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A57383 A communicant instructed, or, Practicall directions for worthy receiving of the Lords Supper by Francis Roberts. Roberts, Francis, 1609-1675. 1656 (1656) Wing R1591; ESTC R28105 135,670 280

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was so obedient that he lost his life rather then he would lose his obedience Now how can we think to meddle with this Memorial of Christs obedience for us acceptably unlesse we be tru●y obedient unto God in Christ proportionably Or What fellowship can obedience ha●e with diso●edience 2. The Tryal and Examination of New Obedience may be according to these Properties of Obedience True Obedience is 1. Consciencious 2. Cordial 3. Transforming 4. Resolved 5. Complete 6. Increasing 7. Continuing 1. True Christian Obedience is Consciencious Ariseth from a Consciencious respect to Gods Command and an awful filial fear of God commanding The End of the Commandment is Love out of a pure heart and a good conscience Such the ground of Noah's obedience who being warned of God touching things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an Ark. S●ch Abraham's who followed God not knowing whither he went meer conscience and awe to Gods call and command made him obey Such David's M●ne heart trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgements M●ne heart standeth in awe of thy Word Dost thou obey in an holy awe and conscience to Gods commands though thou hast no other Motives to obedience 2. True Obed●ence is cordial hearty and affect●onate Not an out●de but an inside-Obedience a●●o not a meer superficial and comp●emental shew but a reality flowing from the inward frame of the soul and the very heart-root Arising from the inscription of the Law in the heart I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy Law is within mine heart Ye have obeyed from the heart that form of Doctr●ne which was delivered you Is thine obedience from the heart-root But how shall I di●co●er whether my obedience be cordial and hearty Answ. Thou mayst discover the heartiness of thine obedience 1. By thy willingness to it The heart makes a man a volunteere ready and forward to all duties and performances Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power If ye be willing and obedient I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments 2. By thy chearfulness in it What is done heartily is done chearfully delightfully I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy Law is in my heart This is love that we keep his Commandments and his Commandments are not grievous Iob was so hearty in obedience that he esteemed Gods words more then his necessary food Christ so delighted in obedience that he said My meat is to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work Dost thou go as chearfully to the doing of Gods will as to thy meat and drink when thou art hungry 3. By thy grief at contrary courses of disobedience in others and fai●ings of obedience in thy self Thus Paul finding that when he would do good evill was present with him and that however he del●ghted in the Law of God touching the inward man yet he saw another Law in his members rebell●ng against the Law of his minde and bringing h●m into captivity to the Law of sin He hereupon thus laments his failings O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of th●s death And as Paul grieved at his own failings of obedience So David at others disobedience Horrour hath taken hold upon me because of the w●cked that forsake thy Law And again Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law If thus thou art willing to obedience cheerfull in it and grieved for failings thine obedience is cordial sincere and acceptable to God 3. True Obedience is a transforming Obedience mightily altereth and changeth a man from impurity to purity from sin to sanctity from Sodomites to Saints c. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance but as he wh●ch hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation Otherwise as Samuel said to Saul when he bragged of his obedience What meaneth then this lowing of the oxen and ble●ting of the sheep c so it may be laid to all dissemblers in obedience Are you obedient What meaneth then the noyse of your prophanation of Sabbaths of your swearing drunkennesse uncleannesse c 4. True Obedience is a fixed and resolved Obedience Like Davids Worthies will break through an host of Philistines through an Army of difficulties impediments and discouragements to the contrary For No contrary commands of man shall deter the truly obedient from their duties They wil obey God rather than man when both cannot be obeyed without crossing each other No stream of the multitude or current of corruptest times wherein they live shall bear them down from their obedience Ioshuah and his house will serve the Lord though all Israel should serve Idols And Noah was upright with God when the whole world was overspread with violence and all flesh had corrupted his wayes No worldly profits advantages or priviledges shall bribe them from their obedience Abram will obey and follow God though he forsake all the benefits and contentments of his Native Countrey and of his fathers House not knowing where his lot should fall No carnal disputes or reasonings with flesh and blood shall disswade them Noah might have raised many Objections against that strange attempt of building an Ark a work of 120 yeers continuance but Noah waves disputing and fals to building his arke which God commanded Paul late●y a Persecutor and but newly converted receives command to be a Preacher to the Gentiles immediately he conferred not with flesh and blood though he might have made multitudes of objections but went into Arabia and fell close to his Masters work No flood of Natural affections which oft-times pro●e most dangerous stumbling-blocks to well-doing shall drown or conquer their obedience As in Abraham when Sarah desired him but to cast out Ishmael the son of the bond-woman the thing was grievous in his eyes yet when God commands him to sacrifice Isaac as a burns-offering though the son of the free-woman his on●y son the son of his old age his sonne whom he loved the son of the promise in whom all the Nations of the earth should be blessed he goes about it readily and never acquainting Sarah lest she should hinder his obedience he travelled three dayes journey to effect it Thus the Levites did execution according to Gods command by Moses upon them that had sinned in the idolatrous Galfe of Aaron without favour or affection to brethren or kindred Hence Levi is so commended Who said unto his father and to his mother I have not seen him neither did he acknowledge his brethren nor knew his own children for they have observed thy Word and kept thy Covenant Natural affection is strong but supernatural obedience is stronger Finally no terrours of threats reproaches afflictions bonds imprisonments
incarnation which were made first to Adam and renewed after to Abram Moses David and Israel These are called The Covenants of promise because they were made in Christ as then only promised not actually performed and Covenants not Covenant because though but one Covenant yet severall times renewed that with considerable enlargements from time to time Now this New Covenant is the same for substance with that Old Covenant called The Covenant of promise For 1. They are both of them the Covenant of ●race not of Nature 2. They are both of them the Covenant of Reconciliation with corrupted mankind not of amity and friendship with incorrupted mankind 3. Jesus Christ was the Mediatour of them both though with some difference Typically he was Mediatour of the Old Testament or Covenant but Truly of the New 4. The termes or conditions of them both were the same viz. faith in Jesus Christ the Mediatour not works 5. The benefits and spirituall advantages of both were the same in the blood of Christ. viz. Pardon of sinne Sanctification of our natures Enjoyment of gracious interest in and Communion with God Eternal happinesse at last with Christ in heaven as the tenour of them clearly evidenceth Herein the Old and New Couenant do notably agree But they differ only in some Circumstances and the manner of Administration For 1. The Old Covenant was dark and obscure All the spiritual mysteries therein being clouded in types and shadowes A typicall Priesthood typical Sacrifices typical Altar and Tabernacle typical blood typical Mediatour typical Sacraments typical Canaan all typical Hence in the promulgation of this Old Covenant in Sinai the Jews came unto blacknesse and darknesse But the new Covenant is bright and clear being administred without all types and shadowes Christ the body being comn already in open spiritual glory The Mosaical veile is done away in Christ And we all with open face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord. 2. The Old Covenant was carnal and earthly in the administration of it They came to the Mount that m●ght be touched and to the sound of a Trumpet and the voice of words And it brought them to an earthly Canaan and an earthly Ierusalem But the New Covenant is dispenced spiritually bringing us to the spiritual Canaan To Mount Sion and unto the City of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem That we may worship God the God of Spirits in Spirit and Truth 3. The Old Covenant was more imperfect according to the imperfect state of the Church in those times which the Apostle compares to A child in his non-age and minority And so it was revealed more and more clearly by degrees as the Church grew riper and riper till Christs coming But the New Covenant is perfect and full never more to be enlarged or encreased till the end of the world it being revealed in Christ fulfilled and comne in the flesh already 4 The Old Covenant was terrible in the manner of its dispensation making not only the People tremble but even Moses himselfe exceedingly to fear and quake But the New Covenant is dispensed with all inviting amiableness and alluring sweetness every thing herein being sweet pleasant and delectable nothing at all terrible As appears in that admirable passage to the Hebrews And if it be said God the judge of all there mentioned is terrible I answer No God the judge of all is not terrible to them that come into Covenant with him for he is a Iudge absolv●ng them only a Iudge condemning His and all their enemies and that is most comfortable 5. That Old Covenant was limited and restrained to the people of the Jews onely and to those that became Jewish Proselytes Gentiles were all Strangers to the Covenant of Promise But the New Covenant is unlimited universally extended both to Jews and Gentiles ●f all sorts Thus the Old and New Covenant especially differ III. The New Covenant gloriously assures them that embrace it That God will write his law in their mindes and heart That he will be to them a God and they shall be to him a people That they all shall know him from the least to the greatest And that he will be merciful to their unrighteousness and remember their sins and iniquities no more This is the chief tenor and substance of the New Covenant Glorious Priviledges Here consider and admire them viz. 1. Gods Inscription of his Law Not in Tables of stone as of old but in the fleshy living Tables of his peoples mindes and hearts That writing was without this within That was broken this shall not be broken Hereby they shall be kept from back-sliding 2. Gods new relation to his people and theirs to him covenanted and promised He will be to them a God not onely a Portion a Protection a Friend a Redeemer a Savior a Comforter a Father an Hushand c. but beyond all these A God and beyond God there can be nothing This is the excellentest bl●ssing that can be promised and the highest promise that can be made If God will be a God to his People consequently he will be All to his people And they shall be to him a People not only their thoughts words and actions his nor only their minds or wils or affections his nor only their sen●es or members or bodies his c. But they whole they whatsoever they are can do or endure for him must be wholly his This is the greatest duty and the highest obligation that can be upon any people But this is the comfort God here undertakes for both sides for both Parties to the Covenant for Himself that he will be theirs for his people that they shall be his So that th●●e shall be no failing on either side 3. Gods univers●● 〈◊〉 ●ore perfect illumination of his people with the knowledge of himself They shall not be so dull of understanding as the Jewes of old nor divine knowledge be so restrained to one sort of people but more generally to all sorts of people and more compleatly in all degrees of knowledge The Knowledge of the Lord shall fill the earth as the waters cover the Sea 4. Gods merciful and eternal Act of oblivion past upon their sins and iniquities There shall not be as of old under the Old Covenant a yearly and daily remembrance of their sins by their yearly and daily sacrifices repeated which in effect was a re-iteration or continuation of their arreignment indictment and condemnation for their sins But an utter blotting out of their iniquities by the blood of Christ once offered for ever so that they shall never be remembred more to their condemnation IV. The New Covenant-Priviledges can actually be claimed by none but those that are effectually made Partakers of the New Covenant-Grace None can say That God is their God in Covenant and he will remember their sins no more till they
3. The Terms of this change and conversion From which and To which both heart and life must be changed From sin to God The heart must be changed from the state and power of sin the life from the acts of sin but both unto God The heart to be under his power in a state of grace The life to be under his rule in all new obedience To open their eyes and to turn them from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God Cease to do evill learn to do well Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord. Thus of the Nature of true Repentance 3. The Notes of true Repentance follow The Nature of Repentance thus described and opened may be a rule of tryal and that chiefly in three particulars viz. Conviction and Contrition Conversion 1. Hast thou a true Conviction and sense of sin A true sight of sin is the first step to Repentance No man will come to the Physician till he feell himself sick To this effect 1. Art thou convinced and sensible of sins sinfullness 1 How extreamly opposite and contrary sin is to God God is light sin is darkness God is life sin is death God cannot do it in himself nor endure it or look upon it with the least approbation in any his creatures Men become enemies in their mindes against God through wicked works Yea the carnall minde is enmity it self against God 2 How repugnant sin is to Gods holy just and good Laws Sin is the transgression of the Law The carnal mind is not subject to the Law of God nor indeed can be 3. What power sin hath over thy self and every man by nature It is a Law in thy members A re●gn●ng King A bond of iniquity c. 4 In a word how filthy odious ●oul and abominable sin is in it self Scripture in this re●pect resembles it to the Ethiopians black skin To the filth under the nailes or Arm-holes as the Greek word signifies To the uncleannesse of a menstruous woman To the filthinesse of the Sodomites To the stinking purrified deadly steam of an opened grave To the poison of Aspes and Serpents to the vomit of a dog To the myre and puddle wherein a swine wallows yea it 's called superfluity of naughtinesse or as the Greek signifies the excrement of malice The Holy Ghost useth such coorse expressions in describing of sin to let us see no language is bad enough for it Yea sin is farre more ugly black filthy then the devil himself for through sin he becomes a devil so ugly and abominable Art thou thus sensible of sins sinfulnesse as the glasse of Scripture represents it 2. Art thou convinced and sensible of sins mischievousnes How it cast Adam and all his posterity out of Paradise and Communion with God there depriving all of Gods Image How it makes all men by nature spiritually dead in sin slaves of Satan children of wrath heirs of all Gods curses and every moment liable to death temporal spiritual and eternal How not onely man but the whole Creation groans under the burden of it How by reason of sin thou art naturally in a lost undone damned state in the very gall of bitternesse being godlesse Christlesse and hopelesse in this present World c. Hast thou such apprehensions of sins mischief and danger that thou seest plainly thou art but a dead and damned wretch if thou gettest not out of thy sinful state c. This is to be truly sensible of sin 2. Hast thou true Contrition of heart and godly sorrow for sin thus discovered Art thou so sensible of thy sins as that thine heart is broken with sighs and sobs and thine eyes run down with tears who can aright discern his sins and refrain from sorrows Thou sayst I mourn for sin but how may I know that I mourn aright and that my sorrow is not carnal but godly sorrow Answ. Thou mayst discover the truth of thy godly sorrow for sin by these particulars 1. True godly sorrow is sincere It is for sin as it is sin especially More for the sinfulnesse of sin then for the dangerousnesse of sin Hence the godly mourning soul is most wounded for offending God and piercing Christ by sin For offending God So David Against thee thee onely have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight He had sinned also against Vriah shedding his blood against the Church giving them offence and cause of mourning against the enemies of God giving great occasion to them of blaspheming and against his own soul wounding it with all this guilt and doubtlesse he mourned for all these but nothing so stabbed him to the heart as that he had offended against such a God For piercing Christ by sin This also most deeply pierceth the soul of him that mourns for sin They shall look upon him whom they have pierced and they shall mourn for him and be in bitternesse for him c. for He was wounded for our transgressions c. What thinks the bleeding soul were my sins the Iudas that betrayed him the Pilat● that condemned him the nails spear and thorns that pierced him the gall and vineger given him to drink him that so loved me as to pray sigh weep bleed and die for my redemption Weep bitterly for this oh my soul let thine eyes run down with floods of tears 2. True godly ●orrow is great the greatest sorrow in the world Hence it 's called A Mourning as for an onely son being in bitternesse as one that 's in bitternesse for his first-born A great mourning as the mourning of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddo A mourning apart All this to shew that godly sorrow for sin is beyond all worldly sorrow When Peter wept for his sins he wept bitterly True there may be such a sudden push of worldly sorrow for a wife child c. that may seem greater then godly sorrow but this sorrow lasts not like godly sorrow So godly sorrow is greatest intensively for degree or extensively for continuance A land-flood may have a greater stream for present than a Spring but the Spring sends forth more waters because it 's still arunning 3. True godly sorrow is penitential it never leaves a man till it reform him of his sins Godly sorrow worketh repentance not to be repented of but the sorrow of the world worketh death Try now is thy sorrow such a sorrow Is it sincere more for offending God and wounding Christ then for any other respect Is it transcendent thou canst mourn more for sin then any worldly occasion Is it p●nitential it hath never left thee till it hath reformed thee Doubtlesse this is true godly sorrow indeed 3. Hast thou a true change and conversion of thine heart and
Communicants do as it were set Seal to their own judgement and damnation All these considerations should mightily move us to prepare and examine ourselves with all industry and integrity before we communicate But upon what particulars are we chiefly to examine our selves Answ. We are principally to examine our selves touching these three particulars viz. 1. What right we have to the Lords Supper 2. What need we have of it 3. What actual fitnesse we have for it If we have no Right we shall but usurp it if we feel no Need we shall but despi●e it if we be not Fit we shall but abu●e it I. What Right we have to the Lords Supper We should carefully examine our Right for without a due Right and claime to the Lords Supper receiving it the Lord may justly count us intruders and usurpers upon the Childrens bread and say Friends How came you in hither c. Now as the Matter of the Lords Supper is two fold viz. Outward the Elements and Actions and Inward the spiritual mysteries represented by them So there is a twofold Right to the Lords Supper viz. Outward and Inward 1. Outward and Visible in respect of the visible Church of Christ wherein this visible Ordinance is dispensed when we outwardly professe to be Federates of the New Covenant whereof the Lords Supper is a Seal And this outward Right is either More Remote and Mediate when by vertue of our Membership being baptized though we be but Infants we have a Ius ad rem a remote Right to the Lords Supper though no present capacity and fitnesse for it More Near and Immediate when by reason of our Qualifications of competent knowledge and unblameablenesse of life we have Ius in re a Right in the Lords Supper in respect of the Church so that the Church may not exclude us but ought to admit us Now of this outward Right the Chu●ch takes Cognizance examineth and judgeth 2. Inward and Invisible Right in re●pect of God and the Lord Jesus Christ. And this Inward Right is when we not only outwardly professe to be but inwardly and indeed are Federates with God in Christ in the New Covenant sealed by the Lords Supper for of the Cup in the Lords Supper it 's said This is my blood of the New Testament Or This is the New Testament in my blood That is This wine in the Cup is the Signe and Seal of my blood and death whereby the New Testament is ratified and established Now of this our Inward Right to the Lords Supper in respect of God we our selves are peculiarly to take knowledge examine and judge But how may we try and know whether we have this Inward Right to the Lords Supper in respect of God Answ. Our true Inward Right to the Lords Supper we may discover by our inward Right to and actual Interest in the New Covenant or New Testament for the Lords Supper is the Token and Seale of the New Covenant Such therefore as is our Right to the New Covenant such is our Right to the Lords Supper Clear thine inward Right to the New Covenant and thine Inward Right to the Lords Supper is consequently evident The New Covenant is summarily described by Ieremy and Paul Compare Ier. 31.31 to 3● with Heb. 8.7 to 13. and Ier. 32.38.39.40 According to the tenor of this New Covenant examine thy Right to the Sacraments Art thou a Party to this New Covenant 1. All that are Parties to the New Covenan● are clearly taught to know the Lord. Art thou clearly taught of God savingly to know the Lord And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the LORD for they sh●ll all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord. This clause of the New Covenant peculiarly concerns the Elect under the New Testament they all shall be taught as it were with open face to k●ow the Lord far more clearly then the Jewes were under the Old Testament The Jewes knew the Lord darkly a● under a veile and being as Children in Minority they stuck in principles stood in need of Tutors and Governours c. But now the veile is done away in Christ and the Elect as children come to riper age know not only Principles but many abstruse mysteries of Religion the Lord opening All treasures of wisdom and knowledge in Christ and bestowing a greater measure of his Spirit And yet this Text doth not countenance Enth●siasms nor annul and lay aside the publike Ministery or private brotherly instructions c. under the New Testament but this phrase They shall not teach every man his neighbour c. is an Hyperbolical expression to show as Calvin well notes how farre the knowledge of the Lord under the New Testament shall surpasse that under the Old Private instru●tion and publik● Ministery are appointed under the New Testament and are subordin● 〈◊〉 the Spirits teaching And as Parae●● observes We may as well ●rgue The Lord feeds all therefore there 's no more need of 〈◊〉 or husbandry as thus reason The Long ●aches all his people therefore they need no more humane instruction private or publick And though under the New Covenant all shall more fully and clearly know the Lord then the Jewes from the least to the greatest yet shall not all under the New Testament have an equal knowledge of the Lord but every one according to the measure of the gift of Christ. Hast thou now this cleare New-Covenant-knowledge of the Lord beyond Jewes of old beyond all carnal men now Then 1. Thou art translated from natural darknesse to supernatural light Ye were sometimes darknesse but now ye are light in the Lord. Is thy night of carnal ignorance past and thy day of spiritual knowledge come Hath the day dawned to thee and is the day-starre risen in thine heart 2. Thou art so savingly taught of God as by his teaching to be effectually brought to Christ to believe in him It is written in the Prophets and they shall be all taught of God Every man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the Father saith Christ cometh unto me So that none are taught of God till they come to Christ by faith 3. Thou so behold●st as in a Glasse the Glory of the Lord his New-Covenant Glory th●t thou art ch●●ged into the same image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Is the Image of Christs spiritual Glory spiritual light in thee Dost thou grow therein from glory to glory from one glorious degree to another 2. They that are parties to the New Covenant have the Law and Covenant of God written in their hearts This shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel after those dayes saith the LORD I will put my Law in their inward parts or into their minde as Paul hath it and write
it in their hearts Hast thou now the Laws of God put into thy minde into thine inward parts are they written in thine heart But how shall I know whether Gods laws be written in mine heart c Answ. Thou mayst know God hath written his Law in thine heart and inward parts by these ensuing discoveries 1. By the conformity of thine heart and inwards to the Law of God When Gods law is writ in thine heart thou wilt have a Law within thy brest exactly answering to Gods Law written without in the Scriptures even as Tally answers to Tally Indenture to Indenture the face in the glasse to the face of a man or as the Counterpain exactly answers to the principal Deed or Conveyance there 's Article for Article Clause for Clause Covenant for Covenant Word for Word so will thine heart be to the Law of God Thine heart will forbid thee every thing Gods law forbids thee thine heart will command thee every thing Gods Law commands thee thine heart will comply to the whole Law 2. By the newnesse of thy heart and spirit The writing of Gods Law in the heart brings in a spiritual newnesse into the heart A new heart also will I give you saith God and a new spirit will I put within you New not for substance but for Qualities and Qualifications A new minde illuminated A new memory strengthened and sanctified A new Conscience quickened and purified A new Will subdued to the obedience of Christ New affections new grief for sinne new desires of grace new love of God Christ and his Members new joyes in the Holy Ghost and in a word the whole man is become a new Creature Old things are past away and all things are become new If thou findest this newnesse of heart then the new Covenant the Law of God is in thine heart 3. By the spiritual softnesse and tendernesse of thine heart Naturally every mans heart is stony a meer Stone hard inflexible and impenetrable when God writes his law in mans heart and admits him into Covenant with him he takes this stony heart away and gives him a supple f●eshy soft tender heart And I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh An heart of flesh is of a tender temper flexible and easily wrought upon by God quickly wounded for sinne facile to melt and dissolve into penitential sorrows is thine heart such 4. By the Obedientialnesse of thine heart Where the Law is written in the heart there the heart becomes obedient to Gods Will and delights in that obedience So saith David I delight to do thy Will O my God yea thy Law is within mine heart or according to the Hebrew phrase thy law is in the midst of my bowels Because the Law was graven in his heart therefore he so delighted to do the Will of God Dost thou delight now to do thine own Will the Will of the flesh or the Will of the Lord 3. They that are Parties to the New Covenant have a Covenant-relation to God and a Covenant-interest in God and God in them This shall be the Covenant I will be their God and they shall be my people What greater blessing can God covenant to bestow on us then to give himselfe to be our God Had God covenanted to give Earth Heaven Grace Glory the whole world ten thousand worlds that were nothing comparable to God himselfe This then is the greatest promise in the World And on the other hand what greater duty can lie upon us then to ingage our selves to be Gods Covenant-people Consider now hath God given himselfe to thee as thy God in Covenant then thou art in Co●enant with God But how shall I know whether God is my God in Covenant Answ. By this Art thou one of Gods people by Co●enant Art thou thy whole selfe not on●y some part of thy selfe given up to God Thou must be wholly not partially his Is thy tongue his to praise him Thy hands his to work his Will thy feet his to walk in his paths thy Mind his to know him thy Conscience his to accuse or excuse under him thy Will his to obey him thy memory his to retain him thy heart his to desire and love him yea to embrace him with most ravish't affections beyond all and in a word is thy whole selfe soul and body with all that is within thee wholly his sincerely to serve him and to be a spiritual sacrifice to him Then thou art in New Covenant with God indeed and hast inward Right to the Lords Supper 4. They that are Parties to this New Covenant have their iniquities forgiven and forgotten of God So the Lord covenanteth I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sin no more Or as the Apostle alledged it I will be merciful to their unr●ghteousnesse and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more Hath the Lord now forgiven thine iniquities then thou art in Covenant with him indeed Thou wilt say O that mine iniquities were pardoned then should I be an happy soul. But how may I know that the Lord hath pardoned my sins and will remember mine iniquities no more Answer Thou majest know that God hath forgiven thy sins 1. If thou hast sincerely confessed bewailed and forsaken thy sins and turned from all thine evil wayes for thus hath God promised He that covereth his sins shall not prosper but who so confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy Wash ye make ye clean put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes cease to doe evil Come now and let us reason together saith the LORD though your sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like Crimson they shall be as Wool And elsewhere most sweetly Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the LORD and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will multiply to pardon 2. If thine heart be calmed and quieted through faith in Christ so that thereby thou art at peace with God When we through faith have pardon and justification from God we consequently have peace with God Being justified by faith we have peace with God Is God pacified towards thee doth he smile upon thee doth he still thy soul with true peace this is an Argument of thy sins pardon 3. If thine heart be singularly inflamed with the love of Christ through whom thy sins are pardoned it 's a great evidence thy sins are forgiven The woman that had many sins forgiven her by Christ she loved him much upon that account She wept and washed his feet with tears she wiped them with the hairs of her head she kissed his feet and anointed them with oyntment Nothing was too good too dear for Christ that had paid all her debts forgiven all her sins 4. If
thou art earnest with God more and more for assurance of pardon for purity of heart and stablishment in the wayes of grace for time to come it 's a good signe thy sins are pardoned God told David by Nathan The Lord hath put away thy sin thou shalt not die Vpon this David prays so pathetically Purge me with Hysope and I shall be clean wash me and I shall be whiter then Snow Make me to hear joy and gladnesse Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit 5. Finally it 's a signe thy sins are pardoned if thy heart and soul and all within thee be singularly inlarged to blesse and praise God for his pardons So it was with David Blesse the LORD O my soul and all that is within me blesse his holy name Blesse the LORD O my soul and forget not all his benefits Who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases If thine heart feel his pardons thy mouth will sing his praises 5. Lastly they are parties to the New Covenant that have Gods fear so implanted in the heart as not to depart from him And I will make an everlasting Covenant with them that I will not turne away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts and they shall not depart from me Apostates and Back-sliders were never truly in Covenant with God All in Covenant with God persevere for God will not forsake them and they shall not forsake him his fear in them shall be their Preservative Now then if the Lords fear in thee keep thee from falling away thou art in Covenant with God Thus thou mayest from the substance and nature of the New Covenant discover w●ether thou beest a Party to the New Covenant having true inward interest therein and consequently having true inward Right to the New Covenant-Seale the Lords Supper in respect of God himselfe Now if this be thy case thou hast a childes portion in the Lords Supper and mayst lay claim to it and all the benefits of it beyond any carnal man in the world Thou shalt be no usurper in ●hat regard come and well-come Thus examine What right thou hast to the Lords Supper What need we have of the Lords Supper As we should examine our Right to it that we be not usurpers so we should search what need we have of it that we be not despisers of the Lords Supper The full soul loatheth an Honey-combe Sense of want excites desire and enlivens the appetite after what we want And Hunger we say will break stone-walls Now Christians have need urgent pressing need of the Lords Supper in many re●pects Examine thou whether thou hast not great need of it in all these respects 1. Hast thou not great need often to nourish strengthen and comfort thine inward man with all the graces and spiritual abilities thereof Consider 1. Thy whole new man when at perfectest is but imperfect We see now but through a glasse darkly we know but in part and so we love but in part obey but in part c. Paul himself durst not challenge perfection to himself in this life saying Not as though I had already attained or were already perfect but I follow after that I may apprehend that for which I am apprehended of Christ Iesus 2. Consequently thy new man all thy gracious endowments are but weak when at strongest for every thing that 's imperfect is comparatively weak 3. Thy inward man is assaulted with many temptations adversaries and difficulties tending to enfeeble and discourage it especially with the reliques of the flesh The flesh lusteth against the Spirit Paul saith in the Person of the Regenerate I finde a law that when I would do good evil is present with me For I delight in the Law of God after the inward man But I see another law in my members warring against the law of my minde and bringing me into Captivity to the law of sin Hast thou not need now to nourish thine imperfect graces that they may grow up to perfection thy weake graces that they may be strong thine assaulted graces that they may not faile Behold now what need thou hast of the Lords Supper to these ends For what nourishing ordinance is this Sacrament for all these purposes For it 's stiled The Lords Supper It 's A Supper therefore suitable to nourish the inward man The Lords Supper therefore sufficient to nourish it effectually As the body and all its strength decays without due corporal food so the soul and its graces without due spiritual food Here is meat indeed Christs body and drink indeed Christ blood and both tendred most familiarly in this Ordinance and most effectually When the Lord Christ prepares a Supper for his members he provides like himself They that truly eat with Christ eat of Christ in this Supper shall never die never totally hunger or mortally thirst more 2. Hast thou not need to have the pardon of thy sins often testified to thee and to have thy faith apprehension and assurance thereof con●irmed to thee There are many things may daily make thee question and doubt whether thy sins be pardoned or at least may darken and dimme thine evidence of pardon As 1. Multitudes of sinfull infirmities that still hang upon thee invincibly makes thee fear sin is not pardoned Hence for clearing the assurance of pardon daily we are taught daily to pray Forgive us our debts 2. Lapses into grosser sins obscure the evidence of our pardon David by his fall lost in great measure the joy of Gods salvation which he prayes to have restored 3 Sharp trials and severe afflictions are wont to revive sin unto the conscience and to bring in scruples about the pardon of them Iob himself in the great storms of his afflictions somewhat dazeled in his sence of pardon complains How many are mine iniquities sins make mee to know my transgression my sin wherefore hidest thou thy face and holdest me for thine enemy Thou writest bitter things against me and makest me possess the iniquities of my youth Thou numberest my steps dost thou not watch over my sin my transgression is sealed up in a bag and thou sowest up mine iniquities Thus here 's great need to have thy sen●e and apprehension of thy sins pardon assured to thee Consequently thou hast great need of the Lords Supper which notably tends to relieve thee in this case This is saith Christ in the In●●itution my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for Remission of sins That is this wine in this Ordinance is a Signe Seal and Conveyance of my blood ratifying the New Testament which blood is shed for many viz. for all the Elect for all Christs sheep for remission of sins Christs blood then was shed meritoriously to procure our sins remission and the Lords Supper is appointed