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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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Pestilence after the manner of Egypt your young men have I slain with the 3. Amos 4. 10. sword and have token away your horses and I have made the stink of your camps to come up unto your n●strils yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord So that the Pestilence and the Sword accompany each other And wherefore are the Sword and Pestilence sent See Levit. 26. 25. I will bring a sword upon you that shall avenge the quarrel of my Covenant and when ye are gathered together in your cities I will send the Pestilence among you and ye shall be delivered into the hand of the enemy And the Sword is a punishment of their Pride Amos 6 7. Now therefore they shall go captive with the first that go captive and the banquet of them that stretched themselves shall be removed Likewise the Sword is sent for a punishment And for Phantastical Fashions Isa 3. 25. Thy men shall fall by the sword and thy mighty in the war A fifth Judgement is Famine and this is for contempt of the Word Behold the days come saith the Lord God that I will send a famine in 5. Amos 8. 11. the Land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of the hearing the word of the Lord. A sixth Judgement is the enseebling of their strength and weakning of their forces Behold I am pressed under you as a cart is pressed 6. Amos 2. 13 14. 15. that is full of sheaves therefore the flight shall perish from the swift and the strong shall not strengthen his force neither shall the mighty deliver himself neither shall he stand that handleth the b●w and he that is swift of foot shall not deliver himselfe neither shall hee that rideth the horse deliver himself When any abuse their strength and power God will enfeeble it This counsel is commended to our practice Jer. 9. 23. Let not the wise man glory in his wisdome neither let the mighty man glory in his might let not the rich man glory in his riches You have by what hath been sayd a tast of bitter fruites some sinnes and judgments set forth in their proper colours In Israels glass England may see her face The same evils of sinne are rise among us and in part the same evils of punishment have already befallen us and the rest hang over our heads and will fall heavie upon us unless mercy speedily interpose Now amidst varieties of wounds and sores and heavy judgments the Prophet prescribes a soveraigne remedie hee addresseth himselfe to divine exhortations and counsels One is Amos 4. 12. Therefore thus will I doe unto thee O Israel and because I will doe this unto thee prepare to meet thy God O Israel Another which begins Si vobis animus est ad Deum reverti jam abjicite omnes vestras superstitiones Calv. in Loc. Amos. 5. 4 is continued vers 5. 6 14. Thus saith the Lord seek yee mee and ye shall live But seek not Bethel nor enter into Gilgal and pass not to Beersheba for Gilgal shall surely goe into captivity and Bethel shall come to nought Seek yee the Lord and yee shall live c. Now if the question be askt wherein doth seeking of God consist A. In the former verses wee read of injustice vers 7. They turne judgment to wormewood and leave off righteousness and of bribery and cruelty v. 12. They afflict the just they take a bribe Insomuch that the prudent man is amazed and stands admiring in a stupendious reverential silence He dares not revile instruments and murmur at the Providence of God v. 3. Therefore the prudent shall keep silence in that time for it is an evill time Q. Now what 's to be done what particular remedy is to bee prescribed sutable to the disease A. My text makes discovery hereof and informes you what 's the most effectual remedy to heale a wounded Kingdome in the words of the Text. Hate the evil and love the good c. The wordes represent unto you an excellent Medicine and the singular virtue thereof The medicine is made up of three particular Ingredients Text divided 1. Hate the evill There 's the affection of hatred 2. Love the good There 's the affection of love 3. Establish judgment in the gate There 's the exercise of distributive Justice 2. For the virtue it 's soveraign effectual to appease the wrath of God to smooth his brow So it follows It may be the Lord God of hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph I shall briefly open the words and draw forth one doctrine which I shall lay down for the ground-worke of my ensuing meditations Here by evill wee are to understand the evill of sinne oppression violence Idolatry pride mentioned in this prophesie and in a large acceptation under this word all manner of sin is forbidden Sinne is the greatest evill and this ought to be the object of our indignation What God hates wee ought to hate Now as God hates sin so should wee with a perfect hatred abhor hate every evil way By good is meant the right way the way of holiness and virtue Mr Calvin takes notice of the order first to hate sinne then to love that which is good and he conceives the scope of the Prophet to bee this that the Israelites should become new men and by a Syne●doch● Repentance is described in the whole worke from these two parts in hating evill and loving that which is good And because there was abundance of corruption and injustice in their gates in an especiall manner hee inculcates the execution of justice And establish judgment in the gate you have turned judgment into gall and hemlock and by your neglect of justice have provoked God to high displeasure against you Now labour to pacifie him by the impartiall execution of Justice It was the custom of Judges to keep their courts of judicature near the gates of the City so v. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly Isai 29. 21 that make a man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate and turne aside the just for a thing of nought Hereupon followes a strong ground of Incouragement It may bee the Lord c hee could not determine absolutely hee knew not the decree whether an irreversible sentence had passed against them See a notwithstanding mentioned after a signal Reformation 2 King 23. 25 26. And like unto him was no King before him that turned unto the Lord with all his heart with all his soule and with all his might Notwithstanding the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath wherewith his anger was kindled against Judah because of all the provocations that Manasseh had provoked him withall But upon probable conjecturall hopes hee encourageth them God hath been very gracious to a penitent people formerly God was gracious to Manasseh
beget love to God Father and Christ If there be any spark of love it will inkindle into a flame of Serapicall affections David professeth Psal 18. 1. I will love thee O Lord my strength 4. This should beget love to the Brethren Joh. 13. 35. By 4. Gods love to us should cause us to love our brethren this shall all men know that yee are my disciples if yee love one another 1 Joh. 3. 14. We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren 1 Joh. 4. 21. And this commandment have we from him that he who loveth God loveth his brother also 5. We should place our love where God placeth his and our 5. love where God loveth hatred where he placeth his hatred God loveth holinesse holy people holy Ordinances so should we God hateth every sinne so should we Psalm 97. 10. Yee that love the Lord hate evill 6. We should be often inquiring whether we be of the number 6. Enquire whether thou hast interest in Christs speciall love Vse 4. For Consolation of those that have Interest in Christs speciall love for whom he died This we should frequently and seriously examine our hearts about as I gave some evidences before unto which I referre you The fourth and last Use is for comfort unto all those who have interest in this speciall love Their speciall Benefits are these 1. They are admitted to the Throne of Grace through Christ Benefit 1. They are admitted unto the throne of grace Eph. 2. 18. For through him we have both an accesse by one spirit unto the Father They are his favorites friends Jewells a Crown and Diadem of Glory and therefore they are exhorted to draw neare with full assurance of faith Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace that we may obtaine mercy and find grace to help in time of need It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with freedome boldnesse or confidence 2. All things work together for their good Rom. 8. 28. And Benefit 2. All things worke together for their good we know that all things worke together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to his purpose They love God God loveth them and nothing shall be able to hinder God's love Their crosses hardships reproaches all shall conduce unto their good 3. They shall feele the benefit of this love unto all Eternity Heb. Benefit 3. They shall feele Christs love unto all Eternity 7. 25. Christ ever liveth to make Intercession for them Though Satan roare and men condemne yet the love of Christ will comfort thee against all Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is God that Justifieth Thy sinnes and corruption administer continuall matter of Humiliation and these will cost thee deare whilest thou art in the valley of Bacha but the time will come when there will be no more sighing for sinne Sorrow and sighing will flye away For there shall be no sorrow in heaven 4. This may Arme us with courage against feare of death Ben 4. Gods love armes us wth courage against fear of death Christ hath died and tooke away the sting Christ hath perfumed the grave He hath conquered sinne Satan lead captivity captive Therefore in doubts feares troubles inward and outward have recourse to this love of God in Christ and this will be a Cordiall a Salve for every sore The consideration of Gods love unto thy Soule will make thee undergoe hardships cheerefully kisse the Rod that beates thee Gods love manifested in Christ will make thee willing to live and willing to dye so that God may be glorified in thee and by thee For thou that hast Interest in this distinguishing love of God reconciled in Christ know to thy comfort that whether thou livest or whether thou dyest Jesus Christ will be unto thee in life and in death advantage THE REALL PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIANITY DISTINGUISED FROM THE NOMINALL 2 Tim 2. vers 19. And let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from Iniquity THE Apostle in the precedent words gives advertisement Sermon 7. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. July 24. 1659. concerning some notorious Hereticks such whose words eat as a canker or Gangren Their names are upon record to their eternall infamy V. 17. Their words will eat as doth a canker of whom is Hymeneus and Philetus And their Heresy likewise hath a brand upon it V. 18. Who concerning the truth have erred saying that the resurrection is past already and overthrow the faith of some * Allegoricam nescio quam resurrectionem fingendo Calv. in loc Calvin understands that they feigned an Allegoricall resurrection Estius and Gorr●n concurre in the same judgment and † Non suo tempore defuisse qu●●esurrectionem ●ortuorum manifeste ann●●tiatam in imag●●ariam resurrectionem distorquerent Tertull. de Resurrectione carnis cap. 19. Tertullian is cited in his Book de resurrectione carnis cap. 19. In whose time there were not wanting some who did openly say that the Resurrection of the dead was imaginary The names of the men are Hymeneus and Philetus a Anuptiarum ●eo Hymeneus from the God of marriage b Nomen quasi Optatum Desideratum Hugo Grot. Philetus that is a name as it were desirable as some of the Learned observe Their doctrine and their mischievous consequences follow First For their doctrine an erroneous and hereticall tenet is there laid downe viz. That the resurrection is past already i. e. as Gorran and Estius produce the opinions of those times that the resurrection was compleated by Regeneration And * Completam ex mente istorum interpretantur resurrectionem in quotidiana animarum renovatione Aug Ep. 119 ad Januarium Augustine himselfe in Epist 119. unto Januarius fastens the same opinion upon them Or else they might incline to the opinion of Marcion that Notorious Heretick That there was no resurrection of the body but of the soule only 2. Secondly Let 's consider the great mischiefe of this opinion The Apostle t●ll● us that their words eate as doth a Gangren The Gangren some assimilate to a Canker or a wolfe which spreadeth further and further to the consumption of the whole body The Originall as Hesichius observes is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depascor † Gangraenam medici de carnosa parte inflammationis emortuâ intelligunt Scultet Scultetus saith that by Gangren Phisitians understand a fleshy and dead part of inflammation What further I shall say is this that as a Gangren frets the flesh runs thorough the blood and creepeth further and further till it infect the whole body so Heresies infect the whole man speedily mortally and uncurably Wherefore let not any make a slight matter of Error and Heresy and plead that every one should have liberty of judgment and that a Toleration of all sorts of opinions
Niniveh Paul Mary-magdalen others repenting Upon these experiences an afflicted remnant may conclude that God will be gracious unto them See Jo●l 2. 12. 13 14. Therefore now thus saith the Lord turne yee even to mee with all your heart and with fasting weeping and mourning And rent your heart and not your garments and turne unto the Lord your God for hee is gracious and m●rcifull slow to anger and of great kindness and r●p●nteth him of the evill Who knoweth if hee will returne and repent and leave a blessing behind him even a meat offering unto the Lord your God Wee read in Scripture of the afflictions of Joseph as a proverbial spech alluding to Joseph the Patriarch who met with evill intreaties from his brethren and from Potiphars wise hee was cast into a pit bought and sold slandred cast into prison and the house of Joseph his posterity and not only his proper natural posterity but all the children of God must through many tribulations enter into the Kingd●me of God Act. 14. 22. That the whole house of Joseph that all the generation of men is not utterly consumed is a great mercy wee have cause to acknowledge it with thankfulness that there is a remnant yet left Now a through reformation a turning from sinne to God a hating that which is evill a loving that which is good an establishment of Justice may much prevaile with God to bee gracious to an afflicted remnant Though the number of the Church be few though Jacob bee small and Joseph bee but a remnant yet many promises are made to a remnant Isai 10. 21. The remnant shall returne even the remnant of Jacob unto the mighty God Jeremiah 15. 11. The Lord said verily it shall bee well with thy remnant verily I will cause the enemie to intreat thee well in the time of evill and in the time of affliction Ezek 6. 8 Yet will I leave a remnant that yee may have some that shall escape the sword among the Nations when yee shall bee scattered through the countries Eph 3. 12 13. I will also leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poore people and they shall trust in the name of the Lord. The remnant of Israel shall not doe iniquitie nor speak lies n●ither shall a deceitfull tongue bee found in th●ir mouth for they shall feed and lay downe and none shall make th●m afraid Rom. 9. 27. Though the number of the children of Israel bee as the sand of the sea a remnant shall be saved And for the remnant we must pray Isay 37. 4. It may be the Lord thy God will heare the words of Rabshakeh whom the King of Assyriah his master hath sent to reproach the living God and will r●prove the words which the Lord thy God hath heard wherefore lift up thy prayer for the remnant that is left Jer. 31. 7. For thus saith the Lord sing with gladnesse for Jacob and shout among the chiefe of the Nations publish yee praise ye and say O Lord save thy people the remnant of Israel So then you may plainly discerne the summe and substance of these words That which they drive at is to ingage people to a through reformation as the only means to pacifie an incensed God Iudgments fall round about us thick and threefold many have been numbred out to the sword many to famine and pestilence Let the remnant lay these things to heart Let them humble themselves turne from the evill of their doings cease to doe evill learne to doe well execute judgment and Justice and it may be God may turne againe and repent and be gracious to the remnant of the house of Joseph The words thus divided and opened commend these principall Doctrine 1 Doctrines to your serious Practicall Observation That sinne alone ought to be the Object of our hatred and indignation So saith the Psalmist Ye that love the Lord hate evill Psal 97. 10. And the feare of God consists in hating of evill The feare of the Lord is to hate evill Prov. 8. 13. pride and arrogancie and the evill way and the froward mouth do I hate You have a short Catalogue of what things God hates in Prov. 6. 16. These six things doth the Lord hate yea seven things are an abomination to him a proud looke a lying tongue and hands that shed innocent blood a heart that deviseth wicked imaginations feet that be swift in running to mischiefe a false witnesse that speaketh lies and him that soweth discord among brethren Nay further whatsoever is sinfull God hates and where God hates we should hate 2. That which is good ought only to be the object of our love It 's a Doctrine 2 character of the wicked Amos 3. 2. to hate the good and love the evill Holinesse hath Gods Image stamped upon it and we must love God's Image where ever we find it God requires publick establishment of Justice in a Kingdome It 's said in the gates where people went in and out There ministers of Iustice Doctrine 3 sate and the eyes of the whole land were upon them and in an especiall manner the eyes of God Iustice must not be dispensed in a scantling measure here and there a drop but judgm●nt must run down as waters and righteousnesse as a mighty streame Amos 5. 24. 4. In that there is such a connexion between these words hate Doct. 4 Deut. 5. 17 18 19. the evill and doe good and establish judgment hence observe In religious duties there is a sacred concatenation and harmonie It 's observed that all the commands of the Decalogue are copulative Thou shalt not kill neither shalt thou commit adulterie neither shalt thou steal● neither shalt thou beare false witnesse c. The same God that ingageth us to the obedience of one Command doth not dispense with us or give any exception for any other 5. The people of God his Josephs may be reduced to a very small remnant So they were in the Babilonish captivitie but 7000 that had Doct. 5 not bowed their knees to Baal and whether all these were upright hearted is doubtfull The primitive Christians in times of persecution were but a handfull a despised remnant in the eyes of the world And in the Arke which was a type of Christ there were but eight persons and Cham was one of them In Christ's own familie but twelve and one of them a Judas 6. Observe That the reformation of a people in hating evill and Doct. 6 loving good may prevaile with God to extend mercy and compassion towards them It shall suffice only to have named these unto you It concernes mee to fix upon the establishment of judgment which the Text specially points at and the aspect of a Venerable Iudicature in presence puts me in mind of that point of Doctrine which is genuine from the text and most seasonable to the Auditorie Thus I propound it to you Doctrine That the faithfull execution of Justice in a land is a probable
borne neither having done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said unto her the elder shall serve the younger as it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated 4. This love is incomprehensible inexpressible Eph. 3. 18 19. 4. This love is incomprehensible That yee may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that yee might be filled with all the fulnesse of God 5. It is an eternall love Joh. 13. 1. Now before the feast of the 5. This love is eternall passeover when Jesus knew that his houre was come that he should depart out of this world unto the Father having loved his owne which were in the world he loved them unto the end Jer. 31. 3. The Lord hath appeared of old unto me saying Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee The second Use is for Examination whether we are of that Vse 4. For Examination number which hath interest in this love We are to distinguish of severall sorts of love There 's Amor benevolentiae Complacentiae For that there is Amor benevolentiae hence appeares munificentia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God doth good to all makes the Sun to shine on the just and unjust That which we are to inquire of is that which is called Amor complacentiae appropriated only unto Gods children What evidences may be given that we have interest in this distinguishing love The 1. Signe is Sanctification it 's God's order and we may Signe 1. Sanctification not break it Rev. 1. 5. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his blood If thou canst prove that thy nature is changed by the sanctifying vertue of God's spirit thou maiest conclude that thou art one that hath interest in the speciall love of God 2. Those that have interest in this speciall love of God feele a Signe 2. Constraining love of Christ constraining power in this love to ingage them to obedience to Gods commands 2 Cor. 5. 14. For the love of Christ constraines us because we thus judge that if one died for all then we are all dead 3. By the sincerity of our love to God we may conclude his Signe 3. Sincerity of love to God love towards us 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us Gods love to us is the ground of our Assurance our love to him is the ground of our Evidence Let Gods children as Bradford that pretious man of God used to advise lay this down for a foundation That God loves them and where this love is it will shed abroad love in their hearts even love to God love to the brethren love to the Ordinances love and longing for the appearance of Christ 4. Christ manifests his love to his people Joh. 14. 21. He that Signe 4. Christ manifests his Love to his people hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my selfe to him Though he may hide himselfe for a time yet he will embrace them with everlasting kindnesse Isai 54 8. In a little wrath I hid my face from them for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer 5. Those whom God loves with a speciall distinguishing love Signe 5. Christ is Lord and King have Christ their redeemer their Lord King and Ruler their Prophet to instruct them their Priest to make satisfaction and intercession for them This is the greatest evidence of Gods love in giving thee his son as in the place forecited Joh. 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Which is plainly applyed to believers and takes not in all universally but a peculiar select company even such only as believe And Rom. 8. 32. He that spareth not his own son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things 6. Those who have interest in this great speciall love have Signe 6. Gods spirit dwells in them Gods spirit and this dwells in them Rom. 8. 9. But yee are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be that the spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Christs spirit dwells as an Inhabitant and Ruler and this is a witnesse Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God And this sealeth and giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the spirit in our hearts and where this dwells it may be knowne by the fruits which it bringeth forth Gal. 5. 22 23. But the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance The third Use is for Exhortation and your duty I shall branch Vse 2. For Exhortat into these following particulars 1. Stand admiring contemplating this great love of God the 1. Admire Gods love Father to give thee Christ and that Christ should becomeman be made sin a curse whilst that greater and nobler richer learneder then thy selfe should be past by and God should give Christ for thee that he should love thee and wash thee and make thee a King and a Priest unto God thou can'st never admire enough this unparralleld love of God Eternity would even be too little to set forth this wonderfull love of God As there is a depth of wisdome so there is a depth of mercy in God which cannot be fathom'd 2. Let thy heart be filled with the praises of the Lord. Lift up 2. Be filled with the praises of God advance what in thee lyeth the honour of God the love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Christ God gives his Son Christ's merits are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a price meritorious and the Holy Spirit maketh application How then ought we for ever to abound in praises to the Lord The Samaritan returned back and gave God thanks for his cleansing So should we blesse God that he hath made a difference by his grace between us and the very vilest of men what ever Thus did Paul 1 Tim. 1. 12. And I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who hath enabled me for that he counted me faithfull putting me into the Ministery Now unto the King Eternall immortall invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen 3. Love should beget reciprocall love even Love unto God the 3. Love should
13. 18. Let there be no strife between my herdsmen and thy herdsmen for we be brethren So say I we that are sons of the same mother the Church servants of the same God heires of the same hope how should we consult the good one of another labouring to build up one another in the holy faith considering to provoke one another to love and to good workes We are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 members one of another Is there a controversy betweene thee and thy brother be not wanting in thy duty to pray for him this if any thing will be the reconciler Imitate thy Saviour on the crosse who prayed for his enemies None are so bad but they deserve thy prayers and commiseration Is thy brother ignorant doe not despise him Consider who made thee to differ from thy brother and a greater mercy requires a greater measure of thankfulnesse Copy out that excellent advice of the Apostle 1 Pet. 4. 8. And above all things have f●rvent oharity among your selves for charity shall cover the multitude of sinnes This is to learne Christ crucifi'd when we labour to puri●y our selves even as he is pure when we labour to be holy as he was in 1 Jon. 3. 3. all manner of conversation when we imitate him in putting on bowells of mercy and tender compassion My brethren God hath given you greater measure of knowledge and therefore he expects from you greater improvements It was a greivous complaint of Austine in his time Surgu●indocti rapiunt coelum nos cum doctrinis nostris detrudimur in gehennam God grant that our holy life August may be the confutation Let it never be told in Gath and publisht in the streets of Askelon I wish there were no cause that any son of Levi should prove a son of Belial and make the sacrifice of the Lord to be abhor'd God forbid that in so sacred an order as the Ministeriall Function is That there should be any profane Esaus any taunting Ishmaels and blasphemous swearers We cannot in any wise brooke Intruders into the Church wee abhorre and that deservedly their irregular motions who runne before they are sent wherefore wee should all unite our prayers and endeavours in our capacities and callings to God as one man to hinder such from ever setting footing in our Israel If any such be as I feare there are methinks the fearfull judgments of God executed upon Vzzah and Vzziah for their over-officious services and intermedling without a calling should make them feare and tremble 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so unpreparedly to adventure upon sacred mysteries In the interim let us walke inoffensively and more circumspectly in our life and conversation and give no just offence neither to Jew nor Gen●ile nor Church of G●d This counsell is not unseasonable for we know not what advantage a scandalous life gives unto a common Adversary If those that should be Seers yet will be blind if the Watchmen sleep and the Sh●pheards leave their flocks to hierlings then will some of Jeroboams Priests of the basest of the people presumptuously usurpe the Ministeriall function Take which you will a negligent Minister who performes not his duty or one that runs without a calling of his own mission and the flatteries of such like himselfe they are both abominable superfluous branches which God will pluck up and sweep away as dung out of the Church Would we then have our callings more honoured and our persons more reverenced and our Doctrine with more cheerfulnesse embraced le ts all endeavour to be more consciencious in the discharge of our duties let us not post off reformation from one to another accusing and excusing one another but let 's commune with our own hearts make diligent enquiry into our own bosomes every one saying with himselfe in Jer. 8. 6. particular what have I done The way to contract greater reverence abroad is to be more circumspect at home that as we goe beyond others in knowledg so likewise we should outstrip them in the practise of holinesse Christ in a more speciall manner hath communicated unto us the knowledg of his waies how should we strive with a pious contention which of us should bring most glory to God and advance the cause of Christ It shall be my close and prayer with Moses that God would put his Vrim and Thummim 1 Pet. 2. 9. upon his holy ones even write upon all our hearts Holynesse unto the Heb. 13. 20. 21. Lord that so we may be a Royall Generation a Holy Priesthood a peculiar people to set forth the praises of him who hath called us out of darknesse into this marvelous light I shall conclude with the Apostle Now the God of peace that brought againe from the dead our Lord Jesus that great shepheard of the sheep through the bloud of the everlasting covenant make you perfect in every good worke to doe his will working in you that which is well pleasing in his sight through Jesus Christ our Lord. Baruchs Hurt and Cure Set-forth from JEREM Chap 45. Vers 5. And seekest thou great things for thy selfe seek them not SERM. II. IF ever a word spoken in due season might be At St Maries Oxon. Octob. 18. 1642. compared to Apples of Gold in pictures of Silver such a one is here represented to your view being a word of comfort opportunely administred unto a man of a sorrowfull spirit And in the front of my Text is a connexive particle and drawes down the Context unto the Text. Take a review of the precedent History in this briefe relation The iniquities of Israel and Judah are full ripe and now it 's high time for the destroying Angell to thrust in his sickle and cut them downe But such are the tender bowels of our Father of mercies and God of all consolations that he gives warning before he smites It 's his accustomed method to leave no meanes unattempted for his peoples recovery and for the healing of their backslidings How often doth he draw them with the bands of a man even with cords of love What presuasive arguments what alluring Rhetorick doth he use enough to breake the Rock within thee even an heart harder then Adamant and to melt it into the love of God here behold bowels opened like the sounding of an Harpe and once more rol'd together The Lord denounceth most heavy Judgments and yet in the midst of Judgment entertaines some thoughts of free love and mercy The Lord reveales his secret intentions to his servants the Prophets He makes the prophet Jeremy of his privy counsell The Lord himselfe becomes the inditer of a dolefull writing fraught with lam●ntation mourning and woe Jeremy dictates from the mouth of God unto Baruch and Baruch wrote from the mouth of Jeremiah all the words of the Lord Jer. 36. 4. Forthwith they are communicated unto the King and Princes of Judah The King being no whit affected Jer. 36. 4. with these dismall
ever did nor shall ever goe away a looser by Gods service God keeps the wages 'till afterwards Here we may have an earnest part of payment but the great summe is reserved for another world And they that honour God in bringing converts to the Gospell and making Proselytes to Jesus Christ they are highly honoured of God Them that honour me saith God I will honour 1 Sam. 2. 30. And what honour God will one day put upon them you may read Dan. 12. 3. And they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse is the stars for ever and ever such honour hath all his Saints When Andrew shall come in with Achaia by him converted to the truth John with Asia Thomas with India Peter with the Jewes and Paul with the Gentiles and all the Ministers of the Gospell and others whom God hath made instrumentall in this great service when these shall be able to say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us then will the Lord say to them well done good and faithfull servants enter into your masters joy And thus I have dispatcht the first head propounded in the second 2. Head The Characters of him that win neth soules Charact. 1. He must abound in love place I am to give in the character of him who of all others is likeliest to win soules how such a one should be qualified I shall represent unto you in these ensuing Characters 1. He must abound in the grace of love his heart must be enflamed with seraphicall love unto Jesus Christ It 's a passage frequently used in Ignatius Epistles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my love is crucified It 's an excellent saying in Paul 2 Cor. 5. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of Christ constrains us A faithfull Minister acts altogether from a principle of love to Jesus Christ He prayeth preacheth giveth almes fasteth watcheth and hee 's indefatigable in his labours and what 's the reason or ground of all Because the love of Christ constrains him Then onely are we upon sure grounds when the love of Christ is that primum mobile that sets all the other orbes in their motion and where there 's a principle of love to Jesus Christ there will be shed abroad mutuall love towards our brethren such love was unparalleld in Moses who wish'd himselfe blotted out of the bo●ke of life Exod. 32. 3. And in Paul who wished himselfe an Anathema for the Jewes Rom. 9. 3. Here 's soule love indeed beyond compare O what an ardent affection and tender compassion ought Ministers to have to the soules of their people Love to their soules will make them runne through fire and water grapple with beasts of Ephesus sons of Anak even Herculean labours But where 's love to the fleece onely Mercenary hopes of promotions dignities carnal interest all such self-ends and sinister respects will be but as so many Ignes fatui to lead men away into dangerous and destructive ways It 's onely love to the soul that will set thee a working to good purpose And further he that is thus set on fire with love to Christ and to his Brethrens souls must be a man of such wisdom as to temper all his counsels in love In all his Meditations and Exhortations Love is one main Ingredient in the composition He abhors sin in any and reproves it but whilest he hates the sin he loves the person and whilest he endeavors to slay and utterly to destroy the sin he would gladly be instrumental to save the soul of the sinner This is the rule which the Apostle gives Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some render it speaking some following some doing the truth But if the English word may be admitted it 's rendred most suitable to the Original truthing of it in love 2. He must be a man of a willing minde God expects his offering Charact. 2. A man of a willing minde of the willing hearted Exod. 35. 5. And the people are commended for willingly offering themselves Judg. 5. 2. The question was asked 1 Chron. 29. 5. Who then is willing to consecrate his service to the Lord and it 's said v. 6. Then the chief of the Fathers and the Princes of the tribes of Israel c. offered willingly And Gods people are a willing people people of willingn●sse Psalm 110. 3. Every one set apart for the Ministry must have such a Spirit as Amasiah the Son of Zichri had who willingly offered himself unto the Lord And this was as eminent in Paul And I will very gladly spend 2 Chro. 17. 16. 2 Chro. 12. 15. and be spent for you Necessity and constraint may not put any upon a Ministerial Function Quasi ultimum refugium not an Advowson purchased by the Father and intended for the Son nor an Impropriator who intends his Son for his Substitute at a venture A strange Soloecism saith Mr. Bolt●n that holy man of God a Lay-Rector and not Preach nor a Collegiate Education by Statute enjoyning at such a standing to enter into Orders whereas alass many venter thus upon this calling who have neither heart nor hand to put forth to the work but onely that they might keep their places I say none of those can be a sufficient warrant in point of conscience to take upon them so high a Calling This Calling must be took upon choice and serious deliberation It must be willingly entred upon and willingly performed No thinking of putting thy hand to the Plough and looking back such are not fit for the service of the Lord This must be thy resolution come good report come evil report honor dis honor prosperity or adversity I will give my self up to God as Hannah gave Samuel for a loan all the days of my life 3. He must be a man of a meek spirit such a singular spirit was Charact. 3. A man of a meek spirit in Moses Numb 12. 3. And beyond all parallel in Christ He propounds himself the pattern of our imitation Matth. 11. 29. How must the servant of the Lord be qualified 2 Timothy 2. 24 25. And the servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all m●n apt to teach patient in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves And how must an erring brother be dealt withal you may observe the rule Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage in the cause of God Every Charact. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage thing is beautiful in its season There 's a season for meekness and a season for zeal Moses who was meek in his own cause yet was highly transported with zeal in the cause of God Some are Boanergesses Sons of Thunder and others are Barnabasses sons of consolation It 's observed that notwithstanding many failings there 's some good spoken of all the
he shall be recompensed accordingly there being such an exceeding rarity and scarcity of such precious Commodities So immaterial Pearls Gospel Ordinances purely dispensed are rare to be found Pure Officers and pure Administrators without humane mixture or composition are very rare Divide the World as some have done into thirty parts but 〈◊〉 are in Christendom and even in See a Map called Ch●istianographia Christendom are Papists Socinians Arians Pelagians Sons of Heresie who differ from the Orthodox even in Fundamentals And now adays though for what 's already done we have cause to bless God with meltings of heart yet through the manifold obstructions of a formal and superstitious People 't is very rare to finde a faithful soul-saving Ministry Omne tempus Clodios non cmne Catones foret He 's but a meer stranger in Isra●l who knows not that Priests of Baal and Bacchus such as made the Sacrifice of God to be abhorr'd have been like Sycamores in the valley for abundance And I wish there be not a remnant left of that wicked generation who within these Walls are enemies to Reformation who brayd of the murmuring Israelites saying Come let us make us a captain and go again unto Aegypt The Language of their heart is Let 's have our Altars our Images Copes Genuflexions Cringings the Liturgy with all its bundle of Ceremonies And no wonder Missa non morder These never touch the quick But all this while the faithful sedulous I aborers in Gods Vineyard are very few old Mnasons the good old Puritans are very few The harvest is great and the laborers few We must therefore pray that God would send forth faithful laborers into his harvest Thirdly As Pearls are rare and scarce so they are hard to be got 3. Pearls are hard to be got there 's much difficulty in getting of them even in those places where they are to be found For getting pretious Stones I told you before many venture far and scramble upon Rocks to get Pearls as some Travellers report the Merchant must wait the ebbing and the flowing of the Sea and tarry till such a certain season waiting many days and nights till that come then sound the depth of the Sea Some dive and hazard their lives for them So sor to get immaterial Pearls is a great difficulty All the graces of the Spirit are invaluable Pearls the richest Bracelet or Neck-lace of Pearls that ever I read of you have mentioned by the Apostle Adde to your faith vertue c. To get a common temporary faith a verbal 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7. love a groundless hope is easie and ordinary but to get a justifying faith an unfained love a stedfast faith here lieth the difficulty here 's the labor here 's the work indeed To get saving Graces thou must be in labors often in watchings often in fastings often and thou must pass through good report and evil report fiery Serpents and sons of Anak You read of a work of faith a labour of love a patience of hope Salvation is a Pearl of glory and we are commanded 1 Th●ss 1. 3. Phil. 2. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling 'T is the difficultest task in all the World to save our souls The way to Heaven is a straight way a narrow Gate there are many obstacles brakes and bryars in the way Beasts of Ephesus to be encountred withal This conflict cannot be managed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without raising a dust without shedding of Blood Thou must set thy self in battel aray against thy self the spirit against the flesh Cum hac controversia●nati sumus saith a Father Thou must wrestle Matth. 11. 12. against Principalities and Powers thou must run a race thou must even storm Heaven and take it by violence Peradventure thou mayst be stript of all and 't is no matter if in the interim thou beest cloath'd with the righteousness of Christ It may be God intends thee for a Martyr to seal the Truth with thy blood Happy wilt thou be notwithstanding all the hardships and difficulties thou hast grapled withal if thou comest to Heaven at the last one moment of Heavens joys one beam of Gods reconciled countenance will make amends for all The Apostle determines That the afflictions of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall b●revealed Rom. 8. 18. in us Fourthly Pearls are of invaluable price and estimation Cl●opatra's 4. Pearls are of unvaluable price Pearl was worth many thousands One Pearl no bigger then a mans thumb may be worth many thousands So the Pearls of the Gospel are of invaluable price This Cabinet contains the most pretious Gems in the whole Universe Every Gospel-promise is a pearl That excellent promise which hath five Negatives and five Negatives in Greek more vehemently deny 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 13. 5. is of it self more worth then an inheritance of ten thoufand pounds per annum Those promises John 3 36. and c. 10. 28. are the Jewels which Believers lay up as their chiefest Treasure Fisthly Pearls are full of vertue and medicinable There 's much 5. Pearls are full of vertue vertue in divers pretious Stones Jewels commonly worn have much vertue in them and Pearls questionless much more That which is called the Magistery of Pearls is of special use It 's commonly observed that the Ruby cures the dimness of the eyes and the Topaz keeps a mans hand from scalding The Carbuncle gives light in the dark and the Saphire cures the stingings of Scorpions So the word of God is that Ruby that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mentioned Rev. 3. 18. that enlightneth thy eyes that makes thy darkned an enlightned minde Christ is that Topaz that good Physitian that hea●s thy distempers both of body and soul Look upon Christ with the eye of Faith and thou shalt be cured of the stingings of Scorpions of Sin and Satan as they were who eyed the brazen Serpent and were cured of Numb 21. 9. the stingings of the fiery Serpents Sixthly Pearls are sterling Commodities in every place In many 6. Pearls are lterling comm●dity Nations our Coyn is not currant with them neither theirs with us But Pearls are currant every where Certainly therefore there 's much worth in Pearls for God-would not so befool the whole world neither would the Scripture shaddow forth the glory of Heaven by Pearls Rev. 21. 21. were there not an extraordinary worth in them So the Gospel of Jesus Christ is a sterling Commodity where ever it comes It hath the stamp of the King of Heaven upon it where the light of the Gospel breaks in it findes or makes a way for its entertainment It 's so lovely that it will ravish us with its love the Proclamation runs Ho every one that thirsteth come unto the waters The Gospel is right metal and passable wherever God will have it It
to Christ that onely constrains us to suffer for him Thirdly They cannot sympathize with the sufferings of Gods people they are so far from being afflicted with them that they rejoyce in their afflictions and adde affliction unto affliction They that are of this temper will never suffer for Iesus Christ The second use shall be for Tryal and Examination whether you Vse 2. For Tryal and examination have a suffering Faith yea or no Many springs move many to suffer as a natural Conscience and a natural Pride and stoutness of Spirit A man may give his Body to be burnt and yet want love to Iesus Christ Here 's the grand Question What 's that Faith which will be a true Q. What 's that faith which wil be a suffering faith A Faith is a Christians life effectual suffering Faith For Answ 1. That Faith which is thy life amidst all deaths thy supply amidst all wants thy supportation consolation amidst all troubles thy meat and drink houshold-stuff thy Riches and Revenues this will carry thee through sufferings that Faith which makes thee live upon Christ in all straights srovvns crosses losses and hardships this will make thee undergoe the worst of evils for him who is the chiefest good It 's not said that a man shall live by his Wits Lands or Labours but by his Faith Hab. 2. 4. The Just shall live by Faith 2. That Faith which is rooted and grounded upon the love of Christ will constrain thee to suffer for him Love made Jacob endure 2. Faith is grounded upon the love of Christ his hard service chearfully for his beloved Rachel Love made Moses wish himself to be blotted out of the Book of Life And Paul wisht himself Anathema for the Jews none so ready to die for Christ as the love-sick Spouse Many waters cannot quench her love Cant. 8. 7. It s love to Christ that will make thee willing to do and suffer any thing for him 3. If thy Faith can carry thee well through the temptations of 3. Faith carryeth through temptations of Prosperity and Adversity Foelix ille quem nec fortuita attollunt nec adversa deprimūt Senec. 4. Faith keeps up the heart in the use of means prosperity it is probable that it will carry thee through the tryal of Adversity If Faith will keep thee from swelling in prosperity it will keep thee from breaking in adversity 'T is a strong Stomack that will digest much Honey It 's a strong Faith that will not be allured by the sweetness pleasures and profits of the world He 's happy whom prosperity lifts not up nor adversity breaks 4. That Faith will make thee suffer that keeps thy heart up in the use of good means even then when all things goe against thee David then most repairs to the Sanctuary Psal 73 17. Vntil I went into the Sanctuary of God I knew it not but hereby I understood their end And see his behaviour at Ziglag 1 Sam 30. 6. And David was greatly distressed for the People spake of stoning of him because the soul of all the People was grieved every man for his sons and for his daughters but David encouraged himself in the Lord his God Rabshekah falls a railing and Hezekiah falls a Praying Observe well if Faith keep you in love to frequent Exercise of holy Duties though as yet you feel nothing coming in yet still continue in the practice of them and dare in no case sit loose from them but follow Christ from Ordinance to Ordinance and enquire every where after your Beloved this is that Faith questionless that will carry you through sufferings 5. That Faith which purifies thy Conscience reforms thy Life 5. Faith purifieth the heart and resigns thy Will wholly to the will of God this will make thee suffer for Christ Onely an holy unfained Faith will make thee to suffer Such a Faith the Apostle had which made him not be afraid of the King of Terrors Phil. 1. 21. For to me to live is Christ to die is gain That Faith will prove a sound suffering Faith that will engage thee to venture soul estate and body upon the free grace of God in Iesus Christ This will make thee to cast thy burthen upon the Lord and flie to him as a Sanctuary as a refuge from the Storm and as a shadow from the heat Examine whether thou canst produce these Symptomes of thy Faith The third Use shall be for Exhortation Be willing to undergoe Vse 3. For Exhortation any hardship loss or cross for Jesus Christ Consider what times you live in what contempt is powred out upon those great Ordinances of Divine Institution viz. Magistracy and Ministry Perhaps God intends thee for a Martyr A few preparations I conceive seasonable 1. Make account of suffering We may fear God is bringing confusion Prepar 1. Make account of sufferings and desolation upon the Kingdom If we consider the Ataxies and Anarchy's thereof we may take up that complaint Ezek. 19. 14. A fire is gone out of a rod of her branches which hath devoured her fruit so that she hath no strong rod to be a Scepter to rule this is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation I neither profess my self Statesman nor Politician neither do I intermeddle out of my own Sphear and Calling onely as a Minister of God I counsel you in the Language of the Holy Ghost Jer. 6. 8. Be thou instructed O Jerusalem l●st my soul depart from thee lest I make thee desolate a land not inhabited Prepare for troubles and afflictions for the end of one trouble may be the beginning of another as when a man hath escaped a Beare a Lyon meets him and after he hath escaped the Lyon and leans his hand upon the wall a Serpent out of the Wall comes and bites him know then that you are fore-appointed unto sufferings so saith the Apostle 1 Thess 3. 3. That no man may be moved by these afflictions for your selves know that we are apointed thereunto Praecogitati mali mollior ictus Xeno suffering Ship-wrack said Jam didici Philosophari By our sufferings let us learn to be better Christians The second preparative is to get a self-denying spirit 't is self Prepar 2. Get a self-denying spirit that makes us shye of the Crosse selfe must be first denyed Severall selfes must be denyed selfe-opinion selfe-counsels selfe-righteousness self-excellencies self-will self-comforts self●ends All these selves must be denyed for Jesus Christ let it suffice onely to mention these at present I proceed to another Preparative And that 3. Is to set upon the practice of Mortification The Apostle protesteth Prepar 3. Set upon the practice of Mortification that he dyeth daily 1 Cor. 15. 31. I protest by your rejoycing which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord I die daily Strive to get thy corruptions mortified thy ill humors purged thy affections crucified thy filthy garments took away
and so thou wilt be better prepared to suffer A great power must be given thee from above over thy corruptions before thou canst grapple with a suffering Violent Storms and Thunder clear the air so strong afflictions clear the heart by them we are as it were by them powred from vessel to vessel Read Jer. 48. 11. Moab hath been at ease from his youth and he hath setled on his lees and hath been emptied from vessel to vessel neither hath he gone into captivity therefore his taste remained in him and his sent is not changed Hereby the ill savour and distemper of our heart comes to be took away Every affliction doth as it were preach to us a Sermon of Mortification An unmortified man and an unsanctified heart will never suffer 4. The last preparative is still to bear in minde the sufferings of Prepar 4. Bear in minde the suffering of the Lord Jesus our Lord Jesus Consider his innocency meekness and humility often keep in minde the dying of Christ an exact pattern for our imitation Let not the Disciple expect to be above the Master The ornament of Christs Livery is persecution But I proceed to another Use which Is for direction I shall onely direct in two particular cases Vse 4. For direction Q. 1. When have we a call for suffering 1. When have we call to suffer 2. When we have a call how must we behave our selves in suffering For the first of these In this case I conceive we have a clear call 1. When we have no warrant for active obedience So the three A. 1. When we have no warrant for our active obedience Children made choice of a hot Furnace rather then they would worship Nebuchadnezzars Image Dan. 3. 21. Then these men were bound in their coats their hosen and their hats and their other garments and were cast into the midst of the fiery furnace So Daniel made choice of the Lyons Den rather then he would obey an ungodly command Dan. 6. 16. Then the King commanded and they brought Daniel and cast him into the den of ly●ns The rule is infallible Acts 5. 29. We must obey God rather then man The Martyrs chose rather to embrace the flames then to worship a breaden God of the Papists devising we must rather suffer the greatest punishments then wound our consciences with the least sin 2 When it comes to this Dilemma that either thou must suffer 2. When either we must suffer or Gods glory must suffer or else Gods glory must suffer then thou must determine to suffer any thing rather then Gods glory should suffer rather then Religion should lie at stake or the Gospel lie a bleeding We must have a tender care of Gods glory we must not be afraid to be good we must not be ashamed of Christ dispossess then this dumb devil that makes thee silent when Gods glory suffers If God have given thee suffering graces as faith love zeal and 3. When God hath given thee suffering Graces patience and a brave heroical spirit assure thy self they are not given in vain to be buryed in a napkin but for duty and employment If God have given thee a Martyrs courage thou must endure a Martyrs tryal When God calls thee he intends thee for a Souldier but it s to fight his battles The second Case is how we must suffer least we spoil a good duty in the miscarriage I will leave with you a few rules Q. 2. How must we suffer A. 1. We must suffer as Saints 1. In suffering be sure that you suffer as Saints and not as evil doers Matth. 5. 10 11 12. Blessed are they that are persecuted for righteousness sake for theirs is the kingdom of Heaven Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of evil against you falsly for my names sake Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in heaven for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you And saith the Apostle 1 Pet. 2. 19 20. For this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience toward God endure grief suffering wrongfully for what glory is it if when ye be buffeted for your faults ye shall take it patiently but if when ye do well and suffer for it ye take it patiently this is acceptable with God 2. Suffer prudently Matth. 10. 16. Behold I send you forth as 2. Suffer prudently sheep in the midst of wolves be ye therefore wise as serpents and harmless as doves Wisdom and innocency are joyn'd together Wisdom is a necessary ingredient in suffering When men rashly bring evils upon themselves they loose the glory of their sufferings And when men suffer and are boisterous clamoring and reviling and reproaching such and such instruments these do much discredit their suffering 3. Christians must suffer believingly Faith acts though the vision 3. Suffer believingly be dark Faith approximates a promise and amidst Euroclydons storms and tempests can say Nubecula est cito transitura 4. Suffer patiently By patience possess thy soul Heb. 10. 36. 4. Suffer patiently For ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise Moral men have had great patienco Do thou discover more patience that art a true Believer say with good old Ely It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good and with David Psalm 39. 9. I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didst it and with Hezekiah Isa 39. 8. Good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken he said moreover for there shall be peace and truth in my days 5. Suffer joyfully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 5. 3. and James 1. 2. My 5. Suffer joyfully Brethren count it all joy when you fall into divers temptations The Apostle mentions this to their joy Heb. 10. 34. For ye had compassion of me in my bonds and took joyfully the spoiling of your goods knowing in your selves that you have in heaven a better and an enduring substance So did the Apostles Acts 5. 41. and they departed from the presence of the councel rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his name 6. Suffer profitably labor to profit by the rod to get corruption 6. Suffer profitably purged out and grace wrought in Labor to suck sweetness as the Bee doth out of bitter hearbs and to eat honey out of the carcass af a Lyon A wise man will gain by every dispensation of providence The fifth and last Use in one word is for Consolation Many promises Vse 5. For Consolation are made to them and they shall get the performance of them Rom. 8. 17. And if children then heirs heirs of God and joynt heirs with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may be also glorified together Matth. 19. 29. And every one that hath forsaken houses or brethren or sisters or father
truly of calamities and of their causes shall in silence and with patience worship Gods Justice without any murmuring or scandal David falls not a railing at Shimei he was better instructed then to render railing for railing but he looks at a higher hand and submits So when Iliads of troubles surround thee and one cross follows upon the neck of another as one Wave of the Sea upon another Oh! do not break forth into cursing and reviling but look at the hand of God and say Lord I see thy hand I desire to know thy meaning to be instructed with Ephraim to smite upon my thigh and submit unto thy hand in every thing and I beseech thee what I understand not teach thou me and wherein I have done amiss I will do so no more Job 34. 32. 3. We must wait patiently 3. It 's the nature of Faith to wait patiently This is waiting indeed when with a quiet frame of spirit I expect the fulfilling of the Vision whether it speak good or whether it speak evil I am content my heart is of Davids temper My h●art is fixed O God my Psal 57. 7. heart is fixed I will sing and give praise The Husband-man waits for the Harvest so must we wait patiently for the Harvest of deliverance Delay is the sickness of the soul Patience is the cure of it Patience is the very soul and life of waiting Waiting without patience is inraged sury We must bear Gods anger patiently I will Micah 7. 9. bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him until he plead my cause and execute judgement for me He will bring me forth to the light and I shall behold his righteousness We must wait for that we see not If we saith the Apostle hope for that we see not then Rom. 8. 25. do we with patience wait for it Hence are we commanded In your patience Luke 21. 19. p●ssess ye your souls There 's a Philosopher that hath this expression if the Gods would grant me my desire and bid me ask what I would have I would ask of them this thing That I might have the spirit of Socrates such a composed spirit as he had It 's observed of him and of Cato likewise that they were in such a quiet composed sedate frame that they never changed their countenances upon any thing that befell them This should stir up Christians to beg of God the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit whereof the Apostle 1. Pet. 3. 4. speaks which is in the sight of God of great price Pray hard for the excellency of a quiet composed spirit Come what will if thou be armed with patience it will ward off the blow 4 It 's the duty and property of waiting Christians to exercise Faith 4. We must exercise faith upon the Divine Promises on the Divine Promises A Heathen out of a Cynical stupidity and by Moral Documents may have patience and pass by injuries but he knows not how to believe against sence he 's a stranger to Faith he discerns no excellency in a Promise he cannot live upon a word he knows not how to relie upon a Crucified Saviour and live by Faith on the Son of God But a true Christian waits believingly he lays hold upon Jesus Christ by Faith and lives upon the Divine Promises and applys them by Faith unto his particular condition Faith gives the soul a firm bottom to stand on a strong foundation to build on which is the Word of God Faith saith the Apostle is Heb. 11. 1. Psal 27. 13. the substance of things hoped for and the evid●nce of things not seen There are two great words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I had fainted saith David unless I had beli●ved to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of Rom. 8. 28. the living A Believer knows that all things shall work together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to his purpose Mal. 4. 2. Such Scriptures are his strong Rock But unto you that fear my nam● shall the Son of righteousness arise with healing in his wings and ye shall goe forth and grow up as calves of the s●all For a small moment Isa 54. 7. have I forsak●n thee but with great mercies will I gather thee A Believer Matth. 28. 20. stays himself upon a promise Loe I am with you alway even unto the end of the world He fears not the opposition of men and devils against the Ministry for he knows Christ will uphold them and vindicate their quarrel A Believer knows that the rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the back of the righteous therefore he waits till God take it off He knows that deliverance shall come to the Church that the Lord will build up Zion and appear in his glory that all the enemies shall come and worship before the Churches feet and the shaking of Nations is a harbinger to deliverance Peruse Hag. 2. 7. that great Promise I will shake all nations and the desire of all nations shall come and I will fill with glory this house saith the Lord of hosts A Believer knows that God can bring light out of darkness order out of a Chaos strike a straight line with a crooked stick make the wrath of man turn to his praise and restrain the remainder thereof By Faith Stephen saw Christ when the stones were about his ears And by Faith Job saw a Redeemer upon the Dung-hill And by Faith Moses saw him that vvas invisible amidst Reproaches and Sufferings Faith discerns a Sun-shine approaching amidst cloudyness and dismall darkness Whatever makes against a Believer in a carnal apprehension the spiritual eye of Faith seeth something to make for him So that a Believer hath double nay trebble even multiplyed hopes for single fears It 's the nature of waiting to have Hope for its companion Waiting ● We must wait and hope Lam. 3. 26. Heb. 6. 19. and Hope are conjoyned It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord. Hope is the Anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast and which entereth into that within the vail When thou art tossed in the troublesome waves of the World cast anchor and let hope support and stay thy spirit Were it not for hope the heart would break in those days of confusion and misery where there are so many sad thoughts and searchings of heart for the afflictions of Joseph and divisions of Reuben yet we are not without hope Let 's apply that of Ezrah amidst all their sorrows and perplexity Shecaniah the son of J●hiel one of the sons of Elam answered and said unto Ezra We have trespassed against our God Ezra 10. 2. and have taken strange wives of the people of the Land yet now there is h●pe in Israel concerning this thing They fall a making a Covenant and O that we would bewail the
Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life This fountaine was opened for Manasseh a bloody sinner 2 Chron. 33. 12 13. And when he was in affliction he befought the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his fathers And prayed unto him and he was intreated of him and heard his supplication and brought him againe unto Jerusalem into his Kingdome Then Manasseh knew that the Lord he was God This fountain was opened for Saul a cruel persecutor Act. 9. 3 4. And as he journyed he came neere Damascus and suddenly there shined round about him a light from Heaven And he fell to the earth and heard a voice saying unto him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me This fountaine was opened for the poore woman a grievous sinner Luk. 7. 47. Wherefore I say un to thee Her sins which are many are forgiven for shee loved much but to whom little is forgiven the same loveth little The woman with the bloody issue believed it and shee will make triall Mat. 9. 20 21. And behold a woman which was diseased with an issue of blood 12 yeares came behinde him and touched the hem of his garment For she said within her selfe if I may touch his garment I shall be whole The woman when she had spent all upon Physitians which were of no value was cured by Christ both in body and soul Luke 8. 48. And he said unto her Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole go in peace And what 's the reason why is there such a fountaine opened No other but free love and bowels opened Sinne endeavours to lock up this fountaine free grace love mercy opens this fountaine But how comes such vertue in this fountaine A. This is the fountaine and originall of all vertue Q. But who are to wash in this fountaine A. All are invited none excluded but such as exclude themselves such as are not sensible of their sins who apprehend not their pollutions will never take the paines to come hither and wash My text is free grace exalted bowels opened mercy heightned gospell enlarged Here 's the Gospel Exchequer full of riches and pretious thinges Here 's the brazen serpent erected the golden scepter held forth If we come not to this exchequer look not up to this serpent take not hold of this scepter the fault is our own O Israel thou hast destroyed thy selfe but in mee is thine help Hos 13. 9. Q. But who are washt and cleansed A. The house of David and Ierusalem the children of God that are sensible of their misery mourners for sin such as apprehend themselves stunge looke to the brazen serpent Such as are humbled for sin are in a capacity of receiving Christ such as are mourners in Zion shall have beauty for ashes the oyle of joy for mourning And those that have thus mourned as for an only son shall have the benefit of this fountaine The invitation is large Luke 14. 17. And he sent his servant at supper time to say unto them that were bidden Come for now all things are ready But read their shifting excuse in the verse following They all with one consent began to make excuse The first said I have bought a peice of ground and I must go and see it have me excused Jesus Christ is freely tendred and offered sermon after sermon and frequently in these gospell dispensations but how few embrace him Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him The fountaine is full enough large enough O come hither wash and be cleane But you cannot come unlesse you be drawne by the father neither will you come unless you be sensible of your owne vilenesse pollutions impurities and of the wondersull vertue Ca● 1. 4. John 6. 44. that is in this fountaine to wash and cleanse you Of this more anon You heare my text is pure gospell It holds forth the pearle of the Gospell Jesus Christ My message from God to you is to perswade you to imitate the wise Merchant To fell all for the purchase of the Pearle of great price It s a fountaine and there 's no fcarcity at Math. 13. 46. the fountaine It s a fountaine opened and there 's riches of mercy My invitation from God this day is to humble sinners such as are sensible of their lost condition to come and wash in this fountaine Be thou never so much polluted yet this fountaine can cleanse thee Let not thy sins hinder and discourage thy comming but come quicklier and hasten thy pace This Exchequer will pay all thy debts This Fountaine will make thee cleane I doe not I dare not open a gap to Licentiousnesse But I enlarge the riches of free grace and mercy Dost thou thirst Here 's an invitation Art thou a godly mourner this day Here 's a fountaine opened Be thy sinnes crimson sinnes double dyed O now come in to Jesus Christ Here 's a plaister every way as broad as the sore Be they as scarlet Christ's blood will make them as white as wooll This fountaine doth miracles which none other can doe For it washeth the Aethiopian cleanseth the Leopard Will you then perish for want of water and there 's a fountaine Will you lie and die in your sinnes notwithstanding salvation is tendred and thewater of life offered freely O! desperate sottish sinners though God would heale them yet they wil not be healed though God would enrich them yet they looke not after his riches nor value them at all Though he would cleanse them yet they will not come to the fountaine It 's said Gen. 21. 19. God opened Hagars eyes to see a well It is God alone that can open thine eyes to see this fountaine The fountaine may be hard by us Christ may be tendered and yet we may not see nor heare him Let God be true and every man a Liar More I shall speak in this Kind when I come to the Application Meth●d propounded For a more full and profitable handling of this precious Doctrine I shall propound this Method 1. I shall discover the Analogie and Resemblance between Christ and a Fountaine 2. How Christ may be said to be a Fountaine opened 3. For whom this fountaine is opened 4. The wonderfull benefits that flow from this fountaine to the Children of God Fiftly and Lastly I shall set all home unto your Consciences by particular application 1. What Analogy there is betweene Christ and a fountain● First What Analogie and resemblance there is between Christ and a fountaine The Analogie holds good in these ensuing particular respects 1. There 's fullnesse of water in a fountaine No want at the well spring the well
thou a purging rinsing and cleansing thy soule Art thou unwilling to allow thy selfe in any sin unconfest unrepented of If so it 's evident that thou takest care for thy soule 5. Dost thou make use of those meanes which God hath appointed for the good of thy soule God gives thee ordinances dost Qu. 5. thou feed on them he scatters many pretious promises dost thou gather them up and apply them for thy comfort God reveales many pretious graces as faith love c. dost thou attire and beautify thy soule with them God affordes meanes publikely privately hearing reading praying meditation conference dost thou make use of these meanes dost thou improve this prize put into thy hand for the good of thy soule if so thou takest care for thy soule 6ly And lastly Dost thou goe to the fountain of the bloud of Qu. 6. Christ Dost thou look to the brazen serpent to cure thy soule Dost thou see Christ with the eye of faith and lay hold on him with the hand of faith believe on him with the heart of faith If when thou hast done all thou canst thou lookest through all unto Christ and actest all thy duties not in thy own strength but in the strength of Christ questionlesse thou hast a speciall regard of thy soule Examine your selves by these 6 Queries and if in truth and sincerity you can give affirmative answers to them I may safely pronounce you such as regard the eternall advantage of your immortall soules The Fifth Use shall be for Direction To handle this Use for your Use 5. For Direction greater advantage I shall acquaint you with some Impediments which must be removed and then I shall prescribe some Duties that must be performed These Impediments must be removed 1. Love of the world This is the soules clog and hinderance Imped 1. Love of the world which keeps it from soaring aloft The earth wormes of the world love their Mammon their Gold is their confidence Luk. 16. 14. The young man in the Gospel Judas the Gadarens preferred the world before Christ If you would regard your soules you must sit loose off the world your hearts must be alienated from the love of it 2. Too much love of the body such pampering a carcase with Imped 2. Too much love of the body variety of delicate meates so much time spent inter pectinem speculum in trimming up the body these hinder the care of the soule The body must be loved in a subordinate way shall we take more care of the carcase which must be wormes meat and neglect the soule which runs parallel with eternity The soule is animae mancipium will you preferre the servant and the drudge before the Master 3. Remissenesse in spirituall duties These are the spiritual viands Imped 3. Remissenesse in spirituall duties which keep the soule in heart Take away these you starve the soul they are as necessary as meat and drink for the body If you keep not time and touch with God in a constant conscientious performance of duties it 's evident you have no care of your soules The soule hath need of all duties prayer reading hearing meditation conference these are Pabula animae animae vehicula they wing the soule and make it soar aloft As you love your soules neglect not spiritual duties 4. Presumption of long life It s a dangerous thing to presume of Imped 4. Presumption of long life long life when as neither space nor grace is in our power This is that soule-murtherer that hath slaine many thousands Many presume of time God cuts them off in the midst of their sins Many have time and presume of grace though God gives them space he denies them Grace as he did to Jezabell Rev. 2. 21. It s an exceeding great folly to presume of that which is out of our power it s an high contempt and affront offered to God to offer him the lame and the blind to offer him that I may speak it with reverence the Devils leavings when the Devill hath sucked out the marrow to leave unto the Great God the empty dry bones 5ly Carnall security See dreadfull judgments of carnally secure Imped 5. Carnall security persons Deut. 29. 19 20. Having removed these Impediments and dangerous stumbling blocks out of the way I shall prescribe some Duties which you must put in practise 1. Labour as much as in thee lieth to keep thy soule unpolluted Duty 1. Keep thy soul pure with sin Every sin pollutes thy soule watch therefore against sin fight against it account sin thy soul's enemy Harbour not hugge not in thy bosome thy desperate enemy but stir especially against that encompassing sin mentioned Heb. 12. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Consider that the Lord seeth all thy sins he loatheth and abhorreth them Do thou hate that which God hates make no peace with Gods enemies give not quarter to Benhadad make no league with any Gibeonites spare no Agag foster no Delilah no Herodias c. 2. Covenant in the strength of God against thy corruptions Duty 2. Covenant against corruptions Resolve I will swear no more be drunken no more c. All sin defiles my soule Lord give me grace to crucifie my corruptions and to get victory over my sins Lord I cannot of my selfe get victory over any one sin I have covenanted against my pride and I am proud still against my passions and I am froward still against my earthly-mindednesse and yet am earthly-minded still I desire now to get out of my own strength and to act in thy strength Lord give me thy strength then I shall do thy work I can do nothing without thee but I can do all things through Christ that strengthneth me 3. Set time apart every day for a serious search and examination Duty 3. Set times apart for selfe searching of thy soule Examine how it fares with thy soule Doth it grow leaner or fatter doth it thrive or decay How doth the Pulse of thy Devotion beat are there not many intermissions Fourthly Frequently and seriously consider of the inestimable price paid to redeem a soule No lesse price than the bloud of Christ Duty 4. Consider the price of the soule shall I neglect that which cost Christ so dear shall I disregard that which extracted the pretious bloud of Christ out of his veines Didst thou frequently consider the worth of thy soule the inestimable price paid to purchase it it would make thee look to thy soule 5. Labour to get all thy soule-pollutions washt away in the Duty 5. Goe to the fountaine Duty 6. bloud of the covenant go to the fountaine and wash there Sixthly and lastly Make use of all meanes God hath ordained for the good of thy soule Apply the Promises feed on the Ordinances Make use of all meanes appointed Vse 6. For Comfort support thy selfe on the Attributes The last Use shall be for comfort unto those whose
and leave the success to God A Third sinne is an affectation of Novelty or devising wayes 2. Sinne affectation of Novelty besides or quite contrary to the knowledge of the word of God We brayd of the humour of old Athens we have Itching eares after novelty It is sad to consider how many young mens heads affect froth of wit and spend much time in reading stage playes Poets Pasquills Romances high-flown non-sense of late Scriblers Others out of curiosity are not afraid to meddle with Judicial Astrology which was Mr. Perkins his sinne in his younger years and his sorrow in his elder years Another sort there are who are much affected with New-Lights i. e. Antinomian and Familisticall writers who with a swelling Title in the frontispice allure men as the Syrens doe with their Musick and then devour them Some of their bookes are no better then guilded Pills or guilded Rats-bane which whilest they pretend the exaltation of Christ and bright morning beames as som●e of their Titles pretend they deceive young heads and whilest they pretend new lights they revive old Antiquated Her esies and like an ignis fatuus mislead multitudes ho follow after to their own destruction Therefore lets all as one man be exhorted not to be wise above what is written not to follow any further then they follow Jesus Christ Keep close to the good old rule unto the law and the testimonyes study the Scriptures and converse with those Mnasons those old disciples study their works such as were Greenham Perk●ns Regers Hildersham Dod Dyke c. Their memory is blessed their works prayse them in the gate And let me communicate an experience unto you I have observed of some that at first out of pregnancy of parts and singularity they would be scepticall and hold Paradoxes in Philosophy In tract of time they stayd not there but they would set their wits a working and afterwards they became scepticall and Heterodoxe in Divinity And therefore take heed of Sceptisme There is † Mr. John Bidle a notorious Heretique One whom I knew very well a man of a proud spirit that used in the schooles to be s●epticall and maintaine Paradoxes and to goe against the principles of Philosophy He is gone further now and hath wrote a blasphemous book against the Divinity of the holy Ghost Whither will not pride and vaine glory carry any man And what becomes of the best wit the best parts when God leaves any man unto himself The Fourth and last sinne I shall now name is pride and of all 4. Sin Pride pride spirituall pride is most dangerous when a man is proud of any gift of God his pride will prove like the wild gourd est mors in olla Pride is the poyson of the soul it soon swells a man and then bursts him And many times men of learning smart for their pride God bereaves them of their senses and they doe even obrutescere with Nebuchadnezzar who in the middest of his proud vainglorious boasting was sent a grazing among the beasts of the field And there is another sort of pride which I dare not let goe unreproved i. e. the strange Exotick Garbes of these times worse then former ages m●ny cannot be content with the haire v. Mr. Pryn's unlovelyness of love-looks that God gives them they like not the colour of it but they borrow other folks hair some are so phantasticall as to Crisp and Powder their hair and wear long Locks fitter to be called Pride-locks then Love-locks I cannot hold my peace to see such vanities and prodigious sights even like bushy Comets p●●tending some mischeif to the place where they live You shall not talk scarce with any Trades-man but he will tell you it s a hard time he hath much adoe to live And many poore housholders have much adoe to keep themselves alive when as in the mean time a Phantasticall Gallant wears so many Ribbands even all the co●lours of the Rainbow in his Hat so many Ribbands about his waste so many Poynts about the knees as the price payd for them would maintain many poore families a great while Brethren I speak these things sadly and seriously when I consider such superfluityes and vanityes which if they were pared off and that money converted to the poor it might supply the honest necessity of many a poor servant of Jesus Christ Hopeing therefore of your Reformation I proceed to a Second Vse for Exhortation Let old men call to mind their youthfull sinnes and mourn for 2 Vse For Exhortation Admonentur hic senes ut ipst delicta juventutis suae ●gnoscant detestentur illorutnque veniam precentur Davidem non imitantur qui gloriando de praeteritâ suâ stultitiâ garriunt adhuc tales esse vellent Musc in Psal 25. Quid●m ex hoc loco colligun eximiam viri sanctissimi sanctitatem qui in aetate jam confirmatâ maturâ nihil sibi conscivit Sanct. them I am confident there are divers aged persons that have repented of their youthfull sinnes which sins were they to commit again they would not commit them for all the world And doe not passe by the sinnes of your riper years David prayes that God would charge neither upon him but remember him according to mercy Psal 25. 7. Covetousness and Passion are amongst others two especiall sinnes that accompany old age Beware of these in an especiall manner These are beloved bosome sinnes O subdue them when Goliah was slain the Philistines were vanquished presently When Covetousness and Passion which are the championsins the accustomed sins of old age are conquered other sins of ordinary incursions will more easily be subdued I have read of Bellarmine that when the Priest came to confess him he could not remember any particular sins of his present age but was fain to call to mind the sinnes of his youth put surely this man was a meer stranger to his own heart he had not studied his own heart otherwise he might have found many present sinnes to bewail if he had not gone back as farre as his youth ●owever the oldest Saints find matter of humiliation for daily and hourely sinnes and they lam●n● their sinnes committed in all ages viz Infancy Childhood Youth and old age ●nd to you that are yong let me beseech you to give God the prime of your youth consecrate your youth to God A young Timothy O how delightfull is he to God The time you have before you O redeem it and be good husbands of it and improve every minute of time to the glory of God! and the best advantage of your precious soules O labour with a holy greediness to get saving graces faith love hope patience meekness and humilitie Now you have a time of plenty store up against a year of famine Now you have many prices put into your hands to get wisdom withall O that God would give you hearts to make a right improvement of them You have strength ●nd
as quench the Spirit which is forbidden 1 Thess 5. 19. such as deride praying by the spirit such as slight and scorn men of the spirit I mean such as are of a pretious annointing in whom the Spirit of Christ dwells O how sad will their Audit be 2. It reproves barren and unprofitable hearers who notwithstanding all the strivings wooings and waitings of Gods Spirit by the Ministry of the Word yet remain barren and unfruitful The Apostle tells their doom The earth that drinketh in the rain that Heb. 6. 7 8. cometh oft upon it and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth a blessing from God but that which beareth thorns and bryars is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned When Christ found nothing on the Fig-tree but leaves he said unto it Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever and Matth. 21. 19 Luke 13. 7. presently the Fig-tree withered away And the Vine-dresser said Behold these three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree and finde none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground 3. It reproves secure persons setled on their Lees Let Gods Spirit strive never so often it is all in vain They think all is well with them they conceive their Estates very good Multitudes now adays are possest with a spirit of slumber and drousiness and this is a dreadful sin and a judgement both Rom. 11. 8. God hath given them a spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear to this day Is not he a desperate fool that dares sleep upon the top of a Mast Is not he much more that notwithstanding judgements threatned in Gods Word against rebellious sinners yet is secure heedless and satisfied in his present condition This is that carnal security mentioned which is under such terrible woe Deut. 29. 19 20. It shall come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to adde drunkenness to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lie upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven 4. And lastly This reproves all impenitent persons who notwithstanding all the Sermons they hear notwithstanding all the reproofs admonitions wooings knocking 's of Gods spirit yet remain impenitent Impenitency is that great soul-damning sin Christ tells us Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock Rev. 3. 20. Ezek. 18. 31. if any man open to me I will come in and sup with him And the exhortation of the Prophet runs Cast away from you all your transgressions for I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth wherefore turn your selves and live So God expostulates the case with them Though by our own strength we cannot stand not by our own powe● will any good thing yet we may doe much more good then we do Can not the same legs carry a man to the Church which carry him to an Ale-house o● Tavern It s want of a good heart and love to the Ordinances of God that make men so negligent of the good of their souls Who forceth thee to swear thou saist thou can●● not leave it custom is become another nature Is it not thine own corrupt heart that causeth corrupt communications The Devil cannot compel to sin he perswades and enticeth neither doth God tempt any man Jam. 1. 13 14 15. But every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed then Jam. 1. 13 14 15. when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished bringeth forth death Tremble and stand amazed thou impenitent person that resiste●● so many strivings of Gods Spirit so many checks of conscience so many warnings from the word O that thy heart might be touched with remorse and repentance for thine impenitency yet thou livest under the sound of the Gospel who knoweth but the spirit may this day once more move woe and beseech thee to be reconciled O do not refuse O do not slight these invitations A City besieged as we read Deut. 20. 11 12. If it make thee answer of peace and open unto thee thea the people that are found therein shall become tributary unto thee but if it will make no peace with thee then thou shalt besiege it and smlte every male with the edge of the sword Just so now the Lord besiegeth thy heart offers thee peace intreats thee to repent of thy Oathes Sabbath-breakings contempt of the Gospel Drunkenness Uncleanness If thou wilt not receive such a gracious offer of peace to thy peril be it thou art the murtherer of thine own soul 4. I proceed to a fourth Use which is for examination Three Vse 4. For Examination Q. 1 Quaeries by way of tryal I shall propose and answer Q. 1. How may we distinguish of the strivings of Gods spirit from a spirit of error and delusion I answer in this wise 1. Gods Spirit strives by the Ministry of the word and directs A. 1 1. Gods spirit strives by the Ministry of the word us according to that rule Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule peace be upon them and mercy and upon the Israel of God But a spirit of delusion deviseth ways of its own and is wise above what is written whereunto a curse appertains Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from heaven preach a●other Gospel then that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed 2. Gods Spirit leads into all truth It is a s●irit of truth But 2. Gods spirit leads into all truth the spirit of delusion leads us into all errors God will send strong delusions that they shall believe a lie 2 Thess 2. 11. 3. Gods Spirit makes us humble meek gentle A spirit of delusion 3. Gods spirit makes us● humble and meek makes us to swell with pride and pride and passions Gods Spirit meekens our spirit An Antichristian deluded spirit makes us boystero●s ino●dinate in our affections But secondly The Quaery will be How we may distinguish the Q. 2 strivings of Gods Spirit from the strivings of our own spirits or natural conscience I answer thus 1. A natural conscience acts from a principle of A. 1 A natural conscience acts from a principle of fear fear of punishment and upon legal convictions hence come many torturings and strivings in natural mens consciences as in Ahab c. Herod feared John Baptist But Gods Spirit strives and moves the soul to act from a principle of love to Jesus Christ when the love of Christ constrains to duty that is genuine altogether 2. The striving of a m●ns own spirit and a natural
for Terrour Exhortation Examination Direction and Consolation 1. This Doctrine breathes forth terrour and dreadful Judgement Use 1. For Terrour unto all unholy persons If the righteous shall scarcely be saved where shall all unholy persons appear If onely holy persons are blessed surely then unholy persons are cursed If holy persons shall be admitted into Gods presence and enjoy communion with God and see God the Father reconciled God the Son their Redeemer God the Holy Ghost their Comforter where shall unholy persons appear They shall stand without they are the dogs whipt out of Gods presence they shall see God no otherwise then the Malefactor a Judge condemning of him Then all the Attributes of God shall plead against prophane persons My mercy saith God my patience my loving kindness my goodness have been despised All the Sermons they have heard shall plead against them so many Sermons of Repentance so many Sermons of Reconciliation of Holyness bring in black Bills of Indictment against them All the Messengers of God plead We have spent our breath and strength in vain We have labored all night and caught nothing We have tendred Christ offered to these prophane Wretches terms of peace and reconciliation but they have scorned them all and undervalued the glorious excellencies of the Lord Jesus All the passages of Providence will come in against unholy persons Providence will plead I have cloath'd and fed thee I gave thee the dew of Heaven and fatness of the Earth I sustain'd preserv'd thee but thou hast abused all the Creatures not eating for health but for gluttony not drinking for strength but drunkenness All thy friends will plead against thee such as have been real friends to thy soul as have spent their spirits in Exhortations Counsels Admonitions all these are upon Record and will cry out for vengeance against thee O that God would smite the hearts of all unholy persons and loosen the joynts of their loyns as Belshazzars were and make their knees smite one against another that now in this time of life this short day they might be effectually wrought upon to a holy conversation This Use in an especial manner reproves those that scoff at holyness Use 1 I would there were none such in the Walls of Athens That which is the true Believers honour to be a Saint is cast by some prophane persons into the teeth of Professors as if it were a Character of infamy These are your Saints In the Act and Monuments v Fox Acts Mon in Q. Maries dayes a Martyr reproved a proud Prelate for Swearing He answered prophanely I am no Saint What was he then surely an incarnate Devil If you be no Saints here in the Militant Church you shall never be Saints in the Triumphant Church What shall we say to such as deride holyness and exercise their wits to cast a flam or a jeer upon Religion and make a mock at praying by the Spirit Let them read that dreadful Sentence each word is a thunder-bolt Rom. 8. 9. If any man hath not the spirit of Christ he is none of his whose are they then the Devil 's questionless either Christs or the Devils If none of Christs Sheep then surely of the Devils Goats Of all others a Scoffer is hardest to cure seldom are such brought home if they are it costs them dear If any such be present though I hope better things of you let me tell you when you come to die holyness will be holyness indeed then holy persons will be holy persons Then when conscience is awakened you will wish you were in their stead whom you so much contemned you wil wish your tongues had fallen out of your heads when you spake against holy persons You that make Gods children even real Saints your subject of obloquy What will you say at the day of Judgement when they shall be at the right hand and the Judge shall say Come ye blessed and you shall be on the left hand and the Judge shall say Goe ye cursed when you shall Luke 14. 28. see Abraham Isaac and Jacob and all the Saints in the kingdom of Heaven and you your selves shut out of doors Are any such present are any young wanton wits that will rather loose a friend then a jest rather loose the friendship of a good conscience then the frothy issue of a scurrilous wit To such let me speak with abundance of love to their souls Non est tutum ludere cum sanctis It 's not safe to make a jest of holy persons or holy things If ever Qui ludit in Cathedra lugebit in Gehenna they belong to God they will with Austin make Confessions and Retractations University sins abuse of wit and parts contempt of holyness neglect of seasons of Grace will cry loud and make such a gash in the conscience as may be a long time clawing off 2. This Doctrine reproves Hypocrites These seem better then they are and put on a Vizard of sanctity these are painted Sepulchres rotten at the core gilded rotten Nut-megs and by how much they pretend to Religion they are so much the worse because they satisfie themselves in a bare pretence There shall be a day of Judgement and that will be a day of terror and vengeance unto them Seldom as a Reverend Divine saith an Hypocrite dies undiscovered It pleaseth God to unmask him and discover his Tor shell of Hypocrisie counterfeit profession before he dieth so that usually in this world a ●ypocrite is discovered However in the world to come all shall be laid open his glozing formalities outside glorious shews all his painted dresses shall be made known to men and Angels And what 's the portion of Hypocrites If there be one place in Hell lower then another any torment greater that 's his portion Matth. 14. 15. 3. This Doctrine reproves all secret sinners who by reason of their secret cunning conveyance hope for impunity They little think of the all-seeing eye of God Could a Homer say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer Il. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and shall not Christians believe that the God of Heaven knows all things All thy Reservations Equivocations subtile Distinctions and Evasions are obvious and naked to the All-seeing eye of God The Adulterer waits for the twy-light he would fain escape the sight of men but he cannot escape the sight of God Speculative as well as practical defilements are all known to God Thy Curtain Closet-sins thy Imageries in the dark the sins that no man living knows of are made manifest unto God The Trades-mans Sophisticated Wares his false Lights scant Measures all his mysteries of Cousenings in the Trade are apparent unto God the Lyars obstinate standing in a lie cannot escape Gods knowledge all his tricks of wit and collusions to baffle his conscience will not serve his turn at the day of Judgement The Popish distinctions of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not acquit them at Gods Tri●●nal The cheating
to love Jesus Christ so the Martyr in the flames cried out None but Christ Thus highly did John Baptist testifie of Christ Joh. 3. 30. so Christ may be exalted hee cares not what becomes o● himself So every faithful Minister puts the highest value upon Jesus Christ so Christs honour may be advanced Christs cause and interest promoted he cares not what sufferings what persecutions he mee●s withall Though he encounter with Beasts at Ephesus Sons of Anak and frie at a stake none of these things move him so Christ may be glorified in him and by him It 's a signe of true grace to prize Christ highly and enhaunce his esteem and honour above all things besides 3. The heart is in love with holynesse for it self ●olynesse is Charact. 3. The heart is in love with holyness the image of God Ephes 4. 24. and there is beauty in Gods im●ge to enamour the soul What was said of Moral virtue may be much more said of Theological Si ●erreno oculo possit cerni admirabile sui desiderium excitaret Could we discern by a spiritual eye the lustre and excellency of Holynesse O how would our hearts bee in love with it Multitudes followed Christ for the Loaves and accounted gain their godlynesse Self-seeking interests covetousnesse is that Master-wheele that sets many on working but a true Beleever accounts Godlynesse his gain Christ his honour ●eligion his preferment His eye is single his heart sincere He 'l do his duty do his work faithfully and trust God for his wages Nay Jsa 49. 4. Psal 119. 7 the work is a reward O how I love thy law saith David It was his delight he loved the Commandements above sine gold And what was the Law it was holy just and good Holynesse was the object of his love To love God for himself Holynesse for it self is a good sign 4. There must an ingenuous sorrow for sinne I call it ingenuous Charact. 4. An ingenuous sorrow for sinne in opposition to all slavish howling under the rod. There is a vast difference between Ahab and Paul between that sorrow which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 7. 10. and you have there seven Apostolical characters of godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7. 11. There 's a vast difference between the howling of dogges and crying of children between the crying of wicked persons as Pharaoh Ahab Cain under a heavy judgement for the punishment and smart upon them and the crying of Paul Peter and Mary Magdalen Pharaoh said Take away this plague the plague of Locusts Caterpillars c. he never was affected with the plague of his heart which was the greatest plague of all But take away my sinnes cries David Wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse me from my sinnes here 's a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of godly sorrow it mourns for sinne more than the punishment it mourns for sin because it is sinne because it is a breach of Gods holy Law because thereby God is dishonoured this sorrow is kindly ingenuous when the heart is melted and mourns and is broken for displeasing so good and gracious a Lord God 5. There wil be a cordial mourning for others sinnes This affection Charact. 5. Thheres mourning for others sins Psal 119. 136 was singular in David Rivers of water run down mine eyes because men keep not thy Law A godly man layes to heart the sins of the times and the place where he lives It grieves him at the heart to see God dishonoured by any Bradford that rare spirited man grieved at the miscarriages of one of his Scholars and laid the fault upon himself for not looking better to him If he so charged himself surely our faces will gather blacknesse and a great deal of guilt will lye at our do●es for not discharging our trust as we ought to doe concerning so many Scholars as so many Depositums committed to our charge But let 's doe our duties and mourn over them that are refractory and keep them strict to discipline Le ts pray for them and mourn over them and questionlesse praiers and tears are prevalent weapons When thou hearest a man swear feest him drunk break Sabbaths takes no heed nor makes any conscience to walk in the way of the Lord O mourn for him and weep that God is dishonoured and reflect upon thy self thy nature is as bad as his Who art thou that differs from thy brother What difference there is it is not of thy making it 's Grace free Grace that makes all the difference 6. The heart approves it self to God so did David put himself Charact. 6. The hearts approving it self to God upon Gods Examination Such a one walks alwaies as in the presence of God knowing that God is all eye to see all ear to hear all hand to write down all He stands not to mans day and mans judgement he appeales to God the searcher of all hearts whose eyes are ten thousand times brighter than the Sun Hereupon Job raised a ground of comfort and confidence because his Redeemer was his Judge he that was his Saviour should acquit him his Witnesse was on high See his excellent protestation that his heart should not reproach him Job 27. 4 5 6. Now when a Christian is hardly censured and condemned by the world yet if he can approve his heart to God that hee hath walkt before God with an upright heart here 's ground of abundant comfort If God be for us who can bee against us If God speake peace who can speak trouble It 's God that justifieth who 's he then that condemneth Let 's all then labour to tread even paths to keep close to the rule of the Word alwaies Rom. 8. 31. to set the fear of God before our eyes that whatsoever evil entreaties we may meet withall from abroad wee may have comfort at home having approved our hearts to God who searcheth all hearts and tryeth the reins and rendereth unto every one according to the fruits of their doings 7. There wil be a pressing forward toward perfection A heart Charact. 7. There will be a pressing forward towards perfection that approves it self to God as it labours for truth of every grace so it labours for growth of them Joshuahs Sun stood stil Hezechiahs Sun went back Neither of these are for their imitation but they are like Davids Sun which like a Giant refresht with wine runnes its course I wel know that there are Lambs as wel as Sheep weak as well as strong Christians Christians of the Lower and of the Vpper Form and that Faith admits degrees yet every true Beleever contents not himself with that measure of grace whereunto he hath attained but labours after perfection as you may see Phil. 3. 12 13 14. Psal 48. 6 7. 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7 8. There are many things which a godly man finds lacking in his Faith Love Humility and therefore
and leave deep impression upon all your Consciences Serm. 10. At S. Mary's Oxon Nov. 1. 1657. HAveing lately made some entrance on this text in this place I proceed on in the same use of Exhortation to drive the naile to its full head pressing upon you all this great duty of the weightiest importance i. e. to give God your Male without blemish that is in all your services worship and duties that you performe to give the best of the best unto the Lord. To set this use home I le press somewhat closer the duty of the text in these seven ensuing considerations Consider the transcendent greatness and majesty of God In my Consid 1. Thetranscendent majesty of God text he is called a great King and Lord of Hosts which sets forth the majesty and soveraignty of God who is absolute Ruler Governour and Commander of all All the Creatures are made by God all are sustained and preserved by him Therefore it 's a cogent reason ro ingage all creatures to subjection and obedience to their Creatour and Governour Seneca was wont to say when we are about a business of great consequence we should imagine that Scipio Cato Laelius c. were our Overseers Much more ought we to remember the soveraignty Dominion and omnipresence of God Such serious considerations might prevaile with us to offer the best sacrifices and services unto the Lord. Gods greatness and power commands our fear and reverence It 's an excellent observation of Mr. Calvin on the place The greatness of God ought so to Magnitudo Dei debet nos humiliare ne eum colamus pro sensu carnis nostrae sed offeramus tantum quod ejus coelesti gloria dign●̄ est Calv. in loc humble us as not to worship God according to our carnal sense But to offer to him what beseemes his heavenly Glory Constantine the great Valentinian and Theodosius called themselves Christs vass●ls and well they might because he is absolute Monarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All other things are his servants All creatures are at his sole command According to our capacities there 's but a shaddowing forth and that very darkly of the glory of God Ezek. 1. Isai 6 Dan. 7. The Throne is there said to be stately costly and magnificent Hence Bernard infers a good note Omnino oporlet nos orationis tempore c. i. e. At prayer time when we enter into the Court of Heaven where the King of all Kings sits in state we should approach with reverence humility and fear considering that we are dust and ashes and we make our addresses unto the great God of Heaven and Earth A second consideration shall be drawn from the infinite Holines Consid 2. Drawn from the holyness of God of God This layeth a strong ingagement upon us in all our services to put forth our selves to the utmost to present unto the Lord an acceptable sacrifice The Lord is holy in his essence holy in all his wayes his name is holy his word holy his people holy his worship holy in Levitical ordinances all ought to be holy As for instance the flesh was holy Lev. 6. 27. Whatsoever shall touch the flesh thereof shall be holy and when there is sprinkled of the blood thereof upon any garment thou shalt wash that whereon it was sprinkled in the holy place The Instruments holy Numb 31. 6. And Moses sent them unto the War a thousand of every Tribe them and Phineas the Son of Eleazar the Priest to the Warre with the holy Instruments and the Trumpets to blow in his hand The Vessels holy 1 Chron. 22. 19. Now set your hearts and your soules to seek the Lord your God build the Sanctuary to bring the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord and the holy Vessels into the ho●se that is to be built The Offerings holy 2 Chron. 35. 13. They rosted the Passeover with fire but the other holy Offerings sod they in p●ts c. The ●ifts holy Exod. 22. 38. The Oyntment holy Exod. 30. 25. The Garments holy Exod. 35. 21. So likewise in Evangelical Ordinances all must be holy as we may read Zech. 14. 20 21. All this is to be understood of the spiritual service in the Christian Church The ingraving of the Priests Mitre was Holynesse unto the Lord. And this Motto must be upon our hearts and lives We serve a holy God who is infinite in holynesse of purer eyes than to behold the least iniquity Holynesse becomes his house his day is holy his service must be holy God will be sanctified in all that we approach unto him His Name ought to be sanctified by us let 's not then be so vile as to offer unholy services to a holy God let 's not offer the lame and the blind to the holy Lord God A third consideration shall be drawn from the equity of the Duty Is it not most equall to return by way of gratitude to God Consid 3. From the equity of the duty again that which he hath given unto us All the cattel on a thousand Mountains are at Gods disposing all the parts and abilities thou hast are Gods gifts all strength vigour marrow in thy bones are Gods bounty and largenesse to thee What hast thou which thou hast not received The Male in the flock is Gods great bounty to thee and wilt thou not give it back again unto God Wee read how David prepared with all his might for the house of God as Brasse Iron Silver and Gold and precious Stones Read his humble acknowledgement 1 Chron. 29. 14 16. Now shall not we render a Mi●e in returne for Millions received shall not we render a drop of Praises for an ocean of Mercies Quid retribuam saith David David thought no cost great enough for ●od Solomon spared for no cost in building the Temple no more ought Christians to love cheap services and lazy wayes of devotion We must think nothing good enough for God An onely sonne Abraham would offer Gen. 22. 12. Hast thou a good memory is that thy best treasure then employ it to remember thy Creator hast thou a great judgement and understanding labour more and more to know God thy self and communicate what thou knowest for the edification of thy brethren Hast thou strong Affections as Love Joy Desire c let them be placed on God as that onely centrum quietativum Hast thou great substance in the world Consider thou hast the worlds goods but lent and entrusted to thee as a Steward for a little time and therefore thou must honour God with thy substance by dealing out thy bread to the hungry and relieving of the distressed members of Jesus Christ In a word whatever thou art or hast all the members of thy body and faculties of thy soul must be employed as instruments in the service of God All come from God and must be employed for God what he gives to us must be given back again Wherefore we conclude this Motive
presence of God deale plainly and impartially in this Examination 1. Then do we give God the best in our duties doe we give God our hearts our affections and wills Do we doe all our duties as in the presence of God in obedience to God with a single eye and respect unto Gods glory Such questions as these put home will search to the quick Amongst others I shall fix only upon these three instances eminenter non exclusive For in all the best is to be given to God This Rule admits no exception The question is 1. Whether in hearing of Gods Word we give God the best Q. 1. Whether in hearing wee give God the best This is a very weighty duty And we are often enjoyned to hear Jer. 22. 29. Faith cometh by hearing Rom. 10. 17. It 's a mark of Christs Sheep to hear his voice Joh. 10. 27. But amongst hearers three sorts in four miscarry according to Christs own computation for there are stony high-way thorny hearers the Word of God is lost in all these Onely the good hearer profits by the Word and brings forth fruit with patience Wherefore we are not only exhorted to the duty of Hearing but to the right manner of performing this duty Take heed therefore how ye hear Luk. 8. 18. Now whether in our hearing we give God the best we are to examine three particulars 1. How we prepare our selves before hearing 2. How we demean our selves in hearing 3. How we behave our selves after hearing First before hearing there is required preparation Eccles 5. 1. Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God Publius Scipio first went unto the Capitol to pray before he went to consult amongst the Senators Before we come to a Sermon our duty is to sequester our selves from earthly entanglements Abraham when he went up to the Mount to Sacrifice he left his Asses at the foot of the hill Before the Jews offered Sacrifice they used many washings and purifyings Exod. 19. 14. Mephibosheth dressed his feet when hee went to David O how should we wash our hearts before we come into Gods presence Before we come into the place where the name of God is recorded we should consider of that soveraignty power purity and Majesty of God We should get our hearts sequestred from the world our pride passion and all inordinate affections should be mortified we should have our spirits meekned we should approach with trembling reverence and awfull fear of the great and glorious presence of God 2. In hearing there are two things required Atte●tion of the ear and Intention of the heart 1. There must be a serious attention we read Luke 4. 20. The eyes of all them that were in the synagogue were fastned on him When we go to duty we should consider of the presence of God and Angels and should behave our selves with all reverence in the publick Assemblies The Preacher should be serious grave reverend and avoyd all affected phrases uncouth unscriptural speeches He should hold fast the form of sound words And hearers should deport themselves with all reverence Laughing at one another idle gazing wanton glances roving eys O! how unfit and unsuitable are they as at other times so especially in places of Worship 2. In hearing there is required intention of the heart The heart must goe along with the eare and what we hear we must labour to let it sink into our hearts and there make its residence The heart must be affected in hearing the heart must act vigorously and be fully bent upon God His Word is precious and none ought to fall to the ground Wherefore we must ruminate ponder meditate apply and labour for retentive memories This caution is of great concernment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2. 1. VVe must remember that in hearing we deale for life and immortality we negotiate for Eternity and drive a trade for our immortall soules so we must hear to day as for ought we know we may never live to have another opportunity Wherefore the heart must be in good earnest with all the affections thereof set a worke The Love Joy Hope Desire all must bee seriously fixt and intent upon what wee hear Thirdly how we must demeane our selves after hearing To this purpose I shall mention onely two Duties which if put in practise it 's without all question that wee give God the Male. First it 's required that we meditate on what we have heard 1. We must meditate in the Word For Meditation is the spiritual digestion of a Sermon This Moses Isaac and David much practised It fareth with a good Sermon for the Soul as with a good meales meat for the Body By digesting what we receive we thrive the better Wherefore after we have heard a Sermon we must call our selves to a strict accompt rubbe up our memories and labour to make what we have heard our owne that this food may turne into our nourishment that we may eat and make a good meale and digest the food of our souls even to eat the roll as the Prophet did Jer. 15. 16. Secondly it 's required that wee yeeld ready obedience unto 2. Wee must yeeld obedience unto the Word the VVord of God For not the Hearers but the Doers of the Word shall be justified The life of a Preacher is the Application and the life of a Sermon in Preaching and hearing consists in the particular Application what wee heare wee must apply and practise in our lives Thus we give God the Male in our hearing A Second Duty wherein we are to examine our selves in is Q. 3. Whether we give God the Male in our prayers whether we give God the Males in our prayers and supplications Prayer is a great part of our religion a great part of worship wherein God is gloryfied wherefore I must take the best paines I can to examine this point whether in our prayers we give God the best whether we offer a Male and not a corrupt thing For tryall whereof I l'e lay down some distinguishing characters to differrence the pretious from the vile 1. Prayer must be humble so did Abraham pray Gen. 18. 27. so David prayed in a most humble manner 2 Sam. 7. 19. so Jacob 1 Prayer must be humble Gen. 32. 9. There 's required an humble reverentiall frame of spirit in our approaches and applications unto the throne of grace Consideration of Gods transcendent majesty and greatnesse and the apprehension of our own vilenesse should cause us in an humble manner to make our addresses and preferre our supplications unto the great God of Heaven and Earth Consider likewise thou art a Creature dust and ashes a worme and no man a sinner a Rebell an enemy to God by nature a child of wrath This Consideration should humble thee in the presence of the Lord. 2. Prayer must be in faith Mat. 21. 22. No prayer but that of faith can be accepted No service but of a Beleever
walk in sincerity before the Lord these shall be happy unto all Eternity these having been faithfull unto the death shall receive a Crowne of Life * ⁎ * The End of the Second Decad. A THIRD DECAD OF SERMONS PREACHED TO THE VNIVERSITY AT St MARIES IN OXFORD By HENRY WILKINSON D. D. and Principall of Magdalen Hall in OXFORD 2 Tim. 1. 13. Hold fast the forme of Sound Words which thou hast heard of me in Faith and Love which is in Christ Jesus OXFORD Printed by W. H. for THOMAS ROBINSON Anno Domini M.DC.LX TO THE READER I HERE present unto thee Christian Reader A third Decad of Sermons of the same complexion with the rest answering those two immediatly preceding as face in water answers face By them the Author may be knowne to be one and the same man not varying a whit from his Principles by reason of vicissitude of times The first of these Sermons was preacht at the Publick Act and was formerly printed which notwithstanding the derision of some through the Incouragement and approbation of others whose Judgment I preferre many degrees before my owne is now againe presented to publick View in this second Edition None of the other sermons of this Decad and none of the two other Decads were ever yet printed before neither had now if some both Godly and Learned who are better able to judge had not thought farre better of them then I ever durst of any thing of my own notwithstanding what paines soever it cost me It 's farre from my Intention to justify my selfe but I shall alwaies with Jacob acknowledge my selfe not worthy of the least of all the mercyes and of all the Gen. 32. 10. truth c which the Lord through riches of mercy hath shewed unto me It cannot be denyed but ought to be acknowledged with renewed thankfulnesse that now adaies we have more helps on all hands if we had our eyes in our Heads and greater advantages then our Predecessors ever enjoyed since Printing came up And since the Gospell in it's Purity and Liberty was restored unto England as Reverend Latimer used to pray that God would restore the Gospell unto England once againe once againe We have variety of Prices both by printing and preaching put into our hands to get divine wisdome withall Oh! that we had this great mercy of mercyes vouchsafed to us that the Lord would bestow upon us such good hearts as to Husband and improove all those spirituall Talents for the best advantage of our immortall soules That saying of a Learned Author hath often come into my deliberate thoughts Ideo scribuntur omnes Libri ut unus emendetur conscientiae Now if by any thing that I have wrote the of Christians may thrive the better and be built up in their faith I have my desire accomplisht Not unto me not to the best of my paines and endeavours but unto the name of Jesus Christ be all the praise and glory It 's not my purpose to detaine thee Reader in a longer Epistle Only thus much I thought good to premise to assure thee that this last Decad is of the same stamp and breaths forth the same spirit and pursues the same plaine stile with those two which according to order went before The designe I only drive at as farre as I apprehend is the eternall good of mine and thine immortall soule so that our profitting may appeare unto all that some addition may be made unto our spirituall stature Be pleased therefore to read deliberately and to joyne prayer and meditation with reading Lay aside all prejudicate opinions and through the meannesse of the Instrument look with the eye of faith unto Jesus Christ the great Counsellour and Prophet who directs and instructs his people and guides them unto all truth And what ever good thou receivest give Christ the praise of all and set the Crowne upon his head alone And in thy serious addressesse unto the throne of grace remember him which in love to thy soule hath made these sermons publick Do not despise the day of small things undervalue not the Reare of the Christian Army Do not entertaine a slight opinion of any of the meanest yet faithfull Labourers in Gods Vine-yard who desires and endeavours to approove himselfe faithfull such a one I desire to be and remaine Thy servant and Brother in Christ Jesus HENRY WILKINSON The Contents of the Third Decad. SERM. I. 2 COr 5. 20. Now then we are Ambassadors for Chri●t as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be yee reconciled to God The Context expounded p. 2 3 4. The Text divided and expounded p. 5 6 7. The Doctrine handled by prooving and improoving all by particular Application p. 9. The Doctrine prooved first by Scripture p. 10 11. Then by three Reasons 1. From foure Properties of Ambassadors p. 12 13 14 15. 2. From the Benefit of a reconciled estate p. 16. 3. From the misery of an unreconciled estate p. 17. Vse for Exhortation 1. To Ministers p. 17 18 19 20 21 22 23. 2. To people p. 25. 3. Characters of a reconciled estate p. 27 28 29 30. Five Motives p. 31 32 33 34 35 36. SERM. II. HEb 1. 14. Are they not all Ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for these who shall be heires of salvation Text divided p. 38. Doct. It pleaseth God to make use of the Ministery of Angels for the good of his Children p. 38. Q. 1. What Angels are p. 39 40 41. Q. 2. How many sorts of Angel sthere p. 42 43. Q. 3. What are the offices of Angels p. 43 44 45 46. Q. 4. Whether every Saint hath a peculiar Angell keeper p. 46 47. Q. 5. What is the knowledge of Angels p. 47 48. Vse 1. For Information in 2 particulars p. 49 50. Vse 2. For Instruction in 3 particulars p. 50. Vse 3. For Consolation in 3 particulars p. 51. SERM. III. 2. CHron 16. 9. The eyes of the Lord run to and for throughout the whole earth to shew himselfe strong in the behalfe of those whose heart is perfect towards him p. 52. Text divided p. 53. Doct. 1. That there is a Providence of God which extends it selfe to the ordering and governing of all the creatures throughout the whole world p. 55. The Doctrine prooved by Scripture p. 55 56. And by 6 Reasons p. 57 58 59. Of the nature of Providence p. 59 60. Vse 1. For Confutation of Epicures c. p. 61. Vse 2. For Reproofe ib. Vse 3. For Instruction in 6 Duties p. 61 62. Doct. 2. As there is a generall providence towards all so there is a speciall distinguishing Providence towards all Gods children p. 62. Doctrine prooved by Scripture example p. 62 63. By 6 Reasons p. 64 65. Vse 1. For Reproofe p. 65. Vse 2. For Instruction p. 66. Vse 3. For Consolation six Duties prest pag. 66. 67. SERM. IV. I Sai 66. 6 7. Yee that make mention of the Lord keep not
in the negative which hath the force of a strong affirmation † 1 Cor. 3. 3. For whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions are ye not carnall and walk as men Sects and factions have their source and originall from the flesh so * Notandum est etiam hoc loco unde sint factiones sectae in Ecclesia Primum quidem ex carne ut qui sectarii sunt licet videantur esse spiritualissimi revera tamen carnales existant Muscul in 1 Cor. 3. 3. Musculus a judicious Expositor observes Further let me be your remembrancer of that great duty that in an especiall manner concernes the Ministers of the Gospell that is to unite amongst themselves and endeavour to draw in one yoak and as one man † Jude 3. contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints Let the Apostles exhortation be as a frontlet before our eyes and as a Phylactery sewed on the hemmes of our garments * Rom. 14. 19. Rom. 14. 19. Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace and things wherewith one may edify another The Phrase is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we must pursue and run after peace though it may seem to flye from us But we must not take any peace at a venture but that which tends to edification as † Sectemur studium vehemens conservandae pacis requirit Pac● adj●ngitaedificationem mutuam ut non pacem quamvis sed eam tantum praecipi intelligamus quae ad aedificationem pertinet Non aedificat pax in mendacio superstitione idololatria impietate sed in veritate Zech. 8. 19. Veritatem pacem diligite Pareus His duobus concordia aedificatione continentur fere ●m●a charitatis offici● Calv. Pareus and Calvin observe Of all others let the faithfull Ministers of Christ endeavour after a right understanding of each other and a loving correspondence and onenesse of heart and judgment amongst themselves Tell it not in Gath publish it not in the streets of Askelon lest the Popish party triumph when they heare that even the Lords Diamonds cut one another and that there are great animosities evill surmises and bitternesse of speech one towards another amongst some that are truely Godly How sharpe was the contention between two rare men even Paul and Barnabas insomuch as they * Act. 15. 39. departed asunder one from the other In severall Centuries we read of the great variances amongst Euseb L. 5. c. 26. L. 7. c. 3. those who were eminent Lights in the Church as Iraenaeus was at great variance with Victor Cyprian with Stephan Jerome with Austin Basill with Damasus Chrysostome with Epiphanius Cyrill with Theodoret. And their private inconsiderable differences amongst themselves gave great advantage to the common Enemy Satan who as a learned Author observes † Dolebat hoc Diabolus qui semper de fratrum pace torquetur Optat. L. 2. is vexed with the peace of the Brethren but much pleased with their contentions Though it cannot be expected but offences will come and that in the Church militant there will be sounding in our ears the noises of Axes and Hammers and oft times it falls out that Doctors both Godly and learned differ in some things from one another in their judgment Yet every Minister of the Gospell should imitate his Master Christ in being a Reconciler It was storyed of Athanasius that he was in lesser matters dissidentibus Magnes though in weighty affairs he was Adamas an Adamant not to be moved even a Load stone to draw those unto him who differed from him Wherefore abundance of wisdome and candour is required towards such as dissent from us if they keep those Fundamentall Principles of faith and a good conscience Truth ought to be spoke but in * Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est persistentes sinceri in vera doctrina ac fide in charitate Zanch. Love And a lapsed Brother ought to be restored or set in joynt so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports but it must be done by such as are † spirituall and in the Spirit of meeknesse If matters be circumstantiall abundance of gentlenesse moderation and mutuall forbearance ought to be exercised A flint may sooner be broken on a Pillow then an anvile † Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat rem aliquam resarcire collapsam reparare Tarnov in medull Ev. * Si virtutum finis ille sit maximus qui plurimorum spectat profectum moderatio omnium pulcherrima est Ambr. de Panor l. 1. c. 1. And mildnesse in some cases may prevail where roughnesse cannot But if matters be Fundamentall If some cry down the morall Law as an Almanack out of date as some Antimonian Spirits have endeavoured if others cry down Magistracy and Ministery as some Anabaptisticall Spirits have done if some cry down the Christian Sabbath as some * Tilham a pestilent Antisabbataria● who seduceth multitudes at Colchester and writes for the Jewish Sabbath and D. Heylin who in a late book intitled Respondet Petrus discovers himselfe a profest Adversary to the strict keeping of the Lords day Sabbath and decries strict observers thereof and most unworthily asperseth that eminent Light of the Church D. Vsser A. B. at Armagh who though Orthodox as in other things so in his judgment in the Lords day Sabbath yet cannot escape the abuses of D. P. H. which said P. H. is neare a kin to Ismael whose hand is against every man and every mans hand was against him Antisabbatarians have done with much impudence and profanenesse of spirit in these and such like cases let 's not yeild an inch let 's keep our ground Let Luther's heroicall resolution be our pattern for imitation Hic gero titulum cedo nulli It was the prudent Counsell of Athanasius to the Orthodox Brethren that they should by no means receive any pacificatory Letters from George the Arrian Persecutor and † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil Epist 235. Basil in an Epistle to Epiphanius assigns a strong reason why Athanasius gave such Counsell If once saith he we shake off the simplicity of the faith there will be no end of Disputations However let us all confer our heads and hearts together that we may agree so farre as we can still holding * Heb. 10. 23. fast our profession without wavering Let it be our endeavour † Heb. 12. 14. to follow peace with all men and holynesse Let 's preserve a happy union between truth and peace All the truths of God are more pretious then the Gold of Ophir We are commanded to * Prov. 23. 23. buy the truth but are prohibited from selling the least part of it Wherefore we ought all in our severall places and capacities to be valiant for the truth even all steel to the back The truth of God is a good matter and it 's good to be
† Gal. 4. 18. zealously affected in a good matter * Praedicare verbum Dei nihil aliud est quam derivare in se furorem totius inferni satanae Luth loc com † In aliis mansuetus ero in blasphemiis in Christum non ita Zuing in Epist ad Servet Luther used to say That to preach the Word of God zealously was a ready way to bring the rage of all the Devills in Hell about our ears But in Gods cause let 's go on couragiously and though we may be vilified by the vilest of men yet let 's resolve with David to be more vile A good God a good cause and a good conscience will carry us through the greatest dangers and difficulties And let us still remember to shew most meeknesse in our own cause and most zeal in the cause of God So * Zuinglius answered Servetus in other things I will be mild but not in blasphemies against God Now I have not yet done with the pressing of this Doctrin● of union amongst Brethren I shall yet prosecute it farther heartily desiring that my words may leave deep impressions upon your Spirits and obtain some comfortable successe The breaches amongst the Ministers were as an Arrow stuck in the sides of that good man Philip Melancthon Whereupon on his death bed V. Vitam Phil. Melancth per Melct Adamum editam he profest I am very glad I am to leave this World because I shall be with Christ and then shall be freed from the contentions of some Divines which were very great at that time There 's a sad story of two eminent Martyrs for the truth viz. * Epiphan Haeres 68. Meletius and Peter Bishops of Alexandria who when they were put into Prison fell at variance amongst themselves about a petty difference whether the Lapsi were to be received into communion The Schisme was very great insomuch as they drew a partition between each other in Prison and would not hold communion with each other and yet afterward they joyntly suffered Martyrdome And it 's not easily to be imagined what a great Rent their dissention made in the Church of God and gave advantage to the common Enemy And what a dust was raised between two choyce and constant Martyrs Ridley and Hooper one prest conformity too strictly upon his Brother and contended with too much eagernesse for such kind of vaine uselesse Ceremonies which Calvin calls tolerabiles ineptias Yet notwithstanding these two Godly Bishops could not agree in Blacks and Whites they could both agree in Red for they resisted even unto bloud and sealed the truth of their Religion with the effusion of their bloud And now to speak my judgment more plainly as in the presence of God without partiality having no mans person in admiration for advantage I conceive it a word spoken in due season and that there is necessity of speaking of it even to exhort Ministers to study the things that make for peace and especially to agree in a sweet Harmony one with another And I am fully satisfied in my judgment that to effect this much desired union a speciall expedient will be in severall Counties as † London Lancashire Essex Warwick Worcester Norfolke c. some herein have given a good President already to associate into Presbyteries and exercise that Government which by experience is known to be Flagellum Haeresium and ordaine Ministers and to put Church censures into execution When Ministers meet together and sosolemnly seek God by prayer and fasting they strengthen one anothers hands and unite each others hearts The keeping up of Discipline is a speciall means to preserve union amongst Brethren to extirpate Heresies and sweep them away as dung and promote the power of Godlinesse It hath often lain sad upon my Spirit to consider the mischiefe that hath ensued upon want of execution of Church Discipline Hinc illae lachrymae Hence for want hereof a sluce hath been opened to let in an inundation of heresies and blasphemies But it 's much to be hoped that the execution of Discipline will shut up the sluce and stop the inundation Faxit Deus Now having spoken thus farre to Ministers the other part of 2. Part of this use to people my use I will direct to people And the substance of my exhortation is to perswade them with all alacrity of Spirit to embrace the Doctrine of Reconciliation tendred to them It 's the great Doctrine of concernement in an especiall manner to be Preacht and practised The Ambassadours of peace publish these good tidings They come in the name of Jesus Christ offering termes of Reconciliation With what joy with what ardency of love should you embrace such gracious offers O how sweet is the voyce of Christ unto his Church His lips drop as an honey combe If thou be the Spouse of Christ thou wilt delight to heare the voyce of the Bridegroom So the Evangelist tel's us * Joh. 3. 29. Discimus etiam hic quod etsi amicus sponsi i. e. Minister Evangelii non gaudeat gaudium sponsi neque fructum eum percipiat ex Ecclesia qui sponsi proprius est non tamen caret gaudio quodam suo vel ex eo quod stet audiat vocem illam sponsi longe suavissimam quam rursus bona fide tanquam internuncius referet sponsae Rollocus in locum That the Friend of the Bridegroome which stands and hears the Bridegrooms voyce rejoyceth greatly Now consider Christ's messengers are his voyce unto people They come on his errand and deliver what he puts into their mouth O how sweet then will Christs words be to a gracious heart And this is that sweet welcome word which Ministers deliver to pray men to be reconciled and make their peace with God My brethren I beseech you in the bowells of Jesus Christ to set the highest estimate upon this Doctrine of Reconciliation preferre it before your appointed food before thousands of Gold and Silver And have them in honour and account their feet beautifull who do the office of Evangelists and are dispensers of these truths and Trumpetters of Gospell peace Though they be men of like passions yet they are Persons of honour Commission officers authorized by Jesus Christ to Preach the Gospell Private Christians may discourse of these things Charitative but let them keep within the compasse of their own calling and exhort one another to embrace this Doctrine but Ministers exhort Authoritative as Ambassadors and commissioners of Jesus Christ Wherefore Brethren let me be your remembrancer of the great duty incumbent on you all to love and reverence the Persons of your Ministers and have them in honour for their works sake especially I shall put you in mind of a Scripture or two that so my exhortation may leave deeper impression upon your hearts one is * 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 4. 1. Let a man so account of us as Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the
himselfe not imputing their trespasses unto them and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation This is love beyond compare The duty that belongs unto us is 1. To admire at this great infinite love to get our hearts raised up in the high contemplation of this love 2. Le ts be thankfull we can never be thankfull enough Eternity will be too little to praise God and blesse him for so great love 3. Let love beget love love must be reciprocall 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us 4. Let this love of God cause us to love one another 1 Joh. 4. 11. Beloved if God so loved us we ought also to love one another 5. Let this ingage us to obedience and holynesse in our conversations Joh. 14. 15. If yee love me keep my Commandments Query 2. Wherein consists this love of Christ Ans In dyeing for us The greatnesse of Christs love in dyeing for us may be inhanced in these singularities 1. In that he died voluntarily 2. If we consider the greatnesse of his sufferings 3. If we consider the persons for whom 1. Christ died voluntarily I gave my back to the smiter and 1. Christ died voluntarily my cheeks to those that pluckt of the haire I hid not my face from shame and spitting Isai 50. 6. And Joh. 10. 17 18. Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay downe my life that I may take it againe No man taketh it from me but I ●ay it down of my selfe I have power to lay it downe and power to take it againe This commandment have I received of my Father Christ if he pleased could have defended himselfe from his enemies he could have had legions of Angells in his defence but in obedience to his Father to fulfill the scripture in love to his owne he freely and voluntarily resigned himselfe to his Fathers pleasure and drunk that cup which his Father gave him And question lesse this was great love for Christ freely and willingly to lay down his life 2. Consider the greatness of Christ's sufferings 2. Consider the greatnesse of Christ's sufferings He endured contempt reproach spitting buffetting reviling they called him Samaritan Impostor Devill they scourged him crowned him with thornes wagged their heads at him Insulted over him and at last they put him to suffer that most shamefull painfull cursed death of the Crosse This Crucifixion was a Roman punishment That 's evident from Joh. 18. 31 32. Then said Pilate unto them take ye him and judge him according to your law The Jewes therefore said unto him it is not lawfull for us to put any man to death that the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled which he spake signifying what death he should dye And to set forth the humiliation of Christ you may read Phil. 2. 8. And being found in fashion as a man he humbled himselfe and became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Implying this was the greatest of Punishments Quid dicam in crucem tollere saith Cicero In this punishment of Crucifixion we are to consider these Aggravations 1. Shame 1. The Shame they were crucified usually stark naked Most writers say Christ was so crucified Believe not your painters who put a cloath before him they are teachers of lyes The common custome was that they who were cruci●ied were stript naked as they came into the world and so they suffered ignominy And a further shame and disgrace appeares in this that Christ was crucified without the walls as unworthy to be within the walls Barabbas a theife and murtherer was released and Christ was crucified between two theives as if he had been their Captaine this Circumstance sets forth the ignominy and disgrace put upon Jesus Christ 2. In this punishment of Crucifixion we are to consider a curse 2. A Curse Deut. 21. 23. His body shall not remaine all night upon the tree but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day for he that is hanged is accursed of God that thy land be not defiled which the Lord thy God gives thee for an inheritance There was a legall curse put upon this death Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Now for the Son of God the fountaine of all blessings in whom all Nations of the earth should be blessed to stand upon the Crosse like an accursed man the Sun was ashamed and withdrew his light and the earth trembled 3. In this punishment consider paine extremity of paine a lingring 3. Paine death This was a terrible and dolorous paine His body was extended stretched out like stretching out upon a Rack Of the Passion of Christ we are to understand Psal 22. 14 16. I am poured out like water and all my bones are out of joynt my heart is like wax it s melted in the midst of my bowells For dogs have compassed me the assembly of the wicked have inclosed me they peirced my hands and my feet Where the sinewes met in the palmes of his hands and in the feet where the paine was most acute there they peirced him It was not with Christ as with many who are stupefied and in whom extremity of paine blunteth the sense thereof but Christ was in perfect sense all the while And six houres in extremity of paine he hung upon the Crosse and was sensible as much at the last as at the first Never was any sorrow like unto his sorrow He sweat drops of blood was in an agony was despised rejected reproached and at last was crucified All these Considerations inhance the greatnesse of Christs sufferings and his love towards us 3. Consider for whom Christ died not for friends but enemies 3. For whom Christ died Vers 10. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Not for righteous and good men but for sinners and bad men not for strong but weak not for faithfull subjects but rebells Christ died Now this love is beyond all compare Now the consideration of Gods love and our unworthynesse should ingage us to love and thankfulnesse as * Tantae dilectionis Dei indignitatis nostrae consideratione demittamus Cristas in Dei judicio ac toto corde eum redamemus ut non totos in ●ivam gratitudinis hostiam vicissim consecremus Pareus in Loc. Pareus observes on the place To lay downe his life for his friends had been great love Joh. 15. 13. greater love hath no man then this that a man lay downe his life for his friend But to lay downe his life for enemies for sinners unworthy persons this love is a none such Christ died for the ungodly He said live when they were in their blood Ezek. 16. 6. And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in
begotten of the Father full of grace and truth And this is the great mystery of Godlinesse mentioned 1 Tim. 3. 16. And without controversy great is the mistery of godlinesse God was manifest in the flesh justified in the spirit seen of Angells preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into glory Christ was God from all Eternity Joh. 8. 58. Jesus said unto them Verily verily I say unto you before Abraham was I am There he speaks of his Godhead A further proofe we have Phil. 2. 6. Who being in the forme of God thought it not robbery to be equall with God Compare this with Zech. 13. 7. Awake O sword against my shepheard and against the man that is my fellow saith the Lord of hosts smite the shepheard and the sheep shall be scattered and I will turne mine hand upon the little ones This is love unparrelleld unexpressible 4. Christ himselfe voluntarily undertook this great work of Proposit 4. Christ voluntarily undertook the worke of our Redemption our redemption he laid down his own life freely And because the Godhead could not suffer death he united our nature unto himselfe and took flesh upon him There are two words setting forth his humiliation Phil. 2. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he made himselfe of no reputation c. Joh. 1. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he dwelt among us c. He took the man hood as if he should unite a clodde of dust unto himselfe who was God from all Eternity As if the Antient of daies should become the infant of daies the Eternall God become a Child As if he that the heaven of heavens could not containe should be inclosed nine months in the wombe of a Virgin Thus it was in respect of his humane nature he was born of Virgin wrapt in swadling cloathes laid in a manger He who had heaven and earth at his command was laid in a manger Herein appeares the singular love of Christ in condescending to take mans nature to take a body that he might accomplish the great work of our redemption by suffering upon the crosse Heb. 10. 5 6 7. Wherefore when he cometh into the world he saith sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not but a body hast thou prepared me In burnt offerings and sacrifice for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Then said I loe I come in the volumne of the book it is written of me to do thy will O God 5. Christ by his active and passive obedience made full compleate Proposit 5. Christ by his obedience hath made full satisfaction and absolute satisfaction to his Fathers Justice for all those that were given him by the Father Rom. 3. 25. Whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sinnes that are past through the forbearance of God To the same effect the Apostle speaks Eph. 2. 13. But now in Christ Jesus yee who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the blood of Christ Col. 1. 20. And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I say whether they be things in earth or in heaven Christ gave himselfe a sacrifice to expiate for sinne He trod the winepresse of his Fathers sury By his stripes we are healed who his owne selfe bare our sinnes in his owne body on the tree that we 1 Pet. 2. 24. being dead to sinne should live unto righteousnesse by whose stripes we are healed He is the reconciler Col. 1. 20. The price of our redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 6. 20. For yee are bought with a price Matth. 20. 28. Even as the Son of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a ransome for many See Christ's great end of coming into the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to give his life a ransome for many Christ is the high Priest that entred into the holy of holiest and offered up himselfe a sacrifice Thereby as a surety he paid our debt satisfied his Fathers justice to the utmost Isai 53. 5 11. But he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed He shall see of the travell of his soule and be satisfied by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many for he shall beare their iniquities And this is a thorough satisfaction 2 Cor. 5. 21. For he hath made him to be sinne for us who knew no sinne that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himselfe for us that he might redeeme us from all iniquity and purify unto himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes Hereby we are justified Rom. 5. 9. Much more being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him Hereby we are sanctified Rev. 1. 5. And from Jesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first begotten of the dead and the Prince of the Kings of the earth unto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his owne blood Feare not we are now made nigh Eph. 2. 13. But now in Christ Jesus yee who were farre of are made nigh by the blood of Christ By him we are reconciled Col. 1. 20. And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I say whether they be things in earth or in heaven By Christ we are blessed Gal. 3. 13 14. Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the law being made a Curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree that the blessing of Abraham might come upon us And that Christ doth fully satisfy is evident because he continually interceds for his people and pleads the vertue and benefit of his perfit satisfactionion Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able also to save them to the utmost that come unto God through him seeing he ever liveth make intercession for them And what was the motive that moved him to do all this for his people to be incarnate to live on earth amongst sinners to suffer reproaches contempts and infamies what moved him to drinke that bitter Cup to poure his blood out of his side and become obedient unto the death of the Crosse Nothing moved him but his love his good will his compassion moved him to heale bodily diseases and his compassion love and mercy moved him to heale soule diseases 6. This love of Christ is a distinguishing speciall love for a peculiar Proposit 6. The Love of Christ is a distinguishing Love sort of people He sweat drops of blood in the garden he was afflicted smitten wounded but all this he endured for the transgression of his own people Isai 53. 8. He was taken from prison and from judgment and who
Perkins of three things 1. The nature of Man 2. The faculties of Nature 3. And corruption of both Now this distinction must be without seperation of nature from faculties or of corruption from either so as we may say truly that the nature and powers of the soule are corrupted Now this corruption consists 1. In the depravation of Gods image man was created after Gods image but by reason of sin he hath defaced the same 2. In a pronenesse to all wickednesse so that the nature of man is evill continually and the seeds of all rebellion are sowne in the corrupt nature of mankind wherefore the Lord threatens That Gen. 6. 3. his spirit should no longer strive with man for that he is but flesh i. e. he is become corrupted he hath fallen from his Creator and become fleshly and sinfull what this flesh is the Apostle tells Rom. 7. 18. Gal. 6. 8. Eph. 2. 3. 2. In the next place we are to inquire what 's meant by affections Q 2. What 's meant by Affections and lusts and lust's Ans By affections we are to understand inordinate affections which beare sway in carnall men their affections are out of order irregular immoderate and they are set upon the wrong object they love where they should hate and hate where they should love Anger is sometimes an inordinate affection and it bared sway in Cain against Abell Envy is sometime an inordinate affection and it prevailed in Saul against David Sorrow is sometimes immoderate and inordinate in Ahab when he could not get Naboths Vineyard he was heavy and displeased 1 King 21. 4. Love was an inordinate affection in the men of the last times Lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God 2 Tim. 3. 4. 2. By Lusts we are to understand inordinate and insatiable desires after the things of the world as Riches Honours Pleasures of this sort of inordinate affections are coveteousnesse pride gluttony c. 3. In the third place what 's meant by crucifying the flesh with Q. 3. What 's meant by crucifying the flesh c. its affections and lusts Ans For answer hereunto we are to distinguish of crucifying either as the action of Christ or as the action of a Christian 1. Le ts consider Crucifixion as the action of Christ and this 1. Crucifixion as the Action of Christ consists in three particulars 1. Upon the Crosse Christ stood in our Roome and bared the burthen of our sinnes and made an expiation for them in this respect we are said to be crucified with him Gal. 2. 20. 2. The second is in us when Christ conveyes the vertue of his death in us to cause the death of sinne when Christ gives us his spirit to mortify the deeds of the body Rom. 8. 13. 3. The third is in Baptisme whereby Christ sealed the two former to them that believe Rom. 6. 3 6. 2. Le ts consider crucifixon as the Action of a Christian and 2. Crucifixion as the Action of a Christian this consists in the imitation of Christ crucified after this manner Christ was attached apprehended and brought into the presence of Pilate so must we bring our selves into the presence of God Christ was arraigned at the Tribunall of Pilate so must we arraigne our selves at the barre of Christs judgment seate Christ was indited and accused so must we indite and accuse our selves Christ was condemned so must we condemne and judge our selves after sentence past there followed execution Christ was crucified so must we proceed to the execution of our sinnes and corruptions We must labour to be the death of every sinne to give every lust a mortifying blow we must not spare any Ruling sinne that was Sauls sinne in sparing Agag but we must destroy all both great and small we must not only mourne for sin but hate it not only hate it but endeavour the destruction of it But the further Inlargement of these things I shall leave to the use of Examination 4. In the fourth place it remaines that I prove the assertion 4. The Doctrine proved that those that are Christs are such crucified persons St Paul thus professeth of himselfe That he was crucified with Christ But I will prove the point by reason 1. Because the flesh is enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 R. 1. The fleshly mind is enmity against God and naturall men are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 5. 10. Now flesh and blood corrupt nature unregeneracy the old man cannot enter into the Kingdome of God To be carnally minded is death Rom. 8. 6. and such cann●t please God Rom. 8. 8. now we may not spare Gods enemies The Children of Babylon were to be dasht in peices Amaleck was to be utterly overthrowne these were Gods enemies Likewise the affections and lusts of the flesh are Gods enemies these must be slaine these must be crucified 2. Because Christians ought to be conformable unto Christs R. 2. Christians ought to be conformable unto Christs death death Phil. 2. 10. Rom. 6. 5 6. As Christ died for our sinnes so we must be a mortifying of sinne sinne must not be suffered to live we are in this world in a dying condition we must never give over fighting till we returne away conquerors though we sinne as long as we be in this world and have flesh as well as spirit yet we must never give over striving for mastery over the flesh 3. God will have us exercised in a continuall warfare and R. 3. God will have us exercised in continuall warfare combat against the flesh it 's an inbred enemy and it hath many lurking holes many Apologies many pretences we must be continually resisting the flesh even unto blood striving against sinne Heb. 12. 4. Here only a deadly Feud is lawfull This must be transmitted from Generation to Generation sinne must be crucified Rom. 6. 6. Sinne must be subdued Mich. 7. 18 19. And above all sinnes we had need fight most violently against fleshly lusts they being grand enemies unto the soule 1 Pet. 2. 11. 'T is true the Canaanite will be in the Land sinne will be in our mortall bodies whilst we be in this world but we must never let it reigne never suffer it to have any peace never give it quarter but be continually resisting of and fighting against it Now to apply what hath been said particularly to every ones Applicat Conscience here are six Uses to be made 1. Information 2. Reprehension 3. Exhortation 4. Examination 5. Direction And 6. Consolation 1. For Information and that in two particulars Vse 1. For Information First Hereby we are informed what a carnall man is namely one that is carried away with some inordinate affections or some inordinate lust Herod did many good things as the Text saith he heard John Baptist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sweetly yet he was but a carnall man Joh. 6. 20. for he was possest with
an inordinate love of his Brother Philips wife Saul slew many of the Amalekites but he was but a carnall man he obeyed the commandment of God too halves He was partiall in his obedience Judas was a disciple of Christ yet but a carnall man he was carried away with an inordinate lust of covetousnesse he was a Theefe and carried the bagge Joh. 12. 6. 2. Hereby we are informed what a spirituall man is he is one that crucifieth his lusts hee 's a man crucified unto the world and the world unto him hee 's a wrastler and a warrior against flesh and blood even against corruptions he makes it his businesse to give a deadly blow to them all 2. The second Use is for Reproofe of severall sorts of persons Vse 2. For Reproofe 1. It Reproves those common sort of Protestants who would be accounted Christians and Protestants but there 's no change at all wrought in their hearts nor in their lives they professe themselves Christians but they live without Christ they know not what Regeneration Adoption the new Creature meanes The old sent still remaines in them they are covetous worldly minded Sabbath-breakers swearers c. And yet these would go under the name of Christians but where 's the crucifying of the flesh where 's the mortifying of their lusts the want whereof evidently proves them to be only nominall not reall Christians 2. This Doctrine reproves such in whom there is some beginning of a change but it 's but partiall it 's not a thorough change some sinnes they leave which are most crosse to their profit and reputation but others they hugge and foster some sweet sinne some antient pleasant customary sin they will not forgoe a beloved bosome sinne they will not crucify they would have a dispensation in this with Naaman and would be faine pardoned in that but these fosterings of a darling sinne shew the heart to be rotten David profest his uprightnesse by keeping himselfe from his own iniquity Psal 18. 23. Right eyes ought to be pluckt out and right hands cut off 3. This reproves those that love not to heare their sinnes reproved if a preacher touch them to the quick and tell them of co●senage in the trade double dealing equivocation c. and shew them the evill of their worldly mindednesse pride and vaine glory c. They cannot abide such plaine dealing but account of such a plain dealing Preacher as Ahab accounted of Michaiah a great enemy and as the Apostle Paul himselfe was accounted an enemy because he told them the truth 3. The third Use is for Exhortation to presse home the duties Vse 3. For Exhortation of the Text to set upon this great work of crucifying the flesh let the proud man labour to crucify his pride the voluptuous man his pleasures the worldly man his covetousnesse the cholerick man his anger here 's a great work indeed it cannot be done easily There 's required sweat and blood there 's much diligence A Christian must be in fastings and watchings often often tugging hard at the oare often in prayer and wrastling with God It 's a greater victory for a man to conquer his pride anger earthly mindednesse c Then to take a City by storme Prov. 16. 32. I will cast in further two or three Considerations to move us to this duty impartially 1. Consider execution of justice upon Gods enemies is acceptable Consid 1. Execution of justice is acceptable unto God unto him after Achan was stoned the vally of Achor was a dore of hope Hos 2. 14. The workes of the flesh are enemies to God and must be destroyed impartially 2. If we be not the death of sinne it will be the death of us Consid 2. If we kill not sin it will kill us it will bring eternall death shall not we rather kill then be killed rather slay sinne and destroy it then let it slay and destroy us Every sinne is destructive to the soule there 's a pit of destruction whereinto sinners fall Psal 55. 23. 3. Of all sinnes those that are most pleasing to flesh and blood Consid 3. c. delightfull sinnes those are most pernicious and destructive to the soule Immoderate mirth and jollity at Ammons Feast were the harbingers of his ruine when his heart was merry with wine then was he slaine Le ts then every one beware of the Syren songs of the flesh let us not hearken to them least we be inchanted therewith to our utter destruction But I proceed to a fourth Use for Examination Here 's the Vse 4. For Examinat grand Question to be put home unto us all whether we are such persons that have Crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts Ans For Answer hereunto by way of Character I le set down the Properties of a crucified person 1. A crucified person hath his affections crucified to the deeds 1. Crucifixion of the affections of the flesh hee 's none of those of whom the Apostle speaks Rom. 8. 5. who mind the things of the flesh The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now a crucified person doth not rellish nor savour fleshly things his love desires hopes Joyes are not fixt upon carnall sensuall pleasures what a wonderfull change is here wrought when as in the state of unregeneracy carnall lusts sensuall pleasures took up a mans joy desire and delight his discourses heart pleasure and all These were carried downe with this stream but after God had broke in upon the heart and renewed the mind and sanctified the affections the man becomes another manner of man what he formerly lov'd now he hates what he formerly most rejoyced in are now his greatest burthens and causes of sorrow and what 's the reason Because he is a mortified person he hath mortified his members as the Apostle speaks Col. 3. 5. and not only particular members but the whole body likewise even the deeds of the body Rom. 8. 13. 2. A crucified person hath a quickning vertue from Christ 2. There 's quickning vertue from Christ to bring forth the fruits of the spirit as love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse c. Gal. 5. 22. A crucified person is dead and alive i. e. dead to the workes of the flesh and alive to the fruits of the spirit By vertue of Christs death sinne is mortified and by vertue of his resurrection we are raised up to newnesse of life 3. A crucified person is weary of the world The world is a 3. A crucified man is weary of the world burthen to him and what 's the Reason but because the love of the world is enmity against God A man upon the crosse O what paines doth he endure his heart hankers not after honours pleasures pompe and vanities hereupon the Apostle glorieth upon the crosse of Christ By whom saith he the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world Gal. 6. 14. But with a caution you must