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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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hope This is to undervalue Christ's redemption this is to think there is more in sin to damn than in Christ's sufferings to save whereas all thy Sins to Christ are but as a little cloud to the glorious Sun yea all the Sins of all the men in the world are but to Christs merits as a drop to the Ocean I speak not this to encourage the presumptuous sinner for alass he hath no part in this satisfaction but to comfort the humble sinner who is loaden with the sense of his Sins what though they were a burthen greater than he can bear yet they are not a burthen greater than Christ can bear there is in Christ's blood an infinite treasure able to sanctifie thee and all the World there is in Christs death a ransome a counterprice sufficient to redeem all the sinners that ever were or ever shall be the price is of that nature that it is not diminished though it be extended to never so many as the Sun hath fulness of light to enlighten all the world and if the blind do not see by it it is no any scarcity of light in the Sun but by reason of his own indisposition so if all men are not acquitted by Christ's death it 's not because that was insufficient as if it had not vertue enough to reach them as well as others but because they by their unbelief do reject this remedy Oh what large room hath saith to expatiate in sit down and dive and dive yet thou canst not come to the bottom of Christ's blood but as the Prophet Ezekiel saw still more and greater abominations so mayest thou in the sufferings of Christ observe more and more fulness See what a notable opposition the Apostle makes Rom. 5.15 16 17 18 19 20 21. between the first and second Adam proving at large that Christ doth super-abound in the fruits of his grace above the first Adam in the fruits of his sin he calls it grace and the abundance of grace and this abundance of grace reigneth to life Ver. 17. so that these Texts should be like so much oyl poured into the wounds of every broken-hearted sinner Oh is there any thing that can be desired more than this 5. There is in it remission of sins so saith Christ Mat. 26.28 This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins Remission of sins is attributed to Christ's death as a cause it is not thy tears or prayers or rendings of heart that could pay the least farthing Heb. 9.22 Without shedding of blood saith the Apostle there is no remission God will have tears and blood also though not for the same purpose for all thy tears thou must flie to Christ only as the cause it is true thou must mourn and pray and humble thy self but it 's Christ's blood only that can wash us clean Oh remember this God will not pardon without satisfaction by the blood of Christ And surely this makes Christ's death so desirable Oh my sins afflict me cries many a one Oh I am loathsome in mine own eyes much more in Gods surely God is offended with my dulness slothfulness and my thousand imperfections I am all the day long entangled with this sin and that sin and the other sin but let this contrite spirit look on Christ's death and therein he may find all sin is pardoned see here what an Argument is put into thy mouth from these sufferings of Christ well mayest thou say O Lord I am unworthy but it is just and right that Christ obtain what he died for Eph. 2.13 14. O pardon my sins for his death's sake and for his precious blood sake 6. There is in it reconciliation and peace with God In Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ for he is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us Rom. 5.10 Eph. 2.16 Col. 1.20 When we were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Son that he might reconcile both viz. Jews and Gentiles unto God in one body by the Cross And having made peace through the blood of his Cross by him ●o reconcile all things to himself This certainly should admirably support the drooping soul it may be thou cryest My sins have made a breach betwixt God and my soul I have warred against heaven and now God wars against me and oh what odds if the Lord be angry yea but a little what will become of my poor soul is a little stubble able to contend with the consuming fire how then should I contend with God but come now and look on Christ's death as the means and meritorious cause of reconciliation and thou canst not but say O this death is desirable When God the Father looks at a sinner in the bloody glass of Christ then saith God Oh now fury and wrath is not in me I have no more quarrel or controversie with this soul seeing Christ hath suffered it is enough I have as much as my justice can demand my frowns are now turned into smiles and my rod of iron into a Scepter of grace Why this is it that makes Christ's death and blood so desirable to the soul what shall Jacob so rejoyce in seeing Esau's face altered to him shall he say to Esau I have seen thy face as the face of God how much rather may the humble and believing sinner be filled with gladness when through Christ's blood shall be thus appeased and reconciled with him 7. There is in it immunity and safety from all the judgments and dangers threatned against our sins Surely if there were such force in the blood of the type that by the effusion of it the Israelites lay safe and untouched of the revenging Angel how much more in the blood of Christ Rev. 12.11 Satan himself is said to be overcome by the blood of the Lamb and God's revenge due to our sins is said to be removed by the blood of Jesus therefore it is called The blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than the blood of Abel Heb. 12.24 the blood of sprinkling was for safety and Christ's blood is for safety it cries not for revenge as Abel's blood cryed but for mercy and for deliverance from all misery 8. There is in it a blessed vertue to open Heaven and to make passage thither for our souls Having boldness or liberty to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10.19 it is the blood of Christ that rents the Vail and makes a way into the Holy of Holies that is into the Kingdom of Heaven without this blood there is no access to God it is only by the blood of Christ that heaven is open to our prayers and that Heaven is open to our persons this blood is the key that unlocks Heaven and lets in the souls of his Redeemed
making Christ 's death of none effect O come and with joy draw water out of this well of Salvation Isa 12.3 5. Another cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me the very thoughts of hell seem to astonish my heart methinks I see a little peep-hole down into hell and the devil roaring there being reserved in chains under darkness untill the judgment of the great day and methinks I see the damned flaming and Judas and all the wicked in the world and they of Sodom and Gomorrah there lying and roaing and gnashing their teeth now I have sinned and why should not I be damned Oh why should not the wrath of God be executed on me yea even upon me I answer the death of Christ acquits thee of all Rom. 20.6 Blessed is he that hath a part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power Christ's death hath took away the pains of the second death yea pains and power too for it shall never oppress such as belong to Christ If Hell and Devils could speak a word of truth they would say Comfort your selves ye believing souls we have no power over you for the Lord Jesus hath conquered us and we have quite lost the cause Paul was very confident of this and therefore he throws down the Gauntlet and challengeth a dispute with all commers Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Rom. 8.33 34. it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed let sin and the law and justice and death and hell yea and all the Devils in Hell unite their forces this one argument of Christ's death it is Christ that dyed will be enough to confute and confound them all Come then and comfort your selves all believers in this death of Christ what do you believe and are you confident that you do believe why then do you sit drooping What manner of communications are these that you have as ye walk and are sad Luke 24.17 Away away dumpishness despair disquietness of spirit Christ is dead that you might live and be blessed in this respect every thing speaks comfort if you could but see it God and men heaven and earth Angels and devils the very justice of God it self is now your friend and bids you go away comforted for it is satisfied to the full Heaven it self waits on you and keeps the dores open that your souls may enter We have boldness saith the Apostle to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10.20 by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the veil that is to say his flesh Christ's death hath set open all the golden gates and dores of glory and therefore go away chearily and get you to heaven and when you come there be discouraged or discomforted if you can O my soul I see thou art pouring on sin on thy crimson sins and scarlet sins but I would have thee dwell on that crimson scarlet blood of Christ Oh it is the blood of sprinkling it speaks better things than the blood of Abel it cryes for mercy and pardon and refreshing and salvation thy sins cry Lord do me justice against such a soul but the blood of Christ hath another cry I am abased and humbled and I have answered all Methinks this should make thy heart leap for joy Oh the honey the sweet that we may suck out of this blood of Christ come lay to thy mouth and drink an hearty draught it is this spiritual wine that makes merry the heart of man and it is the voice of Christ to all his guests Eat O friends Cant. 5.1 drink yea drink abundantly O beloved SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus 1. We must pray that all these Transactions of Christ in his sufferings and death may be ours if we direct our prayers immediately to Jesus Christ let us tell him what anguish and pains he hath suffered for our sakes and let us complain against our selves Oh what shall we do who by our sins have so tormented our dearest Lord what contrition can be great enough what tears sufficiently expressive what hatred and detestation equal and commensurate to those sad and heavy sufferings of our Jesus And then let us pray that he would pity us and forgive us those sins wherewith we crucified him that he would bestow on us the vertue of his sufferings and death that his wounds might heal us his death might quicken us and his blood might cleanse us from all our spiritual filth of sin and lastly that he would assure us that his death is ours that he would perswade us That neither death nor life nor Angels Rom. 8.38 39. nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature should be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 2. We must praise the Lord for all these sufferings of Christ Hath he indeed suffered all these punishments for us Oh then what shall we render unto the Lord for all his benefits upon us what shall we do for him who hath done and suffered all these things but especially if we believe our part in the death of Christ in all the vertues benefits victories purchases and priviledges of his precious death oh then what manifold cause of thankfulness and praise is here be enlarged O my soul sound forth the praises of thy Christ tell all the world of that warmest love of Christ which flowed with his blood out of all his wounds into thy spirit tune thy heart-strings aright and keep consort with all the Angels of Heaven and all his Saints on earth sing that Psalm of John the Divine Rev. 1.5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen SECT IX Of conforming to Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus in respect of his sufferings and death looking unto Jesus is effective of this objects have an attractive power that do assimulate or make like unto them I have read of a woman that by fixing the strength of her imagination upon a Blackamore on the wall she brought forth a black and swarthy child And no question but there is a kind of spiritual-imaginative of power in faith to be like to Christ by looking on Christ come then and let us look on Christ and conform to Christ in this respect In this particular I shall examine these Queries 1. Wherein we must conform 2. What is the cause of this conformity 3. What are the means of this conformity as on our parts For the first wherein we must conform I answer we must conform to Christ
wayes by the antient writers and I refer you to them For the second why Christ retained these wounds and prints many reasons are rendred though I shall not close with all 1. Some think those skars or prints were as the trophies of his victory nothing is more delightfull to a lover than to bear about the wounds undergone for his beloved and nothing is more honourable for a Souldier than to shew his wounds undergone for his countries good what are they but as so many arguments of his valour and trophies of his victory this was Bedes sense Christ reserved his skars Beda in Luc. not from any impotency of curing them but to set out the glory and triumph of his victory over death and hell 2. Others think those skars or prints were for the setting out of Christs splendor and beauty as in cut or pinck garments the inward silks do appear more splended so in Christ's wounds there appears inwardly far more beauty Aquinas affirms that in the very place of the wounds there is a certain special comeliness in Christ And Augustine thinks Thom. 3. part q 53. a cert Aug. 22. de civit Dei that the very martyrs may retain some skarrs of their wounds in glory because there is no deformity but dignity in them and besides a certain beauty may shine in their bodies answerable to their vertues wherein they excelled 3. Others think that Christ retains those skars that he might by them interceed for us upon these very words we have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 1 John 2.2 they comment thus that God is appeased by Christ Thom. in 1. representing to him the prints and skars of his humane nature Christ's wounds are as so many open mouths Jona l. 2. which cry at the tribunal of his Father for mercy as Abels blood cryed for revenge 4 Others think that Christ retains those skars that thereby in the day of judgment he might confound the Jews and all the wicked in the world It is Augustine's judgment that as Christ shewed Thomas his hands and side because otherwise he would not believe so at the last day will he shew those wounds to all his enemies saying Come behold the man whom ye have crucified come see the prints of the nayls and the print of the spear Aug. l. 2. de symb 6.8 these be the hands and feet that you nailed and clenched to a piece of wood this is the side you pierced by you and for you was it opened but you would not enter in that ye might be saved And for this opinion they alledg this text Rev. 1.7 Behold he cometh with clouds and every eye shall see him and they also which pierced him and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him even so Amen 5. All think that Christ retained his skarrs that he might convince the unbelieving Disciples of his resurrection hereby they are assured that Christ is raised and that the same body of Christ is raised that before was crucified and to this we cannot but subscribe the skars of his wounds were for the healing of their doubts Luke brings in Christ Aug. tract 121. in Johan Luke 24.39 he bespeaking his Disciples thus Behold my hands and my feet that 't is I my self handle me and see q. d. Come let your Fingers enter into these prints of the Nails and let your hands he thrust into the depths of this wound come and open these holes in my hands open this wound in my side I will not deny that to my Disciples for their faith which I denyed not to mine enemies in their rage open and feel till you come to the very bone that so both bones and wounds may witness that I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for ever more Rev. 1.18 Vse Amen What testimonies are here to convince the world of Christ's resurrection surely this argues the goodness of God that strives thus wonderfully with the weak saith of those that are his At first he appeared to one even to Mary Magdalen and after he appeared to two Mat 28.1 Mark 16.1 saith Matthew to Mary Magdalen and the other Mary or to three saith Mark to Mary Magdalen Mary the mother of James and Salome but of this apparition he is seen of ten at least and to confirm their faith not a considerable circumstance must be wanting here is time and place and persons to whom he appears and the manner how he appears he stands in the midst to be seen of all he speaks to them breaths on them eats with them and shews them his hands and his side O the wonderful condescentions of Christ what helps doth he continually afford to beget in us faith if we are ignorant he instructs us if we err he reduceth us if we sin he corrrects us if we stand he holds us up if we fall down he lifts us up again if we go he leads us if we come to him he is ready to recieve us there 's not a passage of Christ betwixt him and his but 't is an argument of love and a means either of begetting or of increasing Faith O then believe in Christ yea believe thy part in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ considering that these apparitions were not only for the Apostles sakes but if Christ be thine they were for thy sake that thou mightest believe and be saved But I shall have occasion to speak more of this in the Chapter following So much of the second apparition as it is recorded by the Evangelist John SECT VII Of Christ's Apparition to all his Apostles IMmediately after this apparition to his ten Apostles the next is to all his Apostles not one being absent and after eight days again his Disciples were within and Thomas with them then came Jesus the doors being shut and stood in the midst and said peace be unto you Joh. 20.26 27. Ver. 28 29. then saith he to Thomas reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithless but believing and Thomas answered and said unto him my Lord and my God Jesus saith unto him Thomas because thou hast seen me thou hast believed blessed are they that have not seen and yet have believed In the whole story we have Christ's apparition and fruits of it 1. For the Apparition as in the former we have 1. The time 2. The place 3. The Persons to whom he appeared And 4. The manner how he appeared 1. For the time and after eight days it was on the same day seven night after the former apparitions which was the first day of the week and now because of his resurrection Rev. 1.10 and apparitions called the Lords day I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day this in my apprehension makes much for the honour of the Lord's day the first assembly of the Apostles
God to this purpose he sits at God's right hand to intercede for us and to maintain the peace and union betwixt God and us therefore being justified by faith Rom. 5.1 we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ 2. His work is to maintain intercourse and correspondency and surely this is Christs work also By him we have an access unto the Father Eph. 2.18.3.12 In him we have boldness and access with confidence by the Faith of him the word access doth not only signifie coming to God in prayer but all that resort and communion which we have with God as united by faith to Jesus Christ according to that 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ had once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God This benefit have all believers in and by Christ they come to God by him they have free commerce and intercourse in heaven 3. His work is to reconcile and take up emergent differences and this is Christ's work also Isa 53.12 he maketh intercession for the Transgressors he takes up the differences that our transgressions make betwixt God and us 4. This work is to procure the welfare of the People or State where he negotiates and this is no less Christ's Work for he seeks the welfare of his people he sits at God's right hand to intercede for them and commending their estate and condition to his Father Phil. 1.19 he makes it his request to his Father that his members may have a continual supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ that they may be strengthened in temptations confirmed in tribulations delivered from every evil work enabled to every good duty and finally preserved unto his Heavenly Kingdom 2. Christ's Intercessions consists in the presenting of his Wounds Death and Blood as a publick satisfaction for the debt of sin and as a publick price for the purchase of our glory There is a question amongst the Schools whether Christ hath not taken his wounds or the signs skars and prints of his wounds into heaven with him and whether Christ is representing those wounds skars and prints unto his Father doth not hereby intercede for us some I am sure are for the affirmative Aquinas distinguisheth of Christ's Intercession as being three-fold Aquin. in Job c. 2. the first before his passion by devout prayer and the second at his Passion by effusion of his blood and the third after his Ascension by the representation of his Wounds and Scars Howsoever this hold for I dare not be too confident without Scripture-ground yet this I dare say that Christ doth not only present himself but the Sacrifice of himself and the infinite Merit of his Sacrifice When he went to heaven he carried with him absolutely the Power Merit the vertue of his Wounds and Death and Blood into the presence of God the Father for us and with his blood he sprinkled the Mercy-seat as it were seven times We read in the Law that When the high Priest went within the vail he took the blood of the Bullock and sprinkled it with his finger upon the mercy-seat East-ward Levit. 16.14 and before the mercy-seat he sprinkled the blood with his finger seven times not only was the Priest to kill the Bullock without the holy of holies but he was to enter with the blood into the holy of holies and to sprinkle the mercy-seat therein with it surely these were patterns of things to be done in the Heavens Christ that was slain and Crucified without the gate carryed his own blood into the holy of holies or into the heaven of heavens Heb. 9.12 for by his own blood he entred in once into the holy place having obtained eternal redemption for us and thither come he sprinkles it as it were upon the mercy-seat i.e. he applyes it and obtains mercy by it by the blood of Christ God's mercy and justice are reconciled in themselves and reconciled unto us Christ sprinkles his blood on the mercy-seat seven times seven is a note of perfection where Christs blood is sprinkled on a soul that soul is sure to be washed from all filth and at last to be perfected and saved to the very utmost Christ's blood was shed upon the earth but Christ's blood is sprinkled now he is in heaven what is any soul sprinkled with the blood of Christ Heb. 12.22 24. surely this sprinkling comes from heaven so the Apostle But ye are come to mount Zion and unto the City of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to Jesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and then it follows to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel It is upon mount Zion where this sprinkling is there is Jesus at God's right hand there he stands as it were upon the mount Levit. 16.14 19. and there he sprinkles his blood round about him heaven is all besprinkled as the mercy-seat in the holy of holies was the earth is all besprinkled as the Altar out of the holy of holies was heaven and earth are all besprinkled with the blood of Jesus so that the Saints and people of God are no where but their doors and their posts and houses I mean their bodies and souls are all besprinkled with the blood of the Lamb slain from the beginning of the World Why this is that blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than that of Abel Mark that Christ's blood hath a tongue it speaks it cries it prayes it intercedes there 's some agreement and some difference betwixt Christs blood and Abels blood Gen. 4.10 1. The agreement is in these things Abels blood was abundantly shed for so it is said the voyce of bloods and Christ's blood was let out with thornes and scourges nails and spear Gen. 4.10 it was abundantly shed Again Abels blood cryed out yea it made a loud cry so that it was heard from earth to heaven the voice of thy Brothers blood cryeth unto me from the ground and Christ's blood cryeth out it makes a loud cry it fills heaven and earth with the noise yea the Lords ears are so filled with it that it drowns all other souls and rings continually in his ears 2. The difference is in these things Abels blood cryed for vengeance against Cain but Christ's blood speaks for mercy on all believers Abels blood was shed because he sacrificed and he and his sacrifice accepted but Christs blood was shed that he might be sacrificed and that we through his sacrifice might be accepted Abels blood cryed thus see Lord and revenge but Christs blood cryed thus Father forgive them for they know not what they do and at this very instant Christ's blood crys for remission and here 's our comfort if God heard the servant he will much rather hear the Son if he heard the servant for spilling he will much more hear the Son for saving yet that I may speak properly and not in figures
them again to this Land and I will build them and not pull them down and I will plant them and not bluck them up and I will give them a Heart to know Me that I am the Lord and they shall be My People and I will be their God for they shall return unto Me with their whole Heart Hag. 2.7 8 9. Again I will shake all Nations and the Desire of the Nations shall come and I will fill this House with Glory saith the Lord of Hosts The Silver is mine and the Gold is mine saith the Lord of Hosts the Glory of this latter House shall be greater than of the former saith the Lord of Hosts And I will put my Law in their inward parts Jer. 31.33 34. and write it in their Hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquities and I will remember their Sins no more 3. It excels in the discovery and revelation of the Mediator in and through whom this Covenant was made In the former expression we discovered much yet in none of them was so plainly revealed the time of his coming the place of his birth his name the passages of his nativity his humiliation and kingdom as we find them in this 1. Concerning the time of his Coming Dan. 9.24 Seventy weeks shall be determined upon thy people and upon thy holy City to finish the Transgression and to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the vision and prophesie and to anoint the most holy 2. Concerning the place of his Birth But thou Bethlehem Ephrata Mica 5.2 though thou be little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from of old from everlasting 3. Concerning his Name Vnto us a Child is born unto us a Son is given Isa 9.6 and the Government shall be upon his Shoulders and his Name shall be called Wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the Everlasting Father the Prince of Peace Jer. 23.6 In his dayes Judah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely and this his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son Isa 7.14 and thou O Virgin shalt call his Name Immanuel 4. Concerning the passages of his Nativity that he should be born of a Virgin Isa 7.14 That at his Birth all the Infants round about Bethlehem should be slain Jer 31.15 That John the Baptist should be his Prodromus or forerunner to prepare his way Mal. 3.1 That he should flee into Egypt and be recalled thence again Hos 11.1 I might add many Particulars of this kind 5. Concerning his Humiliation Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows Isa 53.4 yet we did not esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him 5. and with his stripes were we healed He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his Mouth He was taken from Prison and from Judgment 7. and who shall declare his Generation he was cut off out of from the Land of the Living 8. for the transgression of my people was he stricken It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief Therefore I will divide him a portion with the great and he shalt divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his Soul unto Death and he was numbred with the transgressors and he bare the Sin of many and made intercession for t●e transgressors One would think this were rather a History than a Prophesie of Christs sufferings you may if you will take the pains see the circumstances of his sufferings as that he was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zech. 11.12 and that with those thirty pieces of silver there was bought afterwards a Potters field Zech. 11.13 That he must ride into Jerusalem before his Passion on an Ass Zech. 9.9 I might seem tedious if I should proceed 6. Conc●rning his Kingdom Rejoyce greatly O Daughter of Zion Zech. 9.9 Isa 62.11 Mat. 21.5 shout O Daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee he is Just and having Salvation lowly and riding upon an Ass and upon a Colt the Foal of an Ass Behold a King behold thy King behold thy King cometh and he comes unto thee 1. He is a King and therefore able 2. He is thy King and therefore willing wonderful Love that he would come but more wonderful was the manner of his coming He that before made man a Soul after the Image of God then made himself a Body after the Image of Man And thus we see how this Covenant excels the former in every of these respects 3. How doth God put the Law into our inward parts I answer God puts the Law into our inward parts by enlivening or qualifying of a Man with the Graces of Gods Spirit suitable to his Commandment first there is the Law of God without us as we see it or read it in Scriptures but when it is put within us then God hath wrought an inward disposition in our minds that answers to that Law without us for example this is the Law without Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all thy Soul and with all thy Strength Deut. 6.5 Deut. 30.6 To Answer which there is a promise I will circumcise thy Heart and the Heart of thy Seed to Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all my soul now when this promise is fulfilled when God hath put the affections and grace of Love within our hearts when the habit of Love is within answerable in all things to the command without then is the Law put into our inward parts Deut. 13.4 Jer. 32.40 Again this is the Law without Thou shalt fear the Lord and keep his Ordinances and his Statutes and his Commandments to do them to answer which there is a promise I will make a Covenant with you and I will not turn away from you to do you good but I will put my fear into your hearts and you shall not depart from Me now when this promise is accomplished when God hath put the affection and grace of fear within our hearts when the habit of fear is within answerable to that Command without then is the Law put into our hearts Surely this is Mercy that God saith in his Covenant I will put my Law in their inward parts many a time a poor Soul cries out
for God will magnifie his grace and therefore he will do this great thing all that thou hast to do and all that God requires of thee in this case is onely to believe indeed thou hast no part in Christ no part in the covenant of grace if thou wilt not believe faith is the condition of the covenant of grace and therefore either believe or no covenant I know it is not easie to believe nay it is one of the hardest things under heaven to perswade a soul into faith What Will the great God of heaven make a Covenant with such a wretch as I am I cannot believe it Why What 's the matter Ah my sins my sins my sins God is a consuming fire against such he cannot endure to behold iniquity little hopes that ever God should enter into a covenant with me But to help on or to allure a soul in consider O thou soul of these following passages 1. Consider of the sweet and gracious nature of God that which undoes broken hearts and trembling souls it is misconceivings of God we have many times low diminishing ex enuating thoughts of Gods goodness but we have large thoughts of his power and wrath now to rectifie these misapprehensions consider his name and therein his nature the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions Sins and will by no means clear the guilty visiting the Iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children and upon the Childrens Children unto the Third and Fourth Generation O terrible Text Exod. 34.6 7 sayes the Soul alas I am guilty of thousands of sins and if this be his Name I am undone woe to me and mine unto the Third and Fourth Generation But consider again and in this description of God we shall find an Ocean of Mercy to a Drop of Wrath a Sea of Oyl to an half drop of scalding Lead For 1. God doth not begin the Lord the Lord that will by no means clear the guilty but the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering this is the first and greatest part of his Name God is loath to speak in justice and wrath he keeps it to the last m●rcy lies uppermost in Gods heart if the sentence must come it shall be the last day of the Assize 2 Many words are used to speak his goodness Merciful Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin here be six several phrases to shew the Riches of his Goodness but when he speaks his wrath what haste makes he over it there 's only two expressions of that it was a Theam he took no delight in Judgment is his Work his strange Work Isa 28.22 for he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of Men. 3. There 's a difference in the expression when God speaks of mercy Lam. 3.33 he expresseth it thus abundant in Mercy keeping Mercy for Thousands But in visiting sins it is not to thousands but only to the Third or Fourth Generation Surely Mercy rejoyceth against Judgment God would shew Mercy to Thousands Jam. 2.13 rather than he would destroy three or four 4. What if by no means God will clear the guilty stubbornly guilty yet never will he destroy humble souls that lye at his feet and are willing to have mercy on his easie terms How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee O Israel Hos 11.8 9. how shall I make thee as Admah How shall I set thee as Zeboim My heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together I will not execute the fierceness of Mine anger I will not destroy Ephraim for I am God and not Man the Holy One in the middest of ●●ee O my soul why standest thou at a distance with God Why dost thou fancy a Lion in the way O b●lieve in God believe in Jesus and believe thy portion in this Covenant of grace have sweet and delightful thoughts of Gods nature and thou wilt not thou canst not sly from him some are of opinion that a soul may fetch more encouragements to believe from the consideration of Gods gracious and merciful nature than from the promise it self 2. Consider of the sweet and gracious nature of Jesus Christ our thoughts of God are necessarily more strange than of Jesus Christ because of our infinite distance from the Godhead but in Christ God is come down into our nature and so infinite goodness and mercy is incarnate art thou afraid O my soul at his name Jah and Jehovah O remember his name is Emanuel the Lyon is here disrobed of his garment of terrour his rough hair is turned into a soft wooll see thy God disrobed of his terrible Majesty see thy God is a man and thy Judg is a Brother mince Jehovah with Jesus and the Serpent wi●l be a rod O that Balsamy name Jesus that name that founds healing for every wound settlement for every distraction comfort for every sorrow but here 's the misery souls in distress had rather be poring on hell than heaven rather frighting themselves with the terrours of justice than staying themselves with the fl●ggons of Mercy O my soul how canst thou more contradict the nature of Christ and the Gospel-description of Christ than to think him a destroyer of men b●t wherein appears the gracious nature of Christ I answer in his being incarnate O how could Jesus have manifested more willingness to save than that the God-head should condescend to assume our nature surely this is ten thousand times more condescention than for the greatest King to become a sly or a toad to save such creatures as toads and flyes 2. In his tender dealing with all sorts of sinners he professed th t he came into the world not to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved He wept over Jerusalem saying O Jerusalem Je●usalem Mat. 23.37 how oft would I have gathered thee as an Hen gathereth her chickens under her wings but ye would not I would but ye would not And when his Disciples would have had fire come down from Heaven to consume tho●e that refused him he reproves them and tells them they know not of what spirits they were of 3. In his care of his own not caring what he suffered so they might be saved Alas alas that the Lord Jesus should pass through a life of misery to a death more miserable to manifest openly to the world the abundance of his love and yet that any soul should suspect him of cruelty or unwillingness to shew mercy Ah my soul believe never cry out my sins my sins my sins there is a gracious nature and inclination in Jesus Christ to pardon all 3. Consider of that office of saving and shewing mercy which Christ hath set up this is more than meerly a gracious inclination Christ hath undertaken and set up an office
Spirit with a chearful Excitation Fear not q. d. Let those fear who know they are in Displeasure or know not they are gracious Thine happy Estate calls for Confidence and that Confidence calls for Joy What should they fear that are favoured of Him at whom the Devil 's Tremble O Mary How should Joy but enter into thy Heart out of whose Womb shall come Salvation I question not but these very words revived the Virgin What remote Corner of her Soul was there into which these Beams of Consolation did not shi●e Luke 1.31 32 33. 4. Here is the Foundation of her Comfort and our Happiness Behold thou shalt Conceive in thy Womb and bring forth a Son and shalt call His Name Jesus Never was Mortal Creature thus honoured that her VVomb should yield that Flesh which was personally united to the Godhead that she should bear Him that upholds the World There 's one VVonder in the Conception another in the Fruit both are marvellous but the latter I take it is more Mysterious and fuller of Admiration the Fruit of the VVomb is Jesus a Saviour the Son of the Highest a King God shall give Him a Throne and He shall Reign for ever for of His Kingdom there shall be no End Here was a Son and such a Son as the World never had before and here was the Ground of Mary's Joy How could she but rejoyce to hear what her Son should be before He was Surely never was any Mother so glad of her Son Born as this Virgin was of her Son before He was Conceived The Ground of this Joy lay more especially in that Name Jesus Here Christians Here is the Object that you are to Look unto The first Title that the Angel gives our Saviour it is Jesus a Saviour O come let us dwell a little here Without Jesus we had never known God our Friend and without Jesus God had never known us for any other than His Enemies This Name Jesus is better to us than all the Titles of God Indeed there is Goodness and Greatness enough in the Name Jehovah but we merited so little Good and demerited so much Evil that in it alone there had b●en small Comfort for us but in the Name Jesus there is Comfort and with the Name Jesus there is Comfort in the Name of God In old times God was known by His Names of Power and of Majesty and of His Nature but His Name of Mercy was reserved till now when God did purpose to pour out the whole Treasure of his Mercy by the Mediation of his Son And as this Name is exalted above all Names so are we to exalt his Mercy above all his Works O it is an useful Name In all Depths Distresses Miseries Perplexities we beseech God by the Name of Jesus to make good his own Name not to bear it for nought but as He is a Saviour so to save us And this is our Comfort that God will never so remember our wretched Sins as to forget His own Blessed Name and especially this Name Jesus O it is the Highest the Dearest the Sweetest Name to us of all the Names of God The reason of this Name was given by the Angel to Joseph Matth. 1 21. Thou shalt call his Name Jesus for He shall save His People from their Sins But why from their Sins We seem rather willing to be saved from Poverty Ignominy Plague Prison Death Hell the Devil Sin is a thing that troubles but a few O how few how very few be there that break their sleep for their Sins Alas alas Sin if we understand is the very worst of Evils There is no Poverty but Sin there is no Shame but Sin there is no Plague to that of Sin there is no Prison but that Prison is a Paradise without Sin there is no Death that hath any Sting in it but for Sin The Sting of Death is Sin saith the Apostle take out the Sting 1 Cor. 15.56 and you may put the Serpent in your Bosom Nay I 'le say more there is no Hell but for Sin Sin first kindled the Fire of Hell Sin fuels it take away Sin and that tormenting Flame goes out And for the Devil Sin is his Instrument whereby he works all mischief How comes a Man to be a slave to Satan but by Sin But for Sin the Devil had no Business in the World but for Sin he could never hurt a Soul What abundance of Benefits are here in one word He shall save His People from their Sins There is no Evil incident to Man but it ceaseth to be Evil when Sin is gone If Jesus take away Sin he doth bless our very Blessings and sanctifie our very Afflictions He fetcheth Peace out of Trouble Riches out of Poverty Honour out of Contempt Liberty out of Bondage He pulls out the Sting of Death puts out the Fire of Hell As all Evils are wrapt up in Sin so he that saves us from Sin he saves us from all Evils whatsoever But Is not Christ as precious a Name as Jesus is I answer No For 1. Christ is not the Name of God God as he is God cannot be anointed but Jesus is the Name of God and that wherein He more especially delights 2. Christ is Communicated to others Princes are called Christs but Jesus is proper to Himself There is no Saviour but He. 3. Christ is anointed To what End but to be a Saviour Jesus is therefore the End and the End is alwayes above the Means Why this is that Jesus the Son of God's Love the Author of our Salvation In whom alone God is well pleased and whom the Angel published afore He was Conceived Thou shalt Conceive and bring Forth a Son and shalt call His Name Jesus SECT II. Of the Conception of Christ 2. THe Conception of Christ was the Conclusion of the Angel's Message No sooner had the Virgin said Be it to me according to Thy Word but according to that Word it was immediately the Holy Ghost over-shadowed her and Forms our Saviour in her Womb. Now Christians Now was the Time of Love especially if we relate to His Conception and Birth Well may we say Now was it that the Day brake up that the Sun arose that Darkness vanished that Wrath and Anger gave place to Favour and Salvation Now was it that Free-Grace came down from Heaven Thousands of Angels waiting on her the very Clouds part as it were to give her way the Earth springs to welcom her the Flouds clap their Hands for Joy the Heavenly Hosts sing as she goes along Glory to God in the Highest Peace upon Earth Good Will towards Men Truth and Righteousness go before her Peace and Prosperity follow after her Pity and Mercy waits on either Hand and when she first sets Foot on the Earth she cryes a Jesus a Saviour Hear ye Sons of Men The Lord hath sent me down to bring you News of a Jesus Grace and Peace be unto you
rich mercy of Christ that he would admit a Dog to his Kingdom O grace O mercy that Christ should black his fair hands in washing foul and defiled Dogs what a motion of free mercy was this that Christ should lay his fair spotless and chast love upon the black defiled and whorish souls O what a favour that Christ maketh the Leopard and Ethiopian white for Heaven Matth. 16.19 4. Now he discovered his bounty in giving the Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven to his Apostles and to their Successors this was a power which he had never communicated before it was a gift greater than the great Charter of Nature and the Donative of the whole Creation Indeed at first God gave unto man a dominion over the Fish of the Sea Gen. 1.26 and over the Fowl of the Air and over the Cattel and over the Earth but till now Heaven it self was never subordinate to humane Ministration herein was the acting of Christ's bounty he gives unto his Ministers the Keys of Heaven that Whatsoever they shall bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and whatsoever they shall loose on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven 5. Now he discovered his patience in suffering all injuries from hence forward to the death of Jesus we must reckon his dayes like the Vigils or Eves of his Passion for now he began and often did ingeminate those sad predictions of the usage he should shortly find Matth. 16.21 that he should be rejected of the Elders and chief Priests and Scribes and suffer many things at Jerusalem and be killed and be raised up the third day and in the mean time he suffers both in word and deed they call him a Glutton a Drunkard a Deceiver a Sinner a Mad-Man a Samaritan and one possed with a Devil sometimes they take up stones to stone him and sometimes they lead him to an Hill thinking to throw him down headlong and all this he suffereth with patience yea with much patience he possesseth his soul 6. Now he discovered his glory in being transfigured on the Mount however the Person of Christ was usually depressed with poverty disgrace ignominy so that neither Jews nor Gentiles nor the Apostles themselves could at first discern the brightness of his Divinity yet now Christ gave an excellent probation of that great Glory which in due time must be revealed to all the Saints For taking with him Peter James and John Luke 9.28 29 30 31. he went up into the Mountain to pray and while he prayed he was transfigured before them and his face did shine like the Sun and his garments were white and glistering and there appeared talking with him Moses and Elias speaking of the decease which he should accomplish at Jerusalem the embassie of Christs death was delivered in forms of Glory that so the excellency of the reward might be represented together with the sharpness of his sufferings Now if ever whiles he was upon Earth was the beauty of Christ seen at height Peter saw it and was so ravished at the sight that he talked he knew not what In respect of this glorious beauty his face is said to shine like the Sun I cannot think but his shine exceeded Sun and Moon and Stars but the Sun is the brightest thing we know and therefore it is spoken to our capacity Here 's one strain of exaltation though mostly all Christ's life was a state of humiliation it learns us to be content with yea to expect most humiliation little exaltation here we may have a taste but no continued comforts till we come to Heaven 7. Now he discovered his meekness in riding upon an Ass and a colt the foal of an Ass which was according to the Prophesie Behold thy King cometh unto thee meek Math. 21.5 and especially in rebuking the furious intemperate zeal of James and John who would fain have called for fire from Heaven to have consumed the Inhabitants of a little Village who refused to give Christ entertainment Ah saith Christ Luke 9.55 Ye know not of what spirits ye are of q. d. you must learn to distinguish the spirit of Christianity from the spirit of Elias why Christ came with a purpose to seek and to save mens lives Ver. 56. and not to destroy them it were rashness indeed to slay a man on some light displeasure whose redemption cost the effusion of the dearest heart-blood of the Son of God See here the meekness of Christ in opposition to the fury and anger of his own Disciples 8. Now he discovered his pity and compassion in weeping over Jerusalem Luke 19.41 42. And when he was come near he beheld the City and wept over it saying if thou hadst known even thou c. We read of Joseph Gen. 43.30 Gen. 45.1 that there was in him such a brotherly and natural compassion that his bowels yearned upon his Brethren and he could not refrain himself before all them that stood by him his love was like an hot Furnace now Jesus Christ hath the same heart and bowels of a man and I conceive as Christ was a man void of sin so the acts of natural vertues as to pity the afflicted to compassionate the distressed were stronger in him than possibly they could be in any other man sin blunteth natural faculties especially such as incline to laudable and good acts as to love and pity and compassionate the miserable in this respect Joseph was nothing to Christ when Christ saw Jerusalem he wept and wept his compassion strangled and enclosed within him it must needs break out it may be in some measure it eased Christ's mind that his bowels of mercy found a vent we read that pity kept within Gods bowels pains his very heart so that it must needs come out Mine heart is turned within me Hos 11.8 my repentings are kindled together 9. Now he discovered his humility in washing his Disciples feet Supper being ended Joh. 13.4 5. he laid aside his garments and took a towel and girded himself and poured water into a bason and began to wash his Disciples feet and to wipe them with the towel wherewith he was girded In this ceremony and in the discourses following he instructs them in the Doctrine of humility yea he imprints the lesson in lasting Characters by making it symbolical But why would he wash their feet rather than their hands or heads I answer it is probable on this account that he might have the opportunity of a more humble posture See how he layes every thing aside that he might serve his servants Heaven stoops to Earth on abiss calls one another the miseries of man which were next to infinite are excelled by a mercy equal to the immensity of God It is storied of one Guericus that upon the consideration of this humility of Christ in washing his Disciples feet he cried out Thou hast overcome me O Lord thou hast overcome my pride this example hath mastered
saw thee in danger of death through thy own unbelief for except thou sawest in his hands the print of the nails and put thy finger into the print of the nails except thou hadst clear manifestations of Christ even to thine own sense thou wouldest not believe he condescends so far to succour thy weakness as to manifest himself by several witnesses three in heaven and three on earth yea he multiplies his three on earth to thousands of thousands so many were the signes witnessing Christ that the Disciple which testified of them John 21.25 could say If they should be written every one the world could not contain the Books that should be written 4. When he saw the buying and selling in the Temple yea making Merchandize of the Temple it self I mean of thy Soul which is the Temple of the holy Ghost he steps in to whip out those Buyers and Sellers those Lusts and Corruptions O cries he will you sell away your souls for Trash O what is a man profitted though he gain the whole world and lose his own Soul Prov. 30.2 3. 5. When he saw thee like the horse and mule more brutish than any man not having the understanding of a man thou neither learnedst wisdom nor hadst the knowledge of the most holy he came with his instructions adding line unto line and precept on precept teaching and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and sealing his truths with many Miracles Mat. 4.23 that thou maist believe and in believing thou mightest have life through his Name and Oh! what is this but to make thee wise unto salvation 6. When he saw thee a sinner of the Gentiles a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and without God in the world he sent his Apostles and Messengers abroad and bad them preach the Gospel to thee q. d. Go to such a one in the dark corner of the world an Isle at such a distance from the Nation of the Jews and set up my Throne amongst that people open the most precious Cabinet of my Love there and amongst that People tell such a Soul that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom he is one O admirable Love 7. When he saw thee cast down in thy self and refusing thy own Mercy crying and saying what is it possible that Jesus Christ should send a Message to such a dead Dog as I am why the Apostles Commission seems otherwise Go not into the way of the Gentiles Mat. 10.5 6. or into any City of the Samaritans enter ye not but go rather to the lost sheep of the House of Israel O I am a lost sheep but not being of the House of Israel what hope is there that ever I should be found He then appeared and even then he spred his arms wide to receive thy soul he satisfied thee then of another Commission given to his Apostles Go teach all Nations And he cried even then Come unto me thou that art weary and heavy laden with sin and I will receive thee into my bosom Mat. 28.19 and give thee rest there 8. When he saw thee in suspence and heard thy complaint But if I come shall I find sweet welcome I have heard that his ways are narrow and straight Oh it is an hard passage and an high ascent up to heaven Many seek to enter in but shall not be able Luke 13.24 Oh! what shall become of my poor Soul why then he told thee otherwise Prov. 3.17 that all his ways were ways of pleasantness and all his paths peace he would give thee his Spirit that should bear the weight and make all light he would sweeten the ways of Christianity to thee that thou shouldest find by experience that his yoke was easie Mat. 11.29 and his burden was light 9. When he saw the wretchedness of thy Nature and original pollution he took upon him thy Nature and by this means took away thy original sin O here is the lovely Object What is it but the absolute holiness and perfect purity of the Nature of Christ This is the fairest Beauty that ever eye beheld this is that compendium of all Glories now if Love be a motion and union of the Appetite to what is lovely how shouldst thou flame forth in loves upon the Lord Jesus Christ this is rendered as the reason of those sparklings Thou art fairer than the children of men Psal 45.2 10. When he saw thee actually unclean a transgressor of the Law in thought word Heb. 10.9 and deed then he said Lo I come to do thy will O God and wherefore would he do Gods will but meerly on thy behalf O my Soul canst thou read over all these passages of Love and dost thou not yet cry out O stay me comfort me for I am sick of Love Can a man stand by an hot and fiery furnace and never be warmed Oh for an heart in some measure answerable to these Loves Surely even good natures hate to be in debt for love and is therein thee O my soul neither grace nor yet good nature O God forbid awake awake thy ardent love towards the Lord Jesus Christ why thou art rock and not flesh if thou beest not wounded with these heavenly darts Christ loves thee is not that enough fervent affection is apt to draw love where is little or no beauty and excellent beauty is apt to draw the heart where there is no answer of affection at all but when these two meet together what breast can hold against them See O my soul here is the sum of all the particulars thou hast heard Christ loves thee and Christ is lovely his heart is set upon thee who is a thousand times fairer than all the children of men doth not this double consideration like a mighty loadstone snatch thy heart unto it and almost draw it forth of thy very breast O sweet Saviour thou couldst say even of thy poor Church though labouring under many imperfections Thou hast ravished my Heart Cant. 4.9 10. my Sister my Spouse thou hast ravished mine heart with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck how fair is thy love my Sister my Spouse how much better is thy love than wine and the smell of thy oyntments than all Spices Couldst thou O blessed Saviour be so taken with the incurious and homely features of the Church and shall not I much more be enamoured with thy absolute and divine Beauty It pleased thee my Lord out of thy sweet ravishments of thy heavenly love to say to thy poor Church Turn away thine Eyes from me for they have overcome me but Oh let me say to thee Turn thine eyes to me that they may overcome me my Lord Cant. 6.5 I would be thus ravished I would be overcome I would be thus out of my self that I might be all in thee Thus is the Language of true love to Christ but alas how dully and flatly do I speak
of the paradise of delights who hath thus troubled thee it is my sins O Lord that have so troubled thee my sins were the Thorns that pricked thee the lashes that whipped thee the purple that cloathed thee it is I Lord that am thy tormentor and the very cause of these thy pains 8. Consider Pilate's sentence that Jesus should be Crucified as the Jews required Now they had him in their will and they did to him what seemed them good Follow him from Gabbatha to Golgotha see how they lay the heavy Cross upon his tender shoulders that were so pitifully rent and torn with whips accompany him all the way to the Execution and help to carry his Cross to Mount Calvary And there as if thou hadst been frozen hitherto thaw into tears see him lifted up on that engine of torture the bloody Cross he hangs on nails and as he hangs his own weight becomes his own affliction O see how his arms and legs were racked with voilent pulls his hands and feet boared with nails his whole body torn with stripes and gored with blood And now O my soul run with all thy might into his arms held out at their full length to receive thee Oh weigh the matter because sin entred by the senses therefore the head in which the senses flourish is crowned with searching thorns because the hands and feet are more especially the instruments of sin therefore his hands and feet are nailed to the Cross for satisfaction O marvellous what King is he or of what Countrey that wears a Crown of Thorns what man is he or where lives he whose hands and feet are not only bored but digged into as if they had been digging with Spades in a ditch surely here 's matter for a serious meditation be enlarged O my thoughts and dwell upon it consider it and consider it again 9. Consider the darkness that spread over all the Earth now was the Sun ashamed to shew his brightness considering that the Father of lights was darkned with such disgrace the Heavens discoloured their beauty and are in mourning robes the Lamp of Heaven is immantled with a miraculous Eclipse the Sun in the firmament will simpathize with the Sun of Righteousness it will not appear in glory though it be mid-day because the Lord of Glory is thus disgraced And now hear the voice that comes from the Son of God My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Christ in the Garden tasted the bitter cup of God's fierce wrath but now he drunk the dregs of it he then sipped off the top but now he drunk all off top and bottom and all O but what 's the meaning of this My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Surely 1. This was not a total but a partial dereliction this was not a perpetual but a temporary forsaking of him the Godhead was not took away from the manhood but the union remained still even now when the Manhood was forsaken 2. This was not a forsaking on Christ's part but only on the Father's part the Father forsook Christ but Christ went after him God took away the sense of his love but the Son of God laid hold upon him crying and saying My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 3. This forsaking was not in respect of his being but in respect of the feeling of God's favour love and mercy certainly God loved him still Oh but his sense of comfort was now quite gone so as it never was before In his agony there was some inklings of God's mercy now and then at least there was some star-light some little flash of lightning to cheer him up but now all the sense and feeling of God's love was gone and not so much as any little star-light of the same appeared Christ now took the place of sinners and God the Father shut him out as it were amongst the sinners he drew his mercy out of sight and out of hearing and therefore he cryed out in a kind of wonderment My God my God why hast thou forsaken me After this he speaks but a few words more and he gives up the Ghost He dyes that we might live he is dissolved in himself that we might be united to his Father O my soul see him now if thou canst for weeping his eyes are dim his cheeks are wan his face is pale his head is bowing his heart is panting himself is dying come come and dye with him by a most exact mortification look pale like him with grief and sorrow and trouble for thy sins 10. Consider the piercing of his side with a spear whence came out a stream of blood and water O Fountain of everlasting waters methinks I see the blood running out of his side more freshly than those golden streams which ran out of the Garden of Eden and watered the whole World Consider the taking of his body down by Joseph the burying of it by Joseph and Nicodemus O here 's excellent matter for our meditation O my spirit go with me a little Christ being dead it is pitty but he should have a funeral according to the letter let Joseph and Nicodemus bear his corps let the blessed Virgin go after it sighing and weeping and at every other place looking up to Heaven let Mary Magdalen follow after with a box of precious Ointment in her hand and with her hair hanging ready if need were to wipe his feet again or that in this meditation I may be more spiritual let the Usurer come first with Judas's bag and distribute to the poor as he goes along let the Drunkard follow after with the spunge that was filled with gall and vinegar and check his wanton thirst let the young Gallant or voluptuous man come like his Master with bare foot and with the cown of thorns set also upon his head let the wanton person bear the rods and whips and wiers wherewith Christ was scourged and fright his own flesh let the ambitious man be cladin the purple robe the angry Person in the seamless coat my meaning is let every sinner according to the nature of his sin draw something or other from the passion of Christ to the mortifying of his sin yea let all turn mourners let all bow their heads and be ready to give up the Ghost for the Name of Christ and let not Christ be buried without a Sermon neither and let the Text be this John 10.11 The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep and in the end of the Sermon whether it be in use or no let the Preacher take occasion to speak a word or two in the praise of Christ let him say with the Spouse that he was the chiefest among ten thousands that he was altogether lovely Cant. 5.10 16. that being God above all Gods he became man beneath all men that when he spake he began ordinarily with verily verily I say unto you that he was an holy man that he never sinned in all his
Mat. 26.65 as making himself equal with God yea see how the high Priest rends his clothes saying he hath spoken blasphemy Surely all this he endured that very blasphemers may find mercy if they will but come in and believe in Jesus I might instance in other sins art thou a Traytor a glutton a drunkard a wine-bibber a thief a seducer a companion of sinners why see now how Jesus Christ was for thy sake thus called reputed accounted whatever the sin is there 's something in Christ that answers that very sinfulness thou art a sinner and he is made sin to satisfie the wrath of God even for thy sin thou art such and such a sinner and he is accounted such and such a sinner for thy sake that thou mightest find in him something suitable to thy condition and so the rather be encouraged to believe that in him and through him all thy sins shall be done away Away away unbelief distrust despair you see now the brazen serpent lifted up you see what a blessed object is before you O believe O look up unto Jesus O believe in him thus carrying on the work of thy salvation in his death SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation for us during his sufferings and death What! did he suffer and dye Rom. 5.8 Greater love than this hath no man that a man should give his life for his friends but God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us Why here 's an argument of love indeed how should we but love him who hath thus loved us in prosecution of this I have no more to do but first to shew Christ's love to us and then to exercise our love to him again 1. For his love to us had not God said it and the Scriptures recorded it who would have believed our reports yet Christ hath done it and it is worth our while to weigh it and consider it in an holy meditation Indeed with what less than ravishment of Spirit can I behold the Lord Jesus who from everlasting was cloathed with Glory and Majesty now wrapped in rags cradled in a manger exposed to hunger thirst weariness danger contempt poverty revilings scourgings persecution but to let them pass into what extasies may I be cast to see the Judg of all the world accused judged condemned to see the Lord of life dying upon the tree of shame and curse to see the eternal Son of God strugling with his Fathers wrath to see him who had said I and my Father are one sweating drops of blood in his agony and crying out on his cross my God my God why hast thou forsaken me Oh whither hath his love to mankind carried him had he only sent his creatures to serve us had he only sent his Prophets to advise us in the way to Heaven had he only sent his Angels from his chamber of presence to attend upon us and to minister to us it had been a great deal of mercy or if it must be so had Christ come down from Heaven hnmself but only to visit us or had he come only and wept over us saying Oh that you had known even you in this your day the things belonging to your peace Oh that you had more considered of my goodness Oh that you had never sinned this would have been such a mercy as that all the world would have wondered at it but that Christ himself should come and lay down his blood and life and all for his people and yet I am not at the lowest that he should not only part with life but part with the sense and sweetness of God's love which is a thousand times better than life Psal 63.3 Thy loving kindness is better than life that he should be content to be accursed that we might be blessed that he should be content to be forsaken that we might not be forsaken that he should be content to be condemned that we might be acquitted O what raptures of Spirit can be sufficient for the admiration of this so infinite mercy be thou swallowed up O my soul in this depth of Divine love and hate to spend thy thoughts any more upon the base objects of this wretched world when thou hast such a Saviour to take them up Come look on thy Jesus who dyed temporally that thou mightest live eternally who out of his singular tenderness would not suffer thee to burn in hell for ten twenty thirty forty an hundred years and then recover thee by which notwithstanding he might better and deeper have imprinted in thee the blessed memory of a dear Redeemer no no this was the Article betwixt him and his Father That thou shouldst never come there see but observe but Christ's love in that mutual agreement betwixt God and Christ Oh I am pressed saith God with the sins of the world as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves come my Son either thou must suffer or I must damn the world Accordingly I may imagine the Attributes of God to speak to God Mercy cryes I am abused and Patience cryes I am despised and goodness cryes I am wronged and Holyness cryes I am contradicted and all these come to the Father for Justice crying to him that all the world were opposers of his Grace and Spirit and if any be saved Christ must be punished In this case we must imagine Christ stepped in nay rather than so saith Christ I will bear all and undertake the satisfying of all And now look upon him he hangs on the cross all naked all torn all bloody betwixt Heaven and Earth as if he were cast out of Heaven and also rejected by Earth he hath a Crown indeed but such a one as few men will touch none will take from him and if any rash man will have it he must tear hair skin and all or it will not come his hair is all clodded with blood his face all clouded with black and blew he is all over so pittifully rent outwards inwards body and soul I will think the rest alas when I have spoken all I can I shall speak under it had I the tongues of men and Angels I could not express it Oh love more deep than hell Oh love more high than heaven the brightest Seraphims that burn in love are but as sparkles to that mighty flame of love in the heart of Jesus 2. If this be Christ's love to us what is that love we owe to Christ Oh now for an heart that might be some wayes answerable to these mercies Oh for a soul sick of love yea sick unto death how should I be otherwise or any less affected this only sickness is our health this death our life and not to be thus sick is to be dead in sins and trespasses why surely I have heard enough for which to love Christ for ever The depths of God's grace are
Ghost O consider of thy Country whence thou camest at first certainly thou never hadst such a divine and excellent being given thee to delight only in the flesh to be serviceable only to thy body O look up unto Jesus why this it is that turns the heart and sets the conversation on heavenly things 2. Because their best and choice things are already in Heaven As their Father is in Heaven and their Saviour is in Heaven thither he ascended and there now he sits at the right hand of God their Husband is in Heaven their Elder Brother is in Heaven their King is in Heaven their Treasure is in Heaven their Inheritance is in Heaven their Hope is in Heaven their Mansion is in Heaven their chief Friends are in Heaven their Substance is in Heaven their reward is in Heaven their Wages are in Heaven and all these things being in Heaven no marvel their conversations be in Heaven 3. Because they are going towards Heaven even whiles yet they are on Earth If the Nobleman as we formerly supposed do once know his condition and begins his travel homeward towards his Fathers Court will he not every morning that he rises converse with them that come from his father to conduct him home doth it not do him good to hear any man speak of his fathers Country is it not in his thoughts in his talk in his eye in his aim at every step O my soul if thou art indeed travelling towards Heaven how shouldst thou but have it in thy motions affections conversations how shouldst thou but daily commune with thy own heart Heaven is the place that I shall come to ere long I shall be there I know that in this world I am but for a while but in Heaven I shall be for ever and ever 1. Thes 4.17 we shall be caught up into the clouds to meet the Lord in the air and so shall we be ever with the Lord. Our very travel towards Heaven implies an heavenly conversation Psalm 84.7 They go from strength to strength till every one of them in Zion appears before God Luke 17.21 Heb. 10.34 4. Because much of Heaven is already in the Saints The Kingdom of Heaven is within you saith Christ And knowing in your selves that ye have a better and an enduring substance Surely if the Saints have much of Heaven within them it must needs be that their conversation is in Heaven but they know this in themselves they know it by what God hath revealed in their own hearts eternal life is already begun in the souls of God's people Heaven is in them and therefore no marvel if their conversation be in Heaven My meaning is not as if the Saints had no other Heaven but that within them I know there is an Heaven above but some pieces or earnests or seeds or beginnings of that Heaven above is within them Is there not a renewed nature an Image of God a spark of life a drop of glory in God's people Surely yes And if so all these will work heaven-ward principles of grace will have some actings of grace till we come to glory 3. By what means should we attain or come up to have our conversation in Heaven 1. Let us watch opportunities for heavenly exercises God now by his Ministers calls Isa 55.1 3. 2 Cor. 6.2 Come ye to the waters come ye buy and eat come buy wine and milk without money come to me and your souls shall live Why now is the accepted time behold now is the day of salvation whiles Ministers call and we live under the droppings of the Word these are opportunities for Heaven O then he that never prayed let him now pray and he that never heard let him now hear the Lord is now come near to us Christ Jesus is calling and mercy is entreating and love is beseeching and wisdom is even hoarse with crying after us O lay hold on these opportunities for heavenly exercises and then we shall come up to heavenly conversations 2. Take heed of resting in the formality of duties many souls that have enlightnings of conscience dare not but take opportunities for heavenly duties but then comes in the temptations of the Devil and corruptions of their own hearts and they say now duty is done or our task is over and what needs more Alas alas It is not what have we done but where have we been what have our souls been in Heaven with God and with Christ have we had any communion with the Father and with the Son in our duties O take heed of formality it will exceedingly hinder our conversation in Heaven O keep our eye still upon our heart ask in duty what affections have been acted how much are we got nearer Heaven thereby and by this means we shall come to an heavenly conversation 3. Let us look up unto Jesus as hanging on the Cross and as sitting on the Throne this is the Apostles rule Looking unto Jesus the Author and Finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross despising the shame and is set down at the right hand of the Throne of God These two are the objects of a Christians look who studies an heavenly conversation viz. Christ's Cross and Christ's Session by the Cross he is Author and by the Throne he is the Finisher of our faith in the first is set down his love to us in the second is set down our hope of him with high wisdom hath the Holy Ghost exhorted us with these two motives to run and not to faint first here is love love in the Cross Who loved us Eph. 5.2 and gave himself for us a sacrifice on the Cross secondly Here is hope hope in the Throne To him that overcometh will I give to sit with me in my Throne Rev. 3.21 After Christ's death he rose again ascended and is now set down at the right hand of the Throne of God and the same is our blessed hope Christ's Throne is not onely his place but ours also the love of his Cross is to us a pledge of the hope of his Throne or of whatsoever else he is worth Come then and settle your thoughts and looks on this blessed object a sight of Christ's Cross but especially of Christ's Throne is a blessed means to wean us from the World and to elevate and raise up our affections to things above yea to form and frame our conversation towards Heaven 4. Let us wait for the appearing of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in Heaven saith the Apostle from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ Where a man's conversation is there his expectations may be and where his expectations are there a man's conversation is and will be if we expect ere long that the Lord Jesus will appear in glory and that we shall see him not with other but with these same eyes the very waiting