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A65285 A body of practical divinity consisting of above one hundred seventy six sermons on the lesser catechism composed by the reverend assembly of divines at Westminster : with a supplement of some sermons on several texts of Scripture / by Thomas Watson ... Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1692 (1692) Wing W1109; ESTC R32148 1,021,388 604

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any man should boast Eph. 2.9 But the Papists say The Works done by an unregenerate Man indeed cannot justify him but works done by a regenerate Man may justify This is most false as may be proved both by Example and Reason 1. By Example Abraham was a regenerate Man but Abraham was not justified by Works but by Faith Rom. 4.3 Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness 2. By Reason How can those Works justify us which defiles us Isa. 64.6 Our righteousnesses are as filthy rags Bona opera non praecedunt justificationem sed sequuntur justificatum Good Works are not an Usher to go before Iustification but an Handmaid to follow it Object But doth not the Apostle Iames say Abraham was justified by works Resp. The answer is easie Works declare us to be righteous before Men but they do not make us righteous before God Works are Evidences of our Iustification not Causes This Name only must be graven upon the Golden Plate of our High Priest Christ The LORD our righteousness 2. Use of Exhortation Branch 1. Adore the infinite Wisdom and Goodness of God to find out such a way to justify us by rich Grace and precious Bloud We were all involved in Guilt none of us could plead Not Guilty and being Guilty we lay under a Sentence of Death now that the Judge himself should find out a way to justify us and the Creditor himself contrive a way to have the Debt paid and not distress the Debtor this may fill us with Wonder and Love The Angels admire the Mystery of Free-grace in this new way of Justifying and Saving lost Man 1 Pet. 1.12 and should not we who are nearly concerned in it and on whom the Benefit is devolved cry out with the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O the depth of the riches both of the Wisdom and Knowledge of God! c. Branch 2. Labour for this high Priviledge of Justification There is Balm in Gilead Christ hath laid down the Price of our Justification viz. His Bloud and he offers himself and all his Merits to us to justifie he invites us to come to him he hath promised to give his Spirit to inable us to do what is required Why then Sinners will ye not look after this great Priviledge of Iustification Do not starve in the midst of Plenty do not perish when there is a Remedy to save you Would not he be thought to be distracted if having a Pardon offered him only upon the Acknowledgment of his Fault and promising Amendment he should bid the Prince keep his Pardon to himself for his part he was in love with his Chains and Fetters and would dye Thou who neglectest Iustification offered thee freely by Christ in the Gospel art this distracted Person Is the Love of Christ to be slighted Is thy Soul and Heaven worth nothing O then look after Iustification through Christ's Bloud Consider 1. The necessity of being justified If we are not justified we cannot be glorified Rom. 8.30 Whom he justified them he also glorified He who is Outlawed and all his Goods confiscated must be brought into Favour with his Prince before he can be restored to his former Rights and Liberties So we must first have our Sins forgiven and be brought into God's Favour by Iustification before we can be restored to the Liberty of the Sons of God and have Right to that Happiness we forfeited in Adam 2. The Utility and Benefit By Iustification we enjoy Peace in our Conscience a richer Jewel then any Prince wears in his Crown Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God Peace can sweeten all Afflictions it turns our Water into Wine How happy is a justified Person who hath the Power of God to guard him and the Peace of God to comfort him Peace flowing from Iustification is an Antidote against the Fear of Death and Hell Rom. 8.34 It is God that justifies who is he that condemneth Therefore labour for this Iustification by Christ this Priviledge is obtain'd by believing in Christ Acts 13.39 By him all that believe are justified And Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his bloud Faith unites us to Christ and having Union with his Person we partake of his Merits and the glorious Salvation which comes by him Use 3. Comfort to the Justified 1. It is Comfort in case of Failings Alas how defective are the Godly they come short in every Duty But though Believers should be humbled under their Defects yet not despond they are not to be justifi'd by their Duties or Graces but the Righteousness of Christ. Their Duties are mixed with Sin but that Righteousness which justifies them is a perfect Righteousness 2. Comfort in case of hard Censures The World censures the People of God for Proud and Hypocritical and the Troublers of Israel but though Men censure and condemn the Godly yet God hath justified them And as he hath now justified them so at the Day of Judgment he will openly justifie them and pronounce them Righteous before Men and Angels And God is so just and holy a Judge that having once justified his People he will never condemn them Pilate justified Christ I find no fault in him yet after this he condemned him But God having publickly justified his Saints he will never condemn them Whom he justified them he also glorified Of ADOPTION Joh. 1.12 To them he gave power to become the sons of GOD. HAving spoken of the great Points of Faith and Justification the next is Adoption 1. The Qualification of the Persons As many as received him Receiving is put for Believing as is clear by the last words To them that believe in his name 2. The Specification of the Priviledge To them he gave power to become the sons of God The Greek word for Power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Dignity and Prerogative he dignified them to become the Sons of God Our Sonship differs from Christ's Sonship Christ was the Son of God by Eternal Generation a Son before time but our Sonship is 1. By Creation Acts 17.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are his Off-spring This is no Priviledge Men may have God for their Father by Creation yet have the Devil for their Father 2. Our Sonship is by Adoption So in the Text He gave them power to become the sons of God Adoption is twofold 1. External and Federal So those who live in a visible Church and make a Profession of God are Sons Matth. 8.12 The children of the kingdom shall be cast out 2. Real and Gracious So they are Sons who are GOD's Favourites and are Heirs of Glory Before I proceed to the Questions I shall lay down three Positions 1. Adoption takes in all Nations At first Adoption was confined to the People of the Iews they only were grafted in to the true Olive and were dignified with glorious Priviledges Rom. 9.4 Who are Israelites to whom pertaineth
Grave and the Holy Ghosts descending upon the Earth This Day is perfum'd with the sweet Odour of Prayer which goes up to Heaven as Incense This Day the Manna falls that Angels Food this is the Soul's Festival Day on this Day all the Graces act their Part The other Days of the Week are most employed about Earth this Day about Heaven Then you gather Straw now Pearl Now Christ takes the Soul up into the Mount and gives it transfiguring Sights of Glory Now Christ leads his Spouse into the Wine-Cellar and displays the Banner of his Love now he gives her his Spiced Wine and the Iuice of the Pomegranate Cant. 8.2 The Lord doth usually reveal himself more to the Soul on this Day The Apostle Iohn was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day Revel 1.10 He was carried up in Divine Raptures towards Heaven This Day a Christian is in the Altitudes he walks with God and takes as it were a turn with him in Heaven 1 Ioh. 1.3 On this Day holy Affections are quickened The Stock of Grace is improved Corruptions are weakened On this Day Satan falls like Lightning before the Majesty of the Word Christ wrought most of his Miracles upon the Sabbath So he doth now The dead Soul is raised the Heart of Stone is made Flesh. How should this Day be highly esteemed and had in Reverence This Day is more precious than Rubies God hath anoynted this Day with the Oyl of Gladness above its Fellows On the Sabbath we are doing Angels Work our Tongues are tuned to God's Praises This Sabbath on Earth is a Shadow and Type of that Glorious Rest and Eternal Sabbath we hope for in Heaven when God shall be the Temple and the Lamb shall be the Light of it Rev. 21.22 23. EXOD. XX. 9 10. Six Days shalt thou labour and do all thy Work but the Seventh Day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt do no manner of Work c. Six Days shalt thou labour God would not have any live out of a Calling Religion seals no Warrant for Idleness 'T is as well a Duty to labour Six Days as to keep Holy Rest on the Seventh Day Six Days shalt thou labour 2 Thess. 3.11 We hear there are some among you walking Disorderly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all Now them that are such we command and exhort by our Lord Iesus that with Quietness they work and eat their own Bread A Christian must not only mind Heaven but his Calling While the Pilot hath his Eye to the Star he hath his Hand to the Stern Without labour the Pillars of a Common-wealth will dissolve and the Earth will be like the Sluggards Field over-run with Briars Prov. 24.31 Adam in Innocency tho he was the Monarch of the World yet God would not have him idle but he must dress and till the Ground Gen. 2.15 Piety doth not exclude Industry Six Days shalt thou labour Standing Water putrifies The Inanimate Creatures are in Motion The Sun goes its Circuit the Fountain runs the Fire sparkles And Animate Creatures Solomon sends us to the Ant and Pismire to learn Labour Prov. 6.6 Chap. 30.35 The Bee is the Emblem of Industry some of the Bees trim the Honey others work the Wax others frame the Comb others lie Sentinel at the Door of the Hive to keep out the Drone And shall not Man much more inure himself to labour That Law in Paradise was never yet repealed In the Sweat of thy Brows shalt thou eat Bread Gen. 3.19 Such Professors are to to be disliked who talk of living by Faith but live out of a Calling They are like the Lillies which toil not neither do they spin Mat. 6.28 'T is a Speech of Holy and Learned Mr. Perkins Let a Man be endued with excellent Gifts and hear the Word with Reverence and receive the Sacrament yet if he practise not the Duties of his Calling all is but Hypocrisie What is an idle Person good for What benefit is there of a Ship that lies always on the shore Or of Armour that hangs up and rusts To live out of a Calling exposeth a Person to Temptation Melancton calls Idleness Balneum Diaboli the Devil's Bath because he bathes himself with delight in an idle Soul We do not use to sow Seed in ground when it lies fallow but Satan sows most of his Seed of Temptation in such Persons as lie fallow and are out of a Calling Idleness is the Nurse of Vice Seneca an Heathen could say Nullus mihi per Otium Dies exit No Day passeth me without some labour An idle Person stands for a Cypher in the World and God writes down no Cyphers in the Book of Life We read in Scripture of eating the Bread of Idleness Prov. 31.27 and drinking the Wine of Violence Prov. 4.17 It is as well a sin to eat the Bread of Idleness as to drink the Wine of Violence An idle Person can give no account of his Time Time is a Talent to trade with both in our Particular and General Calling The slothful Person hides his Talent in the Earth he doth no good his Time is not lived but lost An idle Person lives unprofitably he cumbers the ground God calls the slothful Servant wicked Mat. 25.26 Thou wicked and slothful Servant Draco whose Laws were written in Blood deprived them of their Life who would not work for their Living In Hetruria they caused such Persons to be banished Idle Persons live in the Breach of this Commandment Six Days shalt thou labour Let them take heed they be not banished Heaven A Man may as well go to Hell for not working in his Calling as for not Believing So I pass to the next But The Seventh Day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt do no manner of work Having spoken already of the Reasons of sanctifying the Sabbath I come now to that Question Quest. In what manner we are to sanctifie the Sabbath Resp. 1. Negatively we must do no Work in it that is expressed in the Commandment In it thou shalt do no manner of Work God hath enclosed this Day for himself therefore we are not to lay it common by doing any Civil Work As Abraham when he went to sacrifice left his Servant and the Ass at the bottom of the Hill Gen. 22.5 So when we are to Worship God this Day we must leave all worldly business behind leave the Ass at the Bottom of the Hill And as Ioseph when he would speak with his Brethren thrust out the Egyptians so when we would converse with God this Day we must thrust out all earthly Employments The Lord's Day is a Day of Holy Rest all secular Works must be forborn and suspended it is a prophaning the Day N●hem 13.15 In these days saw I in Iudah some treading Wine-presses on the Sabbath and bringing in Sheaves as also Wine-Grapes and Figs and all manner of Burdens which they brought into Ierusalem on
Presence Ioh. 8.56 Abraham saw my day and rejoyced So when we see the Light of a Sabbath shine we should rejoyce Isa. 58.13 Thou shalt call the Sabbath a delight This is the Queen of Days which God hath Crowned with a Blessing As there was one Day in the Week on which God did rain Manna twice as much as upon any other Day so God rains down the Manna of Heavenly Blessings twice as much on the Sabbath as on any other This is the Day wherein Christ carries the Soul into the House of Wine and displays the Banners of Love over it Now the Dew of the Spirit falls on the Soul whereby it is revived and comforted How many may write the Lord's day the day of their New Birth This day of Rest is a Pledge and Earnest of that Eternal Rest in Heaven and shall not we rejoyce at the approach of it That day on which the Sun of Righteousness shines should be a day of Gladness 2. Get up betimes on the Sabbath-morning Christ rose early on this day before the Sun was up Iohn 20.1 Did Christ rise early to save us and shall not we rise early to worship and glorifie him Psal. 63.1 Early will I seek thee Can we be up betimes on other days The Husbandman is early at his Plough the Traveller riseth early to go his Journey and shall not we when we are on this day travelling to Heaven Certainly did we love God as we should we would rise on this day betimes that we may meet with him whom our Soul loveth Such as sit up late at work on the Night before will be so buried in sleep that they will hardly be up betimes on a Sabbath-morning 3. Having dressed our Bodies we must dress our Souls for the hearing of the Word As the People of Israel were to wash themselves before the Law was delivered to them Exod. 19.10 so we must wash and cleanse our Souls and that is by Reading Meditation and Prayer I. By Reading the Word The Word is a great means to sanctifie the Heart and bring it into a Sabbath-frame Iohn 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy truth c. And read the Word not carelesly but with seriousness and affection it is the Oracle of Heaven the Well of Salvation the Book of Life David for the preciousness of God's Word esteemed it above Gold and for the sweetness above Honey Psal. 19.10 By reading the Word aright our Hearts when they are dull are quickened when they are hard are mollified when cold and frozen are enflam'd and we can say as the Disciples Did not our Hearts burn within us Some step out of their Bed to hearing The Reason why many get no more good on a Sabbath by the Word Preached is because they did not break Fast with God in the Morning by the Reading of his Word II. Meditation Get upon the Mount of Meditation and so converse with God Meditation is the Soul 's retiring of its self that by a serious and solemn thinking upon God the Heart may be raised up to Divine Affections Meditation is a Work fit for the Morning of a Sabbath Meditate on Four things 1. On the Works of Creation That is express'd here in the Commandment The Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea c. The Creation is a Looking-glass in which we see the Wisdom and Power of God gloriously represented God produced this fair Structure of the World without any pre-existent Matter and with a Word Psal. 33.6 By the Word of the Lord were the Heavens made The Disciples wondred that Christ could with a Word calm the Sea Matth. 8.26 but it was far more with a Word to make the Sea Let us on a Sabbath meditate on the Infiniteness of our Creator look up to the Firmament there we may see God's Glory blazing in the Sun twinkling in the Stars look into the Sea there we may see God's Wonders in the Deep Psal. 107.24 Look into the Earth there we may behold the Nature of Minerals the Power of the Load-stone the Vertue of Herbs and Beauty of Flowers By meditating on these Works of Creation so curiously embroidered we come to admire God and praise him Psal. 104.24 O Lord how manifold are thy Works in Wisdom hast thou made them all By meditating on the Works of Creation we come to confide in God He who can Create can Provide he that could make us when we were nothing he can raise us when we are low Psal. 124.8 Our Help stands in the Name of the Lord who made Heaven and Earth 2. Meditate on God's Holiness Psal. 111.9 Holy and reverend is his Name Hab. 1.13 Thou art of purer Eyes than to behold Iniquity God is Essentially Originally and Efficiently Holy All the Holiness in Men and Angels is but a Chrystal Stream that runs from this Glorious Ocean God loves Holiness because it is his own Image A King cannot but love to see his own Effigies stamp'd on Coyn. God counts Holiness his Glory and the most sparkling Jewel of his Crown Exod. 15.11 Glorious in Holiness Here is a Meditation fit for our first entrance into a Sabbath God's Holiness The Contemplation of this would work in us such a Frame of Heart as is suitable to an Holy God It would make us then Reverence his Name Hallow his Day While we are musing of the Holiness of God's Nature we begin to be transformed into his Likeness 3. Meditate on Christ's Love in redeeming us Rev. 1.5 Redemption exceeds Creation the one is a Monument of God's Power the other of his Love Here is fit Work for a Sabbath O the infinite stupendious Love of Christ in raising poor lapsed Creatures from a state of Guilt and Damnation 1. That Christ who was God should die That this Glorious Sun of Righteousness should be in an Eclipse we can never enough admire this Love no not in Heaven 2. That Christ should die for Sinners Not sinful Angels but sinful Mankind That such Clods of Earth and Sin should be made bright Stars of Glory O the amazing Love of Christ This was Illustre amoris Christi mnemosynum 3. That Christ should not only die for Sinners but die as a Sinner 2 Cor. 5.21 He was made sin for us He who was among the Glorious Persons of the Trinity was numbred among Transgressors Isa. 53.12 Not that he had Sin but he was like a Sinner having our Sins imputed to him Sin did not live in him but it was laid upon him Here was an Hyperbole of Love enough to strike us into Astonishment 4. That Christ should redeem us when he could not look to gain any thing or be at all advantaged by us Men will not lay out their Mony upon a Purchase unless it will turn to their Profit But what Benefit could Christ expect in purchasing and redeeming us We were in such a Condition that we could neither deserve nor recompense Christ's Love First We could not deserve it for we were in
Relations lie in our way to Heaven we must either leap over them or tread upon them A Child must unchild himself and forget he is a Child he must know neither Father nor Mother in God's Cause Deut. 33.9 Who said unto his father and his mother I have not seen him neither did he acknowledge his Brethren This is to aim at God's Glory 2. Then we aim at God's Glory when we can be content that God's Will should take place though it cross ours Lord I am content to be a Looser if thou a Gainer to have less Health if I may have more Grace and thou more Glory whether it be Food or bitter Physick thou givest me Lord I desire that which may be most for thy Glory Thus our Blessed Saviour Not as I will but as thou wilt Matth. 26.39 So God might have more Glory by his Sufferings he was content to suffer Joh. 12.28 Father glorifie thy name 3. Then we aim at God's Glory when we can be content to be out-shined by others in Gifts and Esteem so God's Glory may be encreased A Man that hath God in his Heart and God's Glory in his Eye desires that God should be exalted and if this be effected let who will be the Instrument he rejoyceth Phil. 1.15 Some preach Christ of Envy notwithstanding Christ is preached and I therein do rejoyce and will rejoyce they preached Christ of Envy they envyed Paul that Concourse of People and they preached that they might out-shine him in Gifts and get away some of his Hearers Well saith Paul Christ is preached and God is like to have Glory therefore I rejoyce let my Candle go out if the Sun of Righteousness may but shine 2. We Glorifie God by an ingenuous Confession of Sin The Thief of the Cross had dishonour'd God in his Life but at his Death he brings Glory to God by Confession of Sin Luke 23.41 We indeed suffer justly He acknowledged he deserved not only Crucifixion but Damnation Josh. 7.19 My son give I pray thee glory to God and make confession unto him An humble Confession exalts God how is God's Free-grace magnified in crowning those who deserve to be condemn'd as the excusing and mincing of Sin doth cast a Reproach upon God Adam denies not he did tast the forbidden Fruit but instead of a full Confession he taxes God Inscripser● Deos sceleri Gen. 3.12 The woman whom thou gavest me she gave me of the tree and I did eat It is long of thee if thou hadst not given me the Woman to be a Tempter I had not sinned So Confession glorifies God it clears it acknowledgeth he is Holy and Righteous whatever he doth Nehemiah vindicates God's Righteousness Chap. 9.33 Thou art just in all that is brought upon us And Confession then is ingenuous when it is free not forc'd Luke 15.18 I have sinn'd against heaven and before thee he chargeth himself with Sin before ever his Father chargeth him with it 3. We glorifie God by Believing Rom. 4.20 Abraham was strong in faith giving glory to God Unbelief affronts God it gives him the Lye He that believeth not maketh God a lyer 1 Joh. 5.10 So Faith brings Glory to God it sets to its Seal that God is true Ioh. 3.33 he that believes flies to God's Mercy and Truth as to an Altar of Refuge he doth Ingarrison himself in the Promises he trusts all he hath with God Psal. 31.5 Into thy hands I commit my spirit this is a great way of bringing Glory to God therefore God honours Faith because Faith honours God It is a great Honour we do to a Man when we trust him with all we have we put our Lives and Estates into his hand a sign we have a good Opinion of him The three Children glorified God by believing The God whom we serve is able to deliver us and will deliver us Dan. 3.17 Faith knows there are no Impossibles with God and will trust him where it cannot trace him 4. We glorifie God by being tender of God's Glory God's Glory is dear to him as the apple of his Eye now when we are tender of his Glory by laying to heart his Dishonours this is a glorifying of him An ingenuous Child weeps to see a Disgrace done to his Father Psal. 69.9 The reproaches of them that reproach thee are fallen upon me When we hear God reproached it is as if we were reproached when God's Glory suffers 't is as if we suffered This is to be tender of God's Glory 5. We glorifie God by Fruitfulness Joh. 15.8 Hereby is my Father glorified if ye bring forth much fruit As 't is a Dishonour to God to be barren so Fruitfulness doth honour him Phil. 1.11 Filled with the fruits of righteousness which are to the praise of his glory We must not be like the Fig-tree in the Gospel which had nothing but Leaves but like the Pomocitron that is continually either mellowing or blossoming it is never without Fruit. 'T is not Profession but Fruit glorifies God God expects to have his Glory from us this way 1 Cor. 9.7 Who plants a vineyard and eats not of the fruit of it Trees in the Forrest may be barren but Trees in the Garden are fruitful We must bring forth the Fruits of Love and Good Works Matth. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven Faith doth sanctifie our Works and Works do testifie our Faith To be doing good to others to be Eyes to the Blind Feet to the Lame doth much glorifie God And thus Christ did glorifie his Father He went about doing good Acts 10.38 By being fruitful we are fair in God's Eyes Jer. 11.16 The Lord called thy name a green olive-tree fair and of goodly fruit And we must bear much Fruit it is Muchness of Fruit glorifies God if ye bear much Fruit. The Spouse's Breasts are compared to Clusters of Grapes Cant. 7.7 to shew how fertile she was Tho' the lowest degree of Grace may bring Salvation to you yet not so much Glory to God it was not a spark of Love Christ commended in Mary but much love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 she loved much Luke 7.47 6. We glorifie God by being contented in that State where his Providence hath set us we give God the Glory of his Wisdom in that we rest satisfied with what he carves out to us Thus did holy Paul glorifie God the Lord had cast him into as great variety of Condition as any Man in Prisons more frequent in Deaths oft 2 Cor. 11.23 yet he had learned to be content St. Paul could sail either in a Storm or a Calm he could be any thing that God would have him he could either want or abound Phil. 4.13 A good Christian argues thus It is God hath put me in this Condition he could have raised me higher if he pleas'd but that might have been a Snare to me God hath done it
Eye was upon him so which way soever we turn our selves still God's Eye is upon us Iob 37.16 Dost thou know the balancing of the Clouds the Works of him who is perfect in knowledge God knows whatever is knowable he knows Future Contingencies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys. He foretold Israels coming out of Babylon and the Virgins conceiving By this the Lord proves the Truth of his God-head against Idol-Gods Isa. 41.23 Indicate Futura Shew the things that are to come hereafter that we may know ye are gods The Perfection of God's Knowledge is that it cannot be searched out to perfection Job 11.7 What Angel can reach the top of these Pyramids But 1. God's Knowledge is Primary He is the Original the Patern and Prototype of all Knowledge others borrow their Kowledge of him the Angels light their Lamps at this glorious Sun 2. God's Knowledge is Pure It is not contaminated with the Object Divina Natura non est immista r●bus aut sordibus inquinata Aug. Though God knows sin yet it is to hate and punish it No Evil can mix or incorporate with his Knowledge no more than the Sun can be defiled with the Vapors which arise from the Earth 3. God's Knowledge is Facil it is without any difficulty We study and search for Knowledge Prov. 2.4 If thou seekest for her as Silver But the Lamp of God's Knowledge is so infinitely bright that all things are easily intelligible to him 4. God's Knowledge is infallible there is no mistake in his Knowledge Humane Knowledge is subject to errour and misprision A Physician may mistake the Cause of a Disease but God's Knowledge is un-erring he can neither deceive nor be deceived He cannot deceive because he is Truth nor be deceived because he is Wisdom 5. God's Knowledge is Instantanious Our Knowledge is successive one thing after another We argue from the Effect to the Cause God knows Things past present and to come uno intuitu at once They are all before him in one intire prospect 6. God's Knowledge is Retentive he never looseth any of his Knowledge he hath reminiscentia as well as intelligentia he remembers as well as understands Many things elapse out of our Mind but God's Knowledge is eternized Things transacted a thousand years ago are as fresh to him as if they were done but the last minute Thus he is Perfect in Knowledge Object But is it not said Gen. 18.21 I will go down and see whether they have done according to the cry which is come up unto me and I will know Resp. It could not be a nesciency that God was ignorant because there is mention made of a Cry but the Lord speaks there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the manner of a Judge who will first examine the Cause before he passeth the Sentence God when he is upon a work of Justice is not in a Riot as if he did not care where he hits but he goes in the way of a Circuit against Offenders he lays Iudgment to the Line and Righteousness to the Plummet Isa. 28.17 Object Hos. 13.12 The iniquity of Ephraim is bound up his sin is hid Resp. Not that his sin was hid from God but his sin is hid that is it is recorded it is laid up against a Day of Reckoning That this is the meaning is clear by the fore-going words His iniquity is bound up as the Clerk of the Assizes binds up the Indictments of Malefactors in a Bundle and at the Assizes brings out the Indictments and reads them in Court so God binds up Mens sins in a Bundle and at the Day of Judgment this Bundle shall be opened and all their sins brought to light before Men and Angels That God is thus infinite in his Knowledge 1. It cannot but be so For he who is the Original Cause and gives a Being to things must needs have a clear inspection into them Psal. 94 9. He that planted the Ear shall not he hear he that formed the Eye shall not he see He who makes a Watch or Engine knows all the Workmanship in it God that made the Heart knows all the Motions and Fallacies of it He is like Ezekiel's Wheels full of Eyes and as Austin saith Totus oculis all eye 2. It ought to be so for he is to be Iudge of all the World Gen. 18.25 There are so many Causes to be brought before him and so many Persons to be tried that he must have a most exquisite perfect Knowledge or he could not do Iustice. An ordinary Judge cannot proceed without a Jury the Jury must search the Cause and give in their Verdict but God can judge without a Jury He knows all things in and of himself and needs no Witness to inform him A Judge judgeth only Matters of Fact but God judgeth the Heart He not only judgeth wicked Actions but wicked Designs He sees the Treason of the Heart and punisheth it Use 1. Is God infinite in Knowledge 1 Iohn 1.5 He is Light and in him is no Darkness then how unlike are they to God who are Darkness and in them is no Light who are destitute of Knowledge such as the Indians who never heard of God And are there not many among us who are no better than baptized Heathens who are to seek in the first Principles of the Oracles of God It is sad that after the Sun of the Gospel hath shined so long in our Horison yet to this day the Veil should be upon their Heart Such as are inveloped with Ignorance cannot give God a reasonable Service Rom. 12.1 Ignorance is the Nurse of Impiety the Schoolmen say Omne peccatum fundatur in ignorantia Jer. 9.3 They proceed from evil to evil and know not me saith the Lord. Where Ignorance reigns in the Understanding Lust rageth in the Affections Prov. 19.2 That the Mind be without Knowledge it is not good neither Faith nor Fear no Faith for Knowledge carries the Torch before Faith Psal. 9.10 They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee A Man can no more believe without Knowledge than the Eye can see without Light Nor Fear of God How can they fear him whom they do not know The Covering of Haman's Face was a sad Presage of Death When Peoples Minds are covered with Ignorance this Covering of the Face is a fatal fore-runner of Destruction 2. If God be a God of Knowledge then see the folly of Hypocrisy Hypocrites do not virtutem facere but fingere Melanct. they carry it fair with Men but care not how bad their Hearts are they live in secret sin Psal. 73.11 They say how doth God know Psal. 10.11 God hath forgotten he ●ideth his face he will never see it But Psal. 147.5 His Understanding is infinite He hath a Grate Crates that looks into Mens Breasts he hath a Key for the Heart he beholds all the sinful workings of Men's Spirits As in a Glass-Hive we can see the Bees working in their Combs Matth.
6.4 he sees in secret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in impios habet Rivet As a Merchant enters down Debts in his Book so God hath his Diary or Day-Book and he enters down every sin into the Book He makes a Critical Discant upon Mens Actions Ieroboam's Wife disguised her self that the Prophet should not know her but he discern'd her 1 Kings 14.6 Why feignest thou thy self to be another The Hppocrite thinks to prevaricate and juggle with God but God will unmask him Eccles. 12.14 God shall bring every work into Iudgment with every secret thing Jer. 29.23 They have committed Villany in Israel even I know and am a witness saith the Lord. I but the Hypocrite hopes he shall colour over his sin and make it look very specious Absolom masks over his Treason with the pretence of a Religious Vow Iudas dissembles his Envy at Christ and Covetousness with a pretence of Charity to the Poor John 12.5 Iehu makes Religion a stirrop to his Ambitious Design 1 Kings 10.16 but God sees through these Figleaves You may see a Jade under his gilt Trappings Ier. 16.17 Their Iniquities is not hid from my eyes And he that hath an Eye to see will find an Hand to punish Use 2. of Exhortation Is God so infinite in his Knowledge then we should always set our selves as under his Omniscient Eye Sic vivendum est tanquam in conspectu Seneca Let us set David's Prospect before our Eye Psal. 16.8 I have set the Lord always before me Seneca counselled Lucilius that whatever he was doing he should imagine some of the Roman Worthies beheld him and then he would do nothing dishonourable The consideration of God's Omnisciency would 1. Be preventive of much sin The Eye of Man will restrain from sin and will not God's Eyes much more Esther 7.8 Will he force the Queen before me when I stand and look on Will we sin when our Judge looks on Would Men speak so vainly if they considered God over-heard them Latimer took heed to every word in his Examination when he heard the Pen go behind the Hangings So what care would Persons have of their words if they remembred God heard and the Pen is going in Heaven Would Men go after strange Flesh if they believed God were a Spectator of their wickedness and would make them do Pennance in Hell for it would they defraud in their Dealings and use false Weights if they thought God saw them and for making their Weights lighter would make their damnation heavier 2. The setting our selves as under the Eye of God's Omnisciency would cause Reverence in the Worship of God God sees the frame and carriage of our Hearts when we come before him How would this call in our stragling thoughts how would this animate and spirit Duty it would make us put fire to the Incense Acts 26.7 The Tribes instantly served God day and night 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnibus venibus with the utmost zeal and intensness of Spirit To think God is in this place he beholds us would add Wings to Prayer and Oil to the flame of our Devotion 2. Is God's Knowledge infinite study sincerity be what you seem 1 Sam. 16.7 The Lord looketh upon the heart Men judge of the Heart by the Actions God judgeth of the Actions by the Heart If the Heart be sincere God will see the Faith and wink at the failing Asa had his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Blemishes but his Heart was right with God 2 Chron. 15.17 God saw his Sincerity and pardoned his Infirmity Sincerity in a Christian is like Chastity in a Wise which doth excuse many Failings Sincerity makes our Duties acceptable like Musk among Linen that perfumes it As Iehu said to Iehonadab 2 Kings 10.15 Is thy heart right with me and he said it is if it be saith he give me thy hand and he took him up into the Chariot So if God sees our heart is right that we love him and design his glory now saith he give me your Prayers and Tears now you shall come up with me into the triumphant Chariot of Glory Sincerity makes our Services to be golden and God will not cast away this Gold though it may want some weight Is God Omniscient and his Eye chiefly upon the Heart wear this Girdle of Truth about you and never leave it off Use 3. of Comfort Is God a God of infinite Knowledge then there is Comfort 1. To the Saints in particular 2. To the Church in general in three Respects 1. In case of Private Devotion Christian thou settest hours apart for God thy Thoughts run upon him as thy Treasure God takes notice of every good Thought Mal. 3.17 He had a Book of Remembrance written for them that thought upon his Name Thou enterest into thy Closet and prayest to thy Father in secret he hears every sigh and groan Psal. 38.9 My groaning is not hid from thee Thou waterest the Seed of thy Prayer with Tears God bottles every Tear Psal. 56.8 Put thou my Tears into thy bottle When the Secrets of all Hearts shall be opened God will make an honourable mention of the Zeal and Devotion of his People and he himself will be the Herauld of their Praises 1 Cor. 4.5 Then shall every man have praise of God 2. The Infiniteness of God's Knowledge is a Comfort in case the Saints have not so clear a Knowledge of themselves They find so much Corruption that they judge they have no Grace Gen. 25.22 If it be so why am I thus If I have Grace why is my Heart in so dead and earthly a frame O remember God is of infinite Knowledge he can spy Grace where thou canst not he can see Grace hid under Corruption as the Stars may be hid under a Cloud God can see that Holiness in thee which thou canst not discern in thy self He can spy the flower of Grace in thee though overtop'd with weeds 1 Kings 14.13 Because there is in him some good thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God sees some good thing in his People when they can see no Good in themselves and though they judge themselves he will give them an Absolution 3. It is Comfort in respect of Personal Injuries It is the Saints lot to suffer The Head being crowned with Thorns the Feet must not tread upon Roses if Saints find a real Purgatory 't is in this Life but this is the Comfort God sees what wrong is done to them The Apple of his Eye is touched and is not he sensible St. Paul was scourged by cruel Hands 1 Cor. 11.35 Thrice was I beaten with Rods as if you should see a Scullion whip the King's Son God beholds it Exod. 3.7 I know their sorrows The Wicked make wounds in the backs of the Saints and then pour in Vinegar God writes down their Cruelty Believers art part of Christs Mystical Body and for every drop of a Saint's Blood spilt God puts a drop of Wrath in his Vial. 2. Comfort
decreed the time of my Life in the use of Means so God hath decreed my Salvation in the use of Word Prayer Sacraments And as a Man that refuseth his ●ood murders himself so he that refuseth to work out his Salvation doth destroy himself The Vessels of Mercy are said to be prepar'd unto Glory Rom. 9.23 How are they prepar'd but by being sanctified and that cannot be but in the use of Means therefore let not God's Decree take thee off from Holy Endeavour A good Saying of Dr. Preston Hast thou an Heart to pray to God it is a sign no Decree of Wrath is passed against thee Use 1. If God's Decree be Eternal and Unchangeable then God doth not Elect our Faith foreseen as the Arminians Rom. 9.11 The children being not yet born that the purpose of God according to election might stand It was said Iacob have I loved Esau have I hated We are not elected for Holiness but to Holiness Eph. 1.3 If we are not justified for our Faith much less elected for our Faith but we are not justified for it We are said to be justified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through Faith as an Instrument Eph. 2.8 but not for Faith as a Cause and if not justified for Faith then much less elected God's Decree of Election is Eternal and Unchangeable therefore depends not upon Faith foreseen Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed They were not elected because they believed but they believed because they were elected Use 2. If God's Decree be Unchangeable 't is Comfort in two Cases 1. Concerning God's Providences towards his Church We are ready to quarrel with Providence if every thing doth not jump with our Desire Remember God's Work goes on and nothing falls out but what he hath decreed from Eternity 2. God hath decreed Troubles for the Churches good the troubling of God's Church is like the Angel's troubling the Water Ioh. 5.4 which made way for healing his People He hath decreed Troubles in the Church His fire is in Sion and his furnace in Ierusalem Isa. 31.9 The Wheels in a Watch move cross one to another but they all carry on the Motion of the Watch So the Wheels of Providence often move cross to our Desires but still they carry on God's unchangeable Decree Dan. 12.10 Many shall be made white God lets the Waters of Affliction be poured on his People he doth but lay them a Whitening Therefore murmur not at God's Dealings His Work goes on nothing falls out but what he hath wisely decreed from Eternity every thing shall promote God's Design and fulfil his Decree 2. Comfort to the Godly in regard of their Salvation 2 Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God stands sure having this seal the Lord knows who are his God's Counsel of Election is Unchangeable once elected and for ever elected Rev. 3.5 I will not blot his name out of the book of life The Book of God's Decree hath no Errata's in it no blottings out once justified never unjustified Hos. 13.14 Repentance shall be hid from mine eyes God never repents of his electing Love ● Joh. 13.1 He loved them to the end Therefore if thou art a Believer comfort thy self with this the Immutability of God's Decree Use 3. To conclude a word to the Wicked who march furiously against God and his People let them know God's Decree is Unchangeable God will not alter it nor can they break it and while they resist God's Will they fulfil it There 's a twofold Will of God Voluntas praecepti decreti The Will of God's Precept and of his Decree While the Wicked resist the Will of God's Precept they fulfil the Will of his Permissive Decree Iudas betrays Christ Pilate condemns him the Souldiers crucify him while they resisted the Will of God's Precept they fulfilled the Will of his Permissive Decree Acts 4.28 Such as are wicked God commands one thing they do the quite contrary to keep Sabbath they prophane it while they disobey his Command they fulfil his Permissive Decree If a Man set up two Nets one of Silk the other of Iron the Silken Net may be broken not the Iron God's Commands are the Silken Net while Men break the Silken Net of God's Command they are taken in the Iron Net of his Decree while they sit backward to God's Precepts they row forward to his Decree his Decree to permit their Sin and to punish them for their Sin permitted Of the Wisdom of GOD. THE next Attribute is Gods ' Wisdom which is one of the brightest Beams of the Godhead Iob 9.4 He is wise in heart Kacham lavau The Heart is the Seat of Wisdom Cor in Hebraeo sumitur pro Iudicio Pineda Among the Hebrews the Heart is put for Wisdom Iob 34.32 Let Men of Understanding tell me In the Hebrew Let Men of Heart tell me God is wise in heart that is he is most wise 1. God is only wise he doth monopolize and ingross all Wisdom Ergo he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the only wise God 1 Tim. 1.17 All the Treasures of Wisdom are lock'd up in him and no Creature can have any Wisdom but as God is pleased to give it out of his Treasury 2. God is perfectly wise there is no defect in his Wisdom Men may be wise in some things but in other things may betray imprudence and weakness But God is the Exemplar and Pattern of Wisdom and the Pattern must be perfect Matth. 5.48 God's Wisdom appears in two things 1. His Infinite Intelligence 2. His Exact Working 1. His Infinite Intelligence He knows the most profound obstruse Secrets Dan. 2.28 He knows the Thoughts which are the most intricate subtil things Amos 4.13 He declareth to Man what is his thought Let Sin be contrived never so politickly God will pull off all Masks and Disguises and make an Heart-Anatomy He knows all future Contingencies ante intuitu all things are before him in one clear Prospect 2. His exact curious Working He is wise in heart his wisdom lies in his works These Works of God are bound up in three great Volumes where we may read his Wisdom 1. The Work of Creation The Creation as it is a Monument of God's Power so a Looking-glass in which we may see his Wisdom None but a wise God could so curiously contrive the World Behold the Earth deck'd with variety of Flowers which are both for Beauty and Fragrancy the Heaven bespangled with Lights we may see the glorious Wisdom of God blazing in the Sun twinkling in the Stars His Wisdom is seen in the marshalling and ordering every thing in its proper Place and Sphere If the Sun had been set lower it would have burnt us if higher it would not have warm'd us with its Beams God's Wisdom is seen in appointing the Seasons of the Year Psal. 74.17 Thou hast made Summer and Winter If it had been all Summer the Heat would have scorched us if all Winter the Cold would
strike a strait stroak by crooked sticks God hath oft made his Church grow and flourish by persecution The showrs of Blood have made her more fruitful Iulian. Exod. 1.10 Come let us deal wisely with them least they multiply And that way they took to suppress them made them multiply Vers. 12. The more the afflicted them the more they multiplied Like Ground the more it is harrowed it bears the better Crop The Apostles were scattered by reason of Persecution and their scattering was like the scattering of Seed they went up and down and preached the Gospel and brought in daily Converts Paul was put in Prison and his Bonds were a Means to enlarge the Gospel Phil. 1.12 3. The wisdom of God is seen in making the most desperate Evils turn to the good of his Children As several poisonful Ingredients wisely tempered by the skill of the Artist make a Soveraign Medicine so God makes the most deadly Afflictions co-operate for the good of his Children He purifies them and prepares them for Heaven 2 Cor. 4.17 These hard Frosts hasten the Spring-flowers of Glory The wise God by a Divine Chymistry turns Afflictions into Cordials God makes his People gainers by losses and turns their Crosses into Blessings 4. The wisdom of God is seen in this that the sins of Men shall carry on God's work yet that he should have no hand in their sins The Lord permits sin but doth not approve it He hath an Hand in the Action in which sin is but not in the sin of the Action As in the crucifying of Christ so far as it was a Natural Action God did concur if he had not given the Jews Life and Breath they could not have done it but as it was a sinful Action so God abhorred it A Musitian plays upon a Viol out of tune the Musitian is the Cause of the sound but the jarring and discord is from the Viol it se●f so Men's natural Motion is from God but their sinful Motion is from themselves A Man that rides on a lame Horse his riding is the Cause why the Horse goes but the lameness is from the Horse it self Herein is God's wisdom the sins of Men shall carry on his Work yet he hath no hand in them 5. The wisdom of God is seen in helping in the desperate Cases God loves to shew his wisdom when Humane Help and Wit fail Exquisite Lawyers love to wrestle with Nicities and Difficulties in the Law to shew their skil the more God's wisdom is never at a loss but when Providences are darkest now appears the Morninst-star of Deliverance Psal. 136.23 Who remembred us in our low condition Sometimes God melts away the Spirits of his Enemies Iosh. 2.24 Sometimes he finds them other work to do and sounds a Retreat to them as he did to Saul when he was pursuing David The Philistines are in the Land In the Mount will God be seen When the Church seems to be upon the Altar her Peace and Liberty ready to be Sacrificed now comes the Angel 6. God's wisdom is seen in befooling wise men and making their wisdom a means of their overthrow Achitophel had deep Policy 2 Sam. 16.23 The counsel of Achitophel which he counselled was as if a man had enquired at the Oracle of God but he consulted his own shame The Lord turned his counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 17.23 Job 5.13 God taketh the wise in their own craftiness that is when they think to deal wisely he not only disappoints them but insnares them The Snares they lay for others catch themselves Psal. 9.16 In the Net which they hid is their own foot taken God loves to counter-plot Politicians he makes use of their own Wit to undo them and hangs Haman upon his own Gallows Use 1. Adore the wisdom of God it is an infinite Deep the Angels cannot search into Rom. 11.33 His ways are past finding out And as we should Adore so we should Rest in the wisdom of God God sees what Condition is best for us Did we believe the wisdom of God it would keep us from murmuring Rest in God's wisdom in several Cases 1. In want of Spiritual Comfort God is wise he sees it good sometimes we should be without Comfort Perhaps we should be lifted up with Spiritual Enlargements as Paul with his Revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 'T is hard to have the Heart low when Comfort is high God sees Humility is better for us then Ioy. 'T is better to want Comfort and be humble then to have it and be proud 2. In want of bodily strength rest in God's wisdom he sees what is best Perhaps the less Health the more Grace Weaker in Body the stronger we are in Faith 2 Cor. 4.16 Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day At Rome there were two Laurel Trees when the one withered the other flourished The inward Man is renewed When God shakes the Tree of the Body he is now gathering the Fruits of Righteousness Hebr. 12.11 Sickness is God's Launce to let out the Impostbume of sin Isa. 27.9 3. In case of God's Providences to his Church we wonder what God is doing with us and are ready to kill our selves with Care Rest in God's wisdom he knows best what he hath to do Psal. 77.19 His footsteps are not known Trust him where you cannot trace him God is most in his way when we think he is most out of the way When we think God's Church is as it were in the Grave and there is a Tombstone laid upon her God's wisdom can rowl away the Stone from the Sepulchre Christ cometh leaping over Mountains Cant. 2.8 Either his power can remove the Mountain or his wisdom knows how to leap over it 4. In case we are low in the World or have but little Oil in our Cruise Rest in God's wisdom he sees it best it is to cure Pride and Wantonness God knew if thy Estate had not been lost thy Soul had been lost God he saw Riches would be a Snare to thee 1 Tim. 6.9 Art thou troubled that God hath prevented a Snare God will make thee rich in Faith what thou lackest in Temporals shall be made up in Spirituals God will give thee more of his love Thou art weak in Estate yet God will make thee strong in Assurance O rest in God's wisdom he will Carve the best piece for thee 5. In case of the loss of dear Friends a Wife or Child or Husband rest satisfied in God's Wisdom God hath taken away these because he would have more of your Love He breaks these Crutches that we may live more upon him by Faith God would have us learn to go without Crutches Use 2. If God be infinitely wise then let us go to him for Wisdom as Solomon 1 Kings 3.9 Give thy servant an understanding heart and the speech pleased the Lord and there is encouragement for us If any one lack wisdom let him ask of God who giveth liberally
all things he cannot deny himself Answ. Though God can do all things he cannot do that which stains the glory of his Godhead he cannot sin he cannot do that which implies a Contradiction To be a God of Truth and yet deny himself is a Contradiction Use 1. If God be so infinite in Power Fear this great God We are apt to fear such as are in power Ier. 5.22 Fear ye not me saith the Lord will ye not tremble at my presence He hath power to cast our Souls and Bodies into Hell Psal. 90.11 Who knows the power of his wrath God can with the same Breath that made us dissolve us his Eyes are as a flame of fire the Rocks are thrown down by him Nah. 1.6 Solomon saith Where the word of a King is there is power Eccles 8.4 much more where the word of a God is O let us fear this mighty God! The fear of God would drive out all other base Fear Use 2. See the deplorable Condition of wicked Men 1. This Power of God is not for them 2. It is against them 1. This Power of God is not for them they have no Union with God therefore have no warrant to lay claim to his Power His Power is no relief to them He hath power to forgive sins but he will not put forth his power towards an impenitent sinner God's Power is an Eagles wing to carry the Saints to Heaven But what Priviledge is that to the wicked Though a Man will carry his Child in his Arms over a dangerous water yet he will not carry an Enemy in his Arms. God's Power is not engaged to help those that fight against him Let Miseries come upon the Wicked they have none to help them they are like a Ship in a storm without a Pilot driven upon the Rocks 2. This Power of God is against the Wicked God's Power will not be the Sinner's Shield to defend him but a Sword to wound him God's Power will bind the the Sinner in Chains God's Power serves to revenge the wrong done to his Mercy God will be Almighty to damn the Sinner Now in what a condition is every Unbeliever God's Power is engaged against him and it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God Hebr. 10.31 Use 3. It reproves such as do not believe this Power of God We say we do not doubt of God's Power but his Will But indeed it is God's Power that we question Is any thing too hard for God Jer. 32.27 yet we stagger through Unbelief as if the Arm of God's Power were shrunk and he could not help in desperate Cases Take away a King's Power and we un-king him take away the Lord's Power and we un-God him yet how guilty of this are we Did not Israel question God's Power Can he prepare a Table in the Wilderness Psal. 78.19 they thought the Wilderness was a fitter place for making of Graves then spreading of a Table Did not Martha doubt of Christ's Power Iohn 11.39 He hath been dead four days If Christ had been there while Lazarus was sick or when he had been newly dead Martha did not question but Christ could have raised him but he had laid in the Grave four days and now she seemed to question his Power Christ had as much ado to raise her Faith as to raise her dead Brother And Moses though an holy Man yet limits God 's Power through Unbelief Numb 11.21 The People amongst whom I am are six hundred thousand footmen and thou hast said I will give them flesh for a whole month shall the flocks and the herds be slain for them to suffice them or shall all the Fish of the Sea be gathered for them to suffice them And the Lord said unto Moses is the Lord's hand waxed short This is a great Affront to God to go to deny his Power That Men doubt of God's Power appears 1. By their taking indirect Courses Would they defraud in their Dealings use false Weights if they believed the Power of God that he could provide for them 2. By their depending more upon second Causes then upon God 2 Chron. 16.12 In his disease he sought not to the Lord but to the Physitian Use 4. If God be infinite in Power then let us take heed of hardning our hearts against God Iob 9.4 Who hath hardned himself against him and prospered Iob sends a Challenge to all Creatures in Heaven and Earth Who is he did ever take up the Bucklers against God and came of Conquerour For a Person to go on daringly in any sin is to harden his heart against God and as it were to raise a War against Heaven and let him remember God is Elshaddai Almighty he will be too hard for them that oppose him Iob 40.9 Hast thou an arm like God Such as will not bow to his golden Scepter shall be broken with his iron Rod. Iulian hardned his heart against God he opposed him to his Face but what got he at last did he prosper Being wounded in Battel he threw up his Blood into the Air and said to Christ Vicisti Galilaee O Galilean thou hast overcome I acknowledge thy Power whose Name and Truth I have opposed Will Folly contend with Wisdom Weakness with Power Finite with Infinite O take heed of hardning your heart against God! he can send Legions of Angels to avenge his Quarrel 'T is better to meet God with Tears in your Eyes then Weapons in your Hand You may overcome God sooner by Repentance then by Resistance Use 5. Get an Interest in God and then this glorious Power is engaged for you God gives it under his hand that he will put forth the whole Power of his God-head for the good of his People 1 Chron. 17.24 The Lord of hoasts is the God of Israel even a God to Israel This Almightiness of God's Power is a wonderful Support and Comfort to every Believer It was Sampson's Riddle Iudg. 14.14 Out of the strong came forth sweetness So out of the Attribute of God's Power out of this strong comes forth sweetness 'T is Comfort in several Cases 1. In case of strong Corruption My sins saith a Child of God are potent I have no power against this Army that comes against me I pray and humble my Soul by Fasting but my sins return upon me I but dost thou believe the Power of God the strong God can conquer thy strong Corruption though sin be too hard for thee yet not for him he can soften hard hearts quicken the dead Is any thing too hard for the Lord Gen. 18.14 Set God's Power on work By Faith and Prayer say Lord it is not for thy honour that the Devil should have so strong a Party within me O break the head of this Leviathan Abba Father all things are possible to thee 2. In case of strong Temptation Satan is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The strong Man O but remember the Power of God Christ is call'd
God is not bound to force his Mercies upon Men If they wilfully oppose the offer of Grace there sin is to be taxed as the cause of their perishing and not God's justice 2. See the difference between God and a great part of the World they are unjust 1. In their Courts of Judicature they pervert Justice Isa. 10.1 They decree unrighteous decrees The Hebrew word for a Judges Robe Magnil signifies Prevarication Deceit or Injustice It is often truer of the Judge then the Robe The Judge deserves rather to have that Name than the Robe What is a good Law without a good Iudge Injustice lies in two things either not to punish where there is a Fault or to punish where there is no Fault how frequent Again 2. Unjust in their Dealings This is 1. either in using false weights Hos. 12.7 The Balances of deceit are in his hand 'T is sad to have the Bible in one hand and false Weights in the other Or 2. in adulterating Commodities Isa. 1.22 Thy wine is mixed with water when they mix bad grain with good yet sell it for pure grain I can never believe he is good in the first Table who is not good in the second He cannot be godly who is not just Though God doth not bid you be Omnipotent as he is yet be Just as he is Use 2. Imitate God in Justice Let Christ's golden Maxim be observed Matth. 7.12 What you would have men do to you do ye even so to them You would not have them wrong you neither do you them rather suffer wrong than do wrong 1 Cor. 6.7 Why do ye not rather take wrong O be exemplary for Justice Let Justice be your Ornament Iob 29.14 I put on Righteousness viz. Justice as a Robe and a Diadem A Robe for its graceful Beauty and I put it on induebam justitiam A Judge puts on his Robe and puts it off again at Night but Iob did so put on Justice as he did not put it off till Death semper vestiti We must not lay off this Robe of Justice till we lay down our Tabernacle If you have any thing of God in you you will be like him By every unjust Action you do deny your selves to be Christians you stain the glory of your Profession Heathens will rise up in Judgment against you The Sun might sooner alter its Course than he could be turned from doing Justice Use 3. If God be just there will be a Day of Judgment Now things are out of Course Sin is rampant Saints are wronged they are often cast in a righteous Cause they can meet with no Justice here Justice is turned into Wormwood but there is a day coming when God will set things right he will do every Man Justice he will crown the righteous and condemn the wicked Acts 17.31 He hath appointed a day c. If God be a just God he will take vengeance God hath given Men a Law to live by they break it there must be a day for the Execution of Offenders a Law not executed is but like a Wooden Dagger for a show At the last Day God's Sword shall be drawn out against Offenders then his Justice shall be reveal'd before all the World God will judge in righteousness Acts 17.31 Shall not the Iudge of all the world do right Gen. 18.25 The Wicked shall drink a Sea of Wrath but not sip one Drop of Injustice At that day shall all Mouths be stopped and God's Justice shall be fully vindicated from all the Cavils and Clamors of unjust Men. Use 4. Comfort to the true Penitent As God is a just God he will pardon him Homo agnoscit Deus ignoscit 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins i. e. confess and forsake he is just to forgive us our sins Not only merciful but just Why just because he hath promised to forgive such Prov. 28.13 If thy heart hath been broken for and from Sin thou maist not only plead God's Mercy but his Iustice for the pardoning thy sin Shew him his Hand and Seal he cannot deny himself The Mercy of GOD. THE next Attribute is God's Goodness or Mercy Mercy is the Result and Effect of God's Goodness Psal. 33.5 Psal. 119.64 So then this is the next Attribute God's Goodness or Mercy The most Learned of the Heathens thought they gave their God Iupiter two Golden Characters when they stiled him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good and Great both these meet in God Greatness and Goodness Majesty and Mercy God is 1. Essentially good in himself And 2. Relative good to us They are both put together Psal. 119.68 Thou art good and dost good This Relative goodness is nothing else but his Mercy which is an innate Propensness in God to pity and succour such as are in Misery Concerning God's Mercy 1 st I shall lay down these Twelve Positions 1. It is the great Design of the Scripture to represent God as Merciful This is a Loadstone to draw Sinners to him Exod. 34.6 The Lord merciful gracious long-suffering abundant in goodness c. Here are six Expressions to set forth God's Mercy and but one to set forth his Justice who will by no means clear the Guilty Psal. 57.10 God's mercy is great above the heavens Psal. 108.4 God is represented as a King and a Rain-bow was about his Throne Rev. 4.2 3. The Rain-bow was an Emblem of Mercy The Scripture doth oftner represent God in his white Robes of Mercy then with his Garments rolled in Bloud oftner with his Golden Scepter then his Iron Rod. Position 2. God is more inclinable to Mercy then Wrath Pronior est Deus ad parcendum quam ad puniendum Mercy is his darling Attribute which he most delights in Mic. 7.18 Mercy pleaseth him 'T is delightful to the Mother saith Chryso'stom to have her Breasts drawn So it is to God to have the Breasts of his Mercy drawn Isa. 27.4 Fury is not in me That is I do not delight in it Acts of Severity are rather forc'd from God he doth not afflict willingly Lam. 3.33 The Bee naturally gives Honey it stings only when it is provoked God doth not punish till he can bear no longer Jer. 44.22 So that the Lord could bear no longer because of the evil of your doings Mercy is God's right Hand that he is most us'd to Inflicting of Punishment is call'd God's strange Work Isa. 28.21 he is not used to it And when the Lord would shave off the Pride of a Nation he is said to hire a Rasor as if he had none of his own Isa. 7.20 He shall shave with a rasor that is hired He is slow to anger Psal. 103.8 But ready to forgive Psal. 86.5 Position 3. There is no Condition but we may spie Mercy in it When the Church was in Captivity she cries out It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed Lam. 3.22 Geographers write of Syracuse in Sicily it is so scituated that the Sun is never out
of sight In all Afflictions we may see some Sunshine of Mercy That outward and inward Troubles do not come together is Mercy Position 4. Mercy sweetens all God's other Attributes God's Holiness without Mercy and his Justice without Mercy were Terrible When the Water was bitter and Israel could not drink Moses cast a Tree into the Water and then they were made sweet How bitter and dreadful were the other Attributes of God did not Mercy sweeten them Mercy sets God's Power on work to help us it makes his Justice become our Friend it shall avenge our Quarrels Position 5. God's Mercy is one of the most Orient Pearls of his Crown it makes his Godhead appear amiable and lovely When Moses said to God I beseech thee shew me thy glory The Lord answer'd him I will make all my goodness pass before thee and I will shew mercy Exod. 33.19 God's Mercy is his Glory his Holiness makes him Illustrious his Mercy makes him Propitious Position 6. Even the Worst tast of God's Mercy such as fight against God's Mercy tast of it The Wicked have some Crumbs from Mercy 's Table The Lord is good to all Psal. 145. ● The sweet Dew drops on the Thistle as well as the Rose The Diocess where Mercy visits is very large Pharaoh's Head was crown'd though his Heart was hardned Position 7. Mercy coming to us in a Covenant is sweetest It was Mercy that God would give Israel Rain and Bread to the full and Peace and Victory over their Enemies Levit. 26.4 5 6. But it was a greater Mercy that God would be their God Verse 12. To have Health is a Mercy but to have Christ and Salvation is a greater Mercy this is like the Diamond in the Ring it casts a more sparkling Luster Position 8. One Act of Mercy engageth God to another Men argue thus I have shown you Kindness already therefore trouble me no more But because God hath shown Mercy he is more ready still to show Mercy his Mercy in Election makes him Justifie Adopt Glorifie one Act of Mercy engageth God to more A Parent 's love to his Child makes him always giving Position 9. All the Mercy in the Creature is derived from God and is but a drop of this Ocean The Mercy and Pity a Mother hath to her Child is from God he that puts the Milk in her Breast puts the Compassion in her Heart therefore God is call'd the Father of Mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 because he begets all the Mercies in the World If God hath put any Kindness into the Creature how much Kindness is in him who is the Father of Mercy Position 10. God's Mercy as it makes the Saints Happy so it should make them Humble Mercy is not the Fruit of our Goodness but the Fruit of God's Goodness Mercy is an Alms that God bestows they have no cause to be Proud that live upon the Alms of God's Mercy Job 10.15 If I be righteous yet will I not lift up my head All my Righteousness is the Effect of God's Mercy therefore I will be humble I will not lift up my Head Position 11. It is Mercy stays the speedy Execution of God's Justice Sinners continually provoke God and make the fury come up in his face Ezek. 38.18 Whence is it God doth not presently Arrest and Condemn them it is not that God cannot do it for he is arm'd with Omnipotency but it is from God's Mercy Mercy gets a Reprieve for the Sinner and stops the speedy Process of Justice God would by his Goodness lead Sinners to Repentance Position 12. 'T is dreadful to have Mercy witness against one How sad was it with Haman when the Queen herself accused him Esth. 7.6 so when this Queen of Mercy shall stand up against a Person and accuse him It is only Mercy that saves a Sinner now how sad to have Mercy become an Enemy If Mercy be an Accuser who shall be our Advocate The Sinner never scapes Hell when Mercy draws up the Indictment I might shew you several Species or Kinds of Mercy Preventing Mercy Spareing Mercy Supplying Mercy Guiding Mercy Accepting Mercy Healing Mercy Quickning Mercy Supporting Mercy Forgiving Mercy Correcting Mercy Comforting Mercy Delivering Mercy Crowning Mercy but I shall speak of the Qualifications or Properties of God's Mercy 1. God's Mercy is free To set up Merit is to destroy Mercy nothing can deserve Mercy because we are polluted in our Bloud nor force it We may force God to punish us not to love us Hos. 14.4 I will love them freely Every Link in the Chain of Salvation is wrought and interwoven with Free-grace Election is free Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen us in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the good pleasure of his will Justification is free Rom. 3.24 Being justified freely by his grace Salvation is free Tit. 3.5 According to his mercy he saved us Say not then I am Unworthy for Mercy is free If God should shew Mercy only to such as are Worthy he should shew Mercy to none at all 2. God's Mercy is an Overflowing Mercy 't is Infinite Psal. 86.5 Plenteous in mercy Eph. 2.4 Rich in mercy Psal. 51.1 Multitude of mercies The Viol of Wrath doth but drop but the Fountain of Mercy runs The Sun is not so full of Light as God is of Mercy God hath Morning-mercies Lam. 3.23 His mercies are new every morning and Night-mercies Psal. 42.8 In the night his song shall be with me God hath Mercies under Heaven those we tast of and in Heaven and those we hope for 3. God's Mercy is Eternal Psal. 103.17 The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting It is repeated six and twenty times in one Psalm His mercy endureth for ever Psal. 136. The Souls of the Blessed shall be ever bathing themselves in this sweet and pleasant Ocean of God's Mercy God's Anger to his Children lasts but a while Psal. 103.9 But his mercy lasts for ever As long as he is God he will be shewing Mercy As his Mercy is overflowing so ever-flowing Use 1. of Information It shews us how we are to look upon God in Prayer not in his Judge's Robes but cloath with a Rain-bow full of Mercy and Clemency add Wings to Prayer When Jesus Christ ascended up to Heaven that which made him go up thither with Joy was I go to my Father so that which should make our Hearts ascend with Joy in Prayer is We are going to the Father of Mercy who sits upon a Throne of Grace Go with Confidence in this Mercy as when one goes to a Fire it is not doubtingly perhaps it will warm me perhaps not Use 2. Believe in this Mercy Psal. 52.8 I trust in the mercy of God for ever God's Mercy is a Fountain opened let down the Bucket of Faith and you may drink of this Fountain of Salvation what greater Encouragement to believe then God's Mercy God counts it his glory to be scattering Pardons he is desirous that sinners
glory he hath fore-ordained whatsoever shall come to pass I should come now to speak concerning the Decrees of God but I have already spoken something to this under the Attribute of God's Immutability God is unchangeable in his Essence and he is unchangeable in his Decrees his Counsel shall stand he hath decreed the Issue of all things and carries them on to their Period by his Providence and therefore I shall proceed to the Execution of his Decrees Quest. VIII The next Question is What is the Work of Creation Resp. It is God's making all things of nothing by the word of his power c. Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created the Heaven and the Earth The Creation is glorious to behold it is a pleasant and fruitful study Some think that Isaac when he went abroad into the Fields to meditate it was in the Book of the Creatures The Creation is the Heathen Man's Bible the Ploughman's Primmer the Travellers Perspective Glass through which he receives the Species and Representation of those infinite Excellencies which are in God The Creation is a large Volume in which God's Works are bound up and this Volume hath three great Leaves in it Heaven Earth Sea The Author of the Creation is God so it is in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God created The World was created in time and could not be from Eternity as Aristotle thought The World must have a Maker it could not make it self If one should go into a far Country and see stately Edifices there he would never imagine that these could build themselves but that there had been some Artificer there to raise such goodly Structures so this great Fabrick of the World could not create it self it must have some Builder and Maker and that is God In the beginning God created To imagine that the Work of the Creation was not framed by the Lord Jehovah is as if we should conceive a curious Lanskip to be drawn without the Hand of a Limner Acts 17.24 God that made the World and all things therein In the work of the Creation there are two things to be considered The making of it The adorning of it I. The making of the World Here consider 1. God made the World without any praeexistent Matter This is the difference between Generation and Creation In Generation there is materia habilis disposita some Matter to work upon But in Creation there is no praeexistent Matter God brought all this glorious Fabrick of the World out of the Womb of Nothing We see our Beginning it was of Nothing Some brag of their Birth and Ancestry you see how little cause they have to boast they came of Nothing 2. God made the World with a Word When Solomon was to build a Temple he needed many Workmen and they all had Tools to work with but God wrought without Tools Psal. 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the Heavens made The Disciples wondered that Christ could with a word calm the Sea Matth. 8.26 27. But it was more with a word to make the Sea 3. God made all things at first very good Gen. 1.31 no defect or deformity The Creation came out of God's hands a curious Piece it was a fair Copy without any Blot written with God's own fingers Psal. 8.3 So perfect was God's Work II. The adorning of the World First God made this great Lump and Mass Rudis indigestaque moles and then beautified it and put it into a dress He divided the Sea and the Earth he deck'd the Earth with Flowers the Trees with Fruit but what is Beauty when it is mask'd over Therefore that we might behold this glory God made the Light The Heavens were bespangled with Sun Moon and Stars that so the Worlds Beauty might be beheld and admired God in the Creation began with things less noble and excellent Vegetables and Sensitives and then the Rational Creatures Angels and Men. Man was the most exquisite Piece in the Creation he is a Microcosme or little World Man was made with deliberation and counsel Gen. 1.26 Let us make Man It is the manner of Artificers to be more then ordinary accurate when they are about their Master-pieces Man was to be a Master-piece of this visible World therefore God did consult about the making of so rare a Piece A Solemn Councel of the Sacred Persons in the Trinity was call'd Let us make Man and let us make him in our own Image On the King's Coin his Image or Effigies is stamp'd so God stamp'd his Image on Man and made him partake of many Divine qualities I shall speak 1. of the Parts of Man's Body 1. The Head the most excellent Architectonical Part 't is the Fountain of Spirits and the Seat of Reason In Nature the Head is the best Piece but in Grace the Heart excels 2. The Eye It is the Beauty of the Face it shines and sparkles like a lesser Sun in the Body The Eye occasions much sin and therefore well may it have Tears in it 3. The Ear which is the Conduit-pipe through which Knowledge is conveyed Better lose our seeing than our hearing for faith cometh by hearing Rom. 10.17 To have an Ear open to God is the best Jewel on the Ear. 4. The Tongue David calls the Tongue his glory Psal. 16.9 because it is an Instrument to set forth the Glory of God The Soul at first was a Viol in tune to praise God and the Tongue did make the Musick God hath given us two Ears but one Tongue to shew that we should be swift to hear but slow to speak God hath set a double fence before the Tongue the Teeth and the Lips to teach us to be wary that we offend not with our Tongue 5. The Heart This is a noble part and Seat of Life 2. The Soul of Man This is the Man of the Man Man in regard of his Soul partakes with the Angels nay as Plato saith the Understanding Will and Conscience are a Glass that resemble the Trinity The Soul is the Diamond in the Ring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Soul is a Vessel of Honour God himself is serv'd in this Vessel It is a Sparkle of Coelestial Brightness saith Damascene If David did so admire the rare Contexture and Workmanship of his Body Psal. 139.13 I am wonderfully made I was curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the Earth If the Cabinet be so curiously wrought what is the Jewel How richly is the Soul embroidered Thus you see how glorious a Work the Creation is and Man especially who is the Epitome of the World Quest. But why did God make the World Resp. 1. Negatively Not for himself he did not need it being infinite He was happy before the World was in reflecting upon his own sublime Excellencies and Perfections 2. God did not make the World to be a place of Mansion for us we are not to abide here for ever Heaven is the Mansion-House Iohn 14.2 the World
me But if it be of Faith where is boasting Faith fetcheth all from Christ and gives all the glory to Christ 't is most humble Grace Hence it is God hath singled out this Grace to be the Condition of the Covenant And if Faith be the Condition of the Covenant of Grace it excludes desperate presumptuous Sinners from the Covenant They say there is a Covenant of Grace and they shall be saved but did you ever know a Bond without a Condition The Condition of the Covenant is Faith and if thou hast no Faith thou hast no more to do with the Covenant than a Foreigner or a Country Farmer with the City Charter Use 1. of Information See the amazing Goodness of God to enter into Covenant with us He never entred into Covenant with the Angels when they fell It was much Condescension in God to enter into Covenant with us in a state of Innocency but it was more to enter into Covenant with us in a state of Enmity In this Covenant of Grace we may see the Cream of God's Love and the working of his Bowels to sinners This is a Marriage-Covenant Ier. 3.14 I am married to you saith the Lord. In the New Covenant God makes himself over to us and what can he give more And he makes over his Promises to us and what better Bond can we have Use 2. of Trial. Whether we are in Covenant with God There are three Characters 1. God's Covenant People are an humble People 1 Pet. 5.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be ye clothed with humility God's People esteem of others better then themselves they shrink into nothing in their own thoughts Phil. 2.3 David cries out I am a worm and no man Psal. 22.6 though a Saint though a King yet a Worm When Moses's Face shin'd he covered it with a Vail God's People when they shine most in Grace are covered with the Vail of Humility Pride excludes from the Covenant God resisteth the proud 1 Pet. 5.5 and sure such are not in Covenant with God whom he resists 2. A People in Covenant with God are a willing People though they cannot serve God perfectly they serve him willingly They do not grudge God a little time spent in his Worship they do not hesitate or murmur at Sufferings they will go through a Sea and a Wilderness if God calls Psal. 110.3 Thy people shall be a willing people Hebr. gnam nedabot a people of willingness This spontanity and willingness is from the attractive Power of God's Spirit the Spirit doth not impellere force but trahere sweetly draw the Will and this willingness in Religion makes all our Services accepted God doth sometimes accept of willingness without the work but never the work without willingness 3. God's Covenant People are a consecrated People they have holiness to the Lord written upon them Cast a placent superis Deut. 7.6 Thou art an holy people to the Lord thy God God's Covenant People are separated from the World and sanctified by the Spirit The Priests under the Law were not only to wash in the great Laver but were araied with glorious Apparel Exod. 28.2 This was Typical to shew God's People are not only washed from gross sin but adorned with holiness of heart they bear not only God's Name but Image Tamerlain refused a Pot of Gold when he saw it had not his Fathers stamp upon it but the Roman stamp Holiness is God's stamp if he doth not see this stamp upon us he will not own us for his Covenant People Use 3. of Exhort To such as are out of Covenant labour to get into Covenant and have God for your God How glad would the old World have been of an Ark How industrious should we be to get within the Arke of the Covenant Consider 1. the Misery of such as live and die out of Covenant with God 1. Such have none to go to in an hour of distress When Conscience accuseth when Sickness approacheth which is but an Harbinger to bespeak a Loding for Death then what will you do whither will you fly will you look to Christ for help He is a Mediator only for such as are in Covenant O! how will you be filled with horrour and despair and be as Saul 1 Sam. 15.28 The Philistines make war against me and the Lord is departed 2. Till you are in Covenant with God there is no Mercy The Mercy-Seat was placed upon the Ark and the Mercy-Seat was no larger then the Ark to shew that the Mercy of God reacheth no further then the Covenant 2. The Excellency of the Covenant of Grace it is a better Covenant then the first made with Adam 1. Because it is more friendly and propitious Those Services which would have been rejected in the first Covenant are accepted in the second Here God accepts of the Will for the Deed 2 Cor. 8.10 here sincerity is crowned In the Covenant of Grace wherein we are weak God will give strength and wherein we come short God will accept of a Surety 2. It is a better Covenant because it is surer 2 Sam. 23.5 Thou hast made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure The first Covenant was not sure it stood upon a tottering foundation Works Adam had no sooner a stock of Righteousness to trade with but he broke but the Covenant of Grace is sure it is confirmed with God's Decree and it rests upon two mighty Pillars the Oath of God and the Blood of God 3. It hath better Priviledges The Covenant of Grace brings preferment Our Nature is now more enobled we are rais'd to higher Glory then in Innocency we are advanced to sit upon Christ's Throne Rev. 3.21 we are by virtue of the Covenant of Grace nearer to Christ then the Angels They are his Friends we his Spouse 3. God is willing to be in Covenant with you Why doth God woe and beseech you by his Ambassadors to be reconciled if he were not willing to be in Covenant Object I would fain be in Covenant with God but I have been a great sinner and I fear God will not admit me into Covenant Resp. If thou seest thy sins and loathest thy self for them yet God will take thee into Covenant Isa. 43.24 Thou hast wearied me with thy iniquities I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions As the Sea covers great Rocks so God's Covenant-Mercy covers great Sins Some of the Jews that crucified Christ yet had their sins washed away in his Blood Object But I am not worthy that ever God should admit me into Covenant Answ. It never came into God's thoughts to make a New Covenant upon Terms of Worthiness If God should shew Mercy to none but such as are worthy then he must shew Mercy to none at all But it is God's design in the New Covenant to advance the riches of Grace to love us freely and when we have no worthiness of our own to accept us through Christ's worthiness Therefore
Priest might offer up Prayer for sins of Ignorance but not of Presumption but Christ's Intercession extends to all the sins of the Elect Of what a bloody colour was David's sin yet it did not exclude Christ's Intercession Quest. What doth Christ in the Work of Intercession Resp. Three things 1. He presents the Merit of his Blood to his Father and in the Virtue of that Price paid pleads for Mercy The High Priest was herein a lively Type of Christ Aaron was to do four things 1. Kill the Beast 2. to enter with the Blood into the Holy of Holies 3. to sprinkle the Mercy Seat with the Blood 4. to kindle the Incense and with the smoak of it cause a Cloud to arise over the Mercy Seat and so the Atonement was made Lev. 16.11 12 13 14 15 16. Christ our High Priest did exactly answer to this Type He was offered up in Sacrifice that Answers to the Priests killing the Bullock And Christ is gone up into Heaven that Answers to to the Priests going into the Holy of Holies And he spreads his Blood before his Father that Answers to the Priests sprinkling the Blood upon the Mercy Seat And he prays to his Father that for his Blood sake he would be propitious to Sinners that Answers to the Cloud of Incense going up And through his Intercession God is pacified that Answers to the Priests making Atonement 2. Christ by his Intercession answers all Bills of Indictment brought in against the Elect. Believers do what they can Sin and then Satan accuseth them to God and Conscience accuseth them to themselves now Christ by his Intercession answers all these Accusations Rom. 8.33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect it is Christ who makes Intercession for us When Aesculus was accused for some Impiety his Brother stood up for him and shewed the Magistrates how he had lost his hand in the Service of the State and so obtained his pardon Thus when Satan accuseth the Saints or the Justice of God lays any thing to their charge Christ shews his own wounds and by Virtue of his bloody Sufferings he answers all the Demands and Challenges of the Law and counter-counter-works Satan's Accusations 3. Christ by his Intercession calls for an Acquittance Lord let the sinner be absolved from guilt and in this sence Christ is called an Advocate 1 Iohn 2.1 He requires that the Sinner be set free in the Court An Advocate differs much from an Orator an Orator useth Rhetorick to perswade and entreat the Judge to shew Mercy to another but an Advocate tells the Judge what is Law thus Christ appears in Heaven as an Advocate he represents what is Law When God's Justice opens the Debt-Book Christ opens the Law-Book Lord saith he thou art a just God and will not be pacified without Blood lo here the Blood is shed therefore in Justice give me a Discharge for these distressed Creatures 'T is equal that the Law being satisfied the Sinner should be acquitted And upon Christ's Plea God sets his hand to the Sinner's Pardon Quest. In what manner Christ interceeds Answ. 1. Freely he pleads our Cause in Heaven and takes no Fee An ordinary Lawyer will have his Fee and sometimes a Bribe too but Christ is not Mercenary How many Causes doth he plead every day in Heaven and will take nothing As Christ laid down his Life freely Iohn 10.15 18. so he interceeds freely 2. Feelingly He is sensible of our condition as his own Hebr. 4.15 We have not an High Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our Infirmity As a tender hearted Mother would plead with a Judge for a Child ready to be condemned O how would her Bowels work how would her Tears trickle down what weeping Rhetorick would she use to the Judge for Mercy Thus the Lord Jesus is full of Sympathy and Tenderness Hebr. 2.17 that he might be a merciful High Priest Though he hath left his Passion yet not his Compassion An ordinary Lawyer is not affected with the Cause he pleads nor doth he care which way it goes It is Profit makes him plead not Affection But Christ interceeds feelingly and that which makes him interceed with Affection is it is his own Cause which he pleads He hath shed his Blood to purchase Life and Salvation for the Elect and if they should not be saved he would lose his purchase 3. Efficaciously It is a prevailing Intercession Christ never lost any Cause he pleaded he was never Non-suited Christ's Intercession must needs be effectual if you consider 1. The Excellency of his Person if the Prayer of a Saint be so prevalent with God Moses's Prayer did bind God's hands Exod. 32.10 Let me alone and Iacob as a Prince prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 and Eliah did by Prayer open and shut Heaven Iam. 5.17 Then what is Christ's Prayer He is the Son of God the Son in whom he is well pleased Matth. 3.17 What will not a Father grant his Son Iohn 11.42 I know that thou always hearest me If God could forget that Christ were a Priest yet he cannot forget that he is a Son 2. Christ prays for nothing but what his Father hath a mind to grant There is but One Will between Christ and his Father Christ prays Sanctifie them through thy Truth and this is the will of God even your sanctification 1 Thess. 4.3 so then if Christ prays for nothing but what God the Father hath a mind to grant then he is like to speed 3. Christ prays for nothing but what he hath power to give What he prays for as he is Man that he hath power to give as he is God Iohn 17.24 Father I will Father there he prays as Man I will there he gives as God This is a great comfort to a Believer when his Prayer is weak and he can hardly pray for himself Christs Prayer in Heaven is mighty and powerful Though God may refuse Prayer as it comes from us yet not as it comes from Christ. 4. Christ's Intercession is always ready at hand The People of God have sins of daily incursion and besides these sometimes they lapse into great sins and God is provoked and his Justice is ready to break forth upon them but Christ's Intercession is ready at hand he daily makes up the Breaches between God and them he presents the Merit of his Blood to his Father to pacifie him When the Wrath of God began to break out upon Israel Aaron presently step'd in with his Censer and offered Incense and so the Plague was staid Numb 16.47 so no sooner doth a Child of God offend and God begins to be angry but immediately Christ steps in and intercedes Father it is my Child hath offended though he hath forgotten his Duty thou hast not lost thy Bowels O pity him and let thy Anger be turned away from him Christ's Intercession is ready at hand and upon the least failings of the Godly he stands up and makes
Desertion and are cast down for want of Assurance Resp. 1. Want of Assurance shall not hinder the Success of the Saints Prayers Sin lived in doth ponere obicem put a Bar to our Prayer but want of Assurance doth not hinder Prayer we may go to God still in an humble fiducial manner A Christian perhaps may think because he doth not see Gods smiling Face therefore God will not hear him This is a mistake Psal. 31.22 I said in my hast I am cut off from before thine eyes nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my Supplication If we pour out Sighs to Heaven God hears every Groan though he doth not shew us his Face he may lend us his Ear. 2. Faith may be strongest when Assurance is weakest the Woman of Canaan had no Assurance but a Glorious Faith O Woman Great is thy Faith Mat. 15.28 Rachel was more Fair but Leah was more Fruitful Assurance is more fair and lovely to look upon but a fruitful Faith God sees is better for us Iohn 20.28 Blessed are they that Believe and feel not 3. When God is out of sight yet he is not out of Covenant Psalm 89.28 My Covenant shall stand fast Though a Wife doth not see her Husbands Face in many Years yet the Marriage Relation holds and he will come again to her after a long Voyage God may be gone from the Soul in Desertion but the Covenant stands fast Isa. 54.10 The Covenant of my Peace shall not be removed Quer. But this Promise was made to the Jews and doth not belong to us Yes Verse 17. This is the Heritage of the Servants of the Lord. This is made to all the Servants of God them that are now living as well as those who lived in the time of the Jews Quest. 8. What should we do to get Assurance Resp. 1. Keep a pure Conscience let no Guilt lie upon the Conscience unrepented of God Seals no Pardons before Repentance God will not pour in the Wine of Assurance into a foul Vessel Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near in full Assurance of Faith having our Hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience Guilt clips the Wings of Comfort he who is conscious to himself of Secret Sins cannot draw near to God in full Assurance he cannot call God Father but Judge keep Conscience as clear as your Eye that no dust of sin fall into it 2. If you would have Assurance be much in the Actings of Grace 1 Tim. 4.7 Exercise thy self unto Godliness Men grow rich by Trading by Trading in Grace we grow rich in Assurance 2 Pet. 1.10 Make your Election sure How Add to your Faith Vertue and to Vertue Knowledge Keep Grace upon the Wing it is the lively Faith flourisheth into Assurance no Man will set up a great Sail in a small Boat but in a large Vessel God sets up the Sail of Assurance in an Heart enlarged in Grace 3. If you would have Assurance cherish the Holy Spirit of God When David would have Assurance he Prays Take not away thy Spirit from me Psal. 51.11 He knew it was the Spirit only that could make him hear the Voice of Joy The Spirit is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter he seals up Assurance 2 Cor. 1.22 therefore make much of the Spirit do not grieve it As Noah opened the Ark to receive the Dove so should we open our Hearts to receive the Spirit This is the Blessed Dove which brings an Olive branch of Assurance in its Mouth 4. Let us lye at the Pool of the Ordinances frequent the Word and Sacrament Cant. 2. He brought me to the Banqueting House and his Banner over me was Love The blessed Ordinances are the Banqueting House where God displays the Banner of Assurance The Sacrament is a Sealing Ordinance Christ made himself known to his Disciples in the breaking of Bread So in the Holy Supper in the breaking of Bread God makes himself known to us to be our God and Portion Quest. 9. How should they carry themselves who have Assurance Resp. 1. If you have Assurance of your Justification do not abuse Assurance 1. 'T is an abusing of Assurance when we grow more remiss in Duty as the Musician having Mony thrown him leaves off playing By Remisness or intermitting the Exercises of Religion we grieve the Spirit and that is the way to have an Imbargo laid upon our Spiritual Comforts 2. We abuse Assurance when we grow Presumptuous and less fearful of sin What because a Father gives his Son an Assurance of his Love and tells him he will entail his Land upon him shall the Son therefore be Wanton and Dissolute This were the way to lose his Fathers Affection and make him cut off the Entail it was an Aggravation of Solomon's Sin His Heart was turned away from the Lord after he had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11.9 'T is bad to sin when one wants Assurance but it is worse to sin when one hath it Hath the Lord seal'd his Love with a Kiss Hath he left a Pawn of Heaven in your Hands and do you thus requite the Lord Will you sin with Manna in your Mouth Doth God give you the sweet Clusters of Assurance to feed on and will you return him wild Grapes It much pleaseth Satan either to see us want Assurance or abuse it This is to abuse Assurance when the Pulse of our Soul beats faster in Sin and slower in Duty 2. If you have Assurance admire this stupendious Mercy You deserv'd that God should give you Gaul and Vinegar to drink and hath he made the Hony-Comb of his Love to drop upon you O fall down and adore his Goodness say Lord How is it that thou shouldest manifest thy self to me and not to other Believers Those whom thou lovest as the Apple of thine Eye yet thou holdest them in Suspence and givest them no Assurance of thy Love though thou hast given them the new Name yet not the White stone though they have the Seed of Grace yet not the Oyl of Gladness though they have the Holy Ghost the Sanctifier yet not the Holy Ghost the Comforter Lord whence is it that thou shouldest manifest thy self to me and make thy Golden Beams of Assurance shine upon my Soul O admire God! this will be the Work of Heaven 3. Let your Hearts be endeared in Love to God If God gives his People Correction they must love him much more when he gives them Assurance Psal. 31.23 O love the Lord ye his Saints Hath God brought you to the Borders of Canaan given you a Bunch of Grapes crown'd you with loving Kindness confirm'd your Pardon under the Broad Seal of Heaven How can you be frozen at such a Fire How can you choose but be turn'd into Seraphins Burning in Divine Love Say as St. Austin Animam meam odio Haberem I would hate my own Soul if I did not find it loving God Give God the Cream and Quintessence of your Love and shew your Love by
grow Grace doth not lye in the Heart as a stone in the Earth but as Seed in the Earth which will spring up first the Blade and then the Ear and then the full Corn in the Ear. 2. Grace cannot but grow from the Sweetness and Excellency of it he that hath Grace is never weary of it but still would have more The Delight he hath in it causeth thirst Grace is the Image of God and a Christian thinks he can never be enough like God Grace instills Peace therefore a Christian cannot but strive to increase in Grace because as Grace grows so Peace grows 3. Grace cannot but grow from a Believers ingrafting into Christ he who is a Cien ingrafted into this noble generous Stock cannot but grow Christ is so full of Sap and vivifical Influence that he makes all inoculated into him grow Fruitful Hos. 14.8 From me is thy Fruit found Quest. 4. What motives or incentives are there to make us grow in Grace Resp. 1. Growth is the end of the Ordinances Why doth a Man lay out cost on Ground Manure and Water it but that it may grow The sincere Milk of the Word is that we may grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 The Table of the Lord is on purpose for our Spiritual Nourishment and encrease of Grace 2. The growth of Grace is the best Evidence of the Truth of it things that have no Life will not grow a Picture will not grow a Stake in the Hedge will not grow but a Plant that hath a Vegetative life grows The growing of Grace shews it to be alive in the Soul 3. Growth in Grace is the beauty of a Christian. The more a Child grows the more it comes to its Favour and Complexion and looks more Ruddy so the more a Christian grows in Grace the more he comes to his Spiritual Complexion he looks fairer Abraham's Faith was beautiful when in its Infancy but at last it grew so Vigorous and Eminent that God himself was in love with it and crown'd Abraham with this Honour to be the Father of the Faithful 4. The more we grow in Grace the more Glory we bring to God Gods Glory is more worth than the Salvation of all Mens Souls This should be our design to raise the Trophies of Gods Glory and how can we do it more than by growing in Grace Iohn 15.8 Hereby is my Father glorified if you bring forth much Fruit. Though the least Dram of Grace will bring Salvation to us yet it will not bring so much Glory to God Phil. 1.11 Fill'd with the Fruits of his Righteousness which are to the Praise of his Glory It commends the skill of the Husbandman when his Plants grow and thrive it is a praise and honour to God when we thrive in Grace 5. The more we grow in Grace the more will God love us Is it not That we pray for The more Growth the more will God love us The Husbandman loves his Thriving Plants the thriving Christian is Gods Hephsibah or chief delight Christ loves to see the Vine flourishing and the Pomegranates budding Cant. 6.11 Christ accepts the truth of Grace but commends the growth of Grace Mat. 8.10 I have not found so great Faith no not in Israel Would you be as the beloved Disciple that lay in Christ's Bosom Would you have much love from Christ Labour for much growth let Faith flourish with good Works and Love increase into Zeal 6. What need we have to grow in Grace There is still something lacking in our Faith 1 Thes. 3.10 Grace is but in its Infancy and Minority and we must be still adding a Cubit to our Spiritual Stature the Apostles said Lord encrease our Faith Luke 17.5 Grace is but weak 2 Sam. 3.39 I am this Day weak tho anointed King So though we are anointed with Grace yet we are but weak and had need arrive at further degrees of Sanctity 7. The growth of Grace will hinder the growth of Corruption The more Health grows the more the Distempers of Body abate So it is in Spirituals the more Humility grows the more the Swelling of Pride is asswaged the more Purity of Heart grows the more the Fire of Lust is abated The growth of Flowers in the Garden doth not hinder the growing of Weeds but the growing of this Flower of Grace hinders the sprouting of Corruption As some Plants have an Antipathy and will not thrive if they grow near together as the Vine and the Bay-tree so where Grace grows Sin will not thrive so fast 8. We cannot grow too much in Grace there is no Nimium no Excess there The Body may grow too great as in the Dropsie but Faith cannot grow too great 2 Thes. 1.3 Your Faith groweth exceedingly here was Exceeding yet no Excess As a Man cannot have too much Health so not too much Grace Grace is the Beauty of Holiness Psal. 110.3 We cannot have too much Spiritual Beauty it will be the only Trouble at Death that we have grown no more in Grace 9. Such as do not grow in Grace decay in Grace non progredi in via est regredi Bern. There is no standing at a stay in Religion either we go forward or backward if Faith doth not grow Unbelief will If Heavenly Mindedness doth not grow Covetousness will A Man that doth not encrease his Stock diminisheth it If you do not improve your Stock of Grace your Stock will decay The Angels on Iacob's Ladder were either ascending or descending if you do not ascend in Religion you descend 10. The more we grow in Grace the more we shall flourish in Glory Though every Vessel of Glory shall be full yet some Vessels hold more he whose Pound gained Ten was made Ruler over Ten Cities Luke 19.17 Such as do not grow much though they do not lose their Glory yet they lessen their Glory If any shall follow the Lamb in whiter and larger Robes of Glory than others they shall be such as have shined most in Grace here Use. Lament we may the want of growth Religion in many is grown only into a Form and Profession This is to grow in Leaves not in Fruit. Many Christians are like a Body in an Atrophy which doth not thrive they are not nourished by the Sermons they hear like the Angels who assumed Bodies they did eat but did not grow It is very suspicious where there is no growth there wants a Vital Principle Some instead of growing better grow worse they grow more Earthly more Profane 2 Tim. 3.13 Evil Men proficient in Pejus shall wax worse and worse Many grow Hell-ward they grow past shame Eph. 23.5 they are like some Watred Stuffs which grow more rotten Quest. 5. How shall we know whether we grow in Grace Resp. For the deciding of this Question I shall First shew the signs of our not not growing Secondly Of our growing 1. The Signs of our not growing in Grace but rather falling into a Spiritual Consumption Sign 1. When
Willingness You love to see your Servants go chearfully about your Work Under the Law God would have a Free-Will-Offering Deut. 16.10 Hypocrites obey God grudgingly and against their Will they do facere bonum but not velle Cain brought his Sacrifice but not his Heart 'T is a true Rule quicquid Cor non facit non fit What the Heart doth not do is not done Willingness is the Soul of Obedience God sometimes accepts of Willingness without the Work but never of the Work without Willingness Chearfulness shews that there is Love in the Duty and Love doth to our Services as the Sun doth to the Fruit Mellow and Ripen them and make them come off with a better Relish 2. Obedience must be Devout and Fervent Rom. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fervent in Spirit c. Quae ebullit prae ardore It alludes to Water that boils over So the Heart must boil over with Hot Affections in the Service of God The Glorious Angels who for their burning in Fervour and Devotion are called Seraphims these God chooseth to serve him in Heaven The Snail under the Law was unclean because a dull Sloathful Creature Obedience without Fervency is like a Sacrifice without Fire Why should not our Obedience be lively and Fervent God deserves the Flower and Strength of our Affections Domitian would not have his Statue carved in Wood or Iron but in Gold Lively Affections make Golden Services It is Fervency makes Obedience acceptable Eliah was fervent in Spirit and his Prayers opened and shut Heaven And again he pray'd and fire fell on his Enemies 2 Kings 1.10 Eliah's Prayer fetch'd Fire from Heaven because being fervent it carried Fire up to Heaven Quicquid decorum ex Fide proficiscitur Aug. 3. Obedience must be extensive it must reach to all Gods Commands Psal. 119.6 Then shall I not be ashamed or as it is in the Hebrew lo Ebosh blush when I have respect to all thy Commandements Quicquid propter Deum fit aequaliter fit There is a Stamp of Divine Authority upon all Gods Commands and if I obey one Precept because God Commands I must obey all True Obedience runs through all the Duties of Religion as the Blood through all the Veins or the Sun through all the Signs of the Zodiack A good Christian makes Gospel Piety and Moral Equity kiss each other Herein some discover their Hypocrisie they will obey God in some things which are more facile and may raise their Repute but other things they leave undone Mark 10.21 One thing is lacking Unum deest Herod would hear Iohn Baptist but not leave his Incest Some will Pray but not give Alms others will give Alms but not Pray Matt. 23.23 Ye pay Tithe of Mint and Anise and have neglected the weightier things of the Law Iudgment Mercy and Faith The Badger hath one foot shorter than the other So these are shorter in some Duties than in other God likes not such partial Servants that will do some part of the work he sets them about and leave the other undone 4. Obedience must be sincere viz. We must aim at the Glory of God in it Finis specificat actionem In Religion the end is all The end of our Obedience must not be to stop the Mouth of Conscience or to gain Applause and Preferment but that we may grow more like God and bring more Glory to God 1 Cor. 10.31 Do all to the Glory of God That which hath spoiled many glorious Actions and made them lose their Reward is when Mens aims have been wrong The Pharisees gave Alms but blowed a Trumpet that they might have Glory of Men Matt. 6 2. Alms should shine but not blaze Iehu did well in destroying the Baal-worshippers and God commended him for it but because his Aims were not good he aim'd at setling himself in the Kingdom therefore God look'd upon it no better than Murder Hos. 1.4 I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the House of Jehu O let us look to our Ends in Obedience it is possible the Action may be right and not the Heart 2 Chron. 25.2 Amaziah did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect Heart Two things are chiefly to be eyed in Obedience the Principle and the End A Child of God though he shoots short in his Obedience yet he takes a right Aim 5. Obedience must be in and thorough Christ Eph. 1.6 He hath accepted us in the Beloved Not our Obedience but Christs Merits procure acceptance we must in every part of Worship tender up Christ to God in the Arms of our Faith Unless we serve God thus in Hope and Confidence of Christs Merits we do rather provoke God than please him As when King Uzziah would offer Incense without a Priest God was angry with him and struck him with Leprosie 2 Chron. 26.16 So when we do not come to God in and thorough Christ we offer up Incense to God without a Priest and what can we expect but severe Rebukes 6. Obedience must be Constant Psal. 106.3 Blessed is he who doth righteousness Be Col Gnet at all times True Obedience is not like an high Colour in a Fit but it is a right Sanguine It is like the Fire on the Altar which was always kept Burning Lev. 6.13 Hypocrites Obedience is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for a Season It is like plaistering Work which is soon washed off but true Obedience is constant Though we meet with Affliction we must go on in our Obedience Iob 17.9 The Righteous shall hold on his way We have vowed Constancy We have vowed to renounce the Pomp and Vanities of the World and to fight under Christ's Banner to the Death When a Servant hath entred into Covenant with his Master and the Indentures are sealed then he cannot go back he must serve out his time There are Indentures drawn in Baptism and in the Lords Supper The Indentures are renewed and sealed on our part that we will be Faithful and Constant in our Obedience Therefore we must imitate Christ who became obedient to the Death Phil. 2.8 The Crown is set upon the Head of Perseverance Rev. 2.26 He that keeps my works unto the end to him will I give the morning Star Use 1. This indicts such who live in a Contradiction to this Text they have cast off the Yoke of Obedience Ier. 44.16 As for the word which thou hast spoken to us in the Name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee God bids Men pray in their Family they live in the total Neglect of it He bids them Sanctifie the Sabbath they follow their Pleasures on that day God bids them abstain from the Appearance of Sin they do not abstain from the Act They live in the act of Revenge in the Act of Uncleanness This is an high Contempt of God 't is Rebellion and Rebellion is as the Sin of Witchcraft Quest. Whence is it Men do not obey God They know their Duty
Variety is wanting we are apt to nauseate to feed only on Hony would breed Loathing but in God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all Variety of Fulness Col. 1.19 He is an Universal Good Commensurate to all our Wants He is Bonum in quo omnia Bona a Sun a Portion an Horn of Salvation He is called the God of all Comfort 2 Cor. 1.3 There is a Complication of all Beauties and Delights in him Health hath not the comfort of Beauty nor Beauty of Riches nor Riches of Wisdom but God is the God of all Comfort Fourthly In the chief Good there must be Eternity God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is a Treasure that can neither be drawn low nor drawn dry Though the Angels are still spending on him he can never be spent he abides for ever Eternity is a Flower of his Crown Now if God be our God here is enough to let in full Contentment into our Souls What though we want Torch-light if we have the Sun What if God deny us the Flower if he hath given us the Jewel How should this rock a Christians Heart quiet If we say God is our God and we are not content we have cause to question our Interest in him III. If we can clear up this Covenant-Union that God is our God let this chear and revive us in all Conditions To be content with God is not enough but to be chearful what greater Cordial can you have than Union with Deity When Jesus Christ was ready to Ascend he could not leave a richer consolation with his Disciples than this Tell them I go to my God and their God John 20.17 Who should rejoyce if not they who have an Infinite Alsufficient Eternal God to be their Portion who are as Rich as Heaven can make them What though I want Health I have God who is the Health of my Countenance and my God Psal. 42.11 What though I am low in the World if I have not the Earth I have him that made it The Philosopher comforted himself with this though he had no Musick or Vine-Trees yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here are the Houshold Gods with me So though we have not the Vine or Fig-Tree yet we have God with us I cannot be Poor saith St. Bernard as long as God is Rich for his Riches are mine O Let the Saints rejoyce in this Covenant-Union To say God is ours is more than to say Heaven is ours Heaven would not be Heaven without God All the Stars cannot make Day without the Sun All the Angels those Morning Stars cannot make Heaven without Christ the Sun of Righteousness And as to have God for our God is matter of rejoycing in Life so especially it will be at our Death Let a Christian think thus I am going to my God A Child is glad when he is going home to his Father This was Christs comfort when he was leaving the World Iohn 20.17 I go to my God And this is a Believers Death-bed Cordial I am going to my God I shall change my Place but not my Kindred I go to my God and my Father IV. If God be our God then let us break forth into Doxology and Praise Psal. 118.28 Thou art my God and I will praise thee O infinite Astonishing Mercy that God should take Dust and Ashes into so near a Bond of Love as to be our God As Micah said Iudg. 18.24 What have I more So what hath God more What richer Jewel hath he to bestow upon us than himself What hath he more That God should put off most of the World with Riches and Honours and that he should pass over himself to us by a Deed of Gift to be our God and by virtue of this settle a Kingdom upon us O let us praise him with the best Instrument our Heart and let this Instrument be scrued up to the highest Peg Let us praise him with our whole Heart See how David riseth by degrees Psal. 32.11 Be glad in the Lord and rejoyce and shout for Ioy. Be glad there is Thankfulness rejoyce there is Chearfulness shout there is Triumph Praise is called Incense because it is so sweet a Sacrifice Let the Saints be Queristers in Gods Praises the deepest Springs yield the sweetest Water The more deeply sensible we are of Gods Covenant-Love to us the sweeter Praises we should yield We should begin here to eternize Gods Name and do that Work on Earth which we shall be always doing in Heaven Psal. 146.2 While I live will I praise the Lord. 5. Let us carry our selves as those who have God to be our God that is when we walk so that others may see there is something of God in us Live Holily What have we to do with Sin Is it not this that if it doth not break yet will weaken the Interest Hos. 14.8 What have I to do any more with Idols So should a Christian say God is my God what have I to do any more with Sin with Lust Pride Malice Bid me commit Sin as well bid me Drink Poison Shall I forfeit my Interest in God Let me rather Dye than willingly offend him who is the Crown of my Joy the God of my Salvation Of the Ten Commandments Exod. 20.2 The Land of Egypt c. THE Second part of Preface Who have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the House of Bondage Egypt and the House of Bondage are the same only they are represented to us under a different Expression or Notion I begin with the First Expression Who have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt Quest. Why doth the Lord mention this Deliverance of Israel out of the Land of Egypt Resp. 1. Because of the strangeness of the Deliverance God delivered his People Israel by strange Signs and Wonders by sending Plague after Plague upon Pharaoh blasting the Fruits of the Earth killing all the First-born in Egypt Exod. 12.29 And when Israel march'd out of Egypt God made the Waters of the Sea to part and become a Wall to his People while they went on Dry Ground and as he made the Sea a Cawsey to Israel so a Grave to Pharaoh and his Chariots Well might the Lord mention his bringing them out of the Land of Egypt because of the strangeness of the Deliverance God wrought Miracle upon Miracle for their Deliverance 2. God mentions Israel's Deliverance out of Egypt because of the greatness of the Deliverance God delivered Israel from the Pollutions of Egypt Egypt was a bad Air to live in it was infected with Idolatry The Egyptians were gross Idolaters they were guilty of that which the Apostle speaks of Rom. 1.23 They changed the Glory of the uncorruptible God into an Image made like to Corruptible Man and to Birds and Four-Footed Beasts and Creeping Things The Egyptians Worshipped instead of the true God First A Corruptible Man they Deified their King Apis forbidding all under pain of Death to say that he was a Man
him to pieces The German History relates of a Youth who was given to Swearing and did use to invent new Oaths the Lord sent a Canker into his Mouth which did eat out his Tongue whereupon he died 2. Blasphemy He who did Blaspheme God the Lord caused him to be stoned to death Lev. 24.11 23. The Israelitish womans Son blasphemed the name of the Lord and cursed And Moses spake to the People of Israel that they should bring forth him that had cursed and stone him with stones Olympias an Arian Bishop Reproached and Blasphemed the Sacred Trinity whereupon he was suddenly stricken with three Flashes of Lightning which burned him to Death Felix an Officer of Iulian seeing the Holy Vessels which were used in the Sacrament said in Scorn of Christ See what precious Vessels the Son of Mary is served withall Soon after he was taken with a Vomiting of Blood out of his Blasphemous Mouth whereof he died 2. Or if God should not execute Judgment on the Profaners of his Name in this Life yet their Doom is to come God will not remit their Guilt but deliver them to Satan the Goaler to torment them for ever If God justifie a Man who shall condemn him but if God condemn him who shall justifie him If God lay a Man in Prison where shall he get Bail or Main-prize God will take his full blow at the Sinner in Hell Heb. 10.31 It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God EXOD. XX. 8 Remember the Sabbath-Day to keep it Holy Six Days shalt thou labour and do all thy Work But the Seventh Day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not do any Work thou nor thy Son nor thy Daughter thy Man-Servant nor thy Maid-servant nor thy Cattel nor thy Stranger that is within thy Gates For in Six Days the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that in them is and rested the Seventh Day Wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath-Day and hallowed it This Commandment was engraven in Stone by God's own Finger and it will be our Comfort to have it engraven in our Hearts The Sabbath-Day is set apart for God's Solemn Worship it is God's Enclosure and it must not be alienated to common Uses The Lord hath set a Preface before this Commandment he hath put a Memento to it Remember to keep the Sabbath-Day holy This Word Remember shows that we are apt to forget Sabbath-Holiness therefore we need a Memorandum to put us in mind of sanctifying this Day I shall explain the Words I. Here is a Solemn Command Remember the Sabbath-Day to keep it holy II. Many Cogent Arguments to induce us to observe the Command I. In the Command 1. The Matter of it viz. The sanctifying of the Sabbath which Sabbath-Sanctification consists in two things First In resting from our own Works Secondly In a Conscientious Discharge of our Religious Duties 2. The Persons to whom the Command of sanctifying the Sabbath is given 1. Either Superiours and they are 1 st More Private as Parents and Masters Or 2 ly More Publique as Magistrates Or 2. Inferiours First Natives as Children and Servants Thy Son and thy Daughter thy Man-Servant and thy Maid Servant Secondly Foreigners The Stranger that is within thy Gates II. The Cogent Arguments to obey this Command of keeping Holy the Sabbath 1. From the Rationality of it Six Days shalt thou labour and do all thy Work As if God had said I am not an hard Master I do not grutch thee time to look after thy Calling and to get an Estate I have given thee Six Days Six to do all thy Work in and have taken but one Day for my self I might have reserved Six Days for my self and allowed thee but one but I have given thee Six Days for the Works of thy Calling and have taken but One Day for my own Service therefore it is equal and rational that thou shouldst set this Day in a special manner apart for my Worship 2. The Second Argument is taken from 2 ly The Iustice of it The Seventh Day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God As if God had said The Sabbath-Day is my Due I challenge a special Right in it and none hath any thing to do to lay claim to it He who robs me of THIS DAY and puts it to common Uses is a Sacrilegious Person he steals from the Crown of Heaven and I will in no wise hold him guiltless 3. The Third Argument for sanctifying the Sabbath is taken from God's own Pattern he rested the Seventh Day As if the Lord should say Will not you follow my Pattern Having finished all my Works of Creation I rested the Seventh Day So you having done all your Secular Work on the Six Days you should now cease from the Labour of your Calling and Dedicate the Seventh Day to the Lord as a Day of Holy Rest. 4. The Fourth Argument for Sabbath-Sanctification is taken ab Vtili from the Benefit which redounds from a Religious Observation of the Sabbath The Lord blessed the Seventh-Day and hallowed it It is not only a Day of God's Benediction God did not only appoint the Seventh-Day but he blessed the Seventh Day The Sabbath-Day is not only a Day of Honour to God but a Day of Blessing to us it is not only a Day wherein we give God Worship but a Day wherein he gives us Grace on this Day a Blessing drops down from Heaven This is a great Argument for the keeping the Sabbath-Day Holy God is not benefited by it we cannot add one Cubit to his Essential Glory but we our selves are advantaged The Sabbath-Day religiously observed entails a Blessing upon our Souls our Estate our Posterity As the not keeping this Day Holy brings a Curse Ier. 17.27 God curseth a Man's Blessings Mal. 2.2 The Bread which he eats is poysoned with a Curse So the Conscientious Observation of the Sabbath brings all manner of Blessings with it These are the Arguments to induce Sabbath-Sanctification And so I have divided the Commandment into its several Parts and explained the Sence of it The thing I would have you observe is That this Commandment about keeping the Sabbath was not abrogated with the Ceremonial Law but it is purely Moral and the Observation of the Sabbath is to be continued to the end of the World Where can we show that God hath given us a Discharge from keeping one Day in seven So that I say this fourth Commandment is Moral and obligeth Christians to the perpetual Commemoration and Sanctification of the Sabbath Quest. Why God hath appointed a Sabbath Ans. 1. In respect of Himself it is requisite that God should reserve one Day in Seven for his own immediate Service that hereby he might be acknowledged to be the great Plenipotentiary or Sovereign Lord who hath Power over us both to command Worship and appoint the Time when he will be worshipped 2. In respect of Vs. The Sabbath-day
the Sabbath-day and I testified against them Thou I contended with the Nobles of Iudah and said to them What evil thing is this that ye do and prophane the Sabbath-Day It is Sacriledge to rob that Time for Civil Work which God hath Dedicated and set apart for his Worship He that converts any time of the Sabbath to worldly business is a worse Thief than he who robs on the High-way for such a Thief does but rob Man but this Thief robs God he robs him of his Day The Lord forbad Manna to be gathered on the Sabbath Exod. 16. One would think that might have been dispens'd with for Manna was the Staff of their Life and the time when Manna fell was early between Five and Six in the morning so that they might have gathered it betimes and all the rest of the Sabbath they might have employed in God's Worship And besides they needed not to have taken any great Journey for Manna for it was but stepping out of their Doors and it fell about their Tents yet they might not gather Manna on the Sabbath and but for purposing to gather it God was very angry Exod. 16.27 28. There went out some of the People on the Seventh Day to gather and they found none and the Lord said How long refuse ye to keep my Commandments and my Laws Surely the anoynting Christ when he was dead was a commendable Work but Mary Magdalen and Mary the Mother of Iames tho' they had prepared sweet Oyntments to anoint the dead Body of Christ yet they came not to the Sepulchre to embalm him till the Sabbath was past Luke 23.56 They rested on the Sabbath-day according to the Commandment The Hand cannot be busied on the Lord's Day but the Heart will be defiled The very Heathens by the Light of Nature would not do any Secular Work in that time which they had set apart for the Worship of their False Gods Clem. Alexandrinus reports of one of the Emperors of Rome that on the Day of set Worship for his Gods he did forbear Warlike Affairs and did spend that time in his Devotion To do servile Work on the Sabbath shows an irreligious Heart and highly affronts God To work servile Work this Day is to follow the Devils Plough it is to debase the Soul God hath made this Day on purpose to raise the Heart up to Heaven to converse with God to do Angels Work and to be employed in earthly Work is to degrade the Soul of it's Honour God will not have his Day intrenched upon or defiled in the least thing The Man that gathered sticks on the Sabbath God would have him stoned Numb 15. One would think that a small thing to pick a few sticks to make a Fire but God would not have his Day violated in the smallest matters Nay that Work which had a reference to a religious Use might not be done on the Sabbath as the hewing of stones for the building of the Sanctuary Bezaleel who was to cut the stones and carve the Timber out for the Sanctuary yet he must forbear it on the Sabbath Exod. 31.15 A Temple is the place of God's Worship but it were a sin to build a Temple upon the Lord's Day This is keeping the Sabbath-day holy Negatively in doing no servile Work Yet Caution Not but that Works of Necessity and Charity may be done on this day God in these cases will have Mercy and not Sacrifice 1. 'T is lawful to take the necessary Recruits of Nature Food is to the Body as Oyl to the Lamp 2. 'T is lawful to do Works of Mercy as helping our Neighbour when either Life or Estate are in Danger Herein the Jews were too nice and precise they would not suffer Works of Charity to be done on the Sabbath If a Man were sick they thought on this day they might not use means for his Recovery Christ chargeth them with this that they were angry that he had wrought a Cure on the Sabbath Iohn 7.23 If an House were on Fire the Jews thought they might not bring Water to quench it If a Vessel did run they thought that on this day they might not stop it These were righteous overmuch Here was seeming Zeal but it wanted Discretion to guide it But unless in these two Cases of Necessity and Charity all secular Work is to be suspended and laid aside on the Lord's Day In it thou shalt do no manner of work which justly doth arraign and condemn many among us who do too much foul their Fingers with Work on this Day Some in dressing great Feasts others in opening their Shop-doors and selling Meat on the Sabbath which I have seen The Mariner will not set to Sea but on the Sabbath and so runs full Sail into the Breach of this Commandment Others work on this Day tho privately They put up their Shop-windows but follow their Trade within doors But tho they think to hide their sin under a Canopy God sees it Psal. 139.7 Whither shall I go from thy Presence ver 12. The Darkness hideth not from thee These Persons do profane this Day and God will have an Action of Trespass against them 2. Positively We keep the Sabbath-day holy by Consecrating and Dedicating this Day to the Service of the High God 'T is good to rest on the Sabbath-day from the works of our Calling But if we rest from Labour and do no more the Ox and the Ass keep the Sabbath as well as we for they rest from Labour We must dedicate the Day to God we must not only keep a Sabbath but sanctifie a Sabbath This Sabbath-sanctification consists in two things I. The solemn Preparation for it II. The sacred Observation of it 1. The solemn Preparation for it If a Prince were to come to your House what Preparation would you make for his Entertainment Sweep the House wash the Floor adorn the Room with the richest Tapestry and Hangings that there might be something suitable to the state and dignity of so great a Person On the blessed Sabbath God intends to have sweet Communion with you he seems to say to you as Christ to Zaccheus Luke 19.5 Make hast and come down for this day I must dine with you Now what Preparation should you make for the entertaining this King of Glory Now this Preparation for the Sabbath is First When the Evening of the Sabbath approacheth sound a Retreat call your Minds off from the World and summon your Thoughts together to think of the great Work of the Day opproaching Secondly Purge out all unclean Affections which may indispose you for the Work of the Sabbath Evening-Preparation will be like the tuning of the Instrument it will fit the Heart the better for the Duties of the Sabbath ensuing 2. The sacred Observation of it touching which these things are to be practised 1. Rejoyce at the approach of this Day as being a Day wherein we have a Prize for our Souls and enjoy much of God's
Calling is employed about the Souls of Men. Their Work is to redee● Spiritual Captives and turn Men from the Power of Satan to God Acts 26.18 Their Work is to enlighten them who sit in the Region of Darkness and make them shine as Stars in the Kingdom of Heaven These Spiritual Fathers are to be honoured for their Work sake and this Honour is to be shown three ways 1. By giving them Respect 1 Thess. 5.12 Know them which labour among you and are over you in the Lord and esteem them very highly in love for their work sake I confess the scandalous Lives of some Ministers hath been a great Reproach and hath made the Offering of the Lord to be abhorred in some places of the Land The Leper in the Law was to have his Lip covered Such as are Angels by Office but Lepers in their Lives ought to have their Lips covered and to be silenced But tho some deserve no Honour yet such as are faithful and make it their Work to bring Souls to Christ are to be reverenced as Spiritual Fathers Obadiah honoured the Prophet Elijah 1 King 18.17 Why did God reckon the Tribe of Levi for the First-born Numb 3.12 Why did he appoint that the Prince should ask Counsel of God by the Priest Numb 27.21 Why did the Lord show by that Miracle of Aaron's Rod flourishing that he had chosen the Tribe of Levi to Minister before him Numb 17. Why doth Christ call his Apostles the Lights of the World Why doth he say to all his Ministers Lo I am with you to the end of the World But because he would have these Spiritual Fathers reverenced In ancient times the Egyptians chose their Kings out of their Priests They are far from showing this Respect and Honour to their Spiritual Fathers who have slight Thoughts of such as have the Charge of the Sanctuary and do minister before the Lord Know them saith the Apostle which labour among you Many can be content to know their Ministers in their Infirmities and are glad when they have any thing against them but not to know them in the Apostles Sence so as to give them double Honour Surely were it not for the Ministry you would not be a Vineyard but a Desart Were it not for the Ministry you would be destitute of the two Seals of the Covenant Baptism and the Lord's Supper you would be Infidels For Faith comes by hearing and how shall they hear without a Preacher Rom. 10.14 2. Honour the Ministers these Spiritual Fathers by becoming Advocates for them and wiping off those Slanders and Calumnies which are unjustly cast upon them 1 Tim. 5.19 Constantine was a great Honourer of the Ministry he vindicated them he would not read the envious Accusations brought in against them but did burn them Do the Ministers open their Mouths to God for you in Prayer and will not you open your Mouths in their Behalf Surely if they labour to preserve you from Hell you should preserve them from Slander If they labour to save your Souls you ought to save their Credit 3. Honour them by conforming to their Doctrine This is the greatest Honour you can put upon your Spiritual Fathers by believing and obeying their Doctrine He is an Honourer of the Ministry who is not only an Hearer but a Follower of the Word As Disobedience reproacheth the Ministry so Obedience honoureth it The Apostle calls his Thessalonians his Crown 1 Thess. 2.19 What is our Crown of rejoycing are not ye A thriving People are a Ministers Crown When there is a Metamorphosis a Change wrought People came to the Word proud but they go away humble they came Earthly but go away Heavenly They came as Naaman to Iordan Lepers but they go away healed This is an Honour to the Ministry 2 Cor. 3.1 Need we as some others Epistles of Commendation Tho other Ministers might need Letters of Commendation yet Paul needed none For when Men should hear of the Obedience of these Corinthians which was wrought in them by Paul's Preaching this was a sufficient Certificate for him that God had blessed his Labours The Corinthians were a sufficient Honour to him they were his Letters Testimonial You cannot honour your Spiritual Fathers more than by thriving under their Ministry and living those Sermons which they preach Fourthly There is the Oeconomical Father that is the Master He is Pater Familias the Father of the Family Therefore Naaman's Servants called their Master Father 2 Kings 5.13 And the Centurion calls his Servant Son Matth. 8.6 The Servant is to honour his Master as the Father of the Family Tho the Master be not so exactly qualify'd as he should yet the Servant must not neglect his Duty but show some kind of Honour to him 1. In obeying his Master in licitis honestis in things that are lawful and honest 1 Pet. 2.18 Servants be subject to your Masters not only to the Good and Gentle but also to the Froward God hath no where given you a Charter of Exemption to free you from your Duty You cannot disobey your Earthly Master but you disobey your Master in Heaven Think not that Birth or High Parts no nor yet your Grace will exempt you from Obedience to your Master To obey him is an Ordinance of God and the Apostle saith Whosoever resisteth the Ordinance shall receive to themselves Damnation Rom. 13.2 2. The Servants honouring of his Master his Oeconomical Father is seen in being diligent in his Service Apelles painted a Servant with his Hands full of Tools an Emblem of Diligence The loytering Servant is a kind of Thief tho he doth not steal from his Master Goods yet he steals that Time which he should have employed in his Masters Service The slothful Servant is called a Wicked Servant Matth. 25.26 3. The Servant is to Honour his Master who is his Family-Father by being Faithful Matth. 24.45 Who then is a faithful and wise Servant Faithfulness is the chief thing in a Servant This Faithfulness in a Servant is seen in Six things First In Tenaciousness in concealing the Secrets your Master hath entrusted you with If those Secrets are not Sins you ought to promise Privacy What is whispered in your Ear you are not to publish on the House-top Such Servants are Spies Who would keep a Glass tkat is crack'd Who would keep a Servant that hath a Crack in his Brain and cannot keep a Secret Secondly Faithfulness in a Servant is seen in designing the Masters Advantage A Faithful Servant esteems his Masters Good as his own Such a good Servant had Abraham When his Master sent him to transact business for him he was as careful about it as if it had been his own Gen. 24.12 O Lord God of my Master Abraham I pray thee send me good speed this day and shew kindness unto my Master Abraham Doubtless Abraham's Servant was as glad he had got a Wife for his Masters Son as if he had got a
in his Conscience Hell gapes for such a Wind-fall Vse II. 1 st Br. Exhort To all to take heed of the Breach of this Commandment of lying slandering and bearing False Witness and to avoid these Sins 1. Get the Fear of God Why doth David say The Fear of the Lord is clean Psal. 19.8 Because it cleanseth the Heart of Malice it cleanseth the Tongue of Slander The fear of the Lord is clean It is to the Soul as Lightning to the Air which cleanseth it 2. Get Love to your Neighbour Lev. 19.18 Then there would not be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If we love a Friend we will not speak or attest any thing to his Prejudice Mens Minds are cankered with Envy and Hatred Hence comes slandering and false Witness Love is a Lovely Grace Love thinks no Evil 1 Cor. 13.5 It makes the best Interpretation of anothers Words Love is a Well-wisher and it is rare to speak ill of him we wish well to Love is that which cements Christians together it is the Healer of Division and the Hinderer of Slander 2 d Br. To such whose Lot it is to meet with Slanderers and false Accusers 1. Labour to make a Sanctified use of it When Shimei rail'd on David David made a sanctified use of it 2 Sam. 16.10 The Lord hath said to him Curse David So if you are slandered or falsly accus'd make a good use of it See if you have no sin unrepented of for which God may suffer you to be calumniated and reproached See if you have not at any time wronged others in their Name and said that of them which you cannot prove then lay your Hand on your Mouth and confess the Lord is Righteous to let you fall under the Scourge of the Tongue 2. If you are slandered or falsly accused but know your own Innocency be not too much troubled Let this be your rejoycing the Witness of your Conscience Murus aheneus esto nil conscire sibi A good Conscience is a Wall of Brass that will be able to stand against all False Witness As no Flattery can heal a bad Conscience so no Slander can hurt a good God will clear up the Names of his People Psal. 37.6 He shall bring forth thy Righteousness as the Light God as he will wipe away Tears from the Eyes so he will wipe off Reproach from the Name Believers shall come forth out of all their Slanders and Reproaches as the Wings of a Dove covered with Silver and her Feathers with yellow Gold 3 d. Br. It should exhort such to be v●●y thankful to God whom God hath preserved from Slander and False-Witness Iob calls it the Scourge of the Tongue Chap. 5.21 As a Rod doth scourge the Back so the Slanderers Tongue doth scourge the Name It is a great Mercy to be kept from the Scourge of the Tongue a Mercy that God stops malignant Mouths from bearing False Witness What mischief may not a lying Report or a False Oath do One destroys the Name the other the Life It is the Lord that muzzles the Mouths of the wicked and keeps these Dogs that snarl at us from flying upon us Psal. 31.20 Thou shalt keep them secretly in a Pavilion from the strife of Tongues It is I suppose an Allusion to Kings who being resolved to protect their Favourites against the Accusations of Men take them into their Bed-Chamber or Bosom where none may touch them So God hath a Pavilion or secret hiding-place for his Favourites where he preserves their Credit and Reputation untouch'd he keeps them from the Strife of Tongues This is a Mercy we ought to acknowledge to God II. The Mandatory part of this Commandment imply'd that is that we should stand up for others and vindicate them when they are injur'd by Lying Lips This is the Sence of the Commandment not only that we should not slander or falsly accuse others but that we should witness for them and stand up in their Defence when we know them to be traduced A Man may wrong another as well by Silence as Slander when he knows him to he wrongfully accused yet doth not speak in his behalf If others cast false Aspersions on any we should wipe them off The Apostles who were filled with the Wine of Spirit being charged with Drunkenness Peter was their Compurgator and openly clear'd their Innocency Acts 2.15 These are not drunken as ye suppose Ionathan knowing David to be a worthy Man and all those things Saul said of him to be Slanders vindicated David 1 Sam. 19.4 5. David hath not sinn'd against thee but his Works to thee-ward have been very good Wherefore then wilt thou sin against innocent Blood and slay David without a Cause When the Primitive Christians were falsly accused for Incest and killing their Children Tertullian made a Famous Apology in their Vindication This is to act the part both of a Friend and a Christian To be an Advocate for another when he is wronged in his good Name EXOD. XX. 17 Thou shalt not covet thy Neighbours House thou shalt not covet thy Neighbours Wife nor his Man-servant nor his Maid-servant nor his Ox nor his Ass nor any thing that is thy Neighbours This Commandment forbids 1. Covetousness in General Thou shalt not covet 2. In Particular Thy Neighbours House thy Neighbours Wife c. 1. It forbids Covetousness in General Thou shalt not covet 'T is lawful to use the World yea and to desire so much of it as may 1. Keep us from the Temptation of Poverty Prov. 30.8 Give me not Poverty lest I steal and take the Name of my God in vain 2. As may enable us to Honour God with Works of Mercy Prov. 3.9 Honour the Lord with thy Substance But all the Danger is when the World gets into the Heart The Water is useful for the Sailing of the Ship all the Danger is when the Water gets into the Ship So the Fear is when the World gets into the Heart Thou shalt not covet Quest. What is it to covet Resp. There are two Words in the Greek which set forth the Nature of Covetousness 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an insatiable desire of getting the World Covetousness is a dry Dropsie Austin defines Covetousness plus velle quam sat est To desire more than enough To aim at a great Estate To be like the Daughters of the Horseleech crying Give give Prov. 30.15 Or like Behemoth Job 40.23 He trusteth that he can draw up Iordan into his Mouth 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an inordinate Love of the World The World is the Idol it is so loved that a Man will not part with it to any good Use. This is to come under the Inditement of Covetousness He may be said to be covetous not only who gets the World unrighteously but who loves the World inordinately But for a more full Answer to the Question What is it to covet I shall shew you in Six Particulars when a Man
Resp. Seek to God for it It is his Promise to give an Heart of Flesh Ezek. 36. and to pour on us a Spirit of Mourning Zech. 12.10 Beg God's Holy Spirit Psal. 147.18 He causeth his Wind to blow and the Waters flow When the Wind of God's Spirit blows upon us then the Waters of Repentant Tears will flow from us III. The Third way to escape the Wrath and Curse of God and obtain the Benefit of Redemption by Christ is The diligent Vse of Ordinances In particular the Word Sacraments and Prayer 1. I begin with the First of these Ordinances I. The Word 1 Thess. 2.13 which effectually worketh in you that believe Quest. 1. What is meant by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Words working effectually Resp. The Word of God is said to work effectually when it hath that good effect upon us for which it was appointed of God namely when the Word works powerful Illumination and thorough Reformation Acts 26.18 To open their Eyes and turn them from the power of Satan to God The opening their Eyes denotes Illumination And turning them from Satan to God denotes Reformation Quest. 2. How is the Word to be read and heard that it may become effectual to Salvation This Question consists of Two Branches 1. How may the Word be read Effectually 2. How may it be heard Effectually 1. I shall begin with the First Branch of the Question How is the Word to be read that it may be effectual to our Salvation Answ. That we may so read the Word that it may conduce effectually to our Salvation 1. Let us have a Reverend Esteem of every part of Canonical Scripture Psal. 19.10 More are they to be desired than Gold Value this Book of God above all other Books It is a Golden Epistle endited by the Holy Ghost sent to us from Heaven more particularly to raise our Esteem 1. The Scripture is a Spiritual Glass to dress our Souls by it shows us more than we can see by the Light of a Natural Conscience that may discover gross Sins but the Glass of the Word sh●ws us Heart-Sins Vain Thoughts Unbelief c. And it not only shows us our Spots but washeth them away 2. The Scripture is a Sacred Magazine out of which we may fetch our Spiritual Artillery to fight against Satan When the Devil tempted our Saviour he fetch'd Armour and Weapons from Scripture It is written Matth. 4.4 7. 3. The Holy Scripture is a Panacea or Universal Medicine for the Soul it gives a Receipt to cure Deadness of Heart Psal. 119.50 Pride 1 Pet. 5.5 Infideli●y Iohn 3.36 It is a Physick-Garden where we may gather any Herb or Antidote to expell the Poyson of sin The Leaves of Scripture like the Leaves of the Tree of Life are for the healing of the Nations Rev. 22.2 And may not this cause a reverend Esteem of the Word 2. If we would have the Word written effectual to our Souls let us peruse it with Intenseness of Mind Iohn 5.39 Search the Scriptures The Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to search as for a Vein of Silver The Bereans Acts 17. searched the 〈…〉 daily The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to make a curious and critical Search And 〈◊〉 was mighty in the Scriptures Acts 18.24 Some gallop over a Chapter 〈…〉 and get no good by it If we would have the Word effectual and saving we must mind and observe every Passage of Scripture And that we may be di●igent in the perusal of Scripture Consider First The Word written is Norma Cultus the Rule and Platform by which we are to square our Lives it contains in it all things needful to Salvation Psal. 19.7 What Duties we are to do what Sins we are to avoid God gave Moses a Pattern how he would have the Tabernacle made and he was to go exactly according to the Pattern Exod. 25.9 The Word is the Pattern God hath given us in Writing for modelling our Lives therefore how careful should we be in the pursuing and looking over this Pattern Secondly The Written Word as it is our Pattern so it will be our Iudge Iohn 12.48 The Word that I have spoken the same shall judge him at the last Day We read of the opening of the Books Rev. 20.12 This is one Book God will open the Book of Scripture and will judge Men out of it He will say Have you lived according to the Rule of this Word The Word hath a double Work to Teach and to Iudge 3. If we would have the Word written effectual we must bring Faith to the reading of it Believe it to be the Word of the Eternal Iehovah The Word written comes with Authority it shews its Commission from Heaven Thus saith the Lord It is of Divine Inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 The Oracles of Scripture must be surer to us than a Voice from Heaven 1 Pet. 1.18 Unbelief enervates the Vertue of Scripture and renders it ineffectual First Men question the Truth of the Scripture and then fall away from it 4. If we would have the Word written effectual to Salvation we must delight in it as our Spiritual Cordial Ier. 15.16 Thy Words were found and I did eat them and they were the joy and rejoycing of my Heart All true solid Comfort is fetch'd out of the Word The Word as Chrysostom saith is a Spiritual Garden and the Promises are the Fragrant Flowers or Spices in this Garden How should we delight to walk among these Beds of Spices Is it not a Comfort in all dubious perplext Cases to have a Counsellor to advise us Psal. 119.24 Thy Testimonies are my Counsellors Is it not a Comfort to find our Evidences for Heaven and where should we find them but in the Word 1 Thess. 1.4 5. The Word written is a Sovereign Elixir or Comfort in an hour of Distress Psal. 119.50 This is my Comfort in Afflictions for thy Word hath quickned me It can turn all our Water into Wine How should we take a great Complacency and Delight in the Word They only who come to the Word with Delight go from it with Success 5. If we would have the Scripture effectual and saving we must be sure when we have read the Word to hide it in our Hearts Psal. 119.11 Thy Word have I hid in my Heart The Word locked up in the Heart is a Preservative against sin Why did David hide the Word in his Heart In the next Words That I might not sin against thee As one would carry an Antidote about him when he comes near a place infected so David carried the Word in his Heart as a Sacred Antidote to preserve him from the Infection of Sin When the Sap is hid in the Root it makes the Branches fruitful When the Seed is hid in the Ground then the Corn springs up So when the Word is hid in the Heart then it brings forth good Fruit. 6. If we would have the Word written effectual let us labour
shall not we have the Fruit of his purchase Lord it is thy delight to milk out the Breast of Mercy and Grace and wilt thou abridge thy self of thy own delight Thou hast promised to give thy Spirit to implant grace Can truth lye can faithfulness deceive God loves thus to be overcome with Arguments in prayer 7. Prayer that would prevail with God must be joined with reformation Iob 11.13 If thou stretch out thy hands towards him if iniquity be in thy hand put it far away from thee Sin lived in makes the heart hard and Gods ear deaf 'T is foolish to pray against Sin and then Sin against prayer Sin fly-blows our prayer Psal. 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me The Load-stone loseth its vertue when bespread with garlick so doth prayer when polluted with sin The Incense of Prayer must be offered upon the Altar of an holy Heart Thus you see what is that Prayer which is most likely to prevail with God VSE I. It reproves 1. Such as pray not at all 't is made the note of a reprobate he calls not upon God Psalm 144. Doth he think to have an Alms who never asks it Do they think to have Mercy from God who never seek it Then God should be friend them more than he did his own Son Heb. 5.7 Christ offered up prayers with strong cryes None of Gods Children are born dumb Galat. 4.6 2. It reproves such as have left off prayer a sign they never felt the fruit and comfort of it He that leaves off Prayer a sign he leaves off to fear God Iob 15.4 Thou castest off fear and restrainest prayer before God A Man that hath left of prayer is fit for any wickedness When Saul had given over enquiring after God then he went to the Witch of Endor VSE II. Of Exhortation Be persons given to prayer I give my self saith David to prayer Pray for pardon and purity Prayer is the golden Key that opens Heaven The Tree of the Promise will not drop its Fruit unless shaked by the hand of prayer All the benefits of Christs Redemption are handed over to us by prayer Object But I have prayed a long time for Mercy and have no answer Psal. 69.3 I am weary of crying Answ. 1. God may hear us when we do not hear from him assoon as Prayer is made God hears it though he doth not presently answer A Friend may receive our Letter though he doth not presently send us an answer of it 2. God may delay prayer and yet not deny Quest. But why doth God delay an answer of Prayer Resp. 1. Because he loves to hear the voice of Prayer Prov. 15.8 The prayer of the upright is his delight You let the Musician play a great while ere you throw him down Money because you love to hear his Musick Cant. 2.14 2. God may delay Prayer when he will not deny that he may humble us perhaps God hath spoke to us a long time in his Word to leave such Sins but we would not hear him therefore he lets us speak to him in Prayer and seems not to hear us 3. God may delay Prayer when he will not deny because he sees we are not yet fit for the Mercy perhaps we pray for deliverance we are not fit for it our scum is not boil'd away We would have God swift to deliver and we are slow to repent 4. God may delay prayer when he will not deny that the Mercy we pray for may be the more prized and may be sweeter when it comes The longer the Merchants Ships stay abroad the more he rejoyceth when they come home laden with Spices and Jewels therefore be not discouraged but follow God with prayer though God may delay he will not deny Prayer vincit invincibilem it overcomes the Omnipotent Hos. 12.4 The Tymans tyed fast their God Hercules with a golden Chain that he should not remove The Lord was held by Moses prayer as with a golden Chain Exod. 32.10 Let me alone Why what did Moses he only prayed Prayer ushers in Mercy Be thy case never so sad if thou canst but pray thou needst not fear Psal. 10.17 therefore give thy self to prayer Our FATHER HAVING through the good providence of God gone over the chief Grounds and Fundamentals of Religion and enlarged upon the Decalogue or Ten Commandments I shall now at the close speak something upon the Lords Prayer MATTH vi 9 After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in Heaven Hallowed c. In this Scripture are two things observable I. The Introduction to the Prayer II. The Prayer it self which consists of three parts 1. A Preface 2. Petitions 3. The Conclusion I. The Introduction to the Lords Prayer sic orate vos After this manner pray ye Our Lord Jesus in these words prescribed to his Disciples and us a directory for prayer The Ten Commandments are the rule of our Life the Creed is the summe of our Faith and the Lords Prayer is the pattern of our Prayer As God did prescribe Moses a pattern of the Tabernacle Exod. 25.9 so Christ hath here prescribed us a pattern of Prayer After this manner pray ye c. The meaning is let this be the Rule and Model according to which ye frame your prayers Ad hanc regulam preces nostras exigere necesse est Not that we are tied to the words of the Lords-prayer Christ saith not after these words pray ye but after this manner that is let all your petitions agree and symbolize with the things contained in the Lords prayer and indeed well may we make all our prayers consonant and agreeable to this prayer it being a most exact prayer Tertullian calls it breviarium totius Evangelii a breviary and compendium of the Gospel It is like an heap of massy gold The exactness of this prayer appears 1. In the Dignity of the Author A piece of work hath commendation from the Artificer and this prayer hath commendation from the Author it is the Lords Prayer As the Law Moral was written with the Finger of God so this prayer was drop'd from the Lips of the Son of God Non vox Hominem sonat est Deus 2. The exactness of this prayer appears in the excellency of the matter I may say of this prayer It is as silver tryed in a furnace purified seven times Psal. 12.6 Never was there prayer so admirably and curiously composed as this As Solomons Song for its Excellency is called the Song of Songs so may this well be called the prayer of prayers The matter of it is admirable 1. For its Succinctness 't is short and pithy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multum in parvo a great deal said in a few words It requires more Art to draw the two Globes curiously in a little Map This short Prayer is a System or Body of Divinity 2. It s Clearness This prayer is plain and intelligible to every
after appear in an Eclipse to them 2. The Meditation of the heavenly Kingdom would much promote holiness in us Heaven is an holy place 1 Pet. 1.4 an Inheritance undefiled 't is described by Transparent Glass to denote its Purity Rev. 21.21 The contemplating heaven would put us upon the study of holiness because none but such are admitted into that kingdom Heaven is not like Noah's Ark into which came clean Beasts and unclean only the pure in heart shall see God Mat. 5.8 3. The Meditation of the heavenly Kingdom would be a Spur to diligence immensum Gloria Calcar habet 1 Cor. 15.58 alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord knowing that your Labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. When the Mariner sees the haven he plies it harder with his Oars when we have a sight and prospect of Glory it would make us much in Prayer alms watching it would add wings to duty and make the Lamp of our Devotion burn brighter 2. If you have hopes of this Kingdom be content though you have but a little of the World Contentment is a rare thing 't is a Jewel that but few Christians wear but if you have a grounded hope of heaven it may work your heart to Contentation what though you have but little in Possession you have a Kingdom in Reversion Were you to take an estimate of a Mans Estate how would you value it by what he hath in his house or by his Land perhaps he hath little Money or Jewels in his house but he is a Landed Man there lies his Estate A Believer hath but little Oyl in the Cruse and Meal in the Barrel but he is a landed Man he hath a Title to a Kingdom and may not this satisfy him If a Man who lived here in England had a great Estate befallen him beyond the Seas and perhaps had no more Money at present but just to pay for his Voyage he is content he knows when he comes to his Estate he shall have Money enough Thou who art a Believer hast a Kingdom befallen thee though thou hast but little in thy Purse yet if thou hast enough to pay for thy Voyage enough to bear thy Charges to heaven it is sufficient God hath given thee Grace which is the Fore Crop and will give thee Glory which is the After-Crop and may not this make thee content 3. Branch If you have hope of this blessed Kingdom pray often for the coming of this glorious Kingdom Thy Kingdom come Only Believers can pray heartily for the hastening of the Kingdom of Glory 1. They cannot pray that Christs kingdom of Glory may come who never had the kingdom of Grace set up in their Hearts Can the guilty Prisoner pray that the Assis●s may come 2. They cannot pray heartily that Christs kingdom of Glory may come who are Lovers of the World they have found Paradise they are in their kingdom already this is their heaven and they desire to hear of no other they are of his mind who said if he might keep his Cardinalship in Paris he would lose his part in Paradise 3. They cannot pray heartily that Christs kingdom of Glory may come who o●●ose Christs kingdom of Grace who break his Laws which are the Scepter of his kingdom who shoot at those who bear Christs Name and carry his Colours sure these cannot pray that Christs kingdom of Glory may come for then Christ will judge them and if they say this Prayer they are Hypocrites they mean not as they speak But you who have the kingdom of Grace set up in your hearts pray much that the kingdom of Glory may hasten Thy Kingdom come when this kingdom comes then you shall behold Christ in all his embroidered Robes of Glory shining ten thousand times brighter then the Sun in all it's Meridian Splendor When Christs kingdom comes the Bodies of the Saints that slept in the dust shall be raised in honour and made like Christs Glorious Body then shall your Souls like Diamonds sparkle with Holiness you shall never have a sinful thought more you shall be as holy as the Angels you shall be as holy as you would be and as holy as God would have you to be then you shall be in a better state than in Innocency Adam was Created a Glorious Creature but mutable a bright Star but a falling Star but in the Kingdom of Heaven is a fixation of Happiness When Christs Kingdom of Glory comes you shall be rid of all your enemies As Moses said Exod. 14.13 The Egyptians whom you have seen to day you shall see them no more for ever so those enemies who have plough'd on the backs of Gods people and made deep their surrows when Christ shall come in his Glory you shall see these enemies no more All Christs enemies shall be put under his feet 1 Cor. 15.25 and before the wicked be destroyed the Saints shall judge them 1 Cor. 6.2 Know ye not that the Saints shall judge the World This will cut the wicked to the heart that those whom they have formerly scorned and scourged shall sit as Judges upon them and vote with Christ in his judicial proceedings O then well may you pray for the hastening of the Kingdom of Glory Thy Kingdom come 4. Branch If you have any good hope of this blessed Kingdom let this make the colour come in your Faces be of a sanguine chearful temper have you a Title to a Kingdom and sad Rom. 5.2 We rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God Christians the Trumpet is ready to sound an eternal Jubilee is at hand when a freedom from Sin shall be proclaimed your Coronation day is a coming it is but putting off your clothes and laying your head upon a pillow of dust and you shall be inthroned in a Kingdom and invested with the embroidered Robes of Glory Doth not all this call for a chearful Spirit Chearfulness adorns Religion it is a temper of Soul Christ loves Iohn 14.28 If ye loved me ye would rejoyce It makes many suspect Heaven is not so pleasant when they see those that walk thither so sad How doth the heir rejoyce in hope of the Inheritance Who should rejoyce if not a Believer who is heir of the Kingdom and such a Kingdom as eye hath not seen When the Flesh begins to droop let Faith lift up its head and cause an holy jubilation and rejoycing in the Soul 5. Let the Saints long to be in this blessed Kingdom A Prince that travels in Foreign parts doth he not long to be in his own Nation that he may be Crowned The Bride desires the Marriage day Rev. 22.17 The Spirit and the bride say Come Even so come Lord Iesus Sure our unwillingness to go hence shows either the weakness of our Faith in the belief of the Heavenly Kingdom or the strength of our doubtings whether we have an interest in it Were our Title to Heaven more cleared we should need Patience to be
is a kind of mutinee in the Soul against God Numb 21.5 The people spake against God When a Cloud of Sorrow is gathered in the Soul and this Cloud doth not only drop into Tears but out of this Cloud come Hail-stones murmuring word● against God this is far from patient submission to Gods Will. When water is hot the scum boils up when the Heart is heated with anger against God then this scum of murmuring boils up Murmuring is very evil it springs 1. From Pride Men think they have deserved better at Gods hands and when they begin to swell they spit Poyson 2. Distrust Men believe not that God can make a Treacle of Poyson bring good out of all their troubles therefore they murmur Psal. 106.24 They believed not his word but murmured Men murmur at Gods Providences because they distrust his Promises God hath much ado to bear this Sin Numb 14.27 this is far from submission to Gods Will. 3. Discomposedness of Spirit cannot stand with quiet submission to Gods Will. When a Man saith I am so encompassed with trouble that I know not how to get out Head and Heart are so taken up that a Person is not fit to pray When the strings of a Lute are snarled the Lute can make no good Musick so when a Christians Spirits are perplexed and disturbed he cannot make Melody in his Heart to the Lord. To be under a discomposure of Mind is as when an Army is routed one runs this way and another that the Army is put into disorder so when a Christian is in an hurry of Mind his Thoughts run up and down distracted as if he were undone this cannot stand with patient submission to Gods Will. 4. Self-apology cannot stand with submission to Gods Will instead of being humbled under Gods hand a Person justifies himself A proud Sinner stands upon his own defence and is ready to accuse God of unrighteousness which is as if we should tax the Sun with darkness This is far from submission to Gods Will. God smote Ionahs goard and he stands upon his own vindication Ionah 4.9 I do well to be angry to the death What to be angry with God And to justifie this I do well to be angry This was strange to come from a Prophet and was far from this Prayer Christ hath taught us Thy Will be done Quest. 4. What this patient submission to Gods Will is Answ. It is a gracious frame of Soul whereby a Christian is content to be at Gods dispose and doth acquiesce in his Wisdom 1 Sam. 3.18 It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good Acts 21.14 The will of the Lord be done That I may further illustrate this I shall show you wherein this submission to Gods Will lyes it lyes chiefly in three things 1. In acknowledging Gods hand seeing God in the Affliction Iob 5.6 Affliction ariseth not out of the dust it comes not by chance Iob did eye God in all that befel him Iob 1.22 The Lord hath taken away He complains not of the Chaldeans or the influence of the Planets he looks beyond second Causes he sees God in the Affliction The Lord hath taken away There can be no submission to Gods Will till there be an acknowledging of Gods hand 2. Patient submission to Gods Will lyes in our justifying of God Psal. 22.2 O my God I cry unto thee yet thou hearest not thou turnest a deaf ear to me in my affliction ver 3. But thou art holy God is Holy and Just not only when he punisheth the Wicked but when he afflicts the Righteous Though God put Wormwood in our Cup yet we vindicate God and proclaim his Righteousness As Mauritius the Emperour when he saw his Sons slain before his eyes Iustus es Domine Righteous art thou O Lord in all thy wayes We justifie God and confess he punisheth us less than we deserve Ezra 9.13 3. Patient submission to Gods Will lyes in the accepting of the punishment Lev. 26.41 And they then accept of the punishment of their iniquity Accepting of the punishment that is taking all that God doth in good part He who accepts of the punishment saith Good is the Rod of the Lord he kisseth the Rod yea blesseth God that he would use such a Merciful severity rather to afflict him than lose him This is patient submission to Gods Will. This patient submission to Gods Will in Affliction showes a great deal of Wisdom and Piety The skill of a Pilot is most discerned in a storm and a Christians Grace in the storm of Affliction and indeed this submission to Gods Will is most requisite for us while we live here in this lower Re●●gion in Heaven there will be no need of Patience no more than there is need of the Star light when the Sun shines In Heaven there will be all joy and what need of Patience then It requires no Patience to wear a Crown of Gold but while we live here in a Valley of Tears there needs patient submission to Gods Will Heb. 10.36 Ye have need of patience 1. The Lord sometimes layes heavy Afflictions upon us Psal. 38.2 Thy hand presseth me sore The word in the Original for afflicted signifies to be melted God sometimes melts his People in a Furnace 2. God sometimes layes divers Afflictions on us Iob 19.17 He multiplies my wound God shoots divers sorts of Arrowes 1. Sometimes God afflicts with Poverty The Widow had nothing left her save a pot of Oyl 1 Kings 17.12 Poverty is a great Temptation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand To have an Estate boyled away almost to nothing is hard to Flesh and Blood Ruth 1.20 Call me not Naomi but Mara I went out full and the Lord hath brought me home again empty This exposeth to Contempt When the Prodigal was poor his Brother was ashamed to own him Luke 15.30 This thy Son he said not this my Brother but this thy Son he scorned to call him Brother When the Deer is shot and bleeds the rest of the herd push it away when God shoots the Arrow of Poverty at one others are ready to push him away When Terence was grown poor his Friend Scipio cast him off The Muses Iupiters Daughters the Poets feign had no Suitors because they wanted a Dowry 2. God sometimes afflicts with Reproach Such as have the light of Grace shining in them yet may be eclipsed in their Name The Primitive Christians were reproached as if they were guilty of Incest saith Tertullian Luther was called A Trumpeter of Rebellion David calls reproach an heart-breaking Psal. 69.20 this God lets his dear Saints be oft exercised with Dirt may be cast upon a Pearl those Names may be blotted which are written in the Book of Life Sincerity though it shields from Hell yet not from Slander 3. God sometimes afflicts with loss of dear Relations Ezek. 24.16 Son of man behold I take away from thee the desire of thine eyes with a stroke This is like a pulling away
Righteousness Heb. 12.11 This may make us submit to God and say Thy Will be done there 's kindness in Affliction it is for our spiritual profit 5. There 's kindness in Affliction in that there is no condition so bad but it might be worse when it is duskish it might be darker God doth not make our Cross so heavy as he might he doth not stir up all his Anger Psal. 78.38 He doth not put so many Nails in our Yoak so much Wormwood in our Cup as he might doth God chastise thy Body he might torture thy Conscience doth he cut thee short he might cut thee off The Lord might make our Chain heavier Is it a burning-Feaver it might have been the burning Lake Doth God use the Pruning Knife to lop thee he might bring his Axe to hew thee down Ezek. 47.3 The Waters were up to the Ankles Do the Waters of Affliction come up to the Ankles God might make them rise higher nay he might drown thee in the Waters this may make us submit quietly and say Thy Will be done because there is so much kindness in it whereas God useth the Rod he might use the Scorpion 6. There is kindness in Affliction in that your case is not so bad as others they are alwaies upon the Rack they spend their Years with sighing Psal. 31.10 Have you a gentle fit of an Ague others cry out of the Stone and Strangullion Do you bear the wrath of Men others bear the wrath of God you have but a single trial others have them twisted together God shoots but one Arrow at you he shoots a Shower of Arrows at others is there not kindness in all this We are apt to say never any suffered as we was it not worse with Lazarus who was so full of Sores that the Dogs took pity on him and licked his Sores Nay was it not worse with Christ who lived poor and died cursed May not this cause us to say Thy Will be done there is kindness in it that God deals not so severely with us as others 7. There is kindness in Affliction in that if we belong to God it is all the Hell we shall have some have two Hells they suffer in their Body and Conscience here is one Hell and another Hell is to come unquenchable Fire Iudas had two Hells but a Child of God hath but one Hell Lazarus had all his Hell here he was full of sores but had a Convoy of Angels to carry him to Heaven when he dyed Say then Lo if this be the worst I shall have if this be all my Hell I will patiently acquiesce Thy Will be done 8. There is kindness in that God gives gracious supports in Affliction if he strikes with one hand he will support with the other Deut. 33.27 Vnderneath are the everlasting Arms. There is not the least Trial but if God did desert us and not assist us with his Grace we should sink under it The Frown of a great Man the fear of a Reproach Peter was frighted at the Voice of a Maid Mat. 26.69 O therefore what Mercy is it to have Christ strengthen us and as it were bear the heaviest part of the Cross with us One said I have no ravishing Joys in my sickness but I bless God I have sweet supports and should not this cause submission to Gods Will and make us say Lo if thou art so kind as to bear us up in Affliction that we do not faint put us into what Wine-press thou pleasest Thy Will be done 9. There is kindness in Affliction in that it is preventive 1. God by this stroke of his would prevent some sin Paul's Thorn in the Flesh was to prevent his being lifted up in Pride 2 Cor. 12.7 As Affliction is sometimes sent for the punishing of sin so sometimes for the preventing of sin Prosperity exposeth to much evil 'T is hard to carry a full Cup without spilling and a full Estate without sinning Gods People know not how much they are beholding to their Affliction they might have fallen into some Scandal had not God set an Hedge of Thorns in their way to stop them what kindness is this God lets us fall into sufferings to prevent falling into Snares say then Lord do as it seems good in thy sight Thy Will be done 2. God by Affliction would prevent Damnation 1 Cor. 11.32 We are corrected in the World that we may not be condemned with the World A Man by falling into the Briars is saved from falling into the River God lets us fall into the Briars of Affliction that we may not drown in Perdition It is a great favour when a lesser punishment is inflicted to prevent a greater Is it not Clemency in the Judge when he lays some light Penalty on the Prisoner and saves his life so when God lays upon us light Affliction and saves us from wrath to come as Pilate said Luke 23.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will chastise him and let him go so God chastiseth his Children and lets them go frees them from eternal torment What is a drop of sorrow the Godly tast to that sea of Wrath the Wicked shall be drinking of to all Eternity O what kindness is here may not this make us say Thy Will be done it is preventing Physick 10. There is kindness in that God doth mix his Providences Hab. 3.2 In Anger he remembers Mercy Not all pure Gall but some Honey mixed with it Ashurs Shoes were Iron and Brass but his Foot was dip'd in Oyl Gen. 33.24 Affliction is the shoo of Brass but God causeth the Foot to be dipp'd in Oyl As the Limner mixeth with his dark shadows bright Colours so the wise God mingles the dark and the bright Colour Crosses and Blessings The Body is afflicted but within is Peace of Conscience there is a Blessing Ioseph was sold into Egppt and put in Prison there was the dark side of the Cloud Iob lost all that ever he had his Skin was clothed with Boils and Ulcers here was a sad Providence but God gave a Testimony from Heaven of Iobs Integrity and did afterwards double his Estate Iob. 42.10 The Lord gave Iob twice as much Here was the goodness of God seen towards Iob. God doth checquer his works of Providence and shall not we submit and say Lord if thou art so kind mixing so many bright Colours with my dark Condition Thy Will be done 11. There is kindness in Affliction in that God doth moderate his Stroke Ier. 30.11 I will correct thee in Measure God will in the day of his East-wind stay his rough wind Isa. 27.8 The Physician that understands the Crasis and temper of the patient will not give too strong Physick for the Body nor will he give one Dram or Scruple too much God knows our frame he will not over-afflict he will not stretch the strings of his Viol too hard least they break and is there not kindness in all this may not this work our
but if they want forgiveness of Sin they seem to be unconcerned and do not seek after it whence is this Answ. 1. Inadvertency or want of Consideration they do not look into their spiritual Estate or cast up their Accounts to see how Matters stand between God and their Souls Isa. 1.3 My people doth not consider they do not consider they are indebted to God in a Debt of ten thousand Talents and that God will ere long call them to account Rom. 14.12 So then every one of us shall give account of himself to God But people shun serious Thoughts my people doth not consider Hence it is they do not look after pardon 2. Men do not seek after forgiveness of Sin for want of Conviction Few are convinc'd what a deadly Evil Sin is it is the spirits of Mischief distilled it turns a mans Glory into shame it brings all plagues on the Body and curses on the Soul Unless a mans Sin be forgiven there 's not the vilest creature alive the Dog Serpent Toad but is in a better Condition than the Sinner for when they die they go but to the Earth but he dying without pardon goes into Hell-Torments for ever Men are not convinced of this but play with the Viper of Sin 3. Men do not seek earnestly after Forgiveness because they are seeking other things they seek the World immoderately When Saul was seeking after the Asses he did not think of a Kingdom The World is a golden Snare Divitiae Saeculi sunt laquei Diaboli Bern. The Wedge of Gold hinders many from seeking after a pardon Ministers cry to the people get your pardon sealed but if you call to a man that is in a Mill the noise of the Mill drowns the voice that he cannot hear so when the Mill of a Trade is going it makes such a noise that the people cannot hear the Minister when he lifts up his Voice like a Trumpet and cries to them to look after the sealing of their pardon He who spends all his time about the World and doth not mind Forgiveness will accuse himself of Folly at last You would judge that Prisoner very unwise that should spend all his time with the Cook to get his dinner ready and should never mind getting a pardon 4. Men seek not after the forgiveness of Sin through a bold Presumption of Mercy they conceit God to be made up all of Mercy and that he will indulge them tho' they take little or no pains to sue out their pardon It is true God is Merciful but withal he is Iust he will not wrong his Justice by shewing Mercy read the Proclamation Exod. 34.6 The Lord the Lord God merciful ver 7. and that will by no means clear the guilty Such as go on in Sin and are so slothful or wilful that they will not seek after Forgiveness tho there be a whole Ocean of Mercy in the Lord not one drop shall fall to their share he will by no means clear the guilty 5. Men seek not earnestly after Forgiveness out of hope of Impunity they flatter themselves in sin and because they have been spared so long therefore sure God never intends to reckon with them Ps. 10.11 He hath said in his Heart God hath forgotten he hides his Face he will never see it Atheists think either the Iudge is blind or forgetful but let Sinners know that long forbearance is no forgiveness God did bear with Sodom a long time but at last rain'd down Fire and Brimstone upon them the adjourning of the Assises doth not acquit the Prisoner the longer God is taking his blow the heavier it will be at last if sinners repent not 6. Men do not seek earnestly after Forgiveness through Mistake they think getting a pardon is easie it is but repenting at the last hour a sigh or a Lord have Mercy and a pardon will drop into their Mouths But is it so easie to repent and have a pardon tell me O Sinner is Regeneration easie are there no Pangs in the new Birth is Mortification easie is it nothing to pluck out the right Eye is it easie to leap out of Dalilahs Lap into Abrahams Bosom This is the Draw-net by which the Devil drags Millions to Hell the facility of Repenting and getting a Pardon 7. Men do not look after Forgiveness through Despair Oh saith the desponding Soul it is a vain thing for me to expect pardon my Sins are so many and hainous that sure God will not forgive me Ier. 18.12 And they said There is no hope My Sins are huge Mountains and can they ever be cast into the Sea Despair cuts the Sinews of Endeavour who will use means that despairs of Success The Devil shews some men their sins at the little end of the Perspective-Glass and they seem little or none at all but he shews others their Sins at the great end of the Perspective and they fright them into Despair This is a Soul-damning Sin Iudas's Despair was worse than his Treason Despair spills the Cordial of Christ's Blood this is the Voice of Despair Christ's Blood cannot pardon me Thus you see whence it is that men seek no more earnestly after the forgiveness of sin Having answered this Question I shall now come to press the Exhortation upon every One of us to seek earnestly after the forgiveness of our Sins 1. Our very Life lies upon the getting of a Pardon 't is call'd the Iustification of Life Rom. 5.18 Now if our Life lies upon our Pardon and we are dead and damned without it doth it not concern us above all things to labour after forgiveness of Sin Deut. 32.47 For it is not a vain thing for you because it is your Life If a man be under a Sentence of Death he will set his Wits a work and make use of all his friends to get the King to grant His pardon because his Life lies upon it So we are by reason of Sin under a Sentence of Damnation now there is one friend at Court we may make use of to procure our Pardon namely the Lord Iesus How earnest then should we be with him to be our Advocate to the Father for us and that he would Present the Merit of his Blood to the Father as the Price of our Pardon 2. There is that in Sin may make us desire Forgiveness Sin is the only thing that disquiets the Soul 1. Sin is a Burden it burdens the Creation Rom. 8.22 it burdens the Conscience Ps. 38.4 A wicked man is not sensible of Sin he is dead in Sin and if you lay a thousand weight upon a dead man he feels it not But to an awakened Conscience there 's no such Burden as Sin when a man seriously weighs with himself the Glory and Purity of that Majesty which Sin hath offended the preciousness of that Soul which Sin hath polluted the loss of that Happiness which sin hath indangered the greatness of that Torment which Sin hath deserved to lay all
of these and leave the other two to the severity of the Law will not he that is pardoned love his Prince who hath been so full of Clemency How should your hearts be indeared in love to God The Schoolmen distinguish of a Two-fold Love Amor gratuitus a Love of Bounty that is God's Love to us in Forgiving and Amor debitus a Love of Duty that is our Love to God by way of Retaliation We should shew our love by admiring God by sweetly solacing our selves in him and binding our selves to him in a perpetual Covenant 3. Let the Sence of God's Love in forgiving make you more Cautious and Fearful of sin for the future Psal. 130.4 There is forgiveness with thee that thou maist be feared O fear to offend this God who hath been so gracious to you in forgiving If a Friend hath done a kindness for us we will not disoblige him or abuse his Love After Nathan had told David The Lord hath put away thy sin How tender was David's Conscience How fearful was he of staining his Soul with the guilt of more blood Psal. 51.14 Deliver me from Blood-guiltiness O God Men committing gross sin after pardon God changeth his carriage towards them he turns his Smile into a ●rown they lie as Ionah in the belly of hell God's Wrath falls into their Conscience as a drop of scalding Lead into the Eye the Promises are as a Fountain sealed not a drop of comfort comes from them O Christians do you not remember what it cost you before to get your pardon How long it was before your broken bones were set And will you again venture to sin You may be in such a condition that you may question whether you belong to God or no though God doth not Damn you he may send you to Hell in this Life 4. If God hath given you good hope that you are pardoned walk chearfully Rom. 5.11 We joy in God through our Lord Iesus Christ by whom we have received the Atonement Who should rejoice if not he that hath his pardon God rejoiceth when he shews us Mercy And should not we rejoice when we receive Mercy In the saddest times a pardoned Soul may rejoice Afflictions have a Commission to do him good every cross-wind of Providence shall blow him nearer to the Haven of Glory Christian God hath pull'd off your Prison-fetters and Cloth'd you with the Robe of Righteousness and Crown'd you with Loving-kindness and yet art thou sad Rom. 5.2 We rejoice in hope of the Glory of God Can the Wicked rejoice who have onely a short Reprieve from Hell and not they who have a full Pardon sealed 5. Hath God pardoned you Do all the Service you can for God 1 Cor. 15.58 Always abounding in the work of the Lord. Let your head study for God let your hands work for him let your Tongue be the Organ of his Praise Paul got his pardon 1 Tim. 1.16 I obtained Mercy and this was as Oyl to the Wheels it made him move faster in obedience 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more abundantly than they all Paul 's obedience did not move slow as the Sun on the Dial but swiftly as the Sun in the Firmament He did spend and was spent for Christ. The pardoned Soul thinks he can never love God enough or serve him enough The last thing is to lay down some Rules or Directions how we may obtain forgiveness of Sin 1. We must take heed of Mistakes about pardon of Sin 1. Mistake That our sins are pardoned when they are not Q. Whence is this Mistake R. From Two Grounds 1. Because God is Merciful Answ. God's being Merciful shews that a Man's sins are pardonable but there is a great deal of difference between sins pardonable and sins pardoned Thy sins may be pardonable yet not pardoned Though God be merciful yet who is God's Mercy for not for the Presuming sinner but the Repenting sinner Such as go on in sin cannot lay claim to it God's Mercy is like the Ark none but the Priests might touch the Ark none but such as are Spiritual Priests Sacrificing their sins may touch this Ark of God's Mercy 2. Because Christ died for their sins therefore they are forgiven Answ. That Christ died for Remission of sin is true but that therefore all have Remission is false The Iudas should be forgiven Remission is limited to Believers Act. 13.39 By him all that believe are justified but all do not believe Some slight and trample Christ's blood under foot Heb. 10.29 So that notwithstanding Christ's Death all are not pardoned Take heed of this dangerous mistake Who will seek after pardon that thinks he hath it already 2. Mistake That pardon is easie to be had it is but a sigh or Lord have Mercy But How dearly hath pardon cost them who have obtained it How long was it ere David's broken bones were set Happy we if we have the pardon of sin sealed though at the very last hour But Why do Men think pardon of sin so easie to be obtained their sins are but small therefore Venial The Devil holds the small end of the Perspective-glass before their eyes But First There is no sin small being against a Deity Why is he punished with death that Clips the King's Coin or defaceth his Statue but because it is an abuse offered to the Person of the King Secondly Little sins when multiplied become great A little sum when multiplied comes to Millions What is less than a grain of Sand but when the Sand is multiplied what heavier Thirdly Thy sins cost no small price View thy sins in the Glass of Christ's Sufferings Christ did vail his Glory lose his Joy and pour out his Soul an Offering for the least sin Fourthly Little sins unrepented of will damn thee as well as greater Not onely great Rivers fall into the Sea but little Brooks Not onely greater sins carry Men to Hell but lesser therefore do not think pardon easie because sin is small beware of mistakes 2. The Second Means for Pardon of sin is see your selves guilty Come to God as Condemned Men 1 King 20.32 They put Ropes upon their heads and came to the King of Israel Let us come to God in profound Humility Say not thus Lord my heart is good and my life blameless God hates this Lie in the dust be covered with sackcloth say as the Centurion Mat. 8.8 Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roof I deserve not the least smile from Heaven This is the way for pardon 3. The Third Means for pardon is hearty Confession of sin Psal. 32.5 I confessed my sin and thou forgavest me Would we have God cover our sins we must discover them 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins he is just to forgive them One would have thought it should have ●un thus If we confess our sins he is merciful to forgive them nay but he is just to forgive them Why Just
Grace in them Had they no Grace the Devil would not disturb them where he keeps possession all is in peace Luk. 11.21 his Temptations are to rob the Saints of their Grace a Thief will not assault an empty House but where he thinks there is Treasure A Pyrate will not set upon an empty Ship but that is full fraught with Spices and Jewels so the Devil most assaults the people of God because he thinks they have a rich treasure of Grace in their Hearts and he would rob them of that What makes so many Cudgels be thrown at a Tree but because there is so much fruit hanging upon it the Devil throws his temptations at you because he sees you have so much fruit of Grace growing upon you Tho to be tempted is a trouble yet to think why you are tempted is a comfort 3 The third Rock of support or comfort is that Jesus Christ is near at hand and stands by us in all our temptations Here take notice of two things 1. Christs sympathy in temptation 2. Christs succour in temptation 1. Christs Sympathy in our temptations Nobis compatitur Christus Heb. 4.15 We have not an High-priest who cannot be touch'd with the feeling of our Infirmities Jesus Christ doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sympathise with us he is so sensible of our Temptations as if he himself lay under them and did feel them in his own Soul As in Musick when one string is touched all the rest sound So Christs Bowels sound we cannot be Tempted but he is touched If you saw a Wolf worry your Child would you not pity your Child You cannot pity it so as Christ doth tempted ones Christ had a fellow feeling when he was upon Earth much more now in glory Quest. But how can it stand with Christs glory now in Heaven to have a fellow-feeling of our miseries and temptations Answ. This fellow-feeling in Christ ariseth not from any infirmity or passion but from the mystical union between him and his Members Zach. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of mine Eye Every injury done to a Saint Christ takes as done to him in Heaven every temptation is a striking at Christ and he is touch'd with the feeling of our temptations 2. Christs succour in temptation as the good Samaritan first had compassion on the wounded Man there was Sympathy then he poured in Wine and Oil there was succour Luke 10.34 So when we are wounded by the Red Dragon Christ is first touched with compassion and then he pours in Wine and Oil Heb. 2.18 in that he himself hath suffer'd being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted The Greek word to succour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to run speedily to ones help so fierce is Satan so frail is Man that Christ who is God-man runs speedily to his help When Peter was ready to sink and said Lord save me Christ presently stretched forth his hand and caught him So when a poor Soul is tempted and cries to Heaven for help Lord save me Christ comes in with his Auxiliary Forces Noscit Christus our Lord Jesus knows what it is to be tempted therefore is so ready to succour such as are tempted it hath been an observation that child-bearing Women are more pittiful to others in their Travails than such Women as are Barren So the Lord Jesus having been in Travail by Temptations and Sufferings is more ready to pity and succour such as are tempted Concerning Christs succouring the Tempted consider two things 1. Christs Ability to succour 2. His Agility to succour 1. Christs Ability to succour Heb. 2.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is able to succour them that are tempted Christ is call'd Michael Rev. 12.7 which signifies Who is like God Tho' the Tempted Soul is weak yet he fights under a good Captain The Lion of the Tribe of Iudah When a tempted Soul fights Christ comes into the Field as his Second Michael will be too hard for the Dragon when the Devil lays the Siege of a Temptation Christ can raise the Siege when he please He can beat through the Enemies quarters and can so rout Satan that he shall never be able to rally his forces any more Jesus Christ is on the Saints side and who would desire a better Live-guard than Omnipotency 2. Christs Agility in succouring As Christ is able to succour the tempted so he will certainly succour them Christs power inables him his love inclines him his faithfulness engageth him to succour tempted Souls This is a great comfort to a Soul in Temptation he hath a succouring Saviour as God did succour Israel in the Wilderness among fiery Serpents they had the Rock set abroach the Manna the Pillar of Cloud the Brazen Serpent what was this but a Type of Gods succouring a poor Soul in the Wilderness of Temptation stung with the Devil that fiery Serpent Alexander being asked how he could sleep so securely when his Enemies were about him said Antipater is awake who is always vigilant So when our tempting Enemy is near us Jesus Christ is awake who is a Wall of Fire about us There is a great deal of succour to the tempted in the Names given to Christ. As Satans names may terrifie so Christs names may succour The Devil is called Apollyon the Devourer Rev. 9.11 Christ is called a Saviour the Devil is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Strong man Mat. 12.29 Christ is call'd el Gibbor the mighty God Isa. 9 6. the Devil is call'd the Accuser Rev. 12.10 Christ is called the Advocate 1 Ioh. 2.1 The Devil is called the Tempter Mat. 4.3 Christ is called the Comforter Luke 2.25 The Devil is call'd the Prince of Darkness Christ is call'd the Sun of Righteousness The Devil is call'd the Old Serpent Christ is call'd the Brazen Serpent that Heals Iohn 3.15 Thus the very names of Christ have some succour in them for Tempted Souls Quest. How and in what manner doth Christ succour them that are tempted Answ. Several ways 1. Christ succours them by sending his Spirit whose works it is to bring those promises to their mind which are fortifying Iohn 14.26 he shall bring all things to your remembrance The Spirit furnisheth us with promises as so many Weapons to fight against the old Serpent Rom. 16.20 the Lord will shortly bruise Satan under your feet 1 Cor. 10.13 God will not suffer you to be tempted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 above that ye are able Gen. 3.15 The Seed of the Woman shall break the Serpents Head We are oft in times of Temptation as a Man that hath his House beset and cannot find his Weapons he hath his Sword and his Gun to seek now in this case Christ sends his Spirit and he brings things to our remembrance that help us in our Combat with Satan The Spirit of Christ doth to one that is tempted as Aaron and Hur did to Moses they put a Stone under him and held up his Hands and
then Israel prevailed So Gods Spirit puts the Promises under the Hand of Faith and then a Christian overcomes the Devil that spiritual Amalek The Promise is to the Soul as the Anchor is to a Ship which keeps it steddy in a Storm 2. Christ succours them that are tempted by his blessed interceeding for them When the Devil is tempting Christ is praying Of this the next timer 2. Christ succours his Saints by interceeding for them when Satan is tempting Christ is praying That prayer Christ put up for Peter when he was tempted extend● to all the Saints Luk. 22.32 Lord saith Christ it is my Child that is tempted Father pitty him when a poor Soul lies bleeding of his wounds the Devil hath given him Christ presents his Wounds to his Father and in the virtue of those pleads for Mercy How powerful must Christs Prayer needs be He is a Favorite Iohn 11.42 He is both an High-Priest and a Son if God could forget that Christ were a Priest yet he cannot forget that he is a Son besides Christ prays for nothing but what is agreeable to his Fathers Will if a Kings Son Petitions only for that which his Father hath a Mind to grant his suit will not be denied 3. Christ succours his People by taking of the Tempter a Shepherd when the Sheep begins to straggle may set the Dog on the Sheep to bring it nearer the Fold but then he calls off the Dog again God will take of the Tempter 1 Cor. 10.13 He will with the Temptation make a way to escape 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he will make an Out-let Christ will rebuke the Tempter Zach. 3.2 The Lord rebuke thee O Satan This is no small support that Christ succours the Tempted The Mother succours the Child most when it is sick she sits by its Bed-side brings it Cordials So when a Soul is most assaulted it shall be most assisted Object But I have dealt unkindly with Christ and sinn'd against his Love and sure he will not succour me but let me perish in the Battel Answ. Christ is a merciful High-priest and will succour thee notwithstanding thy failings Ioseph was a Type of Christ. His Brethren sold him away and the Irons entered into his Soul yet afterwards when his Brethren were ready to die in the Famine he forgot their injuries and succoured them with Money and Corn. I am saith he Ioseph your Brother so will Christ say to a tempted Soul I know thy unkindnesses how thou hast distrusted my Love grieved my Spirit but I am Ioseph I am Jesus therefore I will succour thee when thou art tempted 4. Rock of support The best Men may be most tempted A rich Ship may be violently set upon by Pyrats He who is rich in Faith yet may have the Devil that Pyrate set upon him by his battering pieces Iob an eminent Saint yet how fiercely was he assaulted Satan did smite his body that he might tempt him either to question Gods Providence or quarrel with it St. Paul was a chosen vessel but how was this vessel battered with Tentation 2 Cor. 12.7 Object But is it not said he who is born of God the Wicked one toucheth him not 1 Joh. 5.18 Answ. It is not meant that the Devil doth not tempt him but he toucheth him not that is tactu lethali Cajetan with a deadly touch 1 Joh. 5.16 There is a sin unto Death now Satan with all his Temptations doth not make a Child of God sin a sin unto Death Thus he toucheth him not 5. Rock of support Satan can go no further in tempting than God will give him leave The power of the Tempter is limited A whole Legion of Devils could not touch one Swine till Christ gave them leave Satan would have sifted Peter to have sifted out all his Grace but Christ would not suffer him I have prayed for thee c. Christ binds the Devil in a Chain Rev. 20.1 If Satans power were according to his malice not one Soul should be saved but he is a Chained Enemy this is a comfort Satan cannot go an Hairs breadth beyond Gods permission If an Enemy could not touch a Child further than the Father did appoint sure he should do the Child no great hurt 6. Rock of support It is not the having a Tentation makes guilty but the giving consent We cannot hinder a Tentation Elijah that could by Prayer shut Heaven could not shut out a Temptation but if we abhor the Temptation it is our burden not our sin We read in the old Law if one went to force a Virgin and she cried out she was reputed innocent If Satan would by temptation commit a Rape upon a Christian and he cries out and will not give consent the Lord will charge it upon the Devils score It is not the laying the Bait hurts the Fish if the Fish doth not bite 7. Rock of support Our being tempted is no sign of Gods hating us A Child of God oft thinks God doth not love him because he lets him be haunted with the Devil non sequitur this is a wrong conclusion was not Christ himself tempted yet by a Voice from Heaven proclaimed This is my beloved Son Mat. 3.17 Satans tempting and Gods loving may stand together The Goldsmith loves his Gold in the Fire God loves a Saint tho shot at by fiery Darts 8. Rock of support Christs Temptation was for our consolation aqua-ignis Jesus Christ is to be looked upon as a publick person as our Head and Representative and what Christ did he did for us His prayer was for us his suffering was for us when he was tempted and overcame the temptation he overcame for us Christs conquering Satan was to shew that every Elect Person shall at last be a Conqueror over Satan when Christ overcame Satans temptations it was not only to give us an example of Courage but an assurance of Conquest We have overcome Satan already in our Head and we shall at last perfectly overcome 9. Rock of support the Saints Temptations shall not be above their strength The Lutenist will not stretch the strings of his Lute too hard lest they break 1 Cor. 10.13 God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 above that ye are able God will proportion our strength to the stroke 2. Cor. 12.9 My Grace is sufficient for thee The Torch-light of Faith shall be kept burning notwithstanding all the Winds of Temptation blowing 10. Rock of support these temptations shall produce much good 1. They shall quicken a Spirit of Prayer in the Saints they shall pray more and better Temptation is orationis flabellum the exciter of Prayer perhaps before the Saints came to God as cold suiters in Prayer they pray'd as if they pray'd not temptation is a Medicine for security When Paul had a Messenger of Satan to buffet him he was more earnest in Prayer 2 Cor. 12.8 Three times I besought the Lord the Thorn in the
by him It alludes to a Bird that is taken alive in the Snare thus you see he is the Evil one The Devils work is to angle for mens Souls he lays suitable Baits He allures the ambitious Man with Honour the covetous Man with Riches he hooks his Baits with Silver he allures the lustful Man with Beauty he tempts Men to Delila's Lap to keep them from Abraham's Bosom The Devil glories in the Damnation of Souls how needful then is this Prayer Deliver us from Evil. Lord keep us from the Evil One. Tho' Satan may sollicite us to sin suffer us not to give Consent Tho' he may Assault the Castle of our Hearts yet let us not deliver up the Keys of the Castle to our mortal Enemy 3. In this Petition Deliver us from Evil we pray to be delivered from the Evil of the World 'T is call'd an Evil World Gal. 1.4 not but that the World as God made it is Good but through our Corruption it becomes Evil and we had need pray deliver us from an Evil World Quest. In what Sence is it Saeculum malum an Evil World Answ. 1. As it is a defiling World 'T is like living in an infectious Air it requires an high degree of Grace to keep our selves unspotted from the World Iam. 1.27 'T is as hard to live in the World and not be defiled as to go much in the Sun and not be tanned 1. The Opinions of the World are defiling that a little Religion will serve the turn like Leaf-Gold it must be spread but thin That Morality runs parallel with Grace that to be Zealous is to be Righteous over-much That it is better to keep the skin whole than the Conscience Pure That the Flesh is rather to be gratified than mortified These Opinions of the World are defiling 2. The Examples of the World are defiling Examples have a great Force in them to draw us to Evil. Princeps imperio magnus exemplo major Princes are Looking-Glasses which we dress our selves by if they do Evil we are apt to imitate them Great Men are Copies we set before us and usually we write most like the Copy when it is blotted there 's a great Proneness in us to follow the Examples of the World Therefore God hath put in a Caveat against it Exod. 23.2 Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do Evil. How easily are we hurried to sin when we have the Tide of Natural Corruption and the wind of Example to carry us Lot was the worlds Wonder the Complexion of his Soul kept Pure in Sodoms infectious Air. The River of Peru in America after it hath run into the main Sea keeps fresh and doth not mingle with the salt Waters To this River might Lot be compared whose Piety kept fresh in Sodoms salt Water Bad Examples are catching Psal. 106.35 They were mingled among the Heathen and Learned their Works Had not we need then pray Lord deliver us from this Evil World Living in the World is like travelling in a dirty Road. 2. It is an evil World as it is an insnaring World The World 's full of Snares Company is a snare Recreation a snare Oaths are snares Riches are golden snares Opes irritamenta malorum The Apostle speaks of the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eye and the Pride of Life 1 Ioh. 2.16 The Lust of the Flesh is Beauty the Lust of the Eye is Money the Pride of Life is Honour these are the natural Mans Trinity In mundo splendor Opum Gloriae Majestas Voluptatum illecebrae ab amore Dei nos abstrahunt The World is a flattering Enemy whom it kisses it oft betrays it is a silken Halter the Pleasures of the World like Opium cast men into the sleep of Security Lysimachus sold his Crown for a draught of Water so many part with Heaven for the World It is an ensnaring World the King of Armenia was sent Prisoner to Queen Cleopatra in Golden Fetters Too many are inslaved with the worlds golden Fetters the World bewitch'd Demas 2 Tim. 4.10 One of Christs own Apostles was caught with a silver Bait. 'T is hard to drink the Wine of Prosperity and not be giddy Thus the World through our innate Corruption is Evil as it is a Snare 1 Tim. 6.9 They that will be rich fall into Temptation and a Snare If an Angel were to live here there were no danger of the Worlds insnaring him because he hath no Principle within to receive the Temptation but we have a Corrupt Principle that suits with the Temptation and that makes us always in Danger 3. It is an evil World as it is a discouraging World It casts Scorn and Reproach upon them who live vertuously what you will be holier than others Wiser than your Ancestors The World deals with the Professors of Religion as Sanballat did with the Iews when they were building Nehem. 4.1 He mocked the Jews and said What do th●se feeble Jews will they Fortifie themselves will they revive the Stones out of the heaps of Rubbish that are burnt So the wicked World casts out Squibs of Reproach at the godly what will ye build for Heaven What needs all this Cost What Profit is it to serve the Almighty Thus the World would pluck off our Chariot-Wheels when we are driving towards Heaven they are called Cruel Mockings Heb. 11.36 It requires a great measure of Sanctity to with-stand the Discouragements of the World to dance among Serpents to laugh at Reproaches and bind them as a Crown about our Head 4. It is an evil World as it is a deadning World It dulls and deadneth the Affections to Heavenly Objects The World cools Holy Motions like a Damp in a silver Mine which puts out the Light Earthly things choke the Seed of the Word A man intangled in the World is so taken up about secular Concerns that he can no more mind the things above than the earth can ascend or the Elephant fly in the Air. And even such as have Grace in them yet when their Affections are belimed with the Earth they find themselves much indisposed to Meditation and Prayer 't is like swimming with a Stone about the Neck 5. 'T is an evil World as it is a maligning World It doth disgust and hate the people of God Iohn 15.19 Because ye are not of the World therefore the World hateth you Hatred is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Aristotle saith against the whole Kind Hamans hatred was against the Seed of the whole Iews When you can find a Serpent without a Sting or a Leopard without Spots then you may expect to find a wicked World without Hatred the White that is shot at is Piety Psal. 38.20 They are mine Adversaries because I follow the thing that Good is The World pretends to hate the Godly for something else but the ground of the Quarrel is Holiness The Worlds Hatred is Implacable Anger may be reconciled Hatred cannot You may as well reconcile Heaven and Hell as
blame then are the Papists who knock at the wrong door When they are in any Trouble they pray to the Saints to deliver them When they are in danger of Shipwrack they pray to St. Nicholas when they are in the fit of a Fever they pray to St. Petronelle when they are in Travel they pray to St. Margaret How unlawful it is to invocate Saints in Prayer I will prove from one Scripture Rom. 10.14 How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed We may pray to none but such as we may believe in but we ought not to believe in any Saint therefore we may not pray to him The Papists have in their Ladies Psalter directed their Prayers for Deliverance to the Virgin Mary Deliver me O Lady Benedicta Domina in manibus tuis reposita est nostra salus O thou blessed Lady in thy hands our Salvation is laid up But Abraham is ignorant of us Isa. 63.16 The Saints and Virgin Mary are ignorant of us To pray to Saints is Idolatry advanced to Blasphemy Our Saviour hath taught us better in all our Distresses to pray to God for a Cure Deliver us from Evil. He only knows what our Troubles are and can give us help from Trouble he only that laid the Burden on can take it off David went to God Psal. 25.17 O bring thou me out of my Distresses God can with a word heal Psal. 107.20 He sent forth his Word and healed them He delivered the three Children out of the fiery Furnace Ioseph out of Prison Daniel out of the Lions Den. This proves him to be God because none can deliver as he doth Dan. 3.29 There is no other God that can deliver after this sort Let us then in all our Straits and Exigencies seek to God and say Deliver us from Evil. An Addition of some Sermons Preached by the Reverend Mr. Tho. Watson formerly Minister of St. Stephen's Walbrook Of Wisdom and Innocency Matth. 10.16 Be ye therefore wise as Serpents and harmless as Doves THE Apostle saith All Scripture is of Divine inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 God's Word is compared to a Lamp for its enlightning quality Psal. 119.105 and to Silver refined for its enriching quality Psal. 12.6 Among other parts of Sacred Writ this in the Text is not the least Be ye wise as Serpents and innocent as Doves This is the Speech of our Blessed Saviour His Lips were a Tree of Life which fed many His Works were Miracles his Words were Oracles and deserve to be engraven upon our hearts as with the point of a Diamond This is a golden Sentence Be ye wise as Serpents and innocent as Doves Our Lord Jesus in this Chapter First Gives his Apostles their Commission Secondly Foretells their Danger Thirdly Gives them several Instructions I. Christ gives his Apostles their Commission Before they went abroad to preach Christ ordains them vers 5. These Twelve Iesus sent forth Those who exercise in the Ministerial Function must have a Lawful Call Hebr. 5.4 No Man takes this Honour to himself but he who is called of God Christ gave not only the Apostles and Prophets a Call to their Office who were extraordinary Ministers but even Pastors and Teachers Ephes. 4.11 Quest. But if one have Gifts is not this sufficient to the Ministerial Office Answ. No As Grace is not sufficient to make a Minister so neither Gifts therefore it is observable that the Scripture puts a difference between Gifting and Sending Rom. 10.15 How shall they Preach unless they be Sent If Gifts were enough to constitute a Minister the Apostle should have said How shall they Preach unless they be Gifted But he saith unless they be Sent Which denotes a lawful Call or Investiture into the Office The Attorney that pleads at the Barr may have as good Gifts as the Judge that sits upon the Bench but he must have a lawful Commission before he sit as Judge If it be thus in Matters Civil then much more in Church-Matters which are of an higher Concern Those therefore who usurp the Work of the Ministry without being solemnly set apart for it discover more Pride than Zeal and they can expect no Blessing Ier. 23.32 I sent them not nor commanded them therefore they shall not profit this People saith the Lord. So much for the First the Apostles Commission they received These Twelve Iesus sent forth II. Christ foretells their Danger ver 16. Behold I send you forth as Sheep in the midst of Wolves The Apostles were going about a glorious Work but an hazardous Work they would meet with Enemies fierce and savage like Wolves As all that will live godly in Christ shall meet with Sufferings so commonly Christ's Ambassadors encounter the deepest Trials Most of the Apostles died by the hands of Tyrants Peter was crucified with his head downwards Luke the Evangelist was executed on an Olive-Tree Iohn was cast by Domitian into a Vessel of scalding Oyl Maximinus the Emperor as Eusebius relates gave charge to his Officers to put none to death but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Governors and Pastors of the Church The Ministers are Christ's Antesignani his Ensign-bearers to carry his Colours therefore they are most shot at They hold forth his Truth Phil. 1.17 I am set for the defence of the Gospel The Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alludes to a Soldier that is set in the Forefront of the Battel and hath all the Bullets flying about his Ears The Minister's Work is to part between Men and their Sins and this causeth opposition When Paul preached against Diana all the City was in an uproar Acts 19. This may stir up Prayer for Christ's Ministers that they may be able to withstand the Assaults of the Enemy 2 Thes. 3.2 III. Christ gives the Apostles their Instructions whereof this was one in the Text Be ye wise as Serpents and innocent as Doves 1. The Exhortation Be ye wise 2. The Simile as Serpents 3. The Qualification of this Wisdom a Wisdom mixt with Innocency Harmless as Doves This Vnion of the Dove and the Serpent is hard to find Mat. 24.45 Who then is a wise and faithful Servant On which Place saith St. Chrysostom It is an hard matter to find one faithful and wise Faithful there is the Dove Wise there is the Serpent 'T is hard to find both If one would seek for a faithful Man questionless he may find many if for a wise Man he may find many but if he seek for one both wise and faithful this is rara avis hard to find yet it is possible though not common Moses a man learned in all the Wisdom of the Egyptians Acts 7.22 There was the Wisdom of the Serpent And the meekest man alive Numb 12.3 Now the Man Moses was very meek above all the men upon the face of the Earth there was the Innocency of the Dove Daniel was an excellent person Dan. 5.14 Excellent Wisdom is found in thee there was the Prudence of
would take heed to my Ways that I offend not with my Tongue Look to the former slips of your Tongue and how you have by your Words provoked God and that will be a good means to make you more cautious for the future A Mariner that hath twice touched upon a Rock and been like to be cast away will be more careful how he comes there again 3 Rule Watch your Tongue Most Sin is committed for want of Watchfulness As the Tongue hath a double Fence set about it so it had need have a double Watch. The Tongue when it is let loose will be ready to speak loosly watch it lest it run beyond its Bounds in frothy and sinful Discourse Prov. 30.32 If thou hast thought Evil lay thy Hand upon thy Mouth That is say some lay thy Hand upon thy Mouth in token of Repentance But it may bear another Sence If thou hast thought Evil if angry malicious thoughts come into thy Mind lay thy Hand upon thy Mouth to stop thy Lips that thy thoughts come not into Words do not speak what thou thinkest If thou hast in thy Heart conceived Evil let not thy Tongue be the Midwife to bring it forth lay thy Hand upon thy Mouth The Spiritual Watch must be kept daily Watch and Pray 'T is not enough to Pray against Sin but you must Watch against it Look to your Tongue that there be no Wild Fire got into it The Iews Sealed the Sepulchre and set a Watch So Seal up your Lips by an Holy Vow and then Watch them that they speak no Evil. 4 Rule If you would not offend in your Tongue ponder your Words well before you speak Eccles. 5.1 Be not rash with thy Mouth Some speak vainly because inconsiderately they do not weigh their Words before they speak them He must needs make wild Work in Printing that should print his Letters and never mind how he sets them He that speaks rashly speaks rudely and discovers either Indiscretion or Sin Words spoken in haste may be repented of at leisure As it is with a Man's going if he goes carelesly and doth not mind his way his Foot may be in a Slough e'er he is aware So with a Man's speaking If he do not mind his Words but gives his Tongue liberty he may speak not only unadvisedly but unholily and give just offence 5 Rule If you would not offend in your Tongue pray to God to guard your Tongue Psal. 141.3 Set a Watch O Lord before my Mouth Set not about this Work in your own Strength but implore God's help The Tongue can no Man tame Jam. 3.8 Man that can tame the fiercest Creatures Lion Wolf Elephant yet cannot tame the Tongue but God can tame it therefore go to him by Prayer Pray Lord set a Watch before the Door of my Lips keep me that I may speak nothing to grieve thy Spirit or that may tend to thy dishonour God is the great Lord-Keeper he keeps the Heart and Tongue Pray that his fear may be a Golden Bridle to check us from speaking Evil then we are safe when we have God for our Guardian 6 Rule If you would be kept from evil speaking inure your Tongues to good speaking If you would not have the Cask have a bad scent put good Liquor into it So if you would not have your Tongue run out sinfully let it be used to good discourse speak often one to another of Christ and the things pertaining to the Kingdom of God The Spouses Lips drop'd as an Honey-comb Cant. 4.11 MOTIVES Vse To beware of Tongue-Sins 1 Motive If you have no care of your Tongues all your Religion is Vain Iam. 1.26 If any Man among you seems to be Religious and bridleth not his Tongue this Man's Religion is vain Many a one will hear the Word and make a profession of Religion but cares not what Liberty he takes in his Tongue to reproach and vilifie others This Man's Religion is vain That is 1. He hath no Religion his Religion is but a shew or pretence The Blazing Comet is no Star 2. It is vain because it is ineffectual it hath not that force upon him as Religion ought That is a vain Thing that doth not do its Work or Answer its End That Engine is vain that will not carry the Water That Physick is vain that will not Work That Ship is vain that will not Sail. And that Religion is vain which is ineffectual it will not Bridle the Tongue or Master the Passions That which doth not attain the end for which it was appointed is a vain Thing 2 Motive The Tongue discovers much of the Heart Verba sunt nuncia cordis Such as the Tongue is such commonly the Heart is A lascivious Tongue shews a lustful Heart an earthly Tongue a covetous Heart a murmuring Tongue a discontented Heart The Tongue is oft a Commentary upon the Heart As the Face breaking out in Sores shows the Blood is corrupt so the Tongue breaking out in sinful Discourse shows the Heart is corrupt 3 Motive To allow our selves in the abuse of the Tongue cannot stand with Grace I know a good Man may sometimes speak unadvisedly with his Lips he may fly out in Words be in a Passion but he doth not allow himself in it when his Passion is over he weeps Rom. 7.15 What I do I allow not but for a Man to allow himself in Sin Censuring Slandering dropping Words like Coals of Fire sure it is not consistent with Grace A Sheep may fall into the Dirt but doth not lie there A good Man may fall into a Sin of the Tongue but doth not lie in it he gets out again by repentance To allow one's self in Sin shews a Man is overcome of it that he regards it in his Heart and that is inconsistent with Grace Psal. 66.18 4 Motive The Sins of the Tongue are very defiling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iam. 3.6 The Tongue defileth Defiling to one's self and chiefly defiling to others The Tongue conveys Poison into the Ear of another sometimes by false Suggestions raising Prejudices in the Mind of another against such a Person sometimes by passionate Speeches the Spirit of another is provoked as the firing one Beacon causeth more Beacons to be fired So one angry Tongue makes more and stirs up the Fire of Contention 5 Motive The Evil Tongue is set on Fire of Hell In the Text Isaiah's Tongue was set on Fire from Heaven but a malicious censorious passionate Tongue is set on Fire from Hell When Satan inflames the Tongue then it spits Fire How rashly and sinfully did the Prophet Ionah speak Ch. 4.9 I do well to be angry to the Death Ionah in the Hebrew signifies a Dove which is without Gall but he shew'd too much Gall of bitterness What! to be angry and to be angry with God! and to justifie it Sure his Tongue had not a Coal from God's Altar for that was very unseemly for a Prophet When you find your
God ought to be preferred before our Personal Concerns 537 God is the chief God and how 11 God that he is proved 20 What he is 24 God is a Spirit what is meant by it 24 God how he differs from other Spirits ibid. God how we may conceive his being a Spirit without making an Image or Resemblance of him 25 God what kind of Spirit he is 27 God there is but one 59 God from what and to what he calls men 128 God how we shall see him 231 God is a King and how 455 What it requires of us 456 'T is a Comfort to the Godly and Terrour to the Wicked 457 God what it is to make him a God to us 273 What it is to cleave to him as our God 275 God what it is to have other besides the true God 276 God spake all these Words how we must understand them since he has no bodily Organs 249 God how he comes to be our God and what it implies 252 How we may know it ibid. God in what sence he is a Father 426 God's being Father to Christ and to the Elect how differ ibid. What makes God our Father ibid. God wherein it appears that he is the best Father ibid. God that he is our Father how to know it 428 That God is in Heaven what we may learn from it 442 God's Name what is meant by it 446 God's Name dishonoured by all sorts of Persons and how 451 Grace how a Christian may be said to grow in it 215 The right manner of growing in it ibid. Why Grace must needs grow ibid. Grace why we should grow in it ibid. How to know when we grow in it and when not 217 How to comfort them that don't grow in it 218 Grace why called a Kingdom 460 Greatness of Sin an Argument for Pardon 817 H Happiness of having God for our Father wherein it lies 433 Hallowing of God's Name what is meant by it 446 When we may be said to do it ibid. Hallowing God's Name the Character of a Godly Person 450 How we may Hallow God's Name 455 Heart how it may be bettered 992 Hell how we shall know we are delivered from it 269 Hell's Torments consist of two parts 865 Holiness of God what it is 47 Our Holiness wherein it consists 48 Holiness how we may resemble God in it 49 What Honour is due to Political Fathers 350 What Honour is due to Spiritual Fathers ibid. Holy Ghost what is meant by its Power overshadowing the Virgin 112 House of Bondage a Type of Israel's Deliverance from Sin 266 House why 't is put before the Wife in the Tenth Command 387 Humiliation wherein it comes short of Grace 462 I Idolatry how we may be kept from it 281 Idolatrous Places a great Blessing to be delivered from them 258 Idolatry why we are so prone to it 258 Illumination and Conviction how many ways a Man Sins against it 392 Illumination when it comes short of Grace 462 Image-Worship the Evil of it 299 Image of Christ whether we may lawfully make it 280 Image or resemblance of God if none lawful how shall we conceive of God aright 281 Impotency why God suffers it to lie on Man that he cannot keep the Law 389 In dwelling-Presence of the Spirit how to know if we have it 204 Infallibility and certainty of the Kingdom of Glory wherein it appears 479 Infant-Baptism proved 410 The benefit thereof ibid. Intercession of Christ what are the Fruits of it 105 Invocation of Saints unlawful 880 Joy in the Holy Ghost what it is 211 Divine Joys when God usually gives his People them ibid. Joys Worldly and Spiritual the differences between them 212 This Joy to be sought for and why 213 What we shall do to obtain it 214 This Joy those that want it how we shall comfort them ibid. Judgment general when it will be 238 How it will be performed 239 Justice of God what it is 50 Justice of God how it stands with it for Sin committed in a Moment to punish it with Eternal Torment 269 396 Justified Persons in what sence they are redeemed from Sin 122 Justification what is meant by it 131 The ground of it ibid. The Material Meritorious and Efficient Cause of Justification ibid. The Essence of it ibid. The Instrument of it ibid. The End of it 132 Our Justification whether from Eternity ib. Justification Positions about it ib. Justification and Sanctification how they differ 808 K What Kingdom is meant in the Lords Prayer 458 Kingdom of Darkness how many ways a Natural Man is in it 459 Kingdom of Grace why we should pray that it may come into our Hearts 460 Kingdom of Grace how we may know it is set up in our Hearts 462 Kingdom of Grace what we shall do to obtain it 467 Kingdom of Grace when it increases in the Soul 468 Kingdom of Glory what is meant by it 471 Kingdom of Heaven what it implies ibid and 476 The Blessedness of being there ibid. Kingdom of Heaven wherein it excels all other Kingdoms 477 This Kingdom when it shall be bestowed 479 Kingdom of Heaven why we should so earnestly pray for it 480 Kingdom of Heaven how we shall know it is prepared for us 485 Kingdom of Heaven what advances a Man may make to it and yet miss of it and whence it is 487 What we shall do that we may not miss of it 489 Knowledge of God 32 Knowledge the Chief Work of Conversion 998 Knowledge to do Good why not followed with Practice 999 L Law whether we may go to it for Debt 829 Lead us not into Temptation the meaning of it 832 Live to God what it is 5 Lord's Supper what it is 413 What are the Ends of it 414 Lord's Death how we are to remember it in the Sacrament 414 Holy Supper why we are to receive it 415 Lord's Supper whether it be oft to be administred 415 Who are to receive it ibid. How we may receive it Worthily ibid. Loss will befal us if we give over doing God's Will 519 Love what it is 245 Wherein its formal Nature consists ibid. Love to God how it must be qualified ibid. Love to God what are the visible Signs of it 246 How we shall do to Love God aright 248 To Love any thing more than God is to make it a God 277 Love to God how it must be qualified 289 Love God how we may know whether we do it ibid. Love to God incentive to inflame it ●90 M. Man being in honour abideth not how the Rabbins read it 79 Man why he does not obey God though he knows his Duty 244 Master how he must demean towards his Servants 353 Means to bring our Will to God in Affliction 535 Means for obtaining the Kingdom of Heaven 494 Means conducing to Perseverance 502 Meditation a Means to help us to Heaven 499 Meditation on the Kingdom of Glory what Effects it has 509 Mercy of God what it is laid
hearts to submission Lord if thou usest so much gentleness and correctest in measure Thy Will be done 12. There is kindness in Affliction in that God often sweetens it with divine Consolation 2 Cor. 1.4 Who comforteth us in all our Tribulation After a bitter Potion a lump of Sugar God comforts in Affliction 1. Partly by his Word Psal. 119.50 This is my Comfort in my Affliction for thy Word hath quickened me The Promises of the word are a shop of Cordials 2. God comforts by his Spirit Philip Landtgrave of Hesse said that in his troubles se divinas Martyrum consolationes sensisse he felt the divine Consolations of the Martyrs David had his Pilgrimage-Songs Psal. 119.54 and St. Paul his Prison-Songs Act. 16.25 Thus God candies our Wormwood with Sugar and makes us gather Grapes of Thorns Some of the Saints have had such ravishing Joys in Affliction that they had rather endure their Sufferings then want their Comforts O how much kindness is in the Cross In the Belly of this Lyon is an Honey-Comb may not this make us chearfully submit to Gods Will when God lines the Yoak with Comfort and gives us honey at the end of the Rod 13. There is kindness in Affliction in that God doth curtail and shorten it he will not let it lye on too long Isa. 57.16 I will not contend for ever least the Spirit should fail before me God will give his People a Writ of Ease and proclaim a Year of Jubilee the wicked may plow upon the backs of the Saints but God will cut their Traces Psal. 129.4 The Goldsmith will not let his gold lye any longer in the Furnace then till it is purified The Wicked must drink a Sea of Wrath but the Godly have only a Cup of Affliction Isa. 51.17 and God will say Let this Cup pass away Affliction may be compared to Frost it will break and Spring Flowers will come on Isa. 35. Sorrow and sighing shall fly away Affliction hath a Sting but withal a Wing sorrow shall fly away this Land Flood shall be dryed up if then there be so much kindness in the Cross God will cause a Cessation of trouble say then Fiat Voluntas tua Thy Will be done 14. Vlt. There is kindness in Affliction in that it is a means to make us happy Iob 5.17 Behold happy is the Man whom God correcteth This seems strange to flesh and blood that Affliction should make one happy when Moses saw the bush burning and not consumed I will s●ith he turn aside and see this strange sight Exod. 3.3 So here is a strange sight a Man afflicted yet happy The World counts them happy who can escape Affliction but happy is the Man whom God correcteth Quest. But how do Afflictions contribute to our happiness Resp. 1. As they are a means to bring us nearer to God the Loadstone of Prosperity doth not draw us so near to God as the Cords of Affliction VVhen the Prodigal was pinch'd with want then saith he I will arise and go to my Father Luke 15.18 The Deluge brought the Dove to the Ark The Floods of Sorrow make us hasten to Christ. 2. Afflictions make us happy as they are Manuductions to Glory The Storm drives the Ship into the harbour Happy is that Storm which drives the Soul into the Heavenly harbour is it not better to go through affliction to glory then through pleasure to misery not that afflictions merit glory no cross ever merited but that which Christ endured but they do disponere fit and prepare us for glory Think O Christian what Affliction leads to it leads to Paradise where are Rivers of Pleasure always running may not this make us chearfully submit to Gods VVill and say Lord if there be so much kindness in Affliction if all thou dost is to make us happy Thy Will be done 7. Consideration It is Gods ordinary course to keep his People to a bitter Diet-Drink and exercise them with great Trials Affliction is the beaten Road all the Saints have gone in The lively Stones in the Spiritual building have been all hewn and polished Christs Lilly hath grown among the Thorns 2 Tim. 3.12 All that will live Godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution 'T is too much for a Christian to have two Heavens that is more than Christ had It hath been ever the lot of the Saints to encounter with sore tryals Both of the Prophets Iam. 5.10 Take my brethren the Prophets for an example of suffering affliction And of the Apostles Peter was Crucified with his Head downward Iames beheaded by Herod Iohn banished into the Isle of Patmos the Apostle Thomas thrust thorow with a spear who was chosen Apostle in Iudas room Matthias stoned to death Luke the Evangelist hanged on an Olive-tree Those Saints of whom the World was not worthy did pass under the Rod Hebr. 11.36 Christs Kingdom is Regnum Crucis this is the way God hath alwayes gone in such as God intends to save from Hell yet he doth not save from the Cross the consideration of this should quiet our Minds in Affliction and make us say Thy Will be done Do we think God will alter his course of Providence for us Why should we look for exemption from trouble more than others Why should we think to tread only upon Roses and Violets when Prophets and Apostles have marched through the Bryars to Heaven 8. Consideration God hath done that for thee Christian which may make thee content to suffer any thing at his hand and say Thy Will be done 1. He hath adopted thee for his Child David thought it no small Honour to be the Kings Son in Law 1 Sam. 18.18 what an Honour is it to derive thy pedigree from Heaven to be born of God why then art thou troubled and murmurest at every slight cross As Ionadab said to Amnon 2 Sam. 13.4 Why art thou being the Kings Son lean So why art thou who art Son or Daughter to the King of Heaven troubled at these petty things What the Kings Son and look lean This may quiet thy Spirit and bring thy Will to Gods he hath dignified thee with Honour he made thee his Son and Heir and will entail a Kingdom on thee 2. God hath given thee Christ. Christ is communis thesaurus a Magazine and Storehouse of all Heavenly Treasure a Pearl of Price to enrich a Tree of Life to quicken He is the quintessence of all Blessings why then art thou discontented at thy Worldly Crosses They cannot be so bitter as Christ is sweet as Seneca said once to Polybius Why dost thou complain of hard Fortune salvo Caesare is not Caesar thy Friend So is not Christ thy Friend He can never be poor who hath a Mine of Gold in his Field nor he who hath the unsearchable Riches of Christ Say then Lord Thy Will be done though I have my Cross yet I have Christ with it The Cross may make me weep but Christ wipes off all