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A51840 A fourth volume containing one hundred and fifty sermons on several texts of Scripture in two parts : part the first containing LXXIV sermons : part the second containing LXXVI sermons : with an alphabetical table to the whole / by ... Thomas Manton ... Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1693 (1693) Wing M524; ESTC R13953 1,954,391 1,278

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from Faith in Christ Rom. 5.1 Being justified by Faith we have peace with God from a sense of our sincere dealing with God 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world A serenity resulting from our peace with God and close walking with him 2. The strictness and exactness of the Apostles course He would keep this good Conscience void of offence It may be understood passively or actively Passively that Conscience be not offended and suffer wrong Actively that we offend not or offer wrong to others 1. That Conscience be not offended or receive wrong by any miscarriage of ours For it is a tender thing the least dust in the eye hindreth its use so doth Sin offend and trouble the Conscience Take those four Notions before-mentioned Clearness Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God A dusty Glass hindreth the sight of the Image so Lust cloudeth the mind In regard of Purity so far as we give way to Sin Conscience is defiled the Apostle speaketh of some Whose minds and consciences were defiled Titus 1.15 It is defiled by Sin In regard of tenderness nothing bringeth a brawne upon Conscience so much as frequent and allowed sinning in small things first it is wounded and then hardned and so groweth dead and sleepy though it may write it refuseth to speak it is a Register when it is not a Witness So it is offended in regard of quietness an offended Conscience will offend us and a wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18.14 You may as well expect to touch the Flesh with a burning Coal without pain as to sin without trouble of Conscience Sin will bring shame and horrour ever since Adams experience who was afraid and ashamed Gen. 3.7 2. The second Sense that we offend not nor offer wrong to others will fall in with the next Head 3. The Impartiality of his Obedience both towards God and towards men There are two Tables and we are to take care we do not give offence to God or Men by neglecting our Duty to either 1. Our chief care should be that we do not make a breach upon our Love to God Conscience standeth alwayes in dread of God's Eye and Presence to whom it is most accountable Acts 23 1. I have lived in all good conscience before God until this day Oh grieve not the spirit Eph. 4.30 Offend not the pure Eyes of his Glory 2. That we do not offend Men Rom. 12.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Provide things honest in the sight of all men We must be careful of our Conscience before God and frame with Men that we neither seduce them by our Example nor grieve them by any unjust or uncharitable Carriage of ours but be blameless to Men. 4. The Constancy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alwayes in all cases by all means at all times A Conscience brought forth at times and for certain turns is not a good Conscience Iob 13.18 Behold now I have ordered my cause I know that I shall be justified A Man is tryed by his course not by a step or two 1 Pet. 1.15 As he that hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in every creek and corner of your lives not in an Humour and in good Moods A Christian is every where like himself and never dareth to do any thing knowingly against Conscience Thirdly The laborious diligences wherewith he carryed it on I exercise my self We must make it our constant labour and endeavour by a diligent search into the mind of God Rom. 12.2 That we may prove what is the good and acceptable will of God Eph. 5.17 Be not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Eph. 5.10 Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord that we may not offend him in Worship or Daily Conversation By a serious enquiry into the state of our own hearts and wayes Psalm 4.4 Stand in awe and sin not commune with your hearts upon your bed and be still If we would have Conscience speak to us we must often speak to Conscience Ier. 8.6 I hearkened and heard but they spake not aright no man repented him of his wickedness saying what have I done Ask questions of your hearts And also by a constant watchfulness and taking heed to our feet Psalm 39.1 I said I will take heed to my wayes that I offend not with my tongue Many live as if they had no Conscience and by a broken-hearted making use of Christs Death Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ. And 1 Iohn 2.1 If any man sin we have an advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous And Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal spirit offered himself to God without spot purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God By a serious resistance and mortification of Sin cutting off the right Hand and pulling out the right eye Matth. 5.29 30. and Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts And by the use of all Holy Means which God hath appointed II. The Reasons Why this is true Christianity 1. The necessity of it it is a great question how far Obedience belongeth to Faith whether as a part or as an end fruit and consequent I answer both wayes consent of subjection is a part of Faith Actual Obedience a fruit of it In the Covenant there is a consent first before practice Faith believeth the Precepts as well as the Promises Psalm 119.66 Teach me good judgment and knowledge for I have believed thy commandments Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water It believeth the Promises to sweeten Obedience to us it hath a perswasive Oratory as it worketh by Love or Hope it worketh us to an observance of the Precepts by the hopes of the Resurrection least we be inticed from them either by things grateful or troublesome to present sense 1 Cor. 15.58 Be stedfast and unmoveable alwayes ab●i●ding in the work of the Lord for as much as you know that your work is not in vain in the Lord. If you believe things written in the Law and the Prophets you will see your labour is not in vain in the Lord. 2. The Comfort of Obedience to us we cannot make out our Evidence and Plea but by a uniform constant and impartial Obedience Principles are latent till they discover themselves by their Fruit our Faith and Hope is but a fancy unless it prevail over sensitive inclinations to present things that we may live in the patient and delightful service of God and an intire
must not be Offence in Quantity Fulness of Bread was one of Sodom's Sins Ezek. 16.49 that is Excess in the Use of the Creature Now how shall we state this Excess Not merely by the Custom of Nations for Sins may be authorized by general Practice as Sodom's Sin was Fulness of Bread Not merely by the Greatness of the Estate Plenty doth not warrant Excess If a Man have never so much Cloth yet he would not make his Garment too big for him If the Meat be too salt it is no Excuse to the Cook to say he had good store of Salt by him So will it be no Plea that God hath given you Plenty and a great Estate to warrant you in your Excess The Heart may be over-charged when the Purse is not Neither must it be measured by the Capacity of the Stomach Christ doth not say Take heed you do not over-charge your Stomach with Surfeiting and Drunkenness but your Heart Luke 21.34 Some Men are strong to drink Wine they are Tubs and Hogsheads as Ambrose calls them rather than Men. But it is not when the Stomach is overcharged but the Conscience when it grows secure and carnal or the Heart when it is not fit for Duties less apt to be lifted up to God in Prayers and Thanksgivings and the Mind cannot be lifted up to heavenly things So that the Measure in this kind must be our Fitness to perform the Duties of our general and particular Calling and when that is exceeded then we sin 2. For the Quality We must not hanker after Quails and desire dainty Food that 's a sign Lust is made wanton and Nature being perverted is grown delicate which otherwise aimeth but at Necessaries Indeed it is God's great Indulgence to us to give such things as are Refreshments to Nature not only for Support but Delight The Substance of our Food might suffice to nourish but God hath created them with Smell Taste and Colours for our greater Delight but we must not be too curious this is nourishing your Hearts as in a Day of Slaughter Jam. 5.5 And still the Disposition increaseth Therefore it is good to check Curiosity at first Curiosity in Diet God takes notice of Deut. 14.21 Thou shalt not sethe a Kid in his Mother's Milk affecting excessively the pleasing of the Palat with too much Curiosity It is said of the rich Glutton He fared sumptuously every Day Luke 16.19 I know Feasts are allowed and sometimes a more liberal Use of the Creature Christ honoured a Feast with a Miracle of changing Water into Wine But a constant Delicacy brings a Brawn upon the Heart and a Wantonness upon the Appetite When Men do nothing else but knit Pleasure to Pleasure they nourish their Hearts that is rear up their Lusts and are fond of the Flesh. We are still to maintain and carry on the spiritual Conflict and therefore this Curiosity and hunting after Novelties is contrary to the Intent of the Christian Life which is a War with the Flesh not to make it wanton 3. The manner of injoying the Creature It must be with Caution and with Piety 1 st With Caution Iob sacrificed while his Sons feasted Iob 1.5 We are apt to forget God most when he is best to us and when our Hearts are warmed and inflamed with high and good Chear we are apt to sin therefore your Heart should not be let loose to the fruition of outward Comforts It is ill to trust Appetite without a Guard as it is to trust a Child among a Company of Poisons Prov. 23.1 2. When thou sittest to eat with a Ruler consider diligently what is before thee And put a Knife to thy Throat if thou be a Man given to Appetite That 's Solomon's Advice And rejoice as if you rejoiced not 1 Cor. 7.31 Consider you are in the midst of Dangers and Temptations When these Baits are before you Self-denial is put to the Exercise and here you are tried to see what Command you have over your selves Men lay aside all Care when they go to festival Meetings It were well to lay aside worldly Cares that you might not eat the Bread of Sorrow but take heed of a secret Snare you should not lay aside spiritual Care 2 dly You must use them with Piety God must not be banished from our Delights and Refreshments we must receive them from God enjoy them in God and refer them to God We must receive them from God who is the Author the Giver the Allower and the Sanctifier of them You must take all your Comforts out of God's Hands with Thanksgiving then your Table will not so easily be made a Snare How sweet is this when you can say in good Conscience Lord thou hast provided this for me this is the Comfort thou hast allowed me The Apostle saith 1 Tim. 4.5 6. Every Creature of God is good and nothing to be refused if it be received with Thanksgiving for it is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer In the Word God hath declared the Use to be lawful there we understand our Liberty and Right by Christ and in Prayer we ask God's Leave and Blessing that so we may act Faith upon his Providence for Man doth not live by Bread alone he must receive his Strength and Nourishment from God All the Creatures since the Fall are armed with a Curse and therefore we had need take them as Blessings out of God's Hand in and through Jesus Christ. And we must enjoy them in God God must not be forgotten when he remembers us as you refresh the Body with Food let the Soul be refreshed too by Meditation that 's the Soul's Refreshment Consider his Liberality how many things doth God give at a Feast It is God that gives Wealth to furnish our Table Health to use them Peace to meet together and Christ hath purchased Liberty that we may make use of all these Blessings The Soul must have its Refreshment And so may we meditate upon Christ's Sweetness the Fatness of God's House In Luke 14. when Christ was eating Bread in the Pharisee's House then he discoursed of the spiritual Wedding-Supper and of eating Bread in his Father's Kingdom Then you must use them to God as the End and Scope 1 Cor. 10.31 Whether therefore ye eat or drink or whatever you do do all to the Glory of God No Pleasure should be its own End The immediate End is the Sustentation of the Body but the remote End should be Service and God's Glory We do not eat to eat but eat to live Pleasure is the Handmaid of Nature but not the Guide The End of Eating is to repair the Strength which hath been weakned in Duty and fit us to attend upon Duty again Eccles. 10.17 Thy Princes eat in due Season for Strength and not for Drunkenness not for mere Delight but for Service Thus you see what it is to be sober in the Use of Meats and Drinks III d Branch Sobriety in Apparel The
us the more dreggy Delights oppress Reason wound Conscience and so make way for Sorrow 2. Or else it is called strong Consolation in comparison with it self with respect to less or more imperfect degrees of Comfort There is a Latitude in Comfort some have more and some less some have only weak Glimmerings and Drops others have strong Consolation Ioy unspeakable and full of Glory 1 Pet. 1.8 Now a Christian should aim at the highest Degree the stronger your Consolation the better is Christ pleased with it John 15.11 These things have I spoken unto you that my Ioy may remain in you and that your Ioy might be full This makes the Heart of Christ glad when our Counsels are more able to swallow up our Sorrow and revive the Soul in the midst of Trouble In some this Confidence is accompanied with more sensible Doubts Staggerings and Weaknesses though Comfort gets the upper hand in others it is more strong clear and lively and they act in the Ways of God with greater Encouragement 3. It may likewise be called Strong in regard of its Effects 1. It marreth Carnal Joy it puts the Soul quite out of taste with other things Men used Acorns till they found out the use of Bread We content our selves with Husks till we taste of the fatted Calf in our Father's House The Soul must have some Oblectation Love cannot lie idle we are taken with Garlick and Onions till we taste Manna When once we have tasted of the Love of God other things will not be so sweet Cant. 1.4 We will be glad and rejoice in thee we will remember thy Love more than Wine 2. It is stronger than the Evil which it opposeth it swalloweth up all our Sorrows whatever they be Look as we say of Wine or of any Spirits it is very strong when a few Drops can change a great deal of Water into its own Nature So because it overcometh the greatest Evils Terrors of Conscience worldly Miseries and the greatest Anguish and Distress which may befal us therefore it is called strong Comfort A mighty Joy a sense of God's Love in Christ swalloweth up all our Sorrow whatever The Wrath of God is a dreadful thing we can hardly think of it without amazement The fear of Hell Death and Judgment to come these are wont to raise a great Storm in the Conscience but spiritual Joy can only allay it As a wounded Conscience can say there is no Sorrow like unto my Sorrow so a peaceable Conscience can say there is no Joy like unto my Joy Phil. 4.7 The Peace of God which passeth all Vnderstanding shall keep your Hearts and Minds through Iesus Christ. The strength of this Joy is seen by Experience rather than Expression In outward Troubles they can take pleasure in Infirmities 2 Cor. 12.10 Glory in Tribulation Rom. 5.3 The more the Devil seeks to trouble the Saints they have the more Joy and are more than Conquerors Rom. 8.37 and all by the Power of this Joy as the more we seek to wrest a Staff out of a Man's Hands he holds it the faster Tribulations Anguish Distress Fears Torments Difficulties they are all overpowred by this Joy II. How this strong Consolation ariseth from Assurance and Certainty To establish Joy and Comfort two things are necessary Excellency and Propriety The thing in which I rejoice it must be Good and it must be Mine Sutably here in the Text there is an assurance of excellent Privileges and then there is a Qualification annexed that we may understand our own Interest God by his Oath assures us of excellent Privileges in Christ and that 's a ground of strong Consolation Then he requireth a Duty of us that we fly for refuge to take hold of the Hope set before us 1. For the Excellency of our Privileges You know that which will minister solid Comfort to the Soul it had need be Excellent A small Matter though never so sure will not occasion a strong Consolation the Joy is according to the Object Now whether a Christian look backward or forward there is Matter of Rejoicing to the Heirs of Promise Backward there is the Immutability of his Counsel Forward there is a Hope set before us From one Eternity to another may a Believer walk and still find cause of rejoicing in God If he looks Backward there God reveals to him the unchangeable Purposes of Grace before the World was If he looks Forward there is an eternal Possession of Glory when the World shall be no more It is sweet to know what 's past and what 's to come there 's naturally a Curiosity in us which would be satisfied We know what God was doing before the World was and what he will do when the World shall be no more We may know for our comfort God was treating and dealing with Christ about our Salvation putting it into an unchangeable course and he hath for ever provided for the Comfort and Welfare of our Souls that we may enjoy him love him and delight in him for evermore Man out of a natural Curiosity hath a great delight both in History and Prophecy to read what is past and to fore-know what is to come especially what concerns his own Destiny Now God in condescension tells us under the assurance of an Oath what he has done for us what Thoughts of Love he had towards us from Eternity what he will do and how happy our Estate shall be for ever God doth not only satisfy the Curiosity of our Nature that desireth Knowledg but the bent of it that poiseth us to our own Happiness It is sweet to read our Names written in the Book of God's everlasting Decree Luke 10.20 Rejoice because your Names are written in Heaven That God hath set us down as Heirs of all that Grace and Mercy he hath dispensed in his Covenant It is sweet and pleasant to reflect upon his antient Purposes of Grace and by the Eye of Faith to read our Names written and recorded in the Rolls of Heaven When you hear any Offer in the Gospel to say this was God's Purpose and eternal Counsel to bestow this upon me before all Worlds he thought of me then And then there is an Hope set before us thy Lot is fallen to thee in a fair Ground O what Joy is this to Believers that their Souls are fully provided for for ever and ever and they shall have what infinite Mercy can bestow and what infinite Merit hath purchased 2. Another Cause of strong Comfort is Interest and Propriety Besides the Excellency of the Privilege there must be the Clearness of our Interest The Object of Joy is not only good in common but our Good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That which is a Man 's own is sweet to him It doth not enrich a Man to hear there are Pearls and Diamonds in the World and Mines of Gold in the Indies unless he had them in his own possession So it doth not fill us with
beautiful Palace and Edifice And mark there is a diversity of Imployments Foundations Windows Gates Borders and there is a variety of Gifts expressed by the several kinds of Jewels Saphires Agats Carbuncles and pleasant Stones 4. God dispenseth his Gifts variously for the Beauty Order and Comeliness of the whole Universe of Mankind Variety is grateful Hills and Vallies make the World more beautiful so do the distinct Orders and Ranks of Men all Eye or all Belly is monstrous Difference with Proportion maketh Comeliness therefore one excelleth another and several Gifts and Ranks of Men there are for the more convenient Proportion of the whole as Labour Service Counsel Wit Wealth Strength c. Without this Variety it would be a Lump rather than a Body 5. That every one in the sight of his own Wants may be kept humble When we are singular for any or many Excellencies we are apt to grow proud and unsociable The Eye is apt to say to the Hand I have no need of thee or the Head to the Feet I have no need of you 1 Cor. 12.21 Therefore that we may have somewhat to commend us to the Respects of others and something to humble us God hath scattered his Gifts that one should need another that every one might have need of that Gift of which he hath not the Possession As every Man hath received the Gift even so minister the same to one another as good Stewards of the manifold Grace of God 1 Pet. 4.10 6. That there might be no Schism in the Body but the Members of it may maintain mutual Love and Amity Diversity of Gifts was not intended to dissolve the Bands of Union but to strengthen them rather Therefore the Apostle when he had reckoned up the Bands of Union he presently addeth But to every of us is given Grace according to the measure of the Gift of Christ Eph. 4.7 First he speaketh of what is one in all then of what is not one in all but divers in every one Every one hath his distinct Excellency to endear him to the rest Diversity of Gifts is an ordinary occasion of Division and Strife of Envy Pride mutual Disparagement but in it self it is one of the strongest Bands of Union whilst all in their way contribute to the good of the whole and have the use of that Excellency which they want themselves Divers Countries have divers Commodities one aboundeth in Gold another in Spices another with Wine Wool Corn Flax c. to maintain a Commerce between Mankind So here III. Vses 1. To quicken us to improve our several Talents for God and be faithful according to that Degree and Place we sustain in the Body 2. Those that have the greatest Gifts should not contemn those who have few or less There is none but hath need of another It is a base Spirit that would shine alone or set up one Gift to the prejudice of another All are yours whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas 1 Cor. 3.21 22. In veste varietas sed scissura non sit Let us mutually help one another and acknowledg the Wisdom and Goodness of God in all that we have and be humble in what we want 3. Let those that have few be content with the meanest Gifts You have no reason to repine at the Giver How little soever God hath given you it is more than he owed you If his Distribution had been a Matter of Justice and Debt you might have said Why has he not given to me as well as to another But it is the Act of a free Lord and he may do with his own as it pleaseth him Matth. 20.15 Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with my own Is thine Eye evil because mine is good And as you cannot repine against the Giver you should not envy the Receivers The Accounts are easier and the greatest Dealers are not always the safest Men. You that have received little shall account for little Doct. III. That whether we receive little or much all is in reference to an Account That is intimated in the words required asked Gifts are variously dispensed Some have Wit others Estate others Strength some have Offices Honour Authority but all must be called to an Account and those that have any Gifts must look to reckon for them This requiring and asking is represented to us in Scripture under the notion of certain Records Rolls or Books kept between God and the Creature concerning what we have received and returned Therefore I will prove 1. That there are Books of Account kept between God and the Creature 2. That at the Day of Doom these Books shall be opened 3. That all without exception shall be called to this Reckoning none so high as to be exempted from it none so low as to be neglected in it 4. That the Judgment shall pass upon all Men according to the Account then given 1 st That there are Books of Account kept between God and the Creature which is to be understood not properly but figuratively Not properly as if God who seeth all things with one infinite Act of Understanding did need Books as Men for the help of their Memories or to confirm the Truth and Equity of his Judgment by producing a Record but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the manner of Men and for our better Conception Men use Books in which they write those things which they have given out upon Trust and of which they expect a Return And in allusion to this because of God's exact and righteous Judgment the Scripture speaketh as if our Good and Evil were all upon record So Ier. 17.1 The Sin of Judah is written with a Pen of Iron and with the Point of a Diamond The Expression there is taken from Characters cut or carved with Iron and Steel or any strong Tool in Marble so as they cannot be defaced So again it is written before me Isa. 65.6 God did not forget or pass over but observe and remember Indeed there is a twofold Book The Book of God's Remembrance Mal. 3.16 A Book of Remembrance was written for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his Name whereby his notice is expressed The Sin that we commit or the Good that we do doth not die with the Action as if no further memory of it should remain but it is recorded The Book of our Conscience It is graven on the Table of their Hearts Jer. 17.1 It maketh a deep Impression on their Minds and Memories as cannot easily be razed out Nothing can scape the Eye of the Judg and not easily the notice of Conscience though one of the Books be in our keeping it is not easy to deface it and blot it out Now let us see what is written in these Books 1. What God doth for us or to us as Opportunities of Grace and Mercy These three Years I come seeking Fruit on this Figtree and find none Luke 13.7 John 4.54 This is again the
Tongue a deaf Ear or a lame Leg certainly you ought much more to bewail the want of Grace We murmure at outward Defects which is a taxing of Providence it being a fruit of the Lord's Dominion belongs to our Care Train up a Child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it Prov. 22.6 Dye the Cloath in the Wooll and not in the Webb and the Colour is more durable God works strangely in Children and many notable things have been found in them beyond expectation 3 It prevents many Sins which afterwards would be a trouble to us when we are Old O many think that the Tricks of Youth are long since forgotten and forgiven but alas the guilt of them may fly in our Faces afterward nay tho' they be pardoned and the Persons reconciled to God The Sins of Youth trouble many a tender Conscience in Age witness David Psal. 25.7 Remember not the Sins of my Youth And Iob Chap. 13.26 Thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possess the Iniquities of my Youth A Good man may remember old Sins with new fears that they are not pardoned While it is ea●ie to Sin it is easie to believe the pardon of Sin marvel not at the Expression while we are Young and Sin freely we think God will forgive those Sins and they will soon be forgotten but as a Man grows up into more tenderness of Conscience and into a greater Awe and Sense and Esteem of God's Holiness what a Holy God he serves he finds it the more difficult to believe the pardon of Sin Good Men have with much bitterness of Soul called to mind the Sins of their Youth when they see the Sins of their younger days are so many and the breaches of God's Law so innumerable whereby they have offended God that either through Ignorance or Inconsideration they have so sinned against God that they have much ado to believe the pardon of the multitude of their youthful Sins New Afflictions may awaken the sense of old Sins as old Bruises may trouble us long after upon every change of Weather There are some that feel the Sins of their Youth in their Bodies when the Pains and Aches of their miserable Age are the Fruits of their youthful Vanities and Intemperance as it is said Iob 20.11 His bones are full of the Sins of his Youth which shall lye down with him in the dust They carry the marks of their youthful Sins their Bones feel them till they lye down in the Dust. Nay God's Children that have repented and God hath been reconciled to them through Christ they have many a bitter remembrance of their youthful Follies and Vanities that make their Hearts ake at the Thoughts of them Ier. 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 Therefore upon these Considerations certainly it is very good to begin with God betimes that it may not be a disadvantage to us after God shall call us to Grace for though the Lord may bless the Education of Youth with Supernatural Grace yet youthful Vanities may prove very bitter in the remembrance of them when we grow old VSE This is spoken to reprove us because we always think it too soon to begin with God Where is this timely Care and Forwardness Alas we cannot say All these have we kept from our Youth but when we come to look to the Commands of God we may say All these have we broken from our Youth While they are Young most Men live prophane and without all fear of God Certainly there was some Goodness in this Mans Speech and that occasioned me to observe it for Iesus beholding him loved him But was it true All these have I kept from my Youth In a Sence it was true in regard of outward Conformity but not true in regard of that perfect Obedience which was required 1. It was true in regard of outward Conformity Externally he had kept them all thô not in the just extent of the Law yet he was as to Men unreproveable being no Adulterer no Murderer no Extortioner no Thief he did not lye certainly in this Profession he made he spoke as he thought and out of Simplicity and Error rather than Deceit the Man lived blamelesly and did no body harm and therefore saith All these have I kept from my Youth Outward Obedience and Conformity to the Law is a good and commendable thing in it self yea necessary and required of us but we are not to rest in it but to escape the Vices and Pollutions of the World is so far Praise-worthy There are many that are openly prophane and wicked in Life Swearers Drunkards Sabbath-breakers these come short of this Young man who yet came short of the Kingdom of Heaven What will these say for themselves will they pretend that their Heart is good Can a pure Fountain send forth impure Streams If the Heart were good would the Life be so naught If there be light in the Lanthorn will it not shine forth If there be Grace in the Heart it will appear 2. It was not true in regard of that perfect Obedience which the Law requireth and so he ignorantly and falsly supposed that he had kept the Law well enough and done all those things from his Youth The Falsity and presumption of this Answer will appear by considering 1. What the Scripture saith of the State of Man by Nature Gen. 8.21 The Imagination of mans Heart is evil from his Youth And he saith All these have I kept from my Youth O how much do they forget themselves that boast of their own Perfection 2. The Falsity of it appears by the sence of the Commandment produced Thou knowest the Commandment saith Christ Do not commit Adultery c. which will reach the most perfect man upon Earth It was a Command of the Second Table which wrought such Tragical Effects and that stirr'd up those Stings of Conscience and Agonies of Heart in Paul Rom. 7.7 I had nan known lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not Covet and thereupon he groundeth that General Verse 14. The Law is Spiritual but I am Carnal sold under Sin 3. The Falsity will appear by comparing him with other Holy Men of God how differently do they express themselves from this Man that was so full of Confidence Compare him first with Iosiah who when he heard the Law read he rent his Cloaths 2 Kings 22.11 and here Christ recites the Law Thou knowest the Commandment and this Young man saith All these have I kept from my Youth O what a difference is there between a tender Self-judging Heart and a Conceited Justiciary A tender Conscience is all in an Agony when it hears the Law and will smite for the least failing as David's Heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Saul's Garment
not where such a total Resignation there must be of our selves to the Will of God This was done by him and must be done by all that will be saved We know where the Land of Promise is and the way to it but it lyeth in an unknown World 2. Another Tryal was Heb. 11.17 18. By Faith Abraham when he was tryed offered up Isaac and he that had received the Promise offered up his only begotten Son of whom it was said that in Isaac shall thy seed be called Because God would make Abraham an Example of Faith to all future Generations therefore he puts him to this Tryal to see whether he loved his Isaac more than God Now Abraham gave him up wholly to God's disposal even Isaac on whom the Promise was settled being assured of God's Power he made all things ready for the Sacrifice VSE Let us get such a Faith even such a sincere hearty giving up our selves to Christ firmly to rely upon the Promises and faithfully to obey all his Commands delivered in the Gospel The Gospel is a summary of what we are to believe and do Psal. 119.166 I have hoped for thy Salvation and done thy Commandments Stick to this whatever Tryal is made of you and you have the Faith of Abraham SERMONS UPON St. MARK III. 5. SERMON I. MARK III. 5 And Iesus looked round about on them with Anger being grieved for the Hardness of their Hearts IN the first Verse of this Chapter we read that there was a Man which had a withered Hand who came to Jesus for Relief on the Sabbath-Day Here was a fair Occasion offered to the Pharisees to display their Malice The Sabbath was of high Esteem and Veneration among the Jews and therefore now they thought by this means to blast the Repute of Christ among the People In case he should heal on the Sabbath-Day their Noise and Clamour against him might seem to be justified Therefore 't is said They watched him whether he would heal on the Sabbath-day ver 2. But Christ is not daunted he goeth on with his Work for all their Prejudices nay to make the Miracle more manifest he biddeth him stand forth ver 3. However to satisfy the People he disputeth with them they themselves would do more to a Beast than he was requested to do to the Man with a withered Hand Ver. 4. He saith unto them Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath-day or to do evil to save Life or to kill In Matth. 12.10 it is said they propounded the Question to him and in the 11 th Verse by way of answer he maketh use of an Argument from a Beast fallen into a Pit He said unto them What Man shall there be among you that shall have one Sheep and if it fall into a Pit on the Sabbath-day will he not lay hold on it and lift it out But they held their Peace They could reply nothing by way of Answer and sufficient Confutation and they would reply nothing by way of Approbation and Consent At their malicious Silence Christ is both angred and grieved There is an excellent Temper and Mixture in his Affections In Christ's Anger there is more of Compassion than of Passion he knew how to distinguish between the Man and the Sin and to manifest his Displeasure and Grief at the same time The Cause of both is assigned in the Text for the Hardness of their Hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was softned for their Hardness The Point which I mean to handle is the Grievousness of the Sin of Hardness of Heart Christ was grieved with it in the Pharisees and there is not a greater cause of Offence to his Spirit Doct. That Hardness of Heart is a grievous Sin very offensive and provoking to Iesus Christ. I shall I. Open the Terms II. Shew you the Nature of this evil Frame of Heart III. The Kinds of it IV. The Causes of it V. The Heinousness of it VI. Some Observations concerning this spiritual Malady I. For the Terms by which it is expressed they are two Heart and Hardness 1. Heart This Hardness is sometimes ascribed to the Neck as Prov. 29.1 He that being often reproved hardneth his Neck shall suddenly be destroyed and that without Remedy And then it is a Metaphor taken from refractory Oxen that will not endure the Yoke and so it noteth Disobedience Sometimes to the Face as Ier. 3.5 They have made their Faces harder than a Rock And so it noteth Impudence they can no more blush than a Rock or Stone But most usually it is ascribed to the Heart as in the Text so Ezek. 3.7 The House of Israel will not hearken to thee for they will not hearken to me for all the House of Israel are impudent and hard-hearted And so it noteth Obstinacy All go together an hard Heart an hard Neck and an hard Face Men are first disobedient then obstinate then impudent But it is the Heart that we are to consider which naturally and in its first Sense signifieth a piece of Flesh in the Body which is the chief Seat and Shop of Life but morally and metaphorically it signifieth the Soul 1 Sam. 12.20 Serve the Lord with all your Heart that is with all your Soul Now in the Soul there are many Faculties the Mind the Conscience the Memory the Will and Affections and they are all expressed by this Term Heart The Mind is called Heart Rom. 1.21 Their foolish Heart was darkned that is their Mind The Conscience 1 Sam. 24.5 David 's Heart smote him that is his Conscience The Memory Phil. 1.7 I have you in my Heart that is I am mindful of you But usually it signifieth the Will and Affections as Mat. 22.37 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart And this is the Faculty in which this Disease is seated Blindness is incident to the Mind Searedness and Benummedness to the Conscience Slipperiness to the Memory Deadness to the Affections but Hardness is incident to the Will that part of the Soul by which we chuse and refuse Good or Evil. 2. Hardness It is expressed by different Terms in Scripture sometimes by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in the Text and Ephes. 4.18 which noteth a callous brawny insensible Hardness such as is in the Labourer's Hand or the Traveller's Heel Sometimes by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So it is a Metaphor taken from dry Bodies when the Parts are more condensed and so more impenetrable D●xities est qualitas densas bene compactas habens partes difficulter cedens tactui It doth not easily yield to any Impressions from without So it is set forth by the Hardness of the Adamant Zech. 7.12 They made their Hearts as an Adamant Stone They can no more be wrought upon to receive any Impression of Grace and Reformation than the Diamond or Flint or hardest Rock can be ingraved or fashioned to any Form by the Tool of the Artificer II. I
former Prophets There are so many Degrees mentioned first they grow slight and careless and do not care to hear what you say then they refuse to obey what they have heard then they grow Sermon-Proof they can hear and have no Benefit by it As long as the Word doth any way affect a Sinner there is some Hope but within a while Conscience smiteth not and Men have gotten the Victory over their Fears and Scruples And thus they go on from natural to voluntary and from voluntary to judicial Hardness of Heart and so are a ready Prey for the Devil 8. Dilatory Excuses are the last Refuge of an hard Heart When they can no longer withstand a Conviction they adjourn and put off the Compliance with God's Will and so elude the Importunity of the present Conviction Felix his Heart boggled Acts 24.25 And as he reasoned of Righteousness Temperance and Iudgment to come Felix trembled and said Go thy way for this time when I have a convenient Season I will call for thee Mind the present Season when God is affording Opportunities of getting Grace Heb. 3.7 8. To Day if ye will hear his Voice harden not your Hearts Psal. 119.60 I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments Zacheus Luke 19.6 he made haste and came down and received him joyfully Peter and Andrew Mark 4.20 They straitway left their Nets and followed him Paul Gal. 1.16 Immediately I conferred not with Flesh and Blood If God hath given you any Will and Inclination for the present it is an Advantage Sin the longer it continueth the stronger it groweth He that doth not go over at the Fountain-head will not be able to go over when the Stream groweth broader and the farther he goes downward the broader still he findeth it Every Day 's Impenitency bringeth on a new Degree of Hardness Would a Man that is to drink that which to his knowledg is poisoned put the more into his Cup and then take it off out of a Presumption that at length he shall find an Antidote Alas thou may'st be poisoned and dead before the Antidote comes SERMON III. MARK III. 5 And Iesus looked round about on them with Anger being grieved for the Hardness of their Hearts Vse 1. OF Trial. Is this our State Take the two Properties to judg by Insensibleness and Inflexibleness First A hard Heart is insensible insensible of Providences of the Word and of the State of the Soul 1 st Insensible of Providences 1. Of Mercies Either of the Author of Mercies they never look up to the God of their Mercies Hosea 2.8 She did not know that I gave her Corn and Wine and Oil and multiplied her Silver and Gold As Swine that feed upon the Acorns but never look up to the Tree from whence they fall Cant. 4.1 Behold thou ar● fair my Love behold thou art fair thou hast Doves Eyes As Doves peck and look u●ward It is a sign of a tender Heart to see God in every Mercy A drowsy and unattentive Soul never heedeth it is wholly swallowed up in present Enjoyments and looketh no farther It is our Privilege above the Beasts to know the f●rst Cause other Creatures live upon God but they are not capable of knowing God they glorify God in their Kind but we may know him Idolatry and Sottishness had never crept into the World if Men had owned the first Cause Or of the End of Mercies which is to draw in our Hearts to God therefore they are called Cords of a Man Hosea 11.4 I drew them with Cords of a Man with B●●ds of Love Esther 6.3 What Honour and Dignity hath been done to Mordeca● for 〈◊〉 2 Sam. 7.2 Th●● the King said unto Nathan the Prophet See now I dwell in an House of Cedar but the Ark of God dwelleth within Curtains When the Heart is urging to Duty upon this score God hath been good to me he hath given me Food and Raim●●● What have I done for God Now the Heart is hard when we are not sensible of his daily Providence and gracious Supplies in this kind 2 Sam. 12.7 8 9. Thus saith the Lord God of Israel I anointed thee King over Israel and delivered thee out of the Hand of Saul And I gave thee thy Master's House and thy Master's Wives into thy Bosom and gave thee the House of Israel and of Judah and if that had been too little I would moreover have given unto thee such and such things Wherefore hast thou despised the Commandment of the Lord to do evil in his sight David had lost his Awe of God because he had not a thankful sense of the Mercies of God 2. Of corrective Providences The Body is a tender Part with wicked Men when they are straitned for bodily Conveniences they will complain yet the hard Heart is still insensible of Judgments They are insensible of the Author or discerning Cause they do not look upward nor inward and though doctrinally right in these things yet they do not seriously consider it and recal it to mind Opinion is one thing and Consideration is another wicked Men may take up good Opinions but they do not consider the Force and Consequence of them 1. They do not see the Hand of God in them Isa. 26.11 Lord when thy Hand is lifted up they will not see They look on these things but as a Chance 1 Sam. 6.9 And see if it goeth up by the way of his own Coast to Bethshemesh then he hath done us this great Evil but if not then we shall know that it was not his Hand that smote us it was a Chance that happened to us If Men own God's Hand they should take up the Matter with him but they own it doctrinally though not practically A Godly Man hath explicite Thoughts of God Iob doth not say the Sabeans and the Chalde●●s but the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away Job 1.21 They do not complain when they are crossed of Chance but the Lord is angry and when they are stricken they consult with him and humble themselves before him Wicked Men are sensible of the smart of the Rod but not of the Hand that holds it 2. They do not see the deserving Cause of them which is Sin Lam. 3.39 40. Wherefore doth a living Man complain a Man for the punishment of his Sins Let us search and try our Ways and turn again to the Lord. If Sickness cometh if a Relation be taken away if an Estate be blasted a waking Conscience looks to the Cause they would see the Mind of God in the Rod. When Israel fell before the Men of Ai Ioshua looketh out for the Troubler so do God's Children 2 dly Insensible of the Power of the Word they have no taste no feeling of the Powers of the World to come Jer. 23.29 Is not my Word like a Fire saith the Lord and like a Hammer that breaketh the Rock in pieces There is a breaking and a melting Power in the Word
what I spake against this Place and against the Inhabitants thereof that they should become a Desolation and a Curse and hast rent thy Clothes and wept before me I also have heard thee saith the Lord. Threatnings may terrify but this melts the Heart and begets a serious Remorse for Sin as offensive displeasing and grievous unto God 2 Cor. 7.10 For godly Sorrow worketh Repentance to Salvation not to be repented of but the Sorrow of the World worketh Death Ezek. 6.9 And they that escape of you shall remember me among the Nations whither they shall be carried Captives because I am broken with their whorish Heart which hath departed from me and with their Eyes which go a whoring after their Idols and they shall loath themselves for the Evils which they have committed in all their Abominations Not only for the Evils which they have suffered but which they have committed for the Evil that is in Sin not for the Evil that is after Sin 2 Chron. 32.26 Hezekiah humbled himself for the Pride of his Heart Not only for the Inconvenience and Mischief done thereby but because God was offended That Christian Niobe wept much because she loved much Luke 7.47 Secondly There are two Graces Faith and Fear 1. Faith As Reason maketh a difference between a Man and a Beast so doth Faith between a Man and a Man It is Faith bringeth us under the power of a Truth and maketh Light active Three times Christ reproached his Disciples for hardness of Heart and still the Cause given is Unbelief Mark 6.52 They considered not the Miracle of the Loaves for their Hearts were hardned Mark 8.17 Why reason ye because ye have no Bread Perceive ye not yet neither understand Have ye your Heart yet hardned Mark 16.14 Afterwards he appeared unto the eleven as they sat at Meat and upbraided them because of their Vnbelief and hardness of Heart because they believed not them which had seen him after he was risen A Man is dull stupid and sensless till Faith maketh Light break in upon the Heart with Power till then he will not make use of his Eyes Ears or Memory All Affections follow Perswasion Faith perswadeth of Death and Hell and Judgment to come We would not trifle away the Day of Grace if we did believe the Goodness of God offering Favour and Life eternal in Christ. Haec audiunt quasi somniantes Men entertain these things as a Dream and are only a little troubled for the present till they thorowly believe them 2. Fear It is always made a Preservative against hardness of Heart Isa. 63.17 O Lord why hast thou made us to err from thy Ways and hardned our Heart from 〈◊〉 Fear Fear argueth a constant sense of God's Presence and a deep respect to him so as that we are loth to offend him it makes the Soul to walk as in God's Company and therefore it is kept humble Prov. 28.14 Happy is the Man that feareth alway but he that hardneth his Heart shall fall into Mischief It will make us tender of offending God and yielding to our own Corruptions though never so secret Who is the Man that is opposed to him that hardneth his Heart He that feareth alway Carelesness breedeth Senslesness but now when we are continually watchful and say Shall I thus and thus offend God the Heart is kept in a good Frame Thirdly There are two Ordinances the Word and Prayer For Water if never so scalding will return to its natural Coldness 1. The Word 2 Chron. 34.19 It came to pass when the King had heard the VVords of the Law that he rent his Clothes And ver 27. Because thine Heart was tender and thou didst humble thy self before God when thou heardest his VVords against this Place and against the Inhabitants thereof and didst rent thy Clothes and weep before me I have even heard thee also saith the Lord. Heb. 3.7 8. To day if ye will hear his Voice harden not your Hearts A conscionable hearing the Word will prevent hardness of Heart Jer. 23.29 Is not my VVord like a Fire saith the Lord and like a Hammer that breaketh the Rock in pieces There is the double Work of the Word Legal and Evangelical the breaking and the melting Power of it There is a great deal of difference between breaking the Ice with a Staff and thawing or melting it break it in one place and it freezeth in another Melting is more universal There are Legal Breakin gs and Gospel Meltings there Sin is discovered here it is subdued But then you must use the Word as an Ordinance receive it in Faith and Obedience use it in Obedience when you are discouraged in point of Faith Luke 5.5 Master we have toiled all the Night and have taken nothing nevertheless at thy Word I will let down the Net But use it not only in Obedience but in Faith you must hear the Word not only as a moral Lecture or legal Discourse or as a means of literal Instruction but Evangelically waiting for the Power and Presence of God 2. Prayer God will be specially owned in this Work No Creature in the World can soften and turn the Heart but only God He that made the Heart can only change it Ezek. 11.19 And I will give them one Heart and I will put a new Spirit within you and I will take the stony Heart out of their Flesh and will give them an Heart of Flesh. It is God only that gives a teachable Mind a pliable Will and ready Affections Go then and practise this Duty beg of God to give you a Heart more pliable to the Work of Grace more capable to be renewed more soft and ready to receive the Impressions of Grace and be earnest with him for this I shall now give you some further Advice 1. In the first place begin with Conversion to God look for a change of State Repentance in particular Cases is neither right nor acceptable as long as Men do not mind Conversion to God and a change of State by Regeneration When the Tree is good then the Fruits are answerable Get the Heart of Stone taken away and then labour to preserve a tender Frame It is a fruitless Course to look after a good Frame till we are brought into a good Estate Natural Hardness is the cause of habitual Hardness till that be taken away by Regeneration all cometh to nothing 2. Be tender how you use your Light Men wax bold by sinning against Light and seem to get a Victory over their Consciences When the Candle is put out Lust will be stirring Light and Reason is God's Bridle on Man to keep him in awe Well then use your Light tenderly if it be but an half Light search further if it be a full Light walk by it If you are Children of the Light you will have no Fellowship with the unfruitful Works of Darkness 3. After you have sinned take up betimes as Peter went out and wept bitterly for Sin
but Gods They were in an high pang of Ze●l when they offered so freely to the Service of the House of God but David prayes 2 Chron. 29.28 Oh Lord God of Abraham Isaac and of Israel our fathers keep this for ever in the imaginations of the thoughts of the heart of thy people and prepare their hearts to seek thee Our Motions are fleeting and vanishing God must preserve in us these Resolutions of consecrating our selves and all that is ours to him SERMON III. GENESIS xxvi 63 And Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the even-tide IV. MY Work now is to handle the Letts or Hindrances of Meditation together with the helps and means that may quicken you to the performance of it The Letts may be sooner discovered then remedyed as the Nature of many Diseases is better known than the Cures and therefore they are called Opprobria Medicorum the Disgrace of the Physitians skill So these remain as Marks and Memorials of the Fall Intire and uninterrupted Visions are the Priviledges of Heaven we must be contented with our broken and imperfect Measures it is enough that we have Doves Eyes Cant. 4.1 That we can peck and look upward and enjoy some temperate glances on the Glory of our Hopes though we be not transported with the ravishments of a constant and steady Vision We cannot expect to be absolute we shall still have cause to be humbled it is enough if we can be encouraged against despair for many find themselves so unfit that they have not hopes enough to attempt the Duty To these I shall speak chiefly in this Discourse I had thought to have handled the Letts severally and then the helps but I think it would be better to suit each discouragement with its proper helps The Letts and Hindrances are of several sorts some common to this with other Duties and others more peculiar to the Duty of Meditation First I begin with the first sort such Hindrances as are common to other Duties and they are Four Sloath Love of Pleasure a Guilty Conscience and an unwieldy Mind 1. There is a Spiritual Sloathfulness Men lye upon the Bed of Ease and are loath in good earnest to apply themselves to what is painful and difficult If Grace would drop to them out of the Clouds or God would be contented with some faint lazy wishes or some cold and yawning Expressions of a drowsie Devotion they would be Religious but where Duties must cost labour and self-denyal and put them to pains Men withdraw the Shoulder and hang off Therefore Solomon saith Prov. 21.25 The desire of the sloathful killeth him for his hands refuse to labour They would fain have Grace and performe what God requires but are loath to take pains Now as this is a Prejudice against all other Duties so especially against the Duty of Meditation partly because of all Duties it is most difficult and tedious to the Flesh it is a Duty lying within the Soul we cannot so easily command our own thoughts now inward Duties are the most difficult because we cannot alwayes exercise a Dominion over our own Spirits Partly because it is a Private Duty to which God alone is conscious In Publick Duties Secular Interests and Ends have a great constraint and therefore we excite the Heart to be more intent and serious We see by-ends make Men deny themselves but where there is not this to prompt them they either omit the Work or turn it into a slight and idle practice How shall we do to shake off this Spiritual Sloath I Answer 1. You must consider that a lazy Spirit is most unfit for Christianity The whole Christian Life is carryed on with much Labour and Diligence you were as good never look after Christ and Heaven as refuse Labour There is nothing required in the whole compass of Religion but what will cost you a great deal of pains Faith is a work Iohn 6.29 That is the work of God that ye believe on him whom he hath sent It is not a barren idle speculation nor a naked apprehension but a matter of difficulty and diligence to bring Christ and the Soul together and to lodge the Soul in the bosom of Christ. Love is Labour Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love It is not a Naked Profession but there is Labour in it take it either for Love to God or Men for Love to God that is not a fellow-like familiarity but a laying out our selves in his Service or for Love to Men that doth not consist in a few good words Debts are not paid with a noise of Money you do not satisfie the Commandment by saying Depart in peace be ye warmed be ye filled if you give them not those things which are needful to the body Iames 2.16 So for Obedience it is expressed by a constant course of Work and Lab●ur 1 Cor. 15.58 Be ye stedfast and unmovable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Religion is but a constant Exercise there are no Loyterers in Heaven Gods Work must not be followed with a faint wish and a slack hand Men mistake Religion if they think it a broad and easie way where Men may live at large no the Gate is narrow and the Path is streight and few there be that find it it is a Work not a Sport and Play and Men had as good lay all thoughts of God and Christ aside as to resolve upon an easie course and flatter themselves with an expectation that they shall go to Heaven with a lazy wish and fancy such a short cut and passage to Heaven as will cost no pains 2. It is better to take pains than to suffer pains and to be bound with the Cords of Duty than with the Chains of Darkness The Bonds of Duty are not Gives but Ornaments for Duty is the greatest Freedom Psal. 119.45 I will walk at liberty for I seek thy precepts You will never be more free then when you once make Experience of Gods Service How sad is it to see Men prejudiced against such pains as yield Freedom and Comfort for the present and Glory for the future and take pains for that for which they shall suffer Eternal pains Isa. 5.18 Wo unto them that draw iniquity with cords of vanity and sin as it were with cart ropes They moyl and toyl in the work of Satan as a Horse in a Mill and labour for their own destruction Consider the Devils Work is Drudgery and his Reward is Death yet such is the wretchedness of Man that he accounteth nothing toilsome but God's Work and nothing pleasant but the Accomplishment of his own Lusts to be Lusts Vassal and Prides Slave and to be at the command of every Covetous and Unclean Desire How do Men toyl in the World go to Bed late rise early eat the Bread of Sorrows exhaust and waste their Strength
and Spirits and yet there is Sin in the Work and Hell in the Wages Oh consider if it seem difficult which is better to labour for a Season or suffer for ever which is the end of them that live in the constant neglect of a known Duty 3. There is nothing so hard in God's Service but he hath manifested Love enough to sweeten it We begrudge a few thoughts of God and God had thoughts of us before all Worlds Psal. 40.5 Many O Lord my God! are the wonderful works which thou hast done and thy thoughts which are to us-ward they cannot be reckoned up in number unto thee if I would declare and speak of them they are more than can be numbred Psalm 109.13 How precious also are thy thoughts unto me O God How great is the summ of them Who can tell what a condescention it was for Infiniteness to think of poor Worms and that he should before all Worlds plot and design our Salvation And when the Plot came out there was a great deal of Love to sweeten Duty the Lord Jesus Christ thought no Danger too great no Suffering or Extremity too hard no work too difficult for our sakes what a Mercy is this God hath not only required Obedience but discovered a Love that may sweeten the difficulties of it 4. There is no difficulty in Religion wholly insuperable and too hard for an Active and Industrious Spirit Those that follow on after God do at length find him to their Comfort A faint pursuit is the cause of discouragement When a flint doth not strike fire at the first we strike again Prov. 10.4 He becometh poor that dealeth with a slack hand but the hand of the diligent maketh rich It is a Rule in Grace as well as Nature Let us therefore follow on till we have overcome the difficulty that is before us 5. A Lazy backward Heart must be urged forward with the greater importunity When David was shy of God's Presence he layes a Command upon himself Psal. 32.5 I said I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord He maketh Reason to issue out a Decree and positive Conclusion So Psalm 39.1 I said I will take heed to my wayes that I sin not with my tongue So by just Analogy we may gather that the Soul should in this case determine I will go and try and see what may be done I will keep off from God no longer but will go to him 2. Another Lett and Hindrance is Love of Pleasures Men that would pass their time in Mirth are unwilling to be so solemn and serious When Childrens minds are set to play it is irksome to hear of School or of their Books so when the Heart is set for Pleasure it is a hard matter to bring the Soul to Religious Performances How shall we do to wean the Soul from Pleasures 1. Consider to love Pleasure is to gratifie the Beast in us rather than the Angel Man is in part an Angel and in part a Beast he hath a Nature common to both now when Men study altogether to gratifie their sensual part it is to turn Men into Beasts To serve our lowest faculty and to enjoy pleasures without remorse is the happyness of the Beasts to eat and drink and sleep and sport is but to do as the Beasts do A Mans Delight should be in the pure and free Exercises of Reason If Men would exercise themselves herein they would find the greatest delectation would be in the contemplation and view of Truth Psalm 19.8 The statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart That Taste which Hypocrites have of the good word of God Heb. 6.5 is meerly such as Scholars have in the height of Speculation and Study because the Gospel is such an excellent Contrivance and a sublime satisfying Truth Nulla major voluptas quam fastidium voluptatis there is no greater pleasure than a disdain of sensual pleasures 2. Consider the sweetness of Religious Exercises is far better than that of Carnal Pleasures as that heat is more Manly that is gotten by exercise than by hovering over the Fire It is hard I confess to abjure accustomed Delights Pleasantness is connatural to us but we should consider that by Communion with God in Spiritual Exercises Delight is not abrogated but preferred and advanced to a more noble becoming Object it is taken out of Egypt that it may grow in Canaan transplanted out of a Fenn into a Paradice that it may thrive in a better Soyl it is less Dreggy but more Masculine and Grave Psalm 104.34 My meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord Eph. 5.4 Neither filthiness nor foolish talking nor jesting which are not convenient but rather giving of thanks We keep the Affection but change the Object The Comforts of Christianity are expressed by terms proper to the Delights of the Senses to teach us this Excellent Art to keep the Affection and change the Object and by an Holy Sleight and Wile to couzen the Soul into better Joyes Here Delight is most pure and more free no excess is vitious Castae deliciae meae sunt Scripturae tuae thy Scriptures are my chast Delights The Pleasures of the World are but sugard baits a Man may soon loose himself but here by Tryal you will find the same sweetness with less hazard and danger 3. We may make choice of Matter more pleasant to allure the Soul All the Objects of Meditation are not dark and gloomy there are some things pleasing to Nature the variety of Providences the Beauty of the Creation the excellent contrivance of the Gospel All Objects are not mournful and in case of such a Temptation we may allure the Soul and when we are not so fit for the severe Exercises of the Closet we may as Isaac go out into the Fields to meditate and heighten Fancy and Imagination by Objects more pleasant 3. The next general Hindrance is a Guilty Conscience When the Soul is under the burden of Guilt we are loath to be serious and alone lest the Mind should fall on it self of all things we then desire to flee the Company of our selves and therefore Meditation is an unpleasant Duty We cannot think of God but as of a Judge nor of a World to come but as of our own Ruine A guilty Conscience would fain obliterate the thoughts of God as the guilty Heathens Rom. 1.28 They did not like to retain God in their knowledge that is Actual Sound Distinct Thoughts of God It is said Iames 2.19 The Devils believe and tremble Thoughts of God impressed the more horrour on them therefore they cryed out Matth. 8.29 Art thou come hither to torment us before the time So guilty Men are under these horrors They are all their life-time subject to bondage Heb. 2.15 which though it be not alwaies felt is soon awakened Iob 21.14 Therefore they say unto God Depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes What shall we
do to remedy this 1. Get your Conscience cleansed by the hearty application of the Blood of Christ a galled Conscience is much discomposed and unsettled and unfit for such an Exercise Musing requireth a quiet sedate Mind 2. There are matters comfortable that may be of excellent Relief to the Spirit When the Soul is sadly humbled and Bondage is indeed revived there is an Hope set before us to which we may fly for refuge Heb. 6.18 That by two immutable things in which it is impossible for God to lye we may have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us The wounded Soul may run up to the Mountains of Myrrhe and Frankincense So David Psalm 94.19 In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul. 4. Another Lett and Hindrance is unweildiness of Spirit to Spiritual and Heavenly Duties The Heart is many times burdened and oppressed and sunk down with its own burden and weight that it cannot be lifted up to any Holy Duties and so is unfit for any Exercise of Religion This our Saviour bids his Disciples have a care of Luke 21.34 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be over-charged with surfeiting and drunkenness and cares of this life Pleasures and Cares do as it were hang a weight upon the Soul that it cannot mount up to God in Heavenly Exercises This is expressed by a fat heart Isa. 6.10 Make the heart of this people fat That is Spiritually dull as it is observed of the Ass which is the simplest of all Creatures it hath the fattest heart There is a Spiritual dullness and listlessness that is apt to seize upon us What shall we do to help this 1. Learn a Holy Moderation and Sobriety in outward Businesses and Pleasures As the Apostle saies of Prayer Ephes. 6.18 watching thereunto The same Rule holds good in Meditation watch that you may alwaies keep the Soul in a fitness for the Duty order your Affairs with great wisdom that you may not justle out so necessary a Duty when a Man is incumbered with business there is no room left for such an exercise if he let loose his heart disorderly all the day he will find this Spiritual dullness to seize on him 2. Keep the Body in a fit frame that it may not be a clog to the Soul but a dexterous Instrument There is a Sanctification of the Body 1 Thess. 5.23 And the very God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Iesus Christ. And the Apostle commands 1 Thess 4. That every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour Men emasculate and weaken their Strength and Spirits and so the Body loseth its fitness Secondly There are Hindrances that are peculiar to the Duty of Meditation I shall name but two Barrenness of Thoughts and Inconstancy 1. Leanness and Barrenness of Thoughts When we go about to meditate we have no Matter whereupon to bestow our Time and Thoughts and so Christians are much discouraged This is opposite to that which the Scripture calls the abundance of the heart Matth. 12.34 Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh That is when there is a Holy Treasure in the Soul Now to remedy this 1. You must not give way to it but try and use constant Exercise When we give way to such indispositions they prove an utter Bondage voluntary neglects are punished with penal hardness and evils grow upon us as to lie in the dirt will make us more filthy and by little and little Men are hardned through the deceitfulness of Sin The Apostle speaks of them that have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 5.14 Who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil All Habits are increased by frequent Acts long disuse makes the Duty uncouth Wells which are at first a puddle are the sweeter for draining If we are under Indisposition should we not strive to come out of it The more we work the more vigorous and free is the Soul for the Work of God 2. Get a good stock of Sanctified Knowledge Let there be a Treasure in your Hearts Matth. 13.52 Every scribe which is instructed in the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is an housholder which bringeth forth out of his treasure things new and old Those that buy by the Penny will be sometimes in want Prov. 6.21 22. Bind them continually upon thine heart and tye them about thy neck When thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee and when thou awakest it shall talk with thee This is the way to make Truths present and ready in the Thoughts when we have layed them up we can the better lay them out 3. When the Heart is barren think of your own Sins and Corruptions and the Experiences of God to your own Souls If we did not want an Heart we could never want Matter did we but consult with our own Experiences Psal. 40.12 Innumerable evils have compassed me about mine iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up they are more than the hairs of mine head therefore mine heart faileth me And if nothing else will come to hand meditate upon your present unfitness for any Holy Duty 4. You may season and affect your mind before Meditation with some part of Gods Word Reading is a good preparative and when we have taken in Food we may exercise our Depastion and Digestion upon it 2. A loose garish Spirit that is apt to skip and wander from thought to thought There is a Madness in Man his thoughts are light and feathery tossed too and fro and like the loose Wards in a Lock only kept up whilst we are turning the Key This doth much discourage Christians that they cannot keep up their Affections and command their Thoughts How shall we help and remedy this 1. When you go to meditate you should exercise a Command and Restraint upon your selves This is expressed in Scripture by trussing up the Loins of your Minds Luke 12.30 Let your loins be girded about An allusion to their hanging Garments that they trussed up when they went about any work that they may be compact and succinct Lay a Command upon your selves Zephan 2.1 Gather your selves together yea gather together O nation not desired 2. Pray and call in the help of God's Holy Spirit Psalm 86.11 Vnite my heart to fear thy Name Lord make my Heart one He that could stay the Sun can stay the sleeting of your thoughts 3. Dry up these swimming Toyes and Fancies with the flame of Heavenly Love Love unites the Heart and where we have a pleasure there we can stay Psalm 119.97 Oh how love I thy law it is my meditation all the day 4. Let the course of your Lives
thing Conscience is another Science is a Mans knowledge of other things Conscience is a Mans knowledge of himself his State and wayes to know what he is to do and to know who he hath done that is Conscience It is the Judgment of a Man concerning himself and his Actions with respect to Reward and Punishment God that is our Lord is also our proper Judge but it pleaseth God to put a faculty into Man this Spirit within him that he should have something in his own Bosom to be a Rule and Judge but yet a Subordinate Rule and a Deputy-Judge accountable to God but a Judge it is However it much conduceth to the Glory of God and to the Safety of Man 1. To the Glory of God 1. As it is an Evidence of his Being whose Law is the ground of Conscience and before whom Conscience doth accuse and whose Sentence it doth dread and stand in fear of Why doth Conscience scruple this or that if there be not a God by whose Will Good and Evil are distinguished To whom doth it accuse us but to God Why is Conscience sometimes afraid sometimes comforted if there were no God to mind things here below We find Conscience appaleth the stoutest Sinners after the commitment of some Offence though it be secret and beyond the Cognizance and Vengeance of Man Psalm 53.5 There were they in great fear where no fear was that is no outward cause of fear where none sought to hurt them accusing themselves when none else could accuse them as Iosephs Brethren Gen. 42.21 We are verily guilty concerning our brothers blood or where none had power to reach them as Princes and Worldly Potentates feel the stings of Conscience as well as others Foelix trembled who was the Judge at Pauls Words who was the Prisoner Acts 24.25 And as he reasoned of righteousness temperance and judgment to come Foelix trembled What is the Reason of this but that they know there is a Supream Judge and Avenger 2. It is for the Glory of his Judicial Proceedings Self-Accusers and Self-Condemners have no reason to quarrel with God and impeach his Justice Man hath Principles and Sentiments graven upon his Heart which justifie all Gods dealings with him Luke 19.22 Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee thou wicked servant And Psalm 51.4 That thou mayest be justified when thon speakest and be clear when thou judgest Hereby he is left without excuse Rom. 1.20 So that they are without excuse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3.11 Knowing that he that is such is subverted and sinneth being condemned of himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence the frequent Appeals to Conscience Isa. 5.3 4. Iudge I pray you betwixt me and my vineyard What could I have done more to my vineyard that I have not done in it I have produced these Scriptures to show that by Conscience Man is better induced to give a Testimony to God concerning all his dealings with him 2. To the safety and benefit of Man that he may have an Oracle in his own bosom to direct him to his Duty and to warn him of his danger if he doth amiss Conscience is spoken of in Scripture both wayes as instructing us in our Duty Psalm 16.7 My reins also instruct me in the night season that is Conscience shewed him his Duty and how he was concerned in the Law of God or the Rule which God had given to his Creatures And as it sheweth us what to do so it reflecteth upon what we have done If evil it smiteth us for it 2 Sam. 24.10 And Davids heart smote him after that he had numbred the people If good it cheareth us with it 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world It smiteth as it exciteth fear of punishment it cheareth as it stirreth up hope of Reward and we do very much understand hereby how God standeth affected towards us 1 Iohn 3.19 20 21 And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him For if our heart condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all thing Beloved If our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God 2. Conscience is Gods Vicegerent and Deputy You may know much of his Mind by the Voice and Report of Conscience therefore next to the Judgment and Sentence of God a Man should regard the Judgment and Sentence of Conscience 1 Iohn 3.20 21. If our heart condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things Beloved If our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Observe what Conscience speaketh doth it condemn thee or acquit thee And upon what terms doth it either The voice of Conscience is often the voice of God and Men would sooner come to know themselves and might make a right Judgment upon their Estates if they would look inward and regard the voice of Conscience doth it condemn or acquit Indeed there lyeth an Appeal from Court to Court and from Judge to Judge 1. From Court to Court In what Court doth Conscience condemne you In the Law Court You ought to own the desert of Sin clearing God if he should inflict it upon you 1 Cor. 11.31 For if we would judge our selves we should not be judged But yet you may take Sanctuary at his Grace and humbly claim the benefit of the New Covenant Psalm 130.3 4. If thou Lord shouldest mark iniquity O Lord who shall stand But there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared If it condemn you in the Gospel Court for no sound Believer the Case must not be lightly passed over but examined whether there be a sincere bent of Heart towards God Heb. 13.18 We trust we have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly 2. There is an appeal to an higher Judge Doth Conscience write bitter things against thee Yet if God justifieth Rom. 8.33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is God that justifieth Gods Act is Authoritative and Powerful Isa. 57.19 I create the fruit of the lips Peace Peace to him that is afar of and to him that is near saith the Lord and I will heal him Psalm 85.8 I will hear what God the ●ord will speak for he will speak peace unto his people and to his saints But sometimes he speaketh in the Sentence of his Word when not in the Conscience his Authority may comfort when we feel not his Power so for acquitting Conscience is not the highest Judge 1 Cor. 4.4 For if I know nothing by my self yet am I not hereby justified but he that judgeth me is the Lord. Prov. 16.2 All the wayes of a man are clean in his own eyes but the Lord weigheth the spirits He must consult his Word and thereby clear our Case so
as to assure our Hearts before him 3. Conscience is easily offended but not easily appeased As the Eye is easily offended with the least dust or mote which soon gets in but is not easily gotten out But then to appease it costs a great deal of trouble Therefore if we would as Paul keep a Conscience void of Offence there needeth much tenderness and watchfulness for by the Commission of deliberate and wilful Sins you may raise a Tempest that is not easily laid again as David felt broken bones after his foul fall Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce Before the Action Conscience sheweth what is to be done in the Action it guideth us in doing after the Action it censureth it as well or ill done And so either comforteth us with hopes of a Reward or terrifieth us with fear of Punishment As a Man acteth so Conscience is a Party as the Action is censured so Conscience is a Judge after the Action the force of Conscience is usually seen more than before the Fact or in the Fact because before and in the Action the Judgment of Reason is not so clear and strong the Affections raising Mists and Clouds to darken the Mind and trouble it and draw it on their side by their pleasing violence By the Treachery of the Senses and Revolt of the Passions the Mind is betrayed but as the Violence of the Affections ceaseth and is by little and little allayed guilt flasheth in the face of Conscience and Reason hath the greatest force to affect the Mind with grief or fear The Act being over and the Affection satisfied the Soul giveth place to Reason which was before contemned and when it recovereth the Throne it striketh through the Heart with a sharp Sentence and Reproof for obeying Appetite before it self and brings in Terrour and Trouble which causeth the Soul to sit uneasy Matth. 27.4 I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood Rom. 1.32 Knowing the judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death Therefore do not go like an Ox to the Slaughter nor a Fool to the Correction of the Stocks 4. Conscience is the best Friend and the worst Enemy It is the best Friend partly for its Comfort Prov. 15.15 He that is of a merry heart hath a continual feast 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience no Bird sings so sweetly as the Bird in the Bosome Partly for its nearness it is alwaies with us in Health and Sickness in Life and in Death Husbands and Wives who are most together yet because they live a distinct Life they are often apart Death looseth the Bond and Knot but this remaineth with us So it is the worst Enemy Partly for its universal nearness it is sad for a Man to be at odds with himself and fall out with his own Heart It is a Domestical Tribunal which alwaies remaineth with us and therefore Iob could bear the Reproaches of others but his own heart should not reproach him as long as he lived Iob 27.6 Partly because of the grievousness of the Wound and Stroak Prov. 18.14 A wounded spirit who can bear It is no less than the fear of the Wrath of the Eternal God A Man cannot run away from his Conscience no more than he can run away from himself and therefore for a Man to please others and offend his Conscience what folly is that Or to please a Lust to wound his Conscience A Lust or vain Appetite is an unjustifiable thing and will soon appear so but the Fears of Conscience are justified by the highest Reason the Law of God the satisfaction of a Lust is a poor vanishing Pleasure but the observing and keeping a good Conscience breedeth a solid Joy which will stick by thee to the very last and when thou comest to dye will be a support to thee Isa. 38.3 Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight When thou must leave Riches Honours and Pleasures which are the Baits of thy Lust this will stick by thee 1 Iohn 2.17 The world passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever Therefore now thou shouldest mortifie thy Lust and gratifie thy Conscience 5. Thy Conscience is the beginning of Heaven and Hell A good Conscience is the beginning of Heaven and Peace and Joy in believing is a foretast of that fulness of Joy and Pleasure which we shall have when we come into Gods immediate presence The glorified Spirits carry a good Conscience with them to Heaven their works follow them Rev. 14.13 And the damned carry their Stings and Convictions with them to Hell Mark 9.44 Their worm dyeth not and the fire is not quenched Oh think of this The Joys of the Spirit are an Antipast of Glory called often an Earnest in Scripture 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the spirit in our hearts And the Horrors of Conscience are the Suburbs of Hell Oh therefore be sure to keep all quiet within and whatever be your Temptations do not offend Conscience but unfeignedly discharge your Duties to God and Men 6. If there be a crack and a flaw in your Conscience all your trading with Heaven is at a stand there cannot be any serious dealing with God nor Holy boldness in Prayer 1 Iohn 3.21 If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God When you have sinned away your Peace a strangeness and distance groweth between God and you Psalm 32.3 When I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long Gen. 3.8 And Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden Adam run to the bushes Your hearts will grow shie of God and you cannot so comfortably look him in the face and so the sweetness of Holy Privacy and Communion with God will be lost Time was when you could go boldly and open your Hearts to God but now you are afraid of him and every Act of Commerce is a reviving of your Bondage the remembrance of God is a trouble to you 7. If Conscience speaketh not it writeth for it is not only a Witness but a Register and Book of Record Ier. 17.1 The sin of Iudah is written with a pen of iron and with the point of a diamond We know not what Conscience writeth being occupied and taken up with Carnal Vanities and carryed away with foolish and hurtful Lusts but we shall know afterwards when the Book of Conscience shall be opened Rev. 20.12 And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were
do well and Sin it self forbid Sin that it may not disgrace them in the World and bring some hurt and inconvenience on them Conscience doth not guide them herein but Hypocrisie or Sin sets them a work 2. Evil as Lots incest with his Daughters Gen. 19.33 34. He perceived not when they lay down or when they arose Conscience was laid asleep it did not stir and chasten or rebuke him So when the people of Ephesus came together Acts 19.32 The most part knew not wherefore they were come together they were in a hurry tumult and sudden passion These consult not with Conscience in their Actions and the evil they do is not against Conscience yet evil it is and doth not exempt from Punishment for a Man is bound not to act rashly but according to the dictate of Conscience 2. A Man may act out of Conscience or according to Conscience and so he may act either good or evil 1. Good either lawful because it is permitted or necessary because it is commanded in the one Conscience is sensible that he may in the other that he ought to do so This he doth not out of Terrour but the sweet force of Love and willing Obedience unto God for Fear and Conscience are opposed Rom. 13.5 Wherefore ye must be faithful not only for wrath but also for conscience sake but he doth it in Obedience to God Psalm 27.8 When thou saidst seek ye my face my heart said unto thee thy face Lord will I seek I acknowledge thy power over me 2. Evil. So Paul out of Conscience persecuted Christ for his erring Conscience told him that the Precepts and Ceremonies of the Law of Moses were all of Eternal Obligation and necessary to a Mans Justification towards God and therefore that Christ abolishing the Ceremonies was an Enemy to Moses Acts 26.9 I verily thought with my self that I ought to do many things contrary to the name of Iesus of Nazareth Error of Conscience dictated it to him But did Paul do well or ill herein As to the manner of the Action it was well for he did it with a good Mind and according to his Conscience thus far Paul sinned not But as to the matter of the Action he did wickedly that he followed the dictates of a misguided Conscience and did not subject his Conscience to that higher Revelation of God which is in Scripture but to the Tradition of the Elders So many Persecutors do evil and do not think they do evil but do God good Service Iohn 16.2 They shall put you out of the Synagogues yea the time cometh that whosoever killeth you will think that he doth God service and this through Ignorance and blind Zeal This Erring-Conscience is their bane it may urge them to do evil but it cannot oblige them to do evil for they are bound to know better and according to the means of their Conviction so is the greatness of their Sin 3. A Man may act against Conscience 1. So he may do good As a Papist communicating with the Reformed Churches in the Word and Prayer and Sacraments he doth that which is good but he doth it against his Conscience because he thinks it is not lawful to have Communion with Hereticks To this Head belongeth those things that we do with scruple of Conscience fearing the things which we do are not right So many times we do things which are lawful yet fearing they are unlawful we do them not without some scruple and terror of Conscience as for instance a self-condemning Sinner coming to the Lords Supper yet because he hath not a clear sense of the love of God his Conscience troubleth him and he is afraid he eateth and drinketh unworthily The Apostle saith Rom. 14.22 23. Happy is he that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth And he that doubteth is damned if he eat because he eateth not of faith for whatsoever is not of faith is sin that is to the Party that doth it though it be good in it self Therefore we must endeavour that whatever we do we may be assured out of the Word of God that it is lawful Rom. 14.5 Let every one be fully perswaded in his own mind 2. So he may do evil When a Man doth good against his Conscience it is evil but when he doth evil against his Conscience it is a double evil because he doth not only transgress the Rule that should guide him but affronts the Judge which God hath set over him in his own bosom and kicketh against the pricks the urgings of his own Conscience Iames 4.17 Therefore to him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is sin But especially it is a greater Sin when not only by Light Natural but by the checks and motions of the Spirit he understandeth the evil which he doth or the necessary good which he omitteth for this is to resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears ye do alwayes resist the holy Ghost Especially when he wilfully and blasphemously rejects that sufficient Evidence that is given him of the wayes of God and hath done despight unto the spirit of grace Heb. 10.29 For that is the sin unto death 1 Iohn 5.19 In short we should be careful we sin not against Conscience for it is our best Friend or our worst Enemy It is Gods Deputy and to resist the Officer is to resist the Prince or Magistrate Therefore do nothing without Conscience do nothing against Conscience but do all things with Conscience rightly informed by the Word of God Secondly Exercise your selves in this that Conscience may perform its Office and be a good Guide unto you There are two Offices of Conscience to direct and to censure to judge rightly de jure what you ought to do and to judge rightly de facto what you have done or what you are that you may neither have a blind and erring nor a sleepy Conscience 1. That you may not have an erring Conscience or a blind one you must consult with your Rule Rom. 12.2 That ye may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God Ephes. 5.17 Wherefore be not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is with a mind fully resolved to do his will Iohn 7.17 If any man do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self This Rule is the Word of God Psalm 119.105 Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path Beg the light of the Spirit verse 133. Order my steps in thy word and let not any iniquity have dominion over me And be not rebellious against this Light for our Sins and Lusts blind the Mind and a naughty Heart defileth the Conscience so that it groweth loose and indulgent and from a Judge it becometh an Advocate excusing the partialities of our Obedience to God and our injuries to Men. Therefore
pricked in their heart 2. Desire Would not the stung Israelite desire a cure So must you Matth. 5.6 Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be filled Saith the Church Lament 3.51 Mine eye affecteth my heart 3. Trust. You see nothing by the Eye of Sense but his Memorials which God hath instituted as helps of Faith yet to appearance as despicable and as unlikely to produce any great effect as a Figure of Brass to cure a raging wound But things under an Institution are under a Blessing 1 Cor. 1.21 It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe You may think a Crucifix a more lively representation no that is not under the blessing of an Institution as Bread broken and Wine poured forth is that is too much a matter of Sense and begetteth bare thoughts which stirreth up fond pity and gross and wrong thoughts this conveyeth a Blessing You are to behold not only a dying Man put to a cruel Death but the Son of God in his deep kxinanition not carnally to pity him but to see his Love and the Wrath of God and the desert of Sin that you may abhor it to see the great price paid for our Ransom the necessity of having the vertue of his Cross and finally our thankful subjection to God Behold him that you may bless and praise God for your Redeemer The Type had its effect and shall not Christ Oh labour to feel the comfortable effects of his Death 3. Beg of God the Spirit to open your Eyes Christ crucified is only seen in the Light and Evidence of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.4 My speech and my preaching was not with the enticing words of mans wisdom but in demonstration of the spirit and of power The Eyes of our Minds are opened by the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation for our Light is but darkness 4. See him so as to expect not only Comfort but Healing Isa. 53.5 With his stripes we are healed That Heart is to be suspected that looks to Comfort more than Duty Look to him that you may live by him Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the son of God who loved me and gave himself for me Look to him that you may be like him 2 Cor. 3.18 For we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the spirit of the Lord. Look to him that you may loath Sin Ezek. 36.31 Then shall you remember your own evil wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations The First SERMON On I. Thessalonians v. 16 Rejoyce evermore THE words are brief and short and therefore they may be easily carried away They are independant on the Context and therefore will need no long deduction They press you not to a painful but pleasant Duty therefore you should be readily induced to practice it But yet when we look more intrinsecally into the Nature of it it is not so easie as we first imagined every one cannot receive this saying it is hard to keep the Heart in such an exact frame as to rejoyce evermore pray without ceasing and in every thing to give thanks as Christ saith in another case He that is able to receive it let him receive it Matth. 19.12 But what if we prove it to be a Duty incumbent on all Christians and that at all times The Text seemeth to enforce it rejoyce evermore In which words take notice of two things 1. The Duty to which we are exhorted rejoyce 2. The constancy and perpetuity of it in the word evermore Delight and Pleasure are greedily sought after in Christianity it is not only part of our Wages but much of our very Work Doctrine That Gods Children should make conscience of rejoycing in God at all times and under all conditions Here is a Precept for it not only a liberty given but a Command If you look upon the Words as a License or Liberty given you may conceive of them according to the Apostles Speech of Marriage 1 Cor. 7.39 She is at liberty to be married to whom she will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but only in the Lord. But it is not only a liberty given but a command for he addeth verse 18. This is the will of God in Christ Iesus concerning you The will of God is the Supream Reason of all Duties and the Will of God in Christ Iesus falleth upon the Conscience with a double force the Law of the Mediator binding us to delight in God as well as the Primitive Duty which we owe to God as the Creator And that this Clause respects all the Three Duties is evident to any considering Mind In the opening of this Duty I shall shew you 1. What Rejoycing the Apostle intendeth 2. How this must be constant and perpetual 3. The many Reasons which do inforce this Duty upon us I. What Rejoycing the Apostle speaketh of There is a double Rejoycing A Carnal Rejoycing and a Spiritual Rejoycing 1. The Carnal Rejoycing is in the World and the good things of this World apart from God Luke 12.19 Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thine ease eat drink and be merry 2. The Spiritual rejoycing is in God Phil. 3.1 Finally my Brethren rejoyce in the Lord Phil. 4.4 Rejoyce in the Lord alway and again I say rejoyce These two sorts of rejoycing must be carefully distinguished for they differ in their Causes to the one we are prompted by carnal Nature which taketh up with present things and the other is excited in us by the Spirit of God therefore often called joy in the Holy Ghost The one is called the joy of Sense the other the joy of Faith the joy of Faith is in God the joy of Sense in the Creature the joy of Faith is most in future things the joy of Sense in present things the joy of Faith is in the good of the Soul the joy of Sense in the good of the Body or the provisions of the Flesh the joy of Faith is built on the Covenant and the Promises of God Psalm 119.111 Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever they are the rejoycing of my heart The joy of Sense on the Blessings that flow in the Channel of Common and General Providence Now the first sort of rejoycing the Apostle would not press us unto Nature there needeth a Bridle rather than a Spur but to the latter in delight in God and in all things that come from God and lead to him This delighting our selves in God must be the thing which must be further explained 1. God himself as God is a lovely Nature and the Object of our Delight for he is good even before and
13.1 2 3. Though I speak with the Tongues of Men and Angels and have not Charity I am become as sounding Brass or a tinkling Cymbal And though I have the gift of Prophesie and understand all mysteries and all knowledge and though I have all Faith so that I could remove Mountains and have no Charity I am nothing And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor and though I give my body to be burned and have not Charity it profiteth me nothing A Man may be burnt in the flames and yet not at all acceptable to God Dive into all mysteries of Religion yet not be affected with them cast out Devils yet be cast out among Devils give his goods to the poor yet have his Soul full of vain-glory speak eloquently and accurately of God and Christ yet not have his Heart subdued to God Yet a Man cannot have Charity and be upon ill terms with Christ all that love him are beloved of him Vse 1. is of Exhortation to join with your Knowledge of God Love to God Motives 1. From the reward and benefit Is it not a great Mercy to be known of God and to be approved in the sentence of his Word Gal. 5.6 In Christ Iesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but Faith which worketh by love To be chosen accepted and avouched to be his peculiar people 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Iesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha compared with Eph. 6.24 Grace be with all them that love our Lord Iesus Christ in sincerity To be owned in his Ordinances The great feast of the Gospel is prepared for such 1 Cor. 2.9 Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard neither have entered into the Heart of Man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him To be regarded in his Providence above all the dwellers on Earth Psal. 56.8 Thou tellest my wandrings put thou my tears into thy Bottle are they not in thy book Though they seem base and vile in the Eyes of Men can scarce cleanse themselves yet they are accepted of God Our friends will not know us in adversity and the rich will not know the poor yet God knoweth them and owneth them how despicable soever they be Psal. 34.6 This poor Man cried and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles God's approbation is more worth than the approbation of all the World 2 Cor. 10.18 Not he that commendeth himself is approved but whom the Lord commendeth And at the last day when every Man shall receive his final doom and sentence they shall be admited to glory Iam. 1.12 Blessed is the Man that indureth temptation for when he is tried he shall receive the Crown of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him Jam. 2.5 Hath not God chosen the poor of this World rich in Faith and Heirs of the Kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him 2. From the duty 1. There is no true knowledge else We do but talk like Parrots of God and Christ though with never so much subtilty and accuracy till we love him Iud. 16.15 How canst thou say I love thee when thy Heart is not with me Rom. 2.20 An Instructer of the foolish a Teacher of Babes which hast the form of knowledge and of the truth in the Law 2 Tim. 3.5 Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof 2. The design of the Scripture is to teach us the holy art of loving God It is a book written of love wherein is recommended the love of God to us in Creation Providence Redemption and final glorification that by hearing reading meditating therein there may be begotten in us love to God again 1 Tim. 1.5 The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure Heart and of a good Conscience and of Faith unfeigned 3. The love of Christ is the vigour and life of all that grace that is wrought in us by the Spirit 2 Tim. 1.7 God hath not given us the Spirit of Fear but of Power of Love and of a sound Mind 4. The whole work of a Christian is a work of Love to love God and be like to him Deut. 10.12 What doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God to walk in all his ways and to love him and to serve the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and all thy Soul A Christian is rewarded as a Lover rather than as a Servant not as doing work but as doing work out of love Vse 2. Examination Do we know God so as to love him Many will say God forbid we should live else if we do not love God But do you indeed love him Christ puts Peter to the question thrice Iohn 21.15 16 17. Iesus saith to Simon Peter Simon Son of Jonas lovest thou me more than these c. Others on the other side will say how can we know that we love God Burning fire cannot be hidden do what you can you cannot conceal it If you really love any person there will not need many signs to discern it No you will bewray it on all occasions by looks speeches gestures thoughts and endeavours to please Or if you love things will not a covetous Man bewray his love of Money an ambitious Man his love of honour a voluptuous Man his delight in pleasures Let him conceal it if he can But it is not love but the sincerity of love that is so difficult to be found out Well then that is known partly by the degree partly by the proper effect 1. By the degree If you love God you will love him above all All things must give way to his Love Psal. 63.3 Because thy loving kindness is better than life my Lips shall praise thee You will be content to do and suffer any thing rather than displease God and lose his favour for that is your all But alas how far are we from the love of God who are so addicted to self-love and carnal desires and governed by the relishes of the Flesh and intangled in Earthly and Worldly things Can we adhere to him in time of danger and temptation 2. By the proper effect which is obedience doing his Will seeking his Glory promoting his Interest Many think it is love if they keep solemn feasts in his memory seem to be very devout at certain set times at Christmass and Easter No it is a constant respect in those that profess his name and an obedience to his commands Others think they love him If they languish after comforts No ready obedience is all Then Love hath done its work 1 Iohn 2.5 Who so keepeth his word in him verily is the love of God perfected Hereby know we that we are in him Vse 3. Direction to us in the Lords Supper Let us rouse up our selves in this duty this holy and mystical Supper which Christ departing out of the World ordained to be
Faith standeth us in most stead Acts 3.19 Repent ye therefore and be converted that your Sins may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Then by the one we are freed from the guilt of Sin and so have deliverance from Eternal Death By the other we have not only right but entrance into Eternal Glory What is our whole scope but to be absolved by Christ at last and enter into Eternal Life Finally these two are to be regarded to obviate their mistake who think indeed that Faith and it may be Repentance is necessary to pardon or to dissolve our Obligation to Punishment but not new Obedience But in their place all the Conditions are necessary They think new Obedience is necessary to Salvation or Eternal Life but not to Justification But Salvation is as gracious an Act of Mercy as free and undeserved a Gift as Pardon Rom. 6.23 The wages of Sin is Death but the Gift of God is Eternal Life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Eternal Life is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wages but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Gift of God It is as much merited by Christ as the other and therefore as proper a part yea the chief part of the Hope of Righteousness by Faith and that which is only waited for and not injoyed III. What is the work of the Spirit in this business in urging Believers to wait for the Hope of Righteousness by Faith I Answer the work of the Spirit doth either concern the Duties of the new Covenant or the Priviledges of the new Covenant or what is common to them both I begin with the latter 1. What is common to them both He doth convince us of the Truth of the Gospel both of means and end that there is such an Hope and the Righteousness of Faith is the only way to obtain it Now this he doth Externally and Internally 1. Externally and by way of Objective Evidence All the certainty that we have of the Gospel is by the Spirit Acts 5.32 We are Witnesses of these things and so is the Holy Ghost which he hath given to them that obey him And Iohn 15. 26 27. When the Comforter is come whom I will send to you from the Father even the Spirit of Truth which proceedeth from the Father he shall testifie of me And ye also shall bear witness because ye have been with me from the beginning Mark in both these places the two solemn Witnesses are the Spirit and the Apostles the one Principal the other Ministerial the one declaring Doctrine and Matter of Fact the other assuring the World of the Truth of their Testimony The Apostles testified of Christs sayings and doings and the Holy Ghost which came down upon them and the rest that consorted with them and was given in some measure to those that obeyed their Doctrine was an undoubted Evidence that God owned it from Heaven Here was enough to open mens Eyes and to give them a right understanding of his Person and Doctrine that it was of God The Visible Gifts of the Holy Ghost and his powerful working in the Hearts of men in order to their Conversion unto God These admirable Gifts and Graces shed abroad upon men were a Notable Conviction to the World that Christ was a Teacher sent from God to teach men the way to Eternal Life and Happiness This did afford sufficient matter of Confirmation and Conviction by the Spirit shed abroad and poured forth on the Christian Church 2. Internally inlightning their Minds and inclining their Hearts to imbrace the Truth Which maketh the former Testimony effectual So the Apostle prayeth Eph. 1.17 For the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation in the Knowledge of Christ the eyes of their understanding being inlightned that they might know what is the hope of his Calling and the Riches of the Glory of the Inheritance of the Saints in Light To the sight of any thing these things are necessary an Object a Medium a Faculty As in outward sight an Object that may be seen a convenient light to represent it and make the Object perspicuous An Organ or Faculty of seeing in the Eye Unless there be an Object you bid a man see nothing Unless there be a Medium a due light to represent it as in a fog or at Midnight the sharpest sight can see nothing Unless there be a Faculty neither the Object nor Medium will avail a Blind-man cannot see any thing at Noon-day Now here is an Object the way of Salvation by Christ A convenient light it is represented in the Gospel And the Faculty is prepared for the Eyes of the Mind are opened by the Spirit that we may see both Way and End the necessity of Holiness and the reality of future Glory and Blessedness Alas without this sight we busie our selves about Vanities and Childish Toys and never Mind the things which are most necessary certainly we can have no saving understanding of Spiritual Truths neither what is the Benefit of Christianity or the blessed Condition of Gods People Nor what are the Duties of Christianity so as our Hearts may be held to them or how we may behave our selves as true Believers 2. The Work of the Spirit as to the Duties of the new Covenant He doth not only convince us of the Reality and the Necessity of Christs Obedience and our Holiness but by his Powerful Operation frameth and inclineth our Hearts to the Duties required of us Faith it self is wrought in us by this Holy Spirit for it is the Gift of God Eph. 2.8 And so is Repentance and Obedience Heb. 8.10 I will write my Laws upon their Hearts and put them into their Minds Moses his Law was written on Tables of Stone as a Rule without them but Christs Law on the Heart and Mind as drawing and inclining them to obey it The Renewing Grace of the Spirit of God doth prepare us and fit us and his exciting Grace doth quicken us that we may do what is pleasing in his sight And therefore if we profess to live under the new Covenant we are inexcusable if we do not bestir our selves and accomplish the work of Faith with Power and obey from the Heart the Doctrine delivered to us Indeed the Spirit doth most naturally put us upon spiritual Worship and spiritual Holiness these things agree most with his Being and Nature The observances of the Law were carnal yet as long as Gods command continued the Spirit inclined to Obedience to them But a better Law being enacted by Christ the Spirit that proceedeth from the Father and the Son suiteth his Operations accordingly For he cometh into us as Christs Spirit He shall take of mine and glorifie me John 16.14 All that he doth accordeth with Christ as Christs Will doth with the Father 3. The work of the Spirit as to the priviledges of the New Covenant which are pardon and life 1. As to Pardon he is the Comforter He cometh
of recovery for ever 2. God provideth great helps and means of Repentance for them For he hath sent his Messengers into all parts of the Earth and commanded every one to Repent and prepare for the judgment Act. 17.30 And the times of their ignorance God winked at but now commandeth all Men every where to Repent because he hath appointed a day c. So that the World now perisheth for rejecting the means tending to recover them The sins of the Nations were not so great till God sent them the means When the Lord giveth any people the means to Repent their sin is the more aggravated and their judgment is the greater for the rejection of the means is a sin not only against our duty but our remedy and a vile ingratitude and obstinacy which hath no cloak and colour of excuse For though Men have an impotency of Nature and cannot convert themselves without the internal efficacy and power of the Holy Ghost yet the impotency of nature doth not necessitate men to wallow in a course of sin against the light of Conscience and to put away the means by which they might be reformed III. What encouragement there is from Gods long-suffering to induce Men to Repentance And 1. Gods forbearance and continuing of some Grace to us possesseth all Mens Minds with this apprehension that he is gracious merciful willing to be reconciled if we will but accept of terms agreeable to his glory and our good Therefore it is said that the goodness of God leadeth to Repentance Rom. 2.4 For wherefore should he defer vengeance and forbear so long to punish thy sinful course but only that thou mayest bethink thy self and make thy peace He could destroy thee in an instant and why doth he not but to see if thou wilt yet repent and love him and serve him If a Man were under a sentence of Death and the execution were delayed and put off from day to day would not he think it were a fit time to interpose by supplication and obtain his pardon Surely we should gather the like conclusion and make supplication to our Judge 2. The incouragement is the greater that we have not only time and life but many mercies forfeited mercies continued to us Such as food raiment friends house liberties health peace What do all these do but invite us to God For whosoever hath the Heart of a Man would be thankful to his benefactour Yea the very Beasts express a gratitude in their kind to them that feed them Isa. 1.3 The Oxe knoweth his Owner and the Ass his Masters Crib The du●lest of the Bruit Beasts will take notice of such as feed them and make much of them And shall not we take notice of God and be obsequious to him from whom we have received all our supplies our Lord and Owner who hath fed us and most kindly intreated us Hosea 11.4 I drew them with the Cords of a Man the Bands of love Unless we renounce humanity we cannot but look upon our selves as having strong bands upon us obliging us to duty and mindfulness of God 3. These mercies do not harden in their own nature but meerly by the sinners abuse of them For in their own nature they have a fitness and tendency to recover Men to the Love and Service of God but through our abuse they become snares and intangle us in the service of the Flesh. In the Creature there is something good to lead us up to God who is the first and chief good something imperfect uncertain and unsatisfactory to drive us off from it ●elf Is there any thing comfortable in the creature Whence came it Who put it there Common Mercies point to their Author if we would recollect our selves and receive them with thanksgiving Is there vanity and vexation in it Why is it but that the Creatures may not detain us from God that we may not sit on the Threshold when we may come before the Throne Our great fault is loving the Creature above the Creator Now the Creature is imbittered and is an occasion of so much vexation and trouble that we may not rest in it self All the good that is in the Creature is an image of that perfect good which is in God Now who would leave the substance to follow the Shadow As if a Virgin wooed should fall in love with the Messengers of a great King and despise the person himself There is a sweetness in these things mixed with imperfection the sweetness to draw us to God the imperfection to drive us off from the Creatures to make us look ●igher They do as it were say to us We cannot satisfie you you must seek for happiness in that God that made us and you Now Men are inexcusable if after all this they forsake God for the Creature Ier. 2.13 My People have committed two evils they have forsaken me the Fountain of living Waters and have hewed them out Cisterns broken Cisterns that can hold no Water 4. God hath provided a remedy for us by Christ. Whereby he would astonishingly oblige Man to seek after his own Salvation Iohn 3.16 God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life There is love to the World in it there is man-kindness in it Tit. 3.4 After that the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward Man appeared A propitiation for the whole World 1 Iohn 2.2 He is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole World Here is a sufficient foundation for this truth that whosoever believeth shall be saved If after all this Man shall be negligent vain careless unmindful of his misery or remedy his own Conscience will bear witness against him that the cause of his sin and the hinderance of his recovery is from himself and from his own obstinacy and impenitency Hosea 13.9 O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy hope God is not to be blamed for our destruction it is of our own procuring There was help in God but they would not accept it 5. Affected scruples whether this be intended to us are a sin and do not disoblige us from our duty They are a sin because secret things do not belong to us but the open declarations of God concerning our duty Deut. 29.29 Secret things belong unto the Lord but those things which are revealed belong unto us and our Children Let us perform our duty and the secret purposes of God will be no bar and hinderance to us To betray a known duty by a scruple is the part of an erring and deceitful Heart God may do what he pleaseth but we must do what he hath commanded This is the only true principle that will inable us to carry our work through to the last 6. God hath appointed means which during the time of his patience are liberally vouchsafed to us and we being
true Religion will give rest and quiet to the Soul Thirdly That the Christian Religion doth abundantly provide for true Peace of Conscience and Ease of Mind 1. Because it discovereth the Matter of true Peace 2. The Way how it may be attained 1. The Matter of true Peace is Pardon and Life or sufficient Provision to appease our guilty fears and satisfie our desires of Happiness 1. Man being Gods Creature and therefore his Subject and having faulted in his Obedience and Subjection to him and knowing the Judgment of God counteth himself worthy of Death Rom. 1.32 And this fear of Death and Vengeance that ensueth it is ●o ingrained and implanted in the Conscience that unless some fit course of 〈◊〉 and Justification be propounded and that with good Authority man is 〈◊〉 restless and troubled and knoweth not what to do to get rid of the 〈…〉 Soul Micah 6.7 Shall I give my first born for my Transgression the fruit 〈…〉 for the Sin of my Soul Now the great design which the Scriptures 〈…〉 to set forth a grant of Pardon upon Gracious and Commodious Terms 〈…〉 will but accept of it It is the excellency of the Christian Religion above 〈…〉 Religions Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth Iniquity 〈…〉 by the Transgression of the Remnant of his Heritage he retaineth not his 〈…〉 ever because he delighteth in Mercy If the Question were put to you which 〈◊〉 put to the Spouse Cant. 5.9 What is thy Beloved more than another Beloved What is there in Christ above other Gods of the Nations that you make so much 〈◊〉 about him What is it draweth your Hearts so to love him and cleave to him in the greatest Hazards and Extremities This you might Answer He hath set afoot a pardoning Covenant so suited to the Necessities of Man and the Nature of God that all the World cannot shew the like 2 For the other Matter of our Peace a fit Happiness to satisfie our Desires Man having an Immortal Spirit gropeth about for an Immortal and Eternal good Acts 17.27 or such an Estate in the other World as may comfort him against the labours and sorrows and the frailty and shortness of the present Life All Nations have a conceit of the Immortality of the Soul if at any time they doubt of it they cannot wholly blot the sense of it out of their Hearts Surely all desire it and it would give much ease to their Mind if it might be undubitably made out to them that there is such an Immortal Estate They that fully knew it not were pleased with the shadow of it and sought it in fame they would not have their Memory die with them As those that want Children take Pleasure in little Dogs and Cats so did they embrace a poor Shadow for the Substance To be sure most men die Anxious and when they leap into Eternity they know not where their feet shall light But now it is said 2 Tim. 1.10 That Christ hath abolished Death and hath brought Life and Immortality to light through the Gospel He hath made a clear Revelation of that which was not so certainly known before The Heathens guessed at it sometimes they seemed to see it and sometimes doubted of it as men travelling sometimes see a spire of a steeple before them at a distance and anon they lose the sight of it again and so cannot tell certainly whether they see it yea or no. The Law like a Dumb-man made many signs and set forth Eternity by long Life and Heaven by Canaan But now the Gospel clearly speaketh it out and scattereth all the Mists and Clouds about Eternity 2. The Way how we surely may be made partakers of Pardon and Life and there it telleth us First What Christ hath done Secondly What we must do Christ hath sufficiently laid the Foundation and all that we must do is but to apply what he hath purchased and provided for us 1. What Christ hath done The Word that is nigh thee referreth to things already done for us Christs Death and Resurrection 1. His Incarnation and Death for Christ needeth not to be brought down from Heaven any more He once descended from Heaven and was made Flesh and dwelt among us for a double end Partly to reveal these things to us and the way how to obtain them with sufficient Evidence and Certainty One great Errand that he had in the World was to reveal the Will of God to lost Mankind for their recovery and to bring them to the fuller Knowledge of God and the Pardon of Sins and the Truth of the Unseen World and the way thereunto Luke 1.77 To give Knowledge of Salvation unto his People by the Remission of their Sins And not only so but partly also to be a Mediator and Reconciler between God and Man and lay down his Life as a Sacrifice for Sin and a ransom for Souls Eph. 5.2 Who hath given himself for us an Offering and Sacrifice to God Mat. 20.28 He gave his Life a ransom for many We have both Heb. 3.1 Consider the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession Iesus Christ. Well then herein lay the Advantage of the Gospel above the Law that required all to be done by us but the Gospel referreth us to things already done for us by another who was sent from God to reveal his Fathers will to us and to redeem us to God He suffered the Penalty due for our breach of the Law there is nothing required of us but our thankful Acceptance and hearty consent to follow Christs Conduct and Direction well then he needeth not be brought down from Heaven any more or descend to help and redeem the World 2. His Resurrection and Ascension For that is the second Question Who shall descend into the Deep to bring up Christ again from the Dead No that needeth not He is risen already and gone again to Heaven to assure us of the Truth of his Doctrine and the value of his Sacrifice and the reality of the other World For he himself is entred into the Glory he spake of and so giveth us a visible Demonstration of the Truth and reality of it And also he is sate down at the right Hand of God that he might apply Salvation to us by his powerful and all-conquering Spirit But it is the Resurrection we must chiefly insist upon for God by raising him from the Dead hath declared him to be a sufficiently authorized Messenger and set him forth to be the Person to be believed in heard and obeyed in his Name When Christ was crucified and buried though a Grave stone was sealed and a guard of Souldiers set to watch it yet Angels appeared and rolled away the Stone and spake to those that enquired after him Yea Christ himself often appeared to his Disciples conversed with them forty days instructed them in things pertaining to the Kingdom of God and then went to Heaven and poured out the Spirit and for an
Covenant ordered in all things and sure for this is all my Salvation and all my desire although he make it not to grow We are not so firm as God but remission of Sins is one of the Covenant priviledges and remaineth notwithstanding the defects and failings on our part When we grow secure and neglect our duty and do not watch over our selves the jealous God will watch over us and take away the fuel of our Lusts and quicken us to Repentance and the remembrance of our duty The sharpest rods and sorest stripes may stand and do stand with his Covenant-love to them Psal. 119.75 I know that in Faithfulness hast thou afflicted me Yea not only so but they are part of his Covenanting-Administrations they are Fatherly Corrections and Medicinal Preservatives against sinning they are token of God's hating Sin in his People but not of the rejection of their Persons but rather effects of his Love to the persons corrected II. The Confirmation 1. In the General God's Bill and Bond hath a Seal annexed to it A Seal is to make a thing unquestionable The Prophet in his bargain for the Field of Anathoth Ier. 32.10 11. saith I subscribed the Evidence and Sealed it and I took the Evidence of the purchase which was Sealed according to the Law and Custom The Sealing of the Deeds was an assurance by which an Inheritance was made over and a Covenant and Bargain ratified was Sealed by both Parties So is Gods Covenant sealed for the more assurance by God and us 2. I shall shew particularly the nature of the Seal on God's part and ours 1. The Seal of the Covenant hath an impression suitable to God's part the Lord knoweth those that are his where there is a double comfort and ground of assurance to God's Covenant-People 1. They are his 2. He knoweth them 1. They are his 1. By Election from all Eternity Iohn 17.6 Thine they were By this there is a distinction between them and others in the purposes of his Grace When the Lord had all Adam's Posterity under his all-seeing Eye he did out of his free Love chuse some from among others to be the objects of his special Grace 2. By effectual calling which is their actual choice by which a distinction is made between them and others in time 2 Thess. 2.13 God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth His actual Choice is there meant Iohn 15.19 I have chosen you out of the World therefore the World hateth you The World knoweth not the secrets of God's Election but they see the effects The first foundation of a Believer's Salvation was laid in Election but it is acted and compleated when God calleth them from the rest of the World and sets them apart for himself 3. They are his by entering into Covenant with him and an Act of Consecration on their part Ezek. 16.8 Now when I passed by thee and looked upon thee behold thy time was the time of Love and I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy Nakedness yea I sware unto thee and enter'd into a Covenant with thee saith the Lord God and thou becamest mine They surrender themselves to the Lord's use 2 Chron. 30.8 Now be ye not stiff Necked as your Fathers were but yield your selves unto the Lord. Give your hand to God Now all this maketh the Foundation or the Covenant of the Lord sure to them so that they shall not Miscarry by damnable Errors and willful Sin as others do God's eternal Election keepeth them from the Teint of Errors Matth. 24.24 Insomuch that if it were possible they shall deceive the very Elect. The Elect cannot altogether be seduced and drawn away from Christ because of the purpose of God which is backed by his invincible power and care over them Actual Election or effectual Calling giveth them a discerning Spirit 2 Thess. 2.13 But we are bound always to give thanks to God for you Brethren Beloved of the Lord because God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth Their Minds are savingly enlightned and their Wills renewed so that they are kept safe Their Covenant-Dedication doth particularly entitle them to God's care so that they are guided by God's Spirit and guarded by his continual Providence till the work begun in them be perfected Phil. 1.6 Being confident of this very thing that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Iesus Christ. 2. God knoweth them Knowing is put for 1. His particular notice of them as his peculiar People of all that belong to the Election of his Grace He knoweth their Persons Ier. 1.5 Before I formed thee in the Belly I knew thee God hath a special care of them that they may not dye in their unregenerate condition He knoweth their Names Exod. 33.12 I know thee by Name and thou hast also found grace in my sight and Vers. 17. I will do this thing also which thou hast spoken for thou hast found grace in my sight and I know thee by name And it is said of Jesus Christ that he calleth his own Sheep by name and leadeth them out Iohn 10.3 He knoweth all his Flock particularly their Names and their Number by Head and Poll even to the meanest and poorest Saint Iohn Andrew Thomas He knoweth their Necessities Streights and Temptations Cares Griefs Fears Wants Difficulties and Dangers Matth. 6.32 Your Heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of all these things He knoweth who wanteth Food and Rayment and Protection His Eye is never off the Saints Psal. 56.8 Thou tellest my wandrings put then my Tears into thy Bottle are they not in thy Book Not a drop but is in God's Bottle God doth number their Tears reckon all the steps of their Wandrings and Pilgrimages every weary step through Ziph and Hareph I tell you it is God's Business in Heaven to look after his Saints The Eyes of the Lord run too and fro throughout the whole Earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him 2 Chron. 16.9 He knoweth all their employments and how they are to be fitted for them Gal. 1.15 It pleased God who separated me from my Mother's Womb and called me by his Grace He dateth God's Law from that time This Child is appointed to be a Vessel of Mercy to be employed in an especial manner for God's Glory Thus Ieremy was designed to be a Prophet before he was bred or born Paul to be an Apostle in his Mothers Womb An instance we have of God's particular knowledge in the 9 th of the Acts the 11th vers The Lord said unto 〈…〉 go into the street which is called Straight and enquire in the Hous● of Judas 〈…〉 called Saul of Tarsus for behold he prayeth Such a Town such a Street 〈…〉 Person about such a work God taketh notice of
afraid to be damned it is not God's displeasure they care for but their own safety The youngman went away sad and was grieved for he had great possessions Mark 10.22 Because he could not reconcile his Covetous mind with Christ's Institutes So Felix trembled being convinced of Sins which he was loath to discontinue and break off 3. They differ in their effects many men tremble at the word of God coming in upon their Hearts with power but this awakning worketh diversly Sometimes to a solicitous Anxiousness about the way of Salvation and then it is good as those Acts 2.37 And when they heard this they were pricked in their hearts and said unto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we do That was a kindly work to desire to be further instructed and directed into the way of Life and Peace Sometimes to rage Acts 7.54 When they heard these things they were cut to the heart and gnashed on him with their teeth they were vexed at the galling truths which Stephen delivered and the conviction that was upon them kindled their rage against him Sometimes it produceth nothing but dilatory excuses as here in Felix go thy way for this time when I have a more convenient season I will send for thee II. The cause of this trouble and Agony was the word wherein the matter and the manner is considerable 1. The matter is to be considered both generally and particularly 1. Generally the word of God or the Doctrine of Faith in Christ. It hath a convincing power 1 Partly because of its Author the impress of God is upon it it partaketh of his Properties Heb. 4.12 13. For the word of God is quick and powerfull and sharper than any two edged Sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of Soul and Spirit and of the joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Neither is there any Creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and open unto the Eyes of him with whom we have to do God searcheth the Heart and the word searcheth the Heart God is powerful and his word is powerful in discovering a Sinner to himself and bringing a Sinner out of his lurking Holes and taking off all disguises 2 Partly because of its clearness and evidence to a natural Conscience if it be not strangely stupified and blinded by fleshly Lusts 2 Cor. 4.2 3 4. By manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every Man's Conscience in the sight of God But if our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this World hath blinded the minds of them that believe not lest the light of the Glorious Gospel of Christ who is the image of God should shine unto them This Scripture sheweth that the Gospel is light which will discover its self if Men do not shut their Eyes And if men refuse the Converting power they cannot withstand the Convincing power of it for the work of bringing home Souls to God lyeth more with their Lusts than with their Consciences 3 And chiefly because of the Concomitant Blessing God hath appointed the Word to be the great Instrument of Convincing and Converting the World and doth accompany it with his Grace and Spirit sometimes to one effect sometimes to another To Convincing Iohn 16.8 The Spirit shall convince the World of Sin and of Righteousness and of Iudgment If it doth no more it shall leave them under a conviction of the truth Sometimes to Conversion as 2 Cor. 4.6 God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. God concurreth with his own ordinance by his omnipotent and creating power 2. Particularly the Day of Judgment is to be insisted upon in our Ministry The Apostles in planting the Faith observeth this point of Wisdom to insist much upon the Judgment Day Acts 10.42 43. And he commanded us to preach unto the the people and to testifie that it is he which was ordained of God to be the judge of Quick and Dead And to him give all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth on him shall receive remission of Sins This was the great point which his chosen Witnesses were to insist upon So also Acts 17.30 31. But now command●th all men every where to repent because he hath appointed a day in which he will judge the World in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained whereof he hath given assurance to all men in that he hath raised him from the dead The Apostles observed the Tempers of those they dealt with when with the brutish multitude they invite them by Arguments of Providence Acts 14.15 16 17. Sirs Why do ye these things We also are men of like passions with you and preach unto you that you should turn from these vanities unto the living God which made Heaven and Earth and the Sea and all that are therein Who in times past suffered all Nations to walk in their own ways Nevertheless he left not himself without witness in that he did good and gave us rain from Heaven and fruitful seasons filling our Hearts with food and gladness When with the Learned he speaks of the first Cause and chief Good Acts 17.28 For in him we live move and have our being And binds all by his coming to Judgment ver 31. So he deals with Felix here he urges principles of known Dignity and Sobriety from the day of Judgment See also 2 Cor. 5.10 11. For we must all appear before the Iudgment seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in the Body according to that he hath done whether good or evil Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men This was their great and powerful Argument Reasons 1. Because this made their access into the Hearts and Consciences of Men more easie because of its suitableness to natural Light That Man is God's Creature and therefore his Subject is evident by Reasons drawn from our dependance on the first Cause and Fountain of all Being That Man hath failed in his Subjection to his Creator and Lord is evident by daily experience that therefore God may call him to an account and Man should fear his wrath is a principle as evident as the former and justified by the guilty fears incident to Mankind because of their offences Rom. 1.32 Who knowing the judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death Divine Justice must once publickly appear and rectifie the disorders of the World Now because of the sentiments of Nature the Doctrine of the final Judgment doth easily enter into the Thoughts and Conscien●ces of Men. 2. This doth most befriend the great discovery of the Gospel which is justification by Christ and pardon of Sin by submitting to his instruction If
were opened and another Book was opened which is the Book of Life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the Books according to their works Outward Friend or Foe Heathen or Christian Officer or private Person 1 Pet. 1.17 And if ye call on the Father who without respect of persons judgeth every man according to his work Secondly It is a strict and just Judgment Acts 17.31 He hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the world in righteousness Now God winks at many faults ver 30. Thirdly It is our final Doom our eternal Estate dependeth on it We must be judged to everlasting Joy or everlasting Torment Fourthly It is near and asure For the Iudge standeth before the door Jam. 5.9 Every Week Day Hour Minure we approach nearer to it 3. The ●oarness of a bad Conscience and what unsound terms it is with God Felix is set a trembling by Paul Belshazzer's edge taken off in the midst of his carowzing Da● 5.6 Then the Kings countenance was changed and his thoughts troubled him so that the joints of his loins were loosed and his knees smote one against another So true is that Heb. 2.15 Who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bond●ge 4. The necessity of a strict Obedience We should carry our selves so that the Word may comfort us not make us afraid discharging our Duties to God to our Neighbor and to our Selves Tit. 2.12 Teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Paul mentioneth here two Parts as suiting to his purpose but there are three and Godly the chief part of which is to seek our Reconciliation with God by Christ then to love him and delight in him and serve him faithfully doing his Will seeking his Glory Righteously that we may be just to our neighbor doing to others as we would be dealt with our selves Soberly Sobriety and Temperance lyeth in Self-government that he possess his vessel in Sanctification and Honour keep himself unspotted from the World subdue the Flesh that it may not wax wanton that the heart be not hardned nor Conscience stupified and so become uncapable of Spiritual things and so still Crucify the Flesh and inure the Mind to Heavenly things 5. The sottishness of them who are not moved so far as Felix was who hear of Righteousness Temperance Judgment to come and are not a whit moved Object But you will say our Hearts are established by Grace why should we be afraid of the future Judgment Answ. 1. To be only moved with fear and terror is slavish 2. You should have a deep Reverence of His Majesty and so be afraid to displease him 3. You must distinguish between a perplexing distrustful fear and an Holy preventive eschewing Fear 4. There are great Reasons why this Fear should have an influence upon us while we dwell in flesh 1 Because the wrath of God was once our due 2 We still deserve it 3 It is certainly a great and extream difficulty to get free from so great an evil See the Authors Sermon on 2 Cor. 5.11 pa. 113. 2. Use. Caution which is double 1. Do not lose the advantage of this common work but when the waters are stirred put in for Cure It may be lost 1 partly by delays or dreams of a more convenient season The sinners Morrow will never come delay is but a plausible denial the sinners non vacat is non placet Luke 14.18 And they all with one consent began to make excuse 2 Partly by disobedience or relapses into our old crimes so Felix returned to his bribery and licentious course Therefore let us open our hearts to Christ's knocking Reasons 1. It is very dangerous None so bad as those that quench these Convictions The Holy Ghost by the power of the Word fetteth them a trembling many times at the thoughts of their condition and they have some kind of mind to let sin goe but it cometh to nothing Iron often heated and oft quenched is the more hard the parts are more united and condensed As water heated in cold weather being more rarified freezeth the faster Prov. 29.1 He that being often reproved hardneth his neck shall suddenly be destroyed and that without remedy 2. You lose your season the time wherein God will be found There is a twofold season the time of God's Grace and our Capacity 1 The time of God's Grace God the Father's time is while he waiteth 1 Pet. 3.20 When once the long suffering of God waited in the days of Noah The Sons time is when the Gospel offers are made to us To day if you will hear his voice Heb. 3.7 2 Cor. 6.1 2. We then as workers together with him beseech you also that ye receive not the grace of God in vain for he saith I have heard thee in a time accepted and in the day of salvation have I succoured thee behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of salvation The Spirit 's season is the time of the motions of his Spirit Gen. 6 3. My spirit shall not always strive with man Acts 7.5 Ye stiff necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears ye do always resist the Holy Ghost 2. The time of our Capacity When Conscience is awakened the Word is most likely to make an impression upon us as when the Wax is hot it will receive the impression of the Seal 2. do not rest in a common Work that you hear the Word and are some way affected Herod rejoyced Felix trembled God hath never our Hearts till he hath gained our Love as well as our Fear Felix trembled God gained upon his Fear but he never hath our Hearts till he hath our Delight and such a Delight as is not controlled by other Delights when I love him above all and rejoyce in his Word more than in all Riches A Sermon on Prov. iii. 17. Her ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths are peace IN the Context you have an Exhortation to get Spiritual and Heavenly Wisdom The Argument is first Generally Propounded and then Particularly Amplified 1. Generally Propounded Vers. 13. Happy is the man that findeth wisdom and the man that getteth understanding 2. Particularly Amplified 1. By the Worth and Excellency of Wisdom Vers. 14 15. The merchandize of it is better than the merchandize of silver and the gain thereof than fine gold c. 2. The Utility and Profit Vers. 16. Length of days is in her right hand and in her left hand riches and honour She is represented as a Queen having both hands full of Blessings In the right hand length of days in the left hand riches and honour He speaks Pro more faederis according to the manner of the Covenant wherein Temporal Things are explicitely promised though Spiritual and Eternal Things are implyed In her right hand length of days What do Men desire more than to live long
and happy Wisdom will teach us to live for ever And in her left hand riches and honour all good Things in this World so far as not to hinder us of the Things of a better World shall be vouchsafed to us 3. The third Argument is in the Text the Pleasantness of Wisdom which is added to sweeten the Difficulties in attaining to it or pursuing after it or exercising the Virtue of it in the regulation of our Lives and Actions It is hard to get it and then to exercise it but it is recompenced with an answerable Sweetness Her ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths are peace Where note 1. The Subject Ways Paths The general Course or particular Duties which Wisdom prescribeth 2. The Predicate Pleasantness Peace They are not only pleasant but safe they are accompanied with spiritual Sweetness and produce solid Tranquility in the Mind of Man Doctr. That the Man whose Actions and Ways are guided by Heavenly Wisdom enjoyeth true Peace and Delight I. For stating the Point 1. By Wisdom is meant the Heavenly Doctrine revealed in the Word of God especially the Gospel or Salvation by Christ. For this is called The wisdom and power of God 1 Cor. 1.24 And it is said the Holy Scriptures through faith in Christ Iesus do make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 He is a Fool that is wise to other things and is not wise to the saving of his Soul for he is wise in Trifles and neglects necessary Things Well then the Ways and Paths of Wisdom are the Ways and Paths of Faith and Holiness Faith is necessary to solid Rejoycing For 't is said 1 Pet. 1.8 In whom believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory And Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill ye with all joy and peace in believing And Holiness concurreth necessarily for it is not only a godly Man's Duty but his Delight and it is rewarded with Joy and Peace 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world Some degree of Comfort followeth every good Action before our full and final Reward we have the solace of a good Conscience during our Service 2. That these Delights are not Carnal Delights but Spiritual Man is ever inviting himself to some Delight the oblectation of his Mind cannot lye idle but usually consults with Flesh and Blood in choosing his Delights and careth for the Body more than the Soul But bodily Delights and pleasing the sense were our old Slavery Titus 3.3 Serving divers lusts and pleasures These draw down the Mind and dull our Desires and Endeavours towards better things therefore here we need not use the Spur but the Bridle and must refrain our selves because these Delights corrupt the Mind and such a kind of Peace is not the quiet and repose of the Soul in God but the numbness and deadness of Conscience carnal Security not a true Peace But the Delights and Peace which Wisdom inviteth us unto are chaste and rational such as innoble the Soul and raise it to God and do not put it in Vassalage to Sense When our Joy runneth out in a Spiritual Channel there is no Excess in it no Snare by it The Pleasures of Sense are base and dreggy but these are Heavenly and Spiritual 3. It supposeth that the Man be renewed and recovered out of the common Apostacy For while a Man remaineth in it the Beast rideth the Man and nothing is sweet and pleasant but what gratifyeth sensual Appetite Regeneration and change of Heart is necessary to taste the Pleasures which are in the Paths of Wisdom For nothing is pleasant to Men but what is suitable to their Natures And we use to say that one Man's Pleasure is anothers Pain Distempered Souls are not capable of this Peace and Delight for every Man's Gust is according to his Constitution Rom. 8.5 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 Therefore the carnal Man that is wedded to his vain Delights is an incompetent Judge of the Pleasantness that is in the Paths of Wisdom Will he that is wholly addicted to the Flesh ever judge that there is more delight in the Exercises of Godliness than in the foolish Pastimes of the World That it is better to be mourning for Sin than rejoycing in the Creature and that the Congregation yieldeth a more solid Pleasure than the Theatre and that it is better to be mortifying the Deeds of the Body by the Spirit than to court the Senses If his Judgment may be convinced he will never yield to it in his Practice He doth not live by these Rules and Measures II. Let me now prove that the true Peace and Pleasure is no where else to be found but in obedience to Heavenly Wisdom 1. I prove it from the matter of this Peace and Joy and that is Wisdom heavenly Wisdom which leadeth us to Faith in Christ Love to God and an holy and heavenly Life And what is the consequent of these Things but the Pardon of all our Sins the assurance of the Love of God and the lively foresight and foretaste of endless Glory and Blessedness 1. The Wisdom that cometh from above doth teach us Faith in Christ as the whole Scripture manifesteth Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins Well now can any Man be truly chearful till his Sins be forgiven Alas if Conscience were but a little awake in the midst of all his Mirth he would see a sharp Sword hanging over his Head by a slender thread and that all his Jollity is but like dancing about the mouth of the bottomless Pit into which he is tumbling every moment Nay let him stifle Conscience as much as he can yet he can never totally get the victory of it For he hath his Pangs and Qualms and hidden Fears if you dig him to the bottom and stinging Remorses of Conscience which though not always felt are soon awakened No this Man can never be truly merry Suppose none of this as yet ever felt yet this you must grant That he cannot be a Man recollect his ways or use any sober consideration why he came into the World and whither he is a going which every one that weareth the Heart of a Man should sometimes do but his Trouble is revived such Trouble as soureth his Contentments and puts a damp upon all his Mirth On the other side a Man that hath made it his business to enter into God's Peace by Jesus Christ and is humbly and broken-heartedly suing out his Pardon in his Name and hath the justice and faithfulness of God engaged to him that so doing he shall be pardoned hath not this Man true and
I will give you rest Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in Heart and ye shall find rest unto your Souls Now in the Scriptures pardon of Sin is revealed which was a great Secret to nature for they were at a great loss about the way to obtain it Mich. 6.6 7. Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my self before the High God Shall I come before him with Burnt-Offerings with Calves of a year old Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of Rams or with ten thousands of Rivers of Oyl Shall I give my first born for my Transgression the fruit of my body for the Sin of my Soul And Life and Immortality are brought to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 Now the good Man is wholly busied about observing God's direction how the sore that hath so long run upon him may be cured and a proper Happiness which man gropeth after may be obtained Acts 17.27 That they should seek the Lord if happily they might feel after him and find him We are fallen from God and cannot be happy but in returning to him again nor compleatly happy till we attain to the full enjoyment of him 2. By his Spirit when David speaketh of chusing God for his portion he presently addeth Psal. 16.7 I will bless the Lord who hath given me Counsel we had else been as witless fools as others rejoycing in the Creature apart from God in the midst of Soul-dangers Without this nothing will reclaim us from our Wandrings neither Reason nor Experience nor common Grace Now Reason It is easie to prove the vanity of the Creature that it is not Man's Happiness to enjoy the pleasures of the World or to seek to be well here We may argue against their Carnal practices but what will our arguings avail Still they are as Worldly as ever and seek satisfaction in their own ways This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve of their sayings Psal. 49.13 Men may stand over the Graves of their Ancestors and say where is now their Worldly Honour esteem and favour for which they neglected God sleighted Christ and sold their Salvation Yet those that succeed them neglect true Happiness as much as they that went before and are as careless of Heavenly things We see great ones die as well as others but who is better'd by it The survivors are as greedy of gain as sensual as vain and doating upon Worldly greatness as their Fore-runners were So for experience compare Deut. 29.2 3 4. Ye have seen all that the Lord did before your Eyes in the Land of Aegypt unto Pharoah and all his Servants and to all his Land yet the Lord hath not given you an Heart to perceive and Eyes to see and Ears to hear unto this day with Psal. 90. and 12. So teach us to number our days that we may apply our Hearts unto Wisdom God must teach us the plainest Lessons So for common Faith though we have been Trained up in the Scriptures though we know that we must enjoy God or we can never be happy yet still we are wedded to Carnal Vanities Our respects to God are but Notions and Complements The fervency and reality of our Affections is intercepted by the World or else there could not be so many Covetous Christians Voluptuous Christians Ambitious Christians Heart-Idolatry is the most dangerous Men are sooner Convinced than Converted Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 Nay though there be some common work of the Spirit and they do not only talk by rote but have some sense of the vanity of the World and of the necessity and excellency of God's favour some tast of the good word of God and the powers of the world to come Heb. 6.45 Yet though they would have Christ for their Consciences the World hath their Affections We desire happiness as Children would fain have something but are pleased with Rattles or any Toy We would be happy but take up with any thing that cometh next to hand Thus we do till God cureth us by inlightning our Minds or giving us counsel in our Reins and inclining our Hearts Psal. 119.36 Incline my Heart unto thy Testimonies and not unto Covetousness The good Man liveth in obedience to these Sanctifying motions of the Spirit IV. That as to the event they are both filled but in a different Sense First I shall shew how the Wicked are filled with their own ways A Wicked Man he hath enough of Sin in the Punishment Therefore 't is said they shall eat of the Fruit of their own way and be filled with their own devices Prov. 1.31 As a Man that hath surfeited of pleasant Meat hath enough of it when he feeleth the Torments and Gripes of his Surfeit Now 1. When is this and 2. Why 1. When It may be in this Life but surely in the next 1. It may be here partly by disappointment when those Honours and Pleasures and Riches which they sought after prove an occasion of much misery to them and they see they had been safer if they had stood longer This often falleth out in the World Many desire greatness to their hurt Solomon compareth them to Fishes taken in an evil Net or Birds caught in the snare Eccles. 9.12 They play about the bait so long till they meet with the Hook or their height ruine them Iob 5.12 13. He disappointeth the devices of the crafty so that their hands cannot p●rform their enterprize He taketh the wise in their own craftiness and the counsel of the froward is carried headlong partly by Death which bloweth away all vain conceits Ier. 17.11 As the Partridge sitteth on Eggs and hatcheth them not so he that getteth Riches and not by right shall leave them in the midst of his days and at his end shall be a fool And Iob 27.8 What is the hope of the Hypocrite tho' he hath gained when God taketh away his Soul And 1 Iohn 2.17 The World passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever Oh that Men were so careful to seek and serve God and save their Souls as they are to provide for their Bodies and satisfie their Lusts Usually when Men are going out of the World they complain how the World hath deceived them It had been better if they had lived in a strict obedience 2. In the World to come The errors of Mens choice are not well seen in this life but afterwards all will be manifested What will they think of their foolish and vain course when they are cast into Hell They have enough then indeed of Sin when their Worldly Portion is taken from them and the Heavenly Blessedness denied to them For no man shall have more than he sought after whilst he was alive The Conscience of his foolish choice will be a part of his Torment and who can express the other sorrows of the
supposeth a Sanction both of Reward and Punishment and a Sanction a Judg to whom a Man is accountable And if Man were but an higher and wiser sort of Beast he would but differ gradually from a Dog or a Swine Now no Man would be used as a Beast and made a Slave to any one that can master and tame him and sold in the Market as a Beast if this be his Lot by his Infelicity in the World he would look upon it as an uncouth thing and that it would be to sin before God to use him so Therefore there is a Distinction between Men and Beasts Men die not as the Beasts die 3. They are capable of the Knowledg of Immortality and can frame curious Disputes and accurate Debates thereof which sheweth they are not altogether uncapable of the thing it self for the Beasts know no other Life beyond what they injoy and mind no other and care for no other and therefore the Estate of Man will be different from theirs 4. Man is capable of knowing God and his Attributes which the Beasts are not because they were never made to injoy him He hath given us an Vnderstanding that we may know him that is true 1 John 5.20 They are capable of knowing their Relation to God as his Creatures and Subjects and so are obnoxious to his Judgment and that nothing here can make them happy and that God alone can do it Psal. 4.6 7. There be many that say VVho will shew unto us any Good Lord lift thou up the Light of thy Countenance upon us Thou hast put Gladness in my Heart more than in the time that their Corn and their VVine increased That Happiness lieth not in what Men ordinarily seek it Riches Honours and Pleasures but in the Favour of God That here we do not injoy him to the full and that therefore we must seek after another Life here we seek God in the World to come we find him and therefore cannot rest in this partial Injoyment Man is ever seeking after an immortal Blessedness now this Capacity is not in vain the Soul is restless till it find him 5. Man is capable of a Divine Nature which consists not only in the bare Knowledg but Love of God 2 Pet. 1.4 VVhereby are given to us exceeding great and precious Promises that by these you might be Partakers of the Divine Nature He is capable of the Image of God Epes 4.24 And that ye put on the new Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness 6. Man is capable of a sweet familiar Communion with God and Friendship with him 1 Iohn 1.3 And truly our Fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Iesus Christ. Therefore the State of Man dying must needs be different from that of a Beast who hath no Knowledg no Desire no Love to God no Capacity of Communion with him unless it be in respect of receiving the Effects and Bounty of his common Providence 2 dly The Dignity of Man God made him a little lower than the Angels and crowned him with Glory and Honour Psal. 8.5 Now if he were not immortal he would be of all Creatures most miserable his Reason only would serve to make him capable and apprehensive of the greater Calamity and Trouble Sure it is that Man is the Master-piece of this visible World in respect of the Majesty of his Person the Abilities of his Mind and his Soveraignty over all the Works of God's Hands all which are Marks of special Favour of the Creator to Man above other Creatures Now if God hath given to Man the next Place in order of Dignity to the Angels above other his Creatures what would his Love signify if he be in a worse Condition than the Beasts and liable to so many Cares Incumbrances Grief and Remorse of Conscience which the Beasts are freed from Alas considering the Calamities of his Life Infirmities of his Body Perplexities of his Mind his Reason is a sad Privilege to him and his Torment rather than his Blessedness whilst it only giveth him a doleful Remembrance of what is past a Care about what is present and awakens Fears of what is to come The Beasts indeed have a Sense of what is present but no Remorse for what is past no Presage of what is to come but Man hath all these a bitter Remembrance of Sins past and for present Evils they are more than those of the Beasts such as Poverty Banishment Imprisonment Slavery Loss of Estate sundry Sicknesses and Diseases and Man hath a more bitter Sense and Apprehension of them And for time to come he hath a Fore-sight of the End which the Beasts have not So that we have twenty-fold more Cares and Labours than they have who live in Tranquillity and Liberty and free from those Disquiets which vex Mankind and have no Remorse to sowr their Pleasures either from the afflictive Remembrance of what is past or Solicitude about what is to come Therefore if our Happiness were here only Man would be less happy than the Beasts many of whose Lives are longer and sweeter who have a more sincere Use of bodily Pleasures But here is their Happiness God had provided some better thing for them to be injoyed in the other World It cannot be imagined that he hath made his noblest Creature in the World with a Nature that should be a necessary Misery and Vexation to it self above the Calamities incident to the rest of the Creatures The very Apprehensions and Desires that a Man hath of an higher Good would be a Torment and Burden to him if there were no Calamity else for he seeth a better Estate which he cannot injoy as an Horse tied up from the Provender which is near unto him and cannot reach it Our Nature inclineth us to know and love that we cannot obtain We can think afore-hand of our Death and Abode in Darkness which Beasts cannot for they are not troubled with these Thoughts Yea we fear Miseries after Death and know not how to be exempted from them Now it is incredible that God should make his noblest Creature most miserable by setting before his Eyes a certain Death and possible Torments and Miseries after Death and provide no Remedy against these things 3 dly God governeth Men by the Hopes and Fears of another Life and therefore such a Life there is and so the Souls of Men are immortal The Reason is because God needeth not to govern the World by Deceit and Lying This would be against his Holiness and Benignity and would destroy the very Government he would establish for it would tempt us to Insincerity and to cheating and deceiving others for Men are no better than their Religion it were well if they were as good The Foolish Bad and Ignorant may use such Arts but the Wise Holy and Good would not In ludicrous things we fright our Children with Bug-bears and Names but in such a serious thing as the Government of
one wounded with Thieves and he had Compassion on him and went to him and bound up his Wounds pouring in Oil and Wine and set him on his own Beast and brought him to an Inn and took Care of him ver 33 34. So here The Papists indeed make this Limitation Nisi probabiliter praesumatur aliunde nacturum qui eum corripiat Except he probably presume that another will reprove him But this Presumption must be evident and rational not probable only and where I am privy to it and know it and procure it and know how much better he is able to manage it than my self then I am not to take it out of his Hands or when others are present whose Gifts and Office more oblige them to it 6. When he doth expect a better Opportunity his Omission is not faulty for the present for all things must be gone about in their Season Eccles. 3.7 There is a time to keep Silence and a time to speak And in another Place Because to every Man there is Time and Iudgment therefore the Misery of Man is great upon him Eccles. 8.6 7 8. He speaketh of the Misery Men contract upon themselves by disproving publick Disorders especially in great Persons Princes and Potentates Therefore certainly it concerneth us to take a fit Season Not when a Man is drunk as Abigail told Nabal not a Word when the Wine was in his Head 1 Sam. 25.36 37. Not when they are in the Heat of Passion for then they are not capable of discerning Right and Reason Iam. 1.20 For the Wrath of Man worketh not the Righteousness of God Therefore Opportunity and Conveniency of Circumstances must be considered and improved Yet here is Caution still we must not adjourn it too far Life is short and Sin groweth Heb. 3.13 Exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the Deceitfulness of Sin And it must be done at length if we have long waited for a Season and cannot find it we must make it and break a Rule of Civil Prudence rather than violate Conscience for Civilities must not prescribe to Religion 7. If it be uncertain whether that which you reprove for be a Sin as suppose some kind of Games or Sports which are questionable because usually they do hurt ingross time and inchant the Mind and are as the excelsa Mundi the High-places of the World that have a strange Blast and Judgment of God upon them though we cannot say that for the Nature of them they are utterly unlawful What shall we do in this Case Many weak People are importunate to have others reproved for these things but if once we give way to this it looketh like an Itch of reproving and if we reprove for doubtful Matters Men fly from our Reproof for what is clear and open Yet we may hold an Argument and prudently debate things and discourse about them but take heed you do not hinder your selves in Matters that are of more weighty Importance 8. When greater Loss and Damage may come to our selves by the Reproof than Benefit to the Reproved It is out of Question that he that can easily discharge this Duty without any considerable Inconveniency and only forbear it out of Sloth and Pusillanimity hath the greater Sin if he doth it not for he standeth with God for a Trifle But now if a considerable Damage shall redound to my self in discharging this Duty it is of Weight in this Matter Our Lord saith Matth. 7.6 Give not that which is holy unto Dogs neither cast ye your Pearls before Swine lest they trample them under their Feet and turn again and rent you As suppose there be a Danger of your Life having to do with a contemptuous Sinner if I carry my Life in my Hand and put it to hazard there must be many things considered in this Case But now in extream Cases if our Neighbour be in present Danger of losing his Soul with the Danger of my bodily Life I am to do what I can to save his Soul The Work is good the Danger depending upon a future Event is not absolutely certain God can preserve me however it is a part of much Self-denial to venture all in God's Hands 9. Publick Reproof is sometimes not always necessary If the Sin be publick either as committed in Sight before all 1 Tim. 5.20 Them that sin rebuke before all that others also may fear or as judged by a publick Judicatory Or if an hidden Sin tends to the Damage of the Community or a greater hurt follow upon it than the Loss of my Neighbour's Fame or if the Person have lost all Right to Fame or to a good Name as some have forfeited it I need not stand nicely upon their good Name but in such Cases I am to reprove publickly In other Cases the Reproof must be private and the Rule is Matth. 18.15 Go and tell him his Fault between thee and him alone Vse 1. If we are to reprove others let us take Care that we be innocent our selves not culpable but blameless They that are faulty themselves cannot reprove others without Blushing and great Shame Pull out the Beam out of thine own Eye Physician heal thy self Matth. 7.3 4 5. And why beholdest thou the Mote that is in thy Brother's Eye but considerest not the Beam that is in thine own Eye Or how wilt thou say to thy Brother Let me pull out the Mote out of thine Eye and behold a Beam is in thine own Eye Thou Hypocrite first cast out the Beam out of thine own Eye and then shalt thou see clearly to pull out the Mote out of thy Brother's Eye Rom. 2.21 Thou that sayest a Man should not steal dost thou commit Sacrilege The Iews were tender of Idolatry after they had smarted in the Matter of the Golden Calf yet all the latter Prophets condemn them for Sacrilege and robbing God of 〈◊〉 due If we are faulty our selves either in the same kind or worse we spoil our Reproof Psal. 141.5 Let the Righteous smite me it shall be a Kindness and let him reprove me it shall be an excellent Oil. They may admonish with the greater Authority Others are remotely bound they nearly others not without special Repentance and Humility acknowledging their own Sins and desiring they may not be Examples to harden others A Sinner is not freed from the Debt of Love but he is bound humbly to acknowledge his Sin and forsake it that he may be fit to reprove others Vse 2. If others be bound to reprove certainly you are bound to take a Reproof Solomon brings in the wretched Sinner when his Sin hath found him out speaking thus Prov. 5.12 13. How have I hated Instruction and my Heart despised Reproof and have not obeyed the Voice of my Teachers nor inclined mine Ear to them that instructed me These are the Lamentations of one that is ready to perish in his Sin And Prov. 10.17 He is in
Verse 8th The word is nigh thee even in thy Mouth and in thy Heart It 's in the Mouth to know it and speak of it it 's in the Heart as written there by the Spirit that we may do the duty it requireth of us with ease and sweetness 'T is in thy Mouth to Confess and in thy Heart to Believe and Practise VVhen the New Covenant is spoken of as opposite to the Covenant made with them when they came out of Egypt it is said sometimes to be put into the Mouth and sometimes in the Heart The words are Isa. 59.21 As for me This is my Covenant with them saith the Lord My Spirit that is upon thee and my VVords which I have put in thy Mouth shall not depart out of thy Mouth nor out of the Mouth of thy seed nor out of the Mouth of thy seed's seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ever Meaning thereby That his Spirit and Word shall continue with them as a Church to direct them in all necessary things This for the Mouth Now for the Heart see another Promise Jer. 31.33 And this shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their Hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People Well then The Excellency of the Gospel-dispensation is set forth by Two things 1. It 's more easie to be known and understood and carried in the Memory for the Word is nigh thee even in thy Mouth The drift of Moses his Speech tendeth to shew that they should have a New Covenant the Tenour of which was known and easie to be expressed by all those who were acquainted with it 2. It 's more easie to be practised 'T is not in our Mouths onely but in our Hearts which are inclined by the Holy Spirit to obey it so that the New Creature may undertake the duty it requireth of us by the assistance of God and do it sincerely though not exactly Secondly The sense of what it saith 't is explained and exemplified 1. Explained Verse 8. This is the word which we preach namely the Doctrine of Repentance and Remission of sins by Jesus Christ. 2. Exemplified Verse 9th That if thou shalt confess with thy Mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved Confession with the Mouth there answers to the Word is in thy Mouth believe with thine heart that implieth Faith And Christ's being raised from the Dead is instanced in rather than any other Article of Faith because that proveth all the rest and is the great evidence of the truth of Christianity Doctrine That the way of acceptance with God or obtaining Salvation is so clearly stated in the Gospel that we need not be in doubtful suspence or seek out another Religion wherein to find it or other satisfaction than God hath given us in his Word The sense of this Point I shall give you in these Propositions First That it is the weightiest matter in the VVorld to know how to be accepted with God as to pardon and life Man being a guilty Creature needeth pardon and the Soul dying not with the Body we desire to know the way of life or what shall become of us when this frail life is at an end Certain it is that we are haunted with guilty fears for we are through the fear of death all our life-time subject to bondage Heb. 2.15 There are some troubles of Mind in all of us about our acceptance with God not always felt indeed but soon awakened Trembling Souls who know what God is and what themselves are and are conscious to former guilt and present unworthiness cannot easily settle in a confidence of God's Mercy to them especially when they come to die The fear of death raised our trouble before but when death cometh indeed these stings are increased 1 Cor. 15.56 The Sting of Death is sin and these stings of Conscience are justified by the highest reason which is the Law of God not occasioned by our melancholy conceits only It 's an Amazing consideration to us to think of entering into an unknown World and to stand before the righteous bar of an impartial Judge That it is very hard to undergo death with a steady confidence and to incourage our fearful and doubtful Minds to lanch out into Eternity common experience verifieth I pray consider Christians that our present condition is a state of darkness and fear and these fears are caused by sin and justified by the Law of God and revived by death and the thoughts of the other World And therefore there is not a weightier business than to establish our fearful and doubtful Minds in Peace that we may comfortably wait for the Mercy of God unto Eternal Life Secondly That is the best Religion which doth most provide for this Peace and Rest of Soul So that if a man were at liberty to choose and were consulting what Religion he should choose this Consideration must guide him where he can find true Peace and Rest for his Anxious Soul So the Prophet directeth them Ier. 6.16 Stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and you shall find rest for your Souls And by this Argument Christ inviteth us to himself Mat. 11.28 29. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Take my yoak upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in Heart and ye shall find rest unto your Souls And the Apostle commendeth the Gospel upon this account Rom. 5.1 Therefore being justified by Faith we have Peace with God through our Lord Iesus It is easie to lull Conscience asleep for a while either 1. By Carnal Pleasures Prov. 9.17 Stolen Waters are sweet and Bread eaten in secret is pleasant For a while they seem so but the vertue of that Opium is soon spent Or 2. By a false Religion but within a while we shall soon find that is so far from being our cure that it is a great part of our disease no false Religion is consistent with right Thoughts of God Therefore the Woman of Samaria assoon as she began to have an awakened Conscience enquires after the true Religion Iohn 4.20 Our Fathers worshipped in this Mountain and ye say in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship An awakened Conscience will be careful to lay the ground-work of Religion sure A false way of Religion always breedeth scruples and is accompanied with no sound Peace Or 3. In the superficial observances of a true Religion Mat. 19.20 All these things have I kept from my Youth up what lack I yet A false Righteousness will not give true quietness to the Conscience there is something lacking and the Soul sits uneasie Therefore nothing but coming under the Power of the