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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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given him out of the World by the inward Work of his Grace Moral Suasion is common to all but he taketh some aside and worketh on their Hearts 2. For the manner of this Teaching it is accompanied with Force and Power There is always an Operation that goeth along with this teaching John 6.44 45. No Man can come to me except the Father that hath sent me draw him It is written in the Prophets they shall be all taught of God There is Teaching and Drawing The Inspiration and the Impression go together He is an incomparable Teacher he giveth the Lesson and an Heart to learn it with Information he reformeth and with the Knowledg of our Duty he giveth a Will and Power to do it He teacheth the Promise so as to make us believe it the Commandment so as to make us obey it The Soul is God's Eccho Psal. 27.8 When thou sayest Seek ye my Face my Heart said unto thee Thy Face Lord will I seek He reformeth by his Light and exciteth by the Power of his Grace In short it is a powerful Teaching joined with an inward Working His Scholars are sure of Proficiency for he hath their Hearts in his Hands and can move them according to his own Pleasure There is not only an Illumination of the Mind but a Bowing of the Will Corrupt Nature in Man is strong enough to resist any thing of Man as he is Man 3. The necessity of this inward Light without it the Word will not work Many bear outwardly that are never the better John 6.44 No Man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him There must be an inward Light an inward Operation on the Soul or the Word is without Effect the Heart must be opened as well as the Scriptures As all the Multitude that thronged on Christ did not touch him as the diseased Woman did who touched the Hem of his Garment Who touched me saith Christ knowing that virtue had gone out of him Mark 5.30 Many may come to an Ordinance but virtue passeth out to few The outward Minister can but speak to the Ear it is Christ works Grace in the Heart unless the Holy Ghost come down and open the Mouths of Preachers to speak and the Hearts of People to hear all is to no purpose Vse Well then Every time you come to the opening of the Scriptures look for this inward Light to shine into your Hearts that you may have a saving Knowledg of God in Christ. Remember you come to hear that Doctrine which Christ hath brought down from the Bosom of the Father and he must bring it into your Bosoms There are two sorts of Hearers 1. Some are careless that come hither but scarce hear the Minister their Bodies are in the Sanctuary but their Spirits are in the Corners of the Earth Their coming is made fruitless by the wandring of their Hearts they have experience of the Power of Satan not of Christ The Devil presenteth to their Fancy such Objects as carry their Spirits from God and his Work Ezek. 33.31 They come unto thee as the People cometh and they sit before thee as my People and they hear thy Words but they will not do them for with their Mouth they shew much Love but their Heart goeth after their Covetousness Carcases without a Spirit are but Carrion Clothes stuffed with Straw that were a mocking So is a Body present at hearing the Word without a Soul What is the difference between an absent Body and a wandring Spirit God knocketh at the Heart but there is none within to hear him 2. Some hear the Minister but do not wait for the Illumination of Christ which sometimes God grants to us in the hearing of the Word Acts 11.15 As I began to speak the Holy Ghost fell on them this is to draw us to Attention Acts 16.14 Whose Heart the Lord opened that she attended to those things that were spoken by Paul When God disposeth us to hear his Word attentively he approacheth to us in Mercy SERMON VIII JOHN XVII 6 I have manifested thy Name unto the Men which thou gavest me out of the World thine they were and thou gavest them me and they have kept thy Word II. THE next Argument is what the Father had done in and about Believers he disposed them into the Hands of Christ Thine they were and thou gavest them me Where is First His Interest in Believers Secondly His Act about Believers First His Interest in Believers Thine they were How is this to be understood Divers have framed divers Sences thine by Creation thine by Election thine by Sanctification The Father being first in Order of the Persons all Original Works are proper to him So Creation is ascribed to him so the Lord saith Ezek. 18.4 All Souls are mine all created by him But this sence is not so proper to this place because those for whom Christ prayed not might plead this Interest so Satan is God's the Wicked and all Creatures are God's By Election thine by free Election mine by special Donation 1 Pet. 2.9 Ye are a chosen Generation a peculiar People the first and highest Act of Grace is ascribed to him they are his chosen and peculiar Ones These were eternally his and by the continuation of the same purpose of Grace they are always his This is proper to this place only Sanctification may be included which is as it were an Actual Election As by Original Election the Heirs of Salvation are distinguished from others in God's Purpose and Counsel so by Actual Election they are visibly distinguished and set apart from others So thine they were by an excitement of thy Spirit and Grace stirred up to follow me and chuse me in this special way of Service Sanctification is also ascribed to the Father John 6.44 No Man can come unto me except the Father that hath sent me draw him and Jude 1. To them that are sanctified by God the Father The first Effect of Saving-Grace is ascribed to him as the first rise of Grace is from his Love I prefer the middle Sence and do only take in the latter as the Effect Thine they were they were chosen by the Purposes of thy Grace and called which is the Effect of that Grace passing upon their Hearts From hence 1. Observe That Christ pleadeth Interest as an Argument in Prayer It is meet when we come to pray to God that we can say We are his This way would Christ endear his own Disciples to the Father's Respect and Grace Psal. 119.44 I am thine save me The great Work of Christians should be to discern their Interest that they may come to God with some confidence Though you cannot say I am thine with respect to the purposes of his Grace yet at least you should say I am thine in your own Dedication and Choice Si nostra tueri non vultis tamen vestra defendetis Many a trembling Christian dareth not say He is mine but
if they were not accepted in and for Christ. Nothing can be acceptable to infinite Purity but what is pure Habbak 1.13 Thou art of purer Eyes than to behold Evil and canst not look on Iniquity We should not have one good look from God were it not for Christ. To salve this Attribute was Jesus Christ sent into the World We think that Christ was only sent to satisfy Justice God hateth Sin out of Holiness punisheth it out of Justice and executeth that Punishment by his Majesty and Power so that we dread God for his Wrath Power and Justice but all these are awakened by his Holiness there is the Root of all So that consideration of God's Holiness maketh us to prize Christ. Alas what should vile Creatures do before an Holy God out of Christ 3. It is God's principal Glory Exod. 15.11 Thou art glorious in Holiness God is mighty in Power rich in Grace glorious in Holiness It is good to mark the distinctness of Expression in all the Attributes God that he might shew us how much we should prize Grace would be glorious in nothing so much as in Holiness This is Seraphical Divinity the Angels would teach us no other Divinity and Notions of God but Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts Isa. 6.3 this is most pleasing to God profitable to Men. Christ taught us to pray first of all Hallowed by thy Name This should be the chiefest thing that we should think of in our Addresses to God So when the Angel Gabriel came to give notice of Christ Luke 1.35 That Holy Thing that shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God Priùs sanctum quàm Dei Filium nominavit saith one of the Fathers You cannot call God nor Christ by a better Title it is his darling Attribute So the Saints in Heaven Rev. 4.8 They rest not day and night saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty it is nine times in Plantius's Edition as if they were delighted with the mention of it they take a sweet content in the Work Holy Father Holy Son Holy Spirit In Heaven they bless and praise God praise him for his Excellencies bless him for his Benefits We praise him for his Holiness we bless him for his Mercy in Christ this will be our Employment in Heaven Psal. 99.5 Exalt ye the Lord our God and worship at his Footstool for he is Holy God counteth it his chiefest Glory that he might teach the Creature that Moral Perfections are to be preferred before Natural it is better to be Wise than Strong to be Holy than Wise. III. Why especially must we thus look upon him when we deal with him for Grace and Sanctification 1. Because it is a Relief to Faith when we represent God to our selves as the Fountain of Holiness He is the Holy One of Israel and Christ calls him Holy Father Jude 1. To them that are sanctified by God the Father There is enough in God when we come for Pardon he is rich in Mercy when we come for Holiness he is glorious in Holiness he is the God of Grace you may have enough if you be not wanting to your selves Men are willing to spare out of their Fulness the Holy God is as able as willing to sanctify you it is a Work that he delighteth in Joab interceded for Absalom when he perceived the King's Heart was towards Absalom 2 Sam. 14.1 2. It may be a means to enlarge your Spiritual Desires You are to be holy as he is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 The Children if they be of the right Stock they should have some Resemblance of their Father Now you ask Holiness of God that you may be as God in some degree of Conformity tho not in exact Equality Assequi non possu●●● saltem nanquam sequi desinamus we cannot overtake God but we should never cease to follow him We have an high Patern that we might not be content with any low measures of Grace When you are asking it is good to be thinking of your Patern that you may inlarge your Spiritual Desires Lord wash me throughly Lord make me holy as thou art holy I forget the things that are behind it is nothing that I have already Vse 1. Information It informeth us 1. How greatly they sin that deride Men for their Holiness which is the express Image of the glorious God God is glorious in Holiness therefore they that despise Holiness they despise God himself Holy Brethren should no more be a Disgrace than Holy Father That is your Scorn which is the Divine Glory one of the chiefest Excellencies in the Godhead You hate God more than you do the Saints Holiness in them shineth with a faint Lustre 2. How much we should prize Holiness It is the Glory of God and the Glory of holy Angels the Devils also excel in Strength and the Glory of the Saints Ephes. 5.27 That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having Spot or Wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without Blemish This is the Glory of the Church the Church that are are a distinct People from all the World should have a distinct Excellency Other Societies are made glorious by their Policy their Pomp their Trade the Church is a Society for Holiness and therefore it is called The fairest among Women the best of all Societies though it hath little of worldly Pomp and Splendor Psalm 93. ult Holiness becometh thy House O Lord for ever Some Ordinances became God's House for a time Ceremonies and Sprinklings and the Vail and the covering of Badgers Skins c. but Holiness is a standing Ordinance So private Christians are changed from Glory to Glory 2. Cor. 3.18 it is from Grace to Grace for the Apostle speaketh of our being changed into the Likeness of Christ. The World counteth Purity and Strictness a base thing Religio ignobilem facit but the Word is quit with the World and calls a wicked Man a vile Person Psal. 15.4 and the basest of Men Dan. 4.17 Vse 2. It presseth us to draw nigh to God as unto an Holy Father Worship must always be proportioned to the Object of it Conformity maketh way for Communion John 4.24 God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in Truth As he is a God of Peace he will not be worshipped with wrathful Affections 1 Tim. 2.8 I will that Men pray every where lifting up holy Hands without Wrath and Doubting A living God must have a lively Service so a holy God should have a holy Worship this doth make us fit to enjoy God in the way of a sweet and gracious Communion 1. We must be in an holy State If we be accepted by God we must be like him holy as he is holy Partakers of a Divine Nature The Majesty and Glory of God we are not capable of God would not have us to imitate his Power and Majesty but his Holiness We enjoy him
it hateth because I testify of it that the Works thereof are evil We are to contest with Publick Miscarriages Interests and Powers stir up the Malice and Rage of Men Sore Eyes cannot endure the Light nor a guilty Conscience the Word John 3.20 For every one that doth evil hateth the Light neither cometh he to the Light lest his Deeds should be reproved The Ethiopians curse the Sun Rev. 10.11 The two Witnesses tormented them that dwell on the Earth This drouzy World would fain take a Nap and sleep were it not for some bawling Preachers Proud covetous carnal Men Men wedded to their Interests will hate us if we preach in good earnest as a good Thresher maketh the Straw to flie about his Ears Nay and Errors are more touchy than Sins a Drunkard is more patient of Conviction than a Seducer Errors take away the Light of Reason and leave nothing but the Pride of Reason A Drunkard standeth upon lower ground his Practices cannot endure the Test of the Light of Nature but every erroneous Person thinketh he standeth upon the upper Ground because of the height of his Pride and the plausibleness of his Notions 2. By the Providence of God Preachers are like Gideon's Lamps in earthen Pitchers possibly the Apostle may allude to it when he saith We carry this Treasure in Earthen Vessels 2 Cor. 4.7 Now as when the Pitcher is dashed to pieces the Lamp breaketh out to the amazement of the Adversaries so the Sufferings of Ministers are a great Confirmation to their Doctrine Vse 1. Advice to us 1. To prepare for Sufferings 2. When they come do not count it strange I. To prepare for Sufferings It will do us no hurt to be prepared for Sufferings It hath ever been the Lot of God's People to be obnoxious to the World's hatred and we our selves cannot look for any Exemption I shall lay down several Probabilities to shew when God is about to bring Trouble on the Church 1. Observe That after God hath laid in many spiritual Comforts there comes a time to lay them out again and after great Receipts we are put upon great Expences The Disciples first enjoyed Christ's Presence and Ministry and then were exposed to a dreadful Persecution John 11. Christ biddeth them make use of Light because Darkness was coming upon them Never was the Gospel powerfully preached but Trials came 1 Thess. 1.5 For our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but also in Power and in the Holy-Ghost and in much Assurance And it follows Verse 6. Ye received the Word with much Affliction God will try how we can live upon the Comforts of the Gospel Castles are first victualled and then besieged Heb. 10.32 After ye were illuminated ye endured a great Fight of Afflictions The Churches of Asia had horrible Desolations after a powerful Ministry The Germans after a sufficient Promulgation of the Gospel suffered many sad Years 2. Observe After Trials and Reformations there come Trials and Probations that after we have submitted to the Ways of God we may honour them with Sufferings The Ten Persecutions were after Christ had set up the Ordinances of the Gospel The Marian and Bloody Days were after King Edward's Reformation God will have every Truth honoured in its season When the Witnesses had finished the Testimony of their Prophecy after a short time they were slain Rev. 11. 3. Observe When Reformations stick in the Birth God will promote them by Troubles he taketh his own Fan into his hand Mat. 3.12 Whose Fan is in his hand and he will throughly purge his Floor When Men cannot or will not effect it God will purge his Floor and cleanse the Church from prophane mixtures Christ came with his Whip to cleanse the Temple Joh. 2.15 Grosthead prophesied That the Church should not be reformed but ore gladii cruentandi God usually tendreth a Reformation to the World with a Judgment in his hand and if the Reformation be obstructed the Judgment will proceed Ezek. 24.12 13. She hath wearied her self with Lies and her great Scum went not forth out of her her Scum shall be in the Fire In thy filthiness is lewdness because I have purged thee and thou wast not purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my Fury to rest upon thee When the Pot is put over the Fire if the Scum remaineth still he overturneth all 4. Observe When there are great Differences among God's own People the End is bitter We warp in the Sun-shine The Dog is let loose that the Sheep may run together A piece of Wax when it is broken put it together never so often it will not close but put it into the Candle and the Ends stick close together Ridley and Hooper could agree in a Prison A little before Dioclesian's Persecution the Church was rent and torn by intestine Broils Pastor against Pastor and People against People Ease begets Pride and Wantonness and that maketh way for Contention God may soder you in your own Blood and effect Union by making you Objects of the same Hatred and Persecution Nazianzen was wont to call the Enemies of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the turbulent Enemies many times prove the best Reconcilers and the Wolves bring the Sheep together 5. Observe Libertines and Fanatical Persons when they encrease in Power and Numbers become cruel Jude 11. Wo unto them for they have gone in the way of Cain The Donatists are of detestable and accursed memory because of their insolent Cruelties Hos. 5.5 The Revolters are profound to make Slaughter Men that have cast off the holy Faith after some Profession the Lord keep us from their tender Mercies The Arrians grew bloody Want of Truth is usually made up by a supply of Rage Lees and Dregs are usually very tart and sowre 6. Observe When Religion hath received Wounds in the House of her Friends and occasion is given to the World by Scandals to think evil of the Ways of God God taketh his Scourge in his hand and the Devil hath an Advantage he stirreth the Malignant World against the Children of God As a Sect of Monsters the Gnosticks by their impure and libidinous Courses made Christianity odious and then the Heathens rose up against them as Pests of Mankind Satan is a Liar but never his Lies carry more pretence 7. Observe When there is a decay of the Power of Godliness and Formality and Contempt of the Word take place which are the usual Effects of Prosperity As soon as we come out of Miseries we run into Disorders therefore God is wont to return us into our old Chains and Captivity that we may wanton it no more Hos. 5. ult I will go and return to my Place till they acknowledg their Offence and seek my Face In their Affliction they will seek me early I will try them by Adversity I will try what my Rod will do to better my People As also to discover Hypocrites When
any man among you seem to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may be wise he cometh to himself again and when sensible of his filthiness and loathsomness it is a sign he hath some love and liking to the pure and holy ways of God as there is more light and love infused into the heart so do men more loath themselves for their filthiness Ezek. 36.31 Then shall ye remember your own evil ways and doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and abominations To be truly and really ashamed of sin is the effect of saving Grace Ezra 9.6 I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God There are two sorts of Shame the shame of a guilty stormy Conscience and the shame of a tender Conscience there is a confounding shame and a penitential shame the one breedeth trouble of Spirit and is the fruit of Sin the other an holy Self-loathing and is the fruit of Grace the first may be in carnal men the other is only in Gods Children The differences between these two sorts of shame may be these 1. The Penitential Shame continueth and increaseth under the greatest assurance of Forgiveness and dieth not when we think we are out of danger the other is presently after the commission of sin and while the guilt remaineth As David grew shy of God Psal. 32. after he got his discharge and his sins were pardoned Ezek. 16.63 That thou mayest remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified towards thee for all that thou h●st done saith the Lord God There is a dislike of sin when they are upon the surest Terms with God 2. The first sort of Shame considereth Sin as it damneth or destroyeth not as it defileth but the second as it is an act of Filthiness and Folly of Folly as David Psal. 73.22 So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a beast before thee of Filthiness Ezra 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God for our iniquities have increased over our head and our trespass is grown up unto the heavens They loath sin as sin because they love Holiness as Holiness Psal. 119.140 Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it Conscience keepeth its own Court medleth not but for moral evils is ashamed not of calamities and infelicities but crimes or sins which are hateful to God and therefore to the new Creature for it hateth and loveth on Gods grounds and reasons 3. The first sort of Shame is accompanied with slavish fear shunneth the presence of God as Adam did Gen. 3.10 I heard thy voice in the garden and I was afraid because I was naked and I hid my self or David Psal. 32.3 4. When I kept silence my bones waxed old c. The other is accompanied with Love and causeth the Godly to come into Gods presence but with self-loathing and reverence Prov. 30.2 Surely I am more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man Luke 18.13 The Publican standing afar off would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smote on his breast saying God be merciful to me a sinner The one causeth us to hate God the other to loath our selves for our unkindness to him and unworthy dealing with him The one is our torment the other our cure 4. The trouble and shame of Hypocrites is because of the World the shame of the Godly is because of God Saul was not ashamed of his sin but ashamed that Samuel should reprove him before the people 1 Sam. 15.30 So the thief is ashamed when he is found Jer. 2.26 But a Child of God is ashamed before God and of sins which the world cannot see Psal. 69.5 6. O God thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee Let not them that wait on thee O Lord God of hosts be ashamed for my sake let not those that seek thee be confounded for my sake O God of Israel As if he had said Sure I have just cause to be ashamed c. 5. The effect sheweth a difference the true shame quickeneth the Soul to more resolution vigilance earnest striving against sin so that our Life Trade and principal Business in the World is to avoid it Psal. 119.6 Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy commandments But in the other it prevaileth no further than that they may avoid the present trouble and get a little ease The Reasons and Causes of this Shame 1. A new and heavenly Light to see those things which others see not and which themselves saw not before Jer. 31.19 Surely after that I was turned I repented and after I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the commandment once but when the commandment came sin revived and I died They see more of sin and more evil in sin than ever they saw before as light discovers what lay hid before in the dark 2. A lively sense and taste of Gods Mercy and Goodness of his forbearing Mercy that he did not strike assoon as the offence was committed Rom. 2.4 The goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Redeeming Mercy by Christ 1 Joh. 3.5 Ye know that he was manifested to take away our sins Covenanting Mercy or the offers of Pardon and Life in the new Covenant Acts 17.30 The time of this ignorance God winked at but now he commandeth all men every where to repent His healing Mercy Tit. 3.5 According to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost To offend so good a God or sin against the Lord of Love and Mercy is a great crime 3. The new Nature which is contrary to Sin Psal. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evil there is Odium offensionis odium inimicitiae a hatred of offence and a hatred of enmity 4. Their seriousness before the deluded Soul is so taken up with fleshly Pleasures and deluding Objects that they had no time nor room to consider of their ways what with business and sensual delights and the crowd of worldly cares and the noise of foolish sports and sensual passions their hearts were diverted from observing things of the greatest and everlasting consequence they did in effect forget they had Souls to save or lose or a God to serve or a Glory to look after but now they remember and loath themselves Vse 1. To shew how much they differ from the People of God that wallow in all manner of filthiness and know no shame Impudency is a great note of Obstinacy and Impenitency Zeph. 3.5 The unjust knoweth no shame By long custom in sinning they lose the sense of the filthiness and odiousness of it and
A Second Volume OF SERMONS PREACHED by the Late REVEREND and LEARNED Thomas Manton D. D. In Two PARTS The FIRST Containing XXVII SERMONS ON The Twenty Fifth CHAPTER of St. MATTHEW XLV ON The Seventeenth CHAPTER of St. IOHN AND XXIV ON The Sixth CHAPTER of the Epistle to the ROMANS PART II. Containing XLV SERMONS ON The Eighth Chapter of the Epistle to the ROMANS AND XL. ON The Fifth Chapter of the Second Epistle to the CORINTHIANS WITH ALPHABETICAL TABLES To each Chapter of the PRINCIPAL MATTERS therein Contained LONDON Printed by J. Astwood for Jonathan Robinson at the Golden Lion in St. Paul's Church-yard MDC.LXXXIV TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE WILLIAM Earl of Bedford BARON of THORNAVGH AND KNIGHT of the Most Noble Order of the GARTER My LORD IF the Soveraign Disposer of all things had continued the Life of the Author of the following SERMONS he had express'd his Thankfulness for your Real and Noble Favours by the Dedication of the best Fruits of his Studies to your Lordship But since it hath pleased God to remove him from the Church on Earth to the Church in Heaven I am desired by his most near surviving Relation to comply with his Intention by Inscribing your highly Honourable Name in the Frontispiece of this Work Your Lordships Esteem of the Author and most free Kindness plac'd him in an Eminent Station and how faithfully he discharged his Publick Ministry for those great and most worthy Ends the Glory of God and the Salvation of Souls as there is a full Testimony given by many sincere and understanding Persons of all Ranks that were the happy Partakers of it so it is evident to others by the several Volumes of most useful SERMONS Printed since his Decease These had been more Exact and worthy of your Lordships perusal if they had been publisht by himself But such as they are I doubt not but they will be very Acceptable for the heavenly Matter contained in them I shall not Record here the many excellent Vertues that are Conspicuous in your Lordship and truely adorn your Honour but I cannot forbear to mention the Foundation of them Sincere and Solid Piety so clearly discovered in a most Christian Deportment under your heavy Afflictions Surely that Reverence and meek Submission to the high and Holy Providence of God that humble Trust in his Mercy which so admirably appeared in your deep Distress was from the Divine Spirit whose glorious Attribute is The Comforter I shall Earnestly pray That God who turneth the shadow of Death into the Morning will be pleased alwayes to Support you with his Reviving Presence that he will guide you by his Counsel through this Afflicting World and bring you to his Glory I am My LORD Your Lordships very Humble and Obedient Servant WILLIAM BATES To the READER Christian Reader OVR blessed Lord calling the Multitude to some account of their so free and frequent motions in going to hear the first Gospel Preacher John the Baptist doth it in these terms Matth. 11.7 8. What went you out into the Wilderness to see A Reed shaken with the wind But what went ye out for to see A man cloathed in soft Rayment They that wear soft Cloathing are in Kings houses But what went ye out for to see A Prophet yea I say unto you and more than a Prophet V. 11. Verily I say unto you that amongst them that are born of Women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist notwithstanding he that is least in the Kingdom of God is greater than he Teaching us several things by that speech relating to the Religious action of hearing the Word and to a true Gospel Minister With reference to the former 1. That he that goeth out to hear ought in the first place to propound to himself a due End 2. That men may propose to themselves in such motions very false and undue Ends such as going to see Reeds shaken with the wind men cloathed with soft Rayment c. 3. That the true End men should propose to themselves should be not to hear a Philosopher or an Orator but a Prophet which term signifieth a Person revealing the Will of God for the signification of that term is not to be restrained to one onely from God revealing things to come but publishing the Divine Will whether relating to future things or things before revealed which is evident not only from the application of it to the Baptist but to any that will consider that Predictions of future Contingencies was the least part of any of the ancient Prophets work This is that true and more special End which every good man ought to propound to himself when he goeth to hear as a Religious action whose Object is not a meer sound which is the Object of hearing considered as a natural Act but of the joyful Sound Nor can there lye any Obligation upon any religiously to hear any thing but the will of God which a Discourse doth not cease to be by the addition of mans words for the Explanation or Application of any part of the divine Will by such as God hath betrusted with that Employment more than an Embassadors message ceaseth to be his Masters will because delivered in his own words thô to the Sense of his Instructions Which thing well digested would not only teach Ministers what and how to preach but the People also what and how to hear according to the direction of their Lord. If our End in hearing were to tickle our Ears with a Sound our Reason would guide us to hear such whose Language is as the voice of one that hath a Lovely Song and can play well on an Instrument If our end were to promove our selves in Critical Learning or improve our Reason the same Reason would guide us to choose to hear the best Philosophizers or Grammarians such as best understood the Niceties of words and varietyes of Syntax But if our end be to hear a Prophet one that should reveal Gods mind unto us and to make it more intelligible that by it we may be more improved in Knowledge Faith Love Obedience and other Habits fitting us for the Kingdom of God and Eternal Salvation the same reason will teach us to hear the most substantial scriptural and practical Sermons that we can as being most accommodate to the true end of our action to which every wise man proportioneth mediate actions And indeed all other Discourses are abusively called Preaching and Athens were a more proper place for them than a Preachers Pulpit God hath seemed to have reserved it for a great Blessing to the last age of the World that for ought appears to us from any Books it hath been more fertile of such Preaching than any since that of the Apostles The ancient Church had Persons that did famously in their Generations such were Chrysostom in the Greek and Augustine in the Latine Church but besides that they were but very few whose reads the one and the
evil than of good when it is serious 'T is true wicked men cry out God is merciful and that is generally the cause of their Laziness and sleightness in Religion but it is when they do not mind what they say these are but sugared words in their Tongues when they are serious they have other thoughts Bondage is more natural than Liberty Fear than Hope because of the Covenant we are under which is a Covenant of works a Ministry of Death and Condemnation and so begetteth fear and representeth God as terrible yea 't is found in those that are more serious and have some beginnings of a good work upon their Hearts they are too apt to entertain ill thoughts of God and looking upon him in the glass of their guilty fears represent him as harsh and inexorable All their terrours and troubles are raised by false Apprehensions of God and therefore the course of their Obedience groweth the more uncomfortable This is a truth that the Law and Grace contendeth for the mastery in every Heart that entertains thoughts of Religion not only Corruption and Grace but the Law and Grace And as their Law-notions prevail so their slavish fear increaseth but as the Gospel Apprehensions prevail so their Love of God increaseth and their comfortableness in Religion Therefore still the Caution is bound upon us to take heed what Notions we have of God and that we have not any diminishing extenuating thoughts of his goodness and mercifulness that we do not look upon him as one that lyeth upon the catch to spy out Advantages against us for that thought will mightily weaken our hands in the Lords work Do not think of him as one that delights in the Creatures misery No rather in shewing Mercy and Goodness and as ready to give out Grace to the humble that lye at his Feet however he dealeth with the stubborn and obstinate Refusers of his Grace And therefore if I may digress into Application while I am yet in some doctrinal Considerations I would advise First That to preserve the Sense of Religion in the general men would consider how much God standeth upon the Credit of his Goodness and that he giveth them no cause of discouragement as from him Mich. 6.3 O my People what have I done unto you wherein have I wearied you That his Commands are not grievous Mat. 11.29 1 John 3.5 That the Tryals sent by him are not above measure 1 Cor. 10.13 nor his Punishments above deservings Neh. 11.9 13. That he is not hard to be pleased nor inexorable upon our infirmities Mal. 3.17 These things should be constantly in our minds for the Vindication and Justification of God from our natural Jealousies and evil Surmises that we have of his Conduct and Government Secondly I would advise poor trembling Souls that are alarmed by their own fears which represent God as an Enemy and standing at a distance from them that they would study the Name of God For surely things are known by their Names and poor disconsolate Souls are bidden Isa. 50.10 To trust in the Name of the Lord c. Now what is the Name of God Even that which he proclaimed Exod. 34.5 6 7. I am the Lord God merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression and sin Therefore take all his Name and meditate upon it Satan laboureth to represent God by halfs only as a consuming Fire as cloathed with Justice and Vengeance Oh no! 't is true he will not suffer his Mercy to be abused by contemptuous Sinners he will not clear the guilty though he waiteth long on them before he destroyeth them but the main of his Name is his Mercy and Goodness Take it as God proclaimeth it and see if you have any reason to have hard thoughts of God you will find that though he be an high and holy one yet he is willing to be treated with That he is great but yet good ready to receive returning Sinners if thou hast sin and misery Christ hath Compassion and Pity he is the Father of Mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 Misericors est cui alterius miseria cordi est Mercy hath its name from Misery and is no other thing than laying anothers misery to heart not to despise it nor to add to it but to help it And therefore if thou be miserable and knowest it indeed his Nature giveth a strong inclination to succour the miserable I but saith the convinced Soul there is nothing in me to be regarded the Lord telleth I am gracious and Grace doth all freely and from a self-inclination it giveth all the Qualifications he requireth but I have been long a presumptuous Sinner Why God telleth you his Name is long-suffering He that gave not the Angels one hours space for Repentance hath long delayed the Execution of our Sentence and calleth us to himself that we may escape the Condemnation of Angels But I am exceeding perverse and wicked The Lord telleth you He is abundant in Goodness I am full of fears and doubtings Still he is abundant in goodness and Truth I have abused much Mercy and can Mercy pity me The Lord telleth you He keepeth Mercy for thousands and can forgive Iniquity Transgression and Sin His Treasure of Mercy is not soon spent and exhausted no sin can exclude a willing Soul Mercy will pardon thy abuse of Mercy if thou repentest of it Thirdly To the People of God who having a clearer sense of their Duty and a larger Heart towards God than others have and so are the more troubled for the Poverty of their Graces and weakness and Imperfection of their Services than others are which may breed Bondage and uncomfortableness I would have them consider that Humility and Meekness doth still become them but not Dejection and Despondency of mind that they should ever be complaining fearful and disconsolate We have not an hard Master he hath made Joy a part of our work Phil. 4.4 He gave his Son Luk. 1.74 75. That being delivered from our Enemies we might serve him without fear in Holiness and Righteousness We should consider that he is ready to bear with failings where there is an upright heart That God accepteth what we can through Grace well and comfortably perform 'T is a general Maxim of the Gospel though spoken upon a particular occasion 2 Cor. 8.12 That if there be a willing mind it is accepted according to what a man hath not according to that he hath not That the God whom they serve in the Spirit can put a finger on the scar. Ye have heard of the Patience of Job Jam. 5.11 Ay and we have heard of his Impatience too his cursing the day of his Birth and his bold Expostulations with God But this is pass'd over in silence and his Patience commended Nothing should be a discouragement from serving chearfully so good and Gracious a God who is so ready to accept and assist us 1 Pet.
belongeth to them that are of full Age who by reason of use have their Senses exercised to discern both Good and Evil. 2. That Fundamentals in the Scripture are clear and certain God hath not left us in the dark but pointed out a clear way to Heaven of Faith and good Works Ephes. 2.10 We are his Workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good Works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them It is a disparagement to the Word to make it an uncertain Rule The Way to Heaven is beaten and we may observe the Track and Foot-prints of the Flock It is a good Observation of Chrysostom That the Saints do not complain of the darkness of the Scripture but of their own Hearts Open thou mine Eyes not make a new Law 3. These necessary Doctrines must be entertained without doubt and hesitancy It is dangerous when Foundation-stones lie loose We are pressed to stand fast in the Faith 1 Cor. 16.13 and to hold the Profession of it without wavering Heb. 16.23 Not to enquire after the Gods of the Nations Deut. 12.30 and Gal. 1.8 Though an Angel from Heaven should preach any other Doctrine to you than that which ye have heard let him be accursed The notion of new Light chiefly aimeth at undermining the old Doctrine of the Scriptures For the main of Religion a Man should be setled above doubt and contradiction Till we have certainty there cannot be Grace the Soul is not brought under the Power of Truth for things that are controversial have no efficacy and force The great hindrance of Saving-knowledg is that natural Atheism and those habituated Doubts which are found in the Heart 4. We must be zealous for lesser Truths when we have received them upon certain Grounds Every piece and parcel of Truth is precious a little Leaven of Error is dangerous Gal. 5.9 A little Leaven leaveneth the whole Lump Error fretteth like a Gangrene and grows still higher and higher Men think it is enough to be careful of Fundamentals all other Knowledg is but Scientia Oblectans for delight not safety Oh it is dangerous to stain the Understanding though you do not wound it There are Maculae and Vulnera Intellectûs It is dangerous to be wanton in Opinions that seem to be of a smaller concernment Men that play with Truth leave themselves open to more dangerous Errors Some say Fundamentals are few believe them and live well and you are saved This is as if a Man in building should be only careful to lay a good Foundation no matter for Roof Windows or Walls If a Man should untile your House and tell you the Foundation the main Butteresses are safe you would not be pleased Why should we be more careless in Spiritual Things 5. Take up no Practices nor Principles but upon full conviction This imposeth a necessity of often change or at least of frequent doubting Men do not search but act out of blind Obedience and then they are liable to seduction 1 Thess. 5.21 Prove all things hold fast that which is good It is a pertinacy not a constancy when I have no clear warrant A Christian should be able to give an answer to every Man that asketh him a reason of the Hope that is in him with meekness and fear 1 Pet. 3.15 otherwise we shall never be able to secure our Practices and Opinions against the Objections in our own Hearts and answer the Sophister in our own Bosoms 2. Observe That no Knowledg is sufficient to Life Eternal but the Knowledg of God and Christ. I am to prove 1. No other Knowledg is sufficient 2. How far this is enough for such an End and Purpose The Scripture asserts both for the words are exclusive and assertive there is no other Knowledg and this is sufficient 1. No other Knowledg is sufficient to Life Eternal I shall prove it by two Arguments 1. Out of Christ we cannot know God The Gentiles had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something that was known of God Rom. 1.19 20. which served to leave them without excuse but not to save their Souls The Apostle instanceth in such Attributes as are obvious but more terrible than comfortable as Eternity Power c. They had some loose thoughts of his Godhead and Power but no distinct view of his Essence that is reserved for the Scriptures The Scriptures are the Picture of Christ and Christ is the Image of the Father 2 Cor. 4.4 Lest the Light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the Image of God should shine upon them God never made out himself to the World in that latitude and greatness as he hath done to the World in Christ. In Christ's Person and Kingdom the Majesty of God is known in the Divine Power of his Operations the strength of God in the excellency of his Benefits the Love of God The wisest Heathens that had no other Glass than the Book of the Creatures whereby to dress up their Apprehensions could only see a first Cause a first Mover a Being of Beings some great Lord and Governor of the Order of the World whom they mightily transformed and misfigured in their Thoughts they knew nothing distinctly of Creation and Providence of the Nature of Worship which is necessary for whosoever is saved must not only know God's Essence but his Will for otherwise we shall but grope as the Heathens did Acts 17.27 That they should seek the Lord if haply they should feel after him and find him We cannot seek him to satisfaction 2. Without Christ no enjoying of God It must be such a Knowledg as bringeth God and the Soul together Now between us and him there is a great Gulph all gracious Commerce is broken off between God and the fallen Creature John 14.6 No Man cometh unto the Father but by me No free Trade unto Heaven but by Jacob's Ladder John 1.51 Hereafter you shall see Heaven open and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man There is no Access but by Christ and so no Salvation but by him Acts 4.12 Neither is there Salvation in any other for there is none other Name under Heaven given among Men whereby we must be saved In the fallen State of Man there is need of a Mediator in Innocency we might immediatly converse with God God loved his own Image What could a just and holy Man fear from a just and holy God But now that of God's Creatures we are made his Prisoners we can expect nothing of Mercy because he is just Guilty Nature presageth nothing but Evil. Rom. 1.32 Who knowing the Judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death The great Question of the World is Wherewith shall I appease him to give his Justice content and satisfaction Mich. 6.8 In all the Inventions of Men they could never find out a sufficient Ransom to expiate Sin to reconcile God to sanctify humane Nature that we might have commerce with Heaven 2.
have finished the work that thou gavest me to do The greatest work that ever could be done if you respect the importance of it The creating of a thousand Worlds would not bring in such a Revenue to Heaven as this one work of Redemption Or the difficulty of it the Son of God to be made Flesh Sin a Curse States most abhorrent from the Felicity of the Divine Nature Or his willingness to undertake it Lo I come to do thy Will He longed to be at it tho he had infinite complacency in the Bosom of the Father yet as soon as God had made an habitable World Prov. 8.30 31. There I was by him as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight rejoicing always before him Rejoicing in the habitable part of his Earth and my delights were with the Sons of Men. He longed for that time when he might leave the company of Angels and dwell among us and feasted himself with the thoughts of his own Grace And with so much faithfulness I not only finished the Work but glorified thee all he did was for his Father's Glory This could Christ plead as the ground of his Requests he hath paid for all that he asketh not only made satisfaction for Sin but given a price for Glory He cannot out-ask his own Merit his Blood speaketh if Christ should hold his peace Heb. 12.24 And to the Blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel ' s. As clamorous as Abel's Blood for Vengeance It doth not speak against us tho we have made him to serve with our Iniquities but speaks the more for us to pacify his Wrath to pardon us and to do us good 3. The Sublimity of his Office It is an Authoritative Act. God hath always refused such Mediation as is not authorized by himself When Moses interposed for the Children of Israel said God Exod. 32.10 Let me alone that my Wrath may wax bot against them Because he would reserve this honour for him who alone hath this Office under the Broad Seal of Heaven So it is very notable that Christ refused all Mediation to him in the days of his Flesh. As of his Apostles Mat. 15.23 His Disciples came and besought him saying Send her away for she crieth after us c. But Christ would shew that he was sollicitous enough for the welfare of Sinners he needed no Intercessors So his own Mother when she interposed for the Honour of the Wedding John 2.4 Woman saith he What have I to do with thee As if he had said Cannot I do it without your intermedling In these Answers Christ would shew that he would have Sinners come of themselves without any mediation of their Fellow-Creatures they being no authorized Mediators God alloweth no other Mediator of Redemption but Christ and Christ no other Mediator of Intercession but himself It is Sacriledg in the Papists to set up others none is worthy to appear before God but Christ and how unworthy soever we are Christ will have us to come to himself God hath set him up for this purpose and no Copartners are allowed As it was said to Vzziah 2 Chron. 26.18 It pertaineth not to thee to burn Incense but to the Priests the Sons of Aaron that are consecrated to burn Incense Incense could be offered by no other but a Priest and our Prayers by none but by Christ. Heb. 7.28 The Law maketh Men Priests which have Infirmity but the Word of the Oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is consecrated for ever-more Christ is consecrated by an Oath to abide ever-more in the Office which Oath is renewed and confirmed upon his return to Heaven Psal. 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedeck compared with Vers. 1. God will never repent of dispensing Grace in and through him to Sinners as long as Christ's Consecration lasteth none must meddle with his Office 4. The Articles of the Covenant or the Promise of being heard Therefore Christ speaketh with such Confidence John 11.42 I know that thou hearest me always and Psal. 2.8 Ask of me and I will give thee the Heathen for thine Inheritance c. There was a Covenant drawn up between God and Christ the Lord promised him as the Fruit of his Labours and Sufferings that he should obtain all manner of Grace for his People All these things shew us the Advantages of having such a Mediator and Intercessor Secondly The Nature of Christ's Intercession It is a part of his Priestly Office of which there were two Acts Oblation and Intercession Oblation was made once on the Altar of the Cross and Intercession is the continuation of his Sacrifice or the presenting it in Heaven It must be explained by Analogy to the Priests of the Law The Sacrifice was slain without the Camp and then the Priests were to enter with the Blood within the Vail into the Holy of Holies with sweet Incense and so to cause a Cloud to arise over the Mercy Seat But Christ being come an High Priest of good things to come by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is to say not of this Building Neither by the Blood of Goats and Calves but by his own Blood he entred in once into the Holy Place having obtained eternal Redemption for us Heb. 9.11 12. Jesus Christ having offered up himself upon the Cross where he was both Priest and Sacrifice he is gone within the Vail Not into the Holy Places made with Hands which are the Figures of the True but into Heaven it self now to appear before the Presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 It is not a vocal but a real Intercession Christ is gone into Heaven and there presents his Person both in our Nature and his own together with his Merits lifting up Desires which are as a Cloud of Incense before the Mercy-Seat for our Comfort and Salvation Rev. 8.3 And another Angel came and stood at the Altar having a Golden Censer and there was given unto him much Incense that he should offer it with the Prayers of all Saints upon the Golden Altar which was before the Throne The High Priest entred not for himself but for the People having the Names of the Twelve Tribes upon his Breast and Shoulders So Christ is entred on the behalf of us all bearing the particular Memorial of every Saint graven upon his Heart The High Priest staid within the Sanctuary for a short time and so came out to bless the People Christ entred within the Vail at his Ascension and we must wait till his coming out to bless us which will be at the Day of Judgment All this while he hath his Residence in Heaven and then he will open to us and give us entrance So that Christ's Intercession is A constant representation of his Merit for the pardon of our Sins and for our Acceptance together with strong Desires
that they may grow together in one Body whereof I am the Head or one Temple It is sometimes set out by One Mystical Body sometimes by One Spiritual Temple One Body Col. 2.19 And not holding the Head from which all the Body by Joints and Bands having Nourishment ministred and knit together increaseth with the Increase of God Rom. 12.5 We being many are One Body in Christ and every one Members one of another Ephes. 1.22 23. And gave him to be the Head over all things to the Church which is his Body And One Temple Ephes. 2.20 21 22. And are built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief Corner-Stone in whom all the Building fitly framed together groweth unto an Holy Temple in the Lord In whom you also are builded together for an Habitation of God through the Spirit One as thou in me and I in thee Christ doth not say that they may be One in another that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not agree to them but in the Mystery of the Trinity it denotes the Union between the Divine Persons One in Vs that is by the Communication and Inhabitation of that Spirit which proceedeth from us Our Union is from God in God and to God from the Spirit with God through Christ. Let me now enquire I. What it is II. Why it is so valued by Christ I. What it is There is an Union with Christ the Head and between the Members one with another I shall speak of both tho but little of the latter because I handled it Vers. 11. 1. There is a Union with Christ the Head That ye may conceive of it take these Propositions 1. The whole Trinity is concerned in this Union By the Communion of the Spirit we are mystically united to Christ and by Christ to God The Father is as it were the Root Christ the Trunk the Spirit the Sap we the Branches and our Works the Fruits John 15. This is the great Mystery delivered in the Scriptures Christ doth not only dwell in us by Faith Ephes. 3.17 But God dwelleth in us and we in God 1 John 4.16 and the Spirit dwelleth in us Rom. 8.11 We are consecrated Temples wherein the whole Trinity take up their Residence We are Children of God Members of Christ Pupils to the Holy Ghost Gods Family Christ's Body and the Spirit 's Charge We are united to the Father as the Fountain of Grace and Mercy to the Son as the Pipe and Conveyance and the Spirit accomplisheth and effecteth all The Father sendeth the Son to merit this Grace and the Son sendeth the Spirit to accomplish it therefore we are said by one Spirit to be baptized into the same Body 2. Tho all the Persons be concerned in it yet the Honour is chiefly devolved upon Christ the Second Person Christ as God-Man is Head of the Church upon a double Ground because of his two Natures and the Union of these in the same Person It was needful that our Head should be Man of the same Nature with our selves Heb. 2.11 He that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are of One the same Stock It were monstrous to have an Head and Members of a different Nature as in Nebuchadnezzar's Image the Substance of the Head and Body differed the Head was of fine God the Arms of Silver the Belly and Thighs of Brass the Legs of Iron part of the Feet of Clay Here was a monstrous Body indeed made up of so many Metals differing in Nature and Kind But Christ took our Nature that he might be a suitable Head and so have a right to redeem us and be in a Capacity to give himself for the Body and sympathize with us All these are Fruits of the Son 's being of the same Nature And again God he needed to be to pour out the Spirit and to have Grace sufficient for all his Members Meer Man was not enough to be Head of the Church for the Head must be more excellent than the Body it is above the Body the Seat of the Senses it guideth the whole Body it is the Shop of the Thoughts and Musings And so Christ the Head must have a preheminence in him the fulness of the Godhead dwelt bodily that we might be compleat in him Col. 2.8 9. And it pleased the Father that in him should all Fulness dwell Col. 1.19 The Grace of God is most eminent in him as Life is most eminent in the Head Now there must be an Union of these two Natures in the same Person If Christ had not been God and Man in the same Person God and we had never been united and brought together he is Emanuel God with Vs Mat. 1.23 God is in Christ and the Believer is in Christ we have a share in his Person and so hath God he descendeth and cometh down to us in the Person of the Mediator and by the Man Christ Jesus we ascend and clime up to God And so you see the Reason why the Honour of Head of the Church is devolved upon Christ. 3. Whole Christ is united to a whole Believer Whole Christ is united to us God-Man and whole Man is united to Christ Body and Soul Whole Christ is united to us the Godhead is the Fountain and the Humane Nature is the Pipe and Conveyance Grace cometh from him as God and through him as Man John 6.56 57. He that eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood dwelleth in me and I in him As the living Father hath sent me and I live by the Father so he that eateth me even he shall live by me God is a Sealed Fountain his Humanity is the Pipe so that his Flesh is the Food of the Soul Christ came from Heaven on purpose and sanctified our Flesh that there might be one in our Nature to do us good that Righteousness and Life might pass from him as Sin and Death from Adam but our Faith first pitcheth upon the Manhood of Christ as they went into the holy Place by the Vail And then a whole Christian is united to Christ Body and Soul The Soul is united unto him because it receiveth Influences of Grace and the Body also is taken in Therefore the Apostle disputeth against Fornication because the Body is a Member of Christ 1 Cor. 6.15 Shall I then take the Members of Christ and make them the Members of an Harlot God forbid It is a kind of dismembring and plucking a Limb from Christ you defile Christ's Body the Disgrace redounds to him And hereupon elsewhere doth the Apostle prove the Resurrection by virtue of our Union with Christ Rom. 8.10 11. If Christ be in you the Body is dead because of Sin but the Spirit is Life because of Righteousness But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the Dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the Dead shall also quicken your mortal Bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you You may die but
were with the Sons of Men But he is in us in a Mystical and gracious Way John 17.26 That the Love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them He is in us as the Soul is in the Body to give us Life Sense Vigor and Operation Vse 1. To press us to labour after an Interest in this Privilege that Christ may be in us It is the saddest mark if Christ be not in us 1 Cor. 13.5 Know ye not that Christ is in you except ye be Reprobates Reprobates disallowed of God Let me press it 1. If Christ be not in us the Devil is Ephes. 2.2 Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this World according to the Prince of the Power of the Air the Spirit that now worketh in the Children of Disobedience Man's Heart is not a Waste it is occupied by Christ or Satan The Children of Disobedience are acted by the Devil and governed by the Devil Those that are cast out of the Church which is a Figure of cutting off from Communion with Christ were given up to Satan to shew that he reigneth there where Christ doth not take possession the Devil entreth into them and sendeth them headlong to their own destruction 2. Where Christ is there all the Trinity are John 14.23 We will come unto him and make our abode with him there is Father Son and Spirit Such an one is a consecrated Temple wherein God taketh up his Residence They do not only come as Guests to tarry with us for a Night as the Angels came to Abraham Gen. 18.2 Or as Friends come to visit and away and so leave more Sorrow on their departure than Joy in their Presence but they will abide with us for ever Heaven is where God is this Heaven we have upon Earth that all the Persons take up their abode in our Hearts God knocketh at the Door of a Wicked Man's Heart but doth not enter much less have his Abode and Residence there Here is the Father as a Fountain of Grace Christ as Mediator and the Spirit as Christ's Deputy to work all in us This is his second Heaven one above the Clouds and another in our Hearts Oh what a condescension is it that God should not only pardon us and admit us into his Presence hereafter be familiar with us when we have put on our Robes of Glory but dwell in us here When Christ was about to go to Heaven and his Disciples were troubled at it then he leaveth us this Promise We cannot go to God but God will come to us not only give us a Visit but take up his Abode in us 3. Where-ever the Trinity are there is a Blessing left behind The presence of Earthly Princes is costly and burdensome because of their Train and the Charges of Entertainment But the Trinity are Blessed Guests they never come but bring their Welcome with them and a Blessing in their Hands The Father Son and Holy Ghost do not come empty-handed Gen. 18. The Son of God came to Abraham with two Angels but he came not without a Gift a Promise of a Child tho their Bodies were dry and dead Wheresoever Christ came in the days of his Flesh he left some Mercy behind While in the Womb of the Virgin he came into the House of Zacharias and Zacharias and Elizabeth his Wife were both filled with the Holy Ghost Luke 1.41 He came into Peter's House and brought deliverance for Peter's Wive's Mother from a Feaver Mat. 8.15 He came to Capernaum and brought with him to the Man sick of the Palsie Health for his Body and a Pardon for his Soul Mat. 9.2 He came to the House of Jairus and raised his Daughter Vers. 23. He came to the House of Zacheus and brought Salvation with him Luke 19.9 Every where where-ever he went trace him you will find he left a Blessing behind him Laban thrived better for Jacob the House of Obed-Edom for the Ark. In these short visits Christ left a Blessing but in a Gracious Soul they have a perpetual Residence it is fit these Blessed Guests should have good Entertainment 4. It is a Pledg that we shall have more Christ in us the Hope of Glory Col. 2.29 He dwelleth in us to fit us for Heaven It is Heaven begun it makes our Exile a Paradise It is still growing till it cometh to a compleat Presence in Heaven Where he is once in Truth there he is for ever Temples built may stand forsaken but God never forsaketh his Spiritual Temples Vse 2. Direction What must we do that Christ may be in us 1. Make way for him Empty the Heart of all Self-confidence When the Heart is full of Self there is no room for Christ. Phil. 3.8 9. Yea doubtless I count all things but loss for the Excellency of the Knowledg of Christ Jesus my Lord for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and do count them but Dung that I may win Christ and be found in him not having mine own Righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the Righteousness which is of God by Faith First There must be a cutting off from the wild Olive-Tree by a sound Conviction we must know what Strangers we are to the Life of God Was there a Time when we were convinced of this Ephes. 4.18 Having the Vnderstanding darkned being alienated from the Life of God through the Ignorance that is in them because of the blindness of their Heart How can a Man that was never convinced of the sadness of his Estate say Not I but Christ 2. Wait for him in the Ordinances Where should a Man meet with Christ but in his Ordinances in the Shepherds Tents All the Ordinances have an Aspect upon our Union with Christ either to begin or continue it God offereth him to us in the Word 1 Cor. 1.9 God is faithful by whom ye are called to the Fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. We are intreated to take him As long as they see nothing but Man in it it cometh to nothing but many times in hearing they see God in the Offer the Matter is of the Lord as Rebekah yielded out of an over-ruling Instinct So for the Religious use of the Seals We are baptized into Christ Gal. 3.27 It is the Pledg of our Admission into that Body whereof Christ is the Head God is aforehand with us we were engaged to make a profession of this Union before we had liberty to chuse our own way Let us not retract our Vows and make Baptism only a Memorial of our Hypocrisy to profess Union when there is no such Matter I profess to be planted into Christ by Baptism but I feel no such Matter O you should groan for this Then for the Supper of the Lord. 1 Cor. 10.16 The Cup of Blessing which we bless 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is it not the Communion of the Blood of Christ
are fully satisfied It is Fruition maketh us happy We can only speak of it in general Terms the filling up of the Soul with God and of the Glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 We are in God and God in us as Fire in Iron that is red hot it seemeth all on fire Thus can we prattle a little and darken Counsel with words Secondly Backward again Fruition maketh way for Delight We enjoy God to the full therefore we delight in him We are bidden to rejoice in our Pilgrimage Phil. 4.4 Rejoice in the Lord always and again I say Rejoice God hath made our Work a part of our Wages to train us up by degrees But now when we come to Heaven we enter into our Master's Joy It is our only Work in Heaven painful Affections have no more use And Joy maketh way for Love these mutual Endearments pass between God and us to increase Love We delight in God therefore we are never weary of him And Love maketh way for Likeness and Light for Likeness eadem velle nolle There is the most perfect Imitation and Resemblance of God because the most perfect Love And for Light there is Light in this Fire blunt Iron if it be made red hot pierceth deeper than a sharp Tool we have but one Object And Likeness maketh way for Knowledg Mat. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in Heart for they shall see God A dusky Glass doth not give a perfect Representation Ignorance is the Fruit of Sin Man never knew less than since he tasted of the Tree of Knowledg Holiness clarifies the Eye We shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 John 3.2 There is little proportion between God and Men and therefore we do not know him when we are conformed to God we are in a greater capacity to understand his Nature And then Light or Mental Sight maketh way for Ocular Sight that we may look upon Christ. It is a sweet Emploiment to see the Brightness of the Father's Glory in Christ's Face there is God best to be seen at the Rebound and by Reflection It is a delightful Spectacle Vse 1. To ravish your Hearts with the Contemplation of this Happiness O what an affective Sight is Christ's Glory 1. The Sight it self is a Privilege 2. That we shall be able to see it with Comfort 1. The Sight it self is a Privilege Abraham had a sight of his Incarnation when it was a thing long after to come and it filled him with Joy John 8.56 Your Father Abraham rejoiced to see my Day and he saw it and was glad Simeon saw him when he was a Child and then said Now it is enough Luke 2.29 30. Now Lord lettest thou thy Servant depart in peace according to thy Word For mine Eyes have seen thy Salvation Zacheus climbed up into a Tree to see him when he was grown up Luke 19.4 yet then he went up and down as the Carpenter's Son Many saw Christ in Person that had no benefit by him So to see him by Faith and Spiritual Illumination fills the Soul with Joy 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen we love in whom tho now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoice with Joy unspeakable and full of Glory To know Christ by hear-say is lovely and glorious but now what will it be to see Christ in the midst of Angels and Blessed Saints Face to Face he is another manner of Christ than ever we thought him to be It is ravishing to behold him in Ordinances Feasts are poor things to be spoken of to that but yet there is a Vail upon his Glory O that there should be such a glorious Spectacle provided for us It is God's own Blessedness to see himself and enjoy himself 2. That we are able to behold it and that with Comfort That we are able to behold it The World is a dark Place and we are weak Creatures our Eyes now are like the Eyes of an Owl before the Sun we cannot take in a full Representation of his Greatness nor bear the Lustre of his Majesty God is sometimes represented as dwelling in Light to show the Lustre of his Majesty 1 Tim. 6.16 Who only hath Immortality dwelling in the Light which no Man can approach unto And sometimes as dwelling in Darkness as noting the weakness of our Apprehensions Psal. 18.11 He made Darkness his secret Place his Pavillion round about him were dark Waters and thick Clouds of the Sky We are dark Creatures and can but guess all is Mystery and Riddle to us The Children of Israel cried out We cannot see God and live Deut. 5.25 Now therefore why should we die for this great Fire will consume us If we hear the Voice of the Lord our God any more then we shall die God is fain to dwell in the Heavens and fix his Throne there his Glory would drive us to our Wits end the very Happiness of Heaven would not be a Mercy upon Earth And then that we may behold it with Comfort God in Christ is not formidable Wicked Men shall see Christ but they shall see him as a Judg but saith Job with these Eyes shall I see my Redeemer Job 19.25 26 27. I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the Earth And tho after my Skin Worms destroy this Body yet in my Flesh shall I see God Whom mine Eyes shall behold and not another Every Time we look upon Christ we have the liveliest and sweetest sense of God's Love it bringeth to remembrance his Passion and Sufferings Wicked Men shall see him as a Judg to their Terror as Joseph's Brethren were ashamed to look on him they cannot hold up their guilty Heads But we come to behold our best and beloved Friend to see him that laid down his Life for us John 15.13 Greater Love than this hath no Man that a Man lay down his Life for his Friend To see such a Friend will be comfortable Vse 2. Strive to get an Interest in so great a Priviledge Who are those that shall have an Interest in it 1. They that are careful to serve Christ here John 12.26 If any Man serve me let him follow me and where I am there also shall my Servant be His Servants shall serve him and they shall see his Face c. Rev. 22.3 4. Those that have suffered with him and sighed with him that have owned him now an hidden Christ shall have the honour to behold him a glorious Christ they that incourage themselves with these Hopes One day I shall see Christ Psal. 27.13 I had fainted unless I had believed to see the Goodness of the Lord in the 〈◊〉 of the Living The true Land of the Living is Heaven the World is but the Valley of the Dead or the place of Mortality The Queen of Sheba took a long Journey to behold the Glory of Solomon which yet was but a temporal fading and earthly Glory
every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need so for all duties that we are called unto 1 Cor. 15.10 By the grace of God I am what I am and his grace which was bestowed upon me was not in vain but I laboured more abundantly than they all and yet not I but the grace of God which was in me and Heb. 13.21 Working in you that which is pleasing in his sight through Jesus Christ. Now you see what 't is to have Christ in us none but these are real Christians 1. Because We must first be partakers of Christ before we can be paratkers of any saving benefit purchased by him As members are united to the head before they receive sense and motion from it Christ giveth nothing of his purchase to any but to whom he giveth himself first 1 John 5.12 And to whom he giveth himself to them he giveth all things needful to their salvation 2. Where Christ once entreth there he taketh up his abode and lodging not to depart thence dwelling noteth his constant and familiar presence he doth not sojourn for a while but dwelleth as a man in his own house and castle There is a continued presence and influence whereby they are supported in their Chistianity He dwelleth in us and we in him and we know that he abideth in us by his spirit 1 John 3.24 and John 14.23 If a man love me he will keep my words and my father will love him and we will come unto him and take up our abode with him Not a visit and away but a constant residence John 15.5 He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit 3. Where Christ is he ruleth and reigneth for we receive him as our Lord and Saviour Col. 2.6 As ye received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk in him We received him that he may perform the office of a Mediator in our hearts and teach us and rule us and guide us by his spirit All others know him by hearsay but these know him by experience the testimony of Christ is confirmed in them Others talk of Christ but these feel him others have him in their ears and tongues but not in their hearts or if the heart be warm and heavenly for a fit it quickly cooleth and falleth to the earth again Then here doth our true happiness begin to find Christ within us this is that which giveth the Seal to Christ without us and all the Mysteries of Redemption by him for you have experienced the power and comfort of it in your own souls you find his image in your hearts and his spirit conforming you to what he commandeth in the word and have a suitableness to the Gospel in your souls you may look with an holy confidence for help to him in all your necessities when others look at him with strange and doubtful thoughts because nearness breedeth familiarity and the sense of his continual love and presence begets an holy confidence to come to him for mercy and grace to help in short when others have but the common offer you have a propriety and interest in Christ Christ without us is a perfect Saviour but not to you the appropriation is by union he came down from Heaven took our nature died for sinners ascended us into Heaven again to make Intercession at the Right Hand of the Father all this is without us Do not say only there is a Saviour in Heaven is there one in thy heart There is an Intercessor in Heaven is there one in thy heart Rom. 8.26 But the spirit its self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered He was born of the Virgin is he formed in thee Gal. 4.19 He died are you planted into the likeness of his death Rom. 6.5 He is risen from the dead do you know the power of his Resurrection Phil. 3.10 Are you raised with him Col. 3.1 He is ascended are you ascended with him Eph. 2.6 Christ without us established the merit but Christ within us assureth the Application Secondly I come now to the concession The body is dead because of sin Here observe the Emphasis of the expression the body is dead not only shall die or must die but is dead He expresseth himself thus for two reasons first because the sentence is past Gen. 2.17 and Heb. 7.29 It is appointed for all men once to die Therefore as we say of a condemned man he is a dead man by reason of the Sentence past upon him So by reason of this sentence our body is a mortal body liable to death sentenced doomed to death and must one day undergo it The Union between it and the Soul after a certain time shall be dissolved and our bodies corrupted The execution is begun mortalitity hath already seised upon our bodies by the many infirmities tending to and ending in the dissolution of nature We now bear about the marks of Sin in our bodies the harbingers of death are already come and have taken up their lodging aforehand The Apostle saith In deaths often how many deaths do we suffer before death cometh to relieve us by several diseases as Collicks Meagrims Catarrhs Gout Stone and the like all these prepare for it and therefore this body though glorious in its Structure as it is the workmanship of God is called a vile body as it is the subject of so many diseases yea and its self is continually dying Heb. 11.12 therefore sprang there even of one and him as good as dead We express it a man hath one foot in the grave 2. The reason is assigned Because of Sin death is the most ordinary thing in the world but its cause and end are little thought of this expression will give us occasion to speak of both its meritorious cause and its use and end both are implyed in the clause Because of Sin 1. It implyeth the meritorious cause Death is not a natural accident but a punishment we die not as the beasts die or as the Plants decay no the Scripture telleth us by what Gate it entered into the World namely that 't is an effect of the justice of God for mans Sin Rom. 5.12 By one man sin entred into the world and death by sin And 't is also by Covenant therefore called wages Rom. 6.23 Sin procured it and the law ratifies it I but doth it so come upon the faithful I Answer though their sins be forgiven yet God would leave this mark of his displeasure on all mankind that all Adams Children shall die for a warning to the World Well then sin carryes death in its bosome and to some this death is but a step to Hell or death to come 't is not so to the Godly yet in their instance God would teach the World the sure connexion between death and Sin whosoever hath been once a sinner must die 2. It s end and use The
and daughters saith the Lord Almighty Which is a great priviledg if we consider Three Things 1. His Relation to mankind in the general 2. His Relation to the ancient Church under the legal Covenant 3. The estate wherein his Grace found us when he was pleased to take us into his family 1. His Relation to mankind in general So he is the Father of all the world as he created them and Adam is called the Son of God Luke 3.18 He is a father to any who giveth them being and hath a right to govern them so is God to us he made us and is the sole cause of our being and not being and so hath a right in us to dispose of usat his own pleasure But the Relation that we have to God by Creation is distinct from the natural Being this is our new Being which we have from him as his redeemed ones our natural being flowed from his benignity and common bounty but our spiritual being from his special Grace and Love to us in Christ. By creation we are his children as he formed us in the womb and created the soul within us called therefore the father of spirits Heb. 12.9 in opposition to the fathers of our flesh but he is our father by Adoption as we are regenerated by the Holy Ghost John 1.12 13. To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God being born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Our new birth and spiritual being in Christ is the next ground of our Adoption and so we come into a nearer relation to him that we may be capable of receiving the fruits of his special love 't is the benefit of our Redemption applied by his sanctifying spirit to all them that shall be heirs of life By the common Relation God hath a title to our dearest love but we have no title to his highest benefits and therefore he is our Father in a more comfortable sense as we are his workmanship in Christ. 2. His relation to the ancient Church through the legal Covenant So God was a Father to them and they his children for Israel was called his first-born Exod. 4.22 in opposition to other Nations who were left to perish in their own ways And their descendants are called the children of the Kingdom Matth. 8.12 because they had the ordinances and means of grace but the Gospel-church is properly the church of the first-born Heb. 12.23 As they have a clearer knowledg of the priviledges belonging to Gods children and a larger participation and more comfortable use of them and so are freed from that rigour and servitude which belonged to the first administration of the covenant of Grace they have that which answereth the priviledg of primogeniture jus sacerdotis jus haereditatis the right of Priesthood as they are a royal Priesthood 1 Pet. 2.9 Made Kings and Priests unto God Rev. 1.5 Because they offer up spiritual Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 2.5 They are separated by the Election of God from the rest of the world and have an unction from his Holy Spirit 1 John 2.20 And so are qualified to offer up themselves Rom. 12.1 and Prayers and Praises and Alms unto God Heb. 13.15 16. The other Priviledg of the birth-right is jus hereditatis the first-born had a double portion not only of possessions but of Dignity and Honour above their brethren All Gods children are heirs and heirs of the Heavenly inheritance the multitude of co-heirs doth not lessen the inheritance nor make the Priviledg less glorious They are heirs of Salvation Heb. 1.14 3. The estate wherein his Grace found us when he was pleased to take us into his family We were by nature children of Wrath wretched children Eph. 2.3 that had deprived our selves of the inheritance wasted our Patrimony forfeited our right to the Promises but our inheritance is redeemed and the forfeiture taken off by Christ and we are brought back again into the family dignified with the priviledges of the first-born made Priests unto God and above all his other creatures do become his special Portion Jam. 1.18 Of his own will begat he us to be a kind of first fruits to his creatures And made heirs of the Kingdom Jam. 2.5 Now for us to have the Blessed God whom we had so often offended to become our reconciled Father in Christ Oh what wonderful love is this That we should be admitted into the Church of the first-born have free liberty to worship God and have a right to such a blessed and glorious inheritance 2. What is the spirit of Adoption First We are made sons and then we have the spirit of his Son Gal. 4.6 Being adopted into Gods Family we have a spirit suitable They that use to adopt children give them some kind of token to express their love so here is a gift answerable to the dignity of our estate and the love of a Father and that is the gift of the spirit the dignity is inward and spiritual and the gift answereth it He hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts God would not distinguish the good ●● na fall about the Tents of Israel and the people will not go for to gather it to fill their Homer they may starve Tho the Bread of Heaven be dispensed by such a liberal provision the Spirit is ready but they are lazy The Spirit by accident is a cause of servile fear but these Motions are his proper effects 2. A superficial Christianity is rewarded with common gifts but the real Christianity with special Graces All that profess the Faith and are baptized into Christ Gal. 3.26 27. are visibly adopted by God into his Family and are under a visible Administration of the Covenant of Grace So far as they are adopted into God's Family so far they are made partakers of the Spirit Christ giveth to common Christians those common gifts which he giveth not to the Heathen World knowledg of the mysteries of godliness abilities of utterance and speech about spiritual and heavenly things some affection also to them called tasting of the good Word the heavenly Gift and the powers of the World to come Heb. 6. These will not prove us true Christians or really in Gods special favour but only visible professed Christians 3. Among the sincere some have not the spirit of adoption at so full a rate as others have neither so pure and fervent a love to God nor such a respectful obedience and submission to him nor such an Holy confidence and boldness becoming that great happiness which they are called unto who have the right and hope of the Blessed inheritance and so not so much of that son-like disposition which the spirit worketh by revealing the Love and Mercy of God contained in the Gospel in the Hearts of his People some do more improve their priviledges than others do now they
Abba father Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God through Christ. Which teacheth us how to come to a conclusion in soul debates Have I a child-like inclination and sense and confidence that God hath adopted me into his favour and have the sanctifying of the spirit upon my heart I may be bold then to enter my claim 3. It Informeth us That the priviledges of believers are so linked together that where one of them is there are all the rest Therefore if we injoy one then we must collect and infer that the rest do belong to us also If sons we must not rest there then heirs heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. One link of the golden chain draweth on another there is a great deal of profit in these collections and inferences our minds are usually taken up with trifles and childish toys surely the priviledges of a Christian are not so much considered as they should be The benefit of it is this partly it keepeth our hearts in a way of praising God and constant rejoicing in God if we did more consider the excellency of our Inheritanne 1 Pet. 1.3 4. Blessed be God who hath begotten us to a lively hope to an inheritance incorruptible undefiled Our thoughts are too dead and cold till we revive the memory of our excellent priviledges by Christ. Partly as it keepeth us in a constant and cheerful adherence to the truth what ever it cost us we slight all temporal things how grievous or troublesome so ever they be Rom. 8.18 For I reckon that the sufferings of the present life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 5.3 We glory in tribulation as knowing that tribulation worketh patience Partly To help us to despise the pleasures of sin which are but for a season while eternal things are in view 2 Cor. 4.18 While we look not to the things which are seen but to the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal And Partly To digest the labours of duty and obedience all the pains of the Holy Life 2 Cor. 5.9 Wherefore we labour whether present or absent that we may be accepted of the Lord. What shall we not do for such a Father that hath provided such an inheritance for us that we may injoy him and be accepted with him Therefore we should stock our minds with these thoughts 4. That we should not question our estate because we are under grievous pressures and afflictions For the words are an anticipation of an objection If Sons of God and Heirs of Glory why are we then so afflicted he inverteth the Argument You are so afflicted that you may have the inheritance 'T is rather an evidence of our right than an infringement of it especially if patiently endured for Gods sake seeing thereby you are conformed to the Son by nature Rom. 8.29 He hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his son We have communion with Christ and his Sufferings and if we be like him in his estate of Humiliation we shall be like him in his estate of Exaltation also 2. USE is Exhortation 1. To bilieve this blessed inheritance which is reserved for the children of God 'T is a great happiness but let not us therefore suspect the truth of it for 't is founded in the infinite mercy of the eternal God and the everlasting merit of a blessed Redeemer And we are prepared and qualified for it by the Almighty Operation of the conquering spirit 't is an happiness that lieth in another world and we cannot come at it but by death But is there no life beyond this Where then shall the good be rewarded and the wicked punished 'T is unseen but it is set before us in the promises of the Gospel which God hath confirmed by miracles and sanctified to the conversion and consolation of many souls throughout all successions of ages and were the best and wisest of men that ever the world saw deceived with a vain fancy Or can a lye or delusion be sanctified to such high and holy ends therefore do you believe it John 11.26 Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die believest thou this If you believe your Reconciliation with God by the death of Christ why not your salvation by his life If your adoption into his family why not the inheritance both priviledges stand by the same grace 2. Let us live always in the desire of it that desire that will quicken you to look after it Phil. 3.14 And to seek after it in the first place Matth. 6.33 That desire that will quicken you to long for the enjoyment of it Phil. 1.23 3. To comfort your selves with the hope of it Rom. 5.2 And rejoice in hope of the glory of God 't is the glory of God God giveth it God is the solid part of it and can we expect shortly to live with God and upon God and not rejoice in the hope of it Is a deed of gift from God the security of infallible promises nothing Is the Title nothing before possession When this estate is so sure and near we should more lift up our heads and revive our drooping spirits 4. Let us walk worthy of it 1. Despising Satans offers Heb. 12.16 Be not a prophane person as was Esau. 1 Kings 21.3 The Lord forbid that I should part with the inheritance of my father Be chary of your inheritance keep the hopes clear fresh and lively 2. Wean your hearts from the world Col. 3.1 2. If ye be risen with Christ seek the things that are above set your affections above and not on the earth There is your Father your Head your Christ your Patrimony 't is reserved for you in the Heavens 3. Live in all holy conversation and godliness 1 Pet. 3.7 Living as heirs of the grace of life in all duties to God love to one another fidelity in all our relations We that shall live in the clear vision and full fruition of God in Christ should be other manner or persons 4. In an heavenly manner Phil. 3.20 But our conversation is in heaven Either acting for it or living upon it or sollacing our selves with it with delightful thoughts of Heaven sweeten your pilgrimage here be willing to suffer afflictions if God call us thereunto patiently you suffer with Christ Christ takes it as done to himself Acts 9.4 Why persecutest thou me Fill up your share of the sufferings Providence hath appointed for Christ Mystical Col. 1.24 Who now rejoice in my afflictions fo● you and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the church 2 Cor. 1.6 And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and salvation and Phil. 3.10 That I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship
peace with God but his going off from the world and must believe not only to the pardon of sins but also to Eternal life 1 Tim. 1.16 For this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them that should afterwards believe on him to everlasting life There is the final and ultimate object of faith which must be first thought of for all things are influenced by the last end when we are invited to Christ we are invited by this motive That sinners shall not only be pardoned but glorified Therefore a true and well grounded hope of Eternal life is a more weighty point than we usually think of and a great part of Religion lyeth in drawing off the heart from things visible and temporal to those that are invisible and Eternal The great effects of faith which are love to God and victory over the world are more easily produced when faith hath the assistance of hope or this lively expectation of the world to come Therefore we must not only consider the death of Christ as it hath procured for us the pardon of sin or the promise of pardon But as he dyed for us that we might live for ever with him 1 Thes. 5.9 that so the soul may more directly and expresly be carried to God and Heaven 4. It informeth us That none can be saved without hope of salvation A Christian as soon as he is made a Christian hath not the good things promised by Christ but as soon as he is made a Christian he expecteth them As an heir is rich in hope though he hath little in possession Take any notion of applying grace as soon as we are justified we are made heirs according to the hope of Eternal life Tit. 3.7 as soon as we are converted and regenerated we are begotten to a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 and as soon as we are united to Christ Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory And without hope how can a man act as a Christian since the whole business of the world is done by hope certainly the whole spiritual life is quickned by this grace Titus 2.12 13. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously godly in the present world looking for the blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ. And Phil. 3.20 21. for our conversation is in Heaven from whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body But then here ariseth a great doubt how far every man is bound to hope for salvation For those that have no assurance of their own sincerity and cannot unquestionably make out their propriety and interest how can they hope for salvation Answer To solve this doubt we must consider a little the several states of men as they stand concerned in everlasting life some have but a bare possibility others have a probability a third are gotten so far as a conditional certainty others have an actual certainty or firm perswasion of their own right and interest 1. To some the hope of Heaven is but a bare possibility as to the careless Christian who is yet intangled in his lusts but God continueth to them the offer of salvation by Christ they may be saved if they will accept this offer 't is brought home to their doors and left to their choice 'T is impossible indeed in the state in which they are but their hearts may be changed by the Lords grace Mark 10.27 With men 't is impossible but not with God for with God all things are possible He can make the filthy heart to become clean and holy the sensual heart to become spiritual and heavenly There are many bars in the way but grace can break through and remove them This possibility checketh scruples and aggravateth their evil choice for they forsake their own mercies Jonah 2.8 by their vain course of life they deprive themselves of happiness which might be theirs 't is their own by offer for God did not exclude them but not their own by choice for they excluded themselves judge themselves unworthy of eternal life Acts 13.46 This possibility is an incouragement to use the means Acts 8.22 Pray if perhaps or if it be possible the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee 2. Others have a probability or a probable hope of Eternal life as when men begin to be serious or in some measure to mind the things of God but are conscious to some notorious defect in their duty or have not such a soundness of heart as may warrant their claim to everlasting blessedness as we read of almost Christians Acts 20.28 and not far from the kingdom of Heaven Mark 10.24 and such are all those which have only the grace of the second or third ground they receive the word with joy but know not what tryals may do they have good sentiments of Religion but they are much choaked and obstructed by voluptuous living or the cares of the world Luke 8.14 yea some such thing may befall weak believers They dare not quit their hopes of Heaven for all the world but cannot actually lay claim to it and say 't is theirs Now probabilities must incourage us till we get a greater certainty for we must not despise the day of small things and 't is better to be a seeker than a wanderer 3. A conditional certainty which is more than possible or probable That is when we adhere to Gods covenant and set our selves in good earnest to perform the conditions required in the promises of the Gospel expecting this way the blessings offered as for instance the hope is described by Paul Acts 24.15 16. And have hope towards God which they themselves also allow that there shall be a resurrection of the dead both of the just and the unjust and herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men there is such a dependance upon the promise as breedeth an hope and this hope puts upon strict and exact walking such a conditional certainty is described in Rom. 2.7 Who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory honour immortality and eternal life I am sure to find salvation and Eternal life if I self-denyingly and patiently continue this way and by the grace of God I am resolved so to continue Now there is much of hope in this partly because this is the hope which is the immediate effect of regeneration The hope that is the fruit of experience and belongeth to the seasoned and tryed Christian who hath approved himself hearsay is another thing Rom. 5.4 and partly because this suiteth with Gods covenant or the conditional offer of Eternal life according to the terms of the Gospel where the
importance and the eternal recompences not their own interest only as David Psal. 73.13 Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed my hands in innocency As if he had said What reward is there of Holiness Mortification Patience and self-denyal In the lower world where God is unseen our great hopes yet to come the flesh being importunate to be pleased and the things of the world necessary for our use and present to our imbraces Christians are not certain and past all doubts of the truth of their everlasting hopes else there would be no weak faith nor faint hope Did not the Disciples in a great temptation doubt of an Article of Faith Luke 24.21 But we trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel And v. 25. O ye fools and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken To doubt of what the Prophets spake was not to doubt of their own Salvation but of the constant state of their Souls all the Godly are perswaded of the truth of the Gospel that ordinarily they have no considerable doubts about it but that still they resolve to cleave to God and Christ looking for their reward in another world whatever it cost them here and in some measure can fell all for the pearl of price 2. As to the hope which ariseth from your assurance 1. Make your sincerity more clear and unquestionable and every day your hope and your confidence will increase upon you to believe and hope that you your selves shall be saved is very desirable and comfortable but then you must do that which assurance calleth for give diligence to make your calling and election sure abound in the love and work of the Lord grow more indifferent to temporal things venture all in Christs hands for while your faith and repentance is obscure you will not have such full comfort tho you are confident of the truth of Gods promise to all penitent believers 4. This latter or consequent hope which dependeth on the assurance of our interest admits of a latitude it may be full or not full Heb. 6.11 To the full assurance of hope That is full which casteth out all fear that is not full which is accompanied with doubts but the certainty prevaileth Mark 9.24 Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief Cant. 5.2 I sleep but my heart waketh Now we should labour to go to Heaven with full sails or abound in hope Rom. 15.13 and 2 Pet. 1.11 For so an enterance shall be ministred unto you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. With hearts full of Comfort 5. When 't is full it may be interrupted or continued to the end or at sometimes it may be full or nor full at another 1 Pet. 1.13 Hope to the end If we continue in our duty with diligence affection and zeal our full hope may be continued if we abate our fervour grow remiss and cold in the spiritual life we lose much of the comfort of our hopes 6. The hope which followeth after experience and much exercise in the spiritual life may result from an act of ours and from an impression of the comforting Spirit 1. From an act of ours From our considering the truth of Gods promises or his wonderful mercy in Christ and his grace inabling us in some measure to fulfil the conditions of the new Covenant when thereupon we put forth hope Phil. 3.20 21. For our conversation is in Heaven from whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile bodies that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body 2. Or some impression of the comforting spirit supporting and relieving us in our distresses or rewarding our self-denial and obedience as Rom. 5.5 Hope leaveth not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy ghost given unto us The one is an act of Godliness the other one of Gods internal rewards the one is a duty the other a felicity 2. VSE Is to press us to get and act hope Hope implieth two things 1. Certain Perswasion 2. An earnest Expectation The certainty is seen in the quiet and pleasure of the mind for the present The earnestness in the diligent pursuit after the thing hoped for by all holy means Now we must look to both acts of Hope 1. To strengthen the certain expectation There we must often revive the grounds of hope which are these 1. The mercy of God which hath made such rich preparation for our comfort in the Gospel The first ground of hope to the faln creature is the undeserved grace mercy and goodness of God 2 Thes. 2.16 He hath given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace And therefore it is our great invitation to hope Psal. 130.7 Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord is mercy and plenteous redemption Apply your selves to God as a God of mercy otherwise such were our undeservings and our ill deservings there were no hope for us so Psal. 13.5 I have trusted in thy mercy my soul shall rejoyce in thy salvation Let others trust in what they will I will trust in thy mercy The serious remembrance of Gods mercy maketh hope lift up the head so Jude 21. Looking for the mercy of the Lord Jesus unto eternal life There 's our best and strongest plea to the very last Therefore the Heirs of promise are called Rom. 9.23 Vessels of mercy Because from first to last they are filled up with mercy 2. The promise of God which cannot fail Titus 1.2 The hope of eternal life which God that cannot lie hath promised before the world began he promised it to Christ in the Covenant of Redemption and he hath promised it to us in the Covenant of Grace that before time this in time now God will not fail to do what he hath promised when he made the promise he meant to perform it For what need had God to court his creature into a false hope or to flatter him into a fools paradise to tell them of an happiness he never meant to give them and if he meant it is he not able to perform it Men break their word out of weakness they cannot do all that they would their will exceedeth their power Or out of imprudence they cannot foresee what may happen or out of levity and inconstancy for all men are lyars but none of these things can be imagined of God We have Gods Word and Oath Heb. 6.18 We have his Seal the spirit who hath wrought miracles without to confirm this hope and ass●re the world Heb. 2.4 God also bearing them witness with signs and wonders and with divers miracles and gifts of the holy ghost Within preparing the hearts of the faithful for this blessed estate Eph. 4.30 And grieve not the holy spirit whereby ye are sealed to the day of redemption And giving them some beginnings of it as an earnest 2 Cor. 1.22 Who
the Holy Ghost himself is the principal cause of all who doth create this faith love and hope and still preserve it and order and actuate it The Soul worketh powerfully and sweetly by an earnest motion and inclination towards God SERMON XXXV ROM VIII 26 Likewise the spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered WE now come more distinctly to shew what the Holy Ghost doth in Prayer 1. He directeth and ordereth our requests so as they may suit with our great end which is the injoyment of God For of our selves we should Pray only after a natural and humane affection which sets up its self instead of God and self considered as a Body rather than a Soul and so asketh Bodily things rather than Spiritual and the conveniencies of the Natural Life rather than the injoyment of the world to come Let a man alone and he will sooner ask baits and snares and temptations than graces and helps A Scorpion instead of Fish and a Stone rather than Bread we take counsel of our lusts and interests when we are left to our own private spirit and so would make God to serve with our sins and imploy him as a Minister of our carnal desires as 't is said of them in the Wilderness Psal. 78.18 They tempted God in their hearts by asking meat for their lusts Our natural will and carnal affections will make us Pray our selves into a snare In the Text 't is said We know not what to pray for as we ought And in the 27. v. He maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to God not only with respect to his will but his Glory and our eternal good so that human and earnal affection shall neither prescribe the matter nor fix the end To Pray in an Holy manner is the product of the Spirit and the fruit of his operation in us Faith and Love and Hope are more at work in a serious Prayer than human and carnal affection which referreth all its desires and inclinations to the Bodily Life 2. He quickneth and enliveneth our desires in prayer There is an holy vehemency and fervour required in Prayer opposite to that careless formality and deadness which otherwise is found in us These are the groanings which cannot be uttered spoken of in the Text. Groaning noteth the strength and ardency of desire when there is a warmth and a life and a vigour in Prayer Oh how flat and dead are our hearts oftentimes when we want these quickening motions A flow of words may come from our natural temper but these lively motions and strong desires from the Spirit of God T is notable that the Prayer which is produced in us by the spirit is represented by the notion of a cry twice 't is said teaching us to cry Abba Father not with respect to the loudness of the voice but the earnestness of affection Crying for help is the most vehement way of asking used only by persons in great necessity and danger a prayer without life is as incense without fire which sendeth forth no perfume or sweet savour The firing of the Sacrifices was a token of Gods acceptance so when warmth of heart cometh from Heaven God testi●ieth of his gifts 3. He incourageth and emboldneth us to come to God as a Father This is one main thing twice mentioned in Scripture Rom. 8.15 We have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father and Gal. 4.6 Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into our hearts crying Abba Father A great part of the life and comfort of Prayer consisteth in coming to God as a reconciled Father Now this is seen in two things 1. Child-like confidence 2. Child-like reverence 1. Child-like confidence or a familiar owning of God in Prayer when we come to him as little Children to their Father for help in their dangers and necessities Christ hath taught us to say our Father and in every Prayer we must be able to say so in one fashion or an other not with our lips but with our hearts by option and choice if not by direct affirmation Luke 11.13 If ye then being evil know how to give good gifts to your children how much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask it We forget the duty of Children but God doth not forget the mercies of a Father Let it be the voice of our trust and hope rather than of our lips 2. With child-like reverence in an humble and awful way God that hath the title of a Father will have the honour and respect of a Father Matt. 1.6 If this should breed lear and reverence in us at other times it should much more when we immediately converse with him 1 Pet. 1.17 If ye call on the father who without respect of persons judgeth every man God will be sanctified in all that draw nigh unto him Heb. 10. so Phil. 3.11 Serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with tr●ubling Our familiarity with God must not mar our reverence nor confidence and delight in him our humility and serious dealing with God in Prayer is wrought in us by the spirit in whose light we see both God and our selves his Majesty and our vileness his purity and our sinfulness his greatness and our nothingness 2 The necessity of this help and assistance 1. The order and oeconomy of the divine persons sheweth it In the mystery of redemption God is represented as our reconciled God and Father to whom we come Christ as the Mediator through whom we have liberty and access to God as our own God And the Spirit as our guide Sanctifier and Comforter by whom we come to him God is represented as the great Prince and Universal King into whose presence-chamber poor petitioners are admitted Christ openeth the door by the merit of his Sacrifice and keepeth it open by his constant intercession that wrath may be no hindrance on Gods part nor guilt on ours for otherwise God is a consuming fire Heb. 12.29 and sin divides and separates between God and us Isa. 59.2 Then the spirit doth create preserve and quicken and actuate these graces in the exercise of which this access is managed and carryed on Otherwise such is our impotency and aversness that we should not make use of this offered benefit Eph. 2.18 For through him we both have an access by one spirit unto the father The injoyment of the Fatherly love of God is the highest happiness in which the Soul doth rest content Christ is the way by which we come to the Father and the Spirit our guide which causeth us to enter in this way and goeth along with us in it We cannot look right to the blessed Father but we must look to him through the Blessed Son and we cannot look
to this hour There was the innocent desire of his humane nature to be freed from the burden but his greater respect to Gods glory and the publick benefit of mankind made him submit to it His humane nature was to shew a reasonable aversation from what was destructive to it but his resolved will was to submit to God and overcome all impediments Take the instance lower Nature prompted Paul to ask freedom from the Thorn in the flesh but grace taught him to submit to Gods will Paul sinned not in having or giving vent to the natural inclination but the spiritual instinct must guide and overrule it So when we ask natural conveniences we sin not but yet this is not the spirit which God heareth in prayer Christ was heard in that he feared Heb. 5.7 Yet the cup did not pass away but he was supported so Paul was heard not for the removal of the thorn in the flesh but for sufficient grace 2 Cor. 12.9 And he said unto me My grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weakness 2. There is a carnal sinful spirit which may be working in prayer as when the Disciples called for fire from Heaven Christ telleth them Luke 9.55 Ye know not of what spirit ye are of Men often miscarry in prayer being blinded either by an erring Judgment or their carnal Passions 1. By an erring judgment They put their false conceits and opinions into their prayers and so would engage God as Balaam sought by building Altars against his own people This kind of praying 't is a begging of God to do the Devils work to destroy his own Kingdom and suppress his most serious worshippers to gratifie the faction that opposeth them Nothing is so cruel and bloody but false and partial zeal will put men upon if their judgments be once tainted they think the killing of others is doing God good service John 16.2 Their devotions will be soon tainted also for men that follow a blind conscience will hallow and consecrate their rage and cruelty by prayer and solemn worship Isa. 66.5 Your brethren that hate you that cast you out of my names sake said Let the Lord be glorified Thence the old by-word in nomine Domini incipit omne malum Prayer is made a Preface to cruelty Now 't is a comfort to the faithful that God will not hear these prayers he knows what is the mind of the spirit 2. By carnal passions and desires Fleshly interest breedeth partiality and men think God should hear them in their worldly requests the motions of the flesh are very earnest for corrupt nature would fain be pleased Jam. 4.3 Ye ask have not because ye ask amiss that ye may consume it upon your lusts 'T is the flesh prayeth and not the spirit You ask meat for your lusts Psal. 78.18 When their wants were abundantly supplyed yet they remained querelous and unsatisfied They must have dainties as well as necessaries as if Gods providence must serve their carnal appetites In these and such like cases the flesh prayeth and not the spirit but Christ will not put this dross into his golden Censer nor perfume our lusts with his sweet incense 3. The new Nature called also spirit which incineth us to God and Heaven Zech. 12.10 I will pour upon them the spirit of grace and supplication This prompteth and urgeth us to ask spiritual and heavenly things And such kind of requests are most pleasing to God 1 Kings 3.10 those things which are necessary to Gods glory and our salvation There is what the flesh savoureth and what the spirit savoureth the wisdom of the flesh perverteth and diverteth hearts from God and heaven to base low things such as the good things of this world pleasures riches honours But the spirit or the renewed part savoureth other things What is the savouring of the spirit What the new nature would be at or chiefly desireth And 't is a truth that the same spirit which is predominant at other times will work in prayer for the desires follow the constitution and frame of the heart Rom. 8.5 For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit As their constitution is so will their gust be and this tast and relish will shew its self in all things even in their prayers and devotions and whatever their words be the working of their hearts and according to their universal bent and temper 4. The holy spirit of God Jude 20. Praying in the Holy Ghost His assistance is necessary to prayer not only to sanctifie our hearts but to excite our desires and direct our addresses to God so that we are inabled and raised to perform this duty with more ardency and regularity than we of our selves could attain unto A Christian hath both flesh and spirit in him and they remain in him as active principles always lusting against each other Gal. 5.17 In prayer we feel it for the Saints speak sometimes in a mixt dialect half the language of Ashdod and half of Canaan both of the flesh and of the spirit only the one overruleth the other by the power of the Holy Ghost take it in either property of prayer confidence or fervency of desire 1. For confidence Jonah 2.4 I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again to thy holy Temple There is a plain conflict between faith and unbelief unbeliefs words is first out as if we were utterly rejected out of Gods care and favour yet faith will not suffer us to keep off from God and therefore corrects and unsaith again what unbelief had said before yet I will look again to thy holy Temple Try what God will do for me so Psal. 94.18 When I said my foot slippeth thy mercy O Lord held me up yet there is relief in God when all their own confidence and courage faileth them 2. In point of fervency The flesh valueth esteemeth earnestly craveth temporal mercies fancieth a condition of health wealth liberty and worldly conveniencies as best for us We admire carnal happiness Psal. 144. But the spirit corrects the judgement of the flesh There is an higher and better happiness and that we should mainly seek after and all our worldly interests should be subordinated thereunto Now 't is not meerly the spirit or new nature in us which doth hold out in these conflicts but the new nature assisted by the Spirit of God who helpeth us in all our infirmities and to whom Religious manners sheweth we must ascribe all that we have and do All our faith and fervency cometh from him and without his assistance we should either sink under the difficulties or be cold and careless in our requests 2. In what sense God is said to know the mind of the spirit 1. By way of distinction 2. By way of approbation 1. By way of distinction God perfectly knoweth the mind and intention of those
groans which the spirit exciteth in his own children he knoweth what cometh from the natural what from the carnal what from the divine Spirit to what principles these motions belong For he weigheth the spirits Prov. 16.2 That is he doth so exactly know them as if they were put into a ballance What principles motives and aims we are acted by and observeth not only the matter of the prayer but the disposition of the petitioner whether the frame of his heart be Christian and gospel-like humble holy and heavenly or else it hath a carnal bias upon it 2. He knoweth by way of approbation that he doth regard and accept the groans of the spirit for words of knowledg imply allowance respect approbation as Psal. 1.6 God knoweth the way of the righteous but the way of the wicked shall perish Approveth favoureth prospereth as the opposite clause manifesteth As Christs not knowing the wicked implieth their rejection Matth. 7.23 So he knoweth the mind of the spirit he doth regard and accept of what is of the spirit in prayer The groans of believers are more than the pompous petitions of hypocrites 'T is not luscious eloquence which God regardeth but serious devotion if there be holy breathings after communion with him If your prayers be not sensless without a due feeling of your necessities and wants nor heartless without a desire of the graces and mercies you stand in need of God will accept you 3. Why this is such a comfort and benefit to the children of God 1. Gods knowledge by way of distinction between the moans of nature and the groans of the spirit 1. Because sometimes they do not speak in prayer but join with others you make it your prayer if you accompany it with your sighs and groans 'T is not the speaker only but all that consent by the serious motions of their hearts When the gifted prayed in the primitive Church the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the private person we translate it the unlearned was to say Amen 1 Cor. 14.16 And then was his prayer as much as the prayer of him that spake Their hearty Amen was signaculum fidei votum desiderii an hearty assent to the prayer or an hearty expression of their earnest desire 2. Sometimes they cannot speak and put their desires into a language as oppressed with troubles God knoweth the secret groans of our hearts when you cannot give them the vent of expression Psal. 38.9 Lord all my desire is before thee my groaning is not hid from thee The soul is so confounded that we cannot put our desires into distinct thoughts and words but yet they are as formal speech before God for he can interpret the most secret motions of our hearts Exod. 2.24 God heard their groans and remembred his Covenant Psal. 12.5 For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise saith the Lord. Psal. 6.8 For the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping Such sighs groans tears have an intelligable language in Heaven 3. Sometimes they dare not speak for the Prophet telleth us of an evil time when the prudent will keep silence Amos 5.13 And another Prophet speaketh when a man cannot trust in a friend and must keep the door of his mouth from her that lyeth in his bosome Mich. 7.5 When they dare not speak against that which they cannot mend scarce dare peep or mutter or bemoan themselves or plead with God such is the iniquity of the times the guard is put upon them then God knoweth the desires of their hearts and smothered griefs and concealed complaints 4. Sometimes they are sl●ndered when they speak by the scoffing Atheist or carnal world who know not the spirit and his holy motions because their heart is wholly devoted to sensual and earthly things the best strains of devotion are mocked at and all that suiteth not with their carnal way is counted folly 1 Pet. 4.4 speaking evil of you and verse 14. on their part the spirit is evil spoken of The world when they hear of believers praying in the spirit they scoff at it as those Acts 2.13 When the Holy Ghost came upon the Apostles some mocked saying These men are full of new wine so when any thing of God more than ordinary appeareth in them they deride it They are not skilled in the motions of the spirit when they are earnest Festus thought Paul mad and besides himself Acts. 26.24 The wisdom of the flesh is emnity against God and cannot judg aright of his ways and motions But now 't is a comfort that God will put another kind of construction upon the spirits working than the world doth they call evil good and good evil but God can distinguish they are incompetent judges having no savour and relish of these things Many things suit not with the corrupt sense of men that are yet agreeable to Gods holy will and that which is slandered in the world is owned by God and how much soever they are contradicted and scoffed at yet they injoy sweet and real communion with him Though the world knoweth not this spirit yet God knoweth and owneth it as the event declareth 5. Sometimes they themselves find it hard to interpret their duty and judg what is flesh and what is spirit but yet God knoweth the mind of the spirit and when they set themselves to converse with God in the best fashion they can the Lord granteth the desires of their hearts Psal. 66.19 Verily God hath heard he hath attended to the voice of my prayer We find our prayers are not rejected by God he had some doubt for it as appeareth in the verses before and after and so took it as a token of his sincerity God who cannot patronize any sin had been pleased to give him his approbation 6. The saints that are little satisfied in their work plead their desires Nehem. 1.11 O Lord I beseech thee let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of thy servant and to the prayer of thy servants who desire to fear thy name And Isa. 26.9 With my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit will I seek thee right early 7. The children of God may be the better satisfied in his providence and favours to them for God will hear so much of the prayer as cometh from the spirit We ask natural conveniencies to a certain end God will not always give the means but the end shall be promoted he knoweth whether the means will prove a mercy yea or no or the end be promoted by these means or other now they desire the spirit may be heard not the flesh Abraham would have the promise fulfilled and pitcheth on Ishmael Gen. 17.18 Oh that Ishmael might live before thee But God intended a better way by Isaac If he give us our will 't is in anger that 's our prayer but the spirits prayer is to glorify God and according to the will of God Gods answer is
that he would spare us if God should be strict on the best of us what would become of us 2. USE To improve it First to confidence and hope A man that wants not Christ cannot want any thing when the elect had need of Gods own Son he did not spare him and when given us his Son will he not give mercy and grace to help in every time of need He that stood not on the greatest benefit will he stand upon a less There is two grounds of hope 1. The cause 2. The merit The fountain cause is the infinite love of God an Emperors revenue will pay a beggars debt the same good will that moved him to give his Son will move him to give other things that we stand in need of and may tend to our good The other is the merit of Christs Sacrifice God that is not sparing of his Son will not be sparing of what is purchased by his Son surely his purchase will be made good Christ sitteth at the right Hand of God to see that it be done Heb. 10.12 But this man after he had offered one Sacrifice for sins for ever sat down at the right hand of God That one offering hath done the work 2. Improve it to obedience God spared not his own Son and shall we spare our lusts There is a twofold argument in it First an argument of gratitude Let us not spare our selves neither body nor soul nor life nor liberty nor strength nor time nor any thing that is near and dear to us so we may glorifie God the Apostle saith not barely he gave his Son for us but he spared not to give him We have thoughts and to spare Shall not God have them We have time we bestow many hours in vanity shall we not bestow some on God But surely it should be as a wo●nd to our hearts that we should be so unwilling not to spare our lusts that which is not worth keeping The other Argument is from fear If we spare our sins God will punish them Job 20.13 Tho he spare it and forsake it not but keep it still within his mouth Deut. 29.21 The Lord will not spare him I may reason as the Apostle If God spare not the natural branches Rom. 11.21 take ●eed also lest he spare not thee Christ was only a surety for sinners thou art an obstinate and unreclaimed sinner 3. Improve this to patience under poverty If God hath dealt sparingly with us in the matters of this world yet he hath been bountiful in his Son more in your souls tho less in your houses he that spared not his Son doth with him freely give us all things so under affliction by death the death of friends thou art apt to say I cannot spare such a child or yokefellow or relation when God seemeth to be about to take them away God will not spare them tho you cannot or will not but you cannot say God doth not love us or them God loved Christ yet will not spare him 4. And especially should this be improved to give us great boldness and encouragement in prayer 1. Because God loveth us Usually when we come to God in prayer we draw an ill picture of him in our minds as if he were all wrath and vengeance and unwilling to be reconciled to man or brought to it with much difficulty therefore it concerneth us to obviate this prejudice and to conceive of God in prayer as one that loveth us we have gained a great point when we can come with this thought into his presence I am now praying to a God that loveth me and will do me good yes you will say if I could come to that I had gained a great point indeed but what hindreth when Christ came on purpose to shew the love and loveliness of God to us for our redemption came first out of the Bosom of God and Christs mission into the world and dying for sinners was the fruit of his love and mainly it served for this end to give us a full demonstration of the love of God and his pity to the lost world of sinners that when our guilt had made him frightful to us we might not fly from him as a condemning God but love him and serve him and pray to him as one willing to be reconciled to us light and heat are not more abundant in the Sun than love is in God what hindreth then but that you come with this thought But how shall I know that he loveth me What things may assure me of it What saith the Text God spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all There is I confess a twofold love his general love and his special love his general love which intendeth benefits to us and his special love which putteth us in possession of them his general love to the lost world and his love and mercy to us in particular giving us the saving benefits purchased for us and intended to us 1. His general love to the lost world that is a great thing The Devil seeketh to hide the wonderful love of God revealed in our Redeemer that we may still stand aloof from God as more willing to punish than to save and many poor dark creatures gratifie his design and aim are still seeking signs and tokens of Gods love or something in themselves to warrant them to come to God by Christ and to perswade us that we shall be welcome if we do so and because they cannot find any thing in themselves that he will admit them they are troubled but all this while they are but seeking the Sun with a candle What greater evidence of Gods willingness to receive you than the death of Christ than the invitations of the Gospel this is alone above all evidences of his love He spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all But herein we are like the Jews who when they had seen many wonders wrought by Christ would still have a new sign the greatest sign is given already Christs dying for a sinful world Men and Angels cannot find out a sign pledg and confirmation of the love of God above that yet if that be not enough we have another sign the promises and invitations of the Gospel which shew his willingness to welcome sinners salvation is offered not to named but described persons therefore if we are willing to come under these hopes upon Christs terms these must satisfie our scrupulous minds that there is no bar put to us but what we put to our selves by our refusing the grace as God offereth it Certainly Gods love and mercy to mankind is our first motive and his will●ngness to impart good things to them upon his own terms and surely he is well-pleased with our acceptance of them 't is true 't is said ● John 4.19 We love him because he loved us first But the first motive to draw our hearts to him is not his special elective love to
short He is Clothed also with the graces of the Spirit which are both ornamentum and munimentum Our Ornament and Armour of defence 'T is our Ornament as leaves are a beautiful vesture to the Apples as Cloaths are to the Body Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God Holy and Beloved bowels of mercies kindness humbleness of mind meekness long-suffering c. Munimentum Armour Rom. 13.12 The night is far spent the day is at hand let us therefore cast of the works of darkness and let us put on the Armour of light Christ doth aray us non ad pompam sed ad pugnam not to set us off with a vain shew but to furnish and secure us for the Spiritual warfare Well then the words agree There are some peculiar difficulties in the 4th verse But we shall handle them in their own place Doct. That none can groan and long for Heaven but those who are not found naked but Clothed with a Gospel Righteousness The Apostle limiteth it to them In this point I shall handle three things 1. What is a Gospel Righteousness 2. That this carryeth the notion of a Garment to cover our nakedness and shame 3. Why none but they can groan and earnestly desire to be Clothed upon with the House which is from Heaven 1. What is a Gospel Righteousness 'T is Christs reconciling and renewing grace with new obedience resulting from both Or Justification Sanctification and New Obedience 1. Justification is requisite to Eternal Life Therefore called Justification unto Life Rom. 5.18 Tit. 3.7 Being Justifyed by his grace we are made Heirs according to the hope of Eternal Life and this is also represented by Cloathing The taking away of sin is the taking away our filthy Garments or the covering of our nakedness And the applying the Righteousness of Christ 't is as the investing of us with change of Raiment Zech. 3.4 Take away the filthy Garments from him and unto him he said I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee and I will clothe thee with change of Raiment Christ taketh away our sin by pardon and withal adorneth the sinner with his Righteousness and with holiness in the sight of God There is no getting the Blessing but in the Garment of our Elder Brother 2dly Sanctification is requisite in order to Glory For without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 And this is the Ornament wherein the inward man of the Heart is decked and adorned that it may be comely in the sight of God 1 Pet. 3.4 As we cover the nakedness of our Bodies from the sight of men so we must cover the nakedness of our Souls in the sight of God Now thought it be hidden from man yet it is not hidden from the Lord We must see that he find us not in our nakedness neither destitute of grace nor of the Righteousness of Christ. Well then it is not enough to look after the Righteousness of Justification but of Sanctification The one is founded on the Blood of Christ the other is wrought in us by the Spirit of Christ 1 Cor. 6.11 And the application of Christs Blood and the gift of the Spirit are inseparably conjoined both in the dispensation of God and the desire of a poor anxious Soul 1 Joh. 1.9 The one doth away the guilt of sin as it rendreth us obnoxious to Gods just wrath and the other the filthiness and power of sin as it tainteth our faculties and actions and rendreth us unacceptable and unserviceable to God Christ came to restore us to the favour of God and to restore his Image in our Hearts that the plaister might be as broad as the sore If Christ should free us only from the guilt of Sin he would perform but half our cares he would provide for our impunity but not for our holiness and serviceableness to God Our misery lay in our sinfulnes as well as our liableness to wrath Therefore Christ came to change our natures as well as to reconcile our persons to God 3dly New Obedience or Sanctification acted as well as infused is a part of those Garments of Salvation wherewith we are Clothed For the Gospel saith 1 Joh. 3.7 He that doth Righteousness is Righteous That is declareth that he is Righteous in Christs Righteousness and Sanctified by his Spirit And that this Godly and Righteous Life is necessary to the expectation of Glory and Blessedness appeareth by that 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought we to be in all Holy conversation and Godliness Let Conscience speak when it reflecteth upon this how meet it is that we should Glorifie God in the duties of holiness if we would be glorified with him and that we should Glorifie him in all the points of obedience and not in one only For he saith in all Holy Conversation and Godliness in the outward carriage and secret practice in Common affairs and duties of immediate worship in Adversity Prosperity grace exercised and discovered in the lives of Gods people is a part of these Garments wherewith our nakedness is covered Psal. 132.9 Let thy Priests be Clothed with Righteousness 2dly This carryeth the notion of a Garment to cover our nakedness and shame 1. Sin and shame came in together and there is no man born Clothed but stark-naked and hath nothing wherewith to cover his shame before God Adams nakedness was an Emblem of it Gen. 3.11 I was afraid because I was naked and I bid my self We must not only look to the outward nakedness but the inward Adam was naked before and knew that he was so But till they had sinned they were not ashamed Gen. 2.25 our Bodies were Gods own handy work and Apparel in Innocency was but as a Cloud to the Sun Therefore while our first parents were apparelled with the Robe of Innocency they felt no shame all things were honest and comely and Glorious enough without a covering both in the sight of God and themselves no cause of shame either before God or betwixt themselves But when divested and stripped of this Spiritual apparel then Adam was ashamed hid himself from God and till they be Cloathed neither he nor his Posterity can come into his presence with any comfort Another Emblem of this we have in Aaron's stripping the Israelites of their Jewels and Ornaments Exod. 32.25 When Moses saw that the peole were naked for Aaron had made them naked to their shame among their enemies It is not meant barely of Aarons stripping them of their Jewels and Ornaments that was but a type of their nakedness and deformity which was uncovered before God what should Moses kill the Israelites because Aaron had taken away their Jewels And what great matter of disgrace was it among the enemies That the Sons and Daughters of Israel should want ear-rings But the meaning is Aaron had cast them out of Gods protection who was offended and provoked by their sin Another suitable expression is Hosea 2 3. I will set
he is the universal King that hath an Absolute and Supream Authority therefore must be the judge of the World 1. For wisdom and understanding it is in Christ twofold Divine and Humane for each nature hath its proper wisdom belonging to it As Christ is God his wisdom and his understanding is Infinite as it is said in the Psalms and so by one act of understanding he knows all things that are have been yea that shall be or may be He knows all things that shall be in his own Decree And all things that may be by his Divine Power and Alsufficiency They are all before him naked as the Apostle inters Heb. 4.13 Cut down as it were by the chin-bone As when we cut down a Beast by the chin-bone and divine his Body we may see all things within him so all things are naked and open to God We know things successively God knows them all at once If a man were to read a Book he must go from line to line or from page to page but Gods knowledg is just such a thing as if a man should see through a Book by one act of his mind by one view could know all that was contained in that book by one glance of his Eye Well this is his divine wisdom For his Humane wisdom that cannot be equal to this for a Finite Nature is not capable of an Infinite Understanding But yet his humane wisdom is such as doth far exceed the knowledge of all Men and Angels When Christ was upon Earth though the forms of things could not but successively come into his mind as a man he must understand as men do in understanding because of the limited nature of the mind and understanding yet then he could know whatever he would to whatsoever thing he did apply his mind he did presently understand it and that in a moment all things were presented to him So that he accurately knew the nature of things he had a mind to know you find upon all occasions he was not ignorant of the thoughts and hearts of men and when done never so secretly yet Christ knew them as when the woman came behind him and touched the hem of his Garment undiscernibly as she thought by a secret touch then saith Christ who touched me for vertue is passed from me Luke 8.45 Christ knew the touch of Faith knew the woman that came behind him and would not be seen And Mat. 9.3 4. When certain Pharisees said within themselves this man Blasphemes Within their hearts though they durs● not say it publiquely and Christ discovers their inward thoughts and turns out the very inside of their Souls So Mat. 12. Jesus knew their thoughts when they imagined that by Beelzebub the Prince of Devils he cast out Devils But more fully see that notable place which will set forth that no subtil devices we can use is sufficient to escape his knowledge John 2.24 25. When he was at Jerusalem at the Passover on the Feast day many believed in his Name when they saw the miracles which he did But Jesus did not commit himself unto them because he knew all men and needed not that any should testify of man For he knew what was in man Mark they are said to believe in Christ certainly their Faith was not pretended only but real though not a thorough faith not rooted in their souls though as yet they did not betray their insincerity But Jesus knew what was in man We cannot infallibly discern the truth and falshood of a profession before men discover themselves But all hypocrites are known to him long before they shew their hypocrisy And known how Not by a Conjectural but by a certain knowledge as being that knowledge that is from and by himself as God he do's infallibly know what is most secret in man even then when for the present we have but a Moral Sincerity and do not dissemble the Lord knows whether this is a true real and supernatural work for there may be a Moral where there is not a Supernatural Sincerity Now if the Lord Jesus was endowed with such an admirable wisdom and understanding even in the days of his flesh when he was capable of growing in wisdom as well as in stature Luk. 2. as his humane capacity was inlarged by degrees for he would in all things be like us except in sin what shall we think of Christ glorifyed when he comes in that stare in which he is now glorious in heaven When he comes to exercise this judgment certainly he shall bring an incomparable knowledge so far exceeding the manner and measure of all Creatures Men or Angels even as he is man But his infinite knowledge as he is God that chiefly shines forth in this work and therefore he is fit to judge for he can bring forth the secret things of darkness and the hidden counsels of the heart 1 Cor. 4.5 And shall despoil sinners of all their pretences and excuses and plainly and undeniably pluck off their disguises from them He knows all the Springs Motions hidden Counsels of the heart and secret things that move you and set you a work 2. For Justice and Righteousness An Incorrupt Judge he is that neither hath doth or can err in the Judgment As there is a double knowledge in Christ so there is also a double righteousness the one that belongs to him as God the other as man And both are exact and immutably perfect His Divine nature is holiness it self In Him there is light and no darkness at all 1 John 1.5 The least shadow of Injustice cannot be imagined in God for Gods holiness is his Being it is not a superadded Quality as it is in us The Quality may be lost yet the Being remain as in Angels holiness was a superadded Quality they had their Angelical being but lost their holiness and when Adam fell he lost that holiness and righteousness in which he was Created but yet he had his being But Gods holiness is his very Nature and Essence The holiness of God may be compared to a vessel that is all of pure Gold but the holiness of the Creature may be compared to a vessel of Wood and Earth that is only gilded the outside is God but the substance of the vessel is another thing Now in a vessel of pure Gold there the lustre and the substance is the same Our holiness is but gilding it may be worn out but Gods holiness is Gold he is holiness it self We cannot call a wise man wisdom We use the Concrete when we speak of men we say they are wise good holy but we use the Abstract of God God is Love Light Holiness Purity and Mercy it self which notes the inseparability of the Attribute from his Nature God is himself and God cannot deny himself Peter Martyr sets forth the holiness of God by this Comparison Take a Carpenter when he hath chalked and drawn his line when he goes and chops the Timber sometimes he
Remunerative Justice There is a threefold Justice in God his General Justice his Strict Justice his Justice of Benignity or Fidelity according to his Gospel Law 1. His General Justice requireth that there should be a different proceeding among them that differ among themselves that every man should reap according to what he hath sown whether he hath been sowing to the Flesh or to the Spirit that the fruit of his doings should be given into his Bosom And therefore though this be not evident in this life where good and evil is promiscuously dispensed because now is the time of Gods patience and our tryal yet in the life to come when God will Judge the World in Righteousness Acts 17.31 it is necessary that it should go well with the good and ill with the bad And as the Apostle saith 2 Thes. 1.6 7. It is a Righteous thing with God to recompense Tribulation to them that trouble you and to you that are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven with his mighty Angels There is generalis ratio justi in the difference of the recompenses And therefore the different actions of the persons to be judged must come into the discussion whether good or evil 2dly There is Gods strict Justice declared in the Covenant of works whereby he rewardeth man according to his perfect obedience or else punisheth him for his failings and coming short This also is in part to be declared at the day of Judgment on the wicked at least for the Apostle declareth that there will be a different proceeding with men according to the divers Covenants which they are under some shall be judged by the Law of liberty according to which God will accept their sincere though imperfect obedience Others shall have Judgment without any temperament of mercy Jam. 2.12 13. And justly because they never changed Copy and tenure When God made man he gave him a Law suitable to that perfection and innocency wherein he made him Our Fact did not make void his right to require the obedience due by that Law Nor our obligation to perform it but yet because man was uncapable of performing this Law or obtaining Righteousness by it Having once broken it he was pleased to cast out a plank to us after shipwrack to offer us the remedy of a new Law of grace wherein he required of us repentance towards God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ Acts 20 21. That we should return to our duty to our Creator depending upon the merit Satisfaction and Power of the Mediator Now we are all sinners and have deserved death according to the Law of Nature and wo and wrath an hundred times over and if through our impenitency and unbelief we will not accept of Gods remedy we are justly left to the old Covenant under which we were born and so undergo Judgment without mercy 3dly There is his justice of bounty and free beneficence as judging according to his Gospel Law which accepteth of sincere obedience and so God is just when he rewardeth a man capable of reward upon terms of Grace So 't is said Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work of Faith and labour of love which ye have shewed to his name His promises take notice of works and the fruits of Faith and Love as one part of our Qualification which make us capable of the blessings promised 3. His veracity and faithfulness God hath promised Life and Glory to the penitent and obedient and the faithful And God will make good his promises and reward all the labours and patience and faithfulness of his Servants according to his promises to them To whom hath he promised Salvation To the obedient to the patient to the pure in heart to the diligent and studious every where in the Word of God John 12.26 There shall my Servant be Jam. 1.12 And Rom. 2.6 7. He will render to every one according to his deeds To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for Glory Honour Immortality Eternal Life On the contrary he hath interminated and threatned verses 8 9. To them that are contentious and obey not the truth who wrangle and dispute away duty See promises mixed with threatnings to the carnal and the mortified Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the Spirit do Mortifie the deeds of the Body ye shall live And Gal. 6.8 If ye sow to the flesh of the flesh ye shall reap corruption but if ye sow to the Spirit ye shall reap Life Everlasting Now that Gods truth may fully appear mens works must be brought into the tryal 4. His free grace The business of that day is not only to glorifie his Justice but to glorify his free Love and Mercy 1 Pet. 1.13 Hope unto the end for the grace that is to be brought to you at the Revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ. And this grace is no way infringed but the rather exalted when what we have done in the Body whether it be good or evil is brought into the Judgment 1. The evil works of the faithful shew that every one is worthy of death for sinning though we do not die and perish everlastingly for it as others do Gods best Saints have need to deprecate his strict Judgment Psa. 143.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant he doth not say with thine enemy but thy Servant They that can continue with most patience in well doing have nothing to look for at last but mercy Jude 21 'T is their best plea Revel 2.10 Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a Crown of Life When we have done and suffered never so much for God we must at length take Eternal Life as a gift out of the hands of our Redeemer but for the grace of the new Covenant we might have perished as others do In some measure we see grace here but never so fully and perfectly as then Partly because now we have not so full a view of our unworthiness as when our actions are scanned and all brought to light And partly because there is not so full and large Manifestation of Gods favour now as there is in our full and final reward 'T is grace now that he is pleased to pass by our offences and to take us into his family and give us some tast of his Love and a right to the Heavenly Kingdom but then 't is another manner of grace and favour then our pardon shall be pronounced by our Judges own mouth and he shall not only take us into his family but into his immediate presence and Heavenly Palace not only give us right but possession Come ye Blessed of my Father Inherit the Kingdom prepared for you And shall have not only some remote service and Ministration but be everlastingly imployed in loving and delighting in and praising of God this is grace indeed The grace of God or his free favour to
sinners is never seen in all its glory or graciousness till then 2. The good which the faithful do is very imperfect and mixed with many weaknesses and infirmities it may endure the touchstone but it cannot endure the balance as we shall find then when our Righteous Judge shall compare our best actions with his Holy Law After we repented and believed and returned to the obedience of God the Lord knoweth our Righteousness is as filthy rags and our best robes need to be washed in the Blood of the Lamb. Sin is our nakedness and graces are our garments 3. Though it were never so perfect yet it merits nothing by its own intrinsick worth at Gods hands when we have done all we are but unprofitable Servants Luke 17.10 And paying a due debt deserveth no reward 't is a grace bestowed upon us that we can do any thing for God 2 Cor. 8.1 And services and sufferings bear no equality with the reward Rom. 8.18 And all is done by those that did once deserve Eternal Death Rom. 6.17 18. And were redeemed and recovered out of that misery by an infinite grace 1 Pet. 1.18 19. And already appointed Heirs of Eternal Life before we serve him Rom. 8.17 by his precedent elective love In short they that continually need to implore the mercy of God for the pardon of sin and cannot oblige God by any work of theirs must needs admire grace and the more grace is discovered to them and they discovered to themselves the more they will do so 2. The other end of the Judgment is to convince the Creature and that is best done by bringing our works whether good or evil into the Judgment If only the purposes of God were manifested the condemned would have a just exception and their cavils would be justified that it was long of God they were not saved Man is apt to charge God wrongfully Pro. 9.3 The foolishness of man perverteth his way and his heart freteth against the Lord. What ever exceptions men have against God now then all is clear their works are produced their own evil choice and course if the grace of the Redeemer were only produced those who are excluded from the benefit might seem to tax the proceeding as arbitrary and the whole business would seem to be a matter of Favour and not of Justice But when their destruction is of themselves there is no cause of complaint if only the good estate of men were considered there would not be such an open vindication of Gods Righteous dealing In any Judgment all things are rightly and convincingly carryed when the Judge doth proceed secundum regulas juris secundum allegata probata according to the Law as a Rule and according to the things alledged and proved as to the application of the rule to the parties Judged Now the producing of the things done in the Body whether good or evil suiteth with both these and so in the day of Judgment there is a right course taken for convincing the Creature 1. The Judge must keep close to the Law as his rule for the absolving or acquitting of the parties impleaded So it belongeth to Christ as a Judge to determine our case according to the Law which we are under We Christians are under a double Law of Nature and Grace the Law of Nature bindeth us to love and serve our Creator but because of mans Apostacy the Law of Grace findeth out a remedy of repentance or returning to our duty after the breach and Faith or sueing out the mercy of God in the name of Jesus Christ. Now those who will not accept of the Second Covenant remain under the bond of the first which exacteth perfect obedience from them and the Judge doth them no wrong if he Judge them according to their works But now those who have accepted the Second Covenant and devoted themselves to God taking sanctuary at the mercy of their Redeemer they indeed have a plea against the first Covenant they are sinners but they are repenting sinners and believing in Christ. Now their claim must be examined by the Judge whether this penitence and acceptance of grace be sincere and real whether true Penitents and sound believers that must be seen by our works and the Judge must examine whether our repentance and returning to our duty be verified by our after obedience and our thankful acceptance of Christ and doth ingage us to constancy and cheerfulness in that obedience A double accusation may be brought against man before the Tribunal of God That he is a sinner and so guilty of the breach of the first Covenant Or that he is no sound believer Having not fulfilled the Condition of the Second As to the first accusation we are justified by Faith as to the Second by works and so James and Paul are reconciled Rom. 3.24 A man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law Jam. 2.24 A man is justified by works and not by Faith only Every one of us may be considered as a man that liveth in the World Or as a sinner in the State of Nature or as a man called to the grace of God in Christ or as a Christian professing Faith in the Redeemer According to this double relation there is a double Judgment past upon us According to the Law so condemned already according to the Gospel so accepted in the Beloved To this double Judgment there answereth a double justification Of a sinner by vertue of the satisfaction of Christ apprehended by Faith without the works of the Law Of a believer or one in the state of grace so justified by works for here 't is not enquired whether he have satisfied the Law that he may have Life by it but whether professing himself to be a Christian he be a true believer and that must be tryed by his works for as God in the Covenant of grace giveth us two benefits remission of sins and sanctification by the Spirit So he requireth two duties from us A thankful acceptance of his grace by Faith and also new obedience as the fruit of love Well then this being so to wit that Christs Commission and charge is to give Eternal Life to true believers and them only the only found mark of true believers is their works of new obedience These must be tryed in the Judgment 2. A Judge must proceed secundum alligata probata not to give sentence by guess but upon the evidence of the Fact Therefore Christ to convince men that they are sinners by the first Covenant or Hypocrites or sincere by the Second must consider their works Mens profession must not be taken in the case but their lives must be considered for there are Christians in the Letter and Christians in the Spirit some that have a Form of godliness but deny the Power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 And God doth not respect the outward profession 1 Pet. 1.17 There may be a carnal Christian as well as a carnal Heathen
to presume upon the indulgence of that day are such who make a fair profession injoy many outward priviledges As suppose the Jew above the Gentile the Christian above the Jew the Officer or one Imployed in the Church above the common Christian. The priviledge of the Jew was his circumcision the knowledge of the Law and outward obedience thereunto or submission to the rituals of Moses because they were exact in these things they hoped to be accepted with God and to be more favourably dealt with than others The priviledge of the Christian is baptism the knowledge of Christ being of his party and visibly owning his interest in the World they have eaten and drunk in his presence he hath taught in their streets and they have frequented the assembly where he is ordinarily present and more powerfully present Luke 13.26 'T is possible they have put themselves in a stricter garb of religion forborn disgraceful sins been much in external ways of duty given God all the cheap and plausible obedience which the flesh can spare But if all this be without solid godliness or that sound constitution of heart or course of life which the principles of our profession would breed and call for these priviledges will be no advantage to him Well then let the Officer come the Apostle Prophet Pastour or Teacher by what names or titles soever they be distinguished who have born rule in the Church been much in exercising their gifts for his glory have taught others the way of salvation this is their priviledge Mat. 7.22 Lord have we not prophesyed in thy name and in thy name cast out Devils and in thy name done many wondrous works Then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye workers of iniquity Well now if no mans person shall be accepted if not for his profession if not for his Office if not for his external ministrations surely we ought to be strict and diligent and seriously godly as well as others And if we shall all appear before this Holy Just and Impartial Judge we should all pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 2. T is a strict and a just Judgment Acts. 17.30 31. He commandeth now all men every where to repent Because he hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the world in righteousness Now God winketh at every mans faults and doth not take vengeance on them judgeth the World in patience but then all men must give an account those who have refused the remedy offered to lapsed mankind shall have Judgment without mercy And how terrible will that Judgment be when the least sin rendreth us obnoxious to the severity of his revenging justice But those who have heard the Gospel and accepted the redeemers mercy shall also be judged according to their works in the manner formerly explained there is a remunerative Justice observed to them we must give an account of all our actions thoughts speeches affections and intentions that it may be seen whether they will amount to sincerity or a sound belief of the truths of the Gospel and therefore we should be the more careful to walk uprightly before him Matth. 12.36 37. But I say unto you that for every idle word that men shall speak they shall give an account thereof in the Judgment for by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words shalt thou be condemned Words must be accounted for especially false blasphemous words and such as flow out of the evil treasure of the heart and sadly accounted for For in conferring rewards and punishments God taketh notice of words as well as actions they make up a part of the evidence certainly in this just judgment we shall find that 't is a serious business to be a Christian. But those who have owned the redeemer must esteem him in their hearts above all wordly things and value his grace above the allurements of sense and count all things but dung and dross for the excellency of the knowledge of their Lord Phil. 3.7 8 9. And glorify him in their lives 1 Thes. 1.11 12. And pass through the Pikes To him that overcometh Rev. 2.26 And resist the Devil and subdue the flesh and vanquish the World There must be doing and there must be suffering there must be giving and forgiving giving out of our estates and forgiving wrongs and injuries visiting the sick and clothing the naked feeding the hungry there must be believing loving mortifying sin perfecting holiness And this is the tryal of those who come under the Gospel covenant which might be easily proved if the thing were not evident of its self Now judge you whether all this should not beget the fear of reverence or caution at least which fear of God should always reign in the hearts of the faithful 3. Gods final sentence is to be passed upon us upon which our eternal estate dependeth Therefore the great weight and consequence of that day maketh it matter of terrour to us We are to be happy for ever or undone for ever our estate will be then irrevocable Where a man cannot err twice there he cannot use too much solicitude According to our last account so shall the condition of every man be for ever What is a matter of greater moment than to be Judged to everlasting joy or everlasting torment Matters of profit or disprofit credit or discredit temporal life and death are nothing to it If a man lose in one bargain he may recover himself in another credit may bewounded by one action and healed in another though the scar remain the wound may be cured If a man die there is hope of life in another World but if sentenced to eternal death there is no reversing of it Therefore now we knowing the terrour of the Lord sue out our own pardon and perswade others to sue out their pardon in the name of Christ to make all sure for the present 4. The execution in case of failing in our duty is terrible beyond expression Because this is the main circumstance and is at the bottom of all I shall a little dilate upon it not to affright you with needless perplexities but in compassion to your souls God knoweth I shall take the rise thus The object of all fear is some evil approaching now the greater the evil is the nearer it approacheth the more certain and inevitable it is and the more it concerneth our selves the more cause of fear there is all these concur in the business in hand 1. The execution bringeth on the greatest evil The Evil of punishment and the greatest punishment the wrath of God the wrath of the eternal Judge who can and will cast body Soul into eternal fire This was due to all by the first covenant will be the portion of Impenitentsinners by the second Heb. 10.31 It s a fearful thing to f●ll into the hands of the living God Mark first obstinate and impenitent-sinners do Immediately fall
commit such things are worthy of death The dread of a God angry for sin is natural to us and the ground of all our trouble Man is afraid of death and some misery after death which is likely to come upon him Heb. 2.14 And till the forgiveness of sin be procured for us this bondage sticketh close to us and we know not how to get oft it God is an holy God and cannot endure iniquity and by his Law will not suffer the guilty to go free The Justice of the Supream Governour of all the World requireth that sin should be punished all mankind have a general presumption that death is penal these fears make pardon a very inviting motive to them These fears may be a while stifled in men but they easily return and can no way be appeased but by pardon and reconciliation with God carried on in such a way as they may be exempted from these fears Therefore God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself not Imputing their trespasses to them 3. Pardon of sins is very necessary to the end of reconciliation which is living in a course of holy amity and state of friendship with God till we live with him for ever in Heavenly glory Here I am to prove three things 1. That the end of reconciliation is walking in a course of holiness 2. That this holiness is carried on in a state of love and friendship between God and us 3. That pardon is the fittest way to breed this holiness and increase it 1. That the end of reconciliation is walking in a course of holiness for Christ died not to reconcile God to our sins but that reconciling our persons we might quit our sins and walk as those that are at good accord with him Amos 3.3 Can two walk together except they be agreed And 1 John 1.7 If we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with an other Now pardon of sin hath a mighty influence upon holy walking Justification and Sanctification are distinct priviledges but they always go together and the one doth exceedingly suit with the other These two priviledges pardon and holiness the one freeth us from the guilt the other from the stain of sin The one concerneth Gods interest our subjection to him the other our own comfort The one is the end the other thè means pardon is the means to Holiness and Holiness is the end of pardon our general pardon is to put us into a state of acceptable obedience our particular pardon to incourage us in it and quicken us and excite us anew The conditional and offered pardon is the means to work regeneration and regeneration Qualifieth for actual pardon Titus 3.7 That being justified by his grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life And Heb. 8.10 11 12. For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their mind and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people and they shall not teach every man his neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest For I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more And Acts 26.18 To open their eyes and to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Sathan unto God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among them which are sanctified by Faith And then actual pardon quickeneth us by love to carry on that holiness of heart and life which God requireth For this mercy is the powerful motive to perswade us to obedience Because he hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his blood Therefore we must love him and serve him all our days Luke 1.74 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 2 Cor. 5.14 15. For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead that they which live should not henceforth live to themselves but to him that died for them Titus 2.11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth Salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World Rom. 12.1 I beseech you Brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable Service His pardoning mercy and justification by Christ is the great enforcing Argument Those who are fetched up even from the Gates of Hell and delivered from under the sentence of the Law and called into the state of Gods Children should thankfully accept the benefit acknowledge the benefactour live in love to God and holiness hate that sin they have repented of and which hath been pardoned to them and still hold on their course in a way of obedience till their full recovery in the everlasting estate 2. That this holiness is carryed on in a state of love and friendship between God and us Love beareth rule in the Spiritual life and pardon is the great ground of love Luke 7.47 She loved much because much was forgiven her The great business of religion is to love God above all and a man that is uncertain whether there be any such thing as pardon how can he love God above himself and all other things Self love is very hardly cured for what is nearer to us than our selves Therefore self-love is very deeply rooted in us especially love of life that it must be some very strong and powerful thing which can subdue it now nothing will do it but the love of God Propound the terrors of the Lord that will not do it men will not be frightned out of self love It must be a powerful love that must divert us from it as one Nail driveth out another so doth one love drive our another Now what can be more powerful than the love of God T is as strong as death many Waters cannot quench it Cant. 8.7 This prevaileth over our natural inclination so that we shall not only forsake the sins and vanities which we now love but also life its self Rev. 12.11 They loved not their lives unto the death This prevaileth over our natural inclination so that we can lay all things at Gods feet and suffer all things and endure all things for Gods sake yea even life its self for his Glory 3. Pardoning mercy in Christ is the great argument which breedeth and feedeth this love How can I love a God which I think will damn me and may probably do it Our turning to God must be by love and our living to God and for God