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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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access of languishing souls to his Throne of Grace yea this blessed Sacrament is the very Mercy-seat of our God where Jesus Christ is exhibited to the Father as the propitiation and atonement for the faithful Rom. 3.3 § 12. Where then there is faith and repentance it is not our failing that shall make Gods truth to fail not our defects which shall make his promises of none effect no though justice exact justice doth require a perfection of our obedience yet mercy indulgent mercy will vouchsafe acceptance through Christ through Christ in whom mercy and truth are met together Psal 85 10. on purpose that righteousness and peace may kiss each other even in him our blessed Mediator in him do meet all the paths of God in which he brings salvation to his Church and those paths are now become beaten roads right viae Regiae the King of Heavens high-waies in which we have our passage from sin and death to righteousness and life from guilt and misery to holiness and glory and these paths of our God what are they but his Mercy and Truth in Christ Jesus § 13. But O my soul that the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth it is to them that keep his Covenant and his testimonies seeing then thou hast broken his Covenant and transgrest his Testimonies how canst thou expect the acceptance of mercy and the blessings of truth True I have sinned and through my sin mine obedience is become imperfect but what is not the Covenant of my God a Covenant of Grace Jam. 2.13 where mercy rejoyceth yea triumpheth against judgment yea is not the Covenant of my God that Covenant made with Abraham confirmed by Christ and sealed by this holy Sacrament a part of which Covenant is the remission of sins if so then shall faith and repentance be accepted through Christ and all my imperfections made up with the righteousness of his most perfect obedience § 14. Indeed were our obedience perfect what need should we have of Christ to justifie and save us though Truth and Justice then may blame and condemn our failings in the keeping of Gods testimonies yet grace and mercy go before to vail all with the robe of Christs righteousness to a pardoning our infirmities Psal 89.14 an accepting our persons and a rewarding our services though we cannot then keep the Covenant and Testimonies of our God in an Angelical purity yet may we do it in an Evangelical sinceritie though not in a full perfection yet in a sincere endeavor of holy obedience Phil. 3.12 13 14 and blessed is that soul which shall witness the saving comfort of this sacred doctrine that all the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep even thus keep his Covenant and his Testimonies Vers 11. For thy name sake O Lord pardon mine iniquitie for it is great § 1. THe very best of Gods Saints do not so perfectly keep the Covenant and Testimonies of their God but that in thoughts of his Covenant they may well have a sense of their sin in the meditation of his Testimonies they may well have an apprehension of their transgressions and this is that which put David here upon this emphatical ejaculation of fervent prayer For thy names sake O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great § 2. Thou Lord not only art good and gracious but thou wilt also be so acknowledged so declared yea as such worshipped and adored that thy name then be not dishonored let me though a sinner be accepted pardon mine iniquity that it be not said thou ever rejectedst a poor penitent and thereby lose the glory of thy name whose name is merciful A merciful clemency is a royal vertue Exod. 34.5 6. and honorable in every Soveraign Majesty thou then O Lord Psal 24 5 8. who art the King of Glory make this thy holy Sacrament to be the broad Seal to my pardon and this for thy names sake even for thy mercy sake by which thou art as well known as any man can be by his own name § 3. I plead not Lord my merits who am less then the least of thy mercies and as I look not upon my merit so nor do thou look upon my demerit as I do not view my worthiness so nor do thou view my unworthiness but thou who art called the God of mercy be unto me what thou art called make good the glory of thine own name in being merciful unto my sin of which I cannot say as Lot of Zoar is it not a little one no it is great Gen 19.20 for that it is against thee so great a God and so good to me Great for that my place my office my calling is great the Sun the higher it is the less it seems but my sins the higher I am the greater they are even in thine and others eyes § 4. Great for that my knowledge of thee and thy waies is great I knew thy will and yet did it not my conscience check'd me and yet I obeyed not thy Spirit moved me and yet I yeelded not Mine iniquity is great for that I have greatly multiplied and increased it so that it is become great in quality and in quantity great in weight and in number very heinous very numerous yea the number of my sins is numberless those I know and confess are few in comparison of what are unknown and hidden from me Psal 19.12 § 5. Yet further mine iniquity is great for that mine apprehension of it is so great that I know more ill by my self then by any other each man best feels his own burden and the burden of my sins is such as is too heavy for me to bear Lastly mine iniquity is great for that it is such a debt as I am no way able in the least part to make satisfaction And even a little debt is great to him who hath nothing to pay Wherefore O Lord hide not thy great mercy from me who hide not my great sins from thee and the greater is the guilt of my sin the greater shall be the glory of thy mercy to pardon it let it be the glory of thy mercy then to pass by mine offences so shall the greatness of my sins make the glory of thy mercies more conspicuous for that where sin hath abounded there grace doth much more abound Rom. 5.20 § 6. And thus though I went against mine own knowledge in sinning yet do not thou Lord go against thine own nature in punishing who hast promised if we beleeve and repent thou wilt forgive and now 1 Cor. 10.12 as my sins teach them that stand to take heed least they fall so let thy pardon of my sins teach them that are faln upon their repentance not to doubt of thy mercy and forgiveness which mercy and forgiveness do thou seal unto my soul and to each humble penitent through Jesus Christ in a return of peace unto our consciences by
holiness all our glory and happiness Wherefore O my God Isa 44 2. Isa 26.13 Psal 48.14 Deut. 32.30.31 Isa 63.16 in thee do I trust in thee as a Creator to sustain me as a Lord to govern me as a Guide to direct me as a Rock to defend me as a Father to succor me All which relations thou hast taken upon thee in a merciful regard to my weakness and wants that thou mightest the more manifestly declare thy goodness and love which goodness and love now seal unto my soul by a Communion with thee in the Lord Jesus § 16. But how may we best strengthen our trust in God that we faint not in these dayes of trial Ans We strengthen our trust by renewing our resignation and when can we more seasonably renew our resignation Gal. 3 1. 1 Cor. 11.26 Eph. 2.18 then at our receiving the blessed Sacrament in which we have exhibited the fulness of Christs merits as the propitiatory sacrifice and attonement for our souls by whom we have access unto the Father to receive a blessing of pardon and of peace of life and salvation from him Do we then in all humble devotion make this sincere resignation at the Table of the Lord even offer and present unto God from our hearts as we profess with our tongues offer and present our selves our souls and bodies as a reasonable holy and lively sacrifice unto him Rom. 12.1 casting our selves upon him in the mercy and truth of his promise in the wisdom and power of his providence § 17. And upon this total resignation he seals us this assurance that he will exercise those his properties imploy those his attributes for our comfort and protection for our support and salvation and this beyond what our wits can design our wishes can desire or our thoughts conceive And let not any penitent though languishing soul be discouraged from this holy Sacrament of the Eucharist there to renew his resignation Jer. 23.6 and strengthen his trust for that here we have set forth Christ our righteousness and that name imprinted on him which was proclaimed before Moses Exod. 34.6 7. The Lord the Lord God merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression and sin Ps 9.10 This that name of God whereof David speaks saying They Lord that know thy name will trust in thee Yea this is that Solomon speaks of Pr. 18.10 when he says The name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth into it and is safe safe from the guilt of Sin from the rage of Satan and from the fear of Hell § 18. Wherefore for the instruction and comfort of the dejected we will spell every letter of this Name we will view every turret in this Tower The Lord the Lord God merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth c. Here then art thou frighted O thou languishing soul art thou frighted at the vast armies of thy lusts and the potent powers of hell which come against thee why here 's thy refuge thy tower the Lord the Lord Jehovah the mighty God the Lord of hosts he will defend thee he will deliver thee True says the dejected Penitent I question not his power but his will Why hear then he is the Lord merciful as the Lord to assure thee he is able so merciful to give thee as full an assurance that he is willing Ah! but I am so wretched and so worth-less a creature that I have nothing to move his mercy Why yes sure for misery is the object of mercy and besides thy God as he is merciful so he is gracious his riches of mercy are free not expecting merit to move but faith to receive § 19. Ah! but God hath been often rejected by me how shall I then be accepted of him Why know his name will still answer thy moans as he is gracious to receive freely so he is long-suffering to wait patiently even that he may be gracious Ah! Jer. 30.18 but my sins are numerous and hainous great in number and in weight Why but he who is long-suffering in patience to bear is also abundant in goodness to pardon Ay! but I have been false unto God often very often returning and yet as often revolting I have broken my resolutions my vows my covenants and how then shall I hope for pardon Why though thou hast been unfaithful unto God yet will God be faithful unto thee as he is abundant in goodness to forgive thy sin so is he abundant also in truth to make good his promise his promise of grace and salvation to the believing Penitent § 20. Oh! but my hainous guilt strikes terror into my wounded conscience I have sinned wilfully presumptuously with many aggravating circumstances of guilt and of horror Why but see his Name and see it written too upon his Saints A God forgiving iniquity transgression and sin sins of all sorts and sizes of all kinds and degrees the most hainous and the most numerous Ay but this is mercy vouchsafed but few Yes it is mercy vouchsafed to thousands and a mercy not exhausted but still renewed He hath a whole treasure full of it and as a treasure he keeps it He keeps mercy for thousands § 21. And here th●s treasury is open in this blessed Sacrament come and receive of this mercy of thy God this pardoning this healing this comforting this saving mercy of thy God dispensed by the bountiful hand of thy Jesus who with that mercy gives his merits his benefits his spirit his whole fulness his whole self Joh. 1.16 Wherefore rouse up thy soul to receive the bounty of thy God and of thy Saviour with an humble a thankful and a devout heart And amongst other parts of thy devotion remember Davids petition Let me not be ashamed for I put my trust in thee Verse 21. Let integrity and uprightness preserve me for I wait on thee § 1. SIn and shame guilt and punishment they are inseparable in their conjunction unless a timely repentance sue out a divorce and the blood of Christ make the separation In the prosecution of sin nothing more hardens in impenitence then the prosperous success of impiety And in the execution of punishment nothing more confounds with shame then the unexpected disappointment of hope for instance when sacrilegious men have enrich'd themselves with the Churches spoils and raised themselves upon her ruines going on for a while successfully in their wickedness They think God altogether such an one as themselves one that approves of their sin Psal 50.21 in prospering their designs and hereby they become hardned in their impiety not willing to take the bitter pil of penitence and godly sorrow whilst they are chewing the sweet morsel of profit and worldly gain But oh when they think to digest the morsel they have swallowed when they think to enjoy the Houses and Lands they have
us belongeth confusion of f ce to our Kings to our Princes and to our Fathers because we have sinned against thee Yea humility prompteth the soul in the midst of Gods judgments to an advancement of his mercy Thus the Psalmist Psal 1●3 10 He hath not dealt with us according to our sins neither hath he rewarded us according to our iniquities and it is the humble acknowledgment of Gods Church in her lamentations of sorrow saying Lam. 3.22 It is of the Lords mercy that we are not consumed § 15. 2. Faith the Apostle calls faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the substance Heb. 11 1. so the subsistence of things hoped for the subsistence makeing that glory and blessedness that salvation and deliverance to have a present subsistence with us which we look upon through hope as in their future existence to us Wherefore then is it that the conscientious confesso●s of Christs truth so calmly so patiently yea so chearfully suffer the disgrace of the world and the violence of the wicked is it not because they see by faith that to suffer for righteousness truely makes them what Turtullian elegantly stiles them Coelestis gloriae candidatos Candidates of the celestial glory haveing received the earnest of the spirit the seal of their redemption 2 Cor. 1.22 Ephes 4.30 Rom 8.23 the first fruits of glory they see by faith that whilst men load them with injuries they heap up their rewards whilst they spoil their earthly goods they encrease their heavenly treasure yea each scornful reproach they see by faith it does but add a flower to their garland each violent act a jewel to their Crown 2 Cor 4 17. all their light affliction which is but for a moment they see by faith how it works for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory § 16. 3. Hope such as that of Davids which he commends unto the Church upon his own experience of good success Psal 130.7 Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plentious redempteon Wherefore when the Church mourneth and the gates of Zion languish this the hope which strengthens the patience and comforts the souls of Gods Saints that he will either vouchsafe them a temporal deliverance or crown their sufferings with an eternal salvation this that hope of which saith the Apostle Rom. ● 5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non confundit so the vulg it brings no shame of face no confusion of soul it fears no deficiency on Gods part and preserves from Apostacy on mans part and so becomes a right what the Apostle stiles it the Anchor of the soul He● 6 ● both sure and stedfast § 17. 3. What the best duties of devotion Answ Solemn humiliation fervent prayer and a worthy receiving the blessed Eucharist 1. solemn humiliation solemn for time for measure and the manner of performance for time some day in the week or at least in the moneth set apart and dedicated to this service For measure not the dropping of a tear the breathing of a sigh and so away Psal 51 1● no we must offer unto God the Sacrifice of a broken heart and a contrite spirit the sorrows of our contrition must be like that of one mourning for the dead a funeral sorrow the deepest of mournings yea Zech. 12.10 like that of one mourning for her onely Son the saddest of Funerals Indeed the Church by our sins is laid in the depth of calamities fit it is that we for our sin lie down in the deepest of humiliations For manner of performance confessing the guilt of sin bewailing the bitterness of distress deprecating Gods wrath and imploring his mercy § 18. To affect our souls with the greater relentings of contrition and meltings of compassion see oh see we how this Church our Mother Lam. 1.1 sits as a disconsolate widow mourning in her distress her hair dishevel'd her beauty defac'd her garments rent her body wounded her blood flowing her spirits fainting yea see see a flood of tears overtakes her streams of blood her sorrow accompanies her pain and her mourning her affliction And yet how do too too many who boast themselves her Sons Oh! how do they by their oaths their drunkenness their whoredoms and other their abominable pollutions how do they even drag this their Mother by that hair which sorrow hath dishevel'd How do they trample upon her whilst she sits in the dust how do they widen her wounds sharpen her pains imbitter her sorrows and every way aggravate her misery Wherefore as many as are affected with the Churches deep affliction and wait upon God for her gracious restauration let them thus wait even in this sacred duty of holy devotion Solemn humiliation Iam. 5.13 § 19. 2. Fervent prayer this is St. James's Catholicon his general remedy for all spiritual distempers If any man among you be afflicted let let him pray the Original is very emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken in the large sence as here most proper we may thus paraphrase the words of the Apostle Doth any among you suffer any evill of body or of mind as the readiest means of his redress and succour let him pray and in our prayers do we prescribe to our selves some solemn service of devotion more peculiarly appropriate to this sacred blessing Nehem. 1. Dan. 9. the Churches restauration and peace Thus did Nehemiah thus did Daniel and Psal 137. the faithful are so zealous for Jerusalem the type of the Church that they seal the resolution of earnest prayer with this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this dreadful imprecation Psal 137.6 that if they remember her not their tongues may cleave to the roof of their mouthes intimating this zealous w●sh that they may never have tongues to pray for themselves if they forget to pray for Jerusalem § 20. 3. The blessed Eucharist here we have an unmoveable center to rest on God our portion Christ our fulness an object larger then the heavens Oh that our faith were now suitable to its object the firmness of our trust to the fulness of our God our Jesus had the widow of Sarepta prepared more vessels she had received more oil 1 King 17.14 and that we receive less in the supplies of grace and the bounties of love from God and Christ it is because we are straitned in our faith not God or Christ straitned in his bounty we less capable to receive not he less willing or able to give the Widows vessels were all filled and here each humble soul shall be replenish'd according to the measure of their capacity not the riches of Christs fulness who as the Sea can fill the vessels though never so large and therefore where the measure is but little there the vessels are but small Enlarge we then the thirsting desires of our soul that the fountain of Christs
greatest then do they vanish and come to nothing 1 King 13.4 The arm of flesh like Jeroboams hand shall suddenly wither Deut. 33.27 but the arms of the Almighty are everlasting stretcht out to all eternity for the defence of his chosen Water then of the River may be more ready but that of the Fountain is the more pure We may look upon mans help as nearest at hand but it is Gods succor which brings safety in the end Wherefore the patient expectation of Gods people must be for Gods help being assured The Lord will not cast off his people Ps 94.14 15. neither will he for sake his inheritance but judgment shall return unto righteousness and all the upright in heart shall follow it Know afflictions they have their set time and deliverance its appointed season Thus Israels bondage in Egypt the Jews Captivity in Babylon both were determined and our Saviour when laid hold on to be carried away to his passion he tells the Jews Luk. 22 53. that was their hour and power of darkness And as thus afflictions have their appointed time so hath deliverance its appointed season Ps 102.13 So the Psalmist Thou O Lord shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come Ps 110.3 And again Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power Which is spoken prophetically of Christ who notwithstanding his enemies hour and power of darkness yet hath he his prefixed and determined time for victory and conquest Every thing is beautiful in its season The husbandman will not expect his harvest in the Spring nor mow down his Corn in the blade but doth wait the appointed time of the year for the precious fruit of the earth Jam. 5.7 as is S. Iames's Simile Thus be it so that the people of God opprest with misery seem to be laid dead in their graves yet are they but as seed cast in the furrows Light is then sown for the righteous Ps 97.11 and they must wait till harvest the set time of their restauration and deliverance Yea shall we not allow that in God we approve in men Does humane authority constitute the appointed seasons of Civil Judicature so that the greatest injuries and most violent oppressions must wait their legal process and men may not prescribe their own times of hearing or of sentence And what Isa 34 8. shall not God then much rather appoint his day or year his time and season of recompences for the controversies of Sion We must therefore wait not prescribe the time of being heard in our suit and eas'd of our trouble Ps 102.13 seeing God hath his day of visitation a set time wherein he will have mercy upon Sion To close then if afflictions have their set time and deliverance its appointed season seeing our Saviour hath told us Act. 1.7 That times and seasons are in Gods hand let this be a sure Rule of direction to all Gods children even a patient expectation of Gods help 5 To the patient expectatoin of Gods help join a firm resolution of enduring unto the end And when the expectation of help does fail this resolution to endure will hold good knowing the premonition and promise too of our Saviour who having premonisht us that in these latter days Brother should betray brother to death and the father the son and the children should rise up against their parents and cause them to be put to death M●● ●3 12 13. and that the faithful should be hated of all men for his name sake our Saviour presently subjoins to this premonition this promise He that shall endure unto the end the same shall be saved Finis coronat opus the evening crowns the day Constancie it is that gives the garland to all vertuous actions A Believer is not conquered till his spirit be subdued whilst he retains a calm conscience and a resolute mind even in the loss of goods liberty and life it self he conquers through patience his cause prevails in his constancie and grace in his perseverance Let this then be the confident resolution of thy soul O distressed Saint and servant of Christ 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 shall be able to separate thee from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. What though afflictions be great yet is this life but short and the more we do sow the more we shall reap the more we here sow in tears Ps 126.5 the more we shall hereafter reap in joy for that the more excellent is our grace of patience the more abundant shall be our reward of glory A patient suffering of afflictions it is the right way-mark in our passage and pilgrimage to heaven And who will not the better pass the dirt and mire that knows his way is right Yea Gal. 2.14 he that will according to S. Pauls phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walk with a right foot it must be in this strait path He that will walk with a right foot according to the truth of the Gospel it must be in this strait path of suffering afflictions the way of Gods chosen hedg'd with thorns Wherefore Hos 2.6 Jam. 5.8 Rev. 22.12 be patient and stablish your hearts O ye afflicted souls for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh● yea Behold says Christ behold I come quickly and my reward is with me Now then Mat 24.42.46 as our Saviour bids watch and pray for blessed is that servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall find so doing So again Be patient and endure for blessed is that servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall find so suffering as doing of his will so suffering for his name Imitate we David who neither murmurs against God nor inveighs against his enemies nor cryes out of his troubles Ps 42.11 but chides and complains of himself to himself Why art thou so troubled O my soul and why art thou so disquieted within me I can bear all sorrows but thine all afflictions but thine O be not thou cast down and I shall stand firm be not thou dejected and I shall be comforted do not thou shrink and I shall prevail See O see a crown attends thy constancie and songs of deliverance thy faithfulness and perseverance 2. The Grounds of Comfort as to the Prosperity of the Wicked 1. Wicked men are in a certain instability notwithstanding their present prosperity For that dignity pomp and peace cannot stand firm which is founded upon sin though ne'r so successful True it is though men generally regard not Religion indeed yet they all plead Religion in pretence and Piety is still made a drudge to base ends and the Lacquey to attend all politique designs But as there is nothing more reproachful to Gods name so is
his power dedicate thy soul to his Worship and submit thy whole man to his sway and government So shall his Spirit of Union be unto thee a Spirit of Unction 1 Joh 2.27 as of Union to incorporate thee into himself so of Unction to consecrate thee to his service yea of Consolation too to assure thee of thine heavenly inheritance by vertue of thy Communion with him in his Fulness 2. Administer we Comfort to the Faithful amidst their private troubles of Soul and amidst the publick calamities of the Church 1. Amidst their private troubles of Soul That Isa 50.10 howsoever they may for a while walk in darkness Mal. 4 2. clouded with some distress of conscience yet shall Christ the Sun of righteousness arise upon their souls with healing in his wings and in a communion of his fulness their souls shall be calm'd with a serenity of peace crown'd with the joy of faith refreshed with the preapprehensions of Gods glorious presence and this as the clusters of the heavenly Canaan Rom 8.23 as the earnest of their future inheritance as the pledge of their eternal redemption In all the faintings and languishings then of soul this is the sustaining comfort of the faithful that they have Christ neer at hand to succor and save them Eph. 3.8 with him they have a sacred communion in his unsearchable riches of grace and love riches unsearchable not as if they could not be found but because they cannot be fathomed an inexhaustible treasure Of which as Christ is the Depositary so is he the Dispenser Jam. 15 6. giving liberally to them that ask by prayer and pray in faith 2. Amidst the publique calamities of the Church of which calamities that of spiritual captivity is the greatest Thus when Jeroboam had usurp'd the Throne this was Israels captivity in their own land 1 King 12.26 27 c. that they must worship the Calves lest going up to Jerusalem worshipping God according to his Word should mind them too much of their revolt and so bring them back in their allegiance to the house of David Yea the slavery of Soul was that made Babylons captivity more grievous to the Jews then that of Egypt In Egypt their Religion was free Dan. 3.15 though their Persons were in bondage In Babylon they must either fall down and worship the Image or be cast into the fiery furnace Now in this or any other publique calamities of the Church behold the comfort of the faithful That sure they are by vertue of the Churches communion with Christ as the Head in his wisdom and power grace and mercy by how much her distress is the more grievous and mournful by so much her deliverance shall be the more glorious and joyous Thus when the Lord brought back the captivity of Sion Ps 126.1 saith the Church in her Song of praise then were we like unto them that dream The deliverance was so sudden and so strange that it seemed to be not a vision of the day but a dream of the night The manner and method of Gods providence so wonderful that as if none could imagine it being awake they are rhetorically said to dream it being in a sleep And as this deliverance of the Church was wonderful and strange so glorious and joyous glorious to the astonishment of her enemies joyous to the exultation of her friends v. 2. these acknowledging with praise those confessing with envy the Lord hath done great things for them 3. Do we hereby declare we have communion with Christ by denying our selves by denying our own strength of reason seeing he is our wisdom denying our own merit of works seeing he is our righteousness denying our own lustful affections seeing he is our Sanctification and denying our whole selves seeing he is our Redemption Yea see we to this that we declare our heavenly communion by our heavenly conversation Live we as such whose life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3 3. live as such who profess a fellowship with the faithful and expect society with the Angels as such who are fellow-citizens with the Saints Eph. 2.19 and of the houshold of God yea live we as such who wait for the glorious appearing of the Son of God and to be received into the heavenly Jerusalem that City of Holiness Rev. 21.27 into which no unclean thing shall enter Lastly do we with enlarged desires and ravished affections even with all the holy vigor of inflamed hearts recount the great love and extoll the due praises of our God and of our Jesus and of the good Spirit of grace for all the great work of our eternal salvation effectually applied in our Spiritual communion with Christ as He is the Head of the body the Church the beginning the first-born from the dead c. THE SECOND SERMON UPON Coloss 1. v. 18 19. He is the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead c. Introduction Acts 1.10 OUR Lord Jesus Christ he is ascended and whilst we in devotion as his Apostles in admiration do gaze after him see the solemnity of his triumph Sin and Satan Death and Hell his and our mortal enemies whom he vanquished in his Passion and whom he scattered in his Resurrection Eph. 4.8 those he leads captive in his Ascension It was indeed the manner of the Nations most frequently and most solemnly practised by the Romans to take the spoil of the enemy in the field and after victory to ride in triumph thorow the City Heb. 2.10 And thus the Apostle speaks of Christ the Captain of our Salvation having spoiled principalities and powers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 2.15 he made a shew of them openly leading them about in publick triumph and then it was that Christ did spoil Satan and the Infernal spirits of all their principality and power when he disarmed them of their weapons and brake in pieces their ensigns even the strength of sin the curse of the Law and the sting of death of these he spoiled them in the open field of his Passion where the battel was fought he not giving up the ghost till he had cancelled the hand-writing of Ordinances Vers 14. and nailed it to his Cross And Christ having thus vanquished and spoiled his enemies in campo victoriae in the field of Victory his Passion he after Triumphs in his Cross as in sella Regia or curru Triumphali his Chair of State or Triumphal Chariot in his Ascension And being Triumphantly ascended see him royally entertained into the heavenly places see a Celestial Chore of holy Angels leading the host of Heaven to the Gates of Sion Where they welcome their Lord and our Jesus into the heavenly Jerusalem with that or the like divine Anthem Lift up your heads O ye gates and be ye lift up Psal 24.7 8 c. ye everlasting doors and the King of Glory