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A39669 The method of grace, in bringing home the eternal redemption contrived by the Father, and accomplished by the Son through the effectual application of the spirit unto God's elect, being the second part of Gospel redemption : wherein the great mysterie of our union and communion with Christ is opened and applied, unbelievers invited, false pretenders convicted, every mans claim to Christ examined, and the misery of Christless persons discovered and bewailed / by John Flavell ... Flavel, John, 1630?-1691. 1681 (1681) Wing F1169; ESTC R20432 474,959 654

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dishonour upon God for the greatest mercy that ever was given by God to the world there is mercy with thee saith the Psalmist that thou maist be feared not that thou maist be the more abused Psal. 130. 4. Nay let me say the Devils never sinned at this rate they cannot abuse the pardoning grace of God because such grace was never offered unto them And certainly if the abuse of the common mercies of God as meat and drink by gluttony and drunkenness be an hainous sin and highly provoking to God then the abuse of the riches of his grace and the precious blood of his Son must be out of measure sinful and the greatest affront we can put upon the God of mercy Inference 5. To Conclude If this be so as ever you expect pardon and Inference 5. mercy from God come to Christ in the way of faith receive and embrace him now in the tenders of the Gospel To drive home this great Exhortation I beseech you as in the bowels of Christ Jesus and by all the regard and value you have for your own souls let these following Considerations sink down into your hearts First That all Christless persons are actually under the condemnation of God John 3. 18. He that believeth not is condemned already and it must needs be so for every soul is concluded under the curse of the Law till Christ make him free John 8. 36. Till we are in Christ we are dead by Law and when we believe unto justification then we pass from death to life A blind mistaken Conscience may possibly acquit you but assure your selves God condemns you Secondly Consider what a terrible thing it is to lye under the condemnation of God the most terrible things in nature cannot shadow forth the misery of such a state Put all sicknesses all poverty all reproaches the torments invented by all Tyrants into one Scale and the condemnation of God into the other and they will be all found lighter than a Feather Condemnation is the sentence of God the great and terrible God 'T is a sentence shutting you up to everlasting wrath 't is a sentence never to be reversed but by the application of Christ in the season thereof O souls you cannot bear the wrath of God you do not understand it if you think it tolerable one drop of it upon your Consciences now is enough to distract you in the midst of all the pleasures and comforts of this world yet all that are out of Christ are sentenced to the fulness of Gods wrath for ever Thirdly There is yet a possibility of escaping the wrath to come a dore of hope opened to the worst of sinners a day of grace is afforded to the Children of men Heb. 3. 15. God declares himself unwilling that any should perish 2 Pet. 3. 9. O what a mercy is this Who that is on this side Heaven or Hell fully understands the worth of it Fourthly This dore of mercy will be shortly shut Luk. 12. 25. God hath many ways to shut it he sometimes shuts it by withdrawing the means of grace and removing the Candlesticks a judgement at this time to be greatly feared Sometimes shuts he it by withdrawing his Spirit and blessing from the means whereby all Ordinances lose their efficacy 1 Cor. 3. 7. But if he shut it not by removing the means of grace from you certain it is it will be shortly shut by your removal from all the means and opportunities by Salvation by death Fifthly When once the dore of mercy is shut you are gone beyond all the possibilities of pardon and salvation for evermore the night is then come in which no man can work John 9. 4. All the golden seasons you now enjoy will be irrecoverably gone out of your reach Sixthly Pardons are now daily granted to others some and they once as far from mercy as you now are are at this day reading their pardons with tears of joy dropping upon them The world is full of the examples and instances of the riches of pardoning grace And whatever is needful for you to do in the way of repentance and faith to obtain your pardon how easily shall it be done if once the day of Gods power come upon you Psal. 110. 3. Oh therefore lift up your cries to Heaven give the Lord no rest take no denial till he open the blind eye break the stony heart open and bow the stubborn will effectually draw thy soul to Christ and deliver thy pardon signed in his blood The Seventeenth SERMON Sermon 17. EPHES. 1. 6. Text. Opening the eighth motive to come to Christ drawn from the second benefit purchased by Christ for Believers To the praise of the glory of his grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved IN our last discourse we opened to you the blessed priviledge of remission of sin from the following verse in this verse lies another glorious priviledge viz. the acceptation that Believers have with God through Jesus Christ both which comprise as the two main branches our justification before God In the words read to omit many things that might be profitably observed from the method and dependance of the Apostles discourse three particulars are observable viz. 1. The Priviledge it self 2. The Meritorous Cause 3. The ultimate end thereof First The priviledge it self which is exceeding rich and 1. sweet in its own nature he hath made us accepted the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath ingratiated us or brought us into the grace favour and acceptance of God the Father endeared us to him so that we find grace in his sight Secondly The meritorious cause purchasing and procuring this benefit for us noted in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in 2. the beloved which words are a periphrasis of Christ who is here emphatically called the Beloved the great favorite of Heaven the delight of Gods soul the prime object of his love 't is he that obtaineth this benefit for Believers he is accepted for his own sake and we for his Thirdly The ultimate end and aim of conferring this benefit upon Believers to the praise of the glory of his grace or 3. to the end that his grace might be made glorious in praises there are riches of grace in this act of God and the work and business of Believers both in this world and in that to come is to search and admire aknowledge and magnifie God for his abundant grace herein Hence the note is DOCT. That Jesus Christ hath purchased and procured special favour Doct. and acceptation with God for all that are in him This point lies plain in Scripture Ephes. 2. 13. But now in Jesus Christ ye who sometimes were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made nigh a term of endearedness nothing is taken into the very bosom and embraces but what is very dear precious and acceptable and in Rev. 1. 5 6.
hearts which have a strong aversation from God naturally in them to close with him according to the Articles of peace contained in the Gospel that thereby they may be capable to receive the mercies and benefits purchased by the death of Christ which they cannot receive in the state of enmity and alienation Secondly Their Capacity described they act in Christs stead as his Vicegerents He is no more in this world to treat personally with sinners as once he did in the dayes of n●…s flesh but yet he still continues the treaty with this lower world by his officers requiring men to look upon them and obey them as they would himself if he were Corporally present Luke 10. 16. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me Thirdly The manner of their acting in that Capacity prescribed and that is by humble sweet and condescending intreaties and beseechings this best suits that meek and Lamb-like Saviour whom they represent Thus he dealt with poor sinners himself when he conversed among them he would not break a bruised reed nor quench smoaking flax Isa. 42. 3. This is the way to allure and win the souls of sinners to Christ. From hence the Note is Doct. That the preaching of the Gospel by Christs Ambassadors is the Doct. means appointed for the reconciling and bringing home of sinners to Christ. This is clear from Rom. 10. 14. 1 Cor. 1. 21. and many other Scriptures Here we shall take into Consideration these three things First what is implyed in Christs treating with sinners by his Ambassadors or Ministers Secondly What the great Concernment they are to treat with sinners about is Thirdly What and when is the Efficacy of preaching to bring sinners to Christ. First We will open what is implyed and imported in Christs treaty with sinners by his Ambassadors or Ministers And here we find these six things implied First it necessarily implies the defection and fall of man from his estate of favour and friendship with God if no war with heaven what need of Ambassadors of peace the very office of the Ministry is an argument of the fall Gospel Ordinances and Officers came in upon the fall and expire with the Mediators dispensatory Kingdom 1 Cor. 15. 24 25. Then shall he deliver up the Kingdom to God even the Father thenceforth no more Ordinances no more Ministers what use can there be of them when the treaty is ended They have done and accomplished all they were ever intended and designed for when they shall have reconciled to God all the number of his Elect that lay dispersed among the lost and miserable posterity of Adam and have brought them home to Christ in a perfect state Eph. 4. 12. c. Secondly It implies the singular grace and admirable condescension of God to sinful man That God will admit any treaty with him at all is wonderful mercy it 's more than he would do for the Angles that fell Jude 6. they are reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgement of the great day Christ took not on him their nature but suffered Myriads of them to perish and fills up their vacant places in glory with a number of sinful men and women to whom the Law a warded the same punishment But that God will not only treat but entreat and beseech sinful men to be reconciled is yet more wonderful Barely to propound the terms of peace had been an astonishing mercy but to wooe and beseech stubborn enemies to be at peace and accept their pardon Oh how unparallell'd as this condescension Thirdly It implyes the great dignity and honour of the Inter illos qui regi regum inserviunt ●…egatisumus Dei Christique personam gerimus ●…ullus unquam nos impu●…e despicat●… habuit quin in Deum Chri●…umque idem injurius Bowles pr●…fat ad past Evang. Gospel ministry We are Ambassadors for Christ Ambassadors represent and personate the Prince that sends them and the honours or contempts done to them reflect upon and are reckon'd to the person of their Master Luke 10. 16. he that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me Neither their persons nor parts are the proper ground and reason of our respects to them but their office and Commission from Jesus Christ. We are fallen into the dreggs of time wherein a vile contempt is poured not only upon the persons but the very Office of the Ministry and I could heartily wish that Scripture Mal. 2. 7 8 9. were throughly considered by us possibly it might inform us of the true cause and reason of this sore judgement but surely Christs faithful Ministers deserve a better entertainment than they ordinarily find in the world and if we did but seriously bethink our selves in whose name they come and in whose stead they stand we should receive them as the Galatians did Paul Gal. 4. 14. as Angels of God even as Christ Jesus Fourthly Christs treating with sinners by his Ministers who are his Ambassadors implies the strict obligation they are under to be faithful in their Ministerial imployment Christ counts upon their faithfulness whom he puts into the Ministry 1 Tim. 1. 12. They are accountable to him for all acts of their office Heb. 13. 17. If they be silent they cannot be innocent necessity is laid upon them and wo to them if they preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9. 16. Yea necessity is not only laid upon them to preach but to keep close to their Commission in preaching the Gospel 1 Thes. 2. 3 4 5. Our Exhortation was not of deceit nor of uncleanness nor in guile but as we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the Gospel even so we speak not as pleasing men but God which trieth our hearts the word is not to be corrupted to please men 2 Cor. 2. 17. their business is not to make them their disciples but Christs not to seek theirs but them 2 Cor. 12. 14. to keep close to their instructions both in the matter manner end of their Ministry So did Christ himself the treasure of wisdom and knowledge yet being sent by God he saith Job 7. 16. my doctrine is not mine but his that sent me And so he expects and requires that his Ambassadors keep close to the Commission he hath given them and be according to their measure faithful to their trust as he was to his Paul is to deliver to the people that which he also received from the Lord 1 Cor. 11. And Timothy must keep that which was committed to him 2 Tim. 1. 14. Fifthly It implies the removal of the Gospel ministry to be a very great judgment to the people The remanding of Ambassadors presages an ensuing War If the reconciling of souls to God be the greatest work then the removal of the means and instruments thereof must be the forest Judgement Some account the falling of the Salt upon the Table ominous but surely the falling of them whom
yearning bowels after him whether he be yours or not you cannot tell but that you are resolved to be his that you can tell whether he will save you is a doubt but that you resolve to lye at his feet and wait only on him and never look to another for salvation is no doubt Well well poor pensive soul if it be so arise lift up thy dejected head take thine own Christ into thy arms These are undoubted signs of a real closure with Christ thou makest thy self poor and yet hast great riches such things as these are not found in them that despise and reject Christ by unbelief 3. Use of Exhortation This point is likewise very improveable by way of Exhortation 3. Use. and that both to Unbelievers and Believers First To unbelievers who from hence must be prest as ever they expect to see the face of God in peace to receive Jesus Christ as he is now offered to them in the Gospel this is the very scope of the Gospel I shall therefore press it by three great Considerations viz. First What is in Christ whom you are to receive Secondly What is in the offer of Christ by the Gospel Thirdly What is in the rejecting of that offer First Motive First Consider well what is in Christ whom I perswade you this day to receive did you know what is in Christ you Motive 1. would never neglect or reject him as you do For First God is in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. the Deity hath chosen to dwell in his flesh he is God manifest in flesh 1 Tim. 3. 16. a Godhead dwelling in flesh is the worlds wonder so that in receiving Christ you receive God himself Secondly The Authority of God is in Christ Ex●… 23. 21. My name is in him him hath God the father sealed Joh. 6. 27. he hath the Commission the great seal of heaven to redeem and save you all power in heaven and earth is given to him Matth. 28. 18. he comes in his Fathers name to you as well as in his own name Thirdly The wisdome of God is in Christ 1 Cor. 1. 24. Christ the wisdom of God yea in him are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2. 3. Never did the wisdome of God display it self before the eyes of Angels and men as it hath done in Christ. The Angels desire to look into it 1 Pet. 1. 12. yet they are not so much concerned in the project and design of this wisdome in redemption as you are Fourthly The fulness of the Spirit is in Christ yea it fills him so as it never did nor will fill any creature Joh. 3. 34. God giveth not the Spirit by measure to him all others have their limits stints and measures some more some less but the Spirit is in Christ without measure O h●…w lovely and desirable are those men that have a large measure of the Spirit in them but he is anointed with the Spirit of holiness above all his fellows Psal. 45. 2 7. Whatever grace is found in all the Saints which makes them desirable and lovely wisdome in one faith in another patience in a third they all Centre in Christ as the rivers do in the Sea quae faciunt divisa beatum in hoc mixta 〈◊〉 Fifthly The righteousness of God is in Christ by which only a poor guilty sinner can be justified before God 2 Cor. 5. 21. we are made the righteousness of God in him he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord our righteousness Jer. 23. 6. i. e. the i. e. Autorem justitiae nostrae Calv. in Loc. author of our righteousness or the Lord who justifies us by that name he shall be known and call'd by his people than which none can be sweeter Sixthly The love of God is in Christ yea the very yearning bowels of divine love are in him what is Christ but the love of God wrapt up in flesh and blood 1 Joh. 4. 9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us and herein is love that God sent his Son this is the highest 〈◊〉 that ever divine love made and higher than this it 〈◊〉 mount O love unparalell'd and admirable Seventhly The mercies and compassions of Christ are all in Christ Jude v. 21. Mercy is the thing that poor sinners want it 's that they cry for at the last gasp it 's the only thing that can do them good O what would they give to find mercy in that great day Why if you receive Christ you shall with him receive mercy but out of him there is no mercy to be expected from the hands of God for God will never exercise mercy to the prejudice of his Justice and it is in Christ that justice and mercy meet and embrace each other Eighthly To Conclude The salvations of God are in Christ. Acts 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other Christ is the d●…r of salvation and Faith is the key that opens that door to men if you therefore believe not i. e. if you so receive not Jesus Christ as God hath offer'd him you exclude your selves from all hopes of salvation The Devils have as much ground to expect salvation as you you see what is in Christ to induce you to receive him Motive 2. Next I beseech you confider what there is in the offer Motive 2. of Christ to sinners to induce you to receive him Consider well to whom and how Christ is offered in the Gospel First To whom he is offered not to the fallen Angels but to you they lye in chains of darkness Jude 6. as he took not their nature so he designs not their recovery and therefore will have no treaty at all with them but he is offered to you creatures of an inferiour rank and order by nature nor is he offered to the damned the treaty of peace is ended with them Christ will nevermake them another tender of salvation nor is he offered to millions of millions as good as you ●…ow living in the word the sound of Christ and Salvation is not come to their ears but he is offered to you by the special favour and bounty of heaven and will you not receive him O then how will the devils the damned and the heathens upbraid your folly and say had we had one such tender of mercy of which you have had thousands we would never have been now in this place of torments Secondly Consider how Christ is offered to you and you shall find that he is offered First Freely as the gift of God to your souls you are not to purchase him but only to receive him Isa. 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money let him come c. Secondly Christ is offered importunately by repeated intreaties 2 Cor. 5. 20. As though God did beseech you we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God O what amazing condescension is here in the God of
mercy God now beseeches you will you not yield to the intreaties of your God O then what wilt thou say for thy self when God will not hear thee when thou shalt intreat and cry for mercy Which brings us to the Motive 3. Consider the sin and danger that there is in refusing or Motive 3. neglecting the present offers of Christ in the Gospel and surely there is much sin in it the very malignity of sin and the summ of all misery lyes here for in refusing Christ First you put the greatest contempt and slight upon all the Attributes of God that it is possible for a creature to do God hath made his justice his mercy his wisdome and all his attributes to shine in their brightest glory in Christ never was there such a display of the glory of God made to the world in any other way O then what is it to reject and despise Jesus Christ but to offer the greatest affront to the glory of God that it is possible for men to put upon him Secondly you hereby frustrate and evacuate the very design and importance of the Gospel to your selves you receive the grace of God in vain 2 Cor. 6. 1. as good yea better had it been for you that Christ had never come into the world or if he had that your lot had fallen in the dark places of the earth where you had never heard his name yea good had it been for that man if he had never been born Thirdly hereby a man murthers his own soul. I said therefore unto you that you shall dye in your sins for if ye believe not that I am he ye shall dye in your sins Joh. 8. 24. unbelief is self-murther you are guilty of the blood of your own souls life and salvation was offered you and you rejected it yea Fourthly The refusing of Christ by unbelief will aggravate your damnation above all others that perish in ignorance of Christ. O 't will be more tolerable for heathens than for you the greatest measures of wrath are reserved to punish the worst of sinners and among sinners none will be found worse than unbelievers Secondly To Believers this point is very useful to perswade 2. them to divers excellent duties among which I shall single out two principal ones Viz. 1. To bring up their faith of acceptance to the faith of assurance 2. To bring up their conversations to the principles and rules of faith First You that have received Jesus Christ truly give your selves no rest till you are fully satisfied that you have done so acceptance brings you to heaven hereafter but assurance will bring heaven into your souls now O what a life of delight and pleasure doth the assured believer live what pleasure is it to him to look back and consider where once he was and where now he is to look forward and consider where he now is and where shortly he shall be I was in my sins I am now in Christ I am in Christ now I shall be with Christ and that for ever after a few days I was upon the very brink of hell I am now upon the very borders of heaven I shall be in a little while among the innumerable company of Angels and glorified Saints bearing part with them in the Song of Moses and of the Lamb for evermore And why may not you that have received Christ receive the comfort of your union with him there be all the grounds and helps to assurance furnisht to your hand there is a real union Viget ap●…d nos spei immobilis virtus firmitas Cypr. Sermone de patientia betwixt Christ and your souls which is the very groundwork of assurance you have the Scriptures before you which contain the signs of faith and the very things within you that answer those signs in the word So you read and so just so you might feel it in your own hearts would you attend to your own experience The spirit of God is ready to seal you 't is his office and his delight so to do O therefore give diligence to this work attend the study of the Scriptures and of your own hearts more and grieve not the holy Spirit of God and you may arrive to the very desire of your hearts Secondly Bring up your conversations to the excellent principles and rules of faith As you have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk in him Col. 2. 6. live as you believe you received Christ sincerely in your first close with him O maintain the like seriousness and sincerity in all your ways to the end of your lives you received him intirely and undividedly at first let there be no exceptions against any of his commands afterward you received him exclusively to all others see that you watch against all self-righteousness and self-conceitedness now and mingle nothing of your own with his blood whatever gifts or enlargements in duty God shall give you afterwards You received him advisedly at first weighing and considering the self-denying terms upon which he was offered to you O shew that it was real and that you see no cause to repent the bargain whatever you shall meet with in the ways of Christ and duty afterwards Convince the world of your constancy and chearfulness in all your sufferings for Christ that you are still of the same mind you were and that Christ with his cross Christ with a prison Christ with the greatest afflictions is worthy of all acceptation as you have received him so walk ye in him let him be as sweet as lovely as precious to you now as he was the first moment you received him yea let your love to him delights in him and self-denyal for him increase with your acquaintance with him day by day 4 Use of Direction 4. Use. Lastly I will close all with a few words of direction to all that are made willing to receive the Lord Jesus Christ and sure it is but need that help were given to poor Christians in this matter it is a time of trouble fear and great temptation mistakes are easily made and of dangerous consequence attend heedfully therefore to a few directions Direction 1. First In your receiving Christ beware you do not mistake Direct 1. the means for the end many do so but see you do not Prayer Sermons Reformations are means to bring you to Christ but they are not Christ to close with those duties is one thing and to close with Christ is another thing if I go into a Boat my design is not to dwell there but to be carried to the place whereon I desire to be landed So it must be in this case all your Duties must land you upon Christ they are but means to bring you to Christ. Direction 2. Secondly See that you receive not Christ for a present shift Direct 2. but for your everlasting portion many do so they will enquire after Christ pray for Christ cast themselves in their
seasonably A sound of judgement is in our ears the Lords voice crieth unto the City and the man of wisdom shall see thy name hear ye the rod and who hath appointed it Mica 6. 9. All things round about us seem to posture themselves for trouble and distress Where is the man of wisdom that doth not foresee a shower of wrath and indignation coming We have heard a voice of trembling of fear and not of peace Ask ye now and see whether a man doth travel with child Wherefore do I see every man with his hands on his loins as a woman in travail and all faces are turned into paleness Alas for that day is great so that none is like it it is even the day of Jacobs trouble but he shall be delivered out of it Jer. 30. 5 6 7. Many eyes are now opened to see the common danger but some foresaw it long ago when they saw the general decay of godliness every where the notorious Prophanity and Atheism that overspread the Nations the spirit of enmity and bitterness against the power of godliness whereever it appeared and though there seemed to be a present calm and general quietness yet those that were wise in heart could not but discern distress of nations with great perplexity in these seeds of judgement and calamity but as the Epha fills more and more so the determined wrath grows more and more visible to every eye and 't is a fond thing to dream of tranquillity in the mid●… of so much iniquity Indeed if these Nations were once swept with the besom of reformation we might hope God would not sweep them with the besome of destruction but what peace can be expected whilst the highest provocations are continued It is therefore the great and present concernment of all to provide themselves of a refuge before the storm overtake them for as Augustin well observes non facile inveniuntur praesidia in adversitate quae non fuerint in pace quaesita O take up your lodgings in the Attributes and Promises of God before the night overtake you view them often by faith and clear up your interest in them that you may be able to go to them in the dark when the Ministers and Ordinances of Christ have taken their leave of you and bid you good night Whilst many are hasting on the wrath of God by prophaneness and many by smiting their fellow Servants and multitudes resolve if trouble come to fish in the troubled waters for safety and preferment not doubting whensoever the overflowing flood comes but they shall stand dry O that you would be mourning for their sins and providing better for your own safety Reader it is thy one thing necessary to get a cleared interest in Jesus Christ which being once obtained thou maist face the storm with boldness and say Come troubles and distresses losses and tryals prisons and death I am provided for you do your worst you can do me no harm let the winds roar the lightnings flesh the rains and hail fall never so furiously I have a good roof over my head a comfortable lodging provided for me my place of defence is the munition of rocks where bread shall be given me and my waters shall be sure Isa. 33. 16. The design of the ensuing Treatise is to assist thee in this great work and though it was promised to the world many years past yet providence hath reserved it for the fittest season and brought it to thy hand in a time of need It contains the method of grace in the application of the great redemption to the souls of men as the former part contains the method of grace in the impetration thereof by Jesus Christ. The acceptation God hath given the former part signified by the desires of many for the publication of this hath at last prevailed with me notwithstanding the secret consciousness of my inequality to so great an undertakement to adventure this second part also upon the ingenuity and candour of the Reader And I consent the more willingly to the publication of this because the design I first aimed at could not be intire and compleat without it but especially the quality of the subject matter which through the blessing and concurrence of the spirit may be useful both to rouze the drousie Consciences of this sleepy generation and to assist the upright in clearing the work of the spirit upon their own souls These considerations have prevailed with me against all discouragements And now Reader it is impossible for me to speak particularly and distinctly to the case of thy soul which I am ignorant of except the Lord shall direct my discourse to it in some of the following suppositions If thou be one that hast sincerely applied and received Jesus Christ by faith this discourse through the blessing of the Spirit may be useful to thee to clear and confirm thy evidences to melt thy heart in the sense of thy mercies and to ingage and quicken thee in the way of thy duties Here thou wilt see what great things the Lord hath done for thy soul and how these dignities as thou art his Son or Daughter by the double title of regeneration and adoption do oblige thee to yield up thy self to God intirely and to say from thy heart Lord whatever I am I am for thee whatever I can do I will do for thee and whatever I can suffer I will suffer for thee and all that I am or have all that I can do or suffer is nothing to what thou hast done for my soul. If thou be a stranger to regeneration and faith a person that makest a powerless profession of Christ that hast a name to live but art dead here it 's possible thou maist meet something that will convince thee how dangerous a thing it is to be an old creature in the new creatures dress and habit and what it is that blinds thy judgement and is likeliest to prove thyruine a seasonable and full conviction whereof will be the greatest mercy that can befall thee in this world if thereby at last God may help thee-to put on Christ as well as the name-of Christ. If thow be in darkness about the state of thy own soul and willing to have it faithfully and impartially tried by the rule of the word which will not warp to any mans humour or interest here thou wilt find some weak assistance offered thee to clear and disintangle thy doubting thoughts which through thy prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ may lead thee to a comfortable settlement and inward peace If thou be a proud conceited presumptuous ●…oul who hast too little knowledge and too much pride and self-love to admit any doubts or scruples of thy state towards God there are many things in this Treatise proper for thy conviction and better information for woe to thee if thou shouldest not fear till thou begin to feel thy misery if thy troubles do not come on till
Christ calls the Salt of the earth is so indeed What are those once famous and renowned places from whence Christ as he threatned hath removed the Candlestick but magna latrocinia dens of Robbers and mountains of prey Sixthly and Lastly It implyes both the wisdome and condescension of God to sinful men in carrying on a treaty of peace with them by such Ambassadors negotiating betwixt him and them without a treaty there would be no reconciliation and no method to carry on such a treaty like this for had the Lord treated with sinners personally and immediately they had been overwhelmed with such an awful Majesty The app●…ces of God confound the creature Let me not hear again the voice of the Lord my God saith Israel neither let me see this great fire any more that I dye not yea so terrible was that sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake Deut. 18. 16. Heb. 12. 21. Or had he Commissionated Angels for this imployment though they stand not at such an infinite distance from us as God doth yet such is the excellence of their glory being the highest Species and order of creatures that their appearances would be more apt to astonish than persuade us besides they being creatures of another rank and kinde and not partaking with us either in the misery of the fall or benefit of the recovery by Christ 't is not to be supposed they should speak to us so feelingly and experimentally as these his Ministers do they can open to you the mysteries of sin feeling the workings thereof daily in their own hearts they can discover to you the conflicts of the flesh and spirit as being daily exercised in that warfare and then being men of the same mould and temper they can say to you as Elihu did to Job Chap. 33. 6 7. Behold I am according to thy wish in Gods stead I also am formed out of the clay behold my terror shall not make thee afraid neither shall my hand be heavy upon thee So that in this appointment much of the Divine wisdom and condescension to sinners is manifested we have this treasure in ●…arthen vessels that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us 2 Cor. 4. 7. Gods glory and mans advantage are both promoted in this dispensation Secondly Next we are to consider that great Concernment 2. about which these Ambassadors of Christ are to treat with sinners and that as the Text informs us is their reconciliation to God Now reconciliation with God is the restoring of men to Reconciliarenihil aliud est quam amicitiam offensione aliquagravi diremptam resarcire sic inimicos in pristinam concordiam reducere Daven in 〈◊〉 Col. 20. that former frindship they had with God which was broken by the fall and is still continued by our Enmity and aversation whilst we continue in our Natural and unregenerate Estate Now this is the greatest and most blessed design that ever God had in the world an astonishing and invaluable mercy to men as will clearly appear by considering these particulars following First That God should be reconciled after such a dreadful breach as the fall of man made is wonderful No sin all things considered was ever like to this sin other sins like a single bullet kill particular persons but this like a chain-shot cuts off multitudes multitudes as the sand upon the sea shore which no man can number If all the posterity of Adam in their several generations should do nothing else but bewail and lament this sin of his whilst this world continues yet would it not be enough lamented for a man so newly Created out of nothing and admitted the first moment into the highest order Crowned a King over the works of Gods hands Psal. 8. 5. a man perfect and upright without the least inordinate motion or sinful inclination A man whose minde was most clear bright and apprehensive of the will of God whose will was free and able to have easily put by the strongest temptation A man in a paradise of delights where nothing was left to desire for advancing the happiness of soul or body A man understanding himself to be a publick complexive person carrying not only his own but the happiness of the whole world in his hand so soon upon so slight a temptation to violate the Law of his God and involve himself and all his posterity with him in such a gulph of guilt and misery all which he might so easily have prevented O wonderful amazing mercy that ever God should think of being reconciled or have any purposes of peace towards so vile an Apostate creature as man Secondly That God should be reconciled to men and not to Angels a more high and excellent order of creatures is yet more astonishing when the Angels fell they were lost irrecoverably no hand of mercy was stretched out to save one of those Myriads of excellent beings but chains of darkness were immediately clapt on them to reserve them to the judgment of the great day Jude v. 6. That the milder attribute should be exercised to the inferiour and the severer attribute to the more excellent Creature is just matter for eternal admiration who would cast away vessels of gold and save earthen potsherds Some indeed undertake to shew us the reasons why the wisdom of God made no provision for the recovery of Angels by a Mediator of reconciliation partly from the high degree of the malignity of their sin who sinned in the light of heaven partly because it was decent that the first breach of the Divine Law should be punished to secure obedience for the future And besides the Angelical nature was not entirely lost Myriads of Angels still continuing in their innocency and glory whenas all mankind was lost in Adam But we must remember still the Law made no distinction but awarded the same punishment and therefore it was mercy alone that made the difference and mercy for ever to be admired by men how astonishing is the grace of God that moves in a way of reconciliation to us out of design to fill up the vacant places in heaven from which Angels fell with such poor worms as we are Angels excluded and men received O stupendious mercy Thirdly That God should be wholly and throughly reconciled to men so that no fury remains in him against us according to that Scripture Isai. 27. 4. is still matter of farther wonder The design he sends his Ambassadors to you about is not the allaying and mitigating of his wrath which yet would be matter of great joy to the damned but throughly to quench all his wrath so that no degree thereof shall ever be felt by you O blessed Embassy Beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of them that bring such tydings God offers you a full reconciliation a plenary remission Fourthly That God should be freely reconciled to sinners and discharge them without any the least satisfaction to his justice
sad protestation doth Jeremy make against his ungrateful people Jer. 18. 20. shall evil saith he be recompenced for good for they have digged a pit for my soul remember that I stood before thee to speak good for them and to turn away thy wrath from them Gods mercy is eminently discovered in the institution and Satans malice is eminently discovered in the opposition of the Ministerial office Satan is a great and jealous Prince and it is no wonder he should raise all the forces he can to oppose Mr. G●…rnals Christian Armor the Ambassadors of Christ When saith one the Gospel comes into his dominions it doth as it were by sound of Trumpet and beat of drum proclaim liberty to all his slaves and vassals if they will quit that Tyrant that hath so long held their souls in bondage and come under the sweet and easy government of Christ and can the Devil endure this think you if Christ send forth Ambassadors no wonder if Satan send forth opposers he certainly owes them a spite that undermine his government in the world Infer 3. Hence it follows that it nearly concerns all Christs Ambassadors Infer 3. to see that they be in a state of reconciliation with God themselves Shall we stand in Christ's stead by office and yet not be in Christ by Union Shall we intreat men to be reconciled to God and yet be at enmity with him our selves O let us take heed lest after we have preached to others we our selves be as cast-awayes 1 Cor. 9. 27. Of all men living we are the most miserable if we be Christless and graceless our Consciences will make more terrible applications of our doctrine to us in hell than ever we made to the vilest of sinners on earth O it 's far easier to study and press a thousand truths upon others than to feel the power of one truth upon our own hearts to teach others facienda quàm faciendo duties to be done than duties by doing them They are sad Dilamma's with which a learned Writer poses Gildas Salv. p. 15 16. such graceless Ministers If Sin be evil why do you live in it If it be not why do you dissuade men from it If it be dangerous how dare you venture on it If it be not why do you tell men so If God 's threatenings be true why don't you fear them If they be false why do you trouble men needlesly with them and put them into such frights without a cause Take heed to your selves lest you should cry down sin and not overcome it lest while you seek to bring it down in others you bow to it and become its slaves your selves it 's easier to chide at sin than to overcome i. That is a smart question Rom. 2. 21. Thou that teachest another teachest thou not thy self A prophane Minister was Converted by reading that Text once but how many have read it as well as he who never trembled at the consideration of it as he did 2. Use for Conviction Is this the method God uses to reconcile men to himself O then examine your selves whether yet the preaching of the 2. Use. Gospel hath reconciled you to God It 's too manifest that many among us are in the state of enmity unto this day we may say with the Prophet Isaiah 53. 1. Who hath believed our report and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed We offer you peace upon Gospel terms and Articles but our peace returns to us again enemies you were to God and enemies you still continue The Evidence is undeniable for 1. Evidence Many of you were never Convinced to this day of your state 1. Evid of enmity against God and without Conviction of this reconciliation is impossible without repentance there can be no reconciliation and without Conviction there can be no repentance when we repent we lay down our Weapons Isai. 27. 4 5. But how few have been brought to this Alas if a few poor cold heartless ineffectual confessions of sin may pass for a due Conviction and serious repentance then have we been convinced then have we repented but you will find if ever the Lord intend to reconcile you to himself your Convictions and humiliations for sin will be other manner of things this will cost you more than a few cheap words against sin 2 Cor. 7. 11. In that ye sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulness it wrought in you yea what clearing of your selves yea what indignation yea what fear yea what vehement desire yea what zeal yea what revenge 2. Evidence Many of us never treated seriously with the Lord about peace and how then are we reconciled to him What a 2. Evid peace without a treaty Reconciliation without any consideration about it it can never be When was the time and where was the place that you were found in secret upon your knees mourning over the sin of your Nature and the evils of your ways Certainly you must be brought to this you must with a broken heart bewail your sin and misery Friend that stony heart of thine must feel remorse and anguish for sin it will cost thee some sad days and sorrowful nights or ever thou canst have peace with God it will cost thee many a groan many a tear many a hearty cry to heaven if ever the peace be made betwixt God and thee thou must take with thee words and turn to the Lord saying Take away all iniquity and receive me graciously O for one smile one token of love one hint of favour The child of peace is not born without pangs and agonies of Soul 3. Evidence Many of us are not reconciled to the duties of religion and ways of holiness and how then is it possible we should 3. Evid be reconciled to God What reconciled to God and unreconciled to the ways of God By reconciliation we are made nigh in duties of Communion we draw nigh and can we be made nigh to God and have no heart to draw nigh to God it can never be Examine your hearts and say is not the way of strictness a bondage to you had you not rather be at liberty to fullfill the desires of the flesh and of the mind Could you not wish that the Scriptures had not made some things else your sins and other things your duties do you delight in the Law of God after the inner man and esteem his Judgments concerning all things to be right Do you love secret prayer and delight in duties of Communion with God or rather are they not an ungrateful burden and irksome imposition give Conscience leave to speak plain 4. Evidence Many of us are not Enemies to sin and how then are we reconciled to God what friends with God and our Lusts 4. Eivd too it cannot be Psal. 97. 10. Ye that love the Lord hate evil the same hour our reconciliation is made with God there is an everlasting breach made with sin this
assenting act of faith in the very foundation and hence I doubt I do not believe There may be and often is a true and sincere assent found in the soul that is assaulted with violent atheistical suggestions Sol. from Satan and thereupon questions the truth of it and this is a very clear evidence of the reality of our assent that whatever doubts or contrary suggestions there be yet we dare not in our practice contradict or slight those truths or duties which we are tempted to disbelieve Ex. gr we are assaulted with atheistical thoughts and tempted to slight and cast off all fears of sin and practice of religious duties yet when it comes to the point of practice we dare not commit a known sin the awe of God is upon us we dare not omit a known duty the tye of conscience is found strong enough to hold us close to it in this case 't is plain we do really assent when we think we do not A man thinks he doth not love his child yet carefully provides for him in health and is full of grief and fears about him in sickness why now so long as I see all fath rly duties performed and affections to his childs welfare manifested let him say what he will as to the want of love to him whilest I see this he must excuse me if I do not believe him when he saith he hath no love for him Just so is it in this case A man saith I do not assent to the being necessity or excellency of Jesus Christ yet in the mean time his soul is fill'd with cares and fears about securing his interest in him he is found panting and thirsting for him with vehement desires there 's nothing in all the world would give him such joy as to be well assured of an interest in him while it is thus with any man let him say or think what he will of his assent it 's manifest by this he doth truly and heartily assent and there can be no better proof of it than these real effects produc'd by it Secondly But if these and other objections were never so fully answer'd for the clearing of the assumption yet it often falls out that believers are afraid to draw the conclusion and that fear arises partly from First The weighty importance of the matter Secondly The sense of the deceitfulness of their own hearts First The conclusion is of infinite importance to them it is the everlasting happiness of their souls than which nothing is or can be of greater weight upon their spirits things in which we are most deeply concerned are not lightly and hastily received by us it seems so great and so good that we are still apt if there be any room for it to suspect the truth and certainty thereof as never being sure enough Thus when the women that were the first messengers and witnesses of Christs resurrection Luke 24. 10 11. came and told the disciples those wonderful and comfortable tydings it 's said that their words seemed to them as idle tales and they believed them not they thought it was too good to be true too great to be hastily received so is it in this case Secondly The sense they have of the deceitfulness of their own hearts and the dayly workings of hypocrisie there makes them afraid to conclude in so great a point as this is They know that very many dayly cozen and cheat themselves in this matter they know also that their own hearts are full of falseness and deceit they find them so in their daily observations of them and what if they should prove so in this why then they are lost for ever they also know there is not the like danger in their fears and jealousies that would be in their vain confidences and presumptions by the one they are only deprived of their present comfort but by the other they would be ruined for ever and therefore choose rather to dwell with their own fears though they be uncomfortable companions than run the danger of so great a mistake which would be infinitely more fatal And this being the common case of most Christians it follows that there must be many more believers in the world than do think or dare conclude themselves to be such Infer 4. If the right receiving of Jesus Christ be true saving and justifying faith then those that have the least and lowest degree and measure Infer 4. of saving faith have cause for ever to admire the bounty and riches of the grace of God to them therein If you have received never so little of his bounty by the hand of providence in the good things of this life yet if he have given you any measure of true saving faith he hath dealt bountifully indeed with you this mercy alone is enough to ballance all other wants and inconveniencies of this life Poor in the world rich in faith James 2. 5. O let your hearts take in the full sense of this bounty of God to you say with the Apostle Eph. 1. 3. blessed be the God and father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Jesus and you will in this one mercy find matter enough of praise and thanksgiving wonder and admiration to your dying day yea to all eternity for do but consider First The smallest measure of saving faith which is found in any of the poople of God receives Jesus Christ and in receiving him what mercy is there which the believing soul doth not receive in him and with him Rom. 8. 32. O believer though the arms of thy faith be small and weak yet they embrace a great Christ and receive the richest gift that ever God bestowed upon the world no sooner art thou become a believer but Christ is in thee the hope of glory and thou hast authority to become a son or daughter of God thou hast the broad seal of heaven to confirm thy title and claim to the priviledges of Adoption for to as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God To as many be they strong or be they weak provided they really receive Christ by faith there is authority or power given so that it 's no act of presumption in them to say God is our Father heaven is our inheritance Oh precious faith the treasures of ten thousand worlds cannot purchase such priviledges as these all the Crowns and Scepters of the earth sold at their full value are no price for such mercies Secondly The least degree of saving faith brings the soul into a state of perfect and full Justification For if it receives Jesus Christ it must therefore needs in him and with him receive a free full and final pardon of sin the least measure of faith receives remission for the greatest sins By him all that believe are justified from all things Acts 13. 39. it unites thy soul with Christ and then as
need not a Physician but those that are sick Bid a man that thinks himself sound and whole go to the Physician and he will but laugh at the motion If you offer him the richest composition he will refuse it slight it and it may be spill it upon the ground ay but if the same man did once feel an acute disease and were made to sweat and groan under strong pains if ever he come to know what sick dayes and restless nights are and to apprehend his life to be in eminent hazard then messengers are sent one after another in post-haste to the Physician then he begs him with tears to do what in him lyes for his relief he thankfully takes the bitterest potions and praises the care and skill of his Physician with tears of joy and so the Patients safety and the Physicians honour are both secured So is it in this method of grace The Uses follow Inference 1. Use. If sin-burthened souls are solemnly invited to come to Inference 1. Christ Then it follows that whatever guilt lye upon the Conscience of a poor humbled sinner 't is no presumption but his duty to come to Christ notwithstanding his own apprehended vileness and great unworthiness Let it be carefully observed how happily that universal particle all is inserted in Christs invitation for the encouragement of sinners Come unto me All ye that labour q. d. let no broken-hearted sinner exclude himself whenas he is not by me excluded from mercy my grace is my own I may bestow it where I will and upon whom I will 'T is not I but Satan that impales and incloses my mercy from humbled souls that are made willing to come unto me he calls that your presumption which my invitation makes your Duty But I doubt my case is excepted by Christ himself in Matth. Object 1. 12. 31. where blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is exempted from pardon and I have had many horrid blasphemous thoughts injected into my soul. Art thou a burdened and heavy laden soul If so thy case is not in that or any other Scripture exempted from mercy Sol. for the unpardonable sin is alwayes found in an impenitent heart as that sin finds no pardon with God so neither is it followed with contrition and sorrow in the soul that commits it But if I am not guilty of that sin I am certainly guilty of many Object 2. great and heinous abominations of another kind too great for me to expect mercy for and therefore I dare not go to Christ. The greater your sins have been the more need you have to go to Jesus Christ. Let not a Motive to Christ be made Sol. an Obstacle in your way to him Great sinners are expresly called Isa. 1. 18. great sinners have come to Christ and found mercy 1 Cor. 6. 7. And to conclude it 's an high reproach and dishonour to the blood of Christ and mercy of God which flowes so freely through him to object the greatness of sin to either of them Certainly you have not sinned beyond the extent of mercy or beyond the efficacy of the blood of of Christ but pardon and peace may be had if you will thus come to Christ for it Oh but it 's now too late I have had many thousand calls by the Gospel and refused them many purposes in my heart 3. Obj. to go to Christ and quenched them my time therefore is past and now 't is to no purpose If the time of grace be past and God intends no mercy for thee how comes it to pass thy soul is now filled with trouble Sol. and distress for sin Is this the frame of a mans heart that is past hope Do such signs as these appear in men that are hopeless Beside the time of grace is a secret hid in the breast of God but coming to Christ is a duty plainly revealed in the Text and why will you object a thing that is secret and uncertain against a duty that is so plain and evident Nor do you your selves believe what you object for at the same time that you say your seasons are over it is too late you are notwithstanding found repenting mourning praying and striving to come to Christ. Certainly if you knew it were too late you would not be found labouring in the use of means Go on therefore and the Lord be with you 'T is not presumption but obedience to come when Christ calls as here he doth Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden Inference 2. Hence it follows That none have cause to be troubled when God makes the souls of their friends or relations sick with the Inference 2. sense of sin It was the saying as I remember of Hierom to Sabinian Nothing said he makes my heart sadder than that nothing can make thy heart sad 'T is matter of joy to all that rightly understand the matter when God smites the heart of any man with the painful sense of sin of such sickness it may be said This sickness is not unto death but for the glory of God Yet how do many carnal relations lament and bewail this as a misery as an undoing to their friends and acquaintance as if then they must be reckon'd lost and never till then that Christ is finding and saving them O if your hearts were spiritual and wise their groans for sin would be as musick in your ears When they go alone to bewail their sin you would go alone also to bless God for such a mercy that ever you should live to such a happy day you would say now is my friend in the blessed pangs of the new birth now is he in the very way of mercy never in so hopeful a condition as now I had rather he should groan now at the feet of Christ than groan hereafter under the wrath of God for ever O Parents beware as you love the souls of your Children that you don't damp and discourage them tempt or threaten them divert or hinder them in such cases as this lest you bring the blood of their souls upon your own heads Inference 3. It also follows from hence That those to whom sin was never Inference 3. any burthen are not yet come to Christ nor have they any interest in him We may as well suppose a Child to be born without any pangs or throes as a soul to be born again and united to Christ without any sense or sorrow for sin I know many have great frights of conscience that never were made duly sensible of the evil of sin many are afraid of burning that never were afraid of sinning Slight and transient troubles some have had but it 's vanisht like an early cloud lickt up like a morning dew Few men are without checks and throbs of conscience at one time or other but instead of going to the Closet they run to the Ale house or Tavern for a cure If their sorrow for sin
a member now of his own mystical body to purifie and cleanse it that at last he may present it perfect to the Father without spot or wrinkle or any such thing Eph. 5. 26. The reigning power of it is gone immediately upon believing and the very existence and being of it shall at last be destroyed O what rest must this give under those troubles for sin Thirdly It was an intolerable burthen to the soul to be under the continual fears aiarms and frights of death and 3. damnation It s life hath been a life of bondage upon this account ever since the Lord opened his eyes to see his condition Poor souls lye down with tremblings for fear what a night may bring forth 'T is a sad life indeed to live in continual bondage to such fears But faith sweetly relieves the trembling Conscience by removing the guilt which breeds it fears The sting of death is sin when guilt is removed fears vanish Smite Lord smite said Luther for my sins are forgiven Now if sickness come 't is another thing than it was Feri Domine feri nam à peccatis meis absolutus sum Luth. wont to be Isai. 33. 21. The Inhabitant shall not say I am sick the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquities a man scarce feels his sickness in comparison to what he did whilst he was without Christ and hope of pardon Fourthly A convinced sinner out of Christ sees every thing 4. against him nothing yields any comfort yea every thing increases and aggravates his burthen whether he look to things past present or to come If he reflect upon things past his soul is filled with anguish to remember the sins committed and the seasons neglected and the precious mercies that have been abused if he look upon things present the case is doleful and miserable nothing but trouble and danger Christless and comfortless and if he look forward to things to come that gives him a deeper cut to the heart than any thing else for though it be sad and miserable for the present yet he fears it will be much worse hereafter all these are but the beginning of sorrows and thus the poor awakened sinner becomes a Magor missabib fear round about But upon his coming to Christ all things are marvellously altered a quite contrary face of things appears to him every thing gives him hope and comfort which way soever he looks so speaks the Apostle 1 Cor. 3. 22 23. All things are yours saith he whether life or death or things present or things to come all is yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods they are ours i. e. for our advantage benefit and comfort more particularly upon our coming to Christ First Things past are ours they conduce to our advantage and comfort Now the soul can begin to read the gracious end and design of God in all its preservations and deliverances whereby it hath been reserved for such a day as this O! it melts his heart to consider his Companions in sin and Vanity are cut off and he spared and that for a day of such mercy as the day of his espousals with Christ is Now all his past sorrows and deep troubles of spirit which God hath exercised him with begin to appear the greatest mercies that ever he received being all necessary and introductive to this blessed union with Christ. Secondly Things present are ours though it be not yet with us as we would have it Christ is not sure enough the heart is not pure enough sin is too strong and grace is too weak many things are yet out of order yet can the soul bless God for this with tears of joy and praise him for this brimful of admiration and holy astonishment that it is as it is that he is where he is though he be not yet where he would be O 't is a blessed life to live as a poor recumbent by acts of trust and affiance though as yet it have but little evidence that it is resolved to trust all with Christ though it be not yet certain of the issue O this is a comfortable station a sweet condition to what it was either when it wallowed in sin in the days before conviction or was swallowed up in fears and troubles for sin after conviction now it hath hope though it want assurance and hope is sweet to a soul coming out of such deep distresses now it sees the remedy and is applying it whereas before the wound seemed desperate now all hesitations and debates are at an end in the Soul 't is no longer bivious and unresolved what to do all things have been deeply considered and after consideration issued into this resolve or decree of the will I will go to Christ I will venture all upon his Command and Call I will imbarque my eternal interests in that Bottom here I fix and upon this ground I resolve to live and dye O how much better is this than that floating life it lived before rolling upon the billows of inward fears and troubles not able to drop Anchor any where nor knowing where to find an Harbour Thirdly Things to come are ours and this is the best and sweetest of all man is a prospecting creature his eye is much upon things to come and it will not satisfie him that it is well at present except he have a prospect that it shall be so hereafter but now the soul hath committed it self and all its concernments to Christ for eternity and this being done it 's greatly relieved against evils to come I cannot saith the Believer think all my troubles over and that I shall never meet any more afflictions it were a fond vanity to dream of that but I leave all these things where I have left my soul he that hath supported me under inward will carry me through outward troubles also I cannot think all my temptations to sin past O I may yet meet with sore assaults from Satan yet it is infinitely better to be watching praying and striving against sin than it was when I was obeying it in the lusts of it God that hath delivered me from the love of sin will I trust preserve me from ruine by sin I know also death is to come I must feel the pangs and agonies of it but yet the aspect of death is much more pleasant than it was I come Lord Jesus to thee who art the death of death whose death hath disarmed death of its sting I fear not its dart if I feel not its sting And thus you see briefly how by faith Believers enter into rest How Christ gives rest even at present to them that come to him and all this but as a beginning of their everlasting rest Inference 1. Is there rest in Christ for weary souls that come unto him Then certainly it 's a design of Satan against the peace and welfare Inference 1. of mens souls to discourage them from coming to Christ in
the wounds of Christ Isa. 53. 5. By his stripes we are healed his blood only is innocent and precious blood 1 Pet. 1. 19. blood of infinite worth and value the blood of God Act. 20. 28. blood prepared for this very purpose Heb. 10. 5. this is the blood that performs the cure and how great a cure is it for this cure the souls of Believers shall be praising and magnifying their great Physician in Heaven to all eternity Rev. 1. 5 6. To him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood c. to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Secondly The next evil in sin cured by Christ is the dominion 2. of it over the souls of poor sinners Where sin is in dominion the soul is in a very sad condition for it darkens the Understanding depraves the Conscience stiffens the Will hardens the Heart misplaces and disorders all the Affections and thus every faculty is wounded by the power and dominion of sin over the soul. How difficult is the cure of this disease it passes the skill of Angels or men to heal it but Christ undertakes it and makes a perfect cure of it at last and this he doth by his Spirit As he cures the guilt of sin by pouring out his blood for us so he cures the dominion of sin by pouring out his Spirit upon us Justification is the cure of guilt Sanctification the cure of the dominion of sin For First As the Dominion of sin darkens the understanding 1 Cor. 2. 14. so the spirit of holiness which Christ sheds upon his people cures the darkness and blindness of that noble faculty and restores it again Eph. 5. 8. they that were darkness are hereby light in the Lord the anointing of this Spirit teacheth them all things 1 John 2. 27. Secondly As the dominion of sin depraved and defiled the Conscience Tit. 1. 15. wounded it to that degree as to disable it to the performances of all its Offices and Functions so that it was neither able to apply convince or tremble at the word So when the Spirit of holiness is shed forth O what a tender sense fills the renewed Conscience for what small things will it check smite and rebuke how strongly will it bind to duty and bar against sin Thirdly As the dominion of sin stiffned the Will and made it stubborn and rebellious so Christ by sanctifying it brings it to be pliant and obedient to the will of God Lord saith the sinner what wilt thou have me to do Act. 9. 6. Fourthly As the power of sin hardneth the Heart so that nothing could affect it or make any impression upon it when sanctification comes upon the soul it thaws and breaks it as hard as it was and makes it dissolve in the breast of a sinner in godly sorrow Ezec. 36. 26. I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh It will now melt ingenuously under the threatnings of the word 2 Kings 22. 19. or the strokes of the Rod Jer. 31. 18. or the manifestations of grace and mercy Luke 7. 38. Fifthly As the power of sin misplaced and disordered all the affections so sanctification reduces them again and sets them right Psal. 4. 6 7. And thus you see how sanctification becomes the rectitude health and due temper of the soul so far as it prevails curing the diseases that sin in its dominion filled the soul with True it is this cure is not perfected in this life there are still some grudgings of the old diseases in the holiest souls notwithstanding sin be dethroned from its dominion over them but the cure is begun and daily advances towards perfection and at last will be compleat as will appear in the cure of the next evil of sin namely Thirdly The Inherence of sin in the soul this is a sore disease the very core and root of all our other complaints 3. and ayles This made the holy Apostle bemoan himself and waile so bitterly Rom. 7. 17. because of sin that dwelt in him and the same misery is bewailed by all sanctified persons all the world over 'T is a wonderful mercy to have the guilt and the dominion of sin cured but we shall never be perfectly sound and well till the existence or indwelling of sin in our natures be cured too When once that is done then we shall feel no more pain nor sorrows for sin and this our great Physician will at last perform for us and upon us but as the cure of guilt was by our Justification the cure of the dominion of sin by our Sanctification so the third and last which perfects the whole cure will be by our Glorification and till then it is not to be expected For it 's a clear case that sin like Ivy in the old Walls will never be gotten out till the Wall be pulled down and then it 's pulled up by the roots This cure Christ will perform in a moment upon our dissolution For 't is plain First That none but perfected souls freed from all sin are admitted into Heaven Eph. 5. 27. Heb. 12. 23. Rev. 21. 27. Secondly 'T is as plain that no such personal perfection and freedom is found in any man on this side death and the grave 1 Joh. 1. 8. 1 Kings 8. 46. Philip. 3. 12. a truth sealed by the sad experience of all the Saints on earth Thirdly If such freedom and perfection must be before we can be perfectly happy and no such thing be done in this life it remains that it must be done immediately upon their dissolution and at the very time of their glorification as sin came in at the time of the union of their souls and bodies in the womb so it will go out at the time of their separation by death then will Christ put the last hand to this glorious work and perfect that cure which hath been so long under his hand in this world and thenceforth sin shall have no power upon them it shall never tempt them more it shall never defile them more it shall never grieve and sadden their hearts any more henceforth it shall never cloud their evidences darken their understandings or give the least interruption to their communion with God when sin is gone all these its mischievous effects are gone with it So that I may speak it to the comfort of all gracious hearts according to what the Lord told the Israelites in Deut. 12. 8 9. to which I allude for illustration of this most comfortable truth Ye shall not do after all the things that ye do here this day every man whatsoever is right in his own eyes for ye are not as yet come to the rest and to the inheritance which the Lord your God giveth you Whilst you are under Christs cure upon earth but not perfectly healed your understandings mistake your thoughts wander your affections are dead your communion
Christ he doth all gratis he sells not his medicines though they be of infinite value but freely gives them Isai. 55. 1. He that hath no money let him come if any be sent away 't is the rich Luk. 1. 53. not the poor and needy those that will not accept their remedy as a free gift but will needs purchase it at a price Ninthly and Lastly None rejoyces in the recovery of souls more than Christ doth O it is unspeakably delightful to him to see the efficacy of his blood upon our souls Isai. 53. 11. He shall see the travail of his soul i. e. the success of his death and sufferings and shall be satisfied when he foresaw the success of the Gospel upon the world it 's said Luk. 10. 21. In that hour Jesus rejoyced in spirit and thus you see there is no Physician like Christ for sick souls The Uses of this Point are For Information and Direction First From hence we are informed of many great and necessary truths deducible from this as Inference 1. How inexpressible is the grace of God in providing such a Physician Inference 1. as Christ for the sick and dying souls of Sinners O blessed be God that there is Balm in Gilead and a Physician there that your case is not as desperate forlorn and remediless as that of the Devils and damned is There is but one case excepted from cure and that such as is not incident to any sensible afflicted soul Mat. 12. 31. and this only excepted all manner of sins and diseases are capable of a cure Though there be such a disease as is incurable yet take this for thy comfort never any soul was sick i. e. sensibly burthened with it and willing to come to Jesus Christ for healing for under that sin the will is so wounded that they have no desire to Christ. O inestimable mercy that the sickest sinner is capable of a perfect cure There be thousands and ten thousands now in Heaven and earth who said once never was any case like theirs so dangerous so hopeless The greatest of sinners have been perfectly recovered by Christ 1 Tim. 1. 15. 1 Cor. 6. 11. O mercy never to be duly estimated Inference 2. What a powerful restraint from sin is the very method ordained Inference 2. by God for the cure of it Isai. 53. 5. by his stripes we are healed The Physician must dye that the Patient might live no other thing but the blood the precious blood of Christ is found in Heaven or earth able to heal us Heb. 9. 22. 26. This blood of Christ must be freshly applied to every new wound sin makes upon our souls 1 John 2. 1 2. every new sin wounds him afresh opens the wounds of Christ anew O think of this again and again you that so easily yield to the solicitations of Satan is it so cheap and easie to sin as you seem to make it Doth the cure of souls cost nothing True it is free to us but was it so to Christ No no it was not he knows the price of it though you do not hath Christ healed you by his stripes and can you put him under fresh sufferings for you so easily Have you forgot also your own sick days and nights for sin that you are careless in resisting and preventing it Sure 't is not easie for Saints to wound Christ and their own souls at one stroke if you renew your sins you must also renew your sorrows and repentance Psal. 51. Title 2 Sam. 12. 13. you must feel the throes and pains of a troubled Spirit again things with which the Saints are not unacquainted of which they may say as the Church Remembring my affliction the Wormwood and the Gall my soul hath them still in remembrance Lam. 3. 19. Yea and if you will yet be remiss in your watch and so easily incur new guilt though a pardon in the blood of Christ may heal your souls yet some Rod or other in the hand of a displeased Father shall afflict your bodies or smite you in your outward Comforts Psal. 89. 32. Inference 3. If Christ be the only Physician of sick souls what sin and folly is it for men to take Christs work out of his hands and attempt Inference 3. to be their own Physicians Thus do those that superstitiously endeavour to heal their souls by afflicting their bodies not Christs blood but their own must be the Plaister and as blind Papists ●…o many carnal and ignorant Protestants strive by confession restitution reformation and a stricter course of life to heal those wounds that sin hath made upon their souls without any respect to the blood of Christ but this course shall not profit them at all It may for a time divert but can never heal them the wounds so skinned over will open and bleed again God grant it be not when our souls shall be out of the reach of the true and only remedy Inference 4. How sad is the case of those souls to whom Christ hath not Inference 4. yet been a Physician They are mortally wounded by sin and are like to dye of their sickness no saving healing applications having hitherto been made unto their souls and this is the case of the greatest part of mankind yea of them that live under the discoveries of Christ in the Gospel which appears by these sad symptoms First In that their eyes have not yet been opened to see their sin and misery in which illumination the cure of souls begins Act. 26. 18. to this day he hath not given them Eyes to see Deut. 29. 4. but that terrible stroke of God which blinds and hardens them is too visibly upon them mentioned in Isai. 6. 9 10. no hope of healing till the sinners Eyes be opened to see his sin and misery Secondly In that nothing will divorce and separate them from their lusts a sure sign they are not under Christs cure nor were ever made sick of sin O if ever Christ be a Physician to thy soul he will make thee loath what now thou lovest and say to thy most pleasant and profitable lusts get ye hence Isai. 30. 22. till then there is no ground to think that Christ is a Physician to you Thirdly In that they have no sensible and pressing need of Christ nor make any earnest enquiry after him as most certainly you would do if you were in the way of healing and recovery These and many other sad symptoms do too plainly discover the disease of sin to be in its full strength upon your souls and if it so continue how dreadful will the issue be See Isai. 6. 9 10. Inference 5. What cause have they to be glad that are under the hand and Inference 5 care of Christ in order to a cure and who do find or may upon due examination find their souls are in a very hopeful way of recovery Can we rejoyce when the strength of a natural disease is broken and
nature begins to recover ease and vigour again and shall we not much more rejoyce when our souls begin to mend and recover sensibly and all comfortable signs of life and health appear upon them particularly when the understanding which was ignorant and dark hath the light of life beginning to dawn into it such is that in 1 John 2. 27. When the will which was rebellious and inflexible to the will of God is brought to comply with that holy will saying Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9. 6. When the heart which was harder than an Adamant is now brought to contrition for sin and can mourn as heartily over it as ever a tender Father did for a dead Son a beloved and only Son When its aversations from God are gone at least have no such power as once they had but the thoughts are now fixed much upon God and spiritual things begin to grow pleasant to the soul when times of duty come to be longed for and the soul never better pleased than in such seasons When the Hypocrisie of the heart is purged out so that we begin to do all that we do heartily as unto the Lord and not unto men Coll. 3. 23. 1 Thess. 2. 4. when we begin to make Conscience of secret sins Psal. 119. 113. and of secret duties Mat. 6. 5 6. when we have an equal respect to all Gods Commandments Psal. 119. 6. and our hearts are under the holy and awful Eye of God which doth indeed over-awe our souls Gen. 17. 1. O what sweet signs of a recovering soul are these Surely such are in the skilful hand of the great Physician who will perfect what yet remains to be done Second Use for Direction In the last place this point yields us matter of advice and direction to poor souls that are under the disease of sin Use 2. and they are of two sorts which I will distinctly speak to viz. First Such as are under their first sickness or spiritual sorrow for sin and know not what course to take or Secondly such as have been longer in the hands of Christ the Physician but are troubled to see the cure advance so slowly upon them and fear the issue First As to those that are in their first troubles for sin 1. and know not what course to take for ease and safety I would address to them these following Counsels First Shut your Ears against the dangerous counsels of carnal persons or relations for as they themselves are unacquainted with these troubles so also are they with all proper memedies and it is very usual with the Devil to convey his temptations to distressed souls by such hands because by them he can do it with least suspicion It was Augustins complaint that his own Father took little care for his soul and many Parents act in this case as if they were imployed by Satan Secondly Be not too eager to get out of trouble but be content to take Gods way and wait his time no woman that is wise would desire to have her travail hastned one day before the due time nor will it be your interest to hasten too soon out of trouble 'T is true times of trouble are apt to seem tedious but a false peace will endanger you more than a long trouble a man may lengthen his own troubles to the loss of his own peace and he may shorten them to the hazard of his own soul. Thirdly Open your case to wise judicious and experienced Christians and especially the Ministers of Christ whose office it is to counsel and direct you in these difficulties and let not your troubles lye like a secret smothering fire always in your own breasts I know men are more ashamed to open their sins under convictions than they were to commit them before conviction but this is your interest and the true way to your rest and peace If there be with or near you an Interpreter one of a thousand to shew you your righteousness and remedy as it lies in Christ neglect not your own souls in a sinful concealment of your case it will be the joy of their hearts to be imployed in such work as this is Fourthly Be much with God in secret open your hearts to him and pour out your complaints into his Bosome The 102. Psalm bears a title very suitable to your case and duty yea you will find if your troubles work kindly and God intend a cure upon your souls that nothing will be able to keep God and your souls asunder whatever your incumbrances in the world be some time will be daily redeemed to be so spent betwixt you and God Fifthly Plead hard with God in prayer for help and healing Heal my soul saith David for I have sinned against thee Psal. 41. 4. tell him Christ hath his Commission sealed for such as you are he was sent to bind up the broken hearted Isai. 61. 1. tell him he came into the world to seek and save that which was lost and so are you now in your own account and apprehension Lord what profit is there in my bood Wilt thou pursue a dried leaf And why is my heart wounded with the sense of sin and mine eyes opened to see my danger and misery are not these the first dawnings of mercy upon sinners O let it appear that the time of mercy even the set time is now come Sixthly Understand your peace to be in Christ only and faith to be the only way to Christ and rest let the great enquiry of your souls be after Christ and faith study the nature and necessity of these and cry to God day and night for strength to carry you to Christ in the way of faith Secondly As to those that have been longer under the hands of Christ and yet are in troubles still and cannot 2. attain peace but their wounds bleed still and all they hear in Sermons or do in way of duty will not bring them to rest to such I only add two or three words for a close First Consider whether you ever rightly closed with Christ since your first awakening and whether there be not some way of sin in which you still live if so no wonder your wounds are kept open and your souls are strangers to peace Secondly If you be conscious of no such flaw in the foundation consider how much of this trouble may arise from your constitution and natural temper which being melancholy will be doubtful and suspicious you may find it so in other cases of less moment and be sure Satan will not be wanting to improve it Thirdly Acquaint your selves more with the nature of true justifying faith a mistake in that hath prolonged the troubles of many if you look for it in no other act but assurance you may easily overlook it as it lies in the mean time in your affiance or acceptance A true and proper conception of saving faith would go far in the cure of many
which they receive them Hence it is that some men taste more spiritual sweetness in their daily bread than others do in the Lords Supper one and the same mercy by this means becomes a feast to soul and body at once Fourthly All mercies have their duration and perpetuity from Christ all Christless persons hold their mercies upon the greatest contingencies and terms of uncertainty if they be continued during this life that 's all there is not a drop of mercy after death but the mercies of the Saints are continued to eternity the end of their mercies on earth is the beginning of their better mercies in Heaven There is a twofold end of mercies one perfective another destructive the death of the Saints perfects and compleats their mercies the death of the wicked destroys and cuts off their mercies for these reasons Christ is called the mercy Secondly In the next place let us enquire what manner of mercy Christ is and we shall find many lovely and transcendent 2. properties to commend him to our souls First He is a free and undeserved mercy called upon that account the gift of God John 4. 10. And to shew how free this gift was God gave him to us when we were enemies Rom. 5. 8. needs must that mercy be free which is given not only to the undeserving but to the ill deserving the benevolence of God was the sole impulsive cause of this gift John 3. 16. Secondly Christ is a full mercy replenished with all that answers to the wishes or wants of sinners in him alone is found whatever the justice of an angry God requires for satisfaction or the necessities of souls require for their supply Christ is full of mercy both extensively and intensively in him are all kinds and sorts of mercies and in him are the highest and most perfect degrees of mercy for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Col. 1. 19. Thirdly Christ is the seasonable mercy given by the Father to us in due time Rom. 5. 6. in the fulness of time Gal. 4. 4. a seasonable mercy in his exhibition to the world in general and a seasonable mercy in his application to the soul in particular the wisdom of God pitched upon the best time for his incarnation and it hits the very nick of time for his application When a poor soul is distressed lost at its wits end ready to perish then comes Christ all Gods works are done in season but none more seasonable than this great work of Salvation by Christ. Fourthly Christ is the necessary mercy there is an absolute necessity of Jesus Christ hence in Scripture he is called the bread of life Joh. 6. 48. he is bread to the hungry he is the water of life Joh. 7. 37. as cold water to the thirsty soul he is a ransome for captives Mat. 20. 28. a garment to the naked Rom. 13. ult only bread is not so necessary to the hungry nor water to the thirsty nor a ransom to the Captive nor a garment to the naked as Christ is to the soul of a sinner the breath of our nostrills the life of our souls is in Jesus Christ. Fifthly Christ is a fountain mercy and all other mercies flow from him a believer may say of Christ all my fresh springs are in thee from his merit and from his Spirit flow our Redemption Justification Sanctification Peace Joy in the Holy Ghost and blessedness in the world to come In that day shall there be a fountain opened Zech. 13. 1. Sixthly Christ is a satisfying mercy he that is full of Christ can feel the want of nothing I desire to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2. 2. Christ bounds and terminates the vast desires of the soul he is the very Sabbath of the soul how hungry empty straitned and pinched in upon every side is the soul of man in the abundance and fulness of all outward things till it come to Christ The weary motions of a restless soul like those of a River cannot be at rest till they pour themselves into Christ the Ocean of blessedness Seventhly Christ is a peculiar mercy intended for and applied to a remnant among men some would extend redemption as large as the world but the Gospel limits it to those only that believe and these Believers are upon that account called a peculiar people 1 Pet. 2. 9. The offers of Christ indeed are large and general but the application of Christ is but to few Isai. 53. 1. the greater cause have they to whom Christ comes to lye with their mouths in the dust astonished and overwhelmed with the sense of so peculiar and distinguishiug mercy Eighthly Jesus Christ is a suitable mercy fitted in all respects to our needs and wants 1 Cor. 1. 20. wherein the admirable wisdom of God is illustriously displaied ye are complete in him saith the Apostle Col. 2. 20. Are we enemies He is reconciliation are we sold to sin and Satan He is redemption are we condemned by Law He is the Lord our righteousness hath sin polluted us He is a fountain opened for sin and for uncleaness are we lost by departing from God He is the way to the Father Rest is not so suitable to the weary nor bread to the hungry as Christ is to the sensible sinner Ninthly Christ is an astonishing and wonderful mercy his name is called Wonderful Isai. 9. 6. and as his name is so is he a wonderful Christ his person is a wonder 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of godliness God manifested in the flesh his abasement wonderful Phil. 2. 6. his love is a wonderful love his redemption full of wonders Angels desire to look into it he is and will be admired by Angels and Saints to all eternity Tenthly Jesus Christ is an incomparable and matchless mercy as the Apple-tree among the Trees of the Wood so is my Beloved among the Sons saith the enamoured Spouse Cant. 2. 3. Draw the comparison how you will betwixt Christ and all other enjoyments you will find none in Heaven or earth to match him he is more than all externals as the light of the Sun is more than that of a Candle nay the worst of Christ is better than the best of the world his reproaches are better than the worlds pleasures Heb. 11. 25. he is more than all Spirituals as the Fountain is more than the Streams he is more than justification as the cause is more than the effect more than sanctification as the person himself is more than his image or picture he is more than all peace all comfort all joys as the Tree is more than the Fruit. Nay draw the comparison betwixt Christ and things eternal and you will find him better than they for what is Heaven without Christ Psal. 73. 25. Whom have I in Heaven but thee If Christ should say to the Saints Take Heaven among you but as for me I will withdraw my self from you
the Saints would fall a weeping even in Heaven it self and say Lord Heaven will be no more Heaven to us except thou be there thou art the better half of Heaven Eleventhly Christ is an unsearchable mercy who can spell his wonderful name Prov. 30. 4. who can tell over his unsearchable riches Eph. 3. 8. Hence it is that souls never tire in the study or love of Christ because new wonders are eternally rising out of him he is a deep which no line of any created understanding angelical or humane can fathom Twelfthly and Lastly Christ is an everlasting mercy the same yesterday to day and for ever Heb. 13. 8. All other enjoyments are perishable time eaten things time like a Moth will fret them out but the riches of Christ are durable riches Prov. 8. 18. the graces of Christ are durable graces Joh. 4. 14. all the creatures are flowers that appear and fade in their month but this Rose of Sharon this Lilly of the Valley never withers Thus you see the mercy performed with his desirable properties Thirdly The last thing to be opened is the manner of 3. Gods performing this mercy to his people which the Lord did 1. Really and truly as he had promised him 2. Exactly agreeable to the promises and predictions of him First Really and truly as he had promised so he made good the promise Act. 2. 36. Let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God hath made the same Jesus whom ye crucified both Lord and Christ. The manifestation of Christ in the flesh was no phantasm or delusion but a most evident and palpable truth 1 Joh. 1. 1. That which we have heard which we have seen with our eyes which we have looked upon and our hands have handled A truth so certain that the assertors of it appealed to the very enemies of Christ for the certainty thereof Act. 2. 22. yea not only the sacred but prophane writers witness to it not only the Evangelists and Apostles but even the Heathen writers of those times both Roman and Jewish as Suetonius Tacitus Plinius the younger and Josephus the Jewish Antiquary do all acknowledge it Secondly As God did really and truly perform Christ the promised mercy so he performed this promised mercy exactly agreeable to the promises types and predictions made of him to the Fathers even to the most minute circumstances thereof This is a great truth for our faith to be established in let us therefore cast our eyes both upon the promises and performances of God with respect to Christ the mercy of mercies See how he was represented to the Fathers long before his manifestation in the flesh and what an one he appeared to be when he was really exhibited in the flesh First As to his person and qualifications as it was foretold so it was fulfilled His original was said to be unsearchable and eternal Mica 5. 2. and so he affirmed himself to be Rev. 1. 11. I am Alpha and Omega the first and the last Joh. 6. 31 32. Before Abraham was I am his two natures united in one person was plainly foretold Zech. 13. 7. the man my fellow and such a one God performed Rom. 9. 5. His immaculate purity and holiness was foretold Dan. 9. 24. to anoint the most Holy some render it the great Saint the Prince of Saints and such an one he was indeed when he lived in this world Joh. 8. 46. Which of you convinceth me of sin His Offices were foretold the prophetical Office predicted Deut. 18. 15. and fulfilled in him Joh. 1. 18. his Priestly Office foretold Psal. 110. 4. fulfilled Heb. 9. 14. his Kingly Office foretold Mica 5. 2. and in him fulfilled his very enemies being Judges Mat. 27. 37. Secondly As to his birth the time place and manner thereof was foretold to the Fathers and exactly performed to a tittle First The time prefixed more generally in Jacobs Phophecie Gen. 44. 10. when the Scepter should depart from Judah as indeed it did in Herod the Idumean more particularly in Daniel seventy weeks from the decree of Darius Dan. 9. 24. answering exactly to the time of his birth so cogent and full a proof that Porphyry the great enemy of Christians had no other evasion but that this Prophecie was devised after the event which yet the Jews as bitter enemies to Christ as himself will by no means allow to be true and Lastly The time of his birth was exactly pointed at in Haggai's Prophecie Hag. 2. 7 9. compared with Mal. 3. 1. he must come whilst the second Temple stood at that time was a general expectation of him Joh. 1. 19. and at that very time he came Luke 2. 38. Secondly The place of his birth was foretold to be Bethlehem Ephrata Mica 5. 2. and so it was Mat. 2. 5 6. to be brought up in Nazareth Zech. 6. 12. Behold the man whose name is the branch the word is Netzer whence is the word Nazarite and there indeed was our Lord brought up Mat. 2. 23. Thirdly His Parent was to be a Virgin Isai. 7. 14. punctually fufilled Mat. 1. 20 21 22 23. Fourthly His Stock or Tribe was foretold to be Judah Gen. 49. 10. and it is evident saith the Apostle that our Lord sprang out of Judah Heb. 7. 14. Fifthly His Harbinger or forerunner was foretold Mal. 4. 5 6. fulfilled in John the Baptist Luk. 1. 16 17. Sixthly The obscurity and meanness of his birth was predicted Isai. 53. 2. Zech. 9. 9. to which the event answered Luk. 2. 12. Thirdly His Doctrine and Miracles were foretold Isai. 61. 1 2. and Isai. 35. 4 5. the accomplishment whereof in Christ is evident in the History of all the Evangelists Fourthly His death for us was foretold by the Prophets Dan. 9. 26. The Messiah shall be cut off but not for himself Isai. 53. 5. He was wounded for our transgression and so he was Joh. 11. 50. The very kind and manner of his death was prefigured in the brazen Serpent his Type and answered in his death upon the Cross Joh. 3. 14. Fifthly His burial in the Tomb of a rich man was foretold Isai. 53. 9. and accomplished most exactly Mat. 27. 59 60. Sixthly His resurrection from the dead was Typed out in Jona and fulfilled in Christs abode three days and nights in the Grave Mat. 12. 39. Seventhly The wonderful spreading of the Gospel in the world even to the Isles of the Gentiles was fore-prophesied Isai. 49. 6. To the truth whereof we are not only the witnesses but the happy instances and examples of it Thus the promised mercy was performed Inference 1. If Christ be the mercy of mercies the medium of conveying all other mercies from God to men Then in vain do men expect Inference 1. and hope for the mercy of God out of Jesus Christ. I know many poor sinners comfort themselves with this when they come upon a bed of sickness I am sinful but God is merciful and it is very
true God is merciful plenteous in mercy his mercy is great above the heavens mercy pleaseth him and all this they that are in Christ shall find experimentally to their comfort and salvation but what is all this to thee if thou beest Christless There is not one drop of saving mercy that comes in any other Chanel than Christ to the soul of any man But must I then expect no mercy out of Christ This is a hard case very uncomfortable doctrine Yes thou maist be a Christless and Covenantless soul and yet have variety of temporal mercies as Ishmael had Gen. 17. 20 21. God may give thee the fatness of the Earth Riches Honours Pleasures a numerous and prosperous Posterity will that content thee Yes if I may have Heaven too no no neither Heaven nor Pardon nor any other Spiritual or Eternal mercy may be expected out of Christ Jude vers 21. O deceive not your selves in this point There are two bars betwixt you and all Spiritual mercies viz. the guilt of sin and the filth of sin and nothing but your own union with Christ can remove these and so open the passage for Spiritual mercies to your souls Why but I will repent of sin strive to obey the Commands of God make restitutions for the wrongs I have done cry to God for mercy bind my soul with vows and strong resolutions against sin for time to come will not all this lay a ground work for hope of mercy to my soul No no this will not this cannot do it First All your sorrows tears and mournings for sin cannot obtain mercy could you shed as many tears for any one sin that ever you committed as all the children of Adam have shed upon any account whatsoever since the creation of the World they will not purchase the pardon of that one sin for the Law accepts no short payment it requires plenary satisfaction and will not discharge any soul without it nor can it acknowledge or own your sorrows to be such the repentance of a soul in Christ finds through him acceptance with God but out of him it 's nothing Secondly All your strivings to obey the Commands of God and live more strictly for time to come will not obtain mercy Mat. 5. 20. Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Thirdly Your restitution and reparation of wrongs you have done cannot obtain mercy Judas restored and yet was damned man is repaired but God is not remission is the act of God 't is he must loose your Consciences from the bond of guilt or they can never be loosed Fourthly All your cryes to God for mercy will not prevail for mercy if you be out of Christ Mat. 7. 22. Job 27. 9. A righteous Judge will not reverse the just sentence of the Law though the Prisoner at the Bar fall upon his knees and cry mercy mercy Fifthly Your vows and engagements to God for time to come cannot obtain mercy for they being made in your own strength 't is impossible you should keep them and if you could yet it is impossible they should obtain remission and mercy should you never sin more for time to come yet how shall God be satisfied for sins past Justice must have satisfaction or you can never have remission Rom. 3. 25 26. and no work wrought by man can satisfie Divine Justice nor is the satisfaction of Christ made over to any for their discharge but to such only as are in him therefore never expect mercy out of Christ. Inference 2. Is Christ the mercy of mercies greater better and more necessary Inference 2. than all other mercies then let no inferiour mercy satisfie you for your portion God hath mercies of all sorts to give but Christ is the chief the prime mercy of all mercies O be not satisfied without that mercy When Luther had a rich present sent him Valde protestatus sum me nolle sie ab eo satiari Luth. he protested God should not put him off so and David was of the same mind Psal. 17. 14. If the Lord should give any of you the desires of your hearts in the good things of this life let not that satisfie you whilst you are Christless For First What is there in these earthly enjoyments whereof the vilest of men have not a greater fulness than you Job 21. 7 8 9 10 11. Psal. 17. 10. Psal. 73. 3 12. Secondly What comfort can all these things give to a soul already condemned as thou art Joh. 3. 18. Thirdly What sweetness can be in them whilst they are all unsanctified things to you Enjoyments and their sanctification are two distinct things Psal. 37. 16. Prov. 10. 22. Thousands of unsanctified enjoyments will not yield your souls one drop of solid spiritual comfort Fourthly What pleasure can you take in these things out of which death must shortly strip you naked You must die you must dye and whose then shall all those things be for which you have laboured Be not so fond to think of Tunc edax flamma comb●…ret quos nunc carnalis delectatio polluit leaving a great name behind you 't is but a poor felicity as Chrysostom well observes to be tormented where thou art and praised where thou art not the sweeter your portion hath been on earth the more intolerable will your condition be in Hell yea these earthly delights do not only encrease the torments of the damned but also prepare as they are instruments of sin the souls of men for damnation Prov. 1. 32. Surely the prosperity of fools shall destroy them be restless therefore till Christ the mercy of mercies be the root and fountain yielding and sanctifying all other mercies to you Inference 3. Is Jesus Christ the mercy of mercies infinitely better than all other mercies then let all that be in Christ be content and well Inference 3. satisfied whatever other inferiour mercies the wisdom of God seems fit to deny them you have a Benjamins portion a plentiful inheritance in Christ will you yet grumble Others have Houses splendid and magnificent upon earth but you have an house made without hands eternal in the Heavens 2 Cor. 5. 1. Others are cloathed with rich and costly apparel your souls are cloathed with the white pure robes of Christs righteousness Isai. 61. 10. I will greatly rejoice in the Lord my soul shall be joyfull in my God for he hath cloathed me with the garment of salvation he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness as a Bridegroom decketh himself with ornaments and as a Bride adorneth her self with Jewels Let those that have full Tables heavy Purses rich Lands but no Christ be rather objects of your pity than envy 't is better like store-cattle to be kept lean and hungry than with the fatted Ox to tumble in flowry Meadows thence to be led away to the shambles God hath not a better
mercy to give than Christ thy portion in him all necessary mercies are secured to thee and thy wants and straits sanctified to thy good O therefore never open thy mouth to complain against thy bountiful God Inference 4. Is Christ the mercy i. e he in whom all the tender mercies Inference 4. of God towards poor sinners are then let none be discouraged in going to Christ by reason of the sin and unworthiness that is in them his very name is mercy and as his name is so is he Poor drooping sinner incourage thy self in the way of faith the Christ to whom thou art going is mercy it self to broken-hearted sinners moving towards him in the way of faith Doubt not that mercy will repulse thee 't is against both its name and nature so to do Jesus Christ is so merciful to poor souls that come to him that he hath received and pardoned the chiefest of sinners men that stood as remote from mercy as any in the world 1 Tim. 1. 15. 1 Cor. 6. 11. Those that shed the blood of Christ have yet been washed in that blood from their sin Act. 2. 36 37. Mercy receives sinners without exception of great and heinous ones Joh. 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come to me and drink Gospel invitations run in general terms to all sinners that are heavy laden Mat. 11. 28. When Mr. Billney the Martyr heard a Minister preaching at this rate O thou old Sinner who hast been serving the Devil these fifty or sixty years dost thou think that Christ will receive thee now O said he what a preaching of Christ is here Had Christ been thus preached to me in the day of my trouble for sin what had become of me But blessed be God there is a sufficiency both of merit and mercy in Jesus Christ for all sinners for the vilest among sinners whose hearts shall be made willing to come unto him So merciful is the Lord Jesus Christ that he moves first Isai. 65. 1 2. So merciful that he upbraids none Ezec. 18. 22. So merciful that he will not despise the weakest if sincere desires of souls Isai. 42. 3. So merciful that nothing more grieves him than our unwillingness to come unto him for mercy Joh. 5. 40. So merciful that he waiteth to the last upon sinners to shew them mercy Rom. 10. 21. Mat. 23. 37. In a word so merciful that it is his greatest joy when sinners come unto him that he may shew them mercy Luk. 15. 5. 22. But yet it cannot enter into my thoughts that I should obtain Object mercy First You measure God by your selves 1 Sam. 24. 19. If Sol. a man find his enemy will he let him go well away Man will not but the merciful God will upon the submission of his enemies to him Secondly You are discouraged because you have not tryed Go to Jesus Christ poor distressed sinner try him and then report what a Christ thou findest him to be But I have neglected the time of mercy and now it is too late Object How know you that Have you seen the Book of Life or turned over the Records of Eternity Or do you not unwarrantably Sol. intrude into the secrets of God which belong not to you Besides if the treaty were at an end how is it that thy heart is now distressed for sin and solicitous after deliverance from it But I have waited long and yet see no mercy for me May not mercy be coming and you not see it or have you Object not waited at the wrong dore If you wait for the mercy of Sol. God through Christ in the way of humiliation and faith and continue waiting assuredly mercy shall come at last Inference 5. Hath God performed the mercy promised to the Fathers the great mercy the capital mercy Jesus Christ then let no Inference 5. man distrust God for the performance of lesser mercies contained in any other promises of the Scripture the performance of this mercy secures the performance of all other mercies to us For First Christ is a greater mercy than any other which yet remains to be performed Rom. 8. 32. Secondly This mercy virtually comprehends all other mercies 1 Cor. 3. 21 22 23. Thirdly The promises that contain all other mercies are ratified and confirmed to Believers in Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. Fourthly It was much more improbable that God would bestow his own Son upon the world than that he should bestow any other mercy upon it Wait therefore in a comfortable expectation of the fulfilling of all the rest of the promises in their seasons hath he given thee Christ he will give thee bread to eat rayment to put on support in troubles and whatsoever else thy soul or body stands in need of the blessings contained in all other promises are fully secured by the performance of this great promise thy pardon peace acceptance with God now and enjoyment of him for ever shall be fulfilled the great mercy Christ makes way for all other mercies to the souls of Believers Inference 6. Lastly How mad are they that part with Christ the best of Inference 6. mercies to secure and preserve any temporal lesser mercies to themselves Thus Demas and Judas gave up Christ to gain a little of the world O soul-undoing bargain How dear do they pay for the world that purchase it with the loss of Christ and their own peace for ever Blessed be God for Jesus Christ the mercy of mercies The Twelfth SERMON Sermon 12. CANT 5. part of verse 16. Text. Containing a third motive to enliven the general exhortation from a third title of Christ. yea he is altogether lovely AT the ninth verse of this Chapter you have a query propounded to the Spouse by the Daughters of Jerusalem What is thy Beloved more than another Beloved To this question the Spouse returns her answer in the following verses wherein she asserts his excellency in general vers 10. He is the chiefest among ten thousands confirms that general assertion by an enumeration of his particular excellencies to vers 16. where she closes up her Character and Encomium of her Beloved with an elegant Epiphonema in the words that I have read Yea he is altogether lovely The words you see are an affirmative proposition setting forth the transcendent loveliness of the Lord Jesus Christ and naturally resolve themselves into three parts viz. 1. The Subject 2. The Predicate 3. The manner of Predication First The subject He viz. the Lord Jesus Christ after 1. whom she had been seeking for whom she was sick of love concerning whom these Daughters of Jerusalem had enquired whom she had endeavoured so graphically to describe in his particular excellencies This is the great and excellent Subject of whom she here speaks Secondly The predicate or what she affirmeth or saith of 2. him viz. that he is a lovely one machamaddim desires according to the import of
every Creature is suitable to its nature You see divers Creatures feeding upon several parts of the same herb the Bee upon the flower the Bird upon the seed the Sheep upon the stalk and the Swine upon the root according to their nature so is their food sensual men feed upon sensual things spiritual men upon spiritual things as your food is so are you If carnal comforts can content thy heart sure thy heart must then be a very carnal heart yea and let Christians themselves take heed that they fetch not their Consolations out of themselves instead of Christ. Your graces and duties are excellent means and instruments but not the ground-work and foundation of your Comfort they are useful buckets to draw but not the well it self in which the springs of consolation rise If you put your duties in the room of Christ Christ will put your comforts out of the reach of your duties Inference 3. If Christ be the Consolation of Believers what a comfortable Inference 3. life should all Believers live in this world Certainly if the fault be not your own you might live the happiest and comfortablest lives of all men in the world If you would not be a discomfort to Christ he would be a comfort to you every day and in every condition to the end of your lives your condition abounds with all the helps and advantages of consolation you have the command of Christ to warrant your comforts Phil. 4. 4. You have the Spirit of Christ for a spring of comfort you have the Scriptures of Christ for the rules of comfort you have the duties of Religion for the means of comfort why is it then that you go comfortless If your afflictions be many in the world yet your encouragements be more in Christ your troubles in the world may be turned into joy but your comforts in Christ can never be turned into trouble Why should troubles obstruct your comfort when the blessing of Christ upon your troubles makes them subservient to promote your happiness Rom. 8. 28. Shake off despondency then and live up to the principles of Religion your dejected life is uncomfortable to your selves and of very ill use to others Inference 4. If Christ be the Consolation of Believers then let all that desire Inference 4. comfort in this world or in that to come imbrace Jesus Christ and get real union with him The same hour you shall be in Christ you shall also be at the fountain head of all Consolations Thy soul shall be then a pardoned soul and a pardoned soul hath all reason in the world to be a joyful soul in that day thy Conscience shall be sprinkled with the blood of Christ and a sprinkled Conscience hath all the reason in the world to be a comforting Conscience in that day you become the Children of your Father in Heaven and he that hath a Father in Heaven hath all reason to be the joyfullest man upon earth in that day you are delivered from the sting and hurt of death and he that is delivered from the sting of death hath the best reason to take in the comfort of life O come to Christ come to Christ till you come to Christ no true comfort can come to you The Sixteenth SERMON Sermon 16. EPHES. 1. 7. Text. Enforcing the general exhortation by a seventh motive drawn from the first benefit purchased by Christ. In whom we have redemption through his blood the remission of sins according to the riches of his grace SIx great Motives have been presented already from the Titles of Christ to draw the hearts of sinners to him more are now to be offered from the benefits redounding to Believers by Christ. Essaying by all means to win the hearts of men to Christ. To this end I shall in the first place open that glorious priviledge of Gospel remission freely and fully conferred upon all that come to Christ by faith in whom we have redemption by faith c. In which words we have first a singular benefit or choice mercy bestowed viz. Redemption interpreted by way of apposition the remission of sins this is a priviledge of the first rank a mercy by it self none sweeter none more desirable among all the benefits that come by Christ. And therefore Secondly You have the price of this mercy an account what it cost even the blood of Christ in whom we have redemption through his blood Precious things are of great price the blood of Christ is the meritorious cause of remission Thirdly You have here also the impulsive cause moving God to grant pardons at this rate to sinners and that is said to be the riches of his grace Where by the way you see that the freeness of the grace of God and the fulness of the satisfaction of Christ meet together without the least jar in the remission of sin contrary to the vain cavil of the Socinian adversaries In whom we have redemption even the remission of sins according to the riches of his grace Fourthly You have the qualified subjects of this blessed priviledge viz. Believers in whose name he here speaks we have remission i. e. we the Saints and faithful in Christ Jesus vers 1. we whom he hath chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world and predestinated unto the adoption of Children vers 4 5. we that are made accepted in the beloved vers 6. 't is we and we only who have redemption through his blood Hence observe DOCT. That all Believers and none but Believers receive the remission Doct. of their sins through the riches of grace by the blood of Jesus Christ. In the explication of this point three things must be spoken to 1. That all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state 2. That their pardon is the purchase of the blood of Christ. 3. That the riches of Grace are manifested in remission First That all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state where I will first shew you what pardon or the remission of sin is Secondly That this is the priviledge of none but Believers First Now remission of sin is the gracious act of God in and through Christ discharging a believing sinner from all the guilt and punishment of his sin both temporal and eternal 'T is the act of God he is the author of remission none can forgive sins but God only Mark 2. 7. against him only i. e. principally and essentially the offence is committed Psal. 51. 4. To his Judgement guilt binds over the soul and who can remit the debt but the Creditor Mat. 6. 12. 'T is an act of God discharging the sinner it is Gods loosing of one that stood bound the cancelling of his bond or obligation called therefore remission or releasing in the Text the blotting out of our iniquities or the removing our sins from us as it 's called in other Scriptures see Psal. 103. 11. Mica 7. 18 19. It is a gracious act of God the
effect of pure grace done for his own name sake Isai. 43. 25. discharging us without any satisfaction at all by us there is much grace in that and providing a surety for us every way able to pay our debt there is more grace in that 'T is the gracious act of God in and through Christ the satisfaction of Christ is the procuring cause of our remission and so God declares himself just in the remission of our sin Rom. 3 25. Gracious is the Lord and righteous Psal. 116. 5. Justice and mercy meet here and embrace each other in whom saith the Text we have remission no other price could purchase this priviledge Micah 6. 6 7. not rivers of Oyl or humane Blood And this gracious act of God discharges the pardoned soul both from guilt and punishment guilt is nothing else but the force and power that is in sin to oblige the sinner to undergo the penalty due to sin Therefore sinners are said to be guilty of Hell-fire Mat. 5. 22. Guilty of eternal judgement Mark 3. 29. to be under the judgement of God Rom. 3. 19. Remission takes away both guilt and punishment together it takes away all guilt Acts 13. 38 39. and all punishment And so much of the first thing to be opened namely what the remission of sin is Secondly Now that this remission of sin is the priviledge of Believers is most apparent for all the causes of remission are in conjunction to procure it for them The love of God which is the impulsive cause of pardon the blood of Christ which is the meritorious cause of pardon and saving faith which is the instrumental cause of pardon do all cooperate for their remission as is plain in the Text. Besides all the promises of pardon are made to them Jer. 31. 34. Micah 7. 18. and Lastly All the signs of pardon are sound in them and in them only that love God Luk. 7. 47. mercisulness to others Mat. 6. 14. a blessed calmness and peace in the Conscience Rom. 5. 1. So that it is a truth beyond controversie that all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state Secondly Next I will shew you that the Pardon of Believers 2. is the purchase of the blood of Christ nothing but the blood of Christ is a price equivalent to the remission of sin for this blood was innocent and untainted blood 1 Pet. 1. 19. the blood of a Lamb without spot This blood was precious blood blood of infinite worth and value the blood of God Acts 20. 28. it was prepared blood for this very purpose Heb. 10. 5. prepared by Gods eternal appointment prepared by Christs miraculous and extraordinary production by the operation of the Spirit prepared by his voluntary sequestration or sanctification of himself to this very use and purpose The blood of Jesus is not only innocent precious and prepared blood but it is also blood actually shed and sacrificed to the justice of God for the expiation of guilt and procurement of our discharge Isai. 53. 5. To conclude the severe justice of God could put in no exception against the blood of Christ 't is unexceptionable blood being as before was noted untainted by sin and dignified above all estimation by the person whose blood it was Justice required no less and could demand no more and this is the price at which our pardons are purchased and without which no sin could be pardoned for without shedding of blood such blood as this there is no remission Heb. 9. 22. Thirdly The last thing to be opened is That God hath 3. manifested the riches of his grace in the remission of our sins so speaks the Apostle Rom. 5. 20. Where sin abounded grace did much more abound And 1 Tim. 1. 14. The grace of our Lord viz. in the pardon of sin was exceeding abundant Which will appear if we bring our thoughts close to the matter in several particulars First From the nature of the mercy which is the richest of all mercies except Christ the purchaser of it no mercy sweeter than a pardon to a condemned sinner No pardon like Gods pardon to a man condemned at his Bar all the goodness of God is made to pass before our eyes in his pardoning acts of grace Exod. 33. 19. Secondly The very riches of grace must needs be in the pardon of sin if we consider the method in which pardons are dispensed which is as the Text speaks through his blood Herein God commends his love to us Rom. 5. 8. he commends it more than if he had pardoned sin without such a sacrifice for then he had only displayed his mercy but not caused Mercy and Justice to meet and triumph together Thirdly The riches of his grace shines forth in the peculiarity of the mercy Remission is no common favour it was never extended to the fallen Angels nor to the far greater part of the children of men but only to a little flock a small remnant of mankind Luke 12. 32. Joh. 17. 9. Fourthly The riches of grace are manifested in remission if we consider the subjects of this priviledge who are not only equally plunged into sin and misery with others by nature Eph. 2. 3. but many of the Lords pardoned ones are actually guilty of deeper-died abominations than many unpardoned ones in the civilized world are defiled with To me saith Paul the greatest of sinners one that was before a blasphemer a persecutor c. yet to me is this grace given I obtained mercy 1 Tim. 1. 15. and such were some of you but ye are justified 1 Cor. 6. 11. Yea God singles out the most base despised poor and contemptible ones among men to be the subjects of this glorious priviledge 1 Cor. 1. 26. You see your calling brethren c. Fifthly More of the riches of grace still appears if we view the latitude and extent of this act of grace Oh how innumerable are our transgressions Who can understand his errors Psal. 19. 12. Yet the blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1. 7. Small and great sins open and secret sins old and new sins all pardoned without exception O the riches of grace O the unsearchable goodness of God! With the Lord there is mercy and with him is plenteous redemption and he shall redeem Israel from all his Iniquities Psal. 130. 7 8. Sixthly and lastly The riches of Grace shine forth in the irrevocableness and perpetuity of remission as grace pardons all sins without exception so the pardons it bestows are without revocation The pardoned soul shall never come into condemnation Joh. 5. 24. As far as the East is from the West so far hath he removed our transgressions from us Psal. 103. 10. The East and West are the two opposite points of Heaven which can never come together neither shall the pardoned soul and its sins ever meet any more Thou hast cast saith Hezekiah all my sins behind thy back The penitent Believer sets his sins
before his face but the merciful God casts them all behind his back never to behold them more so as to charge them upon his pardoned people And thus you see what the pardon of sin is what the price that purchaseth pardon is and what riches of grace God manifesteth in the remission of Believers sins which were the things to be explained and opened in the Doctrinal part The improvement of the whole you will have in the following Uses Inference 1. If this be so that all Believers and none but Believers receive Inference 1. the remission of their sins through the riches of grace by the blood of Christ What a happy condition then are Believers in Those that never felt the load of sin may make light of a pardon but so cannot you that have been in the deeps of trouble and fear about it those that have been upon the rack of an accusing and condemning Conscience as David Heman and many of the Saints have been can never sufficiently value a pardon Blessed is the man whose transgression is forgiven whose sin is covered blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity Psal. 32. 1 2. or O the blessednesses and felicities of the pardoned man as the Hebrew sounds Remission cannot but appear the wonder of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mercies if we consider through what difficulties the grace of God makes way for it to our souls what strong bars the love of God breaks asunder to open our way to this priviledge for there can be no pardon without a Mediator no other Mediator but the Son of God the Son of God cannot discharge our debts but by taking them upon himself as our surety and making full payment by bearing the wrath of God for us and when all this is done there can be no actual pardon except the spirit of grace open our blind eyes break our hard hearts and draw them to Christ in the way of believing And as the mercy of remission comes to us through wonderful difficulties so it is in it self a compleat and perfect mercy God would not be at such vast expence of the riches of his grace Christ would not lay out the invaluable treasures of his precious blood to procure a cheap and common blessing for us Rejoyce then ye pardoned souls God hath done great things for you for which you have cause to be glad Inference 2. Hence it follows That interest in Christ by faith brings the Inference 2. Conscience of a Believer into a state of rest and peace Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God I say not that every Believer is presently brought into actual peace and tranquillity of Conscience there may be many fears and much trouble even in a pardoned soul but this is an undoubted truth that faith brings the pardoned soul into that condition and state where he may find perfect rest in his Conscience with respect to the guilt and danger of sin The blood of Christ sprinkles us from an evil that is an accusing condemning Conscience We are apt to fear that this or that special sin which hath most terrified and affrighted our Consciences is not forgiven but if there be riches enough in the grace of God and efficacy enough in the blood of Christ then the sins of Believers all their sins great as well as small one as well as another without limitation or exception are pardoned For let us but consider if God remits no sin to any man but with respect to the blood of Christ then all sins are pardoned as well as any one sin because the dignity and desert of that blood is infinite and as much deserves an universal pardon for all sins as the particular pardon of any even the least sin Moreover remission is an act of Gods Fatherly love in Christ and if it be so then certainly no sin of any Believer can be retained or excluded from pardon for then the same soul should be in the favour of God so far as it is pardoned and out of the favour of God so far as it is unpardoned and all this at one and the same instant of time which is a thing both repugnant to it self and to the whole stream of the Gospel To Conclude what is the design and end of remission but the saving of the pardoned soul But if any sin be retained or excluded from pardon the retaining of that sin must needs irritate and void the pardon of all other sins and so the acts of God must cross and contradict each other and the design and end of God miscarry and be lost which can never be So then we conclude faith brings the believing soul into a state of rest and peace Inference 3. Hence it also follows That no remission is to be expected by any Inference 3. soul without interest by faith in Jesus Christ no Christ no pardon no faith no Christ. Yet how apt are many poor deluded souls to expect pardon in that way where never any soul yet did or ever can meet it Some look for pardon from the absolute mercy of God without any regard to the blood of Christ or their interest therein we have sinned but God is merciful Some expect remission of sin by vertue of their own duties not Christs merits I have sinned but I will repent restore reform and God will pardon but little do such men know how they therein diminish the evil of sin undervalue the justice of God slight the blood of Christ and put an undoing cheat upon their own souls for-ever to expect pardon from absolute mercy or our own duties is to knock at the wrong dore which God hath shut up to all the world Rom. 3. 20. Whilst these two principles abide firm that the price of pardon is only in the blood of Christ and the benefit of pardon only by the application of his blood to us this must remain a sure conclusion that no remission is to be expected by any soul without interest by faith in Jesus Christ. Repentance restitution and reformation are excellent duties in their kind and in their proper places but they were never meant for saviours or satisfactions to God for sin Inference 4. If the riches of grace be thus manifested in the pardon of sin Inference 4. how vile an abuse is it of the grace of God to take the more liberty to sin because grace abounds in the pardon of it Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid Rom. 6. 1 2. Will no cheaper stuff than the grace of God serve to make a cloak for sin O vile abuse of the most excellent thing in the whole world did Christ shed his blood to expiate our guilt and dare we make that a plea to extenuate our guilt God forbid If it be intolerable ingratitude among men to requite good with evil sure that sin must want a name bad enough to express it which puts the greatest
fortior one Believer can do much many can do more when Daniel designed to get the knowledge of that secret hinted in the obscure dream of the King which none but the God of Heaven could make known it 's said Dan. 2. 17. Then Daniel went to his House and made the thing known to Hanania Mishael and Azaria his Companions that they would desire mercies of the God of Heaven concerning this secret The benefit of such assistance in prayer by the help of other favourites with God is plainly intimated by Jesus Christ unto us Mat. 18. 19. If two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven God sometimes stands upon a number of voices for the carrying of some publick mercy because he delighteth in the harmony of many praying souls and also loves to oblige and gratifie many in the answer and return of the same prayer I know this usage is grown too formal and complemental among Professors but certainly it is a great advantage to be inward with them who are so with God St. Bernard prescribing rules for effectual prayer closes them up with this wish cum talis fueris memento mei when thy heart is in this frame then remember me Inference 2. If Believers be such favourites in Heaven in what a desperate Inference 2. condition is that Cause and those Persons against whom the generality of Believers are daily engaged in prayers and cries to Heaven Certainly Rome shall feel the dint and force of the many millions of prayers that are gone up to Heaven from the Saints for many generations the cries of the blood of the Martyrs of Jesus joyned with the cries of thousands of Believers will bring down vengeance at last upon the Man of sin 'T is said Rev. 8. 4 5 6. That the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand and immediately it is added vers 5. And the Angel took the Censer and filled it with fire of the Altar and cast it into the earth and there were voices and thunderings and lightnings and earth-quakes and the seven Angels which had the seven Trumpets prepared themselves to sound The prayer of a single Saint is sometimes followed with wonderful effects Psal. 18. 6 7. In my distress I called upon the Lord and cryed unto my God he heard my voice out of his Temple and my cry came before him even into his ears then the earth shook and trembled the foundations also of the hills moved and were shaken because he was wroth what then can a thundring legion of such praying souls do It was said of Luther iste vir potuit cum Deo quicquid voluit that man could have of God what he would his enemies felt the weight of his prayers and the Church of God reaped the benefits thereof The Queen of Scots professed she was more afraid of the Prayers of Mr. Knox than of an army of ten thousand men these were mighty wrestlers with God howsoever contemned and vilified among their enemies There Jacobus Lanigius the Sorbone Doctor who wrote the lives of Luther Knox and Calvin speaks as if the Devil had hired his pen to abuse those precious servants of Christ. will a time come when God will hear the prayers of his people who are continually crying in his ears How long Lord how long Inference 3. Let no Believer be dejected at the contempts and slightings of Inference 3. men so long as they stand in the grace and favour of God it is the lot of the best men to have the worst usage in this world those of whom the world was not worthy are not thought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e the sweepings of the house the filth wiped off any thing Erasmus the dirt that sticks to the Shoos Valla the dung of the Belly as the Syriack translates The condemned man that was tumbled from a steep Rock into the Sea as a sacrifice to Neptune was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Budeus Sit pro nobis 〈◊〉 worthy to live in the world Heb. 11. 38. Paul and his Companions were men of choice and excellent spirits yet saith he 1 Cor 4. 13. Being defamed we intreat we are made as the filth of the world and are the off-scouring of all things unto this day they are words signifying the basest contemptiblest and most abhorred things among men How is Heaven and Earth divided in their Judgements and estimations of the Saints those whom men call filth and dirt God calls a peculiar Treasure a Crown of Glory a Royal Diadem But trouble not thy self Believer for the unjust censures of the blind world they speak evil of the things they know not he that is spiritual judgeth all things yet he himself is judged of no man 1 Cor. 2. 14. You can discern the earthliness and baseness of their spirits they want a faculty to discern the excellency and choiceness of your spirits He that carries a dark Lanthorn in the night can discern him that comes against him and yet is not discerned by him a Courtier regards not a slight in the Country so long as he hath the ear and favour of his Prince Inference 4. Never let Believers fear the want of any good thing necessary Inference 4. for them in this world the favour of God is the fountain of all blessings provisions protections even of all that you need He hath promised that he will withhold no good thing from them that walk uprightly Psal. 84. 11. He that is bountiful to his enemies will not withhold what is good from his friends The favour of God will not only supply your needs but protect your persons Psal. 5. 12. Thou wilt bless the righteous with favour wilt thou compass him as with a shield Inference 5. Hence also it follows that the sins of Believers are very piercing Inference 5. things to the heart of God The unkindness of those whom he hath received into his very bosom upon whom he hath set his special favour and delight who are more obliged to him than all the people of the earth beside O this wounds the very heart of God What a melting expostulation was that which the Lord used with David 2 Sam. 12. 7 8. I anointed thee King over all Israel and I delivered thee out of the hand of Saul and I gave thee thy masters house and thy masters wives into thy bosom and gave thee the house of Israel and Juda and if that had been too little I would moreover have given unto thee such and such things wherefore hast thou despised the Commandment of the Lord But Reader if thou be a reconciled person a favourite with God and hast grieved him by any eminent transgression how should it melt thy heart to hear the Lord thus expostulating with thee I delivered thee out of
the hand of Satan I gave thee into the bosom of Christ I have pardoned unto thee millions of sins I have bestowed upon thee the riches of mercy my favour hath made thee great and as if all this were too little I have prepared Heaven for thee for which of all these favours dost thou thus requite me Inference 6. How precious should Jesus Christ be to Believers by whose Inference 6. blood they are ingratiated with God and by whose intercession they are and shall for ever be continued in his favour When the Apostle mentions the Believers translation from the sad state of nature to the blessed priviledged state of grace see what a Title he bestows upon Jesus Christ the purchaser of that priviledge calling him the dear Son Col. 1. 13. not only dear to God but exceeding dear to Believers also Christ is the favourite in Heaven to him you owe all your preferment there take away Christ and you have no ground to stand one minute in the favour of God O then let Jesus Christ the fountain of your honour be also the object of your love and praise Inference 7. Estimate by this the state and condition of a deserted Saint Inference 7. upon whom the favour of God is eclipsed If the favour of God be better than life the hiding of it from a gracious soul must be more bitter than death deserted Saints have reason to take the first place among all the mourners in the world the darkness before conversion had indeed more of danger but this hath more of trouble Darkness after light is dismal darkness Since therefore the case is so sad let your preventing care be the more grieve not the good Spirit of God you prepare but for your own grief in so doing Inference 8. Lastly Let this perswade all men to accept Jesus Christ as Inference 8. ever they expect to be accepted with the Lord themselves It is a fearful case for a mans person and duties to be rejected of God to cry and not be heard and much more terrible to be denied audience in the great and terrible day Yet as sure as the Scriptures are the sealed and faithful sayings Si voluntatem Dei nosse quisquam desiderat fit amicus Deo August of God this is no more than what every Christless person must expect in that day Mat. 7. 22. Luke 13. 26. Trace the history of all times even as high as Abel and you shall find that none but Believers did ever find acceptance with God all experience confirms this great truth that they that are in the flesh cannot please God Reader if this be thy condition let me beg thee to ponder the misery of it in a few sad thoughts Consider how sad it is to be rejected of God and forsaken by all creatures at once what a day of streights thy dying day is like to be when Heaven and Earth shall cast thee out together Be assured whatever thy vain hopes for the present quiet thee withal this must be thy case the dore of mercy will be shut against thee no man cometh to the Father but by Christ. Sad was the case of Saul when he told Samuel the Philistins make war against me and God is departed from me 1 Sam. 28. 15. The Saints will have boldness in the day of Judgment 1 John 4. 17. but thou wilt be a confounded man there is yet blessed be the God of mercy a capacity and opportunity of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 19. Isai. 27. 5. But this can be of no long continuance O therefore by all the regard and love you have for the everlasting welfare of your own souls come to Christ embrace Christ in the offers of the Gospel that you may be made accepted in the beloved The Eighteenth SERMON Sermon 18. JOHN 8. 36. Text. The liberty of Believers opened and stated If the Son therefore shall make you free ye shall be free indeed FRom the 30th verse of this Chapter unto my Text you have an account of the different effects which the words of Christ had upon the hearts of his hearers some believed verse 30. these he encourageth to continue in his word verse 31. giving them this encouragement vers 32. Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Hereat the unbelieving Jews take offence and commence a quarrel with him vers 33. We be Abrahams seed and were never in bondage to any man We are of no slavish extraction the blood of Abraham runs in our veins this scornful boast of the proud Jews Christ confutes vers 34. where he distinguisheth of a twofold bondage one to men another to sin one civil another spiritual whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin then tells them vers 36. The servant abideth not in the house for ever but the Son abideth for ever Wherein he intimateth two great truths viz. that the servants and slaves of sin may for a time enjoy the external priviledges of the house or Church of God but it would not be long before the master of the house will turn them out of dore but if they were once the adopted Children of God then they should abide in the house for ever And this priviledge is only to be had by their believing in and union with the natural Son of God Jesus Christ which brings us fairly to the Text If the Son therefore shall make you free ye shall be free indeed In which words we have two parts viz. 1. A Supposition 2. A Concession First A Supposition if the Son therefore shall make you free 1. q. d. The womb of nature cast you forth into the world in a state of bondage in that state you have lived all your days servants to sin slaves to your lusts yet freedom is to be obtained and this freedom is the prerogative belonging to the Son of God to bestow if the Son shall make you free Secondly Christs Concession upon this supposition then 2. shall ye be free indeed i. e. you shall have a real freedom an excellent and everlasting fredom no conceit only as that which you now boast of is if ever therefore you will be free men indeed believe in me Hence note DOCT. That interest in Christ sets the soul at liberty from all that Doct. bondage whereunto it was subjected in its natural state Believers are the Children of the New Covenant the denizons of Jerusalem which are above which is free and the mother of them all Gal. 4. 26. the glorious liberty viz. that which is spiritual and eternal is the liberty of the Children of God Rom. 8. 21. Christ and none but Christ delivers his people out of the hands of their enemies Luk. 1. 74. In the Doctrinal part of this point I must shew you First What Believers are not freed from by Jesus Christ in this world Secondly What that bondage is from which every Believer is freed by Christ. Thirdly What kind of
freedom that is which comes in upon believing Fourthly Open the excellency of this state of spiritual freedom First What those things are from which Believers are 1. not made free in this world we must not think that our spiritual liberty by Christ presently brings us into an absolute liberty in all respects For First Christ doth not free Believers from obedience to the moral Law 'T is true we are no more under it as a Covenant for our justification but we are and must still be under it as a rule for our direction The matter of the moral law is unchangeable as the nature of good and evil is and cannot be abolished except that distinction could be destroyed Mat. 5. 17 18. The precepts of the Law are still urged under the Gospel to enforce duties upon us Eph. 6. 12. 'T is therefore a vain distinction invented by Libertines to say it binds us as Creatures not as Christians or that it binds the unregenerate part but not the regenerate but this is a sure truth that they who are freed from its penalties are still under its precepts though Believers are no more under its curse yet they are still under its conduct the Law sends us to Christ to be justified and Christ sends us to the Law to be regulated Let the heart of every Christian joyn therefore with Davids in that holy wish Psal. 119. 4 5. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently O that my heart were directed to keep thy Statutes 'T is excellent when Christians begin to obey the Law from life which others obey for life because they are justified not that they may be justified When duties are done in the strength and for the honour of Christ which is Evangelical not in our own strength and for our own ends which is servile and legal obedience had Christ freed us from obedience such a liberty had been to our loss Secondly Christ hath not freed Believers in this world from the temptations and assaults of Satan even those that are freed from his dominion are not free from his molestation 'T is said indeed Rom. 16. 20. God shall shortly bruise Satan under your feet but mean time he hath power to bruise and buffet us by his injections 2 Cor. 12. 7. he now bruiseth Christs heel Gen. 3. 15. i. e. bruiseth him in his tempted and afflicted members though he cannot kill them yet he can and doth afflict and fright them by shooting his fiery darts of temptation among them Eph. 6. 16. 'T is true when the Saints are got safe into Heaven they are out of Gun-shot there is perfect freedom from all temptation A Believer may then say O thou enemy temptations are come to a perpetual end I am now arrived there where none of thy fiery darts can reach me but this freedom is not yet Thirdly Christ hath not yet freed Believers in this world from the motions of indwelling sin these are continually acting and infesting the holiest of men Rom. 7. 21 23 24. Corruptions like Canaanites are still left in the Land to be thorns in our eyes and goads in our sides Those that boast most of freedom from the motions of sin have most cause to suspect themselves still under the dominion of sin All Christs freemen are troubled with the same complaint who among them complains not as the Apostle did Rom. 7. 24. Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliever me from the body of this death Fourthly Jesus Christ doth not free Believers in this world from inward troubles and exercises of soul upon the account of sin God may let loose Satan and Conscience too in the way of terrible accusations which may greatly distress the soul of a Believer and wofully eclipse the light of Gods Countenance and break the peace of their souls Job Heman and David were all made free by Christ yet each of them hath left upon record his bitter complaint upon this account Job 7. 19 20. Psal. 88. 14 15 16. Psal. 38. unto vers 11. Fifthly Christ hath not freed Believers in this world from the rods of affliction God in giving us our liberty doth not abridge his own liberty Psal. 89. 32. all the Children of God are made free yet what Son is there whom the Father chastneth not Heb. 12. 8. Exemption from affliction is so far from being the mark of a Freeman that the Apostle there makes it the mark of a slave Bastards not Sons want the discipline and blessing of the Rod to be freed from affliction would be no benefit to Believers who receive so many benefits by affliction Sixthly No Believer is freed by Christ from the stroak of death though they are all freed from the sting of death Rom. 8. 10. The bodies of Believers are under the same Law of mortality with other men Heb. 9. 27. we must come to the Grave as well as others yea we must come to it through the same agonies pangs and dolours that other men do the foot of death treads as heavy upon the bodies of the redeemed as of other men Believers indeed are distinguished by mercy from others but the distinguishing mercy lies not here Thus you see what Believers are not freed from in this world if you shall now say what advantage then hath a Believer or what profit is there in regeneration I Answer Secondly That Believers are freed from many great and 2. sad miseries and evils by Jesus Christ notwithstanding all that hath been said For First All Believers are freed from the rigour and curse of the Law the rigorous yoak of the Law is broken off from their necks and the sweet and easie yoak of Jesus Christ put on Mat. 11. 28. The Law required perfect working under the pain of a curse Gal. 3. 10. accepted of no short endeavours admitted no repentance gave no strength it is not so now proportionable strength is given Phil 4. 13. Sincerity is reckoned perfection Job 1. 1. Transgression brings not under condemnation Rom. 8. 1. O blessed freedom when duty becomes delight and failings hinder not acceptance this is one part of the blessed freedom of believers Secondly All Believers are freed from the guilt of sin it may trouble but it cannot condemn them Rom. 8. 33. The hand writing which was against us is cancelled by Christ nailed to his Cross Colos. 2. 14. When the seal and hand-writing is torn off from the Bond the Debtor is made free thereby Believers are totally freed Acts 13. 39. Justified from all things and finally freed John 5. 24. They shall never come into condemnation O blessed freedom How sweet is it to lie down in our beds yea in our graves when guilt shall neither be our Bed fellow nor Grave fellow Thirdly Christ frees all Believers from the dominion as well as the guilt of sin Sin shall not have dominion over you for ye are not under the Law but under Grace Rom. 6. 14. The law of the spirit of life
which is in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death Rom. 8. 2. Now who can estimate such a liberty as this What slavery what an intolerable drudgery is the service of divers lusts from all which Believers are freed by Christ not from the residence but from the reign of sin 'T is with sin in Believers as it was with those beasts mentioned Dan. 7. 12. They had their dominion taken away yet their lives were prolonged for a season and time Fourthly Jesus Christ sets all Believers free from the power of Satan in whose right they were by nature Col. 1. 13. they are translated from the power of darkness into the Kingdom of Christ. Satan had the possession of them as a man of his own goods but Christ dispossesseth that strong man armed alters the property and recovers them out of his hand Luke 11. 21 22. There are two ways by which Christ frees Believers out of Satans power and possession namely 1. By Price 2. By Power First By Price the blood of Christ purchaseth Believers out of the hand of justice by satisfying the law for them which being done Satans authority over them falls of course as the power of a Jaylor over the Prisoner doth when he hath a legal discharge Heb. 2. 14. For as much then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil The cruel Tyrant beats and burthens the poor captive no more after the ransom is once paid and he actually freed and therefore Christ delivers his Secondly By power Satan is exceeding unwilling to let go his prey he is a strong and a malicious enemy every rescue and deliverance out of his hand is a glorious effect of the almighty power of Christ Act. 26. 18. 2 Cor. 10. 5. How did our Lord Jesus Christ grapple with Satan at his death and triumphed over him Col. 2. 15. O glorious salvation blessed liberty of the Children of God! Fifthly Christ frees Believers from the poisonous sting and hurt of death kill us it can but hurt us it cannot 1 Cor. 15. 55 56. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law but thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. If there be no hurt there should be no horror in death 't is guilt that arms death both with its hurting and terrifying power To dye in our sins John 8. 24. To have our bones full of the sins of our youth which shall lye down with us in the dust Job 20. 11. To have death like a Dragon pulling a poor guilty Creature as a prey into its dreadful Den Psal. 49. 14. In this lies the danger and horror of death but from death as a curse and from the grave as a Prison Christ hath set Believers at liberty by submitting to death in their room by his victorious resurrection from the grave as the first-born of the dead death is disarmed of its hurting power the death of Believers is but a sleep in Jesus Thirdly The next thing to be briefly spoken to is the 3. kind and nature of that freedom and liberty purchased and procured by Christ for Believers Now liberty may be considered two ways viz. 1. As Civil 2. As Sacred As to civil freedom or liberty it belongs not to our present business Believers as to their civil capacity are not freed from the duties they owe to their Superiors Servants though Believers are still to be subject to their Masters according to the flesh with fear and trembling Ephes. 6. 5. nor from obedience to lawful Magistrates whom we are to obey in the Lord Rom. 13. 1 4. Religion dissolves not the bonds of civil relations nor is it to be used as an occasion to the flesh 1 Pet. 2. 16. 'T is not a carnal but a spiritual freedom Christ hath purchased for us and this spiritual freedom is again to be considered either as 1. Inchoate 2. Consummate The liberty Believers have at present is but a beginning liberty they are freed but in part from their spiritual enemies but it is a growing liberty every day and will be consummate and compleat at last To conclude Christian Liberty is either 1. Privative or 2. Positive The liberty Believers are invested with is of both kinds they are not only freed from many miseries burthens and dangers but also invested by Jesus Christ with many royal priviledges and invaluable immunities Fourthly And this brings us to the fourth and last thing 4. namely the properties of this blessed freedom which the Saints enjoy by Jesus Christ and if we consider it duly it will be found to be First A wonderful liberty never enough to be admired how could it be imagined that ever those who owed unto God more than ever they could pay by their own eternal sufferings those that were under the dreadful curse and condemnation of the Law in the power and possession of Satan the strong man armed those that were bound with so many chains in their spiritual prison their understanding bound with ignorance their wills with obstinacy their hearts with impenetrable hardness their affections with a thousand bewitching vanities that slight their state of slavery so much as industriously to oppose all instruments and means of deliverance For such persons to be set at liberty notwithstanding all this is the wonder of wonders and is deservedly marvellous in the eyes of Believers for ever Secondly The freedom of Believers is a peculiar freedom a liberty which few obtain the generality abiding still in bondage to Satan who from the multitude of his Subjects is stiled the god of this world 2 Cor. 4. 4. Believers in Scripture are often called a remnant which is but a small part of the whole piece the more cause have the people of God to admire distinguishing mercy how many Nobles and great ones of the world are but royal slaves to Satan and their own lusts Thirdly The liberty of Believers is a liberty dearly purchased by the blood of Christ what that Captain said Acts 22. 28. With a great sum obtained I this freedom may be much more said of the Believers freedom 't was not Silver or Gold but the precious blood of Christ that purchased it 1 Pet. 1. 18. Fourthly The freedom and liberty of Believers is a growing and encreasing liberty they get more and more out of the power of sin and nearer still to their compleat salvation every day Rom. 13. 11. the body of sin dieth daily in them they are said to be crucified with Christ the strength of sin abates continually in them after the manner of crucified persons who dye a slow but sure death and look in what degree the power of sin abates proportionably their spiritual liberty encreases upon them Fifthly
from God Hab. 1. 13. Heb. 12. 14. The enmity of our nature perfectly stopped up our way to God Col. 1. 21. Rom. 8. 7. by reason hereof fallen man hath no desire to come unto God Job 21. 14. The Justice of God like a flaming Sword turning every way kept all men from access to God and lastly Satan that malicious and armed adversary lay as a Lyon in the way to God 2 Pet. 5. 8. Oh with what strong bars were the gates of Heaven shut against our souls The way to God was chained up with such difficulties as none but Christ was able to remove and he by death hath effectually removed them all the way is now open even the new and the living way consecrated for us by his blood The death of Christ effectually removes the guilt of sin 1 Pet. 2. 24. washes off the filth of sin 1 John 5. 6. takes away the enmity of nature Col. 1. 20 21. satisfied all the demands of justice Rom. 3. 25 26. hath broken all the power of Satan Col. 2. 15. Heb. 2. 14. and consequently the way to God is effectually and fully opened to Believers by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10. 20. Secondly The blood of Christ purchaseth for Believers their right and title to this priviledge Gal. 4. 4 5. But when the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the law that we might receive the adoption of Sons i. e. both the relation and inheritance of sons There was value and worth enough in the precious blood of Christ not only to pay all our debts to justice but over and above the payment of our debts to purchase for us this invaluable priviledge We must put this unspeakable mercy of being brought to God as my Text puts it upon the account and score of the death of Christ. No Believer had ever tasted the sweetness of such a mercy if Christ had not tasted the bitterness of death for him The use of all you will have in the following Deductions of truth Deduction 1. Great is the preciousness and worth of souls that the life of Christ should be given to redeem and recover them to God As God laid out his thoughts and counsel from eternity upon them to project the way and method of their salvation so the Lord Jesus in pursuance of that blessed design came from the bosom of the Father and spilt his invaluable blood to bring them to God No wise man expends vast sums to bring home trifling commodities How cheap soever our souls are in our estimation 't is evident by this they are of precious esteem in the eyes of Christ. Deduction 2. Redeemed souls must expect no rest or satisfaction on this side Heaven and the full enjoyment of God the life of a Believer in this world is a life of motion and expectation they are now coming to God 1 Pet. 2. 4. God you see is the centre and rest of their souls Heb. 4. 9. As the Rivers cannot rest Fe●…ti nos ad te inquietum est cor nostrum do●…ec requiescat in te Aug. Confess lib. 1. cap. 1. till they pour themselves into the bosom of the Sea so neither can renewed souls find rest till they come into the bosom of God There be four things which do and will break the rest and disturb the souls of Believers in this world afflictions temptations corruptions and absence from God if the three former causes of disquietness were totally removed so that a Believer were placed in such a condition upon earth where no affliction should disturb him no temptation trouble him no corruption defile or grieve him yet his very absence from God must still keep him restless and unsatisfied 2 Cor. 5. 6. Whilst we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord. Deduction 3. What sweet and pleasant thoughts should all Believers have of death When they dye and never till they dye shall they be fully brought home to God Death to the Saints is the dore by which they enter into the enjoyment of God the dying Christian is almost at home yet a few pangs and agonies more and then he is come to God in whose presence is the fulness of joy I desire saith Paul to depart and to be with Christ which is far better Phil. 1. 23. It should not scare us to be brought to death the King of terrors so long as it is the office of death to bring us to God That dreaming opinion of the soul sleeping after death is as ungrounded as it is uncomfortable the same day we loose from this shore we shall be landed upon the blessed shore where we shall see and enjoy God for ever O if the friends of dead Believers did but understand where and with whom their souls are whilst they are mourning over their bodies certainly a few believing thoughts of this would quickly dry up their tears and fill the house of mourning with voices of praise and thanksgiving Deduction 4. How comfortable and sweet should the converses and communication of Christians be with one another in this world Christ is bringing them all to God through this vale of tears they are now in the way to him all bound for Heaven going home to God to their everlasting rest in glory every day every hour every duty brings them nearer and nearer to their journeys end Rom. 13. 11. Now saith the Apostle is our salvation nearer than when we believed O what manner of heavenly communications and ravishing discourses should Believers have with each other as they walk by the way O what pleasant and delightful stories should they tell one another about the place and state whither Christ is bringing them and where they shall shortly be What ravishing transporting transforming visions they shall have that day they are brought home to God how surprizingly glorious the sight of Jesus Christ will be to them who died for them to bring them unto God How should such discourses as these shorten and sweeten their passage through this world strengthen and encourage the dejected and feeble minded and exceedingly honour and adorn their profession Thus lived the Believers of old Heb. 11. 9 10. By faith he sojourned in the land of promise as in a strange Country dwelling in Tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob the heirs with him of the same promise for he looked for a City which hath foundations whose builder and maker is God But alas most Christians are either entangled in the cares and troubles or so ensnared by the delights and plasures which almost continually divert and take up their thoughts by the way that there is but little room for any discourses of Christ and Heaven among many of them but certainly this would be as much your interest as your duty When the Apostle had entertained the Thessalonians with a lovely discourse of their meeting the Lord in the air and
destroy the usefulness of humane teachings Subordinata non pugnant the teachings of men are made effectual by the teachings of the Spirit and the Spirit in his teachings will use and honour the Ministry of man Thirdly But to speak positively the teachings of God are nothing else but that spiritual and heavenly light by which the Spirit of God shineth into the hearts of men to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 4. 6. and though this be the proper work of the Spirit yet it is called the teachings of the Father because the Spirit who enlightens us is commissionated and sent by the Father so to do Joh. 14. 26. Now these teachings of the Spirit of God consist in two things viz. In his 1. Sanctifying impressions 2. Gracious assistances First In his Sanctifying impressions or regenerating works upon the soul by vertue whereof it receives marvellous light and insight in spiritual things and that not only as illumination is the first act of the spirit in our conversion Col. 3. 10. but as his whole work of sanctification is Illuminative and instructive to the converted soul 1 Joh. 2. 27. the anointing which you have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you the meaning is that Sanctification gives the soul experience of those Mysterious things which are contained in the Scriptures and that experien●… the most excellent key to unlock and open those deep Scripture Mysteries no knowledge is so distinct so clear so sweet as that which the heart communicates to the head Joh. 7. 17. if any man do his will he shall know the doctrine a man that never read the nature of love in books of Philosophy nor the transports and ecstasies thereof in History may yet truly describe and express it by the sensible motions of that passion in his own soul yea he that hath felt much better understands than he that hath only read or heard O what a light doth spiritual sense and experience cast upon a great part of the Scriptures for indeed sanctification is the very copy or transcript of the Word of God upon the heart of man Jer. 31. 33. I will write my Law in their heart so that the Scriptures and the experiences of believers by this means answer to each other as the lines and letters in the Press answer to the impressions made upon the paper or the figures in the wax to the engravings in the Seal When a Sanctified man reads David's Psalms or Pauls Epistles how is he surprised with wonder to find the very workings of his own heart so exactly decyphered and fully expressed there Oh saith he this is my very case these holy men speak what my very heart hath felt Secondly The Spirit of God teacheth us as by his sanctifying impressions so by his gracious assistances which he gives us pro re nata as our need requires Matth. 10. 19. it shall be given you in that same hour what ye shall speak Joh. 14. 26. he shall bring all things to your remembrance he assisteth both the understanding in due apprehensions of truth and the heart in the spiritual improvements of truth and so much briefly of the first particular Secondly In the next place we are to enquire what those special truths are which believers hear and learn of the father 2. when they come to Christ. And there are divers great and necessary truths wherein the Spirit enlightens men in that day I cannot say they are all taught every believer in the same degree and order but it is certain they are taught of God such lessons as these are which they never so understood before Lesson 1. First They are taught of God that there is abundantly more evil in their sinful natures and actions than ever they discerned or understood before the Spirit when he cometh shall convince the world of sin John 16. 8 9. Men have a general notion of sin before so had Paul when a Pharisee but how vastly different were his apprehensions of sin from all that ever he had in his natural state when God brought home the Commandment to his very heart There is a threefold knowledge of Sin viz. Traditional discursive and intuitive The First is in the more rude and illiterate multitude The Second in more rational and knowing men The Third is only found in those that are enlightned and taught of God and there is as great a difference betwixt this intuitive knowledge of sin whereby God makes a soul to discern the nature and evil of it in a spiritual light and the two former as there is betwixt the sight of a painted Lyon upon the wall and the sight of a living Lyon that meets us roaring in the way The intuitive sight of sin is another thing than men imagine it to be 't is such a sight as wounds a man to the very heart Acts 2. 37. for God doth not only shew a man this or that particular sin but in the day of conviction he sets all his sins in order before him Psal. 50. 21. yea the Lord shews him the sinfulness of his nature as well as practice Conviction diggs to the root shews and layes open that original corruption from whence the innumerable evils of the life do spring Jam. 1. 14 15. and which is yet more the Lord shews the man whom he is bringing to Christ the sinful and miserable state which he is in by reason of both Joh. 16. 9. and now all excuses pleas and defences of sin are gone he shews them how their iniquities have exceeded Job 36. 8 9. exceeded in number and in aggravation of sinfulness exceeding many and exceeding vile no such sinner in the world as I can such sins as mine be pardoned the greatness of God greatens my sin the holiness of God makes it beyond measure vile the goodness of God puts unconceivable weight into my guilt O can there be mercy with God for such a wretch as I if there be then there will not be a greater example of the riches of free grace in all the world than I am thus God teacheth the evil of sin Lesson 2. Secondly God teacheth the soul whom he is bringing to Christ what that wrath and misery is which hangs over it in the threatnings because of sin Scripture threatnings were formerly slighted now the soul trembles at them they once apprehended themselves safe enough Isa. 28. 15. Psal. 50. 21. they thought because they heard no more of their sins after the Commission of them that therefore they should never hear more that the effect had been as transient a thing as the act of sin was or if trouble must follow sin they should speed no worse than others the generality of the world being in the same case and beside they hoped to find God more merciful than sowre and precise preachers
needs be satisfied that Christ is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him which is the sixth Lesson Believers are taught of God Lesson 7. Every man that cometh to Christ is taught of God that it can never reap any benefit by the blood of Christ except he have union with the person of Christ 1 Joh. 5. 12. Eph. 4. 16. Time was when men fondly thought nothing was necessary to their salvation but the death of Christ but now the Lord shews them that their union with Christ by faith is as necessary in the place of an applying cause as the death of Christ is in the place of a meritorious cause the purchase of salvation is an act of Christ without us whilst we are yet sinners the application thereof is by a work wrought within us when we are believers Col. 1. 27. In the purchase all the elect are redeemed together by way of price In the application they are actually redeemed man by man by way of power Look as the sin of the first Adam could never hurt us unless he had been our head by way of generation so the righteousness of Christ can never benefit us unless he be our head in the way of regeneration In teaching this Lesson the Lord in mercy unteaches and blots out that dangerous principle by which the greatest part of the Christianized world do perish viz. that the death of Christ is in it self effectual to salvation though a man be never regenerated or united unto him by saving faith Lesson 8. God teaches the soul whom he is bringing to Christ that whatsoever is necessary to be wrought in us or done by us in order to our union with Christ is to be obtained from him in the way of prayer Ezek. 36. 37. And it is observable that the soul no sooner comes under the effectual teachings of God but the spirit of prayer begins to breath in it Acts 9. 8. behold he prayeth those that were taught to pray by men before are now taught of the Lord to pray to pray did I say yea and to pray fervently too as men concerned for their eternal happiness to pray not only with others but to pour out their souls before the Lord in secret for their hearts are as bottles full of new wine which must vent or break Now the soul returns upon its God often in the same day now it can express its burthens and wants in words and groans which the spirit teacheth they pray and will not give over praying till Christ come with compleat salvation Lesson 9. Ninthly All that come to Christ ●…e taught of God to abandon their former wayes and companions in sin as ever they expect to be received unto mercy Isai. 55. 7. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Sins that were profitable and pleasant as the right hand and right eye must now be cut off Companions in sin who were once the delight of their lives must now be cast off Christ saith to the soul concerning these as he said in another case John 18. 8. if therefore ye seek me let these go their way and the soul saith unto Christ as it is Psalm 119. 115. depart from me ye evil doers for I will keep the Commandments of my God and now pleasant sins and companions in sin become the very burthen and shame of a mans soul objects of delight are become objects of pity and compassion no endearments no union of blood no earthly interests whatsoever are found strong enough to hold the soul any longer from Christ nothing but the effectual teachings of God is found sufficient to dissolve such bonds of iniquity as these Lesson 10. Tenthly All that come unto Christ are taught of God that there is such a beauty and excellency in the wayes and people of God as is not to be matcht in the whole world Psal. 16. 3. When the eyes of strangers to Christ begin to be opened and enlightned in his knowledge you may see what a change of judgement is wrought in them with respect to the people of God and towards them especially whom God hath any way made instrumental for the good of their souls Cant. 5. 9. they then called the spouse of Christ the fairest among women the convincing holiness of the Bride then began to enamour and affect them with a desire of nearer conjunction and communion we will seek him with thee with thee that hast so charged us that hast taken so much pains for the good of our souls now and never before the righteous appeareth more excellent than his Neighbour Change of heart is always accompanied with change of judgement with respect to the people of God thus the Jaylor Act. 16. 33. washed the Apostles stripes to whom he had been so cruel before The godly now seem to be the glory of the places where they live and the glory of any place seems to be darkned by their removal As one said of holy Mr. Barrington Methinks the Town is not at home when Mr. Barrington is out of Town they esteem it a choice mercy to be in their company and acquaintance Zech. 8. 23. we will go with you for we have heard that God is with you no people like the people of God now as one said when he heard of two faithful friends utinam tertius essem O that I might make the third Whatever vile or low thoughts they had of the people of God before to be sure now they are the excellent of the earth in whom is all their delight the holiness of the Saints might have some interest in their Consciences before but they never had such an interest in their estimations and affections till this Lesson was taught them by the Father Lesson 11. Eleventhly All that come to Christ are taught of God that whatever difficulties they apprehend in Religion yet they must not upon pain of damnation be discouraged thereby or return back again to sin Luke 9. 62. No man having put his hand to the plough and looking back is fit for the Kingdom of God plowing work is hard work a strong and steady hand is required for it he that plows must keep on and make no balks of the hardest and toughest ground he meets with Religion also is the running of a Race 1 Cor. 9. 24. there is no standing still much less turning back if ever we hope to win the prize The Devil indeed labours every way to discourage and daunt the soul by representing the insuperable difficulties of Religion to it and young beginners are but too apt to be discouraged and fall under despondency but the teachings of the Father are encouraging teachings they are carried on from strength to strength against all the oppositions they meet from without them and the many discouragements they find within them to this conclusion they are brought by the teaching of God we must have Christ we must get a pardon we must strive for salvation let the difficulties troubles and sufferings in
the way be never so great or many As he said necesse est ut eam non ut vivam 't is necessary that I go on 't is not necessary that I live so saith the soul that is taught of God 't is easier with me to dispense with ease honour relations yea with life it self than to part with Christ and the hopes of eternal life Lesson 12. Twelfthly They that come to Christ are taught of God that whatever guilt and unworthiness they discover in themselves and whatever fears and doubts hang upon their hearts as to pardon and acceptance yet as the case stands it is their wisdom and great interest to venture themselves in the way of faith upon Jesus Christ whatever the issue thereof be Three great discouragements are usually found upon the hearts of those that come to Christ in the way of faith First The sensible greatness of guilt and sin how can I go to Christ that am in such a case that have been so vile a wretch and here measuring the grace and mercy of Chris by what it finds in it self or in other creatures 1 Sam. 24. 19. the soul is ready to sink under the weight of its own discouraging and misgiving thoughts Secondly The sense they have of their own weakness and inability to do what God requires and must of necessity be done if ever they be saved my heart is harder than an Adamant how can I break it My will is stubborn and exceeding obstinate I am no way able to bow it the frame and temper of my spirit is altogether carnal and earthly and it is not in the power of my hand to alter and change it alas I cannot subdue any one corruption nor perform one spiritual duty nor bear one of those sufferings and burthens which religion lays upon all that follow Christ this also proves a great discouragement in the way of faith Thirdly And which is more than all the soul that is coming to Jesus Christ hath no assurance of acceptance with him if it should adventure himself upon him 't is a great hazard a great adventure 't is much more probable if I look to my self that Christ will shut the door of mercy against me But under all these discouragements the soul learns this Lesson from God that as ungodly as it is as weak and impotent as it is as full of fears and doubts as it is nevertheless it is every way its great duty and concernment to go on in the way of faith and make that great adventure of it self upon Jesus Christ and of this the Lord convinceth the soul by two things viz. 1. From the absolute necessity of coming 2. From the incouraging probabilities of speeding First The soul seeth an absolute necessity of coming necessity is laid upon it there is no other way Acts. 4. 12. God hath shut it up by a blessed necessity to this only dore of escape Gal. 3. 23. damnation lies in the neglect of Christ Heb. 2. 3. The soul hath no choice in this case Angels Ministers duties repentance reformation cannot save me Christ and none but Christ can deliver me from present guilt and the wrath to come why do I dispute demur delay when certain ruine must inevitably follow the neglect or refusal of Gospel offers Secondly The Lord sheweth those that are under his teaching the probabilities of mercy for their encouragement in the way of believing and these probabilities the soul is enabled to gather from the general and free invitations of the Gospel Isai. 55. 1 7. Rev. 22. 17. from the conditional promises of the Gospel Joh. 6. 37. Mat. 11. 28. Isai. 1. 18. from the vast extent of grace beyond all the thoughts and hopes of creatures Isai. 55. 8 9. Heb. 7. 25. from the incouraging examples of other sinners who have found mercy in as bad condition as they 1 Tim. 1. 13. 2 Chron. 33. 3. 1 Cor. 6. 10 11. from the Command of God which warrants the action and answers all the objections of unworthiness and presumption in them that come to Christ 1 John 3. 23. and lastly from the sensible changes already made upon the temper and frame of the heart Time was when I had no sense of sin nor sorrow for sin no desires after Christ nor heart to duties but it is not so with me now I now see the evil of sin so as I never saw it before my heart is now broken in the sense of that evil my desires begin to be enflamed after Jesus Christ. I am not at rest nor where I would be till I am in secret mourning after the Lord Jesus Surely these are the dawnings of the day of mercy let me go on in this way it saith as the Lepers at the siege of Samaria 2 King 7. 3 4. If I stay here I perish if I go to Christ I can but perish Hence Believers bear up against all objected discouragements certum exitium commutemus incerto 't is the dictate of wisdom the vote of reason to exchange a certain for an uncertain ruine And thus you have heard what those excellent Lessons are which all that come to Christ are taught by the Father The Twenty third SERMON Sermon 23. JOHN 6. 45. Text. It is written in the prophets And they shall be all taught of God every man therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me IN the former Sermon you have been taught this great truth Doct. That the teachings of God are absolutely necessary to every soul that cometh unto Christ in the way of faith What the teachings of God import hath been formerly opened and what those special Lessons are which all believers hear and learn of the Father was the last thing discoursed that which remains to be further cleared about this subject before I come to the Application of the whole will be to shew you 1. What are the Properties of divine teachings 2. What influence they have in bringing souls to Christ. 3. Why it is impossible for any man to come to Christ without these teachings of the Father First what are the properties of divine teachings Concerning the teachings of God we affirm in general that though 1. they exclude not yet they vastly differ from all humane teachings as the power of God in effecting transcends all humane power so the wisdom of God in teaching transcends all humane wisdom For First God teacheth powerfully he speaketh to the soul with a strong hand when the word comes accompanied with the Spirit 't is mighty through God to cast down all imaginations 2 Cor. 10. 4. Now the Gospel comes not in word only as it was wont to do but in power 1 Thess. 1. 4 5. a power that makes the soul fall flat before it and acknowledge that God is in that word 1 Cor. 14. 25. Secondly the teachings of God are sweet teachings Men never relish the sweetness of a truth till they learn it from God Cant. 1. 3. His
incorporate with sin than oyle with water contraries cannot consist in the same subject longer than they are fighting with each other if there be no conflict with sin in thy soul or if that conflict be only betwixt the conscience and affections light in the one strugling with lust in the other thou wantest that fruit which should evidence thee to be a new creature Thirdly The mind and affections of the new Creature are set upon heavenly and spiritual things Col. 3. 1 2. Ephes. 4. 23. Rom. 8. 5. if therefore thy heart and affections be habitually earthly and wholly intent upon things below driving eagerly after the world as the great business and end of thy life deceive not thy self this is not the fruit of the New Creature nor consistent with it Fourthly The new Creature is a praying Creature living by its daily Communion with God which is its livelyhood and subsistence Zech. 12. 10. Acts 9. 11. If therefore thou be a prayerless soul or if in all thy prayers thou art a stranger to Communion with God if there be no brokenness of heart for sin in thy confessions no melting affections for Christ and holiness in thy supplications surely Satan doth but baffle and delude thy over-credulous soul in perswading thee that thou art a new Creature Fifthly The new Creature is restless after falls into sin until it have recovered peace and pardon it cannot endure it self in a state of defilement and pollution Psal. 51. 8 9 10 11 12. It is with the conscience of a new Creature under sin as it is with the eye when any thing offends it it cannot leave twinkling and watering till it have wept it out and in the very same restless state it is under the hiding of Gods face and divine withdrawments Cant. 5. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. If therefore thou canst sin and sin again without such a burthensome sense of sin or restlesness or solicitude how to recover purity and peace with the light of Gods countenance shining as in dayes past upon thy soul delude not thy self thou hast not the signs of a new Creature in thee 4th Use for Exhortation If the new Creation be a sound evidence of our interest in Christ then hence let me perswade all that are in Christ to Use 4. evidence themselves to be so by walking as it becomes new Creatures The new Creature is born from above all its tendencies are Heaven-ward accordingly ●…et your affections on things that are above and let your conversation be in Heaven if you live earthly and sensual lives as others do you must cross your new Creature therein and can those acts be pleasant unto you which are done with so much regret wherein you must put a force upon your own spirits and offer a kind of violence to your own hearts Earthly delights and sorrows are suitable enough to the unregenerate and sensual men of the world but exceedingly contrary unto that spirit by which you are renovated If ever you will act becoming the principles and nature of new Creatures then seek earthly things with submission enjoy them with fear and caution resign them with cheerfulness and readiness and thus let your moderation be known unto all men Phil. 4. 5. Let your hearts daily meditate and your tongues discourse about heavenly things be exceeding tender of sin strict and punctual in every duty and hereby convince the world that you are men and women of another spirit 5th Use for Consolation Let every new creature be chearful and thankful if God have renewed your natures and thus altered the frame and Use 5. temper of your hearts he hath bestowed the richest mercy upon you that Heaven or Earth affords this is a work of greatest rarity a new creature may be called one among a thousand 't is also an everlasting work never to be destroyed as all other natural works of God how excellent soever must be 't is a work carried on by almighty power through unspeakable difficulties and mighty oppositions Eph. 1. 12. the exceeding greatness of Gods power goes forth to produce it and indeed no less is required to enlighten the blind mind break the rocky heart and bow the stubborn will of man and the same almighty power which at first created it is necessary to be continued every moment to preserve and continue it 1 Pet. 1. 5. the new creature is a mercy which draws a train of innumerable and invaluable mercies after it Eph. 2. 13 14. 1 Cor. 3. 22. when God hath given us a new nature then he dignifies us with a new name Rev. 2. 17. brings us into a new Covenant Jer. 31. 33. begets us again to a new hope 1 Pet. 1. 3. intitles us to a new inheritance Joh. 1. 12 13. 't is the new creature which through Christ makes our persons and duties acceptable with God Gal. 6. 15. In a word it is the wonderful work of God of which we may say this is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes there are unsearchable wonders in its generation in its operation and in its preservation Let all therefore whom the Lord hath thus renewed fall down at the feet of God in an humble admiration of the unsearchable riches of free grace and never open their mouths to complain under any adverse or bitter providences of God The Twenty seventh SERMON Sermon 27. GAL. 5. 24. Text. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh Of the nature principle and necessity of Mortification with the affections and lusts TWo great Tryals of our interest in Christ are finished we now proceed to a third namely the mortification of sin they that are Christs have crucified the flesh The scope of the Apostle in this context is to heal the unchristian breaches among the Galatians prevailing by the instigation of Satan to the breach of brotherly love to cure this he urges four weighty arguments First From the great Commandment to love one another upon which the whole Law i. e. all the duties of the second Table do depend vers 14. Secondly He powerfully disswades them from the consideration of the sad events of their bitter contests calumnies and detractions viz. mutual ruine and destruction vers 15. Thirdly He disswades them from the consideration of the contrariety of these practices unto the Spirit of God by whom they all profess themselves to be governed from vers 17 to the 23. Fourthly He powerfully disswades them from these animosities from the inconsistency of these or any other lusts of the flesh with an interest in Christ they that be Christs have crucified the flesh c. q. d. you all profess your selves to be members of Christ to be followers of him but how incongruous are these practices to such a profession Is this the fruit of the Dove-like-spirit of Christ Are these the fruits of your faith and professed mortification Shall the sheep of Christ ●…narl and fight like rabid and
tyranny of Satan to be dead to the world nevertheless see how they are overcome by their own lusts And much after the same rate Salvian brings in the wicked of his time stumbling at the looseness of professors and saying Where is that Catholick Law which they believe where are the examples of piety and chastity which they have learned c. O Christians draw not the guilt of other mens eternal ruine upon your souls Thirdly In a word answer the ends of God in your sanctification and providential dispose in the world this way by the holiness and harmlesness of your lives many may be won to Christ. 1 Pet. 3. 1. What the heathens said of moral vertue which they called verticordia turn-heart that if it were but visible to mortal eyes all men would be enamoured upon it will be much more true of Religion when you shall represent the beauty of it in your conversations Pattern 7. The humility and lowliness of Christ is propounded by himself as a pattern for his peoples imitation Mat. 11. 29. Learn of me for I am meek and lowly He could abase and empty himself of all his glory Phil. 2. 5 6 7. He could stoop to the meanest office even to wash the disciples feet We read but of one triumph in all the life of Christ upon earth when he rode to Jerusalem the people strewing branches in the way and the very children in the streets of Jerusalem crying Hosanna to the Son of David Hosanna in the highest and yet with what lowliness and humility was it performed by Christ Mat. 21. 5. Behold thy King cometh unto thee meek and lowly The humility of Christ appeared in every thing he spake or did Humility discovered it self in his language Psal. 22. 6. I am a wor●… and no man In his actions not refusing the meanest office Joh. 13. 14. In his condescensions to the worst of men upon which ground they called him a friend of Publicans and sinners Mat. 11. 19. But especially and above all in stooping down from all his glory to a state of deepest contempt for the glory of God and oursalvation Christians here is your pattern look to your meek and humble Saviour and tread in his steps be you clothed with humility 1 Pet. 5. 5. Whoever are ambitious to be the worlds great ones let it be enough for you to be Christs little ones Convince the world that since you knew God and your selves your pride hath been dying from that day Shew your humility in your habits 1 Pet. 3. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 9 10. In your company not contemning the meanest and poorest that fear the Lord Psal. 15. 4. Rom. 12. 16. In your language that dialect befits your lips Eph. 3. 8. less than the least of all Saints but especially in the low value and humble thoughts you have of your selves 1 Tim. 1. 15. And to press this I beseech you to consider First From how vile a root pride springs Ignorance of God and of your selves gives rise and being to this sin they that know God will be humble Isa. 6. 5. and they that know themselves cannot be proud Rom. 7. 9. Secondly Consider the mischievous effects it produces it estrangeth the soul from God Psal. 138. 6. it provokes God to lay you low Job 40. 11 12. it goes before destruction and a dreadful fall Prov. 10. 18. Thirdly As it is a great sin so it is a bad sign Hab. 2. 4. Behold his heart which is lifted up is not upright in him Fourthly how unsuitable it is to the sense you have and the complaints you make of your own corruptions and spiritual wants and above all how contrary it is to your pattern and example did Christ speak act or think as you do O learn humility from Jesus Christ it will make you precious in the eyes of God Isa. 57. 15. Pattern 8. The Contentation of Christ in a low and mean condition in the world is an excellent pattern for his peoples imitation His lot in this world fell upon a condition of deepest poverty and contempt yet how well was he satisfied and contented with it hear him expressing himself about it Psal. 16. 6. The lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places yea I have a goodly heritage The contentation of his heart with a suffering condition evidenced it self in his silence under the greatest sufferings Isa. 53. 7. He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his mouth he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before the shearers is dumb so he openeth not his mouth O that in this also the poorest Christians would imitate their Saviour and learn to manage an afflicted condition with a contented spirit let there be no murmurs complaints or foolish charges of God heard from you whatever straits and troubles he bring you into For First The meanest and most afflicted Christian is owner of many rich invaluable mercies Eph. 1. 3. 1. Cor. 3. ult Is sin pardoned and God reconciled then never open your mouths any more Ezek. 16. 63. Secondly You have many precious promises that God will not forsake you in your straits Heb. 13. 5. Isa. 41. 17. and your whole life hath been a life of experiences of the faithfulness of God in his promises Which of you cannot say with the Church Lam. 3. 23. His mercies are new every morning and great is his faithfulness Thirdly How useful and beneficial are all your afflictions to you they purge your sins prevent your temptations wean you from the world and turn to your salvation and how unreasonable then must your discontentedness at them be Fourthly The time of your relief and full deliverance from all your troubles is at hand the time is but short that you shall have any concernment about these things 1 Cor. 7. 29. If the candle of your earthly comfort be blown out yet remember it is but a little while to the break of day and then there will be no need of candles Besides Fifthly Your lot falls by Divine direction upon you and as bad as it is it is much easier and sweeter than the condition of Christ in this world was Yet he was contented and why cannot you O that we could learn contentment from Christ in every condition And thus I have laid before you some excellent patterns in the life of Christ for your Imitation The Thirtieth SERMON Sermon 30. 1 JOHN 2. 6. He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so Text. to walk even as he walked THese words having been resolved into their parts and the sense opened in the former Sermon The observation was this DOCT. That every man is bound to the imitation of Christ under penalty of forfeiting his claim to Christ. Doct. In prosecution of this point we have already shewn what the imitation of Christ imports and what the imitable excellencies in the life of Christ are it now remains that I show you in the next
his Tribunal to be solemnly sentenced They are as my Text speaks condemned already but then that dreadful sentence will be solemnly pronounced by Jesus Christ whom they have despised and rejected then shall that scripture be fulfilled Luke 19. 27. These mine enemies that would not that I should reign over them bring them hither and slay them before me Inference 2. Hence be informed how great a mercy the least measure Inference 2. of saving faith is for the least measure of true faith unites the soul to Jesus Christ and then there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8. 1. Not one sentence of God against them So Acts 13. 39. By him all that believe are justified from all things The weakest believer is as free from condemnation as the strongest the righteousness of Christ comes upon all believers without any difference Rom. 3. 22. Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Christ Jesus unto all and upon all them that believe for there is no difference 'T is not in imputed as it is in inherent righteousness one man hath more holiness than another The faith that receives the righteousness of Christ may be very different in degrees of strength but the received righteousness is equal upon all believers A piece of gold is as much worth in the hand of a child as it is in the hand of a man O the exceeding preciousness of saving faith Inference 3. How dreadful a sin is the sin of unbelief which brings Inference 3. men under the condemnation of the great God! no sin startles less or damns surer 'T is a sin that doth not affright the conscience as some other sins do but it kills the soul more certainly than any of those sins could do for indeed other sins could not damn us were it not for unbelief which fixes the guilt of them all upon our persons This is the condemnation Unbelief is the sin of sins and when the spirit comes to convince men of sin he begins with this as the capital sin John 16. 9. But more particularly First Estimate the evil of unbelief from its Object It is the slighting and refusing of the most excellent and wonderful person in heaven or earth The fiducial vision of Christ is the joy of Saints on earth the facial vision of Christ is the happiness of Saints in heaven 'T is a despising of him who is altogether lovely in himself who hath loved us and given himself for us 'T is the rejecting of the only Mediator betwixt God and man after the rejecting of whom there remains no sacrifice for sin Secondly Let the evil of unbelief be valued by the offer of Christ to our souls in the Gospel 't is one part of the great mystery of godliness that Christ should be preached to the Gentiles 1 Tim. 3. 16. That the word of this salvation should be sent to us Acts 13. 26. A mercy denied to the fallen angels and the greatest part of mankind which aggravates the evil of this sin beyond all imagination So that in refusing or neglecting Jesus Christ is found vile ingratitude highest contempt of the grace and wisdom of God and in the event the loss of the only season and opportunity of salvation which is never more to be recovered to all eternity Inference 4. If this be the case of all unbelievers it is not to be admired Inference 4. that souls under the first convictions of their miserable condition are plunged into such deep distresses of Spirit It 's said of them Acts 2. 37. That they were pricked at the heart and cried out Men and brethren what shall we do And so the Jayler He came in trembling and astonished and said Sirs what must I do to be saved Certainly if souls apprehend themselves under the condemnation and sentence of the great God all their tears and tremblings their weary days and restless nights are not without just cause and reason Those that never saw their own miserable condition by the light of a clear and full conviction may wonder to see others so deeply distressed in Spirit They may misjudge the case and call it melancholy or madness but spiritual troubles do not exceed the cause and ground of them let them be as deep and great as they will and indeed it is one of the great mysteries of grace and providence a thing much unknown to men how such poor souls are supported from day to day under such fears and sorrows as are able in a few hours to break the stoutest Spirit in the world Luther was a man of great natural courage and yet when God let in spiritual troubles upon his soul it is noted of him ut nec vox nec calor nec sanguis superesset He had neither voyce nor heat nor blood appearing in him Inference 5. How groundless and irrational is the mirth and jollity of all carnal and unregenerate men they feast in their prison Inference 5. and dance in their fetters O the madness that is in the hearts of men If men did but see their mittimus made for hell or believe they are condemned already it were impossible for them to live at that rate of vanity they do and is their condition less dangerous because it is not understood Surely no but much more dangerous for that O poor sinners you have found out an effectual way to prevent your present troubles it were well if you could find out a way to prevent your eternal misery but 't is easier for a man to stifle conviction than prevent damnation Your mirth hath a twofold mischief in it it prevents repentance and encreaseth your future torment O what an hell will your hell be who drop into it out of all the sensitive and sinful pleasures of this world If ever a man may say of mirth that it is mad and of laughter what doth it he may say so in this case Inference 6. Lastly what cause have they to rejoyce admire and praise the Lord to Eternity who have a well grounded Inference 6. confidence that they are freed from Gods condemnation O give thanks to the Father who hath delivered you from the power of darkness and translated you into the Kingdom of his dear Son Col. 1. 13. Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for if you be freed from condemnation you are out of Satans power he hath no more any dominion over you The power of Satan over men comes in by vertue of their condemnation as the power of the Jayler or Executioner over the bodies of condemned prisoners doth Heb. 2. 14. If you be freed from condemnation the sting of death shall never touch you For the sting of death smites the souls of men with a deadly stroak only by vertue of Gods condemnatory sentence 1 Cor. 15. 55 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law If you be freed from condemnation now you shall stand with comfort and boldness
men to avoid this they were willing to be ignorant An enlightned Conscience gives an interruption also unto men in their sinful courses and pleasures they cannot sin at so easie a rate in the light as they did in darkness and this made them hate the light as a very troublesom thing to them Thus you see what was the sin and what the punishment and what the cause of both DOCT. That the greater and clearer the light is under which the impenitent and unregenerate do live in this world by so much greater Doct. and heavier will their condemnation and misery be in the world to come Mat. 11. 21 22. Wo unto thee Chorazin woe unto thee Bethsaida for is the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes but I say unto you it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgement than for you Two things require explication in the doctrinal part of this point viz. 1. How light puts a deeper guilt and aggravation into sin 2. Why sin so aggravated makes men liable to greater condemnation First We will enquire into the grounds and reasons why greater and clearer light greatens and aggravates proportionably 2. the sins that are committed under it and it will appear that it doth so upon divers accounts First All light especially Evangelical-light is a great preservative from sin and an excellent means to prevent it 't is the property of light to inform the judgement and rectifie the mistakes and errors of it and thereby to give check to the affections in the pursuit of sinful designs and courses 't is a plain case that many men would never do as they do if their understandings were better informed 1 Cor. 2. 8. Which none of the Princes of this world knew for had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of glory It was want of light and better information which drew them under that horrid and unparallel'd guilt Our Saviour also supposes in the place before cited that if Tyre and Sidon had enjoyed the same light and means of grace that Chorazin and Bethsaida did they would never have been so sinful as they were light discovers danger and thereby overaws and stops men from proceeding farther in those paths and courses that will run them into it Secondly sinning under and against the light supposes and involves in it a greater contempt and despight of Gods authority than sinning in ignorance and darkness doth every man that breaks the law of God doth not in the same degree despise and slight the authority of the Law maker but when a man hath light to discover the evil and danger of what he doth and yet will dare to do it what is this but the treading of Gods authority under foot the casting of his word behind our backs Wilfull sinning is a despightful sinning against God Heb. 10. 26. it argues a low and vile esteem of the law of God which is reverent and holy and by so much the more it maketh sin to be exceeding sinful Thirdly Sinning under and against the light admits not of those excuses and pleas to extenuate the offence which sins of pure ignorance do Those that live without the sound of the Gospel may say Lord we never heard of Christ and the great redemption wrought by him if we had we would never have lived and acted as we did and therefore Christ saith Joh. 15. 22. If I had not come and spoken unto them they had not had sin but now they have no cloak for their sin The meaning is that if the Gospel-light had not shined among them their sin had not been of that deep guilt that now it is for now it is so foul and heinous by reason of the light under and against which it is committed that they have no pretence or excuse to extenuate or mitigate it Fourthly Evangelical light is a very rich favour and mercy of God to men one of the choicest gifts bestowed upon the Nations of the world and therefore it 's said Psal. 147. 19 20. He sheweth his word unto Jacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel he hath not dealt so with any nation and as for his judgements they have not known them Other Nations have Corn and Wine Gold and Silver abundance of earthly delights and pleasures but they have not a beam of heavenly light shining upon them We may account this mercy small but God who is best able to value the worth of it accounts it great Hos. 8. 12. I have written unto them the great things of my Law Christ reckoned Capernaum to be exalted unto Heaven by the Ministry of the Gospel in that place Now the greater the mercy is which the light of truth brings with it by so much the more horrid and heinous must the abusing and despising of it be Fifthly Sinning against the light argues a love to sin as sin to naked sin without any disguise or covert It is nothing so bad for a man to sin through a mistake of judgement when he thinks that to be lawful which is indeed sinful he doth not now close with sin as sin but he either closes with it as his duty or at least his liberty 'T is hard for Satan to perswade many men to embrace a naked sin and therefore he cloaths it in the habit of a duty or liberty and thereby deceives and draws men to the commission of it But if a man have light shining into his Conscience and convincing him that the way he is in is the way of sin quite contrary to the revealed will of God stripping the sin naked before the eye of his Conscience so that he hath no covert or excuse and yet will persist in it this I say argues a soul to be in love with sin as sin Now as for a man to love grace as grace is a solid argument to prove the truth of his grace so on the contrary for a man to love sin as sin doth not only argue him to be in the state of sin but to be in the forefront and among the highest rank of sinners Sixthly The greater and clearer the light is under and against which men continue in sin the more must the Consciences of such sinners be supposed to be wasted and violated by such a way of sinning for this is a sure rule that the Maxima violatio conscienti●… est maximum peccat●…m greatest violation of Conscience is the greatest sin Conscience is a noble and tender part of the soul of man it is in the soul as the eye in the body very sensible of the least injury and a wound in the Conscience is like a blow in the eye but nothing gives a greater blow to Conscience nothing so much wastes it and destroys it as sins against the light do this puts a plain force upon the Conscience and gives a
dreadful stab to that noble power Gods vicegerent in the soul. And thus you see the first thing made good that light puts deep guilt and aggravation into sin Secondly In the next place let us examine why sin so aggravated by the light makes men liable to the greater condemnation 2. for that it doth so is beyond all debate or question else the Apostle Peter would not have said of those sinners against light as he doth 2 Pet. 2. 21. That it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness nor would Christ have told the Inhabitants of Chorazin or Bethsaida that it should be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of Judgement than for them There is a twofold reason of this 1. Ex parte Dei on Gods part 2. Ex parte Peccatoris on the Sinners part First Ex parte Dei on Gods part who is the righteous Judge of the whole earth and will therefore render unto every man according as his works shall be for shall not the Judge of the whole earth do right he will judge the world in righteousness and righteousness requires that difference be made in the punishment of Sinners according to the different degrees of their sins Now that there are different degrees of sin is abundantly clear from what we have lately discoursed under the former head where we have shewed that the light under which men sin puts extraordinary aggravations upon their sins answerable whereunto will the degrees of punishment be awarded by the righteous Judge of Heaven and earth The Gentiles who had no other light but that dim light of nature will be condemned for disobeying the law of God written upon their hearts but yet greater wrath is reserved for them who sin both against the light of nature and the light of the Gospel also and therefore it is said Rom. 2. 9. Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil of the Jew first and also of the Gentile Impenitent Jews and Gentiles will all be condemned at the Bar of God but with this difference to the Jew first i. e. principally and especially because the light and mercy which he abused and violated were far greater than those bestowed upon the Gentiles because unto them were committed the Oracles of God and God had not dealt with any Nation as with that Nation Indeed in the rewards of obedience the same reason doth not hold he that came into the Vineyard at the last hour of the day may be equal in reward with him that bare the heat and burthen of the whole day because the reward is of grace and bounty not of debt and merit but it is not so here justice observes an exact proportion in distributing punishments according to the degrees deserts and measures of sin and therefore it is said concerning Babylon Rev. 18. 7. How much she had glorified her self and lived deliciously so much torment and sorrow give her Secondly Ex parte Peccatoris upon the account of sinners it must needs be that the heaviest wrath and most intolerable torments should be the portion of them who have sinned under and against the clearest light and means of grace for we find in the Scripture account that a principal and special part of the torment of the damned will arise from their own Consciences Mark 9. 44. Where their worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched and nothing is more manifest than this that if Conscience be the tormentor of the damned then sinners against light must needs have the greatest torments For First The more knowledge any man had in this world the more was his Conscience violated and abused here by sinning against it and O what work will these violations and abuses make for a tormenting Conscience in Hell With what rage and fury will it then avenge it self upon the most stout daring and impudent sinner the more guilt now the more rage and fury then Secondly The more knowledge or means of knowledge any man hath enjoyed in this world so much the more matter is prepared and laid up for Conscience to upbraid us with in the place of torments and the upbraidings of Conscience are a special part of the torments of the damned O what a peal will Conscience ring in the ears of such sinners Did not I warn thee of the issue of such sins undone wretch How often did I strive with thee if it had been possible to take thee off from thy course of sinning and to escape this wrath Did not I osten cry out in thy bosom stop thy course sinner Hearken to my counsel turn and live but thou wouldst not hearken to my voice I forewarned thee of this danger but thou slightedst all my warnings thy lusts were too strong for my light and now thou seest whither thy way tended but alas too late Thirdly The more knowledge or means of knowledge any man hath abused and neglected in this world so many fair opportunities and great advantages he hath lost for Heaven and the more opportunities and advantages he hath had for Heaven the more intolerable will Hell be to that man as the mercy was great which was offered by them so the torment will be unspeakable that will arise from the loss of them Sinners you have now a wide and open door many blessed opportunities of salvation under the Gospel it hath put you in a fair way for everlasting happiness many of you are not far from the kingdom of God there will be time enough in Hell to reflect upon this loss What think you will it not be sad to think there O how fair was I once for Heaven to have been with God and among yonder Saints My Conscience was once convinced and my affections melted under the Gospel I was almost perswaded to be a Christian indeed the bargain was almost made betwixt Christ and my soul there were but a few points in difference betwixt us but wretch that I was at those points the bargain stuck and there the treaty ended to my eternal ruine I could not deny my lusts I could not live under the strict yoak of Christs government but now I must live under the insupportable wrath of the righteous and terrible God for ever and this torment will be peculiar to such as perish under the Gospel The Heathen who enjoyed no such means can therefore have no such reflections nay the very Devils themselves who never had such a plank after their shipwrack I mean a Mediator in their nature or such terms of reconciliation offered them will not reflect upon their lost opportunities of recovering as such sinners must and will this therefore is the condemnation that light is come into the world but men loved darkness rather than light Inference 1. Hence it follows that neither knowledge nor the best means of knowledge are in themselves sufficient to secure men from wrath Inference 1. to come Light in it self is a choice
mercy and therefore the means that begat and encreased it must be so too but yet it is a mercy liable to the greatest abuse and the abuse of the best mercies brings forth the greatest miseries Alas Christians your duty is but half learnt when you know it obedience to light makes light a blessing indeed Joh. 13. 17. If ye know these things happy are ye if you do them Happiness is not entailed upon simple knowing but upon doing upon obedience to our knowledge otherwise he that increaseth knowledge doth but increase sorrow for that servant which knew his Lords will and prepared not himself nor did according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes Luke 13. 47. And to him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is sin Jam. 4. 17. We are bound with all thankfulness to acknowledge the bounty of Heaven to this sinful generation in furnishing us with so many excellent means of light beyond many other nations and generations that are past but yet we ought to rejoice with trembling when we consider the abuses of light in this wanton age and what a dismal event is like to happen unto many thousands among us I fear the time is coming when many among us will wish they had never set foot upon English ground God hath blessed this nation with many famous burning and shining lights it was once said to the honour of this Nation that the English Ministry was the worlds Clerus Anglicanus stupor m●…ndi wonder and when a man of another Nation began to Preach methodically and convincingly they were once wont to say we perceive this man hath been in England the greater will our Pe●…cipimus ●…c hominem f●…isse in Anglia account be for abusing such light and rebelling against it the clearer our light is now the thicker will the mists of darkness be hereafter if we thus wantonize under it and rebel against it The Devils have more light than we and therefore the more torment of them it is said Jam. 2. 19. The Devils also believe and tremble the horror of their Consciences is answerable to their illumination they tremble the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est 〈◊〉 a●…itatio Eustach signifies the rote of the Sea or such a murmuring dreadful noise as the tempestuous Seas use to make when they break themselves against the Rocks Inference 2. If the abuse of light thus aggravates sin and misery then times of great temptation are like to be times of deep guilt Wo to an Inference 2. inlightned knowing generation when strong temptations befall them How do many in such times imprison the known truth to keep themselves out of Prison offer violence to their own Consciences to avoid violence from other hands * Opifice●…●…iversorum 〈◊〉 invenire f●…le neque inventum i●…●…gus promulgare tutum Plato was convinced of the unity of God but durst not own his own convictions but said it was a truth neither easie to find nor safe to own And even * In ●…nimi religione non habeat sed in actibus fi●…t Seneca the renowned moralist was forced by temptation to dissemble his conviction of whom * Colebat quod reprebendebat agebat quod arguebat quod culpabat adorabat Augustin saith he worshipped what himself reprehended and did what himself reproved and even a great Papist of later times was heard to say as he was going to Mass eamus ad communem errorem let us go to the common error O how hard is it to keep Conscience pure and peaceable in days of temptation doubtless it is a mercy to many weak and timerous Christians to be removed by a seasonable death out of harms way to be disbanded by a merciful providence before the heat of the battle Christ and Antichrist seem at this day to be drawing into the field a fiery tryal threatens the professors of this age but when it comes to a close grapple indeed we may justly tremble to think how many thousands will break their way through the convictions of their own Consciences to save their flesh Believe it sirs if Christ hold you to himself by no other tye than the slender thread of a single conviction if he have not interest in your hearts and affections as well as in your understandings and Consciences if you be men of great light and strong unmortified lusts if you profess Christ with your tongues and worship the world with your hearts a man may say of you without the gift of prophecie what the Prophet said of Hazael I know what ye will do in the day of temptation Inference 3. If this be so what a strong engagement lieth upon all enlightned Inference 3. persons to turn heartily to God and reduce their knowledge into practice and obedience The more men know the more violence they do to their own Consciences in rebelling against the light this is to sin with an high hand Num. 15. 30. Believe it sirs you cannot sin at so cheap a rate as others do knowledge in a wicked man like high mettle in a blind Horse doth but the sooner precipitate him into ruine You may know much more than others but if ever you come to Heaven it must be in the same way of faith and obedience mortification and self-denial in which the weakest Christian comes thither whatever knowledge you have to be sure you have no wisdom if you expect salvation upon any other or easier terms than the most illiterate Christian finds it It was a sad observation of the Father surgunt indocti rapiunt coelum the unlearned rise and take Heaven What a pity 't is that men of such excellent parts should be enslaved to their lusts that ever it should be said sapientes sapienter descendunt in Gehennam their learning doth but hang in their light it doth but blind them in spiritual things and prepareth them for the greater misery Inference 4. Hence it also follows that the work of conversion is a very difficult work the soul is scarcely half won to Christ when Satan Inference 4. is cast out of the understanding by illumination The Devil hath deeply intrenched himself and strongly fortisied every faculty of the soul against Christ. The understanding indeed is the first entrance into the soul and out of that faculty he is oftentimes expulsed by light and conviction which seems to make a great change upon a man Now he becomes a professor now he takes up the duties of Religion and passes up and down the world for a convert but alas alas all the while Satan keeps the Fort-royal the heart and will in his own possession and this is a work of more difficulty The weapons of that warfare must indeed be mighty through God which do not only cast down imaginations but bring every thought of the heart into captivity to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. While the heart stands out though the understanding
Lord hath not given unto this day eyes to see their misery in themselves or their remedy in Christ so as to make an effectual Application of him to their own souls To all such my counsel is 1. To get a sense of your own blindness 2. To seek out for a cure whilst yet it may be had First Labour to get a deep sense of the misery of such a condition for till you be awakened by conviction you can never be healed O that you did but know the true difference betwixt common and saving light the want of this keeps you in darkness you think because you know the same things that the most sanctified man doth that therefore there is no difference betwixt his knowledge and yours and are therefore ready to say to them as Job to his friends Lo mine eye hath seen all this mine ear hath heard and understood it What ye know the same do I know also I am not inferiour unto you Job 13. 1 2. But O that you would be convinced that your knowledge vastly differs from the knowledge of believers Though you know the same things that they do it is a knowledge of another kind and nature You know spiritual things in another way meerly by the light of reason assisted and improved by the common light of the Gospel they know the same things by spiritual illumination and in an experimental way 1 John 2. 20. Ye have an unction from the holy one and ye know all things Their knowledge is practical yours is idle They are working out their salvation by that light which God hath given them Psal. 111. 10. Their knowledge of God and Christ produces the fruits of faith obedience mortification and heavenly mindedness in them It hath no such fruits in you whatever light there be in your understandings it makes no alteration at all upon your hearts Their light brings them to heaven John 17. 3. Yours shall be blown out by death 1 Cor. 13. 8. and your selves left in the mists of eternal darkness except your eyes be opened seasonably by the anointing of the holy Ghost Conviction is a great part of your cure Secondly Labour to get a remedy for this dangerous disease of your minds Awake to righteousness and sin not for some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame 1 Cor. 15. 34. These things speak incouragement to you though it be a sore Judgement that lies upon you and very difficult to be removed yet remember Jesus Christ is put into Commission by God the Father to open the blind eyes Isa. 42. 6 7. and this excellent Physician bespeaks you for his patients Rev. 3. 18. Anoint thine eyes saith he with eye-salve that thou mayest see Yea the most enlightned Christians were once as dark and blind in spiritual things as you are and Christ hath cured them Eph. 5. 8. Once were you darkness now are ye light in the Lord. Attend therefore upon the Ordinances of the Gospel diligently that 's Gods enlightning instrument by which he couches those Cataracts which blind the eyes of mens understandings Acts 26. 18. And if ever you will have your eyes opened allow your selves time to ponder and consider what you hear The duty of Meditation is a very enlightning duty Above all cry to the Lord Jesus Christ as that poor man did Lord that mine eyes may be opened that I may receive my sight Say Lord this is my disease and danger that in seeing I see not others see natural things in a spiritual way whilst I see spiritual things only in a natural way their light is operative upon their hearts mine is but an idle impractical notion of Religion which brings forth ●…no fruit of holiness Their knowledge sets their hands a work in duties of obedience mine only sets my tongue a work in discourses of those things which my heart never felt Lord open mine eyes and make me to see out of this obscurity All the light that is in me is but darkness O Lord enlighten my darkness enlighten mine eyes lest I sleep the sleep of death Secondly Let it be a word of counsel and exhortation to such as once were blind but do now see First I beseech you bless God for the least degree of spiritual illumination Truly light is sweet and 't is a pleasant thing for the eyes to behold the sun Eccles. 11. 7. But Oh how sweet is spiritual light and what a pleasant thing to behold the Son of Righteousness Blessed are your eyes for they see God hath brought you out of darkness into marvellous light And marvellous indeed it must needs be when you consider how many wise and prudent men are under the power of spiritual darkness whilst such babes as you are enlightened Mat. 11. 25. It greatly affected the heart of Christ O let it affect yours also Secondly Labour to get a clearer sight of spiritual things every day For all spiritual light is encreasing light which shineth more and more unto the perfect day Prov. 4. 18. O if a little spiritual light be so comfortable what would more be The wisdom of God is a manifold wisdom Eph. 3. 16. The best of us see but little of it Labour therefore to know spiritual things more extensively and more experimentally Phil. 3. 8 9. be still encreasing in the knowledge of God Thirdly Walk as men whose eyes are opened Once ye were darkness now are ye light in the Lord walk as children of the light Eph. 5. 8. Else your light will but aggravate your sin Remember how it displeased God that Solomons heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel which had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11. 9. Remember how angry God was with the Heathens for abusing the dim common light of nature Rom. 1. 21. how much more evil is it in you to abuse the most precious light that shineth in this world and what mischievous effects the abuse of your light will have upon this blind world It was a smart rebuke given once by an Atheist to a good man who being asked by him how he could satisfie his conscience to live as he did nay rather said the Atheist I wonder how you can satisfie your self to live as you do for did I believe as you do that there is such a Christ and such a glory as you believe there is I would pray and live at another rate than you do The Conclusion And now Reader after all my discourses of the method of Christ in purchasing the great Salvation for us and the way of the Spirit in applying it and making it effectual to Gods Elect thou hast two wonders before thine eyes either of which may astonish thy soul in the consideration of them Viz. 1. The admirable Grace of God in preparing this great salvation 2. The desperate wickedness of man in rejecting First Behold the riches of the goodness and mercy of God 1. in preparing such a remedy as this for lost
man This is that which is justly called the great mystery of Godliness 1 Tim. 3. 16. That mystery which the Prophets enquired diligently after yea which the Angels desire to look into 1 Pet. 1. 10 12. In this glorious mystery of Redemption tha●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifold wisdom of God or that wisdom which hath such curious and admirable variety in it is illustriously displayed Eph. 4. 10. Yea the contrivement of our Redemption this way is the most glorious display of Divine Love that ever was made or can be made in this world to the children of men for so the Apostle will be understood when he saith Rom. 3. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath set forth or presented his love to man in the most taking manner in a way that commends it beyond all compare to the acceptation of men This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners 1 Tim. 1. 15. It might be justly expected that when this glorious mystery should come to be published by the Gospel in the ears of sinners all eyes should be withdrawn from all other objects and fixed with admiration upon Christ all hearts should be ravished with these glad tidings and every man pressing to Christ with greatest zeal and diligence But behold instead thereof Secondly The desperate wickedness of the world in rejecting the only remedy prepared for them This was long since foretold by the Prophet Isaiah 53. 3. He is despised and rejected of men a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief and we hid as it were our faces from him he was despised 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desitio virorum Nil habit infoelix paupertas durius in se quam quod ridiculos homines facit Juver and we esteemed him not His poor and mean appearance which should endear him beyond all considerations to the souls of men since it was for their sakes that he emptied himself of all his glory yet this lays him under contempt he is looked on as the very offcast of men when his own love to man had emptied him of all his riches the wickedness of men loaded him with contempt and as it was prophesied of him so it was and at this day is sadly verified all the world over For First The Pagan world hath no knowledge of him they are lost in darkness God hath suffered them to walk in their own ways Acts 14. 16. Secondly The Mahumetans which overspread so great a part of the world reject him and instead os the blessed Gospel which they hiss out with abhorrence embrace the blasphemous and ridiculous Alcoran which they confidently affirm to have come down srom God immediately in that laylatto Hanzili as they call it the night of demission calling all Christians Cafirouna i. e. infidels Thirdly The Jews reject him with abhorrence and spit at his very name and being blindfolded by the Devil they call Jesus Anathema 1 Cor. 12. 3. And in a blind zeal for Moses blaspheme him as an Impostor He came to his own and his own received him not John 1. 11. Fourthly The far greater part of the Christianized world reject him those that are called after his name will not 〈◊〉 nomen 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 vi●… 〈◊〉 qu●… 〈◊〉 est quam praevaricati●… divini nominis Cyp. de Zelo. submit to his Government The Nobles of the world think themselves dishonoured by submitting their necks to his yoke The Sensualists of the world will not deny their lusts or forsake their pleasures for all the treasures of righteousness life and peace which his blood hath purchased The worldlings of the earth prefer the dirt and dung of the world before him and few there be among them that profess Christianity who love the Lord Jesus in sincerity The only reason why they are called Christians is because by the advantagious cast of providence they were born and educated in a nation where Christianity is professed and established by the laws of the Countrey and if the wind should turn and the publick Authority think fit to establish another Religion they can shift their sayls and steer a contrary Course But now Reader let me tell thee that if ever God send forth those two grim Sergeants his Law and thine own conscience to arrest thee for thy sins if thou find thy self dragging away by them towards that prison from whence none return that are once clapt up therein and that in this unspeakable distress Jesus Christ manifest himself to thy soul and open thy heart to receive him and become thy surety with God pay all thy debts and cancel all thy obligations Thou wilt love him at another rate than others do his blood will run deeper in thine eyes than it doth in the shallow apprehensions of the world he will be altogether lovely and thou wilt account all things but dung and dross in comparison of the excellency of Jesus Christ thy Lord. To work thy heart to this frame these things are written which the Lord prosper upon thy soul by the blessing of his good Spirit upon them Blessed be God for Jesus Christ. FINIS An Alphabetical Table of the principal points insisted on in this Treatise A. ABortives Spiritual whence they are pag. 369 Absurdity of Believers sins p. 39 Accounts of our time kept in Heaven p. 57 Accusations of Conscience what they are p. 186 Acts of the Spirit sixfold in Conversion p. 197 Acceptation with God what it is p. 311 Acceptation with God what it includes ibid. Acceptance none without Christ. p. 320 Activity for the world what it speaks p. 352 Activity of Christ our pattern p. 507 Adventures of Faith how great p. 82 83 Advocate none like Christ in five respects p. 256 Affections how bewitcht by sin p. 394 Ambassadors of Christ their dignity p. 48 Application what it imports p. 5 6 Application of Christ the end of Ordinances p. 7 Application of Christ of equal latitude with Gods election and Christs death p. 9 Apologies cut off from Gospel-despisers p. 57 Approbation of Christ implied in faith p. 119 A●…ointing how it teacheth p. 139 Alsufficiency of Christ for all our wants p. 196 Altogether lovely Christ only so p. 250 Apostasie an inexcusable sin p. 332. Annihilation better than damnation p. 444 Arminians sense of Justification rejected p. 132 Assent implyed in saving Faith p. 117 Assent three degrees thereof ibid. Assent how discovered to be true p. 140 Aversion from God how discovered p. 84 Awakening out of security how great a mercy it is to the souls of men p. 356 B. BAcksliding an inexcusable sin p. 213. Benefits of Christ how conveyed to us p. 13. Believers more than know themselves so p. 138 Believers why uncomfortable p. 139 Believing the immediate duty of weary souls p. 204 Believers advancement how great p. 281 Boldness of Saints in Prayer p. 313 Blood of Christ its dignity p. 301 Beauty of holiness very great