared to be that Sonne of God by Power in rising from the dead and returning to his glory againe Rom. 1.4 Againe how ever in Abstracto wee cannot say that the Deitie or Divine nature was exalted in any other sense than by evident manifestation of it selfe in that man who was before despised and accused as a blasphemer for that he made himselfe equall with God yet in Concreto and by reason of the Communication of properties from one nature to another in the unitie of one person it is true that as God saved the World by his bloud and as it was the Prince of life that was crucified and the Lord that lay in the grave so God likewise was in the forme of a servant humbled and at the right hand of Majestie exalted againe Secondly the humane nature of Christ is most highly exalted by sitting at Gods right hand for in the right of his Hypostaticall union hee hath an ample and immediate claime to all that glory which might in the humane nature bee conferr'd upon him So that though during the time of his conversation amongst men the exigence and oeconomie of the Office which he had for us undertaken made him a man of sorrowes and intercepted the beames of the Godhead and Divine glorie from the other nature yet having finished that dispensation there was in the vertue of that most intimate association of the natures in one person a communicating of all glory from the deitie which the other nature was capeable of For as by the Spirit of Holinesse he was filled with treasures of wisdome and knowledge and grace and thereby fitted for the Office of a Mediator and made the first fruits the first borne the heire of all things the head and Captaine of the Church furnished with a residue and redundancie of the Spirit to sanctifie his brethren and to make them joynt heirs and first borne with himselfe so by the Spirit of glory is he filled with unmatchable perfections beyond the capacitie or comprehension of all the Angels of Heaven being not onely full of glory but having in him all the fulnesse of glory