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A61848 Heavenly treasure, or, Mans chiefest good wherein the several workings of the heart about, and in pursuance of its chiefest good are solidly and judiciously discovered / by William Strong. Strong, William, d. 1654.; Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658. Elisha his lamentation upon the sudden translation of Elijah. 1656 (1656) Wing S6004; ESTC R25154 135,945 535

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moment First because a mans love is his greatest gift there is nothing else is a gift indeed without love but amor per se donum love is a gift of it self though there be nothing else Consider the love of God though the Lord had never given you any thing but set his love upon you it had been the greatest gift more then if he had given you all the creatures in heaven and earth and if God had given you an inheritance among all the creatures yet there is no gift indeed without love so likewise the Lord Jesus Christ if he had never given you an interest in his Sonship in his victories in the promises in his priviledges if he had given you but his love there is the great gift all these are so far gifts as they flow from love so it is true in you 1 Cor. 13. 3. If I give all my goods to feed the poor and have not charity that is Love it profiteth me not Then a man may give great gifts without love so hypocrites do many times give God great gifts but reserve their love so God deals with them gives many of of them great gifts but reserves his love for his Saints therefore it is love only is the greatest gift that a man hath there is no man giveth more then his love God gives no more man can give no more a great matter therefore where a man sets his love Secondly it is a great matter to inquire where a mans love is because he that gives his love gives himself gives all things else whatsoever he hath this is liberal free love indeed to give all things to the person beloved yea he gives himself and all things else I remember t is Clopenburgs observation Satis liberalis amor omnia amato dans seipsum so the Lord set his love upon his people from eternity and then purposed to give himself yea therein lay his love first himself and then all things else so the people of God they love the Lord and therefore they give themselves unto the Lord 2 Cor. 8. 5. 1. Love gives it self and then all things else whatever is in its power so you finde Rev. 21. 7. He shall inherit all things I will be his God he shall have an interest in God and then all things that God hath shall be his thus as it is with God so likewise it is with men Qui amorem dat omnia dat he that giveth his love giveth all for a mans love commands all that he hath therefore a man inherits all that is Gods why because God sets his love upon his people a mighty thing therefore to consider where a man sets his love Thirdly a mans love is that which makes the thing beloved his it s an excellent observation of a learned man Qui nos super omnes amat super omnes noster est Deus God is ours above all because he loves us more then all we call our estates ours and our friends ours Why God is ours above all things faith and love give us an interest in God so when do we become God's that the Lord saith they be mine and they shall be mine when I make up my jewels why truly by the love of God we become his he loves us and by this means he hath a title to us as we love God and have a title to him It is our love that makes our beloved ours of how great consequence must it be then where a man sets his love for thou canst call nothing thine but what thou lovest for it is a mans love that makes it his Lastly consider it is a mans love that sets the price upon all things as one observes Amor imponit pretium rebus Love sets the price on things and truly great things are of small value where love is wanting t is so with God t is so with men if the Lord give an ungodly man the greatest gifts in the world as He sometimes gives Kingdoms to the basest of men how do the Saints value this this is without love and therefore it is but as a scrap cast to a Dog he values it no more as he said of the Turkish Empire Crustulam canibus projectam so likewise let a godly man give to God but a small thing there is love in it and love raises the price That poor woman the widow that cast in two mites gave more then they all Luke 21. 12. how did she give more then they all why they gave of their abundance It was more in love and affection and therefore more in worth and acceptation Now if such things as these be true and you will finde them great truths how doth it concern every man therefore to consider where he sets his love But what should a man set his love upon that by this means he may know where his heart is Omne bonum est amabile etiam naturale Why truly all good is lovely wherever it is and to be beloved even natural good We have the example of the Lord for it we have the example of God for it God loves all his creatures and of the Lord Jesus Christ himself Mark 10. 21. He beheld the young man and loved him then all good is lovely but the question is not whether we may not love any thing that is good but quid primum amatur but as the Schoolmen put a great question all truth is to be known but what is that as the first truth that the understanding closes withal so what is first to be beloved is the great question for where the love is first set there is the love and there is the heart Consider I pray what is the meaning of al those Scriptures Mark 10. 37. He that loves father and mother more then me to love father and mother is a duty therefore not here reproved But what is the first thing to be loved what hath the chief place in your love so Joh. 12. 35. He that loves his life shall lose it every man is bound to love his life and out of that love to preserve it but he that loves his life more then me more then my truth and my honor c. 1 Joh. 2. 15. Love not the world and the things of the world it is lawfull to love the world and the things of the world but still the question is more then me remember still that God have the priority to love the creature more then God it is that which makes it lust as Austin speaks of it but to love the creature in subordination to God that is Charity Hic amor est charitas ille cupiditas true love love of the right kinde therefore all the things that I shall propose in this particular I desire to be understood according to this Rule What is it that you love most not whether you love this more then that but whether you love these more then me and what is your first love According to this
thy hand were the last works of that eminent and faithful Servant of God Mr. Will. Strong of whom without any unsavory allusion to his name I may truly say that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 18. 24. A man eloquent and strong or mighty in the Scriptures this discourse I say was the dying blaze of that burning and shining light or his * Cantator cygnus Funeris ipse sui quapropter Plato in ●●aedone eum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appellat last Swan-like song and preparation to his own death and Funerals which unexpectedly and alas too suddenly as to our profit followed the preaching of these Sermons it was the secret instinct of the Spirit of God no doubt that engaged his thoughts to such an argument not only for his own comfort in the agonies of death but for our benefit who do survive him These Sermons were formerly surreptitiously printed by an unknown and an unskilful hand but as they now come forth thou maist plainly discern the own spirit of the Author in them which in those rude broken notes was more hidden and obscure I have heard of some that out of a sond superstition have been afraid in health to provide their last Will and Testament taking it for a certain token of approaching death the thoughts of which the carnal world cannot endure and therefore seek to put off that which they cannot put away To prepare for death doth neither hasten nor hinder it there 's folly in the surmise however this truth lyeth hid under it that when men are ripe and ready to die usually they are not long-lived but are gathered in like a shock of corn in its season I hope none are afraid to be too soon in heaven let us mend our pace thitherward and get up as fast as we can that every day our salvation may be nearer then when we first believed this as it is the design of these precious Sermons so the unfeigned desire of him who is Thine in the Lords work Tho. Manton READER THou hast here the first fruits of that seed which this Worthy Reverend Learned and Godly man sowed in the dayes of his Ministry they were indeed in themselves the Last crop of all his Labours being the Last Sermons that ever he Preached but the over-hasty hand of some unskilful if not unjust Gatherer hath occasioned they are first Gather'd into sheaves However it is now thy advantage Thou hast here a Treasure a Tryed Treasure This Piece which is his own compared with those Imperfect notes Printed since his death and unjustly bearing his name may be to thee a Test to discriminate the true and counterfeit Copies if any shall yet farther in that kind do him and the Church of Christ so great an injury Know therefore there are other things of his that follow which that they may be his own all care is taken by transcription from and comparing with his own notes which is the onl● Cause it may seem possibly they make not hast yet they so hast as that the engaged in this work which their heart is in and their hand has found to do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they will do it with all their might using therein all possible care and diligence Having a double earnest of their Acceptance with the Saints The one their own spiritual senses as they hope a little exercised therein Humbly conceiving more of the secrets of God the deep things of the Law and the mysteries of Godliness which are great fetch'd out from the very Bowels of the Scripture have not from any one mouth been communicated in these latter dayes The other earnest is that Seal which therein and thereby the Spirit of God hath fixed on their hearts and of many others very many in the first hearing of them witness that great and sad Assembly in the day of his Funeral solemnity when deep silence heart breaking sighs and weeping eyes would have preached loud enough had that Reverend Minister and his dear friend been silent His Works that followed him are not all dead with him But some of them are here brought forth for thy spiritual advantage The good hand of God be on them with this Tract God sealed up his Ministry and his days and whosoever shall observe the latter part thereof shall find it a solemn seal Having contemplated that Treasure which was his by choice before he was now taken up into the full possession of it for he was indeed a meet Inheritour He had intended the next Lords day to have entered a protest against that which is the treasure of the most of men from that saying of our Lord Luk. 12. 15. Take heed and beware of covetousness but in the mean time his Master called Well done thou good and faithful servant t is enough if they will be covetous let them be so still thou hast finished thy Testimony Enter now into the Joy of thy Lord. How much might be spoken of him were it necessary But what needs it His works praise him in the Gate Few of the eminent Ministers in the Nation but he was either personally known to them or else they had heard of his worth His name was indeed as an Oyntment poured out But for such as Rose up speaking perverse things he was a thorn in their sides practising what himself sometimes pressed as a duty to love their persons but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to truth it in Love He was a man mighty in the Scriptures therein lying a great part of his excellency to open and explain quoad sensum non quoad sonum dark Scripture which we hear without profit and read without understanding He was frequent in preaching for the most part 4 times weekly sometimes many more in season and out of season besides the care that lay on him touching his Pastoral Relation and yet though his work was so great who could say that he offered to God that which cost him nothing There was nothing that came from him that savoured not of much labour study and industry He accounted himself a Debtor to the wise and to the weak and his care was that by his Ministry both might receive advantage He was powerful with the Affections and in order thereto He throughly dealt with the Judgement His doctrine was Practical and his Application Doctrinal He was a stout Champion for Truth and Liberty in both he set his face as an Adamant against the sins of the times In a murmuring Age he was a mourner in Sion very conversant in dayes of Humiliation Publique Private enjoyned not enjoyned and at such times This was his complaint It is time for thee to arise oh Lord for men have made void thy Law He had a spirit fitted to that work for he seldome prayed without Tears an Israel he was for he pleaded when he pray'd nor was he less fitted for thanksgiving for be had vials full of odours he much breathed after Communion with God and he
is a strong tower the righteous runneth to it and is safe and thither he retreats and is safe Haman was in danger and under disgrace what doth the man bear up his heart with he goes home and told of his wealth and the multitude of his children here was the treasure of the man to these his heart retired upon this occasion and with these he comforted himself And so it is let a man be in disgrace I have such an estate and am descended from such Parentage with these poor souls bear up themselves but now another man though none follow Christ but the poor of the world contemptible men what does he comfort himself with just as Tertullian answered those that reviled the Christians they came of no honorable parentage At genus proavos habent in Coelis saith he In heaven they have a Country a Kingdom in heaven though they be but poor here and so Job God had taken away all his estate and his children now whither doth he retire Job 19. 28. The root of the matter is in me I have a treasure of grace in my soul for all that what is a mans treasure that he retreats unto upon all occasions Fifthly look how you judge of other men for you value men more or less as they have of that which you account your treasure a godly man that makes Grace his treasure when the question is who is the best man the rich man or the godly man truly saith he the godly man is far the better man to me though poor and contemptible in the world Psal 16. 3. They are the excellent ones in whom is all my delight here is a godly poor man and there is a great Lord but the godly man is the best man of the two to me because he hath more of that which I account my treasure t is so in other things men that make wealth their treasure their chief good let the man be never so wise and godly if he be not rich he despiseth him why because he hath not that which he accounts his treasure Another man that makes learning his treasure he saith a godly man though never so godly without learning is a poor simple wel-meaning man and that is all he values all men according to that which he accounts his treasure examine what value you put upon men Dost thou prize a godly man above all the world dost thou say a Godly poor man is better to me then an ungodly King t is a sign that grace is thy treasure for thou valuest all other men according to that which is thy treasure The Waldenses were reproached and despised with this The poor men of Lions but God hath chosen the poor of this world rich in faith be they never so poor by this you shall easily judge where your treasure is how do you value other men for you value them by that which you value your selves Lastly What be those times that you set most price upon that you write with red letters in the Kalender of your days those times that bring a man in most treasure those times the man values most as look to them Amos 8. they made wealth their treasure the Sabbath comes it was a wearisom time to them they took no pleasure in the world in it When will the Sabbath be gone that we may sell corn as t is now with vain ones in the world when will the Sabbath be gone and the Sermon be done we cannot take our pleasures as at other times that day seems ten to them Look on the other side Isa 58. 13. there is one that cals the Sabbath his delight why should the Sabbath be a delight to him because he looks upon it as the best day in the week and most honorable because it brings in great treasure You never knew a rich man think the time long so long as he is receiving of money so t is with a gracious man so long as he hath in-comes from God these are Exchequer-days to that soul those times are most precious to such men which bring in that which they account their treasure now examine your selves by these Rules and deal faithfully with your selvs and you will finde where your treasure is for where your treasure is there your hearts will be and where your heart is there is your happiness and rules where your happiness is there is your good and there your reward will be There are five rules of trial which I have prepared for this present time which I desire every one would take as a looking glass to see his face by thereby to judge of his own estate that you may know where your chief good is laid up where your treasure lieth It is the greatest inquiry in the world there is not a greater question to be askt in the world then this Where is your chief good where is your God and therefore we had need stick a little the longer in it The first rule to judge it by A mans treasure or his chief good is that which is first in his eye and aim in all things in the whole bent and course of his life that which hath the priority in all his intentions that is his chief good his treasure Aquinas observs Intentio est voluntatis propensio ad bonum quoddam agendum aut fruendum Intention is the bent and aim of the will in reference unto some good propounded unto it by the understanding if it be a good to be affected that rule takes place that which is first in intention is last in execution if it be a good to be obtained then this rule takes place That which was first in intention is last in fruition so that look now what is the great aim of a mans soul that the bent of his heart is carried out after the first thing that is in his eye that is his chief good his treasure In the Scripture you find that God stands very much upon priority Mat. 6. 33. Seek first the kingdom of God Seek it first why is it not enough that the Kingdom of God be sought suppose it be in the second place no it is not sought then it is despised it is undervalued if men do not seek it first So likewise the Lord commended his love to us in this he loved us first 1 Joh. 4. 19. So likewise in Matth. 22. 38. This is the first and great Commandment God stands wonderfully upon precedency so that that which should be first if it be not sought for in Gods order the Lord looks upon it as neglected and not sought for for the Lord in this above all things else may be truly said to be the God of Order Take a natural man his chief good is first in his eie it hath the preheminency and precedency in all his actings and intentions It s the voice of all covetous men in the world Seek Godliness seek Religion I but quaerenda pecunia primum seek an estate
treasure that he doth glory in every man gloryeth in it every man values all other men according to that he makes his treasure and he that fails of that he looks upon him with an eye of scorn and contempt be it what it will I instanced before a man that makes riches his treasure let a person be never so honorable wise and learned he will despise him and so a godly man values himself according to his interest in God and all other men according unto it Tantus quisque est quantus est apud Deum every man is no more worth then he is of value in Gods account Christ doth so Psal 16. 3 4. The Lord is my portion the lines are fallen to me in a goodly place I have a goodly heritage the Lord is my portion the Saints glory in God and make their boast of him all the day long Lastly whatsoever is your treasure you must use all means that you may add unto it or your interest in it a treasure is increased by continual addition whatever therefore may give a man a further interest in God that is the way a man is to take and sell all to buy it for he is to sell all that buys the pearl that which is treasure as now it is the worship of God the fear of the Lord is his treasure Isa 33. 6. by the fear of the Lord is meant the worship of God why doth he lay up treasure in the fear of the Lord yes he gets a further interest in God why are good works a mans treasure because God rewards a man according to his works and he shall have a further interest in God and therefore the worship of God and all the works of obedience and the exercise of all grace a man is busied in all these because it adds to his treasure gives him a further interest in him Who is his God and his al-sufficient reward Fourthly and lastly to give some Arguments to inforce the Exhortation Is there a treasure to be had in Heaven and is it to be had in God do not be such enemies to your souls as to neglect it and that I may inforce this Exhortation take with you these few Arguments and pray mark them well Remember First no treasure below God will be lasting there will come a time when all treasure laid up below God will be expended and what will you live upon then the Apostle tells us the world passes away and the fashion thereof 1 Cor. 7. 29. He uses the expression the time is short what 's the meaning of it t is a Metaphor taken from things folded up there is very little part of it left it is come almost to the last fold which may help a little to explain that expression Psal 36. 10. Continue or draw out thy loving kindness to them that love thee The Metaphor may seem to be the same that is there is abundance of love folded up and but little winded off there is an eternity to spend but now for all these outward comforts there is a great deal worn out and but a little more behinde how many men have you seen already out-live them but to be sure they will out-live the lives of the best men therefore remember no Treasure below God will last Secondly consider this heaven is the place where you hope to go carry your treasures with you or send them thither before you there is no man will remove from a place and leave his treasure behinde him and poor soul thou leavest a great estate and a fine house behinde thee and thou hopest to go to heaven and thou hast no treasure there it s the observation of one upon this place Lay up treasures in heaven carry your provision carry your treasure with you you hope to go to heaven and if that be a true and lively hope you would endeavor to lay up treasure there Thirdly consider with your selves if you lay up treasure in heaven as God is a true Treasure so God is a faithful treasurer what thou dost commit to him he will keep safe and he is a treasurie able to supply all your wants and to make you happy for ever he is self-sufficient in himself much more will he be al-sufficient to thee do not rest in any thing that is below God but lay up treasure in him Nay let me tell you further and pray mark it any treasure here that is below God if it be thy treasure in this life it will be thy tormentor in the life to come Jam. 5. 3. ye have heaped treasure together for the last day he speaks it of rich men and he tells them that they have laid up treasure against the last day there is a double interpretation given of it some expound it of the last day of the world the day of judgement some of the last day the end and period of the Jewish state which the Apostle speaks of and St. John speaks of this is the last hour I conceive it spoken of the Judgement coming upon the Jewish State take it which way you will the thing leaves us a clear argument if you take it for the last day of the State when judgements come upon persons or people then when judgements come your riches shall be the greatest plagues you have but refer it to the last day of the world riches then take their leave of a man they cease then to be treasures but they will be tormentors the Apostle tels them the rust of them shall be a witness against them they have heaped up riches against the last day take heed therefore Take this for a rule That which a godly man hath wrought upon him at his conversion that a wicked man is sure to meet with at his destruction that which was his treasure before he then looks upon as his greatest plague and torment as Ephraim What have I to do any more with idols and saith to his idols Get ye hence Look upon Iudas his money was his treasure before when he comes to hang himself he casts that away and the word carries a great deal of displeasure with it this is the money that hath undone my soul and so many a one will say when he comes to die the love of an estate the things of this life the love of pleasure or honor this hath undone me for ever when it ceases to be your treasure then it becomes your tormentor I have one word more It is one of the great studies of the times what they may do now to keep what they have got Non minor est virtus quam quaerere partatueri What shall we do to preserve what we have got Truly let me speak plain unto you the only way to preserve our treasures on earth is to make sure of this treasure in heaven that 's the only way pray look into Prov. 15. 6. but in the house of the righteous is much treasure in the horn of the wicked is trouble
should most of all take comfort from Now t is in reference to comfort as it is in reference to duty there are many commands and all of them are to be obeyed but yet there are great commands and these are to have the first place in our obedience This you ought to have done and not to have left the other undone So there is variety of comforts but there are some great grounds of comfort and these are to have the chief place in our hearts and from these in an especial manner should our comfort come in As there be some grand promises those three I have often mentioned I will be thy God That 's the bottom of all the promises I will give thee my Son I will send my Spirit The great Comfort should come in from the great Promises and so t is here and pray observe it If a man be much in the lesser duties of Religion and neglect the greater he hath just cause to suspect the truth of his obedience So if a man take much comfort from lesser grounds and neglect the greater he hath great cause to suspect the truth of his comforts and his right to them This is the great reason why I press it so earnestly that as I would have the people of God take their portion in comfort so I would have them take it in an orderly way But now let us come to particulars You will say Why is a godly man so happy in this that he hath not erred in his chief good There are seven grounds of the greatest comfort that I know in all the book of God arising from this consideration I have not mis-placed my treasure my treasure is in heaven I have not erred in my chief good And the first is this Hereby the soul may see the riches as well as the freeness of the love of God that in my chief good I have not miscarried This is the great error of the world they do mis-place their treasure and by this means they have their portion in this life only with Dives their good things here Now is this the great error of the world as it will be found to be at the last day is it a great mercy to be delivered from lesser sins and judgements how much more is it to be delivered from that which is the greatest judgement in the world Did Noah finde grace in the sight of God and was delivered from that deluge that swept away the world of the ungodly To misplace a mans chief good is the greatest sin and greatest judgement that can possibly fall upon a man This is delivering a man to Satan indeed delivering to Satan with a witness The Scripture speaks of a double delivering of a man to Satan There is Traditio Sathanae tanquam Domino tanquam lictori delivering a man to Satan as a Lord delivering a man to Satan as an Executioner as an Officer There is delivering a man to Satan as a Lord so the Lord Jesus delivered Judas to Satan by the sop After the sop the devil entred into him that is as a Lord to rule over him But there is another way of delivering to Satan 1 Cor. 5. 5. When you are met together in my Spirit deliver such a man to Satan How is that for the destruction of the flesh when the Lord shall be pleased in an Ordinance to give over a man so to the power of the devil that he shall afright his conscience and terrifie him for sin committed and for that end this means shall have its due work and power upon the man but in this Satan is but an executioner A man is never delivered up to Satan as a lord untill he be given up to him so as that he shall deceive him in his chief good then the devil is the lord of the man When the Lord delivers a man to Satan so as that the devil cheats him in his chief good then the man is delivered to Satan as a lord Now for a godly man to be able to look into his own condition and say when I look abroad in the world and see one man place his chief good in this another in that one in riches another in honors another in pleasures but in the midst of all these though in many things I miscarry and therein I was as a beast before God yet blessed be his name here is my comfort I have not miscarried in my chief good there is not any thing stays the soul like this when a godly man is in the greatest affliction when he comes to look death in the face nay when Satan shall triumph over the most of the world as he will do for as he is subtle so he is envious and therefore an insulting spirit when he shall insult over most in the world then that poor soul shall be able to triumph over all the powers of darkness It s true I am weak indeed and I am ignorant poor and mean and low in the world yet in this the devil can never deceive me through grace I have so far obtained mercy that the devil is never able to cheat me of my chief good herein will lie the wisdom at the last day herein will lie a mans glory for t is a mans chief good that will be his glory or his shame to eternity herein will be his wisdom or folly to eternity do you not remember that expression Luke 10. ult Mary hath chosen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the better part or the good part I shall not inquire what the meaning of that is the good part but the word there used signifies not only partem sed portionem part but portion Mary hath chosen that good portion and herein lay her wisdom in a mans election his wisdom lieth And above all choice in the world is that which he makes his chief good true saith the soul I have bin foolish in many things in many things I have erred but yet blessed be the name of my God the true treasure was not hid from me And when a man shall come to appear before men and Angels at the last day those that are now the fools of the world that are derided for their godliness that are mockt in their choice as men that are not able to set themselves in the face of the times so as to be some body in the present Age. But when they shall appear before the Lord Jesus to judge the quick and dead in his Kingdom then these will be esteemed of all others the only wise men this was the soul that was directed by wisdom from above that carried him still to the right chief good if this will not stand by you in your greatest troubles there is nothing in Religion will do it Secondly There is this ground of comfort I have chosen the true chief good the true treasure that shall never be taken from me You know the expression of Maries better part Luke 10. ult She hath
the heart that by heart in Scripture is meant the whole soul Secondly that the soul of man the heart goeth out of it self for happiness for its chief good for here is treasure laid up either in heaven or earth the heart goeth out to the treasure the chief good of a man is without himself Thirdly it is a matter of very great concernment where a mans heart is placed that 's the Argument that Christ uses here Lay up treasure in heaven Why what matter is it where ones treasure is Why where your treasure is there your heart will be Lastly the heart doth always follow the treasure where-ever the treasure is it necessarily infallibly carries the heart and then we shall give the Reasons of this last Doctrine to which all the rest are but subordinate First what is meant by the heart or if you will take it in a Proposition The heart of man in Scripture is put for the whole soul The Hebrews generally place the Government of man in the heart and make the heart the seat of the reasonable soul so you shall finde the Scripture commonly speaks 1. If you look to the whole soul as corrupt Jer. 17. 9. The heart is deceitful above all things and desperatly evil who can know it And 2. If you look upon the soul as sanctified for as corruption goes through all the faculties so doth sanctification also Psal 24. 4. He that hath clean hands and a pure heart which is called The hidden man of the heart 1 Pet. 3. 4. And with the heart man believs Rom. 10. 10. I conceive that 's the whole soul and all the faculties collectively But by heart in Scripture also is sometimes meant those things quarum sedes est in Corde which are situated and have their habitation especially in the heart as wisdom is attributed to the heart wise in heart Ephraim is a silly dove without a heart without wisdom Hos 7. 11. He that trusts in his own heart is a fool Prov. 28. 26. His own heart that is he that leans to his own wisdom or as the Scripture elswhere he that is wise in his own eyes So likewise you finde the heart put sometimes for conscience and the actings thereof Davids heart smote him when he cut off the lap of Sauls garment it is spoken of the conviction of his conscience Sometimes it is put for the memory the treasury of the soul Mary laid up all these things in her heart But in this place I conceive there are three things especially intended by heart here by Christ First the thoughts the meditations the consultations of the heart where the treasure is there is the heart In this are all the meditations the thoughts the plottings the contrivances of the soul they are where a mans treasure is 2 Kin. 5. 25 26. The Prophet said to his servant Gehazi Went not my heart with thee when thou wentest out after the man How did the Prophets heart go with him that is his thoughts went for the thing was discovered unto him by a prophetical spirit and that is indeed a marvellous choice expression Job 17. 11. where the thoughts of the heart are in the Hebrew called the possessions of the heart Now whatever you possess here with your bodies t is true indeed the body can see the glory and tast the sweetness in many contents but what do your souls possess in all these nothing but the thoughts what the soul possesses it possesses by thoughts and therefore they are called the possessions of the heart Secondly by the heart here is meant I conceive the love desires the longings of the soul for in these the soul goeth out towards its objects so Sichem Gen. 34. 8. His soul clave to Dinah Jacobs daughter so Davids heart went out to Absolom therefore where your treasure is your love is your soul goeth out in all manner of longings and desires after it Lastly by the heart is meant a mans delight that wherein the great comfort of his life lieth wherein it is laid up It is said by Christ though a woman in travel hath anguish yet after she remembers no more the pain for joy that a manchild is born into the world and 1 Sam. 4. 20. There 's a woman delivered of a son and calls his name Ichabod She regarded him not for she did not set her heart that is took no comfort in him And Psal 62. 10. If riches increase set not your hearts upon them that is do not place all the comforts of your lives in these things Let not your hearts be swallowed up by these as if you had no better things thus then by heart is meant the whole soul but in this place especially the thoughts the love the joy and delight I shall afterwards take up these things again more particularly I now only endeavor to open it that 's the first Proposition Secondly that the soul of man goeth out of it self for happiness his treasure is without himself It is Gods honour only and his prerogative his blessedness is in himself his blessedness is himself he is unto himself the chief good he hath nothing without himself that makes him the blessed God neither is he moved by any thing out of himself When the Mediator speaks of all he did Psal 16. 3. he saith My goodness extended not to thee its true the L. Jesus as Mediator in all his obedience added nothing to the blessednes of God his blessedness is in himself And here note two things that I shall lay before you First man hath not a chief good in himself his happiness is not within his own power he is therefore in reference to all things a dependant Creature Hence the people of God who have made choice of the Lord for their treasure God in Christ they say Whom have I in heaven but thee My soul is athirst for God for the living God my soul pants after God as the thirsty-land thus then the soul is continually restless why because it seeks to joyn it self to its chief good which is without it self and as for that place Prov. 14. 14. where its said A good man is satisfied from himself the meaning there is not self as separated from God but self as united to God not self in opposition but self in subordination to God its true indeed a mans chief good may in that respect be said to be the most intimate part of himself that of the Schoolmen is true so indeed self united to God Deus est intimior nobis intimo nostro God is nearer to us then our selves So the man is satisfied that is goes not out to any thing besides God but otherways a mans treasure is without himself his chief good lies not within his own power Secondly it is the nature and constitution of the reasonable soul to make out to a chief good without it self its true indeed most of the world mistake this chief good and misplace it but yet this is the
his treasure and presently h●s heart is changed and retires from that which before it went out unto with the greatest earnestness in the world there is the happiness of Gods people they have changed their treasure their chief good and therein lies the great change of conversion This is the first and great change when a man changes his chief good but when that is done once the soul that went out after it before now turns from that which was his chief good and persecutes that with the greatest earnestness that before he did cleave unto there be two things in conversion A version and Conversion The man turns from all treasures below take a proof for that Psal 63. 8. My heart follows hard after God said David the word is my soul cleaves after him that though I have many things that would turn me off from God yet notwithstanding my soul cleaves to him in a constant pursuit of him my soul cleaves after him There are two expressions somewhat alike one is to fulfil after God and the other is to cleave after God Numb 14. 24. Caleb had another spirit he followed God fully he fulfilled after God so t is in the Hebrew this points out the sincerity of a mans heart and to cleave after God t is spoken of the constancy of a mans pursuit the heart goes out the bent of the soul always tends that way yea he that before followed after vanity now cleaves after God what is the reason the chief good is changed And as there is conversion so there is aversion Take a man that now looks on sin as a cheat and all the comforts of the creatures to be but counterfeit and that he hath taken copper for gold all that while what then his heart turns from them with the greatest aversion that is possible you know those places I need not repeat them What have I to do any more with Idols Hos 11. 8. Say to the Idols get you hence therefore the heart is with the treasure where the treasure is there is the heart but now change the treasure and the pursuit of the heatt is changed Thus much for the demonstrations of it I hope all these things may be usefull to every understanding hearer But why is it that the heart always goeth out to the treasure that where the treasure is there the heart is why what is the cause There are six great grounds of it First because the treasure which I expound the chief good is animae pabalum the food upon which the soul feeds and if it be so no wonder the soul goeth out after it the heart cannot live without it take an unregenerate man and it is his treasure his heart feeds upon he eats the bread of wickedness and drinks the wine of violence take a godly man and he doth not labour for the meat that perisheth but for that which endures to eternal life Joh. 6. 27. This is the food his soul feeds upon and for this cause in the Scripture you have so often expressions of hungring and thirsting and you know what violent impressions those make upon the spirits of men what is all this but to let you see that the chief good is the food of the soul and therefore the heart makes after it for it cannot live without it Secondly the chief good is not only the food but animae sustentaoulum the support of the soul the soul of man without it is not able to uphold it self Psal 112. 8. David saith my heart is underpropt so Montanus renders the word suffultum est cor meum then truly the heart of man must be propt it is not able to stand of it self it must have a support and whence is that support pray look Job 8. 15. there is a man that leans upon his house what is that his hope the object of his hope he cannot stand without it support that which is his comfort in reference to eternity upon this his soul leans and so the godly Psal 73. 26. My flesh and my heart fails me but God is the strength of my heart he goes to his chief good because he cannot stand alone he must have somewhat to rest upon and that 's the reason that a rich mans wealth is said to be his strong tower it is that which defends him the heart must needs go to the treasure t is the hearts food and t is the hearts support it cannot be supported one moment without it Thirdly it is the souls delight the delight of the heart oblectamentum animae the heart of man cannot live without it long and all the delight the soul hath comes in from its chief good the chief good is the object of the highest love and of the greatest trust and t is the object of the fullest delight and therefore the soul of man must go out to its treasure because all its joy comes in by it and without delight the soul cannot live Why is Hell said to be death because there is no joy no delight why is Heaven said to be life because in thy presence is fulness of joy and at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore without delight the soul cannot live Saith Austin Take away all delight and the soul dies let there be but pure darkness once and the soul cannot live Fourthly It is a mans chief good that is animae ornamentum the beauty of the soul that wherein the beauty of the soul doth lie and indeed take the soul off from this and it is naked the heart of man is naked taken off from his chief good will you but observe and see both put together Jer. 2. 33. Can amaid forget her ornaments and a bride her attire Take a poor creature all the beauty she hath lies in cloaths as I sometime told you that is like the Cinnamon Tree that hath nothing good but the Bark indeed t is true you dare not go without your ornaments to be sure whatever you forget you will not forget to make your selvs fine to deck your selves I am afraid divers of you forget most other things except that but can she why can she not there is not a natural impossibility indeed but a moral that is it wherein she glories and she cannot forget it but saith God I am your ornament your glory you ought to make me your chief good and you forget me days without number the soul goeth out to its treasure and cannot forget it for this is that wherein all its ornament and beauty lies and the truth is all the adorning of the soul comes from a mans treasure and chief good Fifthly the heart must go out to to the treasure for t is animae spiraculum this is that in which the soul breaths pray consider it we rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God saith the Apostle Rom. 5. 2. Despair is that which strangles the soul the soul lives in hope what is that hope carried after why after its
you may know where your thoughts and by that where your hearts are First when you are alone sequestred from company out of the noise of your callings and outward imployments whither then do your thoughts usually retire where commonly are your thoughts then for the truth is the man is as he is when he is alone such as the thoughts of the heart are such is the man as for example Nebuchadnezzar the question is not where his thoughts were when he was abroad in war he was at peace and walking in his palace at home now where are his thoughts is not this great Babel that I have built for the honour of my Majesty and how he had been the head of gold the first that raised that glorious Empire here were his thoughts take a godly man and where are his thoughts when he is in his Closet or upon his bed or when he awakes in the night Psal 139. 18. saith David when I awake I am still with thee therefore when you are alone look where your thoughts usually go for the man is as he is when he is alone 2ly Would you know where your thoughts are why then what are the thoughts that you use to finde the greatest sweetness in a man may think of a great many things that he finds no content in but what are the thoughts wherein you use to finde the greatest sweetness and content sure there is your heart David Psal 139. 17. How precious are thy thoughts unto me oh God another man the thoughts of his lusts are sweet and he acts over his wickedness in a contemplative way but the thoughts of God are bitter to him his thoughts trouble him as it was with Belshazzar when he saw the handwriting on the wall Dan. 5. 6. His thoughts troubled him But David because God was his treasure his thoughts were sweet and precious to him now examine what thoughts come in upon you with greatest pleasure and delight Thirdly what thoughts are of longest continuance that your souls do most abide upon the thoughts that abide upon your hearts most discover where they are Jer. 4. 14. How long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee take a man whose heart is set upon things below and not only thoughts come in to him for so they do to Godly men but they dwell and abide there but as in reference to God Psal 10. 4. God is not in all his thoughts his thoughts never stay on God nor the things of eternity Pray consider it where do your thoughts stay most take now a natural man and cast in but a thought of his treasure it abides upon him he ruminates upon it afterwards and he sucks great sweetness from it but cast in a thought of heaven or God and he is like the dead sea his heart is like the dead sea of which it is said whatever living thing is cast into it dies immediately so cast in any such thought and it dies presently and will not abide Lastly what are those thoughts that commonly take up your hearts in holy duties t is a very great Argument there a mans heart is where his thoughts in holy duties most commonly are what is that therefore that takes off your hearts and takes up your hearts in holy duties you know that place Ezek 33. 31. they came there to hear a Sermon but their thoughts went after their covetousness Now t is a great argument their thoughts were set upon their covetousness because in the duties of Gods worship these are the thoughts that most take up their hearts now the ground of this rule is this Satans great aim in all the duties of Gods worship is to take off your thoughts from the duty for grace acts by thoughts therefore when the word is preacht he will catch away the seed if he can if not he will keep off the thoughts and how doth the Devil do that his way is this he doth endeavor to prepossess us fixes the thoughts of a mans heart on somewhat else and what is that that which is most likely to take with a man truly the thoughts of that he indevors to stir up in the soul and what is that the thoughts of a mans treasure that 's the thought upon which the heart rests most and the thoughts to which he is most accustomed it is a very great Argument on this ground that those thoughts which most commnoly possess the soul in holy duties that there a mans heart is and there his treasure is and so much the rather because into the duties of Gods worship many other thoughts dare not venture the soul keeps them out but it is in this respect as with a Prince though at sometime the servant may not approach his presence yet a wife a Favorite may just so it is with the thoughts of a mans heart it is I know one great complaint in all the people of God the wandrings of their souls in service Bernard complains of it Aliud canto aliud cogito I sing one thing when I think another so I pray one thing when I think another and hear one thing when my thoughts are upon something else But do you observe in all these wandrings of soul what is there to which in duty most commonly your souls retire a great argument that that is a mans chief good examine by these Rules and you shall finde out where your thoughts and by that where your hearts are that 's the third particular Fourthly the heart is put in Scripture for the love of the heart Judg. 5. 9. My heart is towards the Governors of Israel that offered themselves willingly among the people It is Deborahs speech in her song after that great victory God had given over Sisera the people of God they love all those that are imployed for God but in an especial manner the more eminent men are that are imployed the more their love is drawn out so that by heart is meant her love she desires all may be thankfull especially the Governors of Israel who had the greatest share in the mercy and were the greatest instruments therein Prov. 23. 7. Eat not the bread of him that hath an evil eye for though he bid thee eat yet his heart is not with thee his heart is not with thee what is that he courts thee but he loves thee not and the more he complements with thee the less he affects thee thus thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart love carries the heart with it so that the heart of man is truly said to be rather where it loves then where it lives thus in Scripture the heart is put for the love so then the meaning is this where a mans treasure is there his love will be But how should a man know where his love is It is a thing of marvellous great consequence for a man to consider where he sets and fixes his love And there are four grounds why it is a thing of so great
we shall inquire where a mans love is that by this means we may know where his heart is and I am perswaded if you take these following Rules and observe them carefully that you will not miscarry in your Judgement First Would a man know where his love is what is that he especially desires union with For amor est affectus unionis love is an affection that carries a tendency to union Now this will appear if you observe the love of God the pattern union with God was first in Gods intention because this is last in his execution the people of God in glory are brought into immediate vision of him and into the closest union with him But this being last in execution I say this was first in intention He loved them with an everlasting love that is he had intention from e●ernity of union with them Pray observe it there is indeed a double union with God 1. Of Dependence one is general of all the creatures and that 's a Union of dependency In him we live move and have our being Yea all the creatures have so they cannot live separate from God one moment The Angels in heaven did not this union continue they would fall to nothing immediatly there is a union of dependency but that is general and belongs to all the Creatures But there is a special Union that is peculiar to the Saints by the indwelling of God in them they dwell in God and God in them such a union as no creature in the world but a Saint hath by the elapses of God into the soul Now God loves the Saints and his love carries a tendency to union So Jesus Christ loved his people what for that he might become one with them That he that sanctifies and they that are sanctified might become one why so you will finde that the love of the people of God carries them unto union with God and Christ as the love of God and Christ carries them to union with the Saints there is indeed a natural union that is by constitution but there is a moral union by inclination by sympathy and that 's double there is a union of likeness and there is a union of fruition and enjoyment for the union that the Saints of God shall have h●reafter is far different from what they have here here it is of similitude there it is of enjoyment where a mans love is there is a tendency to union an inclination to union 1 Cor. 6. 17. He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit and the man that is glewed to the Lord so the word doth signifie then the man that loveth God is a man glewed to God he is united to him for union is the tendency of the heart so Sichem loved Iacobs daughter Dinah and the text saith His soul clave to her or as the Septuagint uses the same word his soul was glewed so that where a man loveth the soul goeth out to be united to that which is beloved Now if a man love God then my heart follows hard after God the soul goeth out in the pursuit of the thing beloved and all is that it may be made one with God and to this end you have two Metaphors very remarkable in the Scripture one is that of a hunter Gen. 10. 9. Nimrod was a mighty hunter Ier. 16. 16. I will bring hunters among you Prov. 23. 27. The wicked rosteth not that which he taketh in hunting What is the meaning of these expressions why they are all to set forth the pursuit of the soul after that which it loveth just as the hunter pursues the poor creature that flies so the soul what it loves it pursues and is in continual pursuit of take men that love riches and honours their souls are continually going out to union with them so a man that loves God his soul is in pursuit of God as that Hermite in a story that sometime I have read finding a great Gallant hunting in a desolate wilderness Askt him what he did there he told him He came a hunting there Et ego Deum venor meum And I said he came hither to hunt after my God t is in pursuit of my God There is another Metaphor and that is a merchandize Prov. 3. 15. the merchandize of wisdom it s spoken of trading for Christ and grace and the things of eternity he that Trades for Christ is called a Merchant man Matth. 13. 45. and so also they that trade for any earthly thing are said to be Merchants Romes merchandise you read of Rev. 18. 11. Make merchandise of souls 2. Pet. 2. 3. and of Ephraim Hos 12 7. He is a merchant what is that why the meaning is this they wholly trade for things below for as Merchant men go forth to make themselves possessors of riches make it their business so to do so it is with the soul of a man the heart is a merchant it goeth out to what it loves and never leavs till it hath possest it now I pray do you consider what is it your souls desire most what do you hunt for what do you trade in there is thy love whoever thou art if it be Jesus Christ and Communion with God and the things of eternal life if thou art in the pursuit of these constantly there is thy heart if it he after wealth and honour these thou huntest for as prey assuredly there is thy love and thy heart and thy treasure that 's the first Rule Secondly would a man know where his love is the nearer love comes to the thing beloved the swifter it moves the nearer a mans love comes to possess the thing he loves the swifter it moves yea it stretches after it then see it in worldly things or else what means that expression Psal 62. 10. If riches increase set not your hearts upon them if you want riches set not your hearts upon them take heed of that for the nearer a man comes to enjoy them the more his heart goeth out unto them and therefore covetous men the richer they are the more miserably they scrape and gape after riches and the reason is this because the nearer a mans love comes to the thing beloved the swifter it moves after it and with the greater earnestness Hab. 1. 6. There is a man that loads himself with thick clay the man hath already too much for his graces for his parts for his comforts and already too much for his accompt but yet notwithstanding the more he hath the more his heart grasps after it still thus it is with every mans love the nearer it comes to possess its object the swifter it moves after it so the Apostle speaks of spirituals Phil. 3. 13 14. Not that I have already obtained but I press hard to the mark I am in a vehement pursuit as if you could take a stone from the earth and place it in the Orb of the Sun yet the stone having a tendency downward still moves
towards its center and the nearer it comes to the center the swifter would its motion be so if you could take an ungodly man and place him in heaven yet notwithstanding his heart would move towards the earth his love is there and the nearer it comes to enjoy it the more earnest would his motion be towards it I remember on this account it is that Bernard saith God puts his people here into the condition of betrothed persons here are but the Espousals the Marriage is to come what is the reason that there must be time between the betrothing and the marriage that desires may be kindled so much the more the nearer a man comes to the enjoyment of a thing that he loves sure the more vehemently his heart is carried after it as for this cause you have the first fruits of the spirit that the more you taste the more you may be carried after the full crop of them as the Lord carried the people of Israel to see the Land of Canaan before they enjoyed it as the Goths having once tasted the sweet wines of Italy would never be quiet until they enjoyed the Countrey where those sweet wines grew Examine thy self by this the nearer thou comest to enjoy that thou lovest the swifter and the more vehement thy heart moves towards it if the more thou hast of this world with the more violence thou runnest upon it as some men do that think they shall never have enough grasp after it with great earnestness so on the contrary the more thou hast got of interest in Christ the more communion thou hast with him the more thy heart acts to him with the greater earnestness and impatiency a great Argument there is thy love Thirdly love is bountifull where thy bounty is there is thy love that is certain where a man bestows most bounty there he shews most love it is the opening of the heart that opens the hand and therefore acts of the greatest bounty are demonstrations of the highest love you read of a woman that had much forgiven her and she loved much the same woman came with a box of spikenard very costly Joh. 12. she loved much and therefore thought nothing too much for the thing beloved Gods love is so he loves his people and therefore because he can give no greater he bestows himself he loves his people and therefore he gives his son thus Sichem loved Dinah and therefore said Ask me never so much dowry love is bountifull Sampson loved Dalilah and though he ventured his life in it yet notwithstanding he told her all his heart Consider I beseech you this is another tryal the Apostle 2 Cor. 8. 3. stirs them up to a liberal contribution to the poor what is it for to prove the sincerity of your love men it may be will think the Minister speaks many times for particular interests and private respects alas t is to prove the sincerity of your love which is seen in bounty now tell me where your bounty is laid out why truly my bounty is on my apparel and I think there I can never be too profuse because I think this poor carcass of mine never fine enough or on my body I love to feast and to have abundance of the creatures certainly there is thy love but is thy bounty to God and things of Religion Why then there is thy love Take a man now that loves his belly and he thinks nothing too much that he lays out upon it Some of you have read the History of Sardanapalus who thought nothing too much no costs no pains so he might serve his belly so Haman loved his revenge and thought nothing too much for it Pray examine where your bounty is assuredly there is your love David when he was to build the Temple he thought no cost too much but this I have done out of my poverty this was an argument that the things of God carried the love of the man with them this will prove the sincerity of your love very much do not deceive and flatter your selves I pray t is a large heart that makes an open hand Fourthly love is laborious it grudges no pains for the thing beloved then where a mans love goeth his labour goeth therefore called the labour of love Heb. 6. 10. and truly a man may conclude eas●ly from 1 Cor. 15. ●0 that he that said I laboured more then they all therein implyed I love more then they all for a mans labour is suitable to his love he that laboureth most loveth most now if a man love riches all his pains go out that way where his love is there is his labour Hab. 2. 13. Is it not of the Lord of hosts that the people labour in the fire and weary themselves toilsom wasting labour and labouring in vain is called labouring in the fire wicked men labour for vanity what is that why as the Psalmist saith they love vanity and therefore they weary themselves for that you read of a man Eccles 4. 8. that there is no end of all his labour why his love is endless to the things of this life and therefore his labour is so there is no end of his labour his eye is not satisfied with riches so the Lord Jesus Christ he loves God the Fathers business and therefore laboured till he had spent his natural strength and radical moisture Humidum radicale Isaiah 49. 4. I have laboured in vain and spent my strength in vain My brethren a man that is slothfull there is no love in that man lazy love is pretended love for where love is and according to the degrees of it such will a mans labour be you that finde dulness in duties and the ways of God you do not run the ways of Gods commands strengthen your love and you will mend your pace that is certain now pray look to your whole lives and observe what your labour is laid out for It is the observation of one of the Ancients and a very spiritual one Infra vires amor iniquus est juxta exiguus non capit at ad impossibilitatem tendit amor love that doth not put forth it self in utmost labour is unsound love that which goes to its measure and strength and no more is true love but weak love do not tell me t is beyond my strength no love tends to impossibilities to labour in those things which t is impossible for him to attain It s observed of Mary when she came to Christs Sepulchre her love outbid her strength If you have taken away my Lord tell me where you have laid him and I will carry him away would you know where your love is examine where the labour of your life is and consider how much you have laboured for the things of this world and how little for God and Christ How little have I digged for wisdom pray by these Rules examine where you have placed your love Fifthly would you know where your love is Love
is ventrous it will hazard any thing for the thing beloved Christ gives an evidence of it he doth not only venture his life but lay down his life greater love then this hath no man that a man lay down his life for his friend Joh. 15. 13. Abishai out of his intire love to David when there came Ishbi-benob a gyant whose staff was like a Weavers beam and struck at David thinking to have killed him he interposes receives the blow and slew the Philistine 2 Sam. 21. 16. Love is ventrous it will put life in hazard for the thing beloved t is that which the people of God speak as a testimony of their love to God The reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me Psal 69. 9. and they do it to choose as it was a gracious speech of that Ancient Mallem in me sit murmur quam in Deum Bonum est quod dignetur Deus me uti pro clypeo If the Lord will be pleased to make use of me to keep off reproaches from himself truly I shall look upon it as a very great priviledge and honour Now pray tell me where your hazards are where is the man that for the truths of God and the interests of Christ w●ll hazard the loss of his estate the loss of friends the spoiling of his goods where be the men that be apt thus to hazard any thing The truth is love turns cowardize into Courage you may see it the Hen though a feeble creature how far out of love to her young will hazard her self against the most ravenous Bird the mother though a weak and fearfull creature yet how far and with how little consideration will put her self in hazard if her childe be in danger what is that for which you venture Take a man whose love is set upon a lust what will that man hazard he will lose his friends spend his estate blast his reputation nay he will venture his soul all this out of that cursed love and indeed what is it else that makes men despise the judgements of God and mock at fear what is it that men are so couragious for t is their love to sin makes them so Now pray tell me where are your ventures certainly there is your love Six●hly Love is zealous I do not mean that of suspition a zeal of suspition that we commonly call jealousie suspicio est amicitiae venenum t is the poison of love that suspition of evil in the party beloved no the property of love is the contrary for love thinks no evil 1 Cor. 13. 4. But when I say love is zealous my meaning is it is full of sollicitude fearing least any injury or wrong should be offered to the person and thing beloved this love is zealous against any injury offered to the thing or person beloved Consider Moses was the meekest man upon earth yet Moses meekness is turned into anger when an injury is done to the God of his love as well as of his life Moses by and by breaks the Tables so likewise the Lord Jesus Christ out of love to his Father the Zeal of thy house hath eaten me up Joh. 2. 17. Zeal in the heart is like boyling water that wastes in the seething just so the Lord Jesus the Zeal of thine house hath eaten me up It makes a man overlook all interests concerning himself in the world and be intent only upon the interest of the person beloved so it is in Gods love I am zealous for my sanctuary with a very great jealousie Zach. 1 14. What is zeal It is a mixt affection it s nothing else but love provoked that is zeal Esther speaks the language of love Esth 6. 8. How can I indure to see the destruction that shall come upon my kindred the evil that shall come upon my people how can I indure this is the proper language of love Now pray tell me what are you zealous for Where is your zeal touch one man in his reputation and you arm his zeal against you touch another in point of goods and you will quickly see where his love is so on the contrary touch God in h●s Name Christ in his truth To whom I gave place no not for an hour saith Paul Gal. 2. 5. presently zeal is up and love is provoked I remember it is Bernards exhortation to Eugenius Ignescat Zelus when any thing came contrary to the interest of Christ he would have his zeal turn into fire and so it will be where love is examine therefore what makes you hot upon every occasion sure thats an injury done to the thing beloved this is that which provokes thy zeal therefore where thy zeal is there is thy love Seventhly Love is fearfull of separation from the thing beloved it desires nothing more then union it fears nothing more then separation the Spouse gives an instance of that in the Canticles I charge you awake not my love till he please Austin gives that as the difference between true and unclean love between the love of a wife and the love of an harlot so he puts it both fear the husband true Haec ne veniat illa ne discedat the one fears least the husband should come the other fears least he should depart this love wherever it is fears separation the intirest affection of the soul in this world is unto the body next to God and Christ and heavenly things there is the greatest indeerment between the body and the soul Now why is death called the King of terrors because death is the separation of the soul from the body which especially the soul fears because union it loves and as Neriemberg saith A mans moritur sibi vivit in amato he that loves dies in himself but lives in the thing beloved for if a man die in himself how loth were he to part with the thing beloved for that were a double death for this cause the great consolation of the Saints is let some men of our times talk what they will that the Doctrine of falling from Grace is a Doctrine of great Consolation but the Scripture and Experience tells us who shall separate us from the love of God Rom. 8. ult for in the absence of the thing beloved the heart languishes but in the separation from the thing beloved the heart dies for this cause as this is the greatest cordial to the Saints there is no separation they love that from which they shall never be separated so it s the greatest corrosive to wicked men they love that from which there shall be a separation and therefore the Lord continually tels us Riches betake themselves to their wings Prov. 23. 5. Thou fool this night I will take away thy soul and then whose shall these things be Luke 12. 20. I will take thy cup from thy mouth I will take you away with hooks and your posterity with fish-hooks Amos 4. 2 3. This I say the greatest corrosive to an ungodly man is
there shall be a perpetual separation between him and the thing he loves whereas the greatest cordial to godly man is the contrary and therefore an ungodly man when he dies his love dies because he is continually separated from the thing he loves for love ceases in him and all the comforts in the acts of it so because a godly man shall never be separated from the thing he loves therefore a godly mans love shall be made perfect I am afraid saith one I shall lose my estate another I shall not die in honour a third I shall be cut off from such a pleasure that is the comfort of my life by this you shall know your love what you fear to be separated from that the love of your hearts goes out after Lastly Love is victorious love is strong as death Cant. 8. 6. Strong as death why saith the Apostle Rom. 5. death hath raigned here lies the strength of death it exercises such dominion as no man was ever able to stand out against its Scepter No standing out against it there is a kinde of dominion in love Consider I pray look unto the love that men bear to the things of this life Let them have the riches of Christ and the glory of heaven tendred them as the young man in the Gospel had Sell all that thou hast and thou shalt have treasure in heaven the love of the world overcomes love is victorious so on the other side offer a godly man all the comforts of this life whatsoever his heart could wish yet not withstanding his love to God outbids them all for love is like lime in that respect Many waters cannot quench it no the more water you pour upon it the more it burns Consider I pray but that very instance of Luther in his Epistle to Henry the eight King of England he speaks of the abominable slanders that were cast upon him for they did not spare him in that kinde they that thirsted for his blood did not spare to blast his name but what doth he say of this Si absque animorum suorum damno fieri posset ex omnibus talia audirem Lutherus pascitur convitiis the truth is if this could be done without hurt to their own souls I should be glad if all the men in the world would lay as much upon me as they could By these reproaches I am made fat a man would have thought that this would have mightily cooled the mans zeal and earnestness in the profession of Religion and the doctrine of the Gospel no his love to truth overcame these so pray consider wherein are you Conquerors for not only faith overcomes the world but love conquers the world Examine what proffers so ever thou hast made thee it may be the great things of this world honors preferment riches reputation and whatever else but still love to Christ and the interest of Christ overcomes Try your selves by these Rules where the love is there is the heart where the heart is there is the treasure and there is the heaven and the happiness And so much for the Doctrinal part For the Application there are three Uses that I shall propose to you of it The first is general a Use of Instruction in two things First from hence see the fulness of the Scriptures every short sentence you see how full of mysterie it is the Jews have an ordinary Proverb among them In lege non un a literula a qua magni non suspensi sunt montes there is not the smallest things in Scripture but there are great truths depending upon them and therefore the Father cryes out Adoro plenitudinem scripturae that he did admire the fulness that he found in the Scriptures of God I speak it the rather because many things in the Scripture we are apt to pass over with a slight eye It is an observation one hath worth our note Intoleranda est blasphemia asserere in Scriptura vel unum inveniri verbum otiosum It is the greatest blasphemy that can be to think that in the word of God there should be found one idle word he that will judge you for idle words will not write one idle word unto you that is certain admire the fulness of the Scriptures from what you have heard The Jews indeed were superstitious in this they made great matters of every word and tittle in the Law but what they did in a way Cabalistical that you should do in a way truly Christian and spiritual there is one place which because Chrysostom instances in I shall briefly hint to you t is but barely to give you an instance 1 Tim. 5. 23. Drink no longer water but use a little wine for thy stomack sake and for thy many infirmities Chrysostom hath eight wonderfull great truths out of this ordinary Scripture and I speak it to this end that you may pass by nothing in the Word but that you may labour to understand wonders in it as 〈◊〉 Godly men out of love to duty neglect the body Secondly Godly men are very watchfull and moderate in the use of the creatures least they should be brought under the power of them they be great truths and clear in the Text what need Timothy else to make a great scruple about drinking of wine but he must drink water also Thirdly consider in this weakness he did not cease from his charge he had infirmities yea open infirmities but yet he did not neglect the preaching of the Gospel and the affairs of the Church Fourthly Godly men may yet too far neglect their bodies even to offend therein for he prescribes him this that argues he did not do his duty to repair the breaches made upon his body Fifthly use a little wine every creature is good in its season yea those creatures that commonly by men are most abused Sixthly Godly men may be subject to great bodily infirmities and often men of great service when ungodly men and of little or no use in the world are healthy and strong yet many a man of great service in the Church of God are subject to great and often infirmities Seventhly In the decay of Nature the creatures are to be used for its repair but according to the proportion of natures necessities and Lastly there is a moderation appointed in the receiving of the creature even when a man doth it for necessity for he that prescribes him the wine prescribes him the measure drink a little wine he prescribes him to use herein as medicine Now when men read over such portions of Scripture let them consider and learn there may be great mysteries in the smallest portions of Scripture and know this when the word of God upon this accompt becomes sweet to a man and men love to hear it delight to meditate upon it it s a great argument of growth in grace and spiritual knowledge in that man as Quintilian tels us It is a great argument of a mans profiting in eloquence the
many persons who loved him in his life and bitterly lamented him at his death I was almost fallen out with the thoughts of publishing any occasional Sermons as being most proper for scope and use and working to the present Auditory But your general desire hath prevailed upon me to deny my own judgement and since it must be so here you have those sudden and weak fruits such as they are and the blessing of the Lord go with them Of what other advantage they may be besides the keeping up a while the name and memory of so pretious a servant of Christ I know not but yet I trust thar God may intend them and now doth send them abroad for the good of the living Of this I am sure that every personal change in the world is an effect of his Providence and that there is a Doctrinal will for the living in every providential will of God concerning the dead and the greater that any person is in his relation of usefulness and serviceableness to Christ and his Church the more emphatical Selah doth the Lord in the removal of him print out for the children of men There was honey found by Sampson in the carcase of the dead Lyon so are there many sweet instructions and lessons to be gathered not only out of the lives but also out of the deaths of the Ministers of Christ The last Sermon which a people are to study and diligently to peruse is the death of their Godly Pastor for in this God himself doth immediatly preach unto them As when Ministers do live it is but hypocrisie to give them only a few good words so when they dye it is but a formality only to shed over them a few sad tears O that you your selves and the many other Congregations who of late have carried their Faithful and Laborious Ministers to the grave would seriously remember that you must answer God for the quick and for the dead for your living Ministers and for your dead Ministers there are living uses to be made out of dead instances Live and live the better live up to the power of Truth and Godliness live like such as are even parting with life and in hazzard about a season Live like such who did enjoy and who again would enjoy a choice servant to your Minister Though Ministers die yet Christ lives and he is present with you and he observes all your heart and ways therefore as you formerly have so now especially strive to abound much more in heavenly wisdom in sound Judgement in Faith and Love to our Lord Jesus in meekness and gentleness and profitableness one towards another and in all exactness of holy walking before your God hereupon shall you finde your late great loss gratiously supplied in the answer of your fervent prayers hereupon shall you finde the testimony of a good conscience hereupon shall you finde peace in death and after that the Crown of life which God will give to all that love him And for other People let them repent of the evil handling of their Faithful Ministers and beseech the Lord to give them hearts in their day of Grace yet to know the things which do concern their Peace which that we all may do shall be the prayer of Your servant in the Faith of Christ Obadiah Sedgwick A Sermon lately preached in the Abbey of VVestminster July 4. 1654. At the Funeral of Mr. William Strong Preacher of the Gospel there 2 Kin. 2. 12. And Elisha saw it and he cryed My Father My Father The charet of Israel and the horsemen thereof and he saw him no more and he took hold of his own cloaths rent them in two pieces IN the former verse Elijah and Elisha are passing on and discoursing together What that Discourse was it is not expressed Some do presume to tell us particularly As Lyra and others of the Papists what it was but very probable it is that the discourse was altogether suitable unto so great and Holy a Prophet as Elijah was It was very profitable and very heavenly he being presently to be taken up into heaven Whiles they were thus discoursing on a sudden there appeared a Charet of fire and horses Ver. 11. of fire and parted them both asunder and Elijah went up by P. Martyr In Locum a whirlwind into heaven By the Charet and horses of fire Peter Martyr understands the Angels of God who at this time did put on the species or appearance of fire And with this fiery Apparition God was pleased to honour Elijah at his departure who in his life time had so much honoured his God with the fire of Zeal for his Truth and Worship And he went up by a whirlwind into heaven Some do read it that he went up by a whirlwinde of heaven or by an heavenly whirlwinde which denotes the manner of his Ascension but our general Translation and Reading is best which doth more significantly denote the place unto which he was then carried Namely Heaven Therefore that opinion of the Papists is very fond who do affirm that Elijah was carried into Paradise there to stay with Enoch until towards the end of the world and then both of them are to come forth and to Preach against Contra perfidiam Antichristi A threefold heaven Antichrist But this is a meer fancy all along the Text saith plainly Elijah went up by a Whirlwind into heaven But what heaven he went into is somewhat argued especially by the Papists who it seems will by no means have that zealous enemy to idolatry to be carried into the heaven of the blessed There is indeed Coelum Aerium the Aery Heaven where the Fowls of Heaven do flee and there is Coelum Astriferum where the Stars of heaven are and there is Coelum Beatorum the heaven of the Blessed where God appears in eminency and where Jesus Christ is in glory and the souls of just men made perfect thither is Elijah carried up after all his pains and sufferings troubles fa●thfulness Thither I say is he carried up to receive his Reward and Elisha is left behinde to do his Master more service But how doth El●sha take this sudden parting and loss of precious Elijah The Text tels you Elisha saw it and he cried my Father my Father These words may be called The Lamentation of Elisha upon the sudden translation of that eminent Prophet Elijah In which you may discern 1. His exceeding grief and sorrow He cryed out and until he saw him no more so Junius and Tremellius Read those words And he saw him no more And he rent his cloaths in two pieces as Anciently was the Practise upon the loss and at the Funerals of dear friends and of choice and eminent persons 2. The causes of this his great grief and sorrow And they were 1. His own particular loss The loss of Elijah was unto Elisha as the loss of a loving and dear Father unto a loving and
mournful Lamentation we should be very sensible of such a loss yea in some proportion unto the kind and greatness of it For as the enjoyment of an eminently faithful Prophet or Pastor is an exceeding blessing it is promised amongst the chiefest of mercies I will give them Pastors after mine own heart and thine eyes shall see thy Isa 30. 20. Teacher So the death of such a one is an exceeding loss and consequently requires exceeding Grief and Lamentation There are six great losses Six great losses and do you judge whether they be not so 1. The first is the loss of a soul how great is that loss all is lost if that be lost 2. The second is the loss of true Religion and the glory is departed from Israel when that is gone 3. The third is the loss of Gods smiling favour and presence when that withdraws then the Sun is set and it is night and darkness and fear and trouble with the soul 4. The fourth is the loss of peace in conscience now begins the wars and tumults and the bones are broken 5. The fifth is the loss of the Gospel now the gates of heaven are shut up and the worst of famines seizeth our souls 6. The sixth is the loss of faithful Prophets and Ministers of God now the stones are fallen and the shields of the earth are fallen and the interpreters the men of thousands and the watch-men set upon the Towers and Bullwarks are cut off and the Ambassadors of Christ and of peace are called home and the servants and furtherers of our salvation are discharged Now the more that any loss borders upon souls and upon salvation the more heavy and sharp is that loss and with that loss we should be much afflicted and troubled Q. But may some say why all this ado Why such a crying out and such a laying to heart such a grieving and mourning and taking on and troubling of our selves upon the loss and death of faithful and zealous Prophets What are they more then other men for place for use for service that there must be such a stir for them They are a company of busie and troublesom fellows the Troublers of Israel Sol. So indeed did Ahab speak of gracious and zealous Elijah Ahab who sold himself to work wickedness in the sight of the Lord he said thus unto Elijah Art thou he that troubleth Israel But to let railers go there are two Reasons to be found in the Text for a mournful lamentation upon the death of the faithful Ministers or Prophets of God whereof one respects the people of God who stood in relation unto them as children unto a father and the Prophets stood in relation to them as fathers unto children and the other Reason respects the publike civil State 1. In respect of the Relation between Faithful Ministers and a People Their Relation is that of Father and Children my Father my Father cries Elisha here and truly this Relation hath in it more of Love and more of Grief then any other Relation when Joseph buried Jacob his Father They mourned with a great and a very sore Gen. 50. 10. lamentation Now every faithful Prophet or Minister of God is a Father unto the Saints or people of God 1. For Spiritual generation under God he is a Spiritual Father and begets them again by the Gospel this the Apostle expresly delivers in several places 1 Cor. 4. 15. Though you have ten thousand Instructers in Christ yet have ye not many Fathers for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the Gospel He was an Instrument or means used by God for their New-birth So Philemon ver 10. speaking unto him of Onesimus whom saith Paul there I have begotten in my Bonds 2. For loving and tender affection a Father doth not more love his Natural childe then the faithful Minister doth those whom he hath begotten unto Christ Take thine only Son Isaac whom thou lovest said God to Abraham Gen. 22. 2. The Elder unto the Elect Lady and her children whom I love in the Truth 2 Joh. 1. So Paul to the Corinthians Apologizing for himself in not being burdensom unto them 2 Cor. 11. 11. Wherefore saith he because I love you not q. d. Do you think that the want of love in me unto you is the reason of that forbearance God knoweth q. d. God himself who knows all hearts he doth know that I love you Nay so great is the love of benevolence in a faithful Minister unto his people That he is contented for a while to delay his own eternal salvation and happiness that he may be a little more helpful and useful unto his people this prevalent affection you may read expresly in the Apostle Paul Philippians 1. 23. I am in a strait betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better i. e. For my self Verse 24. Nevertheless to abide in the flesh is more needful for you Verse 25. And having this confidence I know that I shall abide and continue with you all for your furtherance and joy of faith The Apostles difficulty and streight was about his own personal interest and their common spiritual good If I die I shall gain by death I shall be with Christ But then you will lose I must no more be with you to serve and further your Faith and Joy well saith he I am content I am willing to live a little longer for the beneficial service of your souls rather then presently to depart and enjoy my happiness with Christ O what a love was this 3. For care and watchfulness how careful is the Father for his children Children are the uncertain comforts and the certain cares of their Parents and how watchful is the father for the good of his children and against any evil that they may fall into they counsel them they look after them they follow them with their tears and with their many prayers This likewise is applied unto the faithful Ministers of God they do naturally care for the estate of their People Phil. 2. 20. As if they were led thereunto by inward Bowels and by a natural instinct and they are watchful for them and over them Heb. 13. 17. Obey them that have the Rule over you and submit your selves for they watch for your souls Ah Brethren when you are sleeping they are watching when you are minding your Trades then are they studying your salvation when you are following your delights then are they mourning and praying for your souls they are caring and watching how to get your hearts changed how to bring in your souls to Christ how to get your sins mortified your temptations answered your doubts resolved your consciences to be setled and comforted they fear in your fears and they are troubled in your troubles they mourn in your sorrows they rejoyce in your peace c. 4. For all the offices and duties of a Father you read in Scripture of the