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A12478 An exposition of the Creed: or, An explanation of the articles of our Christian faith. Delivered in many afternoone sermons, by that reverend and worthy divine, Master Iohn Smith, late preacher of the Word at Clavering in Essex, and sometime fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Oxford. Now published for the benefit and behoofe of all good Christians, together with an exact table of all the chiefest doctrines and vses throughout the whole booke Smith, John, 1563-1616.; Palmer, Anthony, fl. 1632. 1632 (1632) STC 22801; ESTC S117414 837,448 694

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workings of the spirit Simile 1 2 3 Vse 1. Simile 2 3 Simile Sixe benefits we have by the holy Ghost 1 To shew us our miserable estate Simile Simile Simile 2 Illumination of Gods Will. Two waies the Holy Ghost teacheth First by opening our hearts Simile Secondly by strengthening our memory Simile Thirdly Holy Regiment and Government Simile Simile The Holy Ghost governesus two wayes First by restraining evill Secondly by stirring us up to good The fourth Benefit is to give power to perf●orme holy duties Simile Impossible to a naturall man 1 2 3 Fifthly comfort in distresse How the comfort of the Holy Ghost ex●●ds 〈◊〉 other comfort 1 For 〈◊〉 2 In regard of Puritie Simile 3 In regard of Death 1 In affliction by perswading of Gods love 2 2 By turning all things to our good 3 By comfort that our troubles shall have an end 3 Wayes the Holy Ghost comforts in trouble 1 2 3 2 The Holy Ghost comforts in distresse of conscience How the Holy Ghost comforts in distresse of conscience 1 2 3 At the day of death the Holy Ghost comforts 1 Comfort 2 Comfort 3 Comfort 6 Benefit Vse Simile SERM. LVIII The first Conclusion The first Ground Simile The second Ground Simile The wayes to quench the Sp●rit First by withdrawing the matter Secondly by powring on water Thirdly by smothering Simile 4 Negligence Simile 2 Conclusion 1 2 Simile 3 Conclusion Foure grounds that the Spirit once truely given is never finally lost 1 The ●romise of God 2 The Power of God 3 Christs Prayer 4 From the Nature of the seed 1 2 Simile 3 Simile 4 Simile Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Simile How we may retaine the Holy Ghost Five meanes to nourish the Spirit The first use of meanes Simile Simile Secondly not to grieve the Spirit Simile The Spirit grieved two wayes First sinning against Illumination Simile Secondly by disobedience to his motions Thirdly to marke the removes of the Spirit Simile Simile Fourthly to put the Spirit to imployment Simile 5 Not to over burthen the spirit with cares Simile Simile Simile SER. LIX 1 Vnder what forme wee must beleeve ART IX 2 What wee must beleeve of the Church 1 That God hath a Church Vse Quest Ans Vse 2. Simile 1 What the Church of God is The definition of the Church 1 The Church a company Simile 2 A company of called ones Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. 3 Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile 4 Simile Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Simile SER. LX. Secondly the Parts of the Church First the triumphant Church The Saints are glorified now Reason 1. Object Sol. Reason 2. First against naturall reason Simile Object Sol. Secondly against sanctified reason Secondly the Church militant A man must be a member of the militant before ●e can be of the Church Triumphant Simile Vse 1. Weake Christians deceived Object Sol. Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Simile Vse 4. Simile SER. LXI Particular parts of the Church Simile Object Sol. 1 2 How the Church is one Simile Simile Vse 1. 3 The diverse states of the Church Simile Simile Simile Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. First it is a mixed company Simile Secondly it may be more pure at one time than another Simile Simile When we may not Separate lawfully from the Church 1 2 3 When we may separate Ans. 1. Affirm Simile 2 SERM. LXII 4 Five priviledges and dignities of the Church The first dignitie of the Church The Citie of excels others in foure respects 2 This societie is to preserve soules especially Simile 3 All commodities goe thither for spirituall life 4 Here is spirituall freedome Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Vse 3. 2 Dignitie of the Church 1 Consequent That Christ is the head of the Church onely three proofes 1 Simile 2 3 2 Consequent Simile Simile 3 Consequent Simile Simile Vse 3 Dignitie of the Church Simile 1 He loves the Church Three wayes SERM. XLIII 1 Signe of Love Simile Simile 2 Signe of Love 3 Declaration of Love Simile Simile 2 Deduction Simile Simile 3 Deduction 4 Deduction Simile Simile 5 Deduction 6 Deduction Simile Simile Simile 4 Dignitie of the Church Church ground and Pillar of Truth two wayes 1 The Letter of the Scripture Simile Simile Simile 1 Reason prooving the letter of ●he Scripture hath beene kept uncorrupted Reason 2. Reason 3. Simile Reason 4. 1 Argument Reason 5. Vse Quest Sol. Simile Simile Quest. Ans The first proofe of true Translation The second proofe of true Translation Simile Object Sol. 1 Sol. 2 Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile What Canonicall Scripture is Simile Why the Apocrypha was not equally received into the Church foure grounds 1 The Iewes received them not 2 Apocrypha writers were not Penmen of the Scriptures 1 2 3 They bee not of the witnesses Christ will stand to 4 The wants and imperfections of the Bookes bewray so much Vse 1. Simile Simile Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Simile Simile Simile Quest Sol. Simile Seven Evidences of the Scriptures 1 The Puritie of it 2 By the maiestie of it Simile Simile 3 By the Power of it 4 By the Predictions of it 5 Evidence by the sinceritie of it Simile 6 Evidence the consent of writers 1 In the matter 2 Manner 7 Evidence by Naturall Reason Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Vse 4. Simile Simile Fifth dignitie of the Church There is no salvation out of it Simile Simile Foure reasons why thereis no salvation out of the Church Reason 1. 1 Ioh. 5. 19. Col. 1. 15. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Simile 2 Reason Simile Reason 3. Reason 4. Vse 1. Simile Simile Vse 2. Simile Simile Vse 3. Simile Quest Ans Simile Quest Ans Simile 2 The Properties of the Church 3 Things seeming to oppugne the Holinesse of the Church 2 Simile 3 Foure wayes the Church is Holy 1 How the true Church may erre two waies 1 Simile 2 Simile 2 Simile Simile Simile 4 Object Defects of Popish Holinesse 1 Failing 2 Failing Simile Simile Vse 1. Simile Simile Simile Vse 2. Vse 4. Simile 2 Propertie of the Church In three regards the Church is s●●d to bee Catholike 1 Of place Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile 2 Of Persons Simile Simile 3 In Regard of Time Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Object Ans 1. Ans 2. Simile Three Reasons proving that Papists cannot be the true Catholikes 1 2 1 Tim. 2. 5. 3 Vse Simile Two Reasons why God withholds worldly things from his Children 1 Simile Simile 2 2 Sorts of blessings given to the Church Some in this life some in that to come Simile The first blessing God bestowes on his people in this life is the Communion of Saints Communions of the wicked 1 2 3 Simile 1 Communion with God Simile Our Communion with God stands in two things 1 2 Simile 2 Communion with Christ Ioh. 1. vlt. Christ communicates foure things to us 1 Himselfe Quest Sol. Simile 2 The right of his death and merit Simile Simile 3 Power of spirituall
therefore Christ did first appeare to her I will shew you six particulars wherein Mary did shew her love to Christ First that she continued seeking when others Peter and Iohn gave over Secondly in that she wept and mourned for the losse of Christ when others went away without mourning and weeping We see in nature if one comes to a birds-nest and take away her young ones the bird will flie about the nest take on and in some sort bewaile the losse of her young but the Devill may come and catch away the graces of Christ repentance faith patience the comfortable feeling of Gods favour with the hope of heaven and yet thou never weepest for the losse of these therefore it is a good thing when a man hath lost these graces if he can bewaile them It is said of Ioseph and Mary when they had lost Christ they sought him with heavie hearts even so when a man hath lost the comfortable feeling of Gods favour and the graces of Christ he seekes for them and doth weepe in regard of the losse of them this is a true note of true love to Christ Thirdly in that shee bowed downe into the Sepulchre and looked here and there if by any meanes shee could finde Christ Of these wee have spoken alreadie now to proceed Fourthly Her true love to Christ is seene by the continuance of her complaint For notwithstanding she had seene the comfortable sight of Angels the one sitting at the head the other at the feet of the Sepulchre shewing that they were not onely ready to attend the head but also to minister to the meanest of the members of Christ who gave her comfortable speeches asking why shee wept as if they should say to her Indeed if Christ should lye still trampled and trodden under-foot of death if thy sinnes were yet upon him and held him under there might be cause for it but Christ hath risen from the dead and hath vanquished and overcome Death Hell and the Devill and therefore thou hast no cause to weepe yet for all this sight she had seene and for all those good speeches the Angels could not give her comfort till she had the thing shee sought for So if a man have true love to Christ it is not all the Angels can give him comfort till he finde Christ and feele the comfortable assurance of the pardon of his sins and the hope of Gods favour nothing will make him glad till then as Mary complaines to the Angels and sayes They have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid him in whom I have laid up all my joy and comfort all my hope and all my delight so a Christian may complaine and say My sinnes have taken away Christ from me they have taken away the comfortable feeling of Gods favour the hope of heaven We marvell that the good speeches that Preachers and good Christians give to a man in distresse doe not comfort him but it is no marvell for the Angels cannot doe it till a man be possessed with Christ therefore no marvell that good Preachers and good Christians cannot give them comfort it is a pitifull thing that a number when they have lost Christ every little matter will comfort them they need not have Angels sent from heaven for a few angels of gold will doe it Fifthly The divulgation of her complaint shee complaines to the Angels and she complaines to Christ thinking he had beene the Gardener she was not ashamed that hee should know that the cause of her heavinesse sorrow and weeping was for Christ this is a certaine note of true love to Christ when we are not ashamed to let the world know or see that the cause of our sorrow and heavinesse is because wee have lost Christ by our sins and the comfortable feeling of Gods favor So in the Canticles when the Church had lost Christ she runs thorow the streets and lanes to see whether she could finde him she was not ashamed to let the world know that the matter of her griefe and sorrow was because she had lost Christ so afterwards she layes out for Christ If yee meet my love tell him that I am sicke of love shee was not ashamed to let the world know that she was sicke of love so when it is thus with a man that hee is not ashamed to let the world know and see that the matter of his sorrow and griege is because he hath lost the comfortable feeling of the pardon of his sins and of Gods favour this is a note of true love to Christ Hebr. 2. 11. it is said that he was not ashamed to call them brethren therefore if he be not ashamed of us let us never be ashamed of him Indeed there is good cause why he should bee ashamed of us there is such a deale of corruption and sin in us therefore he might be ashamed of us especially when hee shall stand before God in judgement Now if Christ bee not ashamed of us let us never be ashamed of him for if we be ashamed of him before men he will be ashamed of us before God and all the holy Angels The sixth note of true love which she bare to Christ was the strange proffer she made to Christ Tell mee saith she where thou hast laid him and I will take him away if he be never so deepe if it be never so far I am contented to take any paines to have him this is a strange proffer which she makes beyond her power and abilitie her weake armes were not able to carry Christ but herein she shewes her true love to him so when a man is contented to take any paines or labour to goe thorow it be it never so farre if he can finde Christ is contented this is a note of true love to Christ for Luke 7. 37. our Saviour saith that where the dead bodies be thither the Eagles will resort As the Eagles when they sent a dead body they will flie many a mile to it so we should like the Eagles get a sent of the dead body of Christ and be contented to goe many miles take any paines and labour that we might have Christ Ioh. 21. when the Disciples were a fishing Christ came and appeared to them upon which discovery Peter launches into the water the ship could not hold him but he leapes into the sea to come to Christ so when we know that Christ is to be found in the use of good meanes in the preaching of the Word nothing should keepe us from thence Mary was content beyond her strength and ability to seeke Christ so we should shew our love to him above our strength and abilitie as 2 Cor. 8. it is said of the Macedonians that to their power and beyond their power they were willing And as he sayes Psa 119. Thou hast commanded me to keep thy Precepts diligently O that my heart were
died for us as Saint Paul saith Rom. 5. 8. It was love and a great love too that made Iaakob serve seven yeeres for a wife in Syria which hee thought nothing much more it was love and great love in Christ that hee would be contented to bee borne in a Stable to bee laid in a Manger to sweat blood and water in the garden to die that accursed death of the crosse and to bee laid in the ground for us all which Christ accounts as nothing so we may be saved and brought home to God Esay 53. 11. it is said He shall see the travell of his soule and shall be satisfied so we may be saved and brought home to God this will satisfie Christ he will thinke all his paines as nothing Secondly Christ hath made declaration of his Love in that he doth wash away our sins from day to day in his blood for whereas nothing in this world can wash away our sins but his blood it hath pleased him to dippe a handkerchiefe as it were in his blood to wipe away our sinnes this is another evidence that he loveth us as Revel 1. 5. it is said that he hath loved us and washed away our sins in his blood therefore whosoever doth not feele his soule and conscience to be cleansed and the blood of Christ to eate out the venome of his sinne Christ hath not declared his love unto him as yet in any comfortable manner Thirdly Christ declares his love to the Church in that hee sends love tokens unto her which are the gifts and graces of his Spirit A loving husband if hee bee in a farre Countrie will send love tokens to his wife there is never a messenger that comes but he will send some Iewell or peece of gold so Christ doth to his Church send love tokens from day to day as Ephes 4. 8. it is said When he ascended up on high he led captivitie captive and gave gifts unto men so when he came at the highest top of glory hee did not forget his poore Church but sent gifts to it as Acts 2. 35. it is said Since then that he by the right hand of God hath beene exalted and hath received of his Father the Holy Ghost hee hath shewed forth this which you now see and heare This is a plaine evidence that his heart is upon us and that he doth not onely love us but makes declaration of his love that we may see and feele it from day to day Hence we may inferre though Christians bee despised in the eyes of the world and not regarded yet they be deare in the eyes of Christ he regardeth and loveth them Wee see a good wife if her husband love her shee cares not who hates her so her husband bee pleased shee cares not who is displeased so it should bee with a Christian if Christ love him hee should not care though the world hate him so Christ be pleased hee need not care who be displeased with him Secondly seeing the Church is the Spouse and Body of Christ therefore he will richly indue the Church Wee see when a man marrieth with a woman the marriage deeds be made he gives her an interest in his lands and indowes her with his goods so Christ doth indue the Church with his righteousnesse holinesse with his merits Thus Phil. ● 9. Paul desireth that he might be found in Christ that is not having his owne righteousnesse which is of the law but that which is through faith in Christ So also 1 Cor. 1. 30. saith the Apostle But yee are of him in Christ Iesus who of God is made unto us wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption that according as it is written Hee that rejoyceth let him rejoyce in the Lord this is another comfort to a Christian that though he be poore in himselfe yet he shall be rich in Christ If a poore Maid marry with a rich Husband though her father left her nothing nor never a friend yet she thinkes her selfe well provided for so though we bee poore in our selves our father Adam having left us nothing but sinne yet if we● can marry with Christ hee will richly indow us with all his Graces Thirdly seeing the Church is the Spouse and the Bride of Christ therefore hee will adorne it with all his graces It is said Esai 61. 10. I will greatly rejoice in the Lord and my soule shall bee joyfull in my God for he hath cloathed mee with the garments of salvation and covered mee with the Robe of Righteousnesse hee hath decked me as a Bridegroome and as a Bride tireth her self with her Iewels And to the same effect wee read Revel 19. 8. unto her was granted that shee should bee arayed with pure fine linnen and shining for the fine linnen is the Righteousnesse of Saints so then the Lord will not leave the Church naked but will beautifie and adorne it with his graces therefore wee must labour to feele this and see it for if our conscience shall tell us that wee are naked not having one grace of his Spirit then wee doe not belong to him for without this golden garment of Christs righteousnesse wee shall not bee set at the right hand of Christ as it is Psal 45. 9. but as long as wee bee naked and have not this golden garment on wee doe not belong to Christ for if wee did hee would adorne and beautifie us with all his graces in some measure Fourthly seeing the Church is the bodie and spouse of Christ therefore hee will discharge the Churches duties A woman that is in debt when she is maried to a man all her debts are devolved unto her Husband she shall not answer the debt but her husband because shee is under his covert so the Church shall not answer for her debts but Christ shall as 1 Pet. 2. 24. it is said Who his own selfe bare our sinnes in his own bodie on the tree and Rom 8. 3. saith the Apostle for that which was unpossible to the law in as much as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinnefull flesh and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh Therefore seeing Christ hath discharged our debt and tooke it upon him it is a comfort to the Church that they shall not answere for it Hence wee may learne that when the Divell shall impleade us for our sinnes and debts wee must not deny the debt and say it is not so but answer him wee bee not the parties that are loiable to the Law but hee must goe to our he band Christ hee hath taken our debt upon him and will answere whatsoever can be required of us To make this plaine as wee reade 2 King 4. there was a poore Widow that was impleaded for her debt who comes to the Prophet and tels him of it Hee askes her what shee had
it in the life of grace We see in a house the posts that are compact together are a great stay against the winde and weather so the Communion and societie of the Saints one with another is a great stay and strength against the temptations of the Divell It is a good saying that Chrysostome hath Naturally a Man hath but one head to advise him one tongue to speake for him two eyes to foresee dangers two hands to worke with and two feete to goe with now saith he if a man had this skill and cunning that hee could make that head a thousand heads to advise him that tongue a thousand tongues to speak for him his eyes a thousand eyes to foresee dangers his hands a thousand hands to helpe him and his feete a thousand feete to goe for him hee would hardly be circumvented by any policies Therefore it is a good thing to labour to have communion with the Saints and to bee gathered into it Now the Communion of Saints one with another stands in three things 1. Of the living with the living 2. Of the living with the dead 3. Of the Dead with the Dead First the communion of the living with the living which stands in five things first in communion of affection for they love and desire the good one of another and wish well one to another they rejoyce for the welfare and grieve for the troubles and dangers that befall one another they wish wel to those that be a thousand miles off them and love them they never saw To this purpose David saith Psal 16. 3. All my delight it with the Saints that be on the earth so Colos 2. 1. saith Saint Paul For I would ye knew what great fighting I have for your sakes and for them of La●dicea and for as many as have not seene my person in the flesh We see in nature that if one member suffers all the rest suffer so saith Saint Paul 1 Cor. 12. 26. Therefore if the Communion of nature worke such affection in one member towards another much more there should be the same affection amongst the members of Christ in the Communion of grace Ezek. 1. 24. it is said when the beasts went the wheeles went and when the beasts were lifted up the wheeles were lifted up the reason whereof is there given because the spirit of the beast was in the wheeles so because the same spirit that is in one Christian is in another therefore there is the like affections to procure the good of one another as much as may be Now I doe not say they be all of one judgement for there is diversitie of judgements but they be of like affection and good will one towards another there is difference of judgement as Rom. 14. 5. This man esteemes one day above another and another man accounts every day alike so verse 2. One beleeveth that hee may eate of all things and another which is weeke eateth hearbs so wee may see that there is difference in judgement amongst them but this I may be bold to say though there be difference in judgement yet there is unitie of affection so that they desire the good and wish well one to another It is Pauls rule Rom. 14. 5. Let every man be fully perswaded in his owne minde and else where hee saith Let us therefore as many as be perfect be thus minded and if any be otherwise minded God shall reveale the same things unto him Aquinas saith that the effect of charitie is not concord in judgement but in mens wils and affections that wish well one to another as divers Physitians be sent for to a sicke person some of them thinke that the best way to cure the party is to take away all the corrupt blood at once others thinke that it is better not to take it away all at one time but by a little and little now here is difference in judgement but yet unitie in will and affection in that all of them intend the good of the sicke party so it is in the sins and corruptions of the Church some thinke that it is best to take away all the sinnes and corruptions of the Church at one time but the sober minded thinke that it is best taken away by little and little here is a difference of judgement but unitie of will and affection all intend the good of the Church Therefore when men for every little matter and diversitie of judgement shall part brotherly love wee may suspect that they doe not belong to the Communion of Saints Secondly in communicating of their gifts and graces one to another as 1 Pet. 4. 10. Let every man as hee hath received the gift minister the same one to another as good disposers of the manifold grace of God so then such are exhorted as bee the people of God to bee ready to communicate good things one to another so Matth. 2. when Christ was risen and had appeared to Mary shee could not hold but shee telleth it to the Disciples so also Iohn 20. when the Disciples had seene Christ they could not hold but as soone as they saw Thomas say they Oh Wee have seene the Lord in like manner when wee have any good thing made knowne to us wee should not hold it to our selves but make it knowne to our friends and acquaintance Wee see in nature if a Bird find but a worme shee will carry it to her young ones and make them partakers of it so when wee have got any good thing wee should carry it home to our wife and children and make them partakers of it as Luk. 5. the Disciples were partakers in fishing and there was a compact and league between them that what one did get in fishing it should tend to the common good of that whole societie so whatsoever wee get out of the preaching of the word it should goe to the common good of those that wee are over a man should not keepe it to himselfe but impart it to the cōmon good of his friends acquaintance or wife and children as in the law the shelled fishes were uncleane because though the meat was good yet a man had much adoe to come by it so when men have good things and are not ready to impart and communicate to one another they bee so far uncleane men Thirdly in spirituall Sacrifices the Saints bee free men and yet they bee every bodies servants as far as their ability serveth as Colos 5. 13. saith hee by love serve one another Wee have heard out of Exodus that if one household were too little for the eating of the Paschall Lambe they should joine with another house so if wee bee not fit for Prayer and conference and other holy duties wee should desire the helpe of our brethren that have better graces than our selves Now these spirituall Sacrifices that wee owe to the Saints stand in foure things
stirre at the voyce of the Sonne of God speaking unto them but once and therefore how shall this condemne us that Christ hath spoken so many times and yet wee doe not once stirre or move at it which are living men to goe about our businesse therefore this shall condemne us that the dead cinders of men that have lien in their graves many a yeare shall startle and move at one voyce of Christ and yet wee doe not at a thousand of his voyces Fourthly seeing Christ is the onely Sonne of God wee must take heed we doe not despise him Psal 2. it is said Kisse the Sonne lest hee bee angry O labour to kisse him seeke his favour do not grieve him woe be to him that shall lift up his hand against him to grieve him 1 Cor. 8. 12. Saith the Apostle Now when ye sinne so against the brethren and wound their weake consciences ye sinne against Christ therefore we must take heed wee doe not sinne against our brethren and so sinne against Christ for the sinnes of us Christians more grieve Christ than the sinnes of the world because wee professe he is our Lord and Master and will bee ruled and governed by him and be his servants therfore in this case when a man sinneth against him it is more than the sinne of a stranger or an alien Wee see in the Scripture how Christ complaines One of you shall betray me but wee be to him that doth it and when Iudas came to betray him he saith To what end art thou come art thou come to betray me As if he had said Why thou art a disciple of mine thou professest that thou art my servant and that I am thy Lord and Master and doest thou come to betray me so Ioh. 1. it is said Hee came amongst his owne but his owne received him not if he had come amongst strangers and aliens and had been so used by them the matter had been the lesse but seeing he came amongst his owne and they received him not this it was that did grieve Christ the more so Hosea 4. 12. God complaines My people aske counsell of their stockes and their staffe declareth unto them Wells beloved let us take this to heart when a prophane man liveth in his sinnes impenitent what doth Christ hee doth not so complaine of them But when a Christian shall live in sinne uncleanesse maliciousnesse or deceite this it is that grieveth Christ and maketh him to complaine Fifthly seeing Christ is the onely Sonne of God we must shew the greater measure of thankefulnesse to him for who can sufficiently speake of his goodnesse that he being the onely Sonne of God and God over all would abase himselfe to take our nature upon him and dye for us We have heard of the love of Rebecca to her sonne Iacob when shee gave him counsell to goe to his father to get the blessing hee was afraid his father would have felt and handled him and so in stead of a blessing he might have procured a curse but shee bids him not to feare it On mee bee the curse my sonne if there be any comfort on thee be the blessing but on me be the curse Such and farre greater is the Love of Christ to us he saith On me be the curse my people but if there bee any good or any blessing or comfort to be had by my sufferings or paines on you be the blessing therefore seeing Christ hath made such a change with us who can render sufficient thankefulnesse to him for it Nehem. 11. wee see the people blessed those that would dwell at Ierusalem because it was a dangerous place Now if this people thanked them that would dwell with them hazard and venture their lives O how thankefull ought we to bee unto Christ who hath given his life for us and therefore how are we bound in all love and thankefulnesse to him The late powder treason that was in the yeere of our Lord 1605. the delivery from it is a fruit and benefit we have by Christ and therefore it was carefully and religiously provided of our Magistrates to set apart a day to give thankes in a service to be performed for it for he hath not onely delivered our soules but also our bodies from the jawes of hell Now I come to speake of His dominion which is the second thing in the dignity of His Person our Lord wherein two things are to bee considered 1. That he is the Lord of the World 2. That he is our Lord. First hee is the Lord of the whole world and hath all kingdomes at his command Luk. 1. 33. And hee shall raigne over the house of Iacob for ever and of his kingdome there shall bee no end so Act. 2. 3. Let the house of Israel say and know that God hath made him both Lord and Christ Now Christ is the Lord of the world in two regards First in regard of the Soveraignty that is in himselfe he hath all power under him to dispose of at his will and pleasure as Matth. 11. 27. All things are given me of my father both the possession and the disposition of them and Act 2. Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feete so Luk. 10. 17. And the seventy returned againe with joy saying Lord even the devils are subdued to us through thy name All things are subject to him he is the great Lord of the world Secondly hee is the Lord of this world in regard of service for all things doe serve him whatsoeuer Psal 119. 91. They continue to this dayly by thine ordinances for all thy servants therefore seeing there is nothing but doth service to him he is the Lord of this world Now there is a double service a service which the godly and a service which the wicked performe there is a voluntary service which the godly performe and unvoluntary which the wicked performe as the Axe in the hand of the hewer doth service voluntary so doe the wicked when they doe any service to God they doe it by constraint unwillingly all things doth service unto God either willingly or by constraint for wee cannot stirre a foote or a hand or doe any thing but it is by the appointment of God It is a good saying of Augustine Now grant Lord saith he that we may doe the good service for whether wee bee willing or not willing we shall serve thee thy providence and hidden will if we serve thee unwillingly then we serve thee like slaves but grant Lord that wee may serve thee willingly and voluntarily as thy children ought to serve thee and thine owne people And thus Christ is the Lord of the world The use is first seeing Christ is the Lord of the world it shall bee well with the Church and the members thereof and as Christ is the Lord so hee will order every thing to the good of them in Psal 96. 10. it is said The
the armes of Ioseph in the lap of Mary in the armes of the Preachers or of other good Christians but wee must labour to have him in our owne armes the armes of our faith for though we may see Christ in the armes of our teachers yet for all this wee may perish and therefore so much the rather ought wee to receive and get him into our armes and apply him into our hearts because hee comes to present himselfe to thee and to me therefore if we doe not receive him wee shall be guilty of his blood If we should bee in a roome and a childe should cry to come unto us would wee neglect the childe would not we cast away that which wee had in our hands and take the childe into our owne armes I doe not say if it were the childe of a king we would doe so but if it were the childe of an honest poore man and therefore much more should we receive the Childe Christ beloved this Chide Christ doth in a sort cry to come unto us and saith as it were thus O good people receive me into your hearts receive me into your soules I doe not desire it for my owne sake but you shall be the better for it therefore O good people why doe ye not receive me if we doe not wee are like to perish and we shall be guilty of his blood and therefore this is our duty when Christ doth offer himselfe unto us we should bee ready to receive him so old Simeon did for it is nothing to see him unlesse wee get him in our armes by our faith and embrace him therefore why doe we not fling away all things that doe hinder us and receive him into our hearts and lay hold on him which is life and salvation offered to us The second was that when he had seene Christ he praiseth God for it that although he had seene a great deale of trouble and felt a great deale of sorrow yet that he lived to see those happy daies wherein he might see Christ so howsoever we have lived to see a great deale of trouble and sorrow yet wee should praise God that hee hath let us live to see Christ in the face of the Gospell therefore wee have great cause to praise God that hee hath let us live till this time to repent us of our sinnes to get faith in Christ howsoever we have had a great deale of sorrow and trouble in this world yet the comfort is that we have repented of our sinnes and lived to make heaven and happinesse sure unto us Matth. 13. 16. saith our Saviour But blessed be your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare as if he should say O blessed be God for this happy time wherein we live to see that wee see and to heare that which we heare so Iohn 20. when the Disciples had seene Christ they told Thomas of it They were glad that after a great deale of trouble they had seene Christ at last so it is said Act. 8. 39. the Eunuch went away rejoycing when Christ was made knowne to him therefore whatsoever wee have beene before yet if wee can repent of our sinnes get Christ into our hearts by faith wee have great cause to praise and to thanke God that wee have lived to see these daies hast thou beene a swearer or a drunkard or a bad liver and repented of thy sinnes lay hold on Christ thou hast great cause to praise God and to thanke him that he hath let thee live to see these happy daies The third effect was that he did utter these speeches Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace c. Now this saying of Simeon was the first song in the new Testament that was sung in the Temple wherein foure things may be observed 1. His willingnesse and profession to dye 2. What account he made of death 3. In what disposition he doth desire to dye 4. The Reason why he was willing to dye The first is a profession of his willingnesse to dye Now Lord I am willing to dye I am well contented to depart in peace for I have seene enough I have seene the Saviour and redeemer of the world I have embraced him in my armes and therefore I am willing to dye now So when we have seene Christ we should bee willing to dye for wee have seene enough for our salvation as long as God would have us live wee should be willing to live and when he would have us dye we should be willing to depart we see if a master send his servant to trade and traffique beyond sea so long as his master will have him to trade and traffique so long hee will trade but when his master will have him come home hee will packe up all and come away so as long as God will have us trade and traffique heere we should be content but when hee will have us packe up all and come home wee should be contented to doe so In the Gospell we finde that Christ fled from death and danger when God would have him fly but when the time of his death came he went out to meete it so likewise Moses hee could have beene contented to passe over Iordan but when God told him that he should not but he must goe and dye in the mount Nebo hee went as willingly up as any man goeth to a feast or banquet therefore it is a pitifull thing to see how men doe hang upon the world at that time when God would have them dye Secondly what account he made of death men make much adoe about it are afraid of it but Simeon accounteth it but a departing out of this one roome into another a departing from men to God from earth to heaven from mortality to immortality therefore wee may see what account wee should make of it The Philosophers say that death is the most terrible thing that may be because they thinke it is an utter destruction of nature but Simeon accounts of it as of a remooving or departure from one place to another therefore he is not afraid of it but embraceth it as a doore or gate to passe from earth to heaven from men to God from mortality to immortality and this is the account that all men should make of death Gen. 15. 15. saith the Lord to Abraham but thou shalt go to thy fathers in peace and shalt be buried in a good old age so that death is nothing but a going to the holy men those that have died in faith before and Christ accounts of it Ioh. 17. 13. but as a going to God to the blessed Angels and holy Spirits departed so also Paul in one of his epistles Neverthelesse wee are bold and love rather to remoove out of this body and to dwell with the Lord. Ahasuerus Hester 2. 13 14. had two houses for his women one was the house of sweete perfumes and odors that they might bee
to the fire to warme him All this doth shew the strangenesse of this effect which made some thinke it could not be true but wee may see that all the ancient Fathers of the Church read it so ever from the Apostles time as Irenaeus and Athanasius and divers others as also it agrees with the love of Christ towards us and therefore seeing it hath been thus read of all the ancient Fathers in the Church and is agreeable to the love that Christ shewes to us wee are to make no doubt of it In the sweating of Christ observe foure things 1. Who was the procuring cause of it 2. The cariage of Christ in it 3. The manner of it 4. The end First what was the procuring cause it was His Agonie Agonie doth signifie in Greeke a combate or a conflict now this same conflict which Christ had was not with any earthly power but with God and this was the cause of his sweating before Christ had a combate with feare and sorrow in the garden he had wrestled with the devill being tempted by him and with the Priests in the temple now he is come to combate and have a conflict with God Which may teach us that if we live in our sins and doe not repent of them and put them off to Christ we shall have an agonie too for we shall not only have the devill and an evill and bad conscience to combate with but wee shall have God himselfe to fight against us as Revel 2. 16. Repent or else I will come against thee shortly and will fight against thee with the sword of my mouth so that if men doe not repent they shall not onely have the devill and an evill conscience to combate and conflict with but God himselfe and this is the sorest combate that can be to have Him to fight against them it is a great matter for one to have a combate with the devill and for a poore man to have a combate with a great power but a farre greater matter to have a conflict with God We see that a Christian had neede of a great deale of faith wisedome and patience for he hath not onely his sinnes and the devill to conflict with but God to fight against him therefore wee had need to take Pauls counsell Ephes. 6. To take to us the whole Armour of God to be armed in every part for saith hee wee wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers c. a Christian hath not to doe with weake and fraile men onely but with the devill yea and many times with the Lord himselfe who doth combate with us therefore that wee may stand at that houre how ought we to be armed and to have the gifts of the Spirit The second thing observed was the carriage of Christ in this estate it is said he prayed the more earnestly the more hee felt himselfe pressed and burthened with our sinnes the more earnestly hee prayed Which may teach us that the sorer our temptations and the greater our conflicts bee the stronger must be our endeavour to resist them the more earnest our prayer we must strengthen our faith and renew our repentance that so we may stand in the temptation I have shewed you heretofore that little Bees in a storme or tempest catch up little stones in their clawes to ballance themselves against the winde and storme that so they be not carried away with storme or tempest so Christians must do when there is a tempest up get little stones as it were in our clawes get faith and repentance renewed pray the more earnestly that so wee be not carried away with the temptation and overcome with the conflict many a Christian complaines that he is troubled with evill motions that hee cannot rest nor bee at quiet and some complaine of the deadnesse of their hearts and insensiblenesse of them now in this case what must bee done the sorer the temptation is the greater must bee the indeavour to resist it therefore we should be the more earnest with God in prayer and apply our selves to the use of good meanes that so wee may not bee carried away with the temptation if a tree begin to dye at the top the way to helpe it is not to pick away the moulds from the rootes for this is the way to kill it quite but to lay fresh moulds to the roots so if a Christian begin to droope the way to recover him is not to withdraw himselfe from the meanes but to apply himselfe to it to pray read meditate heare the word preached and to receive the Sacraments When Iehoram was wounded of the Assyrians he turned into Iezreel to bee healed of his wounds so a Christian must doe when he feeles himselfe to be wounded in his love faith care or in his patience what must hee doe but returne to the use of good meanes to bee healed againe in his love and in his patience and in his grace Thirdly the manner of his sweat and this is declared in these five circumstances first it is said that he did sweat the Philosophers say that all sweating ariseth from too much labour or paine for nature being pressed above her strength doth cause sweating therefore so long as a man doth not exceede the power and ability of his nature hee doth not sweat but when hee is pressed above his strength that makes him sweat Gen. 3. saith the Lord to Adam Thou shalt eate thy bread in the sweat of thy face why did not Adam labour before this Yes but the labour which he had before was a delightfull not a painefull or penall labour so Christ being pressed with the burthen of our snnes and the weight of them this made Him to sweat Christ could have borne the heavinesse of the earth on his backe without sweating but our sinnes did so presse and burthen Him and the weight thereof was so heavy that it made him to sweat It is a wonderous thing that Christ should thus sweat under the burthen of our sinnes and wee goe away and feele nothing well sinne will either cost sweating heere or in hell better it were to sweat for them here where wee may have an end of sweating than in hell where there will be no end Secondly He did sweat blood Philosophers say that a man may not onely sweat water but blood as a man being stung with a serpent but Christ did sweat blood when there was no hand to touch him nothing but the serpent of our sinnes to sting Him The use is for our example that if Christ did sweat blood for our sinnes then our consciences should bleede in the consideration of them I have shewed you heretofore that if a man be slaine bring the partie that killed the dead man into the place where he is and his wounds will bleed afresh againe now we be the men that have slaine Christ therefore when wee come to the
words My God my God why hast thou forsaken me are not words of expostulation and reasoning with God but of a mournefull complaint As Christ carried himselfe patiently when he was forsaken of God so wee should carry our selves patiently in our crosses never murmuring nor grudging against God so wee see David did Psal 39. 9. I was dumbe and said nothing because thou didst it and Mich. 7. 9. The Church saith I will beare the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him c. Augustine saith The devill is like unto a dogge if a man be at dinner the dogge sits and waits to see if a crumme fall downe or a bone so long as they give him a bone or a crumme the dogge will still wait one shall not be ridde of him but if you give him nothing the dogge will be gone so the divell doth with us he waits upon a Christian when he is under affliction to see whither he will let fall a word of murmuring or grudging against God if he doe he will wait still but if he doe not he will be gone Thirdly Christ carried himselfe holily first in that he did rest and rely himselfe upon God by faith though he did not feele a dramme of comfort so we should carry our selves holily to rest our selves on God by faith though we feele no comfort as Iob did Though thou killest me yet will I put my trust in thee so Ion. 3. saith he out of the belly of hell I cryed unto the Lord. Secondly Christ did not onely carry himselfe mournefully and patiently but he laboured to recover himselfe to his former feeling of Gods favour againe by prayer so ought we not onely to rest and rely on God by faith but labour to recover our selves to our former feeling of Gods favour againe as when trees are dead at the top wee lay fresh moulds to the roots to make them revive againe so we should labour by the use of good meanes prayer and such like that wee may revive againe to our former comforts joy and feeling of Gods favour Thus what Christ suffered of God we have already spoken of now we are come to speake What he suffered of men for such is the desert of sinne that it deserveth to suffer of God and man and of every power that is able to make us suffer therefore Christ standing in our place and roome being our surety and pledge it was needfull that hee should not suffer onely at the hands of God but of man also as our Saviour tels his disciples Matth. 17. 22. The sonne of man shall be delivered into the hand of men and they shall kill him but the third day hee shall rise againe so Christ did not onely suffer at the hands of God but of men also and as Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that yee should follow his steppes 1 Pet. 2. 21. therefore Christs example must teach us to be contented not onely to suffer of God but of men also This our Saviour foretels Matth. 10. 22. Ye shall bee hated of all men for my names sake of this the Church complaines Psalm 66. 12. Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads wee went through fire and water And Psal 124. 2. If it had not beene the Lord who was on our side may Israel now say if it had not beene the Lord who was on our side when men rose up against us then they had swallowed us up quicke c. so a Christian man must looke for this not onely to suffer at the hands of God but of men also It is a corruption in the world that men can bee contented to suffer at the hands of God when sickenesse lamenesse or blindenesse come then they can say sinking and stooping downe that it is the Lord let him doe as pleaseth him but are impatient when they suffer at the hands of men it is not enough to be contented when God laies any thing upon us as sicknesse lamenesse and the like for wee ought also to be contented to suffer at the hands of men losse of goods mockings evill speakings to be hated and despised and to be impeached in our good name as those Christians spoken of Heb. 11. suffered with joy cruell tortures bonds imprisonments the spoyling of their goods c. To helpe us herein there are three Reasons that may make us contented and patient to suffer at the hands of men First because wee suffer nothing at the hands of men but that which God hath appointed decreed and determined therefore what art thou that resisteth that which God hath appointed for as the Primitive Chur●● quiets her thoughts with the providence of God saying Act. 4. 27. For doubtlesse against thy holy Sonne Iesus whom thou hast annointed both H●rod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel were gathered together for to doe whatsoever thy hand and thy counsell had determined before to be done and David 2 Sam. 16. 10. when Shemei cursed him and Abisha the sonne of Zerviah would therefore have taken away his head saith David what have I to doe with you yee sonnes of Zerviah So let him curse because the Lord hath said unto him Curse David So should wee still and quiet our selves in any affliction with this consideration What there is not any thing that a man can suffer but it is by Gods appointment Secondly because wee suffer nothing but that we have justly deserved in regard of God though it may bee in regard of men we have not deserved it Ierem. 10. 19. This is my sorrow and I must beare it I suffer nothing but that which through my owne folly and sinne I have brought upon my selfe it is my sorrow and I will beare it and so in Mich. 7. 9. I will beare the wrath of the Lord patiently because I have sinned against him Thirdly because there is nothing that wee suffer but it tends to our good although it seemes to be contrary yet by a secret hand of God it all turnes for the best as Rom. 8. 28. And we know that all things worke together for the best unto them that love God I have shewed you heretofore that in clocks there be some wheeles turne one way some another way yet all tend to make the clocke goe so there be many strange motions in the world some runne one way some another as it were against us and yet by a secret hand of God that doth carry them they tend all to our good by this cunning workeman God almighty Hence wee learne that wee must bee patient and contented to suffer at the hands of men too But what men did Christ suffer of were they good men then the matter had been the lesse but he suffered of vile and wicked men as saint Paul saith Heb. 12. 33. Consider therefore him that endured such contradiction of sinners Which may teach us not onely to be content to
a close Disciple and yet when all the Disciples fled he goeth to Pilate boldly and begged the body of Christ Which is an excellent comfort that if the worke of grace be in us it will shew it selfe at one time or other Secondly The declaration of his love and that is seene in his actions First that he did start out of his bed and come to Christ for although he were in his warme bed in a cold night fast asleepe about midnight when he had but a little inkling of him he starts out to follow Christ Which may teach us that if we truly love Christ it is not our warme beds that can hold us nor our pleasures profits or ease from following him so we see Luke 19. Zacheus when he heard Christ should come by gets him up to a tree to see Christ because of the presse of the people and so Mary when she heard Christ in the house she could not hold but went out to meet him so the Church Cantic 5. 6. when Christ had given but a knocke at the doore shee runnes out after him and could not be at rest till she had found him Thus where there is true grace or love they will make declaration of it and where there is a presence of Christ in grace and goodnesse it is not their warme beds nor their houses can hold them but they will follow after Christ where his presence is there they delight to be therefore when it is not so with us but every little matter will hold us from Christ this doth shew that our hearts are not possessed with the true love of Christ The second Action wherein he declares his love was that hee followed Christ he did not follow the souldiers and this his love will be more perspicuous if we consider it in these three circumstances First that he followed Christ when he was in bonds when he was taken of the high Priests and of the wicked Iewes not in the time of peace and libertie but in the time of trouble and danger when the greatest disgrace and infamie was upon him which may teach us that it is an easie matter to follow Christ in the time of peace and libertie but to follow him in the time of trouble and danger this doth shew the true love of Christ Revel 2. 8. the Church of Smyrna is commended for keeping his Name and that shee denied not the faith even in the time of trouble when Antiphas Gods faithfull servant was slaine so the Church Psalm 44. 17. All this is come upon us yet have we not forgotten thee neither have we dealt falsly in thy covenant our heart is not turned backe c. So it is a hard matter to follow Christ in the time of trouble and danger but easie to follow him in the time of peace we see when a floud comes as I have shewed you before it will carry away sticks and strawes and such like but such things as are rooted as trees and the like they stand fast and move not so when trouble and persecution comes like a floud all that be not rooted and grounded in the truth in carries away but if men be rooted and grounded in grace then they stand and are not moved nor carried away this commends the love of the young man to Christ that it was not in the time of peace but in the time of trouble Secondly he did follow Christ when all his Disciples fled which were the great preachers and professours of his name This may teach us that although wee see great preachers and professours fall away and decline from God yet we should follow him and sticke to him therefore we are not to depend upon any mans person whatsoever For if a man have felt the worke of Christ in him though all forsake him yet he will follow him we see in the Gospell the man out of whom Christ had cast out a devill when all the countrey forsooke him yet this poore man did follow Christ still so if Christ have cast out the devill in us though all should forsake him yet we should follow him Thirdly he followeth Christ in his shirt when he had nothing on but a shirt or a linnen garment and that in a cold night too when Peter was glad to goe to the fire but it is our daintinesse and nicenesse that wee cannot follow Christ except it be in our warme beds and in our cloaths if we be punished and want then we cease every little matter will keep us from following of him this is the reason why men doe not come to Church in the Summer it is too hot and in the Winter we stand with Christ for small matters for a drop of water when hee hath not stood with us for great matters but hath shed forth streames of his most pure bloud for us thus this young man did declare his love to Christ that he was contented to follow him with any inconvenience so we if we had tasted of the power of Christ wee would be contented to follow him notwithstanding any inconvenience The third thing was The rage of the souldiers that when they perceived him to be a favourer of Christ they straight-way laid hold on him This is the rage of the world still that if men be friends to religion and favourers to that they straight-way lay hold on them but let a man be a drunkard or a swearer or a prophane person they will never touch him Act. 9. it is said that Saul bound all them that called on the name of the Lord this was matter enough to binde them for So in Tertullians time if men were friends to religion O this man is a good man this man is a Christian a lover of religion thus they reproched him this is the entertainment that Christ and his servants have in this world therefore it is good to take that counsell that Christ gives us that wee must doe like the wise builder consider before-hand what his building will cost him so we should consider what it may cost us when we enter upon religion it may be it will cost us our libertie our goods our peace nay it may cost us our lives Fourthly His escape he left his garment and fled here is a question made whether this man did well to flie I answer he did well for a man may flie in two cases 1. When he hath not a calling to stay 2. When he hath not sufficient strength to suffer Now this may teach us an excellent point of wisdome this man was rather contented to lose all his garments and flie than to betray Christ and to lose the peace of a good conscience so if men finde not sufficient strength to suffer rather than they should betray religion and lose the peace of their conscience let them rather lose their coat and shirt as Ioseph we see rather than he would lose his honesty he would lose his
was to hasten his death and to rid him quickly of his paine for myrrh doth open the veines and in the margins of our Bibles wee finde it so noted Physitians say that wine being taken inwardly doth open the veines also but being taken outwardly doth stoppe them it is reported that it was the maner of the Iewes when they would hasten the death of any they gave them some bitter potion to drinke but this cannot be the reason why they gave it Christ for they did it not out of kindnesse or favour but in cruelty as we may gather by the words of David Psal 69. 21. where he saith they gave me also gall for my meat and in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drinke Prov. 31. Solomon willeth us to give wine to those that are weake and strong drinke to those that bee afflicted so the Iewes did give wine to Christ but it was wine mingled with Myrrh it had a tang and a sowre tast with it so also many such mingled cups we give to our brethren it may bee wee releeve and helpe them but it is with a tang with bitternesse and sowrenesse it is said in the Scripture that God gives to us a pure cup of comfort and addes no sorrow to it such pure cups of comfort wee should give to our brother I dare say there is not any man but would bee ready to condemne the Souldiers and the Iewes because in his extremitie they gave him a mingled cup But let us looke into our selves what doe we wee give him such a mingled cup for every sinne we doe commit is as a drop of poyson put into a cup for Christ to drinke therefore whereas we see that we can complaine of the souldiers and of the Iewes we had neede learne to complaine of our selves much more Now Christ refused to drinke of this This may seeme a strange thing in Christ seeing hee yeelded his backe to the whip and his head to bee crowned his hands to be nailed his face to be spitted on and to bee buffeted refusing none of these things What therefore was the reason that he refused to drinke of this I answer first to teach us the true latitude and extention of Christian patience for there bee two sorts of passions some there be that be of necessity and some voluntary or arbitrary now those that be of necessity such our Saviour did not refuse such as was needfull for the salvation of man but those that were arbitrary and voluntary those our Saviour refused which may teach us this high point of wisedome that those passions that bee by authoritie and those that come immediate from God these we must with Christian patience beare but if it be an arbitrary or voluntary passion then we may refuse it it is an opinion of the world that a Christian must beare any thing that is put upon him but we see in the example of Christ how farre our Christian patience doth extend SERMON XX. MATTHEW 27. 34. They gave him vinegar to drinke mingled with gall and when he had tasted thereof hee would not drinke WE may behold the resemblance and similitude of a great tree in a glasse but not in the same proportion that it hath as it groweth but a great deale lesse for alwayes the resemblance is lesse than the thing it selfe that is resembled so the Gospell is a great glasse that doth shew unto us the great love of Christ in the worke of our redemption but as resemblances be lesse than the things resembled so whatsoever wee say of the love of Christ it comes farre short of the love it selfe which Christ hath shewed unto us as it will easily appeare by the due consideration of the manner of Christs crucifiing and therefore let us proceed in order from that which we left at The last day we made entrance upon the point when amongst other things we spake of that bitter cup presented unto him whereof hee refused drinke one reason whereof wee shewed then which was to teach us the extent of our Christian liberty now wee passe on to that which remaines The second was that we might more sensibly see the love of Christ to us for all the suffering which were needfull for our salvation he refused not but did with patience endure them but whatsoever was voluntary or did concerne himselfe those he refused Ionas he could not endure the heate of the Sunne for himselfe yet hee could abide to bee throwne into the sea for the good of others and for their safety so Christ was contented for our good to be apprehended condemned and to bee spet upon to bee crowned with thornes whipped nailed to the crosse flung into the grave and yet he would not suffer any thing that did concerne himselfe but refused it Now the next generall point to be observed is the very act of his crucifying shewed but in a word Hee was crucified and yet there is much paine much adoe a great deale of torment shut up in the belly and bowels of that word For first they threw downe the Crosse upon the ground Secondly they drew or pulled out all the fearfull instruments for that purpose Thirdly they stripped him Fourthly they laid him on his backe and they stretched out his hands and his feet upon the Crosse and nailed him unto it Lastly they did reare up the Crosse into the ayre as though he were unworthy to be upon the ground And thus we see what a deale of paine and torments is shut up in the bowels of this one word whence for our learning we may gather these good instructions following First seeing Christ was crucified for us this should make us bewaile our sinnes with bitternesse that we should be the parties should bring all these pains upon Christ forhe suffred not for his own sins for he was innocent and holy but for my sinnes and thy sinnes which we daily live in Esay 53. the Prophet saith The chastisement of our peace was upon him and 1 Pet. 3. 24. it is said Who in his owne bodie bare our sinnes upon the tree therefore seeing our sins brought all those paines upon Christ we have cause to bewaile them we can bewaile the punishments we bring upon our selves but how much more should we bewaile the punishment wee bring on Christ as the spickes and the nails being driven into the hands and feet of Christ when he was crucified made the bloud runne out at the holes so the meditation and consideration thereof should cause our consciences to bleed And now seeing our sinnes have brought Christ on the crosse what will we doe mock him as the wicked Iewes and the souldiers did or be silent as the Disciples were or stand still No but we must after a spiritual manner go to the crosse of Christ and say Lord wilt thou die for me and suffer such great paines and torments I have eaten sowre
new master therefore as every man should looke to his behaviour at other times so especially hee should when he comes to the crosse and in affliction Now the carriage of Christ on the crosse is seene in the seven last words of Christ which he uttered on the crosse The first is Father forgive them for they know not what they doe Here we may see the love of Christ that he prayeth for his enemies and for such kinde of enemies as were his sorest and greatest such as did not take away his garments onely but tooke away his life and that hee prayed at such a time when the blood ranne downe his hands and feete when his shoulders were rent and torne with whipping and his face was swelled with buffeting Now from these first words of Christ on the crosse we may observe these foure things 1. Whom it was he prayed for for his enemies his greatest and sorest enemies such as did not take away his garments onely but his life also 2. What he prayed for that their sinnes might be forgiven them and that they might not answer for them at the day of judgement 3. The time when he prayed at that instant when the action was a doing at that time when he did hang on the crosse when the blood ranne from his hands and feete when his shoulders were rent and torne with whipping when his face was swelled with buffeting 4. The reason why hee prayed that God would forgive them because they knew not what they did First whom it was that he prayed for it was for his enemies not such as did take away his garments onely but such who tooke away his life also in the greatest extremity that might bee Which teacheth us two things First to love our enemies and to pray for them that hate and persecute us such as doe not onely take away our garments but our lives in the greatest extremity that may be so we see 1 Pet. 2. 21. For even hereunto were yee called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that wee should follow his steepes and Col. 3. saith the Apostle forbearing one another and forgiving one another even as Christ forgave you so doe yee this is the first lesson that Christ taught us on the crosse for as Augustine saith Christ made a pulpit of the crosse and the lesson that he taught us was that we should love our enemies But in these daies of sinne and corruption we are so farre from loving our enemies that we can hardly love our friends whom we are bound to love both by the Law of nature and Religion therefore how farre are we from that example of Christ which shewes that every one is bound to love his enemies and pray for them I know a man shall have much adoe to bring his heart to doe this neither am I a Pope to give you a discharge if you doe it not but this I say that if you will take no more upon you than comes easily yee shall never bee true Christians nor truely religious a man must force and dresse himselfe against the haire as they say against his nature we see naturally water will runne downe the hill but to make it runne up wee must force and drive it up by violence so we must force our selves and goe against nature against the haire as it were if wee would come to heaven if a man come into a strange country where he can have nothing but wine to drinke if his stomacke will not beare it the custome is to allay it with a little water so seeing heere is in us a great heate of sinne that wee can hardly love our friends and our enemies wee must therefore labour to allay this heate in us that so we may not onely love our friends but our enemies also and that we may doe this there bee five considerations to helpe us and to further us First the commandement of Christ Math. 5. 44. But I say unto you Love yor enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them that persecute you I say unto you I that am your Lord I that am your Saviour love your enemies and although you cannot love them for your owne sake yet love them for the Lords sake as Luk. 5. 4. Our Saviour bids Peter cast downe his net into the sea saith Peter wee have travelled all night and caught nothing as if hee should say it is against the haire we are like to doe no good of it it is in the night time yet at thy commandement I will doe it So ought we to obey the command of Christ how unlikely soever the issue be God will reward it wee shall have an happie end and issue Secondly The example of God Matth. 5. 45. Hee maketh the Sunne to shine on the evill and on the good and the raine to fall on the just and on the unjust So because Gods generall goodnesse comes to all sorts men alike to good and to bad our goodnesse must extend it selfe to all sorts of men good and bad if we be the children of God we must be like him Balaam could say when he was sent for to curse the people of God How can I curse them whom God hath blessed So if God bid us blesse them we must not curse them unlesse wee will bee worse than Balaam Againe though they be our enemies yet they may be Gods friends and them which hee loveth as also it is a gift that God doth bestow upon his children to love their enemies Thirdly Because it is the greatest love to love that which is not capable of love It is nothing for a man to love his friends but it is a hard matter to love our enemies The Philosophers could say that which is the hottest fire burnes up that which is not capable to burne as we see in the Kings The fire that burned the sacrifices did licke up water and consumed that which was not capable to burne so that is the greatest love which workes upon an object where there is least matter of love as the love of God to us was Fourthly Because it is the best way to make our enemies love us as wee cannot quench fire with fire but must quench it with water so wee must overcome enemies with kindnesse as the Apostles counsell is Rom. 12. Be not overcome of evill but overcome evill with goodnesse Fifthly Because if it doe not bring a blessing upon them yet it will bring a blessing upon our selves as Matth. 10. our Saviour bids his Disciples when they come to an house they should say Peace be in this house and if it did not rest on the house yet it should returne to them againe so when we pray for our enemies and blesse them if it doe not rest on them it shall returne to us againe Secondly Seeing Christ loved his enemies and prayed
to heaven a place of glory and happinesse we therefore must labour to be obedient to God to doe his will and to be content to endure the troubles of this life with patience as the children of Israel walked in the wildernesse forty yeares together following God in a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night enduring many troubles and afflictions till they came to the Land of Canaan so we must follow God labour to doe his will and be contented to endure the troubles and afflictions of this life be it forty or fifty yeares together till wee come to this heavenly Canaan The fourth words of Christ on the Crosse were My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee But having spoken of these words not long since I shall not need to speake of them againe at this time Onely I will give you the heads of them which are foure 1. What it is to be forsaken of God 2. How farre forth a true Christian may be forsaken 3 What a grievous thing it is to be forsaken of God 4. How a Christian should carry himselfe when hee is forsaken First What it is to be forsaken of God that is to want the gratefull and the acceptable presence of God which is two-fold First There is a presence of God in power to uphold his creatures and to give a being to them Secondly There is a presence of God in goodnesse and grace to want this presence is to be forsaken of God Secondly How farre forth a true Christian may be forsaken In the life of nature he may be forsaken in the life grace he cannot finally or totally for there is the power of grace and there is the comfortable feeling of grace Now every true Christian hath the power of grace but many times want the comfortable feeling of it and so farre a true Christian may be forsaken Thirdly What a grievous thing it is to be forsaken of God for if he have forsaken us whom shall we make our moane to it was the complaint of Saul that the Philistines were come upon him and God was departed from him wee count it a great matter to be forsaken of our kindred or of our friends O but it is a far greater matter to be forsaken of God therefore though our ●●ndred our friends and the world forsake us yet pray to God that he doe not forsake us Fourthly How a Christian is to carry himselfe when he feeles himselfe forsaken which was shewed in the example of Christ First he carried himselfe mournefully Secondly he carried himselfe holily he rested himselfe on God by faith Thirdly he laboured to recover himselfe by prayer SERMON XXIII IOHN 19. 28 29. After this Iesus knowing that all things were now accomplished that the Scripture might be fulfilled saith I thirst Now there was set a vessell full of vineger And they filled a spunge with vineger and put it upon hyssope and put it to his mouth IN 1 Pet. 2. 21. the Apostle Peter doth offer to our consideration all that Christ did upon the Crosse Hee did not all as the price of salvation onely but also as an example of holy life and Christian vertues therefore looke how Christ carried himselfe when hee was on the Crosse so we must carry our selves when we be under our crosses in any affliction or trouble Many testimonies Christ shewed in his life time of love patience humilitie zeale pietie and number of other vertues yet when hee comes to die and was on the Crosse then all his graces were gloriously dispersed and displayed So howsoever a Christian is to shew many testimonies in his life time of faith patience and of pietie yet especially when he comes to die then all his graces must bee gloriously displayed and made to shine forth Now the Holy carriage of Christ is seene in the seven last words of Christ on the Crosse The first was his prayer for his enemies The second the care he had of his friends The third the promise he made the theefe upon his conversion at the houre of his death whereby all the people of God have assurance of a blessed and a happie change after death though they hang on the crosse in trouble and affliction in paines and in sicknesse here yet death shall take them downe from the crosse and shall transforme them from men to God from earth to heaven from mortalitie to immortalitie from paines to ease from sorrow to joy from shame to glory and as he said to the Theefe on the Crosse This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise so hee saith to his servants on their sicke beds this day shalt thou be at ease and rest Of these I have already spoken as also of the fourth His desertion when hee cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And now I am come to handle the fifth words of Christ on the Crosse containing a complaint that he made of bodily thirst wherein we are to consider foure things 1. What were the causes of his thirst 2. How he carried himselfe in his thirst 3. When he complained of thirst 4. What were the effects of his thirst First What were the causes of his thirst and they were two 1. Naturall 2. Morall The Naturall causes were these The first was long abstinence from meat and drinke hee was a whole night and day without any refreshing Hee never ate bit from the time hee ate the Passeover till this time this was a great matter especially in that Country for we read Luk. 13. 15. How the Iewes did loose their Oxen and their Asses on the Sabbath and had them to the water they could not well tarrie a day without drinking therefore it was a great matter for a man to tarrie without meate and drinke so long especially being so tossed and tumbled as Christ was indeede if he had beene idle and done nothing he might the better have borne it But Christ was in action and in imployment for they puld him in the Garden from thence hurried him to Annas and from Annas to Caiaphas and in the morning from Caiaphas to Pilate from Pilate to Herod from Herod backe againe to Pilate and then to the Crosse So Christ was in action and motion and yet all that while tooke no sustenance he was without any refreshing this could not chuse but make him thirsty When Sampson had killed a thousand Philistins hee cried out give me water or I shall die for thirst so when Christ had encountred not with the Philistins but with our spirituall enemies the Divell Sinne Death Hell and Damnation and had overcome them all he cried out I thirst The second reason was Exiccation or drinesse within him for he had lost much blood some in the Garden and some in Pilates Hall and on the Crosse for as the Philosophers say the blood is the Charriot of the Spirits which wanting moysture drieth up and then the spirits must needs
feeling of their wants We see Christ complained of his thirst so we may complaine to God of our wants And is it not also as lawfull to complaine to men Yes but wee must be sure to use no unlawfull meanes to ease our selves but wait on God where we may see the difference between a true christian and a man of this world● for the one may desire peace ease wealth and such like but there is a moderation in their desires not to have it with any cōdition but by good means which if they thus obtaine not they can rest contented with the good wil of God so we may desire these things but not against the peace of conscience but the other the men of this world care not what means they use to have their desires as Matth. 4. when Christ was hungry the devill came to him and bade him turne stones into bread so the devill doth still when Christians are in want and necessity he will come to them and bid them turne stones into bread that is use unlawfull meanes put themselves upon bad courses to come out of it but wee must take heed of this if wee have not our desires yet wee must waite on God and be contented with his good will So Psal 123. the Church doth As the eyes of a servant looke to the hands of his master and as the eyes of a maiden to the hands of her mistris so our eyes waite on the Lord our God till he have mercy on us In like manner if we be in want or in any trouble we may desire to come out of it but we must use no unlawfull meanes only waite we must on God and be contented with his good will whatsoever it be in the use of good meanes Thirdly the time of his complaint When all things were accomplished when he had lost a great deale of blood and indured a great deale of paine All this time he held it to himselfe till he had set mans salvation in safetie and made that sure he never complaines of his thirst Wherein we may consider the marvellous love of Christ that till hee had made mans salvation sure did not looke to himselfe such a carefull eye he carried for our good and safetie Which love of Christ to us must teach us to shew the like love to him againe to forget our owne ease profit and pleasures that wee may doe service to him as Io● did I have said he preferred the words of his mouth before my appointed food So Ioh. 4. Christ being weary set himselfe downe on a Well when his disciples were gone into the citie to buy meat in which time came a woman to draw water whom hee did convert after which when his disciples came againe with meat and would have had him to eate he made this answere That it was meate and drinke to him to doe his fathers will He had not so much regard to himselfe as to his Fathers will so it must bee with a Christian hee must passe by himselfe and care not what become of him so God may have glory Wee may see a worthy example hereof in Abrahams servant Gen. 24. 33 who being sent to get a wife for his masters sonne when there was mea●e ●et before him he could not eate till he had done his businesse he came about Now if a servant have so much care of his masters businesse that hee would not eate or drinke till hee had done it much more should we be carefull to do Gods will therefore when men have so much regard to their owne case and profit and passe by that which tends to Gods Glory this doth shew that there is not the like love to Christ we see in experience if a childe fall into the fire or water if the mother heare of it what businesse soever she hath shee lets all alone and cannot be at rest till she hath set her childe in safetie againe so it was with Christ he forgate himselfe till hee had set our saluation in safety and then he did thirst and we should shew as neere as may be the like love to Christ againe The fourth was The Event of his thirst Christ being on the crosse complaines of thirst Now is there any that brings him wine to comfort him or drinke to refresh him or water to coole him No but they give him vinegar to drinke And because it was not afflictive enough they gave him it with Hyssope to make it more bitter and sowre Here we may see the vilenesse of the souldiers to give such a draught to Iesus Christ our Lord and blessed redeemer in his extremity we are all ready to condemne them and that justly for it but I pray God we be not the men and women that doe the like For as Christ said vpon the crosse Sitio I thirst so be saith now to all the men and women by his spirit in the world Sitio I thirst what wilt thou stand still and gaze upon him or wilt thou not regard him I dare lay that there is never an one here but would be ready to say Lord what wouldst thou have what is it thou thirstest for Why I thirst not for the wine nor for the strong drinke nor for thy honey or thy milke But O man I thirst for thy salvation thy conversion thy Repentance and for thy faith And therefore seeing we heare that Christ doth thirst what wilt thou doe O man wilt thou give him vinegar to drinke as the souldiers did or wilt thou give him wormewood to drinke or temper a cup of poyson and give him Now the truth is There is no wormewood or gall so bitter to our taste as thy impenitencie hard-heartednesse and the sinnes thou livest in are unto Christ for every sinne we commit we doe as it were put a drop of poyson into a cup for Christ to drinke therefore whereas we condemne the souldiers we had neede condemne our selves and come home to our selves Let us therefore temper a better cup for Christ to drinke on than this let us repent us of our sinnes convert and turne to him this will satisfie Christ Wee reade in the English Chronicles of a Monke that got a Toade and pricked and pressed her in●● a cup of wine and gave it to his Liege-lord to drinke Now I dare say there is never an one here but doth detest the fact But the truth is every sinne we commit we doe as it were temper such a cup of poison for Christ our blessed Saviour and Redeemer therefore I pray God whereas we condemne them for this vile fact that there be not just cause to condemne our selves SERMON XXIIII IOHN 19. 30. VVhen Iesus therefore had received the vinegar hee said It is finished AMongst the seven last words of Christ this is the sixth in order And it is a Song of Gratulation and a triumphing Song for the worke of mans Redemption and Salvation When Moses had led the children
passed that heaven and earth could not reverse it therefore either we must die in our own persons or Christ must die for us he took our nature upon him died for us and so gave satisfaction to the justice of God In the Law we see when lots were cast for the Goats he that the lot fell on was killed and the other escaped so there were lots cast whether we should die or he it pleased God that the lot fell on Christ hee was killed and we escaped wherein we may see the infinite love of Christ that died to satisfie the justice of God that we might not die we reade 2 Sam. 10. 33. David cried out O my sonne Absalom my sonne my sonne Absalom would God I had died for thee O Absalom my sonne my sonne wherein he shewed the true affection of a father Now that which David desired for his sonne Christ hath performed for us and therefore when wee thinke of the death of Christ we may thinke of the infinite love of God to us If one should commit such a fault against the King that he should lose his head or his eye or some part of him how farre should a man goe to finde such a friend to take his punishment upon him and so free him But Christ doth more for us than this he hath not only lost an eye or an hand for us but hee died for us therefore as often as wee thinke of the death of Christ so often wee should thinke of the love of God The Centurion Luke 7. sent the Elders of the Iewes to Christ to tell him of one that loved their nation and builded them a Synagogue but Christ hath done more for us than to build a Synagogue for he hath loved us and wished away our sinnes in his bloud as Saint Iohn saith Revel 1. 5. And therefore as often as we thinke of the death of Christ so often let us thinke of the infinite love of Christ that he would die for us to satisfie the justice of God for sinne Secondly it was needfull that Christ should die that our sinnes might die in his death for he tooke all our sinnes upon him as Saint Peter saith Who in his owne body bare our sinnes upon the Crosse when he went to die on the crosse all our sinnes were bound unto him who carried them up with him unto the crosse that they might be crucified with him and die in his death this was another thing that made a necessity of the death of Christ therefore if we live in sinne what doe we but pull downe our sinnes from the crosse of Christ bring them to the fire rub and chafe them as it were put Aqua-vitae into the mouth of them that they may live againe Iosua 7. we read that Achan stole away a wedge of gold and a Babylonish garment of the spoile when Iericho was destroyed and that proved his owne destruction in the end so if wee steale our sinnes from the crosse of Christ notwithstanding Christ died that sin might die with him then these same stolne sinnes will be our destruction Thirdly it was needfull that Christ shold die to seale unto true beleevers the promises that God hath made in the Gospell God hath bequeathed life everlasting and Christ heaven and happinesse to those that repent and beleeve In the law there is nothing but death and destruction promised to those that did transgresse and breake it but in the new testament God hath promised to them that repent and beleeve life and salvation heaven and happinesse Therefore that these promises might be sealed and confirmed Christ must die for as long as the testator liveth the testament is of no force As it is Heb. 9. 16. For saith he the testament is confirmed when men be dead because it is of no force as long as he that made it is alive therefore that the promises of God might stand good unto us it pleased the sonne of God to die for us and to seale it with his blood all which is to sustaine and comfort us for although wee have nothing here but misery and trouble yet one day we shall bee put in possession of heaven and happinesse as a man that hath a patent or a sealed deed that hee shall have such lands and livings one day though hee have not any thing to help himselfe yet he wil comfort himselfe with that which is to come so though we be put in possession on these promises presently yet let us comfort our selves that one day they shall be verified unto us and although wee endure troubles and afflictions in this world yet we may bodly stand up and say Lord I thanke thee I have a sealed deed to shew that one day I shall enjoy the promises that thou hast made in the Gospell here we see for the comfort of a Christian it was needfull for Christ to die and to seale with his blood the promises that are made in the Gospell Secondly the time when he died when he had finished the worke of mans redemption and done the worke hee came for a long time did he hang on the crosse in paines and torments yet he dyed not till hee had done the worke hee came for which must teach us that wee should bee willing to die when we have done our worke when wee have repented of our sinnes and made Christ sure to us then we should be willing to die and never till then so it is said of David Act. 13. 36. After he had served his generation by the counsell of God he fell on sleepe and was laid unto his fathers and saw corruption so the Lord said to Moses Numb 31. 2. Avenge the children of Israel of the Midianites and afterwards shalt thou be gathered unto thy people in like manner we must doe the will of God and fulfill the worke he sent us to doe and then we shall be willing to dye and never till then If a master should send his servant beyond sea to deale for him in his businesse if hee come home and doe the halfe onely and leave the other halfe undone hee must looke for a cold welcome home so God hath sent us into this world to doe his businesse whereof if we doe but the halfe leaving the rest undone we may looke for a cold welcome when wee come to dye 1 King 19. 4. we read that Elias laid him downe under a Iuniper tree and desired that he might die saying it is enough O Lord take away my life for I am no better than my fathers at which time an Angell came unto him and said Vp Elias eate and drinke for thy journey is too great for thee so many times a Christian may have a desire to dye when troubles and griefes are upon him but the Spirit of God comes unto him and bids him arise for God hath another service for him to doe We see Christ was not willing to dye
would have beene squeamish to have taken downe the dead body of Christ in his owne armes to have soyled and foyled himselfe with the bloud that came out of his wounds but the true love hee did beare to Christ made him doe it so if there bee true love in us to Christ we will not bee squeamish to doe any meane service and duty for him and his members wee will not be squeamish to come to their sick beds to comfort and relieve them wee see a mother through the love she hath to her childe will stoope to doe any meane service and duty that another woman would be somewhat squeamish of so if there bee true love to Christ in us it will make us doe any service and duty to the meanest of Christ members even to do that which another would scorn S. Iierom saith O man when thou goest to the sicke beds of thy neighbours thou art somewhat squeamish and thou makest a sowre face at it consider with thy selfe that thou art made of the same element and the same thing that is befallen him thou mightest have suffered thinke his sorrowes and paines to be thine owne and then thou wilt not be so squeamish Secondly they were Disciples yet but weake Disciples Ioseph was a secret Disciple but for feare of the Iewes hee durst not shew his face openly in that profession and Nicodemus hee came to Christ by night now these were weake Disciples and yet in the greatest disgrace stood to Christ when Iudas had betraied Christ and Peter had denyed him and all the rest of the Disciples were fled from him which may teach us not to despise our weake brethren but to thinke humbly of our selves and to carry our selves lowly for these weake ones may stand to Christ and to the profession of holy Religion when great learned men shrinke men of great graces therefore wee should not despise our weake brethren as Paul exhorts Rom. 14. 4. who art thou that condemnest another mans servant hee standeth or falleth to owne Lord and master yea hee shall be established for God is able to make him stand Now I doe not speake this to nourish any one in his weakenesse for it is a good thing to speake boldly in the cause of Christ who saith he that denyeth me before men I will denie him before God There is a pretty story in the booke of Martyrs of two Protestants that were doctors of Divinity in the dayes of King Edward saith one of them I am afraid I shall not have courage to stand out for Religion in the time of persecution I thinke I cannot burne for Religion saith the other knowing that I doe know if I had one hundred lives I would give them and be contented to lose them in the cause of Christ well the time of persecution came and the strong man became a Papist and the weakest remained a Protestant although he did not burne for it but dyed in his bed therefore the strong must carry themselves humbly and lowly and not despise their weake brethren but pray to God that they may shew love to Christ in the time of greatest troubles Now what was it that made them performe this duty to Christ this consideration that they had heard Christ preach unto them and had not profited by it that hee was entertained into many of their houses but not into their hearts and now that thay had taken Christ and killed him if ever they will shew their love to him now they must doe it or never this consideration made them hold and stand to Christ when others did shrinke Now the same thing must worke upon us the like effect we have heard the Gospell a long time yet have profited little by it whereas we might have growne in grace and have beene teachers of others still we remaine ignorant the more shame for us we should rather reason thus I grow old and I know not how soone the day of my death will come now is the time where in I should get grace the time wherein I should get knowledge it must bee now or never this consideration may stirre us up to shew love to Christ and to his members The next point is the place where Christ was buryed and this is to bee considered in divers circumstances 1 That it was another mans grave 2 That this grave was Iosephs grave 3 That it was a new grave wherein never any man was laid 4 It was in a Garden First it was another mans grave that Christ was buryed in for hee was so poore that he had not a grave of his own we see that poore men though they have not an house to hide their heads in yet they have a grave to bury themselves in but Christ was so poore he had not a grave of his owne to bury himselfe in neither was it onely in his death but also in his whole life for when Christ was borne he was borne in another mans house when he preached hee preached in another mans ship and when he prayed he prayed in another mans garden when hee eat the women ministred unto him when he did ride to Ierusalem he did ride on another mans Asse when he was buryed he was buryed in another mans grave he had nothing peculiar to himselfe but his crosse which no man would touch much lesse take from him for they compelled Simon of Syrene to beare it all which may teach us that Christ hath sanctified a poore estate to us so that if a man be never so poore and meane let him be contented with it and labour to be Gods servant that he may say of him Behold my servant and behold my sonne then this poore estate is sanctified to thee Secondly Christ was buried in another mans grave to shew that hee would come in a neerer conjunction with us That hee would not onely take our nature upon him come into our houses and eate at our Tables but hee would also lye in our graves with us it is a great love that a woman heares to her husband that shee will be contented to forsake her fathers house and leave her kindred and go and dwell with her husband but it is a farre greater love when shee will follow him into the prison and downe into the dungeon so it is a great love of Christ that he would take our nature upon him come into our houses and feede at our tables But it is a farre greater love that he would go into the grave with us and lie there troden downe of death that so he might give life to our dead bodies Secondly this grave was Iosephs now Ioseph was a rich man as wee have heard and this was to fulfill that Scripture Esay 53. 9. where the Prophet foretold it Hee made his grave with the wicked and with the rich in his death on the crosse contemned and despised but in the grave he was honoured so it is with a Christian so
about his grave and this was the cause why Christ appeared to her and may teach us that although we be not Kings and Queenes noble men and women nor yet the holiest and most sanctified men and women although we be sinners yet if we be repentant sinners and shew speciall love to Christ upon our conversion hee will appeare to us and we shall see his glory therefore wouldst thou O man or woman have Christ appeare to thee and shew thee his glory then be a repentant sinner and shew speciall love to Christ upon thy conversion and feare not but Christ will appeare to thee and thou shalt see his glory So Christ saith Ioh. 14. 21. He that loveth me shall be beloved of my Father and I will love him and shew mine owne selfe unto him and dwell with him so likewise Gen. 18. we read that God appeared unto Abraham in such a familiar manner as he never did to any no not to Adam in the state of his innocency nor to Henoch in the state of excellency and why did he appeare so to Abraham because he had shewed specially love to Christ as wee may see in the Chapter foregoing that he obeyed God to the cutting off his flesh and the effusion of his blood even so if wee would have God come in a familiar manner to us to be at our tables at our labours and to be in our houses then we must shew speciall love to God in obeying his commandements if we repent us of our sinnes convert and turne to God and shew speciall love to Christ we are the men that shall enjoy Christ by the eye of faith now there bee six particular notes of Maries love First she continued seeking when others gave over Peter and Iohn sought him but when they came and saw nothing but the linnen clothes they gave over but Mary she continued still wherein shee shewed speciall love to Christ now in these two are figured two sorts of Christians the cold Christians are figured out in Peter and Iohn and the feruent Christians in Mary the cold Christian could be contented to have Christ but if he be gone he cannot helpe it he seekes but coldly to finde him O but the fervent Christian if he cannot finde him the first or the second day hee will never give over till hee have found him this is a speciall argument of true love so the Church doth Cant. 3. she never gives over seeking till she have found him Secondly that shee sought him with teares and weepes for the losse of him so when we can weepe for the losse of Christ and of Gods favour this is a note of true love wee see how Mary Magdalen could weepe for the losse of Christ the Angell asked her what she ailed saith she Doe you aske me what I aile they have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid him hee in whom I have laid up all my hope and all my comfort and joy so wee may say by our sinnes if any aske us why wee weepe we may reply our sinnes have taken away the comfortable feeling of Gods favour they have taken away Christ from me he in whom I have laid up all my joy and all my comfort and hope and have I not cause to weepe therefore it is a pitifull thing that a man can weepe for the losse of a wife or a childe or a sonne or some worldly wealth or because he is sicke and wants health but will never weepe for the losse of Christ and for the want of Gods favour it is said of a learned Father that there bee no teares so acceptable with God as the teares that be shed for sinne for all other teares that be shed for worldly losses fall to the ground but these teares are kept in a Bottle Thirdly she shewed her love to Christ in her diligence in seeking of him It is said she bowed her selfe downe at the grave to looke in there and yet Peter and Iohn had told her there was nothing but the linnen clothes yet she loo●ed this way and that way to see if by any meanes she could have espyed Christ or have any hope of finding him shee was loth to leave the place where she thought she might finde him this was an infallible signe of true love Mary sought for Christ in the grave but wee must seeke for Christ in the face of the Gospell there hee is to bee found now or no where else therefore when men seeke for Christ in the use of good meanes and in the preaching of the word although they do not presently finde him yet if they be loth to give over seeking of Christ because that is the place where they may have hope of finding of him they may expect good successe as Ioh. 5. wee see when the waters had beene troubled by the Angell the man that lay at the poole side of Beth●●● a long time to be healed stil one or other stepped in before him and was healed yet he lay still till at last Christ healed him so wee should come to the preaching of the word to seeke Christ to repent of our sinnes and to turne to God where although wee see others to catch away the blessing from us yet let us continue still and we shall speed therefore as the shepheards Luk. 2. exhort one another saying Come let us goe to Bethlehem to see the thing the Angels tell us of so we should exhort one another and say Come let us goe to the preaching of the word where we shall see Christ not lying in a cradle but crucified for our sinnes and gloriously sitting at the right hand of God in his throne It is reported of the Elephant that although he cannot swimme as other beasts can yet he will bee wading about the water so though wee cannot doe as other Christians doe yet let us keepe about the waters let us keepe about good meanes and at last we shall finde Christ to our comfort SERMON XXXII IOHN 20. 11 12 13 c. But Mary stood without at the sepulchre weeping and as she wept shee stooped downe and looked into the sepulchre And seeth two Angels in white sitting the one at the head and the other at the feet where the body of Jesus had layen And they say unto her Woman why weepest thou Shee saith unto them Because they have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid him c. I Declared the last day that Christs first appearing was to Mary Magdalen out of whom was cast seven devils who had beene infamous and a very great sinner but was become a convert and a repentant sinner and had shewed speciall love to Christ upon her conversion and repentance in attending about the grave and therefore although she was none of the great gallants of the world nor yet the holiest and most sanctified woman yet because she was a repentant sinner and shewed great love to Christ
to us and wee will be one people Genesis 34. 16. Even so God saith to us if ye will be circumcised and cut off your lusts and your sinnes and be a sanctified and holy people then ye shall be one with me but if ye will not bee circumcised and cut off your lusts and your sins then yee will cause mee to depart away from you And this is the second thing whereby we may know when Christ makes a proffer to be gone Thirdly When we feele a decay of Gods graces in us when we have lost our zeale care and love as when the King removes from a place wee may know it by his carriage going before so the graces of Gods Spirit bee as it were the carriage therefore when this goes away know then Christ will remoove then he makes a proffer to be gone But why did Christ make a proffer to be gone It was not that hee had any purpose to depart but to trie their affections and to see what account they would make of him so the Lord doth still make a proffer to bee gone from us and to take away the Gospell and many times the comfortable feeling of his favour which hee doth to trie our faith and our affection and to trie what account wee will make of him So we see Matth. 15. 22. Christ deales with the woman of Canaan makes a proffer to bee gone as may appeare by conferring this with other places for it is said in Marke 17. 24. Christ went into an house and would have no man know it as if he would have beene gone from her yet shee followes him he goes into the fields and yet she followes him this was not that he had any purpose to be gone from her but to trie her faith and her affection As 1 Sam. 7. 2. the Arke was in the borders of Israel twentie yeeres together and all the people lamented after the Lord He kept the Arke twenty yeeres together aloofe of them to see how they would long for his presence So God deales with us hee withdrawes the comfortable feeling of his presence to see how wee will long after it and what account wee make of it as a loving mother sometimes hides her selfe from her childe not because she meanes to go from it quite but because shee would trie the love of her childe and how it longs after her so Christ doth shrinke away from us and hide his presence to trie our love our faith and our affection Therefore when Christ makes a proffer to be gone wee must doe as the people did Marke 1. 45. follow him not being at rest till they had found him though hee went into never so secret a place If hee be departed away from us wee should not bee at rest but follow him and labour to recover him againe by prayer meditation and the use of good meanes Now when Christ made a proffer to be gone these two Disciples would not let him goe but one hanged on the one arme as it were and the other on the other till they constrained him to tarry with them Hence wee must learne that if Christ makes a proffer to be gone we must not let him goe and doe as the World does If hee will goe let him goe and say wee cannot hold him but wee must importune him and constraine him to tarry with us as it is said of the good people Luke 4. 42. And when it was day he departed and went into a desart place and the people sought him and came to him and stayed him that he should not depart from them So when wee feele Christ to depart from us wee must constraine him to tarrie with us as Iacob did Genes 32. 26. When hee and the Angell wrestled together Iacob laid hold on him and would not let him goe till he had blessed him Now the Angell that did wrestle with Iacob was Christ So also Exodus 32. 15. When the Lord told Moses that hee would not goe with them but an Angell should goe with them Lord saith hee Carry us not away from this place unlesse thy presence goe with us Lord let me die here and goe no further unlesse thy presence goe with us so wee should pray to God not to carry us away from our houses that we may not stirre from the places where wee be unles the presence of God goe with us and when we feele the presence of God to be going from us we must pray him to tarrie with us and constraine him too But why doe they desire Christ to tarry with them because they had tasted of the goodnesse power sweet graces and excellency of Christ this was the reason of it therefore no marvell though the world let Christ goe and doe not desire him to tarry with them because they never felt the power of God neither tasted of the sweet and excellent graces that be in Christ but such as have tasted hereof will be contented to take any paines and labour to enjoy Christ therefore the Apostle Peter gives us this exhortation 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that ye may grow therby as who should say If so be ye have tasted how good the Lord is you that bee Christians and have tasted of the Gospell and the sweetnesse of it even as a childe desires the milke of the breast and it is not at quiet till it hath it so desire yee the sincere milke of the word that ye may grow thereby and as Abraham said Gen. 18. Lord depart not from thy servant so wee should desire Christ to be with us and to say Lord depart not away from mee till the day of my death Now there are two especiall times wherein every Christian should pray that Christ may be with him 1. In the time of Trouble 2. At the time of Death First In the time of trouble when there is misery and extremity upon us then we had need to have a great deale of grace to sustaine us wee see ships in a great storme if they have not good Anchors and good Cables they may quickly miscarry and dash against some rockes and so make shipwracke in like manner if trouble and danger bee upon us if Christ be not with us we are like to miscarry therefore as the two Disciples said to Christ The day is farre spent and the night drawes on tarry with us so wee should say The day of prosperity is farre spent and there is a night of affliction drawing on therefore Oh Lord tarry with us and give us a good issue out of troubles so David prayeth Psal 22. 11. Be not farre from me O Lord because trouble is neere for there is none to helpe me this is a speciall time to have Christ with us Secondly At the day of death when wee come to end this life this is a speciall time to have Christ with us as the disciples
me So this is the Reason of the Assignement The Popish Church lay hold on these words and would prove thereby that their workes merit at the hands of God because Christ gives heaven to those that doe good to his servants and because they shall be judged by their workes To which I answer although this be the reason why the Lord assignes heaven to them that they did workes of mercy and although we shall be judged by our workes yet workes are not the meritorious cause of it why he gives us heaven but the signes and tokens who be the persons so qualified that shall have heaven such as love Christ and shew mercy to his needy members and doe good to them I will cleere it you by an example The King of England makes a promise to bestow on his subjects a great reward out of his bountie and there came before him his subjects and his enemies and he saith to his subjects I will bestow this gift on you for when I was in France ye did attend on me and shewed your love to mee ●ow this gift shewes who be the subjects of the King and who be the enemies So at the last day when the good and bad shall be before Christ and Christ shall tell them this is the reason why I bestow heaven on you because I was hungry and yee gave mee meat this is not the cause of it but it shewes onely who be the persons that God hath assigned heaven to to those that love him and regard him in his members therefore one sayes well Christ shewes not for what he bestowes heaven in this place but on what kinde of persons he will bestow it And Chrysostome saith though the Saints doe a thousand such things as these yet they deserve nothing at the hands of God it is his bountie to bestow heaven on them for so small and meane things as these So then we see workes are not the cause why Christ assignes heaven to us And there be foure grounds for it The first ground● is from the estate and condition we be in all are servants Therefore whatsoever we doe is but our dutie and if it be our duty we cannot merit any thing at the hand of God So saith Christ Luke 17. 10. When yee have done all these things which are commanded you say We are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our dutie to doe Therefore the very estate and condition that wee are in doth sh●w that wee cannot merit any thing at the hands of God And Chrysostome saith No man is able to shew such an holy conversation of life to deserve any thing at the hands of God but when he hath done all he is but an unprofitable servant The Papists reply against this and say That although a man cannot merit any thing being in the estate of a servant yet if of a servant hee become a friend hee may merit Now that hee may bee a friend it is plaine by the words of Christ Iohn 15. 15. Hence call I you no servants for the servant knoweth not what his master doth but I have called you friends and in the verse before Yee are my friends To this I answer we are servants still though it please God to accept of us as his friends we are only made friends by acceptance in the merit of Iesus Christ which alters not the former condition of duty and service as may be proved by these places Rom. 6. 18. Being then made free from sinne yee are made the servants of righteousnesse and in the 1 Pet. 2. 16. he exhorteth them As free and not using the libertie for a cloake of maliciousnesse but as the servants of God And Christ saith Ioh. 15. 19. Yee are my friends if yee doe whatsoever I command you therefore because we be servants still and remaine in the same estate and condition wee cannot merit any thing but when wee have done all wee doe but our dutie The second ground is our owne impotencie that we are not able to doe any good thing of our selves much lesse can wee merit anything Now that we can doe no good thing it is plaine by the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 10. By the grace of God I am that I am And 2 Cor. 3. 5. saith he Not that we are sufficient of our selves to thinke any thing as of our selves but our sufficiencie is of God So Phil. 2. 13. For it is God that worketh in you both the will and the dead even of his good pleasure Now then if all we doe is by the power of grace and if it is God onely which worketh both the will and the deed then we are beholding to God for it and God is not beholding to us Origen saith well No workes of man can deserve any thing at Gods hand because they cannot thinke any good or doe any good but it must be from God The Papists reply and say that God may give a man grace which he may so husband as that hee may deserve any thing at Gods hand and they make it plaine by this similitude A father gives a farme to his son and gives him a stocke now the sonne may so raise the stocke and play the good husband as he may purchase any thing that the father hath in like manner say they God may give a man grace and hee may so husband it as he may purchase any thing at Gods hand To this I answer If a father should give his sonne a farme and a stock to use and when he had done so his childe could not earne a penny but it must be the father and the son could not stirre a foot or a hand without the father then the father is not beholding to the sonne but the son to the father This is the case betweene God and us for when he gives us any grace he must give us a second grace to use and to imploy it wel and therefore it is manifest we cannot merit any thing at Gods hands it is the doctrine of the Schoole-men and Aquinas makes it plaine hee puts the question and resolves it saith he A man may receive a benefit from another and may deserve it at his hands as a man may give one an house which he may deserve but if a man when he hath given another an house must give him also power to use the house and wisdome to governe the same that man cannot be beholding to him that receives but the receiver must needs be beholding to him that gave it so although God give a man grace which he cannot use well unlesse he also give him power to use it Therefore God is not beholding to us for any thing but we are to God and therefore we cannot merit any thing at Gods hands The third ground is our imperfection that in every thing we doe we sinne against God and if we sinne against him then we cannot merit any
love and most difficult Now since all our good workes shall be remembred and more especially our workes of mercie Therefore it is a good thing for a man to feede the hungrie to cloth the naked to visit the sicke and let us meditate with our selves in this case as David said 2 Sam. 7. 2. I dwell in a house of Cedar and the Arke of God remaines within curtaines so we should say I dwell in a goodly house and many of Gods people have not a house to put their heads in I lie in a soft bed when many of them have not a bed to lie on I have good food when they have not a bit of bread to eate So then it is a good thing for a man to go out of himselfe to consider the wants of other and to shew mercy to them especially at this time because God hath beene mercifull unto us in giving us seasonable times to inne the fruits of the earth to our comfort and giving to us the appointed weekes of the harvest as Ierem. 5. and giving of us strength to undergoe our labours we see Numb 31. 49. when the captaines had beene at warre and were returned home againe they muster their men and finde not a man lost therefore they bring an offering and offer it to the Lord in thankefulnesse for it so we should doe every one looke into his family and number his men and when hee sees that there is not one of them hath miscarried but that he hath his number still give thankes to God for it and as God hath beene mercifull to us so to bee mercifull to our brethren I but some will say I am a poore man and cannot feede the hungry cloath the naked nor as Christ speaketh doe any great matter what shall I doe I answer that the least and smallest matter that is done in true love to Christ shall not want his reward if it be but a draught of drinke or visite of the sicke so Christ shewes Matth. 10. 42. And whosoever shall give unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water to drinke onely in the name of a Disciple verily I say unto you he shall not lose his reward so we see Luk. 21. the poore widdow that cast into the treasurie but two mites was more accepted than them that cast in of superfluitie it is not the great quantitie that is accepted but with what affection for the smallest thing done Christ will accept if it be done in love Exod. 35. we see the people brought gold and silver and brasse and silke ramskins and goates haire and so forth for the building of the Tabernacle Origen saith well on that place Grant Lord saith he that I may bee found to bring something to the building of thy Temple that I may bee found to being a little gold to make the mercy-seate on or the Arke or to make the candlestick or a little silver to make the pillars on or a little brasse to make the bosses on or a little silke to make the curtaines on a little goates haire that so I may not be found empty to have brought nothing to the building of thy spirituall Temple So what a griefe may it be at that day when Christ shall say here is the gold silver brasse silke or the goats haire that such a man and such a woman brought and I shall be found to bring nothing what a shame and what a griefe I say will this bee therefore will I ever beseech God to give me the grace that I may be found able to bring something and bestow it on Gods spirituall house that it may bee a comfort to me at that day and let every man be exhorted to doe what they can out of true love to God and compassion to his poore members and no question it shall bee accepted though it be but a little goates haire wee see Math. 21. when Christ rode to Ierusalem every man was ready to doe him service and honor some strowed their garments in the way some cut downe boughs and branches to make way for his comming so doe thou if thou have not changes of garments to strow yet cut downe a boughe or some little branch bestow something on Christ on the Church of God on his poore Saints people and God will accept it for as it is 1 Cor. 8. if there be but a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that which hee hath not therefore let men doe what they are able and God will accept of it though it be but a little Fourthly the judgement that shall passe upon us at the day of judgement shall bee of such workes of mercy as are done to Christians because they are Christians it is good thing to doe good to all as Salomon saith Eccl. 11. cast thy bread on the waters for after many dayes thou shalt finde it though it seeme to thee to be lost and to bee cast away yet thou shalt finde it againe But especially doe good to Christians because they be Christians as it is Gal. 6. 9. doe good to all especially to the houshold of faith and so Rom. 12. 13. the Apostle exhorts to distribute to the necessities of the Saints for that which is done to the Saints is done to Christ himselfe thus 2 Sam. 9. David makes inquirie if none of the house of Saul was left for Ionathan was dead unto whom hee could shew no kindnesse therefore hee makes inquiry to see if any of his race were left that hee might shew kindnesse to them for Ionathans sake so Christ is in heaven wee cannot bestow our bread or our cloth on him O but there are a number of his brethren and servants here in want and in need these wee must feede cloath and shew kindnesse to for Christs sake againe though we are to doe good to all yet especially to Christians because they are Christians for there is such a neere conjunction betweene Christ and Christians that their wants hee takes to bee his wants their injuries and wrongs to bee as done to him Therefore one saith well that Christ takes all the injuries and wrongs that are done to his servants as if they were done to himselfe as Acts 9. Saul persecuted the Church and Christ cries out of heaven Saul Saul why persecutes thou mee Saul kicked at the foote and the head cries out of heaven why dost thou persecute mee such a neere conjunction there is betweene Christ and his members that all the injuries and wrongs that are done to them are accounted as done to Christ and all their wants to bee his wants Therefore tell me O man or woman if Christ should hang on the crosse and crie out and say I thirst what wouldst thou doe Let him thirst still nay wouldest thou not rather bring him wine or milke to comfort him this is the same case still for when a
the cry in the eares of the parents so it is with a Christian if hee bee strong hee makes the stronger crye in the eares of God Thirdly A strong Christian is bold to confesse Christ in the time of trouble as the Apostle did Acts 5. so it is said of the Saints Revel 12. That they loved not their lives to the death Fourthly A strong Christian is contented with any thing that God sends as Phil. 4. saith the Apostle I have learned in all estates therewith to be contented to want and to abound to be full and to be emptie so old Eli said 1 Sam. 3. It is the Lord let him doe as it pleaseth him Now these are in a Christian either stronger or weaker according as he is weakned with temptations And therefore let us labour to feele these workes of the Spirit for the Spirit is all the evidence we have of Heaven and happinesse therefore let us looke to have the spirit that we be not deceived A man that hath house and land would be loth to have his deeds and his evidences to prove naught and so to lose his house and land much more should we be loth to have our evidence that we have of Heaven and happinesse to prove naught Here it will be worthy our inquiry How a Christian that was strong and is weakned by sinne may know that the Holy Ghost is in him In all the declinings and fallings of the faithfull there is a roote of grace left although the Diuell cut off the Boughes and the Branches yet the root is safe as Daniel 4. Nabuchadnezzar is compared to a tree which the Angell is sent to cut downe the body and the branches but to let the stumpe of it remaine and bee bound with iron so though the Divell cut downe the boughes and branches yet the roote is fast which is a comfort to the Church that in all their falls there is a roote of grace remaining But how may a man know this I answere three wayes First If ever he had the workes of grace in him at any time though hee see or feele nothing yet there is a roote of grace remaining I have shewed you if God give his Spirit hee will never quite take it away therefore if hee can finde this that there hath beene a worke of grace in him it is certaine there is a roote left if he can finde but a few live-coales raked up in the dead ashes there is hope of fire and some comfort though he see nothing for the present therefore we must looke backe to see whether ever we have felt the worke of grace or no if wee can finde wee have we may assure our selves that the spirit of God is in us and that there is a roote of grace left in us This was Davids comfort Psal 77. saith hee I thought on the time past and my soule received comfort If a man put fish into a Pond and comes thither againe and sees them not yet he is perswaded that they are there though covered with water so if a man be once stored with the graces of God though hee sees and feeles them not yet must he be perswaded that he hath them still it is a corruption in the estate of weaknesse to thinke the Divell hath deceived them and that all was nothing that was in them but wee must take heed of this that we doe not bely God We read Malach. 1. How the Lord saith That he hath loved the people and they say wherein hast thou loved us Therefore it is a good thing when the Lord shall love us in our conversion and in our repentance that we doe acknowledge it Secondly A man may know it by the desires of grace that there is a roote left which are foure in number First to grieve that wee cannot grieve for sinne and to mourne that we cannot mourne If we desire to weepe as others doe this is a desire of grace nature will not doe this So Esay 63. 17. The Church of God complaines of this saying O Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and hardened our hearts from thy feare Secondly to desire the reconciliation and love and favour of God above all things which though he feeles not yet hee longs for it and desires it above all worldly things whatsoever and would give a world to have the sense and feeling of Gods favour Thus we see the Church Cant. 3. when she had lost Christ she seekes after him and she runnes here and there to find him so when we have lost Christ we long for him and our desire is after him this of a suretie is a desire of grace so Matth. 5. saith Christ Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse though they have it not yet they shall be satisfied A man in the time of his weakenesse thinkes his case to bee but miserable and yet the Spirit of God pronounceth him a happy man Thirdly a desire to beleeve though a man doe not beleeve for the present yet he desireth to beleeve and striveth against infidelity this is a desire of grace if a man feeles this hee may assure himselfe there is a roote of grace left in him Mark 9. saith Christ unto the man canst thou beleeve Lord saith he I beleeve but helpe my unbeleefe Fourthly a desire to please God in all our courses though wee have some sinnes and corruptions yet wee desire to bee rid of them and to walke with God these desires of new obedience doe shew there is a roote of grace left As Psal 119. saith David O that my heart were directed to keepe thy Law and Psal 40. I desire to doe thy will O Lord indeed Lord I confesse I doe not thy will but I desire to doe it by these desires wee may know that there is a roote of grace left But here may be an Objection made Had not Herod good desires and Balaam yet these had no roote of Grace in them To this I answere Balaam had good desires hee desired the end but not the meanes that tends to the end he desired to be happy but he did not desire to be holy The wicked desire grace but they doe not use the meanes to come to it A carnall man may deceive himselfe in this therefore if men desire grace Heaven and happinesse they must vse the meanes to come by it which is by Prayer and hearing the Word preached receiving the Sacraments reading of the Word and such like duties The third meanes whereby a man may know that there is a roote of grace left in him is If he can finde some working of the Spirit in this estate the roote is fast As a man may know the Sunne is up though hee see not the Sunne but a little glimpse of it so by some little workings of the Spirit he may
know he hath the Spirit The first worke is That hee would not grieve God for a world hee hates sinne he cannot abide it hee would not sweare nor lie nor prophane the Sabboth nor commit any sinne willingly in this case he may assure himselfe he hath the Spirit of God in him Secondly that although hee falls into some sinne yet hee holds his care and love to all other holy duties as David did in that foule sinne of adultery when he had fallen into it yet hee came to the Temple did hold himselfe to performe holy duties still Thirdly to hold our love to God and to Gods people when he loves a Christian as a Christian saith S. Iohn hereby we know that we are translated from death to life because wee love the brethren First the Vse of this is that seeing in the falls of the Godly there is alwayes a roote left therefore wee should labour to nourish and to hold this roote that is to nourish these good desires the love of goodnesse and the hatred of sinne If a man hath a good plant in his Garden if bad fellowes come and cut downe the boughes and branches what will he doe he will goe and digge about the roote dung it and labor to preserve and nourish it so when there is a plant of goodnesse in a Christian if the Divell come and cut downe the boughes and branches neverthelesse we must labour to nourish the roote by the Use of good meanes Secondly seeing there is a roote left in all the falls of the godly therefore wee must bee thankefull to God when wee have a desire to please him in all our courses Thirdly seeing there is a roote of grace left in all the falls of the godly Therefore if we cannot finde these workings of the Spirit nor the desires in us but perceive our selves to be dead hearted it is a shrewd signe that there is no roote of grace yet I say not but that God may in time and in the use of meanes worke grace in such a heart but for the present I can give such a disposition no incouragement of that estate till God worke more in them SERMON LVII IOHN 14. 26. But the Comforter which is the Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name hee shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you HAving spoken of the meanes whereby a man may know by infallible arguments that the holy Ghost is in him in the next place we are to speake what good and benefit wee have by the Holy Ghost for when we know the great good that comes by the Holy Ghost it will make us to prise it when wee have it and to seeke for it when we want it Therefore it shall not be amisse to see what this great good and benefit is that we have by the holy Ghost The Prophet David Psal 51. 11. prayes Lord take not thy Holy Spirit from me though thou take away my peace my Children my crowne and kingdome and other blessings yet Lord take not thy Spirit from me David knew the Spirit of God was a greater blessing than Peace Children Crowne Kingdome than all other blessings and benefits whatsoever It is true indeede that the benefits of the Holy Ghost are unspeakeable that no man can see them in the full latitude and extention because God is infinite yet wee may see some of them A man who comes to the Sea stands and lookes on it hee joyes to see it though hee cannot see the length nor the breadth of it so although a man cannot comprife the number of them yet it is a comfort to see some of them Now there are sixe speciall benefits that we have by the Holy Ghost The first worke is to shew us our wretched and miserable estate that wee stand in till we be brought home to Christ for no sooner are wee beginning to enter into an estate of grace but presently there is kept a marvellous stirre which troubles and disquiets us as long as the strong man holds possession Luk. 1. 21. Because the Spirit of God once come into us shewes us our sinnes and the wrath of God against them and that Hell is ready for us and then our thoughts cannot chuse but bee exceedingly troubled and we are so amazed as wee know not how to turne us Thus we see Paul was Act. 9. three dayes together he eate no meate but prayed in heavinesse and sorrow as Ezechiel 37. before life came into the dead bones there was a noyse a ratling shaking and trembling amongst them so before the Lord puts spirituall life into us there is as it were a noyse and a trembling and a shaking for sinne This is the worst wee shall feele from the Holy Ghost which is harsh to the flesh but comfortable to the Spirit because it is as an holy vomit that the Lord gives us to purge out our sins and corruptions which though bitter in taste at first is comfortable and giving ease at the latter end So Matth. 5. Christ saith Blessed are ye that mourne for ye shall be comforted and Psal 126. They which sow in teares shall reape in joy So that there is no teares more blessed and happy than those that are shed out for sinne Therefore in the harshest worke of the Spirit there is comfort as Matth. 1. Ioseph was sore perplexed about Mary and he thought to put her away secretly till the Angell came to him and said Feare not Ioseph to take Mary to be thy Wife for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost So when a christian is perplexed and troubled with his sinnes let him not be afraid for it is from the Holy Ghost So Gen. 25. 21. when Rebecca had conceived the Children dashed in her wombe that is they strove together Why am I thus saith shee and thereupon asked the Lord who said unto her Two Nations are in thy Wombe of whom the one shall be mightier than the other and the elder shall serve the yonger So when a Christian shall feele a striving in him let him be of good comfort there are two within him the spirit and the flesh the elder shall serve the younger the flesh shall bee but a slave to the spirit So then in the harshest worke of the spirit there is comfort and if there bee comfort in the troublesomest worke what comfort is there in the rest of the benefits The second benefit is Illumination to teach us the whole will of God as shall bee needfull for our salvation and so Christ saith in this place But the comforter which is the holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my name he shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance which I have told you and Iohn 6. 45. saith he they shall all be taught of God so also 1 Ioh. 2.
seede that is the thornes sucke and draw away the heart of the ground that the good seede cannot thrive and prosper so the cares for the things of this life and about our worldly businesse doe sucke away the heart of the Spirit Fourthly by negligence for if we doe not stir up the fire lay the brands together and blow it it will quench and goe out so if men be negligent and doe not stirre up the graces of God that are in them and lay as it were the brands together and blow them the Spirit of God wil quench in them Therefore the Apostle exhorts 2 Tim. 1. 6. To stirre up the gift of God in him Origen Hom. 15. saith if God should kindle a fire to heat thee and it were like to goe out wouldst not thou lay the brands together stirre it up and so nourish it so God hath kindled a fire in our hearts by his Spirit therefore wee must not through negligence let it dye and goe out but stirre up the graces of God that are in us that they do not quench these be the foure meanes that will quench the spirit therefore corrupt nature is the greatest enemy to the graces of God in us that can be Chrysostome saith well No man hath any hurt but it is in himselfe in this case all the hurt that the spirit of God hath in us is by our selves by our earthlinesse and by neglecting of good things and for want of stirring up the graces of God that be in us The second conclusion is That a man may have common graces of the spirit such as are common to good and bad to the Elect and reprobate these a man may lose as first a man may be inlightned and indued with Heavenly knowledge and talke wisely of high points and yet he may lose this because this is a common grace as Heb. 6. 4. there were some that were inlightned and had tasted of the good Word of God and of the power of the world to come who neverthelesse may yet fall away Secondly there may bee a feeling of good things a man may have a desire to be saved and to behold God in glory as Balaam had Num 23. a man may lose these because they be common graces therefore it is a good observation of one That the wicked may taste of the Heavenly power and of the good Word of God but these bee not the things they live by as a Cooke that dresses a dinner hee may taste of the meate and licke his fingers but it is not that he liveth by he liveth by somewhat else so a reprobate may taste of the good Word of God and have feeling of good things as quietnesse of conscience and other of Gods favours and yet neverthelesse he shall not be saved thereby they shall not bee able to bring him to life everlasting Thirdly a man may have restraining grace and be restrained from a number of sinnes or a man may have the spirit of governement as Saul had and yet hee may lose it as we see 1 Sam. 10. 14. The Spirit of God departed from Saul so a man may bee fitted for a calling and discharge it wisely and yet may lose this because it is a common grace for all common graces a man may lose The third conclusion is That there be peculiar graces proper to Gods elect these shall never be lost as Regeneration Sanctification and Iustification which may comfort a Christian who though hee may lose his wife and children his goods and life yet if he hath the spirit of God hee cannot lose that and there is foure grounds for it The first is the promise of God as that Psal 89. 30 31. saith God But if his children forsake my Law and walke not in my judgements if they breake my Statutes and keepe not my commandements then will I visite their transgression with the rod and their iniquitie with strokes yet my loving kindnesse will I not take from him c. The second is the Power of God as 1 Pet. 1. 5. saith the Apostle of the Faithfull which are kept by the power of God through Faith to Salvation The third is the Prayer of Christ Iohn 17. 20. I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeve in me through their Word so then this prayer of Christ was not onely effectuall for Peter and for the rest of the Apostles but also effectuall for all the Elect people of God The fourth is the nature of the Spirit which is alwayes as a seede remaining in them 1 Iohn 3. 9. so Christ saith Iohn 4. that the water which he should give them should be a Well of water springing up to Eternall life All these foure grounds doe confirme unto us that if a Man hath received the grace of God proper to the Elect hee shall never lose it totally nor finally and therefore this conclusion stands good though a man may lose common graces yet he shall not lose them which are proper to the Elect. Yet lest any man should presume let mee tell you first though such a one cannot lose the spirit yet he may lose the measure of the spirit and be brought to a low ebbe in himselfe there may be a shrewd abatement of this grace as Revel 2. Christ saith to the Church of Ephesus Remember from whence thou art fallen why the Church was not fallen from an estate of grace but it was fallen from a great measure of grace to a lesser from a great degree of it from a great measure of Care Love Faith Repentance and Zeale so a Christian though hee bee not quite deprived of the Spirit and have a totall losse thereof yet may want of the measure may finde a great abatement of it in himselfe Secondly A man may lose the comfort of the Spirit though he cannot lose the Spirit yet he may bring himselfe into a poore case by his sins that he may have as little feeling of the spirit and comfort as if hee had no presence of the Spirit as a man may have joynts but they may bee so benumbed with cold as a man cannot feele nor have use of them so a man may have the spirit and yet may be so benumbed with sinne that he may have no more feeling of the spirit nor comfort than if hee had not the spirit Thirdly A man may have the Spirit and yet may lose the working and operation thereof he may be overruled by the flesh as a man may have life in him in a dead sound and yet no operations so a man may have the Spirit and yet he may want the operations and workings of it this is the greatest extremitie that a Christian can be in Fourthly Though a man may lose the feeling of the Spirit the comfort operations and workings thereof yet it is but for a little time
the Militant Church warring against sinne the World and the Divell Therefore we must looke for no perfect peace here Secondly seeing the Church of God is Militant therefore every man must stand upon his guard and watch armed with Faith Patience and with the graces of Gods Spirit He must take unto him all the Armour of God that is spoken of Eph. 6. that so he may be armed against the temptations of the Divell the World and his owne sinnes and corruptions he must not be secure but he must stand on his watch We read Matth. 13. 25. Whilst men slept the Divell came and did sow tares not when their bodies slept but when their care indeavour and zeale was asleepe so when men bee secure and stand not upon their watch and guard then the Divell comes to surprise them therefore the watchfulnesse and diligence of the Divell should teach us to be watchfull and diligent We finde 1 King 3. when the true mother of the childe was asleepe the false mother came and stole away the live-childe and laid a dead childe in the roome of it so the Divell will doe when men sleepe in sinne hee will steale away the live-childe and lay a dead child in the roome of it that is he will steale away our lively faith hope repentance and will leave dead faith and dead affection in their roome Therefore the watchfulnesse of the Divell must make us watchfull to resist him Thirdly seeing the Church of God is militant it is cleare we cannot escape without wounds and blowes in this life therefore it must bee our wisedome when we take any to labour to cure and heale them that so we doe not bleede to death with them So Heb. 12. 13. saith the Apostle And make straight s●eppes unto your selfe lest that which is halting be turned out of the way but let it rather be healed and Revel 3. 2. awake and strengthen the things which remaine that are ready to die here wee see the Church had wounds but it must be the care of the Church to heale their wounds It is a fearefull thing that the Divell many times wounds a man in his care faith patience love or zeale and yet they have no care to recover againe they doe not runne to prayer to repent of their sinnes returne to God get faith and come to the preaching of the Word and to the Sacraments that so they might recover and be healed We read 2 Kings 8. when Iehoram was wounded of the Assyrians he returned into Iezreel to be healed of his wounds so when the Divell hath wounded us in our care faith or in our zeale it must be our wisedome to returne to the Word and to the Sacraments to be healed of them Fourthly though wee have a great deale of toyle and trouble here in the Church militant yet we may be comforted because it is the way and the gate to the church triumphant as Iohn 16. 2. Christ saith Verely verely I say unto you that ye shall weepe and lament but the World shall rejoyce and yee shall have sorrow but your sorrow shall be turned into joy So Revel 21. 4. saith he And God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes and there shall be no more death neither sorrow neither crying nor no more paine So then although the people of God have a number of troubles and temptations here yet it may comfort them that one day they shall bee blessed in the Church triumphant We see as long as a man is at Sea in the Ship he is flung here and there and tossed up and downe and yet it is the Ship that must carry himsafe to the Haven and Shore so as long as wee live in the militant Church we cannot be at quiet it is a place full of trouble wee shall have the world the flesh and the Divell to vexe and trouble us yet because the militant Church is the ship that must carry us to the shore that is to Heaven therefore it must bee our care so to live in the militant Church that we may be a member in the Church triumphant that when we have passed the glassie Sea of this world wee may live in the blessed presence of Christ and for ever sing the song of Moses and the Lambe SERMON LXI REVELATION 1. 20. The seven golden Candlestickes which thou sawest are the seven Churches WEE spake the last day of the parts of the Church of God which generally are two the Triumphant part and the Millitant the triumphant part is that which is blessed with God in Heaven and it is so called because it is not in conflict and combate as wee bee but hath triumphed and overcome temptation the Divell sinne and lusts being now blessed in Heaven with God himselfe the millitant we shewed was so called because of that continuall warfare wee are in with the flesh the world and the Divell untill thereby wee are brought home into the triumphant Now for the particuler there be divers parts of the Church as the Ocean Sea is all one in it selfe yet by the reason there bee many armes and creekes of it which runnes by divers countries therefore it is called by the name of the countries and kingdomes it runnes by as the English Sea and the French Sea and the Spanish Sea so although the Church of God be one in her owne receit yet by reason that it spreadeth it selfe into divers Countries and Kingdomes it is called by the name of the Country or kingdome it is neere as the English Church and the French Church and the Dutch Church so there are many parts thereof all which make but one Church There was a Popish convert that made an objection against this saith he the Church of God is one and the reformed Churches are many therefore the reformed Churches are not the Church of God as Cantic 6. 8. But my Dove is all alone shee is the onely daughter of her mother To this I answere in this cavill there is first ignorance of the Scripture secondly ignorance of learning First it doth shew hee is ignorant of the Scripture for although the Church of God is but one in it selfe yet there be divers parts of it which are called Churches as in this place which is my Text The seeven golden candlestickes are the seven Churches So Gal. 1. 21. And after that I went into the coasts of Asyria and Cilicia for I was knowne by face unto the Churches of Iudea So 1 Cor. 14. 35. for God is not the Author of confusion but of peace as we see in all the Churches of the Saints so though the Church of God bee but one in it selfe yet there are diverse parts of it Secondly this shewes ignorance in learning the Church of God is but one but how is it but one It is one as a great line is one composed of a number of small lines so saith Cyprian
so as no life flowes from the head to it hee will rubb and chafe it to bring heate and Spirits into it againe so when wee see our selves hang by as dead members and that hardly any life of grace flowes unto us wee should never bee at rest but use all the meanes wee can to heare the word pray repent of our sinnes get faith in Christ never to bee at quiet till wee feele a derivation of the graces of Christ unto us The third consequent is that seeing Christ is the head of the Church and the Church his body Therefore hee will preserve all the members of it There is never a little toe finger or a bone in the body of Christ that shall perish but hee will preserve them all We see in nature that the head will labour to preserve the rest of the members that they doe not perish much more will Christ preserve his mysticall body Hence therefore is our comfort that wee stand not by our own power but by the power of Christ and the life that wee live in grace wee have not by the power of nature but by Christ therefore hee will preserve us and keepe us as Iohn 17. 12. saith Christ of those that thou hast given mee have I lost none Wee are all dead by Adam but we are made alive by Christ so Revel 2. 16. Christ is called the roote and the generation of David It is a Metaphor taken from herbes in a garden that although the stalke and the leafe die in the winter time yet they are preserved in the roote and when the spring time commeth they will put forth againe so though wee die in our selves yet wee are preserved in the roote which is Christ although the stalke and the leafe die yet wee are safe in the roote The use is Seeing that the Church is the body of Christ therefore all injuries and wrongs that are done unto the Church Christ takes as if they were done to himselfe not onely the injuries and wrongs that the world puts on them but also the disgraces and shames that Christians bring upon themselves therefore thou that art a Christian consider with thy selfe thou art a member of Christ looke what disgrace thou bringest on thy selfe thou bringest on Christ as 1 Cor. 6. 15. saith S. Paul Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot God forbid or shall wee abuse them to drunkennesse looke what disgrace we cast on our selves we bring on Christ because we bee Christs Members Therefore Chrysostome saith well O man by thy sinne thou dost not disgrace thy owne selfe but another and the shame doth not rest on thy owne body but it rests on another mans that is on the body of thy Lord and Master Iesus Christ So Augustine saith if thou have no care of thine owne selfe yet have care of Christ and if thou care not for defiling of thine owne body and disgracing of it yet take heede of defiling and disgracing of the body of Christ rest not on thy selfe but on Christ therefore how carefull should we be that we doe not defile our bodies SERMON LXIII EPHESIANS 5. 25. Husbands love your Wives as Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it THere bee five things wherein the dignitie of the Church consists 1. It is called the Citie of God or the House of of God because there is a speciall presence of Gods Spirit 2. It is called the Body of Christ 3. The Spouse of Christ or the Bride 4. It is the Pillar and ground of Truth 5. It is like unto Noah his Arke that there is no salvation without it Two of these wee haue intreated of already and now are come to speake of the third which is this That the Church is the Spouse and the Bride of Christ because it hath pleased Christ to bestow himselfe on the Church to marry and to adjoine himselfe to it in the most neerest bond that may be Man and Wife are not neerer tyed one to another by the bonde of marriage than Christ hath tied and bound himselfe to her by the bond of the Spirit therefore the Church may well bee tearmed the Spouse and the bride of Christ as Cantic 5. 1. I am come into my garden my Sister my Spouse so Iohn 3. 29. He that hath the bride is a bridegrome but the friend of the bridegome which standeth and heareth him rejoyceth because of the bridegroomes voyce So Revel 21. 9. saith he Come I will shew thee the Bride the Lambes wife What a great comfort is this that such silly people as we be should be advanced to this honour as 1 Sam 25. 41. when David sent to Abigall to take her to wife saith she Let thy handmaid be a servant to wash the feete of thy servants of my Lord so wee may say what Lord wilt thou make mee thy Spouse and they Bride it is honour and glory enough for me to be a poore servant to wash the feete of the meanest of thy servants Now as many lines come from one Center so there may be many points deducted out of this point First seeing the Church is the Spouse and the Bride of Christ therefore He loves the Church the love betweene man and wife is great but the greatest love is betweene Christ and his Church as it is Gen. 2. 24. Therefore shall a man leave father and mother and cleave to his wife the greatest bond in nature is betweene them and the greatest bond in grace is betweene Christ and the Church It is said Esay 43. 4. Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast beene honourable and I have loved thee therefore will I give Man for thee and People for thy sake So Revel 3. 9. I will make them that they shall come and worship before thy feete and to know that I have loved thee In my Text we see Christ hath not onely loved the Church but hath made declaration of his love wee read Milac 1. 2. that the Lord saith to the people I have loved you and the people say to God Wherein hast thou loved us But thankes be to God wee need not say so for Christ hath not onely loved us but he hath made declaration of his Love that we may feele it and see it If Christ should have loved us and we should not have knowne it it had beene a great matter But the comfort is the greater that hee makes declaration of his Love to us Now in three things Christ makes declaration of his Love to the Church First in that Christ hath spared no paines nor labour nay hath given his owne life and blood to redeeme it greater love than this could no man shew than to give his life for his friend But Christ sets out his love towards us seeing whilst we were yet sinners He
the societie of the faithfull there is not one onely Angell that descended but God himselfe comes down by his grace and holy Spirit to blesse us and to make his word profitable to us therefore here we are to waite and to attend for this speciall blessing of God Fourthly because Christ raigneth onely in the Church of God all the rest of the world is under the power of the Divell and sinne so Mich. 4. 7. it is said there the Lord shall raigne over them in mount Sion for ever and ever as also Luk. 1. 33. and hee shall raigne over the house of Iacob for ever and of his Kingdome there shall bee no end that is of the Militant Church therefore because Christ raigneth in the Church of God the Divell taking all the rest as his own this is the fourth reason why there is no salvation without the Church Thus much for the Doctrine The uses are First seeing there is no salvation but in the true Church of Christ therefore wee should bee thankfull to God that hee hath made us members of it for wee might else have perished in ignorance and blindnesse this hath beene the practice of Gods Children in former ages for Gen. 9. 27. It was all the blessing that Noah gave to his Sonne Iapheth for his goodnesse in covering of the nakednesse of his Father saith hee God perswade Iapheth to dwell in the Tents of Shem and Ioseph become a great man in the Kingdome of Pharoah might have made his Sonnes great men also but hee had more care to adopt them into the true Church of God and to have Gods blessing powred out upon them than to make them great men in the Kingdome of Pharoah as wee may reade Gen. 43. 13. in like manner Hebr. 12. 24. it is said that Moses by faith when hee was come to age refused to bee called the Sonne of Pharoahs daughter and chose rather to suffer adversitie with the People of God whatsoever Moses did when hee was a Childe yet when hee comes to discretion hee refused to bee called the Sonne of Pharoahs Daughter and had ra●her live in the Communion of the faithfull than bee called in the princely honours of the unfaithfull Therefore seeing it is such a great blessing to live in the societie of the faithfull wee ought to bee thankfull to God that hee hath brought us out of the belly of Poperie as Ionas was delivered out of the belly of the whale It is a pittifull thing to see a number of men live in the Church of God who doe not partake of the power of it they live in the Church as fishes in the Sea which although they breed live and dye in the Sea yet never taste of the saltnesse of it so there bee a number of men that are bred in the Church live and dye in it yet never tast of the power of it in their soules and consciences nor partake of the holy graces of it Therefore hath God brought thee to the Communion of the Church Labour to partake of the blessings and graces of it to grow in the feare of God in the love of our brethren in obedience to his commandements in care to please him in faith in repentance in knowledge in zeale of his glorie and so our comfort shall bee great at the day of judgement but if thou doe not grow in these things great shall thy terrour bee at that time Secondly seeing there is no salvation but in the true Church of God therefore we should hold communion with it and not suffer our selves to bee drawne from the societie of it as Iohn 6. 68. When many slipped away Peter himselfe could say when Christ said to him Will you all goe saith hee Master whither shall wee goe thou hast the words of eternall life so when wee see others to goe out of the societie of the Church and to bee drawne away let us say whither shall wee goe here are the words of eternall life here are the meanes to get Faith and repentance here are the meanes of salvation life everlasting Iohn 9. When there was a question made whether Iesus was of God or no the blind man answers as if hee should say is it not a strange thing that ye aske me whether he be of God or no and yet yee have seene the power of God in his person for wee read there these words whether hee bee a sinner or no I cannot tell but one thing I know that I was bl●nd and now I see so men must bee wise to answer temptations when some shall say to them your Ministers are not the ministers of Christ there is a fault in their Ordinations Wee must answer againe I know not whether there bee any fault in their Ordination or no but this I know that once I was a swearer a bad person and a vile liver indeed I once lived in blindnesse and ignorance but by their ministery now I am come to see my sinnes bee humbled for them and to lay hold on Iesus Christ Therefore whatsoever thou thinke my beleefe is they bee the ministers of Christ Historians report that there is a certaine beast called an Hyena like a Wolfe that comes to the shepheards house and there mones and bewayles himselfe and if hee heares any body named hee calls them out of doores and then falls on them and makes a prey of them so a number of such Hyena's there bee in the world who come and mone and bewayle themselves when they heare their names they call them out of the doores that is out of the Church then they fall upon them and make a prey on them Therefore wee should bee wise to hold the Communion of the Church Thirdly seeing there is no salvation but in the true Church of God therefore the sentence of excommunication is the fearfullest sentence that is other sentences condemnes us in our bodies goods or our libertie but this declares us to bee of the Communion of the ungodly by other sentences wee are committed to the Iayle but by this censure we are committed to Sathan as 1 Cor. 5. 5. saith hee when yee bee gathered together and my Spirit with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ that such an one bee delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh Therefore this sentence is the fearfullest that can passe on a man But here I will speake my conscience it is a pittifull thing that such a censure should bee used for every light and pettie matter there is never a surgeon that dare cut off the least finger of the King though it were diseased but would use all meanes that might be before hee did it so there is never a poore Christian but is as deare to God as a King or the greatest Potentate that is and therefore what great caution should there bee used before this censure of excommunication be pronounced against any man but wee have now cause
to thanke God that it is not so common amongst us as it hath been There is also another fault amongst us that a poore man many times stands excommunicated three or foure yeers together indeed there may bee a fault in the poore man to stand so long but let us take heed it bee not for want of our helpe Therefore as wee are ready to contribute to the necessities of their bodies so we should bee to contribute to them in this case But here may a Christian demand whether were a man best to give money or to stand excommunicated still this question I will answer by another question what if a man fall into the hands of Theeves were hee better to lose his money or his life I answer hee were better to lose his money because his life is the greater even so a man were better to lose his money than the meanes of grace which is the greater Another may here object and say I but how if a man cannot bee absolved without hee should sinne against God and offend his conscience To this I answer that if the case be so that he cannot be absolved but he must sinne against God then hee were better lose the Communion of men which is the lesser than the Communion of God which is the greater as Iohn 9. wee see the blind man whom the Pharisees had cast out Christ meets with and said unto him doest thou beleeve in the Sonne of God as if hee should say notwithstanding this censure thy cause is good thou art a blessed man in like maner although the censure of excommunication hath passed upon thee if thou beleevest in the Sonne of God thy case is good this may comfort Christians Lawyers have a saying that unjust Lawes binde no man and Bellarmine saith that there is a double Communion an externall and an internall Communion the externall Communion of the Church of God is in the word preached prayer and in Sacraments the internall is in the graces of the Spirit Faith love and other graces Now a man may bee cast out from the externall Communion the word and Sacraments as when a man is put into prison or banished and yet may have the internall Communion with the Church a man may be cut off from his brethren in regard of outward societie but hee can not bee cut off from Christ And these bee the uses wee are to make of this point Now that wee have spoken of the Nature of the Church in the next place we are to speake of the properties of it which are two 1. It is a Holy Church 2. It is a Catholike Church First The Church of God is Holy there is a company of Holy People here in this world as Zech. 8. 5. thus saith the Lord I will returne unto Sion and will dwell in the midst of Ierusalem and Ierusalem shall be called a Citie of Truth and the Mountaine of the Lord of Hosts and the Holy Mountaine so in D●●iel the Church is called the Holy People of God and Revel 22. 2. saith S. Ioh. And I saw the holy Citie the new Ierusalem come downe from God so also 1 Cor. 3. 17. Saint Paul saith For the Temple of the Lord is Holy which ye are Therefore seeing the Church of God is an assembly of Holy People accordingly as it is Holy wee the Members thereof must labour to be Holy Now the Holinesse of the Church is opposed unto three things that seemeth to take away Holinesse from it First the judgement of the world for it thinkes that of all societies they are the vilest and the worst they thinke them to be but a company of dissemblers and hypocrites that professe the Word but deny the Power of it but we that are Christians beleeve that the Church of God is Holy though the World thinke them a company of dissemblers David saith Psal. 13. Yet God is good to Israel even to the pure in heart and in the 14. of Deut. 2. we read For thou art an Holy People to the Lord thy God and the Lord hath chosen thee to be a precious people to him Therefore howsoever the World condemnes them yet wee beleeve that God hath a Holy company of People in the World The second thing that seemeth to take away Holinesse from the Church is that it is a united company of good and bad together for I have shewed you that the Church of God is like to a Flocke wherein are Sheepe and Goates a Floore wherein is Corne and Chaffe a Field wherein are Tares and Wheate and yet these bad persons are no true Members of the Church but like bad humours in the body Againe the Faith of a Christian opposeth and doth beleeve that there is a company of Holy People and that the wicked that live amongst them doe not defile the Holy things of God for it is Pauls rule 1 Cor. 11. 26. Let a Man therefore examine himselfe c. whereupon saith Augustine Marke thou that art a good Man thou mayest eat and drinke with comfort if thou doe examine thy selfe and againe he that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation not so to thee that art a good Man but to the wicked that came like swine without any preparation at all The third thing that seemes to take away holinesse from the Church is the remainders of sinne and corruption for there is no Man in the estate of Grace but hath complained of this So David Psal 40. 12. My sinnes hath taken such hold on me that I am not able to looke up and Paul complayneth Rom. 7. The good thing that I would doe that doe I not but what I hate that doe I c. so in the best estate there is some remainders of sinne Therefore although the World and the Divell should condemne them yet we beleeve the Church of God is Holy SERMON LXVII 1 CORINTHIANS 3. 17. For the Temple of God is holy which yee are HAving spoken of the Nature of the Church we began to speake of the Properties of it the last day being two First we beleeve the Church of GOD is Holy Secondly that it is Catholike agreable to that part of our Christian profession Now the Church of God is holy foure manner of wayes First In regard of the Holinesse of their Faith or by the Holinesse of their Faith All other societies are fouly spotted and tainted with errour against the foundation but this remaines unspotted in the foundation therefore the Church is Holy because their Faith is Holy So Iude 20. But ye beloved edifying your selves in your most holy Faith keepe your selves in the Love of God So Matth. 7. 6. saith our Saviour Give not that which is holy to Dogges It cannot be denyed but that there may bee errours in the true Church for as they bee subject to all other sinnes so are they to the sinne of ignorance as
a time when divers men were excluded from the Congregation of the Lord as Num. 22. the Ammonites the Moabites because they did not meete the people of the Lord with bread and water but now it hath pleased God to take in all sorts of men so that no man is excluded unlesse hee will exclude himselfe as it is said Esai 65. 25. That the Wolfe and the Lambe shall feed together and the Lion shall eate straw like the Bullock and to the Serpent dust shall bee his meat the sense is that in the time of the Gospell the Lord will alter the naughtinesse of mens hearts and bring them to joine in holy sweet communion one with another but if they would not attend him but desire rather to live in their sinnes still than they should live in Gods curse the Serpent shall eate dust hence wee are taught seeing God doth exclude no man wee must take heede wee doe not exclude our selves If a man comes to a Kings Court in meane apparell and have no good attendance he can have small hope of accesse to the King oh but let him come to Gods court though hee come never so meanely and basely apparelled if hee bee well attended with faith and the graces of his Spirit then he shall have accesse into the presence Chamber of Almightie God therefore seeing no man is excluded doe not thou exclude thy selfe If a gift grant or pardon should come from the King to certaine persons that would claime it there is no man that would exclude himselfe and say it doth not belong to mee but every man would labour to have his part in it so the Lord hath given a gift and a grant to bestow pardon of sinnes the love and favour of God heaven and happinesse to all that will repent and beleeve in Christ Therefore no man must exclude himselfe and say it doth not belong to mee but labour to have his part in it Thus the Church is Catholike in regard of the persons Thirdly the Church of God is Catholike in regard of time for it hath beene in all ages and so shall continue to the end of the world it began in Adams time and shall continue to the last man that shall live it hath bin in all times and it shall continue so long as the world doth last For this world was made for the good of the Church therefore God lets it stand for their sakes and as soone as the people of God be gathered home then this world shall have an end as the Prophet David hath it Psal 48. O God according to thy Name so is thy praise unto the worlds end so also Psal 89. thy seed will I establish for ever and set up thy Throne from generation to generation and Dan. 2. 44. it is said And in the dayes of those Kings shall the God of Heaven set up a Kingdome that shall not be destroyed a Kingdome that shall not bee given to another but that shall breake and destroy all those Kingdomes and it shall stand for ever Here wee may see the honour that God brings us to to bee of that Communion and fellowship that all the Saints are of to bee of that Church that Adam Abel Henoch Noah Abraham Moses and all the rest of the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles and Christ himselfe were of and all the holy men that have lived as Ephes 1. 11. saith the Apostle Now therefore yee are no more strangers nor forrenners but citizens with the Saints and of the household of God and are builded upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Iesus Christ himselfe being the chiefe corner stone so Heb. 12. 17. Saint Paul saith for yee are not come to the mount that might bee touched c. but yee are come to the mount Sion and to the citie of the living God the celestiall Ierusalem and to the company of innumerable Angels and to the congregation of the first borne whose names are written in Heaven and to God the Iudge of all men and to the Spirits of just and perfect men So then wee see that this is the honour that God hath brought us to to bee of the same Church and company that the Prophets Apostles holy men and Christ himselfe were of Therefore to apply it first let us not lose the graces of God like a slight huswife that keepes the emptie caske and boxe and loseth the Iewell but let us labour to partake of the same graces with them seeing wee are of the same Church that they bee of Secondly seeing the Church hath beene in all times past and shall continue to the worlds end therefore it may bee our comfort in all the troubles that doe befall it when wee see men conspire against and labour to destroy it yet notwithstanding all that they can doe it shall stand and continue to the worlds end It hath bin in all times and it shall continue for ever as Psal 48. 8. David saith As wee have heard so have wee seene in the citie of the Lord of Hosts in the citie of our God God will establish it for ever Therefore seeing hee hath established the Church it shall stand though all the world were set against it Augustine saith well The enemies of the Church though they come and gather themselves together to destroy and roote it out yet this is the comfort Christ will keepe it hee hath a sword to defend it he will tye up the devill and shut up hell that they shall not trouble the Church therefore though wee doe not see the Church visbile it not being patent and openly seene but sometime hidden as it was in the time of Elias from the fury of the world yee we must beleeve that the Church of God is Catholike or Universall that it hath beene in all times and it shall continue to the worlds end Now the Papists adde somewhat unto this Article and say that wee must beleeve in the Catholike Romish Church but this is first absurd in Religion and secondly absurd in Reason it is absurd in Religion because the Romish Church must fall in the time of Antichrist as the Scripture sheweth and as the Papists themselves say but the true Catholike Church that shall ever continue therefore it is absurd in religion to beleeve in the Catholike Romish Church Secondly it is absurd in Reason because that Rome when it was at the best could but be a part of the Church and a part cannot bee the whole Church as Scholars know therefore it is absurd in Reason But they say that the name of Catholike doth properly belong to them to this I answer as Christ did to some that lived in the Church Revel 2. 4. that said they were Iewes but saith Christ they are the Synagogue of Sathan so I may say of them though they terme themselves to be true Catholikes yet they be but a conspiracie against Christ Now by three reasons I
death and merit so that whatsoever is due to Christ in regard of the right of his death and merit wee may claime at Gods hand the favour of God the pardon of our sins and the glory of Heaven is due to us in regard of the merit of his death as Peter saith By his stripes we are healed so a Christian may be bold to say Christ is mine and his death mine his life is mine and his crosse mine and his paines mine to my eternall comfort therfore in the troubles of conscience and accusations of the Divell we may goe to God and tender before him the death and merits of Christ if we should tender our owne righteousnesse this would shame and disgrace us If a man should be imprisoned for a debt which was payed by a suretie if he could finde the suretie he would bring him to the Iudge and say here is the Man that did discharge my debt here are the empty bagges that the money came out of that paid my creditor surely any Iudge would acquit that Man so when the Devill shall implead us for our sinnes we may goe to God and shew him Christ and we may quiet and stay our selves here saying This is he that hath paid my debt here is the emptie purse here are the empty veines that the blood came out of and then without all doubt God will acquit us Therefore we must tender the merits of Christ to God spread them before him and stand to them To this purpose saith Chrysostome Christ hath taken away the hand-writing which was against us and hath given us another bill bond or new writing whereby we may claime Christ He hath not done by us as the unjust Steward did by abatement but hee having quite wiped out all hath given us a new bill and hath made God a debtor to us Thirdly the power of our spirituall life We indeed are able by nature to move and stirre and to do the duties of our calling to buy and sell c. but are not able to stir a foote to Heaven to looke after that nor move towards it till Christ communicates a spirituall life unto us So 1 Iohn 5. 12. saith he He that hath the Sonne hath life and he that hath not the Sonne hath not life as 2 King 12. 21. the dead Souldier was not able to move or stir till being laid in the Sepulchre of Elisha he touched his loynes and then he revived and stood upon his feete so we are dead by nature and not able to move or stirre a foote in the wayes of God till we touch the Body of Christ by Faith then we revive and stand up life comes into us againe Fourthly the dignitie of his owne estate for by nature Christ is the Son of God and he makes us the Sonnes and Daughters of God by Adoption and Grace and drawes us into the same dignitie and honour with him to be called the Sonnes of God But it is a harder matter for us to be made the Sonnes of God than for Christ to bee made the Sonne of Man Now as Christ communicates something to us so wee something to him We communicate to him three things first our Nature secondly our sinnes thirdly our troubles and afflictions Here wee see what an exchange wee make with Christ Hee communicates to us himselfe the right of his death merit and spirituall life and the dignitie of his owne State and we communicate to him our nature our sinnes and troubles First wee communicate to him our Nature and that not in the best estate when it was in integrity but since it was disgraced and subject to sicknesses diseases and troubles this is the change wee make with Christ like Hiram and Salomon Hiram gave to Salomon gold and silver and Firre trees and what the heart of the King could desire and Salomon gave to him a few dirty Cities In like manner Christ giveth to us what our heart can desire his owne selfe the right of his death merit and spirituall life the dignitie of his owne estate and we give him a few dirty cloathes our bad nature disgraced with sinne subject to troubles and afflictions If wee would have communicated any thing it should have beene of the best because He is God blessed for ever Amen it should have beene when our nature had beene in the best estate but we communicate to him our sinnes and troubles therefore wee should admire Christs love and goodnesse to us that will accept of this exchange Secondly we have communicated a worse thing than this our sins as 1 Pet. 2. 14. who his own selfe bare our sins in his body on the tree c. all the wicked shall carry their owne sins on their backe to Hell with them but the sinnes of the godly are laid on the backe of Christ he bare them the cruell Souldiers laid the Crosse on Christ and made him to beare it but we laid a greater burthen than that on him the burthen of our sins for the weight of the crosse is nothing to the weight of our sinnes Thirdly we communicate to Christ our troubles and dangers as Esay 63. 9. In all their troubles he was troubled and Col. 1. 24. Now I rejoyce in my sufferings for you and fulfill the rest of the sufferings of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake so Christ suffereth still in his members by compassion and fellow feeling And these be the goodly things that we communicate to Christ nothing but our nature and sins our troubles and dangers as I told you a little before out of 1 Kings 9. 11. there was an exchange betweene king Salomon and Hiram he gave Salomon gold silver Firre trees and Cedar trees and all that the heart of the king could wish and Salomon gave Hiram twentie dirty cities in the land of Galile but it is a better exchange that Christ makes with us for he giveth all that the heart of a Christian can wish his wisedome righteousnesse himselfe his merits and death a spirituall life and the same dignitie and honour with him but we againe repay him with our nature sins and dangers therefore hence let us learn to admire this great kindnesse and love of Christ to us that will be content therewith Now as the Saints have communion with God and with Christ so have they communion with one another by meanes of love as Exod. 25. We see the golden Cherubim did so looke towards the Arke and the Mercy seat as that they looked one towards another So wee must looke to God and to Christ by the eye of faith as we must have one eye also to one another by love This societie is comfortable for Gen. 2. 18. God saith It is not good that man should be alone therefore if it were a good thing for man to have communion and societie in the life of nature much better is
1. In Exhortation 2. In Admonition and good Counsell 3. In Consolation 4. In Mutuall Prayer First In exhortation for the People of God must exhort one another to feare God and to make conscience of every holy dutie commanded as Heb. 3. 13. saith S. Paul Exhort one another dayly whilest it is called to day c. so Heb. 11. 24. Let us exhort one another to provoke one another to love and good works So it is not enough for a man to bring himselfe on in Religion but he must stirre up the care of other as Zech. 4. 2. the Prophet saw a vision of a golden Candlestick with a boule on the top of it and seven Lampes thereon with seven Pipes to the Lampes which were on the top thereof and two O live trees right over it to drop down fatnesse to nourish the lights with so every Christian is a shining Lampe and wee must bee as Olive trees to drop down fatnesse or oyle into the heart of our brother to nourish the light of God that is in him therefore it is woefull thing to see that men doe neglect this dutie that they doe not exhort one another and yet meet many times in the weeke and on the Sabboth day and passe away the time with a deale of idle talke and let this dutie slip so that they cannot say as the Disciples said did not our hearts burne when wee talked with such a man Secondly Admonition and good counsell when they bee fallen so to recover and restore them againe as Gal. 6. saith S. Paul Brethren if any man bee fallen by any occasion into any fault yee which are spirituall restore such a one with the Spirit of meeknesse considering thy selfe lest thou also bee tempted The word in the originall is a metaphor taken from a Surgeon that is to set a joint who useth it with great tendernesse to bring it to his right place so wee must doe when wee see our brethren fallen into any fault use them gently to restore them againe and wee must labour to recover them with the Spirit of meeknesse considering lest wee also bee tempted It is not the manner of the world to doe so but they make table-talke of it and speak to the disgrace of others but wee must consider that wee our selves may bee overtaken and therefore as wee would have others to deale in meeknesse and love with us when we are fallen so we must doe to our brethren We see in a shipwrack that those that escape and get to the shore first get up to the top of a high tower mountaine or rocke and hang out lights and Lanthornes that so they may direct the rest of their company to the same harbour So wee must doe when we have suffered shipwrack in our consciences and are recovered againe wee must hang out as it were lights and lanthornes advise and admonish others and give them good counsell that so wee may bring them to the same harbour that wee are arrived at Thirdly wee owe to our brethren Christian consolation and mutuall comfort because that ordinarily the crosse doth follow them and accompany the people of God for if a man be a sincere Professour of the Gospell through the malice of the Devill and the furie of the world alwayes the crosse doth accompany him and therefore the brethren had need to comfort them as 1 Thes 4. 18. saith S. Paul Wherefore comfort your selves with these words and Prov. 31. 6. it is said Give yee strong drinke unto him that is ready to perish and wine unto him that hath griefe of heart As in a sick family where they are given to fainting they have bottles of Aquavitae and Rosasolis to refresh and comfort them so the Church of God is a sick family and therefore must have bottles of Aquavitae and Rosasolis to comfort and to cheare them that is wee must have comfortable words to cheare and refresh them but wee see Iob 6. 14. Hee complaines of this saith hee Hee that is in miserie ought to bee comforted of his neighbours but men have forsaken the feare of the Almightie so David complaines Psal 69. 20. Reproch hath broken my heart and I am full of heavinesse and I looked for some to have pitie on mee but there was none and to comfort mee but I found none Therefore wee must take heede that this bee not laid against us at the day of judgement Fourthly Mutuall Prayer to pray for one another as Iames 5. 16. it is said Pray one for another so that the Prayers of the Saints are for the common good of the whole bodie of them this is a great comfort to be one of the people of God in the time of danger and temptation for one cannot bee the least member of the Communion of Saints but he shall have his part and portion in all the Prayers of the Saints Wee see in one Countrie there are divers shippes goe to the Sea some traffique in one thing and some in another some for gold and silver some for other commodities but all such as they bring home is for the common good of the whole countrie So the Prayers of the Saints are like unto a number of ships that goe to Sea some of whom make request for this thing and some for that but whatsoever they bring home all tends to the common good of all the bodie Fourthly the Communion of the Saints consists in Communicating of Riches and goods to one another Gal. 6. 10. it is said while you have time doe good to all especially to the houshold of faith so Hebr. 13. 16. To doe good and distribute forget not for with such sacrifices God is well pleased so also 2 Cor. 8. 7. Therefore as you abound in every thing in faith and utterance knowledge and in all diligence and in your love towards us see that yee abound in this grace also There is no one dutie that men come more short in than in this men are contented to pray and advise others but this they sticke at they cannot bee contented to communicate of their goods to them neither can they abide to part with any of their Riches this they stick at But Matth. 2. 11. wee see the wise men came to worship Christ and presented to him gifts gold frankincense and myrrhe They did not onely worship him but did also impart to him of their treasure and goods It is the manner of the world that they can bee contented to worship Christ but they will not let any thing come from them to refresh the Saints they will not part with any of their goods to them Augustine saith well It is not meet that in a Christian commonwealth one should surfet and another starve that one should live in plentie and another in want for wee have all one master and are redeemed with one bloud we came into the world all after one sort and
the Saints is the mutuall bearing one with another in their weaknesses and infirmities seeing all the People of God are subject to weaknesse and infirmitie being partly flesh and partly spirit the flesh many times having the better of the spirit As wine and water being put into a glasse the water taketh away the good taste of the wine so the flesh taketh away the good taste of the spirit insomuch that many times the best men have many frailties and weaknesses therefore there must be a mutuall bearing one with another which is that which holds together Christian communion as Rom. 15. 1. Saint Paul saith We which are strong ought to beare with the infirmities of the weake and in this place beare ye one anothers burthen and so fulfill the Law of Christ againe saith he Forbearing one another and forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake forgave you so then there must be a mutuall forbearing one of another as we would have others to beare with our weaknesse and infirmities so wee should beare one with another for if wee doe not we cannot hold communion one with another which is out of want of true love We see a mother will beare with the frowardnesse of her childe though it crie and be disquiet all the night yet she sings and dances it and in the morning smiles on it and is as good friends with it as she was before the reason whereof is because she loveth her childe so if there were true love amongst us the husband would beare with the weakenesse of the wife and the wife with the weakenesse of the husband the Parents with the Children and the Children with the Parents and one good neighbour and friend with another for because men want true love therefore they cannot digest the least matter that is Now this mutuall bearing one with another consists in three things First they be ready to hide and conceale the faults one of another they will not blaze them abroad and make table-talke of them but they will hide them and if there bee but one grace or vertue in them that they will take notice of but their infirmities they conceale contrariwise is the practise of the world if they see a great many graces and vertues and but one infirmitie and weakenesse in one they will conceale all his vertues and take notice of that weaknesse and infirmitie being like to the flie that passeth over all the whole parts of a man and lights on the sore place chiefly Secondly if they cannot hide and cover them they will be ready to excuse them as Acts 3. 17. Peter told the Iewes that they had killed the Lord of Life And now brethren saith he ye did it of ignorance as did your fathers so Ioseph Gen. 45. 5. saith he I am Ioseph your brother whom you sold into Egypt now therefore be not sad and grieved in your selves that yee sold mee thither for God did send me before for your preservation Thirdly when the fault is so great that they cannot excuse it and so open and manifest as that they cannot hide it yet still they can indure them wish well to them and pray for them As 1 King 12. 23. when the people had sinned against God in asking a king and had cast off Samuel and rejected him saith he God forbid that I should sinne against God and cease praying for you but I will shew you the good and right way I will not faile in dutie to you though you faile to me This is a rare example that when wee cannot excuse the matter nor hide it that yet we can pray for the party The use is seeing the communion and societie of the Saints is such a great helpe to further us to Heaven and to comfort us here in this world let it bee our wisedome to nourish this holy communion one with another and to strengthen one another in our faith repentance and holy graces as also to nourish holy meetings for the further instructing one of another But these Christian communions are now much decayed wee have seene what meetings in many townes there hath beene in former time to confer and pray one with another and to speak of good things doe Christians thinke there is no neede of helpe this way can they goe to Heaven without the helpe one of another The strength of Sampson lay in his haire which when Dalilah had cut hee became as another man so a great part of the strength of a Christian lieth in Christian communion and in the use of good meanes from which if the world can intice thee and cut off these good helps and meanes thy strength will decay and thou shalt become as another man therefore it must bee our wisedome to nourish this holy communion There is another communion now adayes that hath eaten out and overrun this to wit the communion of good fellowes that meete together to swill swagger drinke carouse mispend their time abuse the good creatures and dishonor God but there is as great difference betweene these two communions as betweene light and darknesse and therefore it is a pittifull thing that on this day in which men should get knowledge faith and repentance and bee the better for it all the weeke after they come to swill swagger and mispend their pretious time which I trust all good men that hope to enjoy the communion of Saints will shun detest and abhominate Now the Papists do further inlarge this point and say that the Saints may communicate their merits one to another for they say that the Saints can merit enough for themselves and give the overplus to their friends this is a monstrous opinion and yet the doctrine of that Church which by three reasons I will disproove First because no man can merit for himselfe so if hee cannot merit for himselfe he cannot merit for another and no man can merit for himselfe because merit is a worke that is not due seeing all that we can doe to God is but our duty Now all the service that we doe to God is but our dutie for it is said Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy might so then when we have done all we can we doe but our duty so also Christ saith Luk. 17. 10. when ye have done all you can say We are but unprofitable servants therefore if no man can merit for himselfe then much lesse can hee merit for another Secondly No man can merit for another but he must he his Saviour but no man can be a Saviour but Christ onely according as the Angell told Mary Matth. 1. 21. And then shalt bring forth a Sonne and shalt call his name Iesus for he shall save his people from their sinnes Now there is no man can be a Saviour unlesse he can give grace but
sinnes are pardoned is to conside with ones selfe if his heart hath beene set at peace by the use of good meanes whereas before hee hath beene troubled in conscience for his sinnes if he hath repented of them and prayed unto God for the pardon of them if his heart hath beene set at peace in the use of these meanes hee may assure himselfe that his sinnes are pardoned this is Pauls Reason Rom. 5. 1. Then being justified by faith wee have peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ therefore if a man can finde peace in his conscience upon the use of good meanes this is an evidence that his sinnes are pardoned If a man be run in debt and danger and the kings writs be out against him the Bayliffes lying in every bush to take arrest and carry him into prison so that he cannot be at rest nor quiet for them now if this partie hath a friend to go to London to compound the matter and to agree it the question is how a man shall know whether his friend hath composed the matter or no I answer if the Bailiffes be gone home againe and the man at rest and quiet againe by this hee may bee sure that his friend hath composed and agreed the matter In like manner when we are runne in the Briers of debt and danger and heare that Gods writs are out against us the judgements of God lying in every bush as it were like Bayliffes to arrest us and carry us to prison if we can send a friend to compose the matter and agree it that is if we can send our prayers up to Heaven to compose the matter with God if upon this one finde his conscience to bee set at peace and the judgements of God to cease and be removed from him this is a comfortable evidence that his sinnes are pardoned therefore although a man may bee a sinner yet if a man can repent of them and finde by comfortable effects that his sinnes are pardoned hee shall have comfort both in life and death and when he hath lived here a few dayes in this world shall goe home to God to live with Abraham Isaak and Iaakob in the Kingdome of Heaven SERMON LXXII IOHN 11. 23 24. Jesus saith unto her Thy Brother shall rise againe Martha said unto him I know that he shall rise againe in the Resurrection at the last day IT was my purpose to have spoken no more at this time of Forgivenesse of sinnes but upon further meditation there is something more that I must impart unto you which is To know what that comfort is that a Christian man may have when hee beleeves his sins are pardoned and that he is acquitted and discharged for them before the judgement seat of God I answer that the comfort is exceeding great First because if a man knowes by infallible evidence that his sinnes are pardoned then he knowes he shall bee saved and death shall be as no death to him and that after this life hee shall goe into Heaven to glory and happinesse Seeing nothing can hinder a man from Heaven but sinne as it is Revel 21. ult And there shall enter in no uncleane thing Therefore if we know that our sinnes are pardoned we may be comforted for as soone as we leave this world we shall goe to God As Luke 23. as soone as the good Theefe had obtained pardon for his sinnes the next thing that Christ saith to him is This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise and therefore if we know that our sinnes are pardoned then we know wee shall be saved and wee shall goe into the Kingdome of Heaven Secondly if our sinnes bee pardoned then wee know that all that God ●●nds unto us comes of Love and that all our crosses and troubles he will turne to our good so that they bee not the wounds of an enemy but the love-tokens of a friend like the arrowes that were shot by Ionathan not to hurt but to forewarne so all crosses and troubles of this life shal turne to his good As soone as David had found the pardon and forgivenesse of his sinnes hee could say Of very faithfulnesse the Lord had afflicted him As a loving father giveth a bitter potion to his childe hee will put a peece of sugar into his hand secretly to allay the bitternesse of it so though the Lord give us a bitter potion that is a number of troubles and afflictions here in this life he puts into our hands as it were secretly a peece of sugar that is an assurance that all the troubles and afflictions of this life are sent in love to us and that they shall not hurt us but shall turne to our good Thirdly Then we know that as God hath taken away our sinne hee will take away the taile which followes it that is the punishment of sinne for the punishment of sinne followeth the act of it as the shadow doth the bodie for if we would remove the shadow wee must remove the body so God when he doth remove the body of sinne then the shadow must needs follow it We read Matth. 5. that when they brought a lame man to Christ the first thing that he saith to him is Sonne thy sinnes are forgiven thee after which the next words are Take up thy bed and walke So when the Lord takes away our sinnes he will take away the punishment of sinne Therefore in all the crosses and troubles that befall us we are not to deale with the shadow but with the body of sinne if we remove that we may be sure the shadow will be removed These be the three comforts that a man may have by the knowledge of forgivenesse of his sinnes therefore it is a good thing for a man to know in particular that his sinnes are forgiven Now wee come to speake of the other two blessings and benefits which the Lord doth give and grant to the Church in the life to come and the one is The raising of our bodies at the last day the other Life everlasting and these two blessings he hath reserved till the day of judgement closing up and making an end of all with them yet not a finall end for they shall have no end because the Lord will bestow eternall happinesse on them so that that day though it be a dolefull day to others yet it shall be a joyfull day to the Church of God and a day that they have many a day looked for and desired Now in handling of it we are first to consider The order of Gods distribution that he giveth us First the benefits and blessings of this life and then those of eternall life Hence we are instructed that that which is the order of Gods distribution must be the order in our intention for wee must labor to have communion with the saints here in this life and to have
that he sends not all afflictions at once 169. † The three afflictions that Christ suffered 153. The behaviour of Christ in his afflictions 158. The effects of Christs afflictions 160. Christ was affraid To stand be fore God in Iudgemens clothed in our sinnes of death Not as a dissolution of Nature But as Gods curse 155. Christs agonie the cause of his sweat 161. All things made for mans benefit 71. How Christ shall bee All in all at the day of Iudgement 477. Almighty see God The amazement of Christ on the Crosse proceeded from Gods curse 157. Angels Ministers unto Christians 297. ¶ The Angels service to Of Christs anointing 78. Men. 430. Christ 122. ¶ What meant by anointing in the Law 16. Christ by being anointed was designed enabled made acceptable for the worke of redemption 78. With what By whom the end why Christ was anointed c. 81. The benefit of Christs anointing participation of His Graces the dignitie of his Person 89. We must anoint Christs Head Body and Feete with the Oyle of Devotion Compassion and Contrition 82. ¶ In the Law were anointed Prophets Priests Kings 83. No injurie must bee done to the Lords anointed 82. † Apocrypha see Scripture Of Christs appearing 305. Application of Christ to the heart better than Simeons holding him in his armes 141. † The wicked can doe no more than God hath appointed 213. ¶ 268. † Whatsoever betides a man is by Gods appointment 214. The Place Time Manner and Preparation of Christs apprehension 177. c. That apprehension of impenitent sinners worse than that of Christs in the Garden 186. * Comfortable words like Aqua-vitae 589. Christs armes his messengers 342. Christs arraignement frees us from arraignment and condemnation 194. * Of Christs ascension 353. The Necessity Time Place from whence Manner Fruits and benefits of Christs asscension from 353. to 365. Christ ascended to Prepare a place for us Send down the holy ghost Lead captivity captive Give gifts to his Church Make intercession for us 354 Difference betwixt Christs ascension and others 363. Christs ascension a pawne of ours 315. † Trials to know whether wee have ascended from sinne or no. 365. Of the great assembly to Iudgement 428. Gods assistance in troubles makes men confident 194. † B CHristians ought to beare with one another in Hiding the infirmities Excusing them Loving the partie 595. Christians ought to begin all their workes with prayer and thankesgiving 645. † Not to resist beginnings in sinne dangerous 181. ¶ Why the Shepheards went to Bethlehem 126. * By Christs binding we are loosed from the chaine of condemnation and corruption 188. Christs birth the greatest Ioy of the world 125. ¶ The Place 116. Time 113. Manner 117. of Christs birth The manifestation of Christs birth 120. Foure reasons of Christs meane birth 118. God bestowes on his Children blessing of this life and the life to come 581. The wise order God takes in giving us blessings 622. The communion of Saints an earthly blessings 581. In the blood of Christ that issued out of his side is something naturall and miraculous 268. Christs blood purifies us from the guilt and filth of sinne 269. The blood of Martyrs and Christ cry unto God for revenge and mercy 85. † Body see Resurrection As a Goldsmith melts gold to make a cup for the king so God melts our bodies to make vessels of honour for himselfe 637. ¶ The perfection of our bodies compared to a Shipmans needle touched with a Loadstone 641. * Our bodies spirituall because Vpheld by Subject to the spirit 642. Chris rose with the same body hee was crucified with 340. ¶ The power of a glorified body 643. What use of stomacke teeth c. in a glorified body 628. ¶ Christ saves not our soules onely but our bodies also 230. ¶ Two Bookes opened at the day of Iudgement 439. Christ borne when Herod was king Augustus taxed the world why 115 Christ borne in a base place to shew 10. the guilt of sinne 2. to procure us a better place 3. to make us content with any estate 116. ¶ Christ borne after the common and poorest manner 117 118. Christ was bonnd in regard of God To sanctifie the bonds of his servants To teach us the desert of sinne That we might bee loosed 187. Men for Paine and punishment Caution and securitie Shame and disgrace 186. Against the Papists giving the bread onely 334. * What meant by Christs breaking of bread with the Disciples that went to Emmaus 334. Christs breathing on the Disciples was a signe of giving the Holy Ghost 345. † Christ was buried To give us assurance of his death that hee might conquer death in his strongest hold to sanctifie and sweeten the grave for us that wee might have strength to bury him 273. Of the burning of the world 410. ¶ A Story of two Protestants in king Edward the sixths dayes touching burning for religion 277. † The burthen of sinne 158. * Every sinne addes to the burthen of Christ 159. * The benefit of Christs buriall 281. Foure waies to bury sinne to kill it hate the loathsome face of it remove it out of our sight and to rake moulds on it 282. C CHrist comes when a man is at his calling 122. † Calvins speech Dominus cum venit inveniet me laborantem 122. ¶ Moderation in worldly cares seeing God is our Father 55. What the word Catholike meanes 574. ¶ The Church said to be Catholike in respect of Place Persons and Time 575. c. The Papists beleeving in the Catholike Church absurd in religion and reason 578. * Reasons proving the Papists no true Catholikes 578. A twofold chaine on every naturall man of corruption sinne of condemnation and guilt of sinne 188. The wicked compared to chaffe 434. A great change and alteration after conversion 499. We must commit the seede of our charity into the bosome of the poore and hands of God 594. ¶ All chastisements came from God our loving Father and shall turne to our good 56 57. Gods Children why withheld from worldly blessings 580. Gods Children never totally finally forsaken of him proued by foure grounds 172. What Christ shall doe after the last Iudgement 475. see Iudgement The word Christ what it signifies 77. see Anointed Christ and Messiah all one 77. ¶ Christ the Sonne of God 90. Christ proved to be God from the Names Attributes Workes and Worship of God ascribed to him 91. Why Christ must bee both God and Mun. 92. ¶ Christ borne when Augustus Caesar taxed the world to fulfill a Prophesie to be under the taxe of Gods wrath for our sakes 116. * Christ the Head of the Church three proofes 542. The love and willingnesse of Christ to die for us 208. † Every little meanes is to bee laid hold of to bring us to Christ 131. ¶ Three things required in him that would be found in Christ 693. The infinite comfort after finding Christ 312. No condition can
hinder a man from Christ 121. * How a strong Christian weakned by sinne may know whether the holy Ghost bee in him or no. 505. Christians of all men most happy because Christ is their Lord. 99. ¶ Good is to be done to Christians as they are Christians 461. † What the Church of God is 525. The Church Triumphant Militant 520. 530. No member of the Triumphant that is not of the Militant Church 530. The great blessing it is to be a member of the Church 566. ¶ Wee must beleeve a not in the Church 523. ¶ The Church a mixed company of good and bad 537. How the Church is one 534. The diverse estates of the Church here in this world 534. The Church sometimes hidden 535. ¶ The Church power at one time than another 537. Of cleaving to the Church 537. ¶ The blessings that proceed from the peace of the Church 536. ¶ The dignities of the Church 539. The Church as the Citie of God excels all other cities in foure respects 539. The Church the Body of Christ 542. * Christ Loveth Indoweth Adorneth Acquitteth Bringeth home Glorifieth the Church his Spouse 544. Vniversality a property of the Church 574. The Church the pillar and ground of truth 549. The Church preserves the Letters Canon Authority of the Scripture 550. Holinesse a property of the Church 569. Iudgement of the world mixture of good and bad remainder of sinne seeme to take away the holinesse of the Church 569. The Church said to bee Holy by 1. Faith and good conversation 2. Imp●tation of Christs righteousnesse 3. Inherent holinesse in the true members 4. Having the means of holinesse 570. Reasons why there is no salvation without the Church 565. ¶ The Church Bet●lehem thither we must goe to finde Christ 126. * All things tend to the good of the Church as crosse wheeles in a clocke 88. ¶ The come unto me in glory depends on the come unto me in grace 446. ¶ Christ comes to a man when things bee at the worst 115. ¶ The comfort of the Holy Ghost excels all other comforts 511. To appropriate Christs merit a great comfort 124. † Two times to commend our soules to God In danger every day 258. 3. grounds of cōmending our selves to God because hee is the Father of Spirits our Father in Christ hath afforded us former favours 258. Why Christ gives signes of his comming 402. God communicates his wisdome c. to us we our griefes to him 583. Christ communicates to us Himselfe right of his death merit Power of Spirituall life Dignity of his owne estate 584 We communicate to Christ our Nature Sinnes Troubles and dangers 383. Christ communicates his graces to his Church 341. Of the communion of the Saints 579. By the communion of Saints a Christian hath a thousand helps 597. ¶ The communion of Saints consists in communion with God with Christ one with another 582 Foure lets of the communion of saints 605. The communion one with another consists in the commmuion of the 1. Living with the living 587 c. 2. Living and the Dead in wishing well to conversing with one another 598 3. Dead with the dead in 1. Lying together in the Grave 2. Being members of Christ 3. Being gathered to the Saints departed 599. The communion of the living with the living stands in community of Affection 587. Graces 588. Spirituall sacrifices ibid. Temporall blessings 590. Bearing one with another 594. The communitie of goods is limited in the Excesse Defect 592. Communions of the wicked 579. Christs company a great comfort 243. † Christs complaint on the crosse 168. Christ conceived of the flesh of the Virgin 105. † by the power of the holy Ghost how 106. Christ conceived by the Holy Ghost that he might be pure and without sin 107. † The stirre that was at Christs conception 108. * Of the condemnation of Christ 197. Conscience compared to a Booke wherein all things are written 207. ¶ To sin against conscience a fearefull thing 205. † 207. † The property of a good conscience to be moved at Gods judgements 206. ¶ Bad consciences troubled at Christs comming 132. ¶ Wicked mens consciences may be sealed for a time but one day they shall be opened 184. ¶ No flying from an evill conscience 205. ¶ An evill conscience the worst accuser 207. ¶ A Christian though contemn'd in his life is honoured in his grave 278. ¶ Constancie in a good course requisite thogh without successe 199. * Of the conviction at the last day 437. Conversion makes men labour to draw others to the same estate 238. * Confession of sinne Cleering the Iustice of God Zeale for the honour of God a signe of conversion 238. No man knowes the instant of his conversion 305. No cost to be spared for Christ 280. ¶ Covetousnesse moved Iudas to betray Christ 181. † The workes of the Creation not to be lookt on but with due consideration 65. ¶ The Author Substance Manner Subject Estate Time Order End of the Creation c. 64. The motion multitude of the Creatures prove a Deitie 43. ¶ The Creature not God cause of sinne and defect 67. † We ought not to abuse the Creatures seeing God made them 65. Wee ought to pray for restauration to the creatures 68. * Christ died the death of the Crosse because it was most Accursed Shamefull Painefull Apparent 211. Christs behaviour on the Crosse 224. The seven last words of Christ on the Crosse 224. c. The scandall of the Crosse weakens faith 321. Christs Disciples must bee carriers of the Crosse 214. ¶ No man must make a Crosse to himselfe but bee contented if God lay it on him 214. ¶ All Crosses must be borne ibid. The place where Christ was crucified 215. Why Christ was crucified aloft 213. * How Christ was led to be crucified 213. What torments are expressed in the word crucified 219. ¶ Vses from Christs crucifying 220. c. Five falsehoods in Popish crucifixes 223. Christs Cup what it is 160. * Sinne brings Gods curse upon 〈◊〉 467. * D ALL needlesse dangers are carefully to be shunned 338. † Whether the darkenesse of the Sunne at Christs passion was all the world over 165. † The horrid darknesse of wicked men at the last day 165. ¶ The holy Ghost illuminates as a window in a darke house 509. Dead bodies members of Christ having communion with him 600. Incertainty of death should stirre us up to conscionable walking 237. † At the day of death most care is to bee had of our soules 238. ¶ 257. ¶ 258. * Death but a departing 143. * The good change a Christian makes by death 242. ¶ The greatest extremitie befals Christians at the time of their deaths 169. ¶ We ought to prepare for death 179. † Christs Death 261. Voluntarie 265. The manifestation thereof 266. The Power thereof 269. ¶ The fruits of Christs Death are to us freedome from the Eternall Death Seing of Death Curse of Death Power of
the Name Iesus is implied Christ to be our Savior No other Iesus but he He is our Iesus and will save us 72. Sinnes of ignorance lesse than sinnes of knowledge 228. * Commission of sinne after illumination dangerous 193. ¶ Impenitence worse than wormewood or ●all to Christ 250. * Importunitie prevailes with wicked men to any thing that is bad 210. * Impossibilities in nature are possibilities in the power of God 109. ¶ Our Heavenly Inheritance comes from God our Father 57. Our title to Heaven is by inheritance 452. Foure testimonies of Christs Innocencie 195. We ought to beware of wronging the Innocent 206. ¶ Iosephs grave in his garden why 279. How Christ makes intercession for us 457. It is finished Christs song of gratulation 250. ¶ Of Iudas's betraying Christ 181. Christ onely the Iudge at last day 394. ¶ Comforts from Christ being our Iudge 394. ¶ Two things required in a Iudge sufficient Knowledge to know all things Power to punish all offendors 391. Of Christs comming to Iudgement 385. The glory of Christs comming to Iudgement consists in His traine Brightnesse of his Body Eminencie of his soveraigne Power 422 There shall be a Iudgement day 386. The day of Iudgement not far off 400. ¶ The Earth the generall place where the last Iudgement shall be 395. * The Time Certaintie Signes of the last Iudgement 399. c. Two signes yet to come of the last Iudgement 403. Reasons of the delay of the day of Iudgement are Gods 1. Patience in waiting for mans redemption 2. Goodnesse to his creatures 3. Care of the Elect. 404. The persons that shall be Iudged 405. The manner of the last Iudgement 409. The sentence of the last Iudgement 443. The last Iudgement shall bee according to good workes 458. ¶ Difference in Iudgement may happen to the Saints but not in affection as in Physitians about a sicke Patient 585. ¶ Gods Children must bee affected with his Iudgements 168. ¶ All that desire to see Christ and to depart in peace must be Iust men 139. † Iustice and Religion must goe together 139. ¶ K NO doores or iron gates can keepe out Christ 339. * Christ hath two keyes 1. To lock the wicked into hel 2. To open heavē to the godly 423 Christ a King to Gather Governe Doe good to Defend his Church and People 86. c. The Kingdome of Heaven prepared onely for the Elect. 451. Three properties of the Kingdome of Heaven 448. Gods attributes set aworke to furnish the Kingdome of Heaven 448. ¶ Foure excellencies of the Kingdome of Heaven 449. Gods goodnesse to his people to bring them out of the divels kingdome into Christs 87. † Christs Kingdome not of this world 115. † 198. † Some kisse religion at Church as Iudas did Christ and betray it at home 184. † That we shall know one another at the Resurrection 630. Two defects in knowledge or illumination 496. Christ must bee made knowne abroad no● conceald in private 127. † Wee must make conscience of knowne truthes 284. * L NO labour too great to come to Christ 129. ¶ If we continue in sinne unrepentant Christ hath lost his labour 151. ¶ A Christian a shining lampe 589. * The Canon Law makes it unlawfull to sell Spirituall things What belongs to another 182. ¶ God sometimes leaves us to see how we love him 332. A man loses the Spirit as leaves fall off a tree 521. † An evill member of the Church compared to a wodden legge 537. * Why Christs legges were broken 266. No lets should binder Christians from comming to Christ 126. † Christs Letter to his Father 74. How a man may be busied for provision for this life 648. † Mans life compared to Weavers warpe 45. ¶ Life twofold of Nature Grace 171. * The time of this life the time of mercie and grace 444. This life compared to a drawbridge ibid. Of life everlasting 648. God promiseth to his People life Naturall in this world Spirituall in the world to come 649. ¶ Two degrees of spirituall life of Grace Glorie 650. † The continuance of life everlasting 669. Life everlasting no blessing but torment to the wicked 648. ¶ Christ by his life aswell as death wrought out our salvation 254. † As the Soule is the life of the body so God is the life of the soule 649. Sinners deserve not to have the light of the Sunne or Moone to shine on them 167. ¶ Christ Lord of the world in regard of Soveraigntie Service 95. Christ as Lord will dispose all to the good of his Church 96. † Christ our Lord by right of Creation Redemption Donation Voluntarie service 97. The abatements of the graces of the Spirit in a man whereby hee thinkes them lost 518. † Love beares with a number of faults as a mother with her childe 595. The marvellous love of Christ to die and suffer for us 151. * True love to Christ Endures no holding backe Followes Christ in bonds 190. True love to Christ stoopes to the meanest service for his members 276. † Christ loves his enemies much more his friends 226. ¶ Every man like the Iewes preferre their lusts before Christ 203. M IF Christ restored an Eare to Malchus his enemy much more will he be mercifull to his friends 638. ¶ God had rather abate of his Service tha● Man w●nt his comfort 459. Gods fitting a Man to his Kingdome compared to a Carpenters hewing of timber 500. ¶ The meanenesse of Mans beginning 67. God made Man last of all creatures to Honour him Teach him Further him in the best things 70. † Christ was made Man in regard of Necessitie Equitie Fitnesse 103. The Manhood of Christ darkned by the Godhead as a candle by the Sunne 477. * The manner of the manifestation of Christs birth 123. Three reasons why Christ was manifested first to the poorer sort 120. ¶ The Virgin Mary more blessed for bearing Christ in her heart than in her wombe 112. † Notes of Mary Magdalens love to Christ are her seeking him Continually when others gave over With teares for losse of him With diligence With complaint for not finding him With publishing her sorrow With proffer of any paines to enjoy him 306. c. Why Mary could not see Christ 310. Why Christ appeares first to Mary 313. ¶ Constant using the meanes a sure way to finde Christ 307. The meanes are to the Spirit as would to the nourishing of a tree 520. † The conscionable use of the meanes gives us comfortable hope of a blessing 538. * The office of a Mediator ceases when Christ renders up his Kingdome 476. † The Mediatorship compared to silke before sore eyes 476. ¶ All men are sinners 610. See Sinne and Sinners Mercie in the midst of wrath 58. Three reasons that no man can merit for another 596. Man can merit nothing 252. ¶ Watchfulnesse requisite to the members of the Church militant 531. ¶ GOD the Author of all Ministery 342. ¶ Christs
Fourthly the end of their iourney Three motione or reasons to seeke Christ 1 Simile 2 3 Simile Fifthly what mooved the Wisemen to seeke Christ 4 Simile Vse 1. 1 Quest sol SER. XII Two discouragements of the wisemen in seeking Christ 1 Observe Simile Simile 1 2 Simile 1 2 Object Sol. Rom. 6. 13. 3 Simile First Hee was man Secondly a Devout man Luk. 2. 25. Thirdly he waited for the Consolation of Israel 2 1 Thirdly the effects of Simeons manifestation of Christ 1 Simile 3 1 Simile 2 Simile 3 2 4 Simile SER. XIII Quest Sol. ARTI III. First the necessity of Christs Sufferings 1 Necessitas Precii Simile 2 Necessitas exempli Secondly who it was that suffered Vse 1. Simile Quest. Sol. Vse 2. Vse 3. Simile Thirdly for whom be suffered Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Simile Fourthly the ●nd why Christ suffered The generall end of his death 1 Object Sol. 2 Heb. 9. 12. 3 Simile The particular end of his death First to reconcile us Simile Plead against Satan Secondly to abolish sinne Simile Fifthly of whom Christ suffered Sixthly what Christ suffered 1 Affliction the curse of our sins wrought in Christ Two causes of Christs Feare 1 2 1 Causes of Feare Simile Simile 2 Cause of Christs Feare Simile Simile 2 Affliction of Christ. 1 Three causes of Christs Sorrow Vse 1. Simile 2 Simile Simile Simile 3 Affliction of Christ Vse 1. Simile SER. XIV Vse 2. Vse 3. Two reasons why sinne seemes so light 1 Simile 2 Simile 3 Simile First what Christ Praied for Simile Simile Secondly the limitation of his Prayer Thirdly the effects of Christs Afflictions First the procuring Cause Sin Secondly the carriage of Christ Simile Simile 2 King 8. 29. First He did sweat Secondly blood Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. 3 Thicke bloud Heb. 12. 1. Iob 15. 16. 4 It ran thorow his garments Simile Simile 5 It ran on the ground Simile Simile The second thing Christ suffered from God on the Crosse 1 Sam 28. 15. The first cause 1 The manner of it Vse Simile Simile The second cause of it Reason 1. Simile Reason 2. Simile Simile Simile 3 The end of the Darknesse Simile 2 The effect of Christs suffering on the Crosse 1 SER. XV. Simile Quest Sol. 2 3 Two times the devill tempts busily Simile 2 First what it is to be forsaken 1 Vse 2. Secondly how farre forth God forsaken 1 Simile The second desertion Simile How farre forth one may be forsaken in the life of grace Quest Sol. 1 Foure grounds proving that a Christian or a true beleever is neither totally nor finally forsaken of God 2 3 4 1 They fall in part Simile 2 He fals not finally Simile Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Simile 3 Why God forsakes his people 4 How we should carry our selves being forsaken First mournefully Secondly patiently Simile Thirdly h●lily Simile Secondly what Christ suffered of men Three reasons to enable us to suffer from men 1 2 3 Simile Simile First the place where 2 Simile Simile 3 Simile Secondly the time when Thirdly the preparation for it Fourthly the meanes and manner Simile Simile SER. XVI The second thing what did moove Judas to betray Christ First the merchant Simile 2 The Chapman 3 The Ware sold 1 2 3 4 5 4 The Price Distinction of Shekels 1 2 3 The Manner 4 The Issue and event 1 2 Simile Simile Simile First in his taking two things 1 The Iewes obduration Secondly a meditation of the last Iudgement 1 2 3 Simile Simile 2 The binding of Christ three reasons of it in regard of mans intention First for paine and punishment Secondly for the more security Thirdly to put the more disgrace upon Him Secondly Hee was bound in regard of God for three causes 1 2 3 First the chaine of condemnation Simile Simile Secondly the chaine of corruption Simile Simile Thirdly Christs leading away 1 The Person 1 A Young man Simile 2 2 The declaration of his Love 1 2 1 2 3 3 The souldiers rage Matth. 7. 4 His escape Simile 1 SERM. XVII Before whom he was Arraigned Secondly the causes why Christ was arraigned 1 2 3 Iob 9. 20. Thirdly the manner of his arraignment Foure testimonies of Christs innocencie First his concealement Secondly his defence 2 3 4 1 2 Simile Simile First how often Pilate sought to deliver Christ. The first time 1 2 Simile 1 King 10. 8. The second time Proverbs The third time The fourth time 2 The meanes used to deliver Christ Quest 1. 2 Ans 1. Ans 2. 1 By speaking for Him Simile 2 By sending Him to Herod Simile Thirdly by ioyning Christ with Barabbas Simile Simile Fourthly by whipping of him Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Thirdly what made Pilate so stand for Christ. First his owne conscience Simile Simile Secondly the admonition of his wife First who sent the message Secondly when it was sent Thirdly the message Simile Fourthly the reason and cause SERM. XVIII Vse Simile 2 3 Simile 3 The strange silence of Christ Simile 4 Christs protestation 5 Christs Commination 4 What made Pilate to condemne Christ 1 The importunitie of the Iewes Simile Simile Simile 2 Feare to lose Caesars favour SERM. XIX The first thing Christ must die the death of the Crosse for foure reasons 1 Because it was onely accursed 2 Because it was a shameful● death 3 Because it was one of the painefullest d●aths Reasons 4. 1 2 3 4 Vses 2. 1 2 Why Christ dyed not an ordinary death 4 1 2 The second point how Christ was led to bee crucified 1 In his owne garments Vse 1. Simile 2 2 They laid his Crosse upon him 1 2 3 Simile Iob. 6. 14. The third thing where Christ was crucified 1 Without the Gate Three Reasons why Christ suffered without the Gate 1 Simile Simile Simile 3 Simile Simile 2 In Golgotha SERM. XX 2 Simile Fourthly the manner of Christs crucifiing Matth. 27. 34. Mark 15. 25. Quest. Why Christ refused the bitter cup. 1 Sol. Division of Passion twofold Simile 2 Simile Fifthly the crucifying of Christ 1 2 3 4 5 Vse 1. Simile Simile Simile Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Vse 5. Of the stripping of Christ Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Next crucified betwint two theeves 1 2 Five falsehoods of popish Crucifixes 1 2 3 4 5 Fiftly Christs Behaviour on the crosse Simile Simile The seven last words of Christ upon the crosse The first word of Christ on the crosse First for whom Christ prayed 1 Simile Simile Five Considerations to move us to love our enemies 2 Simile 3 Simile 4 Simile 5 Simile The second Lesson Quest. Sol. Simile Simile 2 What Christ prayes for 3 When hee prayed for them 1 Simile 2 1 Of Compassion 2 Of Extenuation SER. XXI 1 Occasion of the speech First a Morall Simile Secondly a Spirituall use Simile 2 The Speech it selfe 1 2 1 Object Sol. 2 3 Order of our Duty Simile 4 Simile Object Ans Simile Secondly the time when he spake Simile Heb. 11. 21.
Thirdly the effects of his speech 1 The third speech of Christ on the Crosse First the occasion of the speech First the party who was converted 1 Tim. 1. 15. Simile Secondly the time when he was converted 1 Simile 2 Simile 3 Danger of late Repentance 2 Thirdly the fruits and effects of the theefes conversion First the reproofe of his fellow theefe 1 Simile 2 Simile Simile 2 His confession of sinne and punishment due thereunto 1 2 3 His apologie and defence for Christ 4 The prayer which he made SERM. XXII Fourthly the theeves prayer 1 2 3 1 2 Simile 3 First what he prayed for Simile Simile Object Ans. 1 2 1 2 Thirdly what hee promised First Paradise First instruction Simile Simile 2 Instruction 2 His owne company 4 The time of fulfilling this Prophecie Object Sol. Quest Sol. Object Sol. Vse Matth. 27. 46. 1 2 SERM. XXIII Simile 1 The naturall cause of it Simile 2 By exiccation or drinesse 3 Extremi●●e of griefe The Morall causes of Christs thirst 1 That we might not thirst 2 To fulfill a scripture 3 That by his thirst we might learne to thirst Math. 5. 2 Christs carriage in his thirst Simile Simile Simile 4 The event of his thirst Simile Simile SERM. XXIIII First what is meant by finishing Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Quest Sol. 2 The time when he said it is finished 1 Simile 2 Simile Simile 3 By what actions all was finished Simile Vse Vse 2. SER. XXV Simile 1 To whom Hee commends his spirit Simile Simile Secondly what he commended 1 2 Thirdly the time when he commended his soule to God First danger Secondly dayly Simile Simile 〈…〉 Three Grounds whereon to commit our soules to God 1 2 3 5 What comfort we may have by Christs commending his soule to God 1 Simile 2 Simile SERM. XXVI 1 Why it was needful that Christ should die Simile Simile 2 Simile Simile 3 Simile Secondly the time when 〈◊〉 dye● Simile Simile Simile Thirdly the manner of His death 1 Foure reasons why Christ died a painefull death 1 2 3 4 Simile 2 He died willingly 1 2 Quest Sol. 4 The manifestation of Christs death 1 2 Quest. Sol. Of the Paschall Lambe 1 2 3 4 5 SERM. XXVII 1 2 1 2 Zech. 13. 1. 1 For the guilt of sinne 2 The filth of sin Simile Simile 5 The power of Christs death 1 The Temple veilerenting Reason 1. Of the veile of the Temple reuting Simile Reason 2. Three times of Ceremonies 1 2 3 Reason 3. Reason 4. 2 The rending of the stones 3 The graves opened Simile 6 The effects of Christs death 1 2 3 4 5 Iosua 10. 24. SERM. XXVIII First the reasons why Christ was buried are foure Reason 1. Simile Reason 2. Simile Simile Reason 3. Simile Simile Reason 4. Simile Simile Simile Simile Secondly the Parties who buried Christ 1 Simile 2 Thirdly the place of his buriall First another mans grave Reason 1. Reason 2. Simile Secondly Iosephs grave 3 A new Grave Two causes why Christ was buried in a new Grave 4 It was in a garden Simile Simile 4 The manner of Christ buriall 1 2 3 4 5 Obser 1. Their readinesse to bury Christ 2 Observatio● 3 The fruite and benefit of his buriall 1 4 Waies to burie sinne Simile 2 Simile ARTI IV. Simile 3 Simile Simile Simile SERMON XXIX 1 Simile 2 Simile Simile Foure opinions of Christs descension into hell 1 2 The second Opinion 3 The third Opinion Object Sol. 4 The fourth Opinion 1 2 Object sol Simile Two more probable Opinions 1 Reason 1. 2 3 Object Sol. 4 5 6 Object Sol. Two reasons to prove the point 1 2 Object Sol. Object Sol. Two parts of the earth The second probable opinion Vse 1. Two Descents of a Christian 1 Simile 2 2 Sam. 6. 22. Simile SERMON XXX The first degree of his exaltation His Resurrection First three reasons why it was needfull that Christ should rise Simile Simile Reason 2. 1 2 2 The time when hee rose againe Reason 1. Why Christ rose no sooner Reason 2. Three Reasons why Christ rose no later 2 3 4 3 The manner how Christ rose 1 Obser 1. Simile Simile 2 Simile Simile 3 2 Christ when he rose left behinde him all Deaths ornaments Reason 1. 2 3 The Company he rose with SERM. XXXI Simile Simile 1 Who they were who did rise Difference of raising up godly and wicked Simile Secondly what number rose with Christ 2 Quest Ans. 1 Simile 3 When they did rise Simile Simile 4 What they did being risen 5 What became of those who rose 1 Simile Comfort for not knowing the moment of calling Simile Quest Ans. ART V. First why Christ appeared to Mary Magdalen Observation Six notes of Maries love 1 3 1 2 Simile SERM. XXXII 3 4 Simile Note 5 6 Simile Simile 2 The manner how Christ appeared to her Note Two causes why Christ put off Mary so long 1 2 Simile Simile 1 Consideration 2 Consideration Simile 3 The end why Christ did manifest himselfe to Marie 1 2 The second end of his appearance to Mary Quest Ans 1. Ans 2. Simile Simile Ans 3. 2 Whom she must tell Simile 3 What her message was A twofold Comfort first from his ascension 1 2 Secondly from his going to our Father 1 Circumstance SERMON XXXIII 2 Circumstance Simile Simile Simile Simile Simile ● Causes why men delight not to speake of the word 1 Simile 2 Simile 3 Secondly How Christ did manifest himselfe to them 1 2 Simile Quest Sol. Simile Two reasons why Christ could not be s●ene 1 2 Thirdly Christ joyned with them Simile Simile First Faith Three things a Christian is commended for 1 2 3 Secondly their weakenesse of faith Simile Simile Three hinderances of the Disciples faith 1 2 3 Simile Simile Simile SERMON XXXIIII Simile Simile Two reasons why we are so slow to beleeve the Scriptures● 1 Simile 2 Simile Vse 1. Simile 2 Simile Two wayes how Christ strengthens his Disciples faith First the necessity of Christs sufferings 1 Necessitie Simile 2 Necesstie Simile Quest Sol. Simile Three reasons why of necessity wee must suffer 1 2 Simile 3 Secondly Christ informes them of the utility of his Suffering Simile Fourthly confirmation to information Three trials to know when Christ will be gone from us 1 Simile 2 3 Simile Simile Simile Simile Gene●● 〈◊〉 26. Simile Simile Two things wherein every Christian should pray God to bee with him 1 Simile Simile 2 Quest Sol. 1 2 The first popish argument Sol. The second popish argument Sol. 2 Vses 1 Vse 2. Simile 1 2 SERM XXXV First their disposition Simile Simile Simile Simile Two Reasons of their meeting 1 Simile 2 2 Hee appeared when the doors were shut Simile 2 2 The manner how Christ did appeare Object Sol. Quest Sol. Vse Where wee are to seeke for peace 3 He shewed them his hands and feete Simile 2 Vse The third point the effects of Christs apparitiom Christs care to
life 4 The dignitie of his owne estate 2 Wee communicate to Christ three things 1 Our Nature Simile 2 Our sinnes 3 Our troubles and dangers Simile The Saints communion one with another Simile Simile The communion of Saints with the living stands in five things 1 Communion of affection Simile Simile 2 Communitie of Graces Simile Simile Simile 3 In spirituall Sacrifices Simile 1 Exhortation Simile 2 Admonition Simile Simile 3 Consolation Simile 4 Mutuall Prayer Fourthly the Saints Communication in Riches Simile SERM. LXIX Simile 1 That there ought to bee a Communion in goods Simile 2 The bounds and Limits of this Communion of goods 1 The Excesse of giving Simile Object Ans Simile Another kinde of Excesse 2 The Defects of giving 1 Defect 2 Defect 3 Defect Simile Simile Quest Ans Simile 5 Bearing with one another How the flesh may overcome the Spirit Simile Simile In three things Christians must beare with one another 1 They hide infirmities Simile 2 When they cannot cover they excuse them 3 They can endure the partie when the fault is open and unexcusable Vse 1. Simile Object Ans Three Reasons that no man can merit for another Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Vse 1. Simile 2 The Communion of the living with the dead Simile 2 Wee have the same faith and hope and love 3 The Communion of the Dead with the Dead in two things 1 Of in regard their bodies 2 Simile Object Ans 1. Simile Ans 2. 2 They have communion in regard of their soules SERM. LXX Simile ART X. Simile Simile 1 That the soule dieth not 1 Proofe by the Scripture 2 By Reason Reason 2. Reason 3. 1 2 Vse Simile Simile 2 That the soule sleepe not in the body Reasons against it Cause of sleepe 2 Object Ans 3 That the soules doe not goe to a middle place Foure lets of the communion of Saints 1 Let the mixture of evill men In wronging the Saints 1 Simile 2 They vexe them with their fine Simile 2 The imperfections of good men Simile 3 The distance of Place Simile Simile Simile 4 Narrownesse of their Love 1 Pardon of sins one the greatest blessing of this life Simile SERM. LXXI Vse Simile Simile 2 Pardon of sinne is onely for this life Simile 1 That all men bee sinners Simile Vse 1. Simile 2 No way to have release but by forgivenesse of sinnes Simile Object Ans Reasons against Mans satisfaction Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Quest Ans Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile 3 That forgivenesse of sinnes is to bee had if sought for Vse 1. Simile Simile Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. 4 That there is forgivenesse of sinnes without limitation Vse 5 That none but God can forgive sinnes Reason 1. That none but God can forgive sinnes Simile Reason 2. Reason 3. Object Ans Object Ans Ans 2. Vse 1. Simile Simile Vse 2. Simile Simile Simile 6 Gods pardon is conditionally if men repent Of particular forgivenesse of sinnes Quest Ans Generall Simile In Particular Foure wayes to know our sinnes are pardoned First if humbled for them Simile 2 If prayed heartily for forgivenesse 3 Whether wee have got strength against them Simile Simile Quest Ans 4 If wee have attained a peaceable Spirit Simile SERM. LXXII Quest Ans Three comfortts of forgivenesse of sinnes 1 Knowledge of Salvation 2 Then all that God sends us comes of Love Simile Simile ART XI 3 That with the pardon of sinne the punishment of them is removed 2 Benefit of the Life to come The Resurrection of the Body The Order that God takes in giving us blessings Simile 1 Wee beleeve to rise againe 1 Proofe by the Scriptures Reasons proving the Resurrection 1 From the Power of God 2 It is cleare also from the Iustice of God 1 2 3 From the mercy of God 4 From the end of Christs comming 5 From the Resurrection of Christ Object Ans 1 Obiection of the Atheists Ans Simile Object 2. Ans Simile Simile Object 3. Ans Simile Object 4. Ans Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. SERMON LXXIII Simile Secondly we shall rise again● with the same bodies Object 1. Ans 1. Object 2. Ans 2. Object 1. Ans Simile 2 Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile Simile Vse 3. Quest. Of knowing one another at the Resurrection Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Reason 4. 3 The Time when we shall rise Foure Reasons why the Resurrection is delaid 1 Simile 2 Simile 3 4 Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Quest What may comfort in our lying in the grave Ans. 1 2 Sam. 21. 10. Simile 2 Simile 3 4 Simile Vse Fourthly by whose power we shall rise Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Vse 3. 5 In what estate our bodies shall rise in Simile Simile The glory of the body consists in sixe things at the Resurrection 1 Intirenesse of parts Reason 1. Reason 2. Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Simile Object Ans Ans 2. 2 The body shall bee beautiful and lovely Reason 1. Reason 1. Simile Simile 3 In brightnesse and splendor Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile 4 In that they shall bee immortall and immutable Simile Simile Simile They shall bee spirituall Bodies Our Bodies shall bee spirituall in two Respects 1 Because upheld by the Spirit 2 Because subject to the Spirit Simile Simile 6 It shall bee a powerfull Bodie in three things 1 To act without wearinesse 2 Because it shall bee able to move it selfe nimbly in the aire 3 In that they shall bee p●ircing Simile In what estate the wicked shall rise 1 In a disgracefull estate 2 They shall bee clogged with all miserie necessitie and want Luk. 15. 19. Simile SERM. LXXIV Simile Exod. 19. 24. Quest 1. whether monsters borne shall rise monsters Simile Ans That the deformities of the Saints shall onely bee repaired Quest 2. In what Sex all shall rise againe Ans Quest 3. Whether Children and old men shall rise so againe or not Ans 1. 2 3 4 Reas 1. against the former opinion 2 3 Object Ans Simile Iohn 10. 27. Simile Simile Object Ans Object Ans Simile Simile 1 God promiseth to his people Life twofold 1 Naturall Life 2 Our spirituall Life 1 Degree of Spirituall Life The Life of Grace Simile Simile 2 The Life of Glorie Simile Simile 2 Cor. 12. 5. Simile Secondly from all the labours of this life Simile Simile Thirdly from Originall sinne Simile Fourthly from all worldly power and authority Fifthly from all society with the wicked Simile 6 We shall be freed from all sicknesses and diseases Simile What things we shall inioy in life everlasting 1 Immediate societie with God Simile 2 The Eternall presence of Christ wee shall enjoy Simile 3 The societie of all Saints Angels and Archangels c. 4 Lordship over all the world Simile 5 A con●inuall Sabbath to the Lord. Simile The continuance of Life everlasting Simile Simile Simile 1. Pet. 1. 4.