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A65285 A body of practical divinity consisting of above one hundred seventy six sermons on the lesser catechism composed by the reverend assembly of divines at Westminster : with a supplement of some sermons on several texts of Scripture / by Thomas Watson ... Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1692 (1692) Wing W1109; ESTC R32148 1,021,388 604

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decuit ideo ascendit quo altius non potuit Christ in his Humiliation descended so low that it was not fit to go lower and in his Exaltation he ascended so high that it is not possible to go higher In his Resurrection he was exalted above the Grave in his Ascension he was exalted above the Aery and Starry Heaven in his sitting at God's right Hand he is exalted above the highest Heavens far Eph. 4.10 Far above all heavens 5. God hath exalted Christ in constituting him Judge of the whole World Ioh. 5.22 The Father hath committed all judgment to the Son At that day of Judgment shall Christ be exalted super-eminently He shall come in the glory of his Father Mark 8.38 He shall wear the same embroydered Robes of Majesty as the Father And he shall come with all his holy Angels Matth. 25.31 He who was led to the Bar with a Band of Souldiers shall be attended to the Bench with a Guard of Angels Christ shall judge his Judges he shall judge Pilate that condemned him Kings must leave their Throne and come to his Bar. And this is the highest Court of Judicature from whence is no Appeal 1. Use of Information Branch 1. See Christ's different State on Earth and now in Heaven O how is the Scene alter'd When he was on Earth he lay in the Manger now he sits in the Throne then he was hated and scorn'd of Men now he is adored of Angels then his Name was reproached now God hath given him a Name above every name Phil. 2.9 Then he came in the Form of a Servant and as a Servant stood with his Bason and Towel and washed his Disciples Feet Ioh. 13.4 5. now he is clad in his Prince's Robes and the Kings of the Earth cast their Crowns before him on Earth he was a Man of Sorrow now he is anointed with the Oyl of Gladness on Earth was his Crucifixion now his Coronation then his Father frowned upon him in Desertion now he hath set him at his right Hand before he seemed to have no Form or Beauty in him Isa. 53.2 now he is the Brightness of his Father's Glory Heb. 1.3 O what a change is here Him hath GOD highly exalted Branch 2. Was Christ first Humble and then Exalted hence learn the way to true Honour is Humility Luke 14.11 He that humbleth himself shall be exalted The World looks upon Humility as that which will make one contemptible but it is the ready way to Honour The way to rise is to fall the way to ascend is to descend Humility exalts us in the Esteem of Men and it exalts us to an higher Throne in Heaven Matth. 18.4 Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven Viz. He shall have a greater degree of Glory in Heaven Branch 3. Christ first suffered and then was exalted see hence that Sufferings must go before Glory Many desire to be glorified with Christ but they are not content to suffer for Christ 2 Tim. 2.12 If we suffer with him we shall reign with him The Wicked first reign and then suffer the Godly first suffer and then reign There 's no way to Constantinople but through the Straits no way to Heaven but through Sufferings No way to the Crown but by the way of the Cross. Hierusalem above is a pleasant City Streets of Gold Gates of Pearl but we must travel through a dirty Road to this City through many Reproaches and Sufferings Acts 14.22 We must enter into Glory as Christ did first he suffered Shame and Death and now is exalted to sit at God's right Hand 2. Use of Comfort Branch 1. Christ being so highly exalted hath Ennobled our Nature he hath crowned it with Glory and lifted it up above Angels and Archangels Though Christ as he was Man was made a little lower than the Angels Heb. 2.9 yet as the Humane Nature is united to the Divine and is at God's right Hand so the Humane Nature is above the Angels And if God hath so Dignified our Humane Nature what a shame is it that we should debase it God hath exalted the Humane Nature above the Angels and the Drunkard abaseth the Humane Nature below the Beasts Branch 2. Christ being exalted at God's right hand the Key of Government is laid upon his shoulders he governs all the Affairs of the World for his own Glory Do you think when Christ is so highly advanced and hath all Power in Heaven and Earth in his hand he will not take care of his Elect and turn the most astonishing Providences to the good of his Church In a Clock the Wheels move cross one to another but all make the Clock strike so Christ being at his Father's right hand he will make the most cross Providences tend to the Salvation of his Church Branch 3. Christ being at God's right hand we may be assured he hath now finished the Work of Man's Redemption Heb. 10.12 This man after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever sate down on the right hand of God If Christ had not fully expiated Sin and satisfied God's Law he had not sate down at God's right hand but had still lain in the Grave but now he is exalted to Glory This is an evident Token he hath done and suffered all that was required of him for the working out our Redemption Branch 4. Though Jesus Christ is so highly exalted in Glory yet he is not forgetful of us on Earth some when they are raised to Places of Honour forget their Friends when the Chief Butler was restored to his Place at Court then he forgot poor Ioseph in Prison But it is not so with Christ though he be exalted to such Glory in Heaven yet he is not unmindful of his Saints on Earth Our High-Priest hath all the Names and Wants of his People written upon his Breast-plate Art thou tempted though Christ be in Glory he knows how to pity and succour thee Heb. 4.15 We have not a high-priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmity Dost thou mourn for sin Christ though in a glorified State he hears thy Sighs bottles thy Tears Branch 5. Christ being exalted at God's right hand this is for the Comfort of Believers that they shall one day be exalted to that Place of Glory where he is Christ's Exaltation is our Exaltation Christ hath prayed for this Joh. 17.24 Father I will that all those whom thou hast given me be with me where I am And he is said to go before to prepare a place for Believers Ioh. 14.2 Christ is called the Head and the Church is called his Body Eph. 1.22 23. The Head being exalted to Honor the Body Mystical shall be exalted too as sure as Christ is exalted far above all Heavens so sure will he instate Believers in all that Glory which his Humane Nature is adorn'd with Ioh. 17.22 As here he puts his Grace upon the Saints so shortly he
they cast their Crowns before the Throne they lay all their Honour at his Feet Thus they shew humble Adoration to the Eteral Essence Study God's Eternity it will make us adore where we cannot Fathom 2. Think of the Soul's Eternity As God is Eternal so he hath made us Eternal We are never-dying Creatures we are shortly entring upon an Eternal State either of Happiness or Misery Have serious thoughts of this Say O my Soul which of these two Eternities is like to be thy Portion I must shortly depart hence and whither then shall I go to which of these Eternities either of Glory or Misery The serious Meditation of the Eternal State we are to pass into would work strongly with us 1. Thoughts of Eternal Torment a good Antidote against Sin Sin tempts with its Pleasure but when we think of Eternity it may cool the intemperate Heat of Lust Shall I for the Pleasure of Sin for a Season endure eternal Pain Sin like those Locusts Rev. 9.7 seems to have on its Head a Crown like Gold but it hath in it a Tail like a Scorpion Verse 10. And a Sting in its Tail and this Sting can never be plucked out Shall I venture eternal Wrath is Sin committed so sweet as lying in Hell for ever is bitter This would make us flye from Sin as Moses from the Serpent 2. The serious Thoughts of Eternal Happiness would very much take us off from these Worldly Things we should not esteem much of them What are these Sublunary Things to Eternity they are quickly gone they salute us and take their Farewel But I am to enter upon an Everlasting Estate I hope to live with Him who is Eternal what is the World to me They who stand upon the top of the Alps the great Cities of Campania seem as small things in their eyes so he who hath his Thoughts fixed on his Eternal Estate after this Life all these things seem as nothing in his eye What is the Glory of this World how poor and contemptible compar'd with an Eternal Weight of Glory Aeternis inhianti in fastidio suns transito Bern. 3. To conclude The serious Thoughts of an Eternal Estate either of Happiness or Misery would have a powerful Influence upon whatsoever we take in hand Every Work we do promotes either a blessed or cursed Eternity every good Action sets us a step nearer to an Eternity of Happiness every bad Action sets us a step nearer to an Eternity of Misery O what Influence would the Thoughts of Eternity have upon our Religious Duties it would make us do them with all our Might A Duty well performed lifts a Christian higher towards Heaven and sets a Christian a step nearer to a blessed Eternity GOD's Vnchangeableness THE next Attribute is God's Unchangeableness Mal. 3.6 I am Iehovah I change not 1. God is unchangeable in his Nature 2. In his Decree 1st Unchangeable in his Nature 1. There is no Eclipse of his Brightness 2. No Period put to his Being 1. No Eclipse of his Brightness His Essence shines with a fixed Lustre Iam. 1.17 With whom is no variableness neither shadow of turning Psal. 102.27 Thou art the same All created Things are full of Vicissitude 1. Princes and Emperours are subject to Mutation Sehostris an Aegyptian Prince having subdued divers Kings in War made them draw like Horses in his Chariot as if he intended to turn them to Grass as God did King Nebuchadnezzar The Crown hath many Successors 2. Kingdoms have their Ecclipses and Convulsions What is become of the Glory of Athens the Pomp of Troy Iam seges est ubi Troja fuit Kingdoms tho' they have a Head of Gold yet Feet of Clay 3. The Heavens change Psal. 102.25 26. As a vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed The Matter of the Elements as it is more pure so more firm and sollid the Heavens are the most ancient Records where God hath written his Glory with a Sun-beam yet these shall change though I do not think they shall be destroyed as to their substance yet they shall be changed as to their qualities They shall me●t with fervent heat 2 Pet. 3.12 and so be more refin'd and purifi'd Thus the Heavens shall be changed but not He who dwells in Heaven With him is no Variableness or Shadow of Turning 4. The best Saints have their Eclipses and Changes look upon a Christian in his Spiritual Estate and he is full of Variation though the Seed of Grace doth not dye yet the Beauty and Activity of it doth often wither A Christian hath his Aguish Fits in Religion sometimes his Faith is at an high Tide sometime● low Eb● somtimes his Love flames and at another time like Fire hid in the Embers and he hath lost his first Love How strong was David's Grace at one time 2 Sam. 22.3 The God of my rock in him will I trust At another time I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul What Christian can say he doth not find a Change in his Graces that the Bow of his Faith doth never unbend the Strings of his Viol do never slacken Sure we shall never meet with such Christians till we meet them in Heaven But God is without any Shadow of Turning 5. The Angels were subject to Change they were created Holy but Mutable Jud. 6. The angels which kept not their first estate Those Morning-stars of Heaven were falling Stars But God's Glory shines with a fixed Brightness In God there is nothing looks like a Change no better or worse no better in him because then he were not perfect nor worse in him for then he should cease to be perfect He is immutably Holy immutably Good There is no Shadow of Change in him Object Christ who is God assumed the Humane Nature here was a Change Resp. If indeed the Divine Nature had been converted into the Humane or the Humane into the Divine here had been a Change but not so The Humane Nature was distinct from the Divine therefore there was no Change As suppose a Cloud cover the Sun this makes no Change in the Body of the Sun so though the Divine Nature be covered with the Humane this makes no Change in the Divine Nature 2d There is no Period put to his Being 1 Tim. 1.16 Who only hath immortality The Godhead cannot die 1. An Infinite Essence cannot be changed into a Finite but God is Infinite 2. He is Eternal Ergo he is not Mortal to be Eternal and Mortal is a Contradiction Use 1. See here the Excellency of the Divine Nature in its Immutability this is the Glory of Godhead Mutableness denotes Weakness it is not so in God he is the same Yesterday and to Day and for ever Heb. 13.8 Men are fickle and mutable like Ruében Unstable as water Gen. 49.4 They go in changeable Colours 1. They are changeable in their Principles sometimes Protestant sometimes Papist if their Faces altered as fast as their Opinions
Coeternity and Consubstantiality with his Father Iohn 10.30 I and my Father are One It were a Blasphemy for any Angel to speak thus Yet further to prove Christ's Godhead consider 1. the glorious incommunicable Attributes belonging to God the Father are ascribed to Christ. 1. Is God the Father Omnipotent so is Jesus Christ. He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Almighty Rev. 1.8 he Creates Col. 1.16 2. Is God the Father infinitely Immense filling all places Ier. 23.24 so is Jesus Christ. While Christ was on the Earth by his bodily presence he was at the same time in the bosom of his Father Iohn 3.13 in regard of his Divine presence 2. The same Iura Regalia or Prerogatives Royal which belong to God the Father belong also to Christ. 1. Doth God the Father seal Pardons this is a Flower of Christ's Crown Matth. 9.2 Thy sins be forgiven thee Nor doth Christ only remit sin organicè as Ministers do by virtue of a Power delegated to them from God but Christ doth it by his own Power and Authority 2. Is God the Father the adequate Object of Faith is he to be believed in so is the Son Iohn 14.1 3. Doth Adoration belong to God the Father so it doth to the Son Hebr. 1.6 Let all the Angels of God worship him How Sacrilegious therefore is the Socinian who would rob Christ of the best Flower of his Crown his Godhead they that deny Christ to be God must greatly wrest or else deny the Scripture to be the Word of God 3. It confutes the Arrians who deny the Holy Ghost to be God The Eternal Godhead subsists in the Holy Ghost Iohn 16.13 He shall guide you into all Truth Christ speaks not there of an Attribute but a Person And that the Godhead subsists in the Person of the Holy Ghost appears thus The Spirit who gives diversity of Gifts is said to be the same Lord and the same God 1 Cor. 12.5 6. The black and unpardonable sin is said in a special manner to be committed against the Godhead subsisting in the Holy Ghost Matth. 12.32 The mighty power of God is made manifest by the Holy Ghost He changeth the Hearts of Men. The Devil would have Christ prove himself to be God by turning Stones into Bread but thus the Holy Ghost shews his Godhead by turning Stones into Flesh Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart and give you an heart of flesh Yet further the power and Godhead of the Holy Ghost appeared in the effecting the glorious Conception of our Lord Jesus Christ the very Shadow of the Holy Ghost made a Virgin conceive Luke 1.35 The Holy Ghost works Miracles which transcend the sphere of Nature as raising the Dead Rom. 8.11 to him belongs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divine Worship our Souls and Bodies are the Temples of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6.19 in which Temples he is to be worshipped vers 20. We are baptized in the Name of the Holy Ghost therefore either we must believe his Godhead or renounce our Baptism in his Name Methinks it were enough for such Men as have not so much as heard whether there be an Holy Ghost or no Acts 19.2 to deny his Deity but that any who go for Christians should deny this Article of their Creed seems to me very strange They who would wittingly and willingly blot out the third Person shall have their Names blotted out of the Book of Life Use 2. of Exhortation 1. Believe this Doctrine the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of Essence The Trinity is purely an Object of Faith The Plumb-line of Reason is too short to fathom this Mystery but where Reason cannot wade there Faith must swim There are some Truths in Religion may be demonstrated by Reason as that there is a God but the Trinity of Persons in Unity of Essence is wholly Supernatural and must be believed by Faith This Sacred Doctrine though it be not against Reason yet it is above Reason Those illuminated Philosophers that could find out the Causes of things and discourse of the Magnitude and Influence of the Stars the Nature of Minerals could never by their deepest Search find out the Mystery of the Trinity This is of Divine Revelation and must be adored with humble believing we can be no good Christians without the firm belief of the Trinity How can we pray to God the Father but in the Name of Christ and through the help of the Spirit Believe the glorious Trinity How are the Quakers to be abhorr'd who go under the Name of Christians yet undervalue and renounce Jesus Christ. I have read of some of the Quakers who speak thus We deny the Person of him whom you call Christ and affirm That they who expect to be saved by that Christ without will be damned in that Faith Could the Devil himself speak worse Blasphemy they would pull up all Religion by the Roots and take away that Corner-stone on which the Hope of our Salvation is built 2. If there be one God subsisting in three Persons then let us give 1. Equal Reverence to all the Persons in the Trinity There is not more or less in the Trinity the Father is not more God then the Son and Holy Ghost There is an Order in the Godhead but no Degrees one Person hath not a Majority or Supereminency above another therefore we must give equal Worship to all the Persons Iohn 5.23 That all Men should honour the Son as they honour the Father Adore Unity in Trinity 2. Obey all the Persons in the blessed Trinity for all of them are God 1. Obey God the Father His words either preceptive or minatory must be observed Christ himself as Man obeyed God the Father Iohn 4.34 much more then must we Deut. 27.10 2. Obey God the Son Psalm 2.12 Kiss the Son lest he be angry Kiss him with a kiss of Obedience Christ's Commands are not grievous 1 Iohn 5.3 Nothing he commands but is for our interest and benefit O then kiss the Son Why do the Elders throw down their Crowns at the feet of Christ and fall down before the Lamb Rev. 4.10 11. but to testifie their Subjection and to profess their Readiness to serve and obey him 3. Obey God the Holy Ghost our Souls are breath'd into us by the glorious Spirit Iob 33.4 The Spirit of God hath made me Our Souls are adorned by the blessed Spirit Every Grace is a Divine Sparkle lighted in the Soul by the Holy Ghost Nay more the Spirit of God sanctified Christ's Humane Nature he united it with the Divine and fitted the Man Christ to be our Mediator Well then doth this third Person in the Trinity the Holy Ghost deserve to be obeyed he is God and this Tribute of Homage and Obedience is to be paid him by us Of the CREATION Quest. VII WHat are the Decrees of God The Decrees of God are his eternal purpose according to the counsel of his own will whereby for his own
glory he hath fore-ordained whatsoever shall come to pass I should come now to speak concerning the Decrees of God but I have already spoken something to this under the Attribute of God's Immutability God is unchangeable in his Essence and he is unchangeable in his Decrees his Counsel shall stand he hath decreed the Issue of all things and carries them on to their Period by his Providence and therefore I shall proceed to the Execution of his Decrees Quest. VIII The next Question is What is the Work of Creation Resp. It is God's making all things of nothing by the word of his power c. Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created the Heaven and the Earth The Creation is glorious to behold it is a pleasant and fruitful study Some think that Isaac when he went abroad into the Fields to meditate it was in the Book of the Creatures The Creation is the Heathen Man's Bible the Ploughman's Primmer the Travellers Perspective Glass through which he receives the Species and Representation of those infinite Excellencies which are in God The Creation is a large Volume in which God's Works are bound up and this Volume hath three great Leaves in it Heaven Earth Sea The Author of the Creation is God so it is in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God created The World was created in time and could not be from Eternity as Aristotle thought The World must have a Maker it could not make it self If one should go into a far Country and see stately Edifices there he would never imagine that these could build themselves but that there had been some Artificer there to raise such goodly Structures so this great Fabrick of the World could not create it self it must have some Builder and Maker and that is God In the beginning God created To imagine that the Work of the Creation was not framed by the Lord Jehovah is as if we should conceive a curious Lanskip to be drawn without the Hand of a Limner Acts 17.24 God that made the World and all things therein In the work of the Creation there are two things to be considered The making of it The adorning of it I. The making of the World Here consider 1. God made the World without any praeexistent Matter This is the difference between Generation and Creation In Generation there is materia habilis disposita some Matter to work upon But in Creation there is no praeexistent Matter God brought all this glorious Fabrick of the World out of the Womb of Nothing We see our Beginning it was of Nothing Some brag of their Birth and Ancestry you see how little cause they have to boast they came of Nothing 2. God made the World with a Word When Solomon was to build a Temple he needed many Workmen and they all had Tools to work with but God wrought without Tools Psal. 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the Heavens made The Disciples wondered that Christ could with a word calm the Sea Matth. 8.26 27. But it was more with a word to make the Sea 3. God made all things at first very good Gen. 1.31 no defect or deformity The Creation came out of God's hands a curious Piece it was a fair Copy without any Blot written with God's own fingers Psal. 8.3 So perfect was God's Work II. The adorning of the World First God made this great Lump and Mass Rudis indigestaque moles and then beautified it and put it into a dress He divided the Sea and the Earth he deck'd the Earth with Flowers the Trees with Fruit but what is Beauty when it is mask'd over Therefore that we might behold this glory God made the Light The Heavens were bespangled with Sun Moon and Stars that so the Worlds Beauty might be beheld and admired God in the Creation began with things less noble and excellent Vegetables and Sensitives and then the Rational Creatures Angels and Men. Man was the most exquisite Piece in the Creation he is a Microcosme or little World Man was made with deliberation and counsel Gen. 1.26 Let us make Man It is the manner of Artificers to be more then ordinary accurate when they are about their Master-pieces Man was to be a Master-piece of this visible World therefore God did consult about the making of so rare a Piece A Solemn Councel of the Sacred Persons in the Trinity was call'd Let us make Man and let us make him in our own Image On the King's Coin his Image or Effigies is stamp'd so God stamp'd his Image on Man and made him partake of many Divine qualities I shall speak 1. of the Parts of Man's Body 1. The Head the most excellent Architectonical Part 't is the Fountain of Spirits and the Seat of Reason In Nature the Head is the best Piece but in Grace the Heart excels 2. The Eye It is the Beauty of the Face it shines and sparkles like a lesser Sun in the Body The Eye occasions much sin and therefore well may it have Tears in it 3. The Ear which is the Conduit-pipe through which Knowledge is conveyed Better lose our seeing than our hearing for faith cometh by hearing Rom. 10.17 To have an Ear open to God is the best Jewel on the Ear. 4. The Tongue David calls the Tongue his glory Psal. 16.9 because it is an Instrument to set forth the Glory of God The Soul at first was a Viol in tune to praise God and the Tongue did make the Musick God hath given us two Ears but one Tongue to shew that we should be swift to hear but slow to speak God hath set a double fence before the Tongue the Teeth and the Lips to teach us to be wary that we offend not with our Tongue 5. The Heart This is a noble part and Seat of Life 2. The Soul of Man This is the Man of the Man Man in regard of his Soul partakes with the Angels nay as Plato saith the Understanding Will and Conscience are a Glass that resemble the Trinity The Soul is the Diamond in the Ring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Soul is a Vessel of Honour God himself is serv'd in this Vessel It is a Sparkle of Coelestial Brightness saith Damascene If David did so admire the rare Contexture and Workmanship of his Body Psal. 139.13 I am wonderfully made I was curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the Earth If the Cabinet be so curiously wrought what is the Jewel How richly is the Soul embroidered Thus you see how glorious a Work the Creation is and Man especially who is the Epitome of the World Quest. But why did God make the World Resp. 1. Negatively Not for himself he did not need it being infinite He was happy before the World was in reflecting upon his own sublime Excellencies and Perfections 2. God did not make the World to be a place of Mansion for us we are not to abide here for ever Heaven is the Mansion-House Iohn 14.2 the World
Hence that saying of St. Augustine Surgunt indocti rapiunt coelum the unlearned Men rise up and take Heaven they know the Truths of Christ more savingly then the great admired Rabbies The duller the Scholar the more is his skill seen that teacheth Hence it is Christ delights in teaching the Ignorant to get himself more Glory Isa. 35.5 The eyes of the blind shall be opened and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped Who would go to teach a blind or a deaf Man yet such dull Scholars Christ teacheth Such as are blinded with Ignorance they shall see the Mysteries of the Gospel and the deaf Ears shall be unstopped 3. Wait upon the Means of Grace which Christ hath appointed Though Christ teacheth by his Spirit yet he teacheth in the use of Ordinances Wait at the Gates of Wisdoms door Ministers are Teachers under Christ Eph. 4.11 Pastors and Teachers We read of Pitchers and Lamps within the Pitchers Iudges 7.16 Ministers are Earthen Vessels but these Pitchers have Lamps within them to light Souls to Heaven Christ is said to speak to us from Heaven now Hebr. 12.25 viz. by his Ministers as the King speaks by his Ambassador Such as wean themselves from the Breast of Ordinances seldom thrive either they grow light in their Head or lame in their Feet The Word preached is Christ's Voice in the Mouth of the Minister and they that refuse to hear Christ speaking in the Ministry Christ will refuse to hear them speaking on their Death-bed 4. If you would have the Teachings of Christ walk according to that Knowledge which you have already Use your little knowledge well and Christ will teach you more Iohn 7.17 If any man will do his will he shall know of my Doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self A Master seeing his Servant improve a little Stock well gives him more to trade with Use 3. If you have been taught by Christ savingly be thankful It is your Honour to have GOD for your Teacher and that he should teach you and not others is matter of admiration and gratulation O how many knowing men are ignorant They are not taught of God they have CHRIST's Word to enlighten them but not his Spirit to sanctifie them But that you should have the Inward as well as the Outward Teaching that Christ should anoint you with the Heavenly Unction of his Spirit that you can say as he Iohn 9.25 One thing I know that whereas I was blind I now see O! how thankful should you be to Christ who hath revealed his Father's Bosom Secrets unto you Iohn 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father he hath declared him If Alexander thought himself so much obliged to Aristotle for the Philosophical Instructions he learned from him O how are we bound to Jesus Christ this great Prophet for opening to us the Eternal Purposes of his Love and revealing to us the Mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven CHRIST's Priestly Office Quest. XV. HOw doth Christ execute the Office of a Priest Resp. In his once offering up of himself a Sacrifice to satisfie Divine Justice and reconcile us to GOD and in making continual Intercession for us Heb. 9.26 Now once in the end of the world hath he appear'd to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Quest. What are the parts of Christ's Priestly Office Resp. Christ's Priestly Office hath two Parts his Satisfaction and Intercession 1. His SATISFACTION and this consists of two Branches 1. His Active Obedience Matth. 3.15 He fulfill●d all righteousness Christ did every thing which the Law required his holy Life was a Perfect Commentary upon the Law of God and he obeyed the Law for us 2. His Passive Obedience Our Guilt being transferred and imputed to him he did undergo the Penalty which was due to us He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself The Paschal Lamb slain was a Type of Christ who was offered up in Sacrifice for us Sin could not be done away without Bloud Heb. 9.22 Without bloud is no remission Christ was not only a Lamb without spot but a Lamb slain Quest. Why was it require there should be a Priest Resp. There needed a Priest to be an Umpire to mediate between a Guilty Creature and an Holy God Quest. How could Christ suffer being God Resp. Christ suffered only in the Humane Nature Quest. But if only Christ's Humanity suffered how could his suffering satisfie for Sin Resp. The Humane Nature being united to the Divine the Humane Nature did suffer the Divine did satisfie Christ's Godhead as it did support the Humane Nature that it did not faint so it did give Vertue to his Sufferings The Altar sanctifies the thing offered on it Matth. 23.19 so the Altar of Christ's Divine Nature sanctified the Sacrifice of his Death and made it of infinite value Quest. Wherein doth the Greatness of Christ's sufferings appear Resp. In the Sufferings of his Body he suffered truly not only a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Appearance the Apostle calls it Mors Crucis The Death of the Cross Phil. 2.8 Tully when he speaks of this kind of Death Quid dicam in crucem toilere though he were a great Orator he wanted words to express it The thoughts of this made Christ sweat drops of Bloud in the Garden Luke 22.44 It was an ignominious painful cursed Death Christ suffered in all his Senses 1. In his Eyes they beheld two sad Objects he saw his Enemies insulting and his Mother weeping 2. In his Ears his Ears were filled with the Revilings of the People Matth. 27.42 He saved others himself he cannot save 3. In his Smell when their Drivel fell upon his Face 4. In his Tast when they gave him Gall and Vinegar to drink Bitterness and Sharpness 5. In his Feeling his Head suffered with Thorns his Hands and Feet with the Nails Totum pro vulnere Corpus Now was this white Lily dyed of a Purple colour 2. In the Sufferings of his Soul he was pressed in the Wine-press of his Father 's Wrath. This caused that Vociferation and Outcry on the Cross My God my God Cur deseruisti Christ suffered a double Eclipse upon the Cross an Eclipse of the Sun and an Eclipse of the Light of God's Countenance How bitter was this Agony The Evangelist useth three words to express it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He began to be amazed Mark 14.33 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He began to faint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To be exceeding sorrowful Matth. 26.37 Christ felt the Pains of Hell in his Soul though not locally yet equivalently Quest. Why did Christ suffer Resp. Surely not for any desert of his own Dan. 9.26 The Messiah shall be cut off but not for himself it was for us Isa. 53.6 Unus peccat alius plectitor He suffered that he might satisfie God's Justice for us We by our Sins had infinitely wronged God
one with God our Nature is enobled above the Angelical Nature Christ taking our flesh hath made us nearer to himself than the Angels The Angels are his Friends Believers are flesh of his flesh his Members Eph. 5.30 and cap. 1.23 And the same Glory which is put upon Christ's Humane Nature shall be put upon Believers CHRIST's EXALTATION Phil. 2.9 Wherefore GOD also hath highly exalted him and given him a Name above every name c. BEfore we have spoken of Christ's Humiliation now of his Exaltation Before you saw the Sun of Righteousness in the Eclipse now you shall see it coming out of the Eclipse and shining in its full Splendour and Glory Wherefore God hath highly exalted him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Super-exaltavit Ambr. Above all Exaltation Quest. XVIII Wherein consists Christ's Exaltation Resp. In his rising from the Dead his ascending into Heaven and sitting at the right Hand of God the Father c. Quest. In what sence God hath exalted Christ Resp. Not in respect of Christ's Godhead for that cannot be exalted higher then it is as in Christ's Humiliation the Godhead was not lower so in his Exaltation the Godhead is not higher But Christ is exalted as a Mediator his Humane Nature is exalted Quest. How many ways is Christ exalted Resp. Five ways God hath exalted Christ 1. In his Titles 2. In his Office 3. In his Ascension 4. In his Session at God's right Hand 5. In constituting him Judge of the World First Title 1. God hath exalted Christ in his Titles 1. He is exalted to be a Lord Act. 19.17 The name of the Lord Iesus was magnified He is a Lord in respect of his Soveraignty he is Lord over Angels and Men Matth. 28.18 All power is given to him Christ hath three Keys in his Hand the Key of the Grave to open the Graves of Men at the Resurrection the Key of Heaven to open the Kingdom of Heaven to whom he will the Key of Hell Rev. 1.18 to lock up the Damned in that fiery Prison To this LORD all Knees must bow Phil. 2.10 That at the name of Iesus every knee should bow Name is put here for Person To that holy thing JESUS to the Scepter of that Divine Person every knee shall bow Bowing is put for Subjection all must be subdued to him as Sons or Captives submit to him as to their Lord or Judge Kiss the Son Psal. 2.12 With a Kiss of Love and Loyalty We must not only cast ourselves into Christ's Arms to be saved by him but we must cast ourselves at his Feet to serve him Second Title Christ is exalted to be a Prince Dan. 12.1 There shall stand up Michael the great prince Some think it was a created Angel but it was Angelus Foederis Christ the Angel of the Covenant He is a great Prince Rev. 1.5 The prince of the kings of the earth They hold their Crowns by immediate Tenure from him His Throne is above the Stars he hath Angels and Archangels for his Attendance Thus he is exalted in his Titles of Honour 2. God hath exalted Christ in his Office He hath honoured him to be Salvator Mundi The Saviour of the World Act. 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a prince and a saviour It was a great Honour to Moses to be a Temporal Saviour but what is it to be the Saviour of Souls Christ is call'd the Horn of Salvation Luke 1.69 He saves from sin Matth. 1.21 From Wrath 1 Thess. 1.10 To save is a Flower belongs only to his Crown Acts 4.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Neither is there salvation in any other What an Honour is this to Christ How doth this make Heaven ring of the Saints Praises they sing Halelujahs to Christ their Saviour Rev. 5.9 They sung a new song saying Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seals for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy bloud 3. God hath exalted Christ in his Ascention If he be ascended then he is exalted Austin saith Some were of Opinion that Christ's Body ascended into the Orb and Circle of the Sun So the Hermians But the Scripture is plain he ascended into Heaven Luke 24.51 And Eph. 4.10 Far above all heavens Ergo above the Firmament He is ascended into the highest part of the Empyraean Heaven which Paul calls the third Heaven Concerning Christ's Ascension two things 1. The manner of Christ's Ascension 1. Christ being to ascend blessed his Disciples Luke 24.50 He lift up his hands and blessed them and while he blessed them he was parted from them and carried up into heaven Christ did not leave his Disciples Houses and Lands but he left them his Blessing 2. Christ ascended as a Conqueror in a way of Triumph Psal. 68.18 Thou hast led captivity captive c. He triumph'd over Sin Hell and Death and Christ's Triumph is a Believer's Triumph Christ hath conquered Sin and Hell for every Believer 3. The Fruit of Christ's Ascension Christ's Ascension to Heaven causeth the Descention of the Holy Spirit into our Hearts Eph. 4.8 When he ascended up on high he gave gifts to men Christ having ascended up in the Clouds as his Triumphant Chariot gives the Gift of his Spirit to us As a King at his Coronation bestows Gifts liberally to his Favourites 4. God hath exalted Christ in his Session at God's right hand Mark 16.19 After the Lord had spoken to them he was received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God Eph. 1.20 He raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand far above all principality and power and every name that is named Quest. What is meant by Christ's sitting at God's right hand Resp. To speak properly God hath no right Hand or left for being a Spirit he is void of all bodily parts but it is a borrowed Speech a Metaphor taken from the manner of Kings who were wont to advance their Favourites next to their own Persons and set them at their right Hand Solomon caused a Seat to be set for the Queen his Mother and placed her at his right hand 2 Kin. 2.19 So for Christ to sit at the right Hand of God is to be in the next place to God the Father in Dignity and Honour The Humane Nature of Christ being personally united to the Divine is now set down in a Royal Throne in Heaven and adored even of Angels By Vertue of the Personal Union of Christ's Humane Nature with the Divine there is a Communication of all that Glory from the Deity to Christ as his Humane Nature is capable of Not that the Manhood of Christ is advanced to an Equality with the Godhead but the Divine Nature being joyned with the Humane the Humane Nature is wonderfully Glorified though not Deified Christ as Mediator is filled with all Majesty and Honour beyond the Comprehension of the highest Order of Angels Descendit Christus quo inferius non
2. That it may encrease and flourish 3. That the Kingdom of Glory may hasten and that God would in his due time translate us into it 1. What this Kingdom of Glory is 2. What are the Properties of it 3. Wherein it exceeds all other Kingdoms 4. When this Kingdome comes 5. Wherein appears the Certainty of it 6. Why we should pray for its coming 1. What this Kingdom of Glory is Answ. By this Kingdom is meant that glorious Estate which the Saints shall enjoy when they shall reign with God and Angels for ever If a Man stand upon the Sea-shore he cannot see all the Dimensions of the Sea the length breadth and depth of it yet he may see it is of a vast Extension So though the Kingdom of Heaven be of that incomparable Excellency that neither Tongue of Man or Angels can express yet we may conceive of it to be an exceeding glorious thing such as eye hath not seen Concerning the Kingdom of Heaven I shall show What 1. It Implies 2. It imports 1. What it implies Answ. It implies A blessed Freedom from all Evil. 2. What it imports Answ. It Imports glorious Fruition of all good 1. What the Kingdom of Heaven implies Resp. It implies a blessed freedom from all evil 1. A freedom from the Necessities of Nature We are in this Life subject to many Necessities We need Food to nourish us Cloathes to cover us Armour to defend us Sleep to refresh us But in the Kingdom of Heaven there is no need of these things and it is better not to need them then to have them as it is better not to need Crutches then to have Crutches What need will there be of Food when our Bodies shall be made spiritual 1 Cor. 15.44 Though not spiritual for substance yet for qualities What need will there be of Clothing when our Bodies shall be like Christs glorious Body what need will there be of Armour when there is no Enemy what need will there be of Sleep when there is no Night Rev. 22.5 The Saints shall be freed in the Heavenly Kingdom from those Necessities of Nature to which now they lye exposed 2 In the Kingdom of Heaven we shall be freed from the Imperfections of Nature Since the Fall our Knowledge hath suffered an Eclipse 1. Our Natural Knowledge is imperfect it is checkered with Ignorance There are many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hard Knots in Nature which we cannot easily unty Why the Sea should be higher then the Earth yet not drown it What way the Light is parted Iob 38.24 What is the reason of all the occult Qualities Sympathies and Antipa●●●es He who sees clearest hath a Mist before his Eyes Socrates said on his Death-bed there were many things he had yet to learn Our Ignorance is more then our Knowledge 2. Our Divine Knowledge is imperfect we know but in part said Paul 1 Cor. 13.9 though he had many Revelations and was wrapt up into the third Heaven We have but dark Conceptions of the Trinity Iob 11.7 Canst thou by searching find out God our narrow Capacities will no more contain the Trinity then a little Glass-Vial will hold all the Water in the Sea we cannot unriddle the Mistery of the Incarnation the Humane Nature assumed into the Person of the Son of God the Humane Nature not God yet united with God We see now in aenigmate in a Glass darkly but in the Kingdom of Heaven the Vail shall be taken off all Imperfections of Nature shall be done away When the Sun-light of Glory shall begin to shine in the Heavenly Horizon all dark shadows of Ignorance shall flye away our Lamp of Knowledge shall burn bright we shall have a full knowledge of God though not know him fully 3. In the Kingdom of Heaven we shall be freed from the toylsome Labours of this Life God enacted a Law in Paradise In the sweat of thy Brows thou shalt eat Bread Gen. 3.9 There is the Labour of the Hand in Manufacture and the Labour of the Mind in Study Eccl. 1.8 All things are full of Labour but in the Kingdom of Heaven we shall be freed from our Labours 1. There needs no Labour when a Man hath got to the Haven he hath no more need of failing In Heaven there needs no Labour because the Saints shall have that Glory which they laboured for 2. There shall be no Labour Rev. 14.13 They rest from their Labours As God when he had finished the Work of Creation rested from his Labours Gen. 2.2 So when the Saints have finished the Work of Sanctification they rest from their Labours Where should there be rest but in the Heavenly Center Not that this sweet rest in the Kingdom of Heaven excludes all Motion for Spirits cannot be idle but the Saints Glorified shall rest from all wearisome Imployment it shall be a labour full of ease a Motion full of Delight The Saints in Heaven shall love God and what labour is that Is it any Labour to love Beauty They shall praise God and that sure is delightful When the Bird sings it is not so much a Labour as a pleasure 4. In the Kingdom of Heaven we shall be freed from Original Corruption This is causa causati the root of all Actual Sin There would be no Actual Sin if there were no Original there would be no Water in the Stream if there were none in the Fountain Original Sin is incorporated into our Nature 't is as if the whole mass of Blood were corrupted This makes a Christian weary of his Life he offends that God whom he loves What would a Christian give to have his Chains taken off to be rid of vain thoughts How did Paul that bird of Paradise bemoan himself for his Sins Rom. 7.24 we cannot act either our Duties or Graces without Sin The Soul that is most refined and clarified by Grace is not without some dregs of Corruption but in the Kingdom of Heaven the Fountain of Original Sin shall be quite dryed up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What a blessed time will that be never to grieve Gods Spirit more In Heaven are Virgin Souls there is Beauty which is not stained with Lust nothing enters there that defiles Rev. 21.27 5. In the Kingdom of Heaven we shall be freed from all sorrows Rev. 21.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There shall be no more sorrow Our Life here is interlarded with trouble Psal. 31.10 either Losses grieve or Law-suits vex or Unkindness breaks the heart We may as well separate moisture from Air or weight from Lead as Troubles from Mans Life Quid est diu vivere nisi diu torqueri Aug. but in the Kingdom of Heaven sorrow and sighing shall fly away Here the Saints sit by the Rivers weeping but one smile from Christs Face will make them forget all their Sufferings their Water then shall be turned into Wine their Mourning into Musick 6. We shall in the Kingdom of Heaven be freed from the immodesty of
and Majesty yet chiefly he will have the worship of the Soul 1 Cor. 6.20 Glorifie God in your body and in your spirit Spirit-worship God prizeth because it comes so near to his own Nature who is a Spirit Quest. What is it to Worship God in the Spirit Resp. 1. To worship him without Ceremonies The Ceremonies of the Law which God himself ordained are now abrogated and out of date Christ the Substance being come the Shadows flie away and therefore the Apostle calls the Legal Ceremonies Carnal Rites Heb. 9.10 and if not use those Iewish Ceremonies which God did once appoint then not those which he did never appoint Resp. 2. To worship God in Spirit is to worship him 1. With Faith in the Bloud of the Messiah Heb. 11.9 And 2. to worship him with the utmost Zeal and Intensness of Soul Acts 26.7 Our twelve tribes instantly serving God day and night 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Intensness of Spirit not only constantly but instantly This is to worship God in the Spirit The more Spiritual any Service is the nearer it comes to God who is a Spirit and the more excellent it is the spiritual part of Duty is the Fat of the Sacrifice it is the Soul and Quintessence of Religion The richest Cordials are made of Spirits and the best Duties are such as are of a Spiritual Nature God is a Spirit and will be worshipped in Spirit It is not Pomp of Worship but Purity which God accepts Repentance is not in the outward Severities used to the Body Pennance Fasting and Chastising the Body but it consists in the Sacrifice of a broken Heart Thanksgiving doth not stand in Church-Musick the Melody of an Organ but rather making Melody in the Heart to the Lord Eph. 5.19 Prayer is not the Tuning of the Voice into an heartless Confession or telling over a few Beads but it consists in Sighs and Groans Rom. 8.26 When the Fire of Fervency is put to the Incense of Prayer now it ascends as a sweet Odour that is the true Holy Water not which the Pope sprinkles but what is distilled from the Limbeck of a Penitent Eye Spirit-worship best pleaseth that God who is a Spirit Ioh. 4.23 The Father seeks such to worship him to shew the great acceptance of such and how God is delighted with Spiritual-worship This is the savoury Meat God loves How few mind this worshipping him who is a Spirit in the Spirit they give him more Dreggs then Spirits they think it enough to bring their Duties but not their Hearts which hath made God disclaim those very Services he himself appointed Isa. 1.12 Ezek. 33.31 Let us then give God Spirit-worship this best suits with his Nature a Soveraign Elixar full of Vertue may be given in a few drops a little Prayer if it be with the Heart and Spirit may have much Vertue and Efficacy in it The Publican made but a short Prayer God be merciful to me a sinner Luke 18.13 but it was full of life and spirit it came from the Heart therefore was accepted Use 2. of Exhortation Pray to God that as he is a Spirit so he will give us of his Spirit The Essence of God is incommunicable but the Motions the Presence and Influences of his Spirit When the Sun shines in a Room not the Body of the Sun is there but the Light Heat and Influence of the Sun God hath made a Promise of his Spirit Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within you Turn Promises into Prayers O Lord thou who art a Spirit give me of thy Spirit I Flesh beg thy Spirit thy enlightning ●anctifying quickning Spirit Melancthon's Prayer Domine accende animam meam Spiritu tuo Lord inflame my Soul with thy Holy Spirit How needful is his Spirit we cannot do any Duty without it in a lively manner when this Wind blows upon our Sails then we move swiftly towards Heaven Pray therefore that God will give us of the Residue of his Spirit Mal. 2.15 that we may move more vigorously in the Sphere of Religion Use 3. of Comfort As God is a Spirit so the Reward that he gives is Spiritual that is the Excellency of it as the chief Blessings he gives us in this Life are Spiritual Blessings Eph. 1.3 not Gold and Silver he gives Christ his Love he fills us with Grace so the main Rewards he gives after this Life are Spiritual a Crown of Glory that fades not away 1 Pet. 5.4 Earthly Crowns fade but the Believer's Crown being Spiritual is Immortal a never-fading Crown It is impossible saith Iulius Scaliger for that which is Spiritual to be subject to Change or Corruption This may comfort a Christian in all his Labours and Sufferings he lays out himself for God and hath little or no Reward here but remember God who is a Spirit will give Spiritual Rewards a sight of his Face in Heaven white Robes a weight of Glory Be not then weary of God's Service think of the Spiritual Reward a Crown of Glory which fadeth not away GOD is INFINITE Quest. WHat kind of Spirit is God Resp. He is Infinite so he differs from all created Beings which are Finite Though Infinite may be applied to all God's Attributes he is infinitely Merciful infinitely Wise infinitely Holy yet if we take Infiniteness properly so implies 1. God's Omnipresency the Greek word for Infinite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies without Bounds or Limits God is not confined to any place he is Infinite and so is present in all places at once His Centre is every-where Divina essentia nusquam inclusa aut exclusa Aug. 1 Kings 8.27 Behold the heaven and heaven of heavens cannot contain thee This the Turks have a Notion of they build their Temples open on the top to show that God cannot be confined to their Temples or circumscribed but is in all places by his Presence God's Essence is not limited either to the Regions above or to the Terrestrial Globe but his whole Essence is every-where This is to be Infinite As Philosophers say of the Soul it is Tota in toto tota in qualibet parte The Soul is in every part of the Body in the Eye Heart Foot so we may say of God he is Ubique his Essence is every-where his Circuit is in Heaven and Earth and Sea and he is in all places of his Circuit at once This is to be Infinite God who bounds every thing else is himself without Bounds He sets Bounds to the Sea Huc usque Hitherto shalt thou come and no further He sets Bounds to the Angels they like the Cherubims move and stand at his appointment Ezek. 10.16 but he is Infinite without Bounds He who can span the Heavens and weigh the Earth in a pair of Scales must needs be Infinite Isa. 40.12 Object Vorstius That God is in all places at once but not in regard of his Essence but Virtute potentia by his Vertue and
and Drunkenness in Noah and Cursing in Iob If God leave a Man to himself how suddenly and scandalously may Original sin break forth in the holiest Men alive 5. Original sin doth mix and incorporate it self with our Duties and Graces 1. With out Duties as the hand which is paralitical or palsy cannot move without shaking as wanting some inward strength so we cannot do any holy action without sinning as wanting a Principle of Original Righteousness As the Leper whatever he touched became unclen if he touched the Altar the Altar did not sanctifie him but he polluted the Altar such a Leprosy is Original sin it defiles our Prayers and Tears we cannot write without blotting Though I do not say that the holy Duties and good Works of the Regenerate are sins for that were to reproach the Spirit of Christ by which they are wrought yet this I say that the best works of the godly have sin cleaving to them only Christ's Blood makes atonement for our holy things 2. With our Graces There is some Unbelief mixed with Faith Lukewarmness with Zeal Pride with Humility As bad Lungs cause an Astmah or shortness of breath so Original Corruption having infected our heart our Greaces breath now very faintly 6. Original sin is a vigorous active Principle within us it doth not lye still but is ever exciting and stirring us up to evil it is an Inmate very unquiet Rom. 7.15 What I hate that do I. How came Paul to do so Original sin did irritate and stir him up to it Original sin is like Quicksilver always in motion when we are asleep sin is awake in the Fancy Original sin sets the Head a plotting evil and the Hands a working it it hath in it principium motus not quiet is it is like the Pulse ever beating 7. Original sin is the cause of all Actual it is fomes peccati it is the Womb in which all actual sins are conceived Hence come Murders Adulteries Rapines it is the Trojan Horse out of which a whole Army of Impieties come Though Actual sins may be more scandalous yet Original sin is more heinous the Cause is more then the Effect 8. It is not perfectly cured in this Life Grace though it doth subdue sin yet not wholly remove it Though we are like Christ having the first fruits of the Spirit yet we are unlike him having the remainders of the Flesh. There are two Nations in the Womb. Original sin is like that Tree Dan. 4.23 though the Branches of it were hewen down and the main body of it yet the stumps and root of the Tree were left Though the Spirit be still weakning and hewing down sin in the godly yet the stump of Original sin is still left it is a Sea that will not in this Life be dried up Quest. But why doth God leave Original Corruption in us after Regeneration he could quite free us from it if he pleased Resp. 1. He doth it to shew the power of his Grace in the weakest Believer Grace shall prevail against a Torrent of Corruption Whence is this the Corrupion is ours but the Grace is Gods 2. God leaves Original Corruption to make us long after Heaven when there shall be no Sin to defile no Devil to tempt When Elias was taken up to Heaven his Mantle dropped off so when the Angels shall carry us up to Heaven this Mantle of sin shall drop off we shall never complain more of an aking head or an unbelieving heart Use 1. If Original sin be propagated to us and will be inherent in us while we live here then it Confutes the Libertines and Quakers who say they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without sin they hold Perfection they shew much Pride and Ignorance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but we see the Seeds of Original sin remain in the best Eccles. 7.20 There is not a just man lives and sins not And St. Paul complained of a body of death Rom. 7.24 Grace though it doth purifie Nature it doth not perfect it Object But doth not the Apostle say of Believers that their old man is crucified Rom. 6.6 and they are dead to sin Rom. 7.11 Resp. They are dead 1. Spiritually they are dead as to the Reatus the guilt of it and as to the Regnum the power of it the love of sin is crucified 2. They are dead to sin Legally as a Man that is Sentenced to Death is dead in Law so they are legally dead to Sin there is a Sentence of Death gone out against sin it shall die and drop into the Crave but at the present sin hath its Life lengthened out nothing but Death of the Body can quite free us from the Body of Death Use 2. Let us lay to heart Original sin and be deeply humbled for it it cleaves to us as a Disease it is an active Principle in us stirring us up to Evil. Original sin is worse then all Actual sin the Fountain is more then the Stream Some think as long as they are civil they are well enough I but thy Nature is poisoned thou hast a proud lustful envious Nature a River may have fair Streams but Vermin at bottom Thou carriest an Hell about thee thou canst do nothing but thou defilest it thy Heart like muddy ground defiles the purest Water that runs thorow it Nay though thou art Regenerate there is much of the Old Man in the New Man O how should Original sin humble us This is one reason God hath left Original sin in us because he would have it as a Thorn in our side to humble us as the Bishop of Alexandria after the People had embraced Cristianity destroyed all their Idols but one that the sight of that Idol might make them loath themselves for their former Idolatry So God leaves Original sin to pull down the Plumes of Pride Under our silver Wings of Grace are black feet 2. Let the sence of this make us daily look up to Heaven for help beg Christ's Blood to wash away the guilt of sin and his Spirit to mortifie the power of it beg further degrees of Grace Gratiam Christi eò obnixiùs ambiamus though Grace cannot make sin to be yet not to reign though Grace cannot expel sin it can repel it and for our Comfort where Grace makes a Combat with sin Death shall make a Conquest 3. Let Original sin make us walk with continual Iealousie and Watchfulness over our Hearts The Sin of our Nature is like a sleeping Lion the least thing that awakens it makes it rage The Sin of our Nature though it seem quiet and lies as Fire hid under the Embers yet if it be a little stirr'd and blown up by a Temptation how quickly may it flame forth into scandalous Evils therefore we had need always walk watchfully Mark 13.37 I say to you all watch A wandring heart needs a watchful Eye MAN's Misery by the FALL Quest. XIII WHat is the Misery of that Estate whereinto Man fell
dreadful when he causeth him to be set upon the Rack or to be broke upon the Wheel Who knows the power of God's wath While we are Children of Wrath 1. We have nothing to do with any of the Promises they are as the Tree of Life bearing several sorts of Fruit but no right to pluck one Leaf Eph. 2.3 Children of wrath Verse 12. Strangers to the covenants of promise The Promises are as a Fountain seal'd While we are in the State of Nature we see nothing but the flaming Sword and as the Apostle Heb. 10.27 there remains nothing but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fearful looking for of fiery Indignation 2. While Children of Wrath we are Heirs to all God's Curses Gal. 3.10 How can the Sinner eat and drink in that Condition Like Damari●'s Banquet he sat at Meat and there was a Sword hanging over his Head by a small Thread one would think he should have little stomack to eat So the Sword of God's Wrath and Curse hangs every moment over a Sinner's head We read of a flying Roll written with Curses Zach. 5.3 There 's a Roll written with Curses goes out against every Person that Lives and Dies in Sin God's Curse blasts where-ever it comes A Curse on the Sinner's Name a Curse on his Soul a Curse on his Estate Posterity a Curse on the Ordinances Sad if all a Man did eat should turn to Poison The Sinner eats and drinks his own Damnation at God's Table Thus it is before Conversion As the Love of God makes every bitter thing sweet so the Curse of God makes every sweet thing bitter Use. See our Misery by the Fall Heirs of Wrath And is this Estate to be rested in If a Man be fallen under the King's Displeasure will he not labour to Re-ingratiate himself into his Favour O let us flie from the Wrath of God! And whither should we flie but to Jesus Christ there 's none else to shield off the Wrath of God from us 1 Thess. 1.10 Iesus hath delivered us from wrath to come 3. Subject to all outward Miseries All the Troubles incident to Man's Life are the bitter Fruits of Original Sin The sin of Adam hath subjected the Creature to Vanity Rom. 8.20 Is it not a part of the Creature 's Vanity that all the Comforts here below will not fill the Heart no more then the Mariner's breath can fill the Sails of a Ship Job 2● 22 In the midst of his sufficiency he shall be in straits There is still something wanting and a Man would have more the Heart is always Hydropical it thirsts and is not satisfied Solomon put all the Creatures into a Lembick and when he came to extract the Spirits and Quintissence there was nothing but Froth all was Vanity Eccles. 1.2 Nay 't is vexing Vanity not only Emptiness but Bitterness Our Life is Labour and Sorrow we come into the World with a Cry go out with a Groan Ps. 90.10 Some have said that they would not be to live the Life they have lived over again because their Life hath had more Water in it than Wine More Water of Tears then Wine of Joy Quid est diu vivere nisi diu torqueri Aug. Man is born to trouble Job 5.7 Every one is not born Heir to Land but he is born Heir to Trouble as well separate Weight from Lead We do not finish our Troubles in this Life but change them Trouble is the Vermine bred out of the putred matter of Sin Whence are all our Fears but from Sin 1 Ioh. 4.18 There is torment in fear Fear is the Ague of the Soul sets it a shaking some fear Want others Alarms others fear loss of Relations If we rejoyce 't is with Trembling Whence are all our Disappointment of Hopes but from Sin Where we look for Comfort there a Cross where we expect Honey there we tast Wormwood Whence is it that the Earth is filled with Violence that the Wicked oppresseth the Man which is more righteous then he Hab. 1.13 Whence is it that so much Fraudulency in Dealing so much Falseness in Friendship such Crosses in Relations whence is it Children prove Undutiful they that should be as the Staff of the Parents Age are a Sword to pierce their Hearts Whence is it Servants are Unfaithful to their Masters The Apostle speaks of some who have entertain'd Angels into their Houses Heb. 13.2 But how oft instead of entertaining Angels into their Houses do some entertain Devils Whence are all the Mutinees and Divisions in a Kingdom 2 Chr. 15.5 In those days there was no peace to him that went out nor to him that came in All this is but the sowr Core in that Apple our first Parents eat viz. Fruit of Original Sin Besides all the Deformities and Diseases of the Body Feavers Convulsions Catarrhs Macies nova febrium terris incubu●t cohors These are from Sin There had never been a Stone in the Kidnies if it had not been first a Stone in the Heart Yea the death of the Body is the Fruit and Result of Original Sin Rom. 5.12 Sin entred into the world and death by sin Adam was made Immortal conditionally if he had not sinned Sin dig'd Adam's Grave Death is terrible to Nature Lewis King of France forbad all that came into his Court to mention the name of Death in his Ears The Socinians say That Death comes only from the Infirmness of the Constitution But the Apostle saith Sin usher'd Death into the World By sin came death Certainly had not Adam eat of the Tree of Knowledge he had not died Gen. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thou shalt surely die implying if Adam had not eat he should not have died O then see the Misery ensuing upon Original Sin Sin dissolves the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Harmony and good Temperature of the Body it pulls this Frame in pieces 4. Original Sin without Repentance exposeth to Hell and Damnation This is the second Death Rev. 20.14 Two things in it 1. Poena Damni Punishment of Loss the Soul is banished from the Beatifical Presence of God in whose Presence is Fulness of Joy 2. Poena Sensus Punishment of Sense the Sinner feels the scalding Viols of God's Wrath It is penetrating abiding Joh. 3.36 Reserved 2 Pet. 2.17 If when God's Anger be kindled but a little and a Spark or two of it flies into a Man's Conscience here in this life it be so terrible what then will it be when God stirs up all his Anger In Hell there is the Worm and the Fire Mark 9.44 Hell is the very Accent and Emphasis of Misery There 's Iudgment without Mercy O what Flames of Wrath what Seas of Vengeance what Rivers of Brimstone are pour'd out there upon the Damn'd Bellarmi●e is of Opinion That one Glimpse of Hell-fire were enough to make the most fla●itious Sinner turn Christian nay live as an Hermit a most strict mortified Life What is all other Fire to this but
Sufferings Christ being God his Death and Passion is Meritorious Christ's Bloud is called Sanguis Dei The Bloud of God Acts 20.28 because the Person who was offered in Sacrifice was God as well as Man This is an invincible Support to Believers it was God who was offended and it was God who satisfied Thus Christ's Person in two Natures 2. Consider Christ's two Natures in one Person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man 1 Tim. 3.16 God manifest in the flesh Christ had a twofold Substance Divine and Humane yet not a twofold Subsistance both Natures make but one Christ A Siens may be grafted into another Tree a Pear-tree into an Apple which though it bear different Fruits is but one Tree So Christ's Manhood is united to the Godhead in an ineffable manner yet though here are two Natures yet but one Person This Union of the two Natures in Christ was not by Transmutation the Divine Nature chang'd into the Humane or the Humane into the Divine nor by Mixture the two Natures mingled together as Wine and Water are mixed Both the Natures of Christ remain distinct yet make not two distinct Persons but one Person the Humane Nature not God yet one with God 3. Consider Christ our Mediator in his Graces These are the sweet Savour of his Oyntments that make the Virgins love him Christ our Blessed Mediator is said to be full of grace and truth Joh. 1.14 He had the anointing of the Spirit without measure Joh. 3.34 Grace in Christ is after a more eminent and glorious manner then it is in any of the Saints 1. Jesus Christ our Mediator hath Perfection in every Grace Col. 1.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is a Panoply Magazine and Store-house of all Heavenly Treasure all Fulness This no Saint on Earth hath he may excel in one Grace but not in all as Abraham was eminent for Faith Moses for Meekness but Christ excells in every Grace 2. There is a never-failing Fulness of Grace in Christ Grace in the Saints is Ebbing and Flowing it is not always in the same degree and proportion At one time David's Faith was strong at another time so faint and weak that you could hardly feel any Pulse Psal. 31.22 I said I am cut off from before thine eyes but Grace in Christ is a never-failing Fulness it did never abate in the least degree he never lost a drop of his Holiness What was said of Ioseph may more truly be applied to Christ Gen. 49.23 The archers shot at him but his bow abode in strength Men and Devils shot at him but his Grace remain'd in its full vigour and strength His bow abode in strength 3. Grace in Christ is Communicative His Grace is for us the holy Oyl of the Spirit was poured on the head of this Blessed Aaron that it might run down upon us The Saints have not Grace to bestow on others when the foolish Virgins would have bought Oyl of their Neighbour-Virgins Matth. 25.9 Give us of your oyl for our lamps are gone out The wise Virgins answer'd Not so least there be not enough for us and you The Saints have no Grace to spare to others but Christ diffuseth his Grace to others Grace in the Saints is as Water in the Vessel Grace in Christ is as Water in the Spring Joh. 1.16 Of his fulness have we received grace for grace Set a Glass under a Still or Limbeck and it receives Water from the Limbeck drop by drop So the Saints have the Drops and Influences of Christ's Grace distilling upon them What a rich Consolation is this to those who either have no Grace or their Stock is but low they may go to Christ the Mediator as to a Treasury of Grace Lord I am indigent but whether should I carry my empty Vessel but to a full Fountain Psal. 87.7 all my fresh Springs are in thee I am guilty thou hast Blood to pardon me I am polluted thou hast Grace to cleanse me I am sick unto death thou hast the Balm of Gilead to heal me Gen. 41.56 Ioseph opened all the Store-houses of Corn Christ is our Ioseph that opens all the Treasuries and Store-houses of Grace and communicates to us He is not only sweet as the Honey-comb but drops as the Honey-comb This is a great comfort in Christ our Mediator there is a Cornucopia and fulness of all Grace and Christ is desirous that we should come to him for Grace like the full Breast that akes till it be drawn Use 1. Admire the Glory of this Mediator he is God-Man he is co-essentially glorious with the Father All the Jews that saw Christ in the Flesh did not see his God-head all that saw the Man did not see the Messiah The Temple of Solomon within was embellished with Gold Travellers as they passed along might see the outside of the Temple but only the Priests saw the Glory which sparkled within the Temple only Believers who are made Priests unto God Rev. 1.6 see Christ's glorious inside the God-head shining through the Manhood Use 2. If Christ be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God Man in one Person then look unto Iesus Christ alone for Salvation There must be something of the Godhead to fasten our Hope upon in Christ there 's Godhead and Manhood Hypostatically united If we could weep Rivers of Tears out-fast Moses on the Mount if we were exact Moralists touching the Law blameless if we could arrive at the highest degree of Sanctification in this Life all this would not save us without looking to the Merits of him who is God our perfect Holiness in Heaven is not the cause of our Salvation but the Righteousness of Jesus Christ. To this therefore did Paul fly as to the Horns of the Altar Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him not having my own righteousness 'T is true we may look to our Graces as Evidences of Salvation but Christ's Bloud only as the Cause In the time of Noah's Flood all that trusted to the high Hills and Trees and not to the Ark were drowned Heb. 12.2 Looking unto Iesus and so look unto him as to believe in him that so Christ may not only be united to our Nature but to our Persons Joh. 20.31 That believing you may have life thorow his name Use 3. Is Jesus Christ God and Man in one Person This as it shews the Dignity of Believers that they are nearly related to one of the greatest Persons that is Col. 2.9 In him dwells the fulness of the Godhead bodily so it is of unspeakable Comfort Christ's two Natures being married together the Divine and Humane all that Christ in either of his Natures can do for Believers he will do In his Humane Nature he Prays for them in his Divine Nature he Merits for them This for the Person of our Mediator Use 4. Admire the Love of Christ our Mediator that he should humble himself and take our Flesh that he might redeem us Believers should put Christ in their
consume the water this is impossible in the course of Nature But God can bring about all this Ier. 32.27 There is nothing too hard for thee Zach. 8.6 If it be marvellous in your Eyes should it be marvellous in my eyes saith the Lord How should God be united to our flesh It is impossible to us but not with God He can do that which transcends Reason and exceeds Faith He should not be God if he could not do more than we can think Eph. 3.20 He can reconcile Contraries How apt are we to be discouraged with seeming impossibilities how do our hearts die within us when things go cross to our Sense and Reason We are apt to say as that Prince 2 Kings 7.1 2. If the Lord would make windows in Heaven might this thing be It was a time of Famine and now that a measure of Wheat which was a good part of a Bushel should be sold for a Shekel viz. half an Ounce of Silver how can this be So when things are cross or strange God's own People are apt to question how they should be brought about with success Moses who was a Man of God and one of the brightest Stars that ever shined in the firmament of God's Church yet he was apt to be discouraged with seeming Impossibilities Numb 11.21 And Moses said the People among whom I am are six hundred thousand footmen and thou hast said I will give them flesh that they may eat for a whole month shall the flocks and herds be slain for them to suffice them or shall all the fish of the Sea be gathered for them to suffice them As if he had said in plain English he did not see how the People of Israel being so numerous could be fed for a month Vers. 23. And the Lord said is the Lord's hand waxed short Surely that God who brought Isaac out of a dead Womb and the Messiah out of a Virgins Womb what cannot he do O let us rest upon the Arm of God's Power and believe in him in the midst of seeming Impossibilities Remember there are no impossibilities with God He can subdue a proud heart he can raise a dying Church Christ born of a Virgin that wonder-working God that wrought this can bring to pass the greatest seeming Impossibilities Use 2. of Exhortation Branch 1. Seeing Christ took our Flesh and was born of a Virgin let us labour that he may be spiritually born in our hearts What will it profit us that Christ was born into the World unless he be born in our hearts that he was united to our Nature unless he be united to our Persons Marvel not that I say unto you Christ must be born again viz. in our hearts Gal. 4.19 till Christ be formed in you Now then try if Christ be born in your hearts Quest. How shall we know that Resp. 1. There are Pangs before the Birth so before Christ be born in the Heart there are Spiritual Pangs Some Pangs of Conscience Deep convictions Acts 2.37 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were pricked at their heart I grant the New-birth doth Recipere magis minus all have not the same Pangs of Sorrow and Humiliation yet all have Pangs If Christ be born in thy heart thou hast been deeply afflicted for sin Christ is never born in the heart without Pangs Many thank God they never had any Trouble of Spirit they were always quiet a sign Christ is not yet formed in them 2. As when Christ was born into the World he was made flesh so if he be born into thy heart he makes thy heart an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 Is thy heart Incarnate Before it was a rocky heart and would not yield to God or take the Impressions of the Word Durum est quod non cedit tactui now it is fle●hy and tender like melting Wax to take any stamp of the Spirit This is a sign Christ is born in our hearts when they are hearts of flesh they melt in Tears and in Love What is it the better Christ was made flesh unless he hath given thee an heart of flesh 3. Christ was conceived in the Womb of a Virgin so if he be born in thee thy heart is a Virgin-heart in respect of Sincerity and Sanctity Art thou purified from the love of sin If Christ be born in the heart it is a Sanctum Sanctorum an Holy of Holies If thy heart be polluted with the predominant love of sin never think Christ is born there Christ will never lye any more in a Stable If he be born in thy heart it is consecrated by the Holy Ghost 4. If Christ be born in thy heart then it is with thee as in a birth 1. There is Life Faith is principium vivens it is the vital Artery of the Soul Gal. 2.20 The life that I live in the flesh is by the faith of the Son of God 2. There is Appetite 1 Pet. 2.7 As new born babes desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sincere milk of the word The Word is like Breast-milk pure sweet nourishing the Soul in which Christ is formed desires this Breast-milk St. Bernard in one of his Soliquies comforts himself with this That sure he had the New-birth in him because he found in his heart such strong Anhelations and Thirstings after God 3. Motion After Christ is born in the heart there is a violent Motion there is striving to enter in at the strait gate and offering violence to the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. 12.11 By this we may know Christ is formed in us This is the only comfort that as Christ was born into the World so he is born in our hearts as he was united to our flesh so he is united to our Persons Branch 2. As Christ was made in our Image let us labour to be made in his Image Christ being Incarnate was made like us let us labour to ●e made like him There are three things in which we should labour to be like Christ. 1. In Disposition He was of a most sweet Disposition Delitiae humani generis Tit. Vespasian he invites sinners to come to him He hath Bowels to pity us Breasts to feed us Wings to cover us He would not break our hearts but with Mercy Was Christ made in our Likeness let us labour to be made in his Likeness Let us be like him in this sweetness of Disposition Be not of a morose Spirit It was said of Nabal 1 Sam. 25.18 He is such a son of Belial that a man cannot speak to him Some are so barbarous as if they were a kin to the Ostrich they are fired with Rage and breathe forth nothing but Revenge like those two Men in the Gospel possessed with Devils coming out of the Tombs exceeding fierce Matth. 8.28 Let us be like Christ in mildness and sweetness Let us pray for our Enemies and conquer them by love David's kindness melted Saul's heart 1 Sam. 24.16 A frozen heart will be thawed with the fire
are kept by the Power of God unto Salvation every Person in the Trinity hath an hand in making a Believer persevere God the Father establisheth 2 Cor. 1.21 God the Son confirms 1 Cor. 1.8 God the Holy Ghost Seals Eph. 1.13 so that it is the power of God keeps us Alas we are not kept by our own power The Pelagians held That Man by his own power might overcome Temptation and persevere But St. Austin confutes them Man saith he prays unto God for Perseverance which would be absurd if he had power of himself to persevere And saith St. Austin If all the power be inherent in a Mans self then why should not one persevere as well as another why not Judas as well as Peter So that it is not by any other than the power of God that we are kept As the Lord preserved Israel from perishing in the Wilderness till he brought them to Canaan the same care will he take if not in a miraculous yet a spiritual invisible manner in preserving his People in a state of Grace till he brings them to the Celestial Canaan As the Heathens feigned of Atlas That he did bear up the Heavens from falling The power of God is that Atlas which bears up the Saints from falling It is disputed whether Grace of it self may not perish as Adam's yet sure I am Grace kept by the power of God cannot perish 3. The third Argument is taken ab Electione from Gods electing Love such as God hath from all Eternity elected to Glory cannot fall away finally but every true Believer is elected to Glory ergo he cannot fall away Wat can frustrate Election or make Gods Decree void This Argument stands like Mount Sion which cannot be moved Insomuch that some of the Papists hold that such who have absolute Election cannot fall away 2 Tim. 2.19 The Foundation of God stands sure having this Seal The Lord knows them that are his The Foundation of God is nothing else but Gods Decree in Election and this stands sure God will not alter it others cannot 4. The fourth Argument is taken Ab Unione cum Christo from Believers Union with Christ. They are knit to Christ as the Members to the Head by the Nerve and Ligament of Faith so that they cannot be broken off Eph. 5.23 What was once said of Christ's Natural Body is true of his Mystical a Bone of it shall not be broken As it is not possible to sever the Leaven and the Dough when they are once mingled and kneaded together so it is impossible when Christ and Believers are once united ever to be separated Christ and his Members make one Christ. Now is it possible that any part of Christ should perish How can Christ lose any Member of his Body Mystical and be perfect In short Si unus excidat quare non alter If one Believer may be broken off from Christ then by the same Rule why not another Why not all And so Christ should be an Head without a Body 5. The fifth Argument is taken ab Emptione from the Nature of a Purchase A Man will not lay down his Mony for a Purchase which may be lost and the Fee-simple alienated Christ died that he might purchase us as a People to himself for ever Heb. 9.12 Having obtained eternal Redemption for us Would Christ think we have shed his Blood that we might believe in him for a while and then fall away Do we think Christ will lose his Purchase 6. The sixth Argument is A Victoria supra mundum from a Believers Victory over the World The Argument stands thus He who overcomes the World doth persevere in Grace but a Believer doth overcome the World ergo he perseveres in Grace 1 Iohn 5.4 This is the Victory over the World even your Faith A Man may lose a single Battle in the Field yet at last win the Victory A Child of God may be foild in a single Battle against Temptation as Peter was but at last he is Victorious Now if a Saint be crowned Victor if the World be conquered by him he must needs persevere I come next to answer some Objections of the Arminians 1. The first Objection of the Arminians is If a Believer shall persevere in Grace then to what purpose are all those Admonitions in Scripture Let him take heed lest he fall 1 Cor. 10 12. and Heb. 4.1 Let us fear lest any of you seem to come short These Admonitions seem to be Superfluous and Vain if a Saint shall certainly persevere Answ. No these Counsels and Admonitions are necessary to Caution Believers against Carelesness they are as Goads and Spurs to quicken them to a greater Diligence in working out Salvation These Admonitions do not imply the Saints can fall away but they are Preservatives to keep them from falling away Christ told some of his Disciples they should abide in him yet he exhorts them to abide in him Iohn 15. His exhorting them was not in the least to question their abiding in him but to awaken their Diligence and make them pray the harder that they might abide in him 2. The second Objection is Heb. 6.4 it is impossible for those who were once enlightned and have tasted of the Heavenly Gift and were made Partakers of the Holy Ghost and have felt the Powers of the World to come if they shall fall away to renew them again to Repentance Answ. This place of Scripture hath no Force in it for the Apostle here speaks of Hypocrites he shews how far they may go yet fall way 1. They who were once enlightned Men may have great Illuminations yet fall away Was not Iudas enlightned 2. They have been made partakers of the Holy Ghost The common Gifts of the Spirit not the special Grace 3. They have tasted the good word of God Tasting here is opposed to Eating the Hypocrite may have a kind of Taste of the sweetness of Religion but this taste doth not nourish There is a great deal of difference between one that takes a Gargle and a Cordial The Gargle only washeth his Mouth he tasts it and puts it out again but a Cordial is drank down which nourisheth and cheers the Spirits The Hypocrite who hath only some smack or taste of Religion as one tasts a Gargle may fall away 4. And have felt the powers of the World to come That is they may have such Apprehensions of the Glory of Heaven as to be affected with it and seem to have some joy in the thoughts of it yet fall away as in the Parable of the stony ground Matt. 13.20 All this is spoken of the Hypocrite but it doth not therefore prove that the true Believer who is effectually wrought upon can fall away Though Comets fall it doth not therefore follow that true Stars fall That this Scripture speaks not of sound Believers is clear from Verse 9. But we are perswaded better things of you and things that accompany Salvation Of PERSEVERANCE 1
his Service 3. Faith gives us a Prospect of Heaven it shews us an invisible Glory and he who hath Christ in his Heart and a Crown in his Eye will not faint away O cherish Faith keep your Faith and your Faith will keep you While the Pilot keeps his Ship his Ship keeps him Sixthly If Persevere let us engage the power of God to help us we are kept by the power of God The Child is safest when it is held in the Nurses Arms so are we when we are held in the Arms of Free-Grace It is not our holding God but his holding us preserves us When a Boat is tied to a Rock it is secure so when we are fast tied to the Rock of Ages then we are impregnable O engage God's power to help us to Persevere we engage his Power by Prayer Let us pray to him to keep us Psal. 17.5 Hold up my goings in thy Paths that my Footsteps slip not It was a good Prayer of Beza Domine quod cepisti perfice ne in portu naufragium accidat Lord perfect what thou hast begun in me that I may not suffer Shipwreck when I am almost at the Haven Seventhly If Persevere set often before your Eyes the noble Examples of those who have Persevered in Religion quot Martyres quot Fideles in Coelis jam Triumphant What a glorious Army of Saints and Martyrs have gone before us How constant to the Death was St. Paul Acts 21.13 How Persevering in the Faith were Ignasius Policarp Athanasius These were Stars in their Orb Pillars in the Temple of God Let us look on their Zeal and Courage and be animated Heb. 12.1 Seeing we are compassed about with so great a Cloud of Witnesses let us run with Patience the Race that is set before us The Crown is set at the end of the Race if we win the Race we shall wear the Crown A Believers Privilege at Death Phil. 1.21 For to me to Live is Christ and to Dye is Gain SAint Paul was a great Admirer of Christ he desired to know nothing but Christ and him Crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 No Julip to the Blood of Christ and in the Text To me to live is Christ and to dye is Gain First To me to live is Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must understand Paul of a Spiritual Life To me to live is Christ i. e. Christ is my Life so Greg. Nyssen Or thus my Life is made up of Christ. As a Wicked Mans Life is made up of Sin So Paul's Life was made up of Christ he was full of Christ. But that I may give you the Sense of the Te●● more fully take it in these Three particulars 1. Christ is the principle of my Life 2. Christ is the end of my Life 3. Christ is the Joy of my Life 1. To me to live is Christ i. e. Christ is the Principle of my Life I fetch my Spiritual Life from Christ as the Branch fetcheth its Sap from the Root Gal. 2.20 Christ liveth in me Jesus Christ is an Head of Influence he sends forth Life and Spirits into me to quicken me to every Holy Action Thus To me to live is Christ. Christ is the principle of my Life from his Fulness I live as the Vine-branch lives from the Root 2. To me to live is Christ i. e. Christ is the end of my Life I live not to my self but to Christ. So Grotius and Causabon Christo Servio To me to live is Christ all my Living is is to do Service to Christ Rom. 14.8 Whether we live we live unto the Lord. When we lay out our selves wholly for Christ as the Factor trades for the Merchant so we Trade for Christs Interest we propagate his Gospel the design of our Life is to exalt Christ and make the Crown upon his Head to flourish Now it may be said to us to live is Christ our whole Life is a Living to Christ. 3. To me to live is Christ i. e. Christ is the Joy of my Life Psal. 42.4 God my exceeding Ioy or the Cream of my Joy A Christian rejoyceth in Christs Righteousness he can rejoyce in Christ when Worldly Joys are gone When the Tulip in a Garden withers a Man rejoyceth in his Jewels When Relations Dye a Saint can rejoyce in Christ the Pearl of Price in this Sense to me to live is Christ he is the Joy of my Life If Christ were gone my Life would be a Death to me Use. It should exhort us all to labour to say as the Apostle to me to live is Christ. Christ is the Principle of my Life the End of my Life the Joy of my Life to me to live is Christ and then we may comfortably conclude that to Dye shall be Gain Secondly And that brings me to the Second part of the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to Dye is Gain Doct. To a Believer Death is great Gain A Saint can tell what his Losses for Christ are but he cannot tell how great his Gains are at Death To me to dye is Gain Death to a Believer is Crepusculum gloriae the Day-break of Eternal Brightness To shew fully what a Believers Gains are at Death were a task too great for an Angel all Hyperboles fall short the Reward of Glory exceeds our very Faith Only let me give you the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some dark views and imperfect Lineaments of that infinite Glory the Saints shall gain at the Hour of Death To me to Dye is Gain 1. Believers at Death shall gain a Writ of Ease from all Sins and Troubles they shall be in a state of Impeccability Sin expires with their Life I think sometimes what an happy state that will be never to have a sinful Thought more And they shall have a quietus est from their Troubles Here David cried out My Life is spent with Griefs and my Years with Sighing Psal. 31.10 Quid est diu vivere nisi diu torqueri Aug. Life begins with a Cry and ends with a Groan but at Death all Troubles Dye 2. Believers at Death shall gain the glorious Sight of God They shall see him First Intellectually with the Eyes of their Mind which Divines call the Beatifical Vision If there were not such an Intellectual sight of God how do the Spirits of Iust Men made Perfect see him Secondly They shall behold the Glorified Body of Jesus Christ and if it be pleasant to behold the Sun then how blessed a sight will it be to see Christ the Son of Righteousness cloathed with our Human Nature shining in Glory above the Angels Through Christ's Flesh as through a Transparent Glass some bright Rays and Beams of the God head shall display themselves to glorified Eyes The sight of God through Christ will be very complacential and delightful The terrour of God's Essence will be taken away Gods Majesty will be mixed with Beauty and sweetned with Clemency it will be infinitely delightful to the Saints to see the amiable
shall wipe away all Tears Then Christs Spouse puts off her Mourning How can the Children of the Bride Chamber Mourn when the Bride-Groom shall be with them Matt. 9.15 Thus Death gives a Believer his Quietus est it frees him from Sin and Trouble Though the Apostle calls Death the last Enemy 1 Cor. 15. yet it is the best Friend To me to dye is gain Use 1. See here that which may make a true Saint willing to die Death will set him out of Gun-shot free him from Sin and Trouble There is no cause of weeping to leave a Valley of Tears The World is the Stage on which Sin and Misery are Acted Believers are here in a strange Country why then should they not be willing to go out of it Death beats off their Fetters of Sin and sets them free who go weeping out of a Goal Besides our own Sins the Sins of others The World is a place where Satan's Seat is a place where we see God daily dishonoured Lot who was a bright Star in a dark Night his righteous Soul was vexed with the unclean Conversation of the Wicked 2 Pet. 3.8 To see Gods Sabbaths broken his Truths adulterated his Glory eclipsed is that which wounds a Godly Heart This made David cry out Psal. 120.5 Woe is me that I dwell in Mesech that I sojourn in the Tents of Kedar Kedar was Arabia where were Ishmaels Posterity This was a cut to David's Heart to dwell there O then be willing to depart out of the Tents of Kedar 2. The Bodies of Believers are united to Christ in the Grave and shall rest there till the Resurrection They are said to sleep in Jesus 1 Thess. 4.14 The dust of Believers is part of Christs Body Mystical The Grave is a Dormitory or place of rest to the Saints where their Bodies quietly sleep in Christ till they are awakened out of their sleep by the Trumpet of the Arch-angel Quest. 2. But how shall we know that we shall gain all this at Death to be freed from Sin and Trouble and to have our Bodies united to Christ in the Grave Resp. If we are Believers then we gain all this at Death To me saith Paul to dye is gain To me quatenus a Believer Are we such Have we this blessed Faith Faith where-ever it is is Operative Lapidaries say there is no precious Stone but hath Virtutem insitam some hidden Virtue in it So I may say of Faith It hath some secret Virtue in it It Anchors the Soul on Christ It hath both a justifying and sanctifying Virtue in it It fetcheth Blood out of Christs sides to Pardon and Water out of his sides to Purge It works by love It constrains to Duty It makes the Head study for Christ the Tongue confess him the Hands work for him I have read of a Father who had three Sons and being to dye left in his Will all his Estate to that Son who could find his Ring with the Jewel which had an healing Vertue The Case was brought before the Judges the two elder Sons counterfeited a Ring but the younger Son brought the true Ring which was proved by the Vertue of it whereupon his Fathers Estate went to him To this Ring I may compare Faith there is a counterfeit Faith in the World but if we can find this Ring of Faith which hath the Healing Vertue in it to purifie the Heart this is the true Faith which gives us an Interest in Christ and entitles us to all these Privileges at Death to be freed from Sin and Sorrow and to have our Bodies united to Christ while they are in the Grave 3. I should now come to the third Privilege at Death the Souls of Believers pass immediately into Glory Where I shall lead you to the top of Mount Pisgah and give you a short view of the Glory of Heaven A Believers Privilege after Death Phil. 1.21 And to dye is Gain 3. AT Death the Souls of Believers pass into Glory Death brings Malorum omnium ademptionem Omnium ademptionem Death 's the day-break of Eternal Brightness And here I shall lead you to the top of Mount Pisgah and give you a glimpse of the Holy Land Quest. 1. What is comprehended in Glory Resp. Glory is Status omnium Bonorum aggregatione perfectus Boetius It is a perfect State of Bliss which consists in the Accumulation and heaping together all those good things which immortal Souls are capable of And truly here I am at a loss all that I can say falls short of the Celestial Glory Appelles Pencil cannot delineate it Angels Tongues cannot express it We shall never understand Glory fully till we are in Heaven Only let me give you the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or some dark views and some imperfect Lineaments of that State of Glory the Saints shall arrive at after Death 1. The first and most sublime part of the Glory of Heaven is the full and sweet Fruition of God Ipse Deus sufficit ad praemium Aug. We are apt to think the Happiness of Heaven is in being free from Pain and Misery but the very 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Quintessence of Happiness is the Enjoyment and Fruition of God this is the Diamond Ring of Glory God is an infinite inexhaustible Fountain of Joy and to have him is to have all Now the enjoying of God implies three things 1. It implies our seeing of God 2. Our loving of God 3. Gods loving of us 1. The enjoying of God implies our seeing of God 1 Iohn 3.2 We shall see him as he is Here we see him as he is not not mutable mortal there as he is Quest. 2. How shall we see God Resp. 1. We shall see him intellectually with the Eyes of our mind This Divines call the Beatifical Vision We shall have a full knowledge of God though not know him fully If there were not such an intellectual sight of God then how do the Spirits of just Men made perfect see him This sight of God will be very glorious As when a King on his Coronation-day shews himself in all his Royalty and Magnificence 2. We shall corporeally behold the glorified Body of Jesus Christ And if it be a pleasant thing to behold the Sun Eccles. 11.7 then how blessed a sight will it be to behold the Sun of Righteousness to see Christ clothed in our humane Nature sitting in Glory above the Angels Solomon saith The eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccles. 1.8 But sure the Eyes of the Saints will be satisfied with seeing that Orient Brightness which shall shine from the beautiful Body of Christ. It must needs be satisfying because through Christs Flesh some Rays and Beams of the God-head shall gloriously display themselves Gods excellent Majesty would overwhelm us but through the Vail of Christs Flesh we shall behold the Divine Glory 3. Our seeing of God will be transforming We shall so see him as to be in some measure assimilated and changed
hold that the Soul shall be cloathed with a new Body but then it were improper to call it a Resurrection it should be rather a Creation Iob 19.26 Though worms destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God Not in another flesh but my flesh 1 Cor. 15.53 This corruptible shall put on incorruption Quest. 2. By what Arguments may the Resurrection be proved Resp. Argument 1. By Scripture Iohn 6.44 I will raise him up at the last day Isa. 25.8 He will swallow up Death in Victory That is by delivering our Bodies from the Captivity of the Grave wherein Death for a time had power over them 1 Thess. 4.14 Them which sleep in Iesus will God bring with him Argument 2. Christ is risen Therefore the Bodies of the Saints must rise Christ did not rise from the Dead as a private Person but as the publick Head of the Church and the Head being raised the rest of the Body shall not always lye in the Grave Christs rising is a Pledge of our Resurrection 2 Cor. 4.14 Knowing that he which raised up the Lord Iesus shall raise up us also by Iesus Christ is called the first Fruits of them that slept 1 Cor. 15.20 As the first Fruits is a sure Evidence that the Harvest is coming on so the Resurrection of Christ is a sure Evidence of the rising of our Bodies out of the Grave Christ cannot be perfect as he is Christ Mystical unless his Members be raised with him Argument 3. In respect of Gods Justice If God be a just God then he will reward the Bodies of the Saints as well as the Souls It cannot be imagined that the Souls of Believers should be glorified and not their Bodies They have served God with their Bodies Their Bodies have been Members of Holiness Their Eyes have drop'd Tears for Sin Their Hands have relieved the Poor Their Tongues have set forth Gods Praise therefore Justice and Equity require that their Bodies should be crown'd as well as their Souls And how can that be unless they are raised from the Dead Argument 4. If the Body did not rise again then a Believer should not be compleatly happy for though the Soul can subsist without the Body yet it hath Appetitum Unionis a desire of re-union with the Body and it is not fully happy till it be clothed with the Body Therefore undoubtedly the Body shall rise again If the Soul should go to Heaven and not the Body then a Believer should be only half saved Object 1. But some may say as the Virgin Mary to the Angel How can this be So how can it be that the Body which is consum'd to Ashes should arise again Resp. It doth not oppose Reason but transcend it There are some Resemblances of the Resurrection in Nature The Corn which is sown in the ground dies before it springs up 1 Cor. 15.36 That which thou sowest is not quickned except it dye In Winter the Fruits of the Earth dye in Spring there is a Resurrection of them Noah's Olive-tree springing after the Flood was a lively Emblem of the Resurrection After the Passion of our Lord many of the Saints which slept in the Grave arose Matt. 27.52 God can more easily raise the Body out of the Grave than we can wake a Man out of sleep Object 2. But when the Dust of many are mingled together How is it possible that a Separation should be made and the same numerical Body arise Resp. If we believe God can Create then he can distinguish the dust of one Body from another Do we not see the Chymist can out of several Metals mingled together as Gold Silver Alchimy extract the one from the other the Silver from the Gold the Alchimy from the Silver and can reduce every Metal to its own kind And shall we not much more believe that when our Bodies are mingled and confounded with other Substances the wise God is able to make an Extraction and re-invest every Soul with its own Body Quest. 3. Shall none but the Bodies of the Righteous be raised Resp. Yes all that are in the Graves shall hear Christs Voice and shall come forth Acts 24.15 There shall be a Resurrection of the Dead both of the just and unjust Rev. 20.12 I saw the dead small and great stand before God But though all shall be raised out of their Graves yet all shall not be raised alike 1. The Bodies of the Wicked shall be raised with Ignominy those Bodies which on the Earth did tempt and allure others with their Beauty shall be at the Resurrection loathsom to behold they shall be ghastly Spectacles as the Phrase is Isa. 66.24 They shall be an abhorring unto all flesh But the Bodies of the Saints shall be raised with Honour 1 Cor. 15.43 It is sown in dishonour it is raised in Glory The Saints Bodies then shall shine as sparkling Diamonds Matt. 13.43 Then shall the righteous shine forth as the Sun 2. The Bodies of the Saints shall arise out of their Graves with Triumph The Bodies of the Wicked shall come out of the Grave with Trembling as being to receive their fatal Doom But the Godly when they awake out of the Dust shall sing for Joy Isa. 26.19 Awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust When the Arch-angels Trumpet sounds then the Saints shall sing The Bodies of Believers shall come out of the Grave to be made happy As the chief Butler came out of Prison and was restored to all his Dignity at the Court But the Bodies of the Wicked shall come out of the Grave as the chief Baker out of Prison to be executed Gen. 40.22 Use 1. Believe this Doctrin of the Resurrection and that the same Body that dies shall arise again and with the Soul be crown'd Without the belief of this tota corruit Religio all Religion falls to the ground 1 Cor. 15.4 If the Dead rise not then Christ is not risen and then our Faith is vain Use 2. Comfort The Body shall rise again This was Iob's Comfort Iob 19.26 Though Worms destroy this Body yet in my flesh shall I see God The Body is sensible of Joy as well as the Soul And indeed we shall not be in all our Glory till our Bodies are re-united to our Souls O consider what Joy there will be at the re-uniting of the Body and Soul at the Resurrection Look what sweet Imbraces of Joy were between Old Iacob and Ioseph when they first saw one another Gen. 46.29 Such and infinitely more will there be when the Body and Soul of a Saint shall meet together at the Resurrection How will the Body and Soul greet one another What a welcome will the Soul give to the Body O blessed Body When I prayed thou didst attend my Prayers with hands lifted up and Knees bowed down Thou wert willing to suffer with me and now thou shalt reign with me Thou wert sown in dishonour but now art raised in Glory O my dear
Body I will enter into thee again and be eternally married to thee Use 3. The Resurrection of the Body is a Cordial when a Christian lyes a dying Thy Body though it drop into the Sepulchre it shall revive and flourish as an Herb in the Resurrection The Grave is a Bed of dust where the Bodies of the Saints sleep but they shall be awakened by the Trump of the Arch-angel The Grave is your long home but not your last home Though Death strip you of your beauty yet at the Resurrection you shall have it restored again As David when he found Saul asleep took away his Spear and Cruse of Water but when he awoke he restored them again 1 Sam. 26.22 So though at death all our strength and beauty be taken away yet at the Resurrection God will restore all again in a more glorious manner Quest. 4. But how shall we know that our Bodies shall be raised to a glorious Resurrection Resp. If we have a part in the first Resurrection Rev. 20.6 Blessed is he that hath a part in the first Resurrection Quest. What is meant by this Answ. It is a rising by Repentance out of the Grave of Sin He who lies buried in sin can have little hope of a joyful Resurrection His Body shall be raised but not in Glory O then ask Conscience Have you a part in the first Resurrection Hath the Spirit entred into you and lifted you up Hath it raised you out of your Unbelief Hath it raised your Hearts above the Earth This is the first Resurrection and if your Souls are thus Spiritually raised then your Bodies shall be gloriously raised and shall shine as Stars in the Kingdom of Heaven Regeneration makes way for a glorious Resurrection Use Seeing you expect your Bodies should arise to Glory keep your Bodies unspotted from sin Shall a drunken Body rise to Glory Shall an unclean Body rise to Glory Shall a thievish Body steal into Heaven O keep your Bodies pure Keep your Eyes from unchast Glances your Hands from Bribes your Tongues from Slander Defile not your Bodies which you hope shall rise one day to Glory Your Bodies are the Members of Christ and hear what the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 6.15 Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot God forbid O keep your Bodies unspotted let them be Instruments of Righteousness 1 Cor. 6.20 Glorifie God in your Body If your Bodies glorifie God God will glorifie your Bodies Quest. 5. But seeing our Bodies must be laid in the Grave and they may lye many years rotting there before the Resurrection What may support and comfort us in this case Resp. 1. That God will not leave his People in the Grave Our Friends bring us to the Grave and leave us there but God will not God will go to the Grave with us and watch over our dead Bodies and take care of our Ashes Rizpah watched over the dead Bodies of the Sons of Saul and guarded them against the ravenous Fouls of the Air 2 Sam. 21.10 Thus the Lord watcheth over the dead Bodies of the Saints and looks to it that none of their dust be missing Christian thou hast a God to watch over thy Body when thou art dead 2. The Bodies of the Saints in the Grave though separated from their Souls are united to Christ. The dust of a Believer is part of Christs Mystical Body 3. When the Bodies of the Saints are in the Sepulchre their Souls are in Paradise The Soul doth not sleep in the Body but returns to God that gave it Eccles. 12.7 The Soul immediately partakes of those Joys the blessed Angels do When the Body returns to dust the Soul returns to rest When the Body is sleeping the Soul is triumphing When the Body is buried the Soul is crowned As the Spies were sent before to taste of the Fruits of the Land Numb 13. so at Death the Soul is sent before into Heaven to taste of the Fruit of the Holy Land 4. When Gods time is come the Graves shall deliver up their Dead Rev. 20.13 When the Judge sends the Goaler must deliver up his Prisoners As God said to Iacob Gen. 46.4 I will go down with thee into Egypt and I will surely bring thee up again So the Lord will go down with us into the Grave and will surely bring us up again 5. Though the Bodies of the Saints shall rot and be loathsom in the Grave yet afterwards they shall be made Illustrious and Glorious Concerning this consider 1. The Bodies of the Saints when they arise shall be comely and beautiful The Body of a Saint in this Life may be deformed Those whose minds are adorned with Virtue yet may have mis-shapen Bodies as the finest Cloth may have the coarsest List But this deformed Body shall be aimable and beautiful This beauty consists in two things 1. Perfection of parts There shall be a full Proportion of all the Members In this Life there is oft a defect of Members The Eye is lost the Arm is cut off but in the Resurrection all parts of the Body shall be restored again Therefore the Resurrection is called the time of restoring of all things Acts 3.19 Malcha's Ear cut restituit 2. Clarity and Splendor The Bodies of the Saints shall have a graceful Majesty in them they shall be like Stephen whose Face shined as if it had been the Face of an Angel Acts 6.15 Nay they shall be made like Christs glorious Body Phil. 3.21 2. The Bodies of the Saints when they arise shall be free from the Necessities of Nature as Hunger and Thirst Rev. 7.16 They shall hunger no more Moses on the Mount was so fill'd with the Glory of God that he needed not the Recruits of Nature Much more in Heaven shall the Bodies of the Saints so fill'd with Gods Glory be upheld without Food 3. The Bodies of Saints when they arise shall be swift and nimble our Bodies on Earth are dull and heavy in their Motion then they shall be swift and made fit to ascend as the Body of Elias in the Air. Now the Body is a Clog in Heaven it shall be a Wing We shall be as the Angels Matt. 22.30 And how nimble are they The Angel Gabriel in a short time came from Heaven to the Earth Dan. 9.21 As the Helm turns the Ship instantly whether the Steersman will so the Body in an instant will move which way the Soul will 4. The Bodies of the Saints at the Resurrection shall be very firm and strong 1 Cor. 15.43 It is raised in power Through frequent Labour and Sickness the strongest Body begins to Languish But at the Resurrection we shall be of a strong Constitution Then there will be no Weariness in the Body nor Faintness in the Spirits This may comfort you who now conflict with many bodily Weaknesses This weak Body shall be raised in Power The Body which is now a weak Reed shall be like a Rock
the King himself is present So to bow down to an image of God when God himself is every where present II. It is unlawful to worship God by an Image for First It is against the Homily of the Church it runs thus The Images of God our Saviour the Virgin Mary are of all others most dangerous therefore the greatest care ought to be had that they stand not in Temples and Churches So that Image-Worship is contrary to our own Homilies and doth affront the authority of the Church of England Secondly Image-worship is expresly against the Letter of Scripture Lev. 26.1 Ye shall make no Graven Image neither shall ye set up any Image of Stone to bow down to it Deut. 16.22 Neither shalt thou set up any Image which the Lord thy God hateth Psal. 97.7 Confounded be all they that serve Graven Images Do we think to please God by doing that which is contrary to his Mind and which he hath expresly forbidden Thirdly Image-worship is against the practice of the Saints of old Iosiah that Renowned King destroyed the Groves and Images 2 Kin. 23.24 Constantine abrogated the Images set up in Temples The Christians destroy'd Images at Basil Zurick Bohemia when the Roman Emperors would have thrust Images upon them they chose rather to dye than deflour their Virgin Profession by Idolatry They refused to admit any Painter or Carver into their Society because they would not have any Carved Statue or Image of God When Seraphion bowed to an Idol the Christians excommunicated him and delivered him up to Satan Use 1. It reproves and condemns the Church of Rome who from the Alpha of their Religion to the Omega are wholly Idolatrous they make Images of God the Father painting him in their Church-Windows as an Old Man and an Image of Christ in the Crucifix And because it is against the Letter of this Commandment therefore they sacrilegiously blot out the Second Commandment out of their Catechises dividing the Tenth Commandment into Two Now this Image-worship must needs be very Impious and Blasphemous because it is a giving that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Religious Worship to the Creature which is only due to God It is vain for Papists to say they give God the worship of the Heart and the Image only the worship of the Body for the worship of the Body is due to God as well as the worship of the Heart and to give an outward Veneration to an Image is to give that Adoration to a Creature which only belongs to God Isa. 42.8 My Glory will I not give to another Obj. 1. But the Papists say they do not worship the Image only make use of it as a Medium they worship God by it Ne imagini quidem Christi in quantum est Lignum sculptum ulla debetur reverentia Aquinas Resp. 1. Where hath God bid them worship him by an Effigies or Spirit Isa. 1.12 Who hath required this at your Hands The Papists can't say so much as the Devil Scriptum est it is written 2. The Heathens may bring the same Argument for their gross Idolatry as the Papists do for their Image-worship who of the Heathens were so simple as to think Gold and Silver or the Figure of an Ox or Elephant were God They were only Emblems and Hieroglyphicks to represent him they did worship the invisible God by such visible things To worship God by an Image God takes as done to the Image itself Obj. 2. But say the Papists Images are Lay-mens Books and they are good to put us in mind of God One of the Popish Councils affirmed that we might learn more by an Image than by long study of the Scriptures Resp. Hab. 2.18 What profiteth the Graven Image the Molten Image and a Teacher of Lies Is an Image a Lay-mans Book See then what Lessons this Book teacheth it teacheth Lyes it represents God in a visible shape who is invisible For the Papists to say they make use of an Image to put them in mind of God is as if a Woman should say she keeps company with another Man to put her in mind of her Husband Obj. 3. But did not Moses make the Image of a Brazen Serpent why then may not Images be set up Resp. That was done by Gods special command Num. 21.8 Make thee a Brazen Serpent and there was a special use of it both Literal and Spiritual but what doth the setting up this Image of the Brazen Serpent justifie the setting up of Images in Churches What because Moses did make an Image by Gods appointment may we therefore set up an Image of our own Devising Because Moses made an Image to heal them that were stung is it lawful therefore to set up Images in Churches to sting them that are whole This doth not at all follow Nay that very brazen Serpent which God himself commanded to be set up when Israel did look upon it with too much Reverence and began to burn Incense to it Hezekiah defaced that Image and called it Nehushtan and God commended him for doing so 2 Kings 18.4 Obj. 4. But is not God represented as having Hands and Eyes and Ears Why then may we not make an Image to represent him by and help our Devotion Resp. Though God is pleas'd to stoop to our weak Capacities and set himself out in Scripture by Eyes to signifie his Omnisciency and Hands to signifie his Power yet it is very absurd from Metaphors and Figurative Expressions to bring an Argument for Images and Pictures for by that Rule God may be pictured by the Sun and the Element of Fire and by a Rock for God is set forth by these Metaphors in Scripture and sure the Papists themselves would not like to have such Images made of God Quest. 1. If it be not lawful to make the Image of God the Father yet may we not make an Image of Christ who took upon him the nature of Man Resp. No. Epiphanius seeing an Image of Christ hanging in a Church brake it in Pieces 't is Christ's Godhead united to his Manhood that makes him to be Christ therefore to Picture his Manhood when we cannot Picture his Godhead is a Sin because we make him to be but half Christ we separate what God hath joyned we leave out that which is the chief thing which makes him to be Christ. Quest. 2. But how then shall we conceive of God aright if we may make no Image or Resemblance of him Resp. We must conceive of God Spiritually viz. 1. In his Attributes his Holiness Justice Goodness which are the Beams by which his Divine Nature shines forth 2. We must conceive of him as he is in Christ. Christ is the Image of the Invisible God Col. 1.15 As in the Wax we see the print of the Seal Set the Eyes of your Faith on Christ-God-Man Iohn 14.9 He that hath seen me hath seen the Father Use 2. Take heed of Idolatry viz. Image-worship our Nature is prone to this Sin as dry
the Sabbath-day and I testified against them Thou I contended with the Nobles of Iudah and said to them What evil thing is this that ye do and prophane the Sabbath-Day It is Sacriledge to rob that Time for Civil Work which God hath Dedicated and set apart for his Worship He that converts any time of the Sabbath to worldly business is a worse Thief than he who robs on the High-way for such a Thief does but rob Man but this Thief robs God he robs him of his Day The Lord forbad Manna to be gathered on the Sabbath Exod. 16. One would think that might have been dispens'd with for Manna was the Staff of their Life and the time when Manna fell was early between Five and Six in the morning so that they might have gathered it betimes and all the rest of the Sabbath they might have employed in God's Worship And besides they needed not to have taken any great Journey for Manna for it was but stepping out of their Doors and it fell about their Tents yet they might not gather Manna on the Sabbath and but for purposing to gather it God was very angry Exod. 16.27 28. There went out some of the People on the Seventh Day to gather and they found none and the Lord said How long refuse ye to keep my Commandments and my Laws Surely the anoynting Christ when he was dead was a commendable Work but Mary Magdalen and Mary the Mother of Iames tho' they had prepared sweet Oyntments to anoint the dead Body of Christ yet they came not to the Sepulchre to embalm him till the Sabbath was past Luke 23.56 They rested on the Sabbath-day according to the Commandment The Hand cannot be busied on the Lord's Day but the Heart will be defiled The very Heathens by the Light of Nature would not do any Secular Work in that time which they had set apart for the Worship of their False Gods Clem. Alexandrinus reports of one of the Emperors of Rome that on the Day of set Worship for his Gods he did forbear Warlike Affairs and did spend that time in his Devotion To do servile Work on the Sabbath shows an irreligious Heart and highly affronts God To work servile Work this Day is to follow the Devils Plough it is to debase the Soul God hath made this Day on purpose to raise the Heart up to Heaven to converse with God to do Angels Work and to be employed in earthly Work is to degrade the Soul of it's Honour God will not have his Day intrenched upon or defiled in the least thing The Man that gathered sticks on the Sabbath God would have him stoned Numb 15. One would think that a small thing to pick a few sticks to make a Fire but God would not have his Day violated in the smallest matters Nay that Work which had a reference to a religious Use might not be done on the Sabbath as the hewing of stones for the building of the Sanctuary Bezaleel who was to cut the stones and carve the Timber out for the Sanctuary yet he must forbear it on the Sabbath Exod. 31.15 A Temple is the place of God's Worship but it were a sin to build a Temple upon the Lord's Day This is keeping the Sabbath-day holy Negatively in doing no servile Work Yet Caution Not but that Works of Necessity and Charity may be done on this day God in these cases will have Mercy and not Sacrifice 1. 'T is lawful to take the necessary Recruits of Nature Food is to the Body as Oyl to the Lamp 2. 'T is lawful to do Works of Mercy as helping our Neighbour when either Life or Estate are in Danger Herein the Jews were too nice and precise they would not suffer Works of Charity to be done on the Sabbath If a Man were sick they thought on this day they might not use means for his Recovery Christ chargeth them with this that they were angry that he had wrought a Cure on the Sabbath Iohn 7.23 If an House were on Fire the Jews thought they might not bring Water to quench it If a Vessel did run they thought that on this day they might not stop it These were righteous overmuch Here was seeming Zeal but it wanted Discretion to guide it But unless in these two Cases of Necessity and Charity all secular Work is to be suspended and laid aside on the Lord's Day In it thou shalt do no manner of work which justly doth arraign and condemn many among us who do too much foul their Fingers with Work on this Day Some in dressing great Feasts others in opening their Shop-doors and selling Meat on the Sabbath which I have seen The Mariner will not set to Sea but on the Sabbath and so runs full Sail into the Breach of this Commandment Others work on this Day tho privately They put up their Shop-windows but follow their Trade within doors But tho they think to hide their sin under a Canopy God sees it Psal. 139.7 Whither shall I go from thy Presence ver 12. The Darkness hideth not from thee These Persons do profane this Day and God will have an Action of Trespass against them 2. Positively We keep the Sabbath-day holy by Consecrating and Dedicating this Day to the Service of the High God 'T is good to rest on the Sabbath-day from the works of our Calling But if we rest from Labour and do no more the Ox and the Ass keep the Sabbath as well as we for they rest from Labour We must dedicate the Day to God we must not only keep a Sabbath but sanctifie a Sabbath This Sabbath-sanctification consists in two things I. The solemn Preparation for it II. The sacred Observation of it 1. The solemn Preparation for it If a Prince were to come to your House what Preparation would you make for his Entertainment Sweep the House wash the Floor adorn the Room with the richest Tapestry and Hangings that there might be something suitable to the state and dignity of so great a Person On the blessed Sabbath God intends to have sweet Communion with you he seems to say to you as Christ to Zaccheus Luke 19.5 Make hast and come down for this day I must dine with you Now what Preparation should you make for the entertaining this King of Glory Now this Preparation for the Sabbath is First When the Evening of the Sabbath approacheth sound a Retreat call your Minds off from the World and summon your Thoughts together to think of the great Work of the Day opproaching Secondly Purge out all unclean Affections which may indispose you for the Work of the Sabbath Evening-Preparation will be like the tuning of the Instrument it will fit the Heart the better for the Duties of the Sabbath ensuing 2. The sacred Observation of it touching which these things are to be practised 1. Rejoyce at the approach of this Day as being a Day wherein we have a Prize for our Souls and enjoy much of God's
Day of Judgment there shall be an open and honourable mention made of them in the Presence of the Angels Sixthly Hard-heartedness to them in Misery reproacheth the Gospel When Men's Hearts are like pieces of Rocks or as the Scales of the Leviathan shut up as with a close Seal Job 41.15 You may as well extract Oyl out of a Flint as the Golden Oyl of Charity out of their Hearts These Vnchristian themselves Unmercifulness is the Sin of the Heathen Rom. 1.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without Mercy It eclipseth the Glory of the Gospel Doth the Gospel teach Uncharitableness Doth it not bid us draw out our Soul to the Hungry Isa. 58.10 Tit. 3.8 These things I will that you affirm that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good Works While you relieve not such as are in Want you walk Antipodes to the Gospel you cause it to be evil spoken of and lay it open to the Las● and Censure of others Seventhly There is nothing lost by relieving the Necessitous The Shunamite Woman was kind to the Prophet she welcomed him to her House and she received Kindness from him another way He restored her Dead Child to Life 2 Kings 4.35 Such as are helpful to others shall find Mercy to help in time of need Such as pour out the Golden Oyl of Compassion to others God will pour out the Golden Oyl of Salvation to them For a Cup of cold Water they shall have Rivers of Pleasure Nay God will make it up some way or other in this Life Prov. 11.25 The Liberal Soul shall be made fa● As the Loaves in breaking multiplied or as the Widows Oyl encreased by pouring out 1 Kings 17.16 An Estate may be imparted yet not impaired Eighthly To do good to others in Necessity keeps up the Credit of Religion Works of Mercy adorn the Gospel as the Fruit Adorns the Tree When our Light so shines that others see our Good Works this glorifies God Crowns Religion silenceth the Lips of Gain-sayers Basil saith Nothing rendred the True Religion more famous in the Primitive Times and made more Proselytes to it than the Bounty and Charity of the Christians Ninthly and Lastly The Evil that doth accrue by not preserving the Lives of others and helping them in their Necessities God sends oft a secret Moth into their Estate Prov. 11.24 There is that with-holdeth more than is meet but it tendeth to Poverty Prov. 21.13 Whoso stoppeth his Ears at the cry of the poor he also shall cry himself but shall not be heard Jam. 2.13 He shall have Iudgment without Mercy that showed no Mercy Dives denied Lazarus a Crumb of Bread and Dives was denied a Drop of Water Mat. 25.41 Depart from me ye cursed for I was an hungred and ye gave me no meat Christ saith not Ye took away my Meat But Ye gave me no Meat ye did not feed my Members therefore depart from me By all this be ready to distribute to the Necessities of others This is included in the Commandment Thou shalt not kill Not only Thou shalt not destroy his Life but thou shalt preserve it by giving to his Necessities 2. It is imply'd that we should endeavour to preserve the Souls of others counsel them about their Souls set Life and Death before them help them to Heaven In the Law if one met his Neighbours Ox or Ass going astray he must bring him back Exod. 33.4 Much more if we see our Neighbours Soul going astray we should use all means to bring him back to God by Repentance 2. In reference to our selves The Commandment Thou shalt not kill requires that we should preserve our own Life and Soul 'T is engraven upon every Creature that we should preserve our own Natural Life We must be so far from Self-murder that we must do all we can to preserve our Natural Life We must use all means of Diet Exercise and lawful Recreation which is like Oyl to preserve the Lamp of Life from going out Some have been under Temptation Satan hath suggested they are such Sinners as do not deserve a bit of Bread and so they have been ready to starve themselves This is contrary to this Sixth Commandment Thou shalt do no Murder it is imply'd we are to use all means for the preserving our own Life 1 Tim. 5.23 Drink no longer Water but use a little Wine for thy Stomach's sake Timothy was not by drinking too much Water to over-cool his Stomach and weaken Nature but he must use means for Self-preservation Drink a little Wine c. Secondly This Commandment requires that we should endeavour as to preserve our own Life so especially to preserve our own Souls Omnia si perdas animam servare memento It is engraven upon every Creature as with the Point of a Diamond that it should look to its own Preservation If the Life of the Body must be preserved then much more the Life of the Soul If he who doth not provide for his own House is worse than an Infidel 1 Tim. 5.8 then much more he who doth not provide for his own Soul This is a main thing implied in the Commandment a special Care for the preserving our Souls The Soul is the Iewel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar The Soul is a Diamond set in a Ring of Clay Christ puts the Soul in ballance with the World and it outweighs Matth. 16.26 The Soul is a Glass in which some Rays of Divine Glory shine It hath in it some Faint Idea and Resemblance of a Deity It is a Celestial Spark lighted by the Breath of God The Body was made out of the Dust but the Soul is of a more noble Extract and Original Gen. 2.7 God breathed into Man a living Soul 1. The Soul is Excellent in its Nature It is a Spiritual Being 't is a kind of Angelical thing The Mind sparkles with Knowledge the Will is crown'd with Liberty and all the Affections are as Stars shining in their Orb. The Soul being Spiritual 1. Is of quick Operation How quick is the Motion of a Spark How swift is the Wing of a Cherubim So quick and agil is the Motion of the Soul What is quicker than a Thought How many Miles can the Soul travel in an Instant 2. The Soul being Spiritual moves upward it contemplates God and Glory Psal. 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee The Motion of the Soul is upward only Sin hath put a wrong Byass upon the Soul and made it move too much down-ward 3. The Soul being Spiritual is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it hath a self-moving Power it can subsist and move when the Body is dead as the Mariner can subsist when the Ship is broken 4. The Soul being Spiritual is Immortal Scaliger Aeternitatis Gemma a Bud of Eternity 2. As the Soul is excellent in its Nature so in its Capacities It is capable of Grace it is fit to be an Associate and Companion of Angels It
Apostacy 'T is a renouncing of our Baptism 'T is damnable Perjury to go away from God after a Solemn Vow 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me He turned Renegado and afterward became a Priest in an Idol Temple saith Dorotheus Iulian the Apostate Gregory Nazianzen observes bathed himself in the Blood of Beasts offered in Sacrifice to the Heathen Gods and so as much as in him lay washed off his former Baptism The Case of such as fall away after Baptism is dreadful Heb. 10.38 If any Man draw back The Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to draw back alludes to a Souldier that steals away from his Colours So if any Man steal away from Christ and run over to the Devils side my Soul shall have no pleasure in him That is I will be severely avenged on him I will make my Arrows drunk with his Blood If all the Plagues in the Bible can make that Man miserable he shall be so II. The Second Sacrament wherein Jesus Christ communicates to us the Benefits of his Redemption is the Lord's Supper Mark XIV 24 And as they did Eat Iesus took Bread c. Secondly Having spoken of the Sacrament of Baptism I come now to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper The Lord's Supper is the most Spiritual and sweet Ordinance that ever was instituted Here we have to do more immediately with the Person of Christ. In Prayer we draw nigh to God in the Sacrament we become one with him In Prayer we look up to Christ in the Sacrament by Faith we touch him In the Word Preached we hear Christ's Voice in the Sacrament we feed on him Quest. 1. What Names and Titles in Scripture are given to the Sacrament Resp. 1. It is called 1. Mensa Domini The Lord's Table 1 Cor. 10.21 The Papists call it an Altar not a Table The Reason is because they turn the Sacrament into a Sacrifice and pretend to offer up Christ corporally in the Ma●s It being the Lord's Table shews with what Reverence and solemn Devotion we should approach to these Holy Mysteries The Lord takes notice of the Frame of our Hearts when we come to his Table Matth. 22.11 The King came in to see the Guests We dress our selves when we come to the Table of some Great Monarch We should think with our selves we are going to the Table of the Lord therefore should dress our selves by Holy Meditation and Heart-Consideration Many think it is enough to come to the Sacrament but mind not whether they come in Due Order Perhaps they had scarce a serious Thought before whither they were going All their Dressing was by the Glass not by the Bible Chrysostom calls it The dreadful Table of the Lord So it is to such as come unworthily 2. The The Sacrament is called Coena Domini the Lord's Supper 1 Cor. 11.20 to import it is a Spiritual Feast It is indeed a Royal Feast God is in this Cheer Christ in both Natures God and Man is the matter of this Supper 3. The Sacrament is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Communion 1 Cor. 10.16 The Bread which we break is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ The Sacrament being called a Communion shews 1. That this Ordinance is only for Believers because none else can have Communion with Christ in these Holy Mysteries Communio fundatur in ●nione Faith only gives us Union with Christ and by Vertue of this we have Communion with him in his Body and Blood None but the Spouse communicates with her Husband A Stranger may drink of his Cup but she only hath his Heart and communicates with him in a Conjugal manner So Strangers may have the Sign drink of the Cup but only Believers drink Christ's Blood and have Communion with him in his Priviledges 2. The Sacrament being a Communion shews That it is Symbolum Amoris a Bond of that Unity and Charity which should be among Christians 1 Cor. 10.17 We being many are one Body As many Grains make One Bread so many Christistians are one Body A Sacrament is a Love-Feast The Primitive Christians as Iustin Martyr notes had their Holy Salutations at the Blessed Supper in token of that Dearness of Affection which they did bear each to other It is a Communion therefore there must be Love and Union The Israelites did eat the Passover with Bitter Herbs so must we eat the Sacrament with bitter Herbs of Repentance but not with bitter Hearts of Wrath and Malice The Hearts of the Communicants should be knit together with the Bond of Love Thou braggest of thy Faith saith Austin but show me thy Faith by thy Love to the Saints For as in the Sun Light and Heat are inseparable so Faith and Love are twisted together inseparably Where there are Divisions the Lord's Supper is not properly a Communion but a Disunion Quest. 2. What is the Lord's Supper Resp. It is a visible Sermon wherein Christ crucify'd is set before us or it is a Sacrament of the New Testament wherein by receiving the Holy Elements of Bread and Wine our Communion with Christ is signify'd and seal'd up to us Or thus It is a Sacrament Divinely Instituted wherein by giving and receiving Bread and Wine Christ's Death is shewed forth and the worthy Receivers are by Faith made Partakers of his Body and Blood and all the Benefits flowing from thence For the further explaining of the Nature of the Lord's Supper I shall look back to to the Institution 1. Iesus took Bread Here is the Master of the Feast or the Institutor of the Sacrament The Lord Iesus he took Bread He only is fit to Institute a Sacrament who is able to give Vertue and Blessing to it 2. He took Bread Christ's Taking of the Bread was one Part of his Consecration of the Elements and setting them apart for an Holy Use. And as Christ did consecrate the Elements so we must labour to have our Hearts consecrated before we receive these Holy Mysteries in the Lord's Supper How unseemly a Sight is it to see any come to these Holy Elements having Hearts leavened with Pride Covetousness Envy These do with Iudas receive the Devil in the Sop and are no better than Crucifyers of the Lord of Glory 3. And Blessed it This is another Part of the Consecration of the Element Christ blessed it He blesseth and it shall be blessed Viz. He look'd up to Heaven for a Benediction upon this Ordinance newly founded 4. And Brake it The Bread broken and the Wine poured out was to signifie to us the Agony and Ignominy of Christ's Sufferings the Rending of Christs Body on the Cross and that Effusion of Blood which was distilled from his blessed Sides 5. And gave it to them Christ's giving the Bread denotes Christ's giving of himself and all his Benefits to us freely Tho Christ was sold yet given Iudas did sell Christ but Christ gave himself to us 6. He gave it to Them viz. The Disciples This is Childrens Bread
to affright Fire to burn a Lake of Sulphur to choke Chains to bind the Worm to gnaw 2. The Torments of Hell will sieze upon every part both of Body and Soul the Eyes shall be tortured with the sight of Devils the Tongue that hath swore so many Oaths shall be tortured Luke 16.24 Send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue The Memory shall be tormented to remember what Mercies have been abused what seasons of Grace neglected the Conscience shall be tormented with self-accusations 3. In the pains of Hell there is no mitigation no mixture of Mercy In this Life God in Anger remembers Mercy Hab. 3.2 but in Hell there is no alleviation or lessening of the pains As in the Sacrifice of Jealousie Numb 5.15 God would have no Oyl or Frankincense put to it so in Hell there is no Oyl of Mercy to lenifie the sufferings of the Damned no Incense of Prayer to appease Gods Wrath. 4. In the pains of Hell there is no intermission The Poets feign of Endymion that he got leave of Iupiter alwayes to sleep What would the damned in Hell give for one hours sleep Rev. 14.11 They rest not day nor night they are perpetually upon the rack 5. In the pains of Hell there is no expiration they must alwayes lye scorching in flames of Wrath Rev. 14.11 The smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever but in the Heavenly Kingdom the Elect shall be freed from all infernal torments Jesus hath delivered us from the Wrath to come A Prison is not made for the Kings Children Christ drank that bitter cup of Gods Wrath that the Saints might never drink it 2. In the Kingdom of Heaven there is a Glorious Fruition of all Good Had I as many Tongues as Hairs on my Head I could not fully describe this I may say as Iudg. 18.9 10. Heaven is called The excellent Glory 2 Pet. 1.17 I may as well span the Firmament or drain the Ocean as set forth the Glory of this Kingdom Caelum non habet Hyperbolem The Kingdom of Heaven is beyond all Hyperbole Were the Sun ten thousand times brighter than it is it could not parallel the lustre of this Kingdom Apelles Pensil would blot Angels Tongues would lessen it I can but give you the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or dark shadow of it expect not to see it in all its orient colours till you are mounted above the Stars But let us not stand afar off as Moses to behold this Canaan but enter into it and taste the honey Concerning the Fruitions and Priviledges of the Heavenly Kingdom 1. We shall have an immediate Communion with God himself who is the inexhausted Sea of all Happiness This Divines call The Beatifical Vision The Psalmist did triumph in that enjoyment he had of God in this Life Psal. 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee If God enjoyed by Faith doth give so much Comfort to the Soul how much more when he is enjoyed by immediate Vision Here we see God but darkly through the glass of Ordinances but in the Kingdom of Heaven we shall see him face to face 1 Cor. 13.12 we shall have an intellectual sight of God i. e. we shall see him with the eyes of our mind we shall know God as much as the Angels in Heaven do Matth. 18.10 1 Cor. 13.12 We shall know as we are known We shall have a full knowledge of God though not know him fully as a Vessel in the Sea is full of the Sea though it holds not all the Sea To see and enjoy God will be most delicious in God are beams of Majesty and bowels of Mercy God hath all Excellencies concentred in him bonum in quo omnia bona If one Flower should have the sweetness of all Flowers how sweet would that Flower be All the beauty and sweetness which lyes scattered in the Creature is infinitely to be found in God therefore to see and enjoy him will ravish the Soul with delight We shall so see God as to love him and be made sensible of his Love and when we shall have this sweet Communion with God then God shall be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 Light to the eye Manna to the taste Musick to the ear 2. We shall in the Kingdom of Heaven with these eyes see the Glorified Body of Jesus Christ. This our Saviour makes a great part of the Glory of Heaven to view the Glory of his Humane Nature Iohn 17.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That they may behold my glory When Christ was transfigured upon Earth it is said That his face did shine as the sun and his rayment was white as the light Matth. 17.2 If the Glory of his Transfiguration was so great what will the Glory of his Exaltation be Much of the Glory of God shines in Christ by vertue of the Hypostatical Union Col. 2.9 In whom dwells the fulness of the Godhead bodily Through Christs Humanity as through a bright mirrour we may see some beams of the Divine Majesty shine forth put a back of Steel to a Glass and you may see a Face in it Christs Humane Nature is as a back of Steel put to the Divine Nature through this we may see God and then our Capacities shall be enlarged to a wonderful degree to receive this glorious object and we shall not only see Gods Glory but some of his Glory shall be put upon us non tantum aderit Gloria sed inerit Bern. A Beggar may behold the Glory of a King and not be the happier but Christs Glory shall be ours We shall be like him 1 Iohn 3.2 we shall shine by his beams 3. We shall in the Kingdom of Heaven enjoy the society of innumerable company of Angels Heb. 12.22 Quest. But is there not enough in God to fill the Soul with delight Can the sight of Angels add to the Souls happiness What need is there of the light of Torches when the Sun shines Answ. Besides the Divine Essence the sight of Angels is desirable much of Gods curious workmanship shines in the Angels the Angels are beautiful glorious Creatures and as the several strings in a Lute make the harmony sweeter and the several Stars make the Firmament brighter so the society with Angels will make the delight of Heaven the greater and we shall not only see the Angels with the glorified eye of our understanding but converse with them 4. We shall in the Kingdom of Heaven have sweet society with Glorified Saints then the Communion of Saints will be illustrious O what a blessed time will it be when those who have prayed wept suffered together shall rejoyce together we shall see the Saints in their white Linnen of Purity and see them as so many Crowned Kings in beholding the Saints Glorified we shall behold an Heaven full of Suns Some move the Question whether we shall know one another in Heaven Surely our knowledge shall not be diminished but
have been cast away upon the Worlds Golden Sands 9. If you would not come short of the Kingdom of heaven take heed of indulging any sin one Mill-stone will drown as well as more and one sin lived in will damn as well as more Vbi regnat peccatum non potest regnare Dei regnum Hierom. If any one sin reign it will keep you from reigning in the kingdom of heaven especially keep from sins of Presumption which wast Conscience vastare Conscientiam Tertul. and the Sin of your natural Constitution the peccatum in delitiis Aug. the darling Sin Psal. 18.23 I have kept my self from mine iniquity That Sin which my heart would soonest decoy and flatter me into as in the Hive there is one Master-Bee so in the heart one Master-sin O take heed of this Quest. How may this sin be known A. 1. That Sin which a Man cannot endure the Arrow of a reproof should shoot at that is the bosom sin Herod could not brook to have his Incest medled with that was a noli me tangere Men can be content to have other sins declaimed against but if a Minister put his Finger upon the sore and toucheth upon one special sin then igne micant oculi they are enraged and spit the Venome of Malice 2. That sin which a Mans heart runs out most to and he is most easily captivated by that is the Dalilah in the Bosom One Man is overcome with wantonness another by worldliness 't is a sad thing a Man should be so bewitched by a beloved sin that if it ask him to part with not only half the kingdom but the whole Kingdom of heaven he must part with it to gratify that Lust. 3. That sin which doth most trouble a Man and fly in his Face in an hour of sickness and distress that is the sin he hath allowed himself in and is his complexion sin When Ioseph's Brethren were distressed their sin in selling their Brother came into their Remembrance Gen. 42.21 We were verily guilty concerning our Brother c. So when a Man is upon his sick-bed and Conscience shall say thou hast been guilty of such a sin the sin of slandring or uncleanness Conscience reads a Man a sad Lecture it affrights him most for one sin that is the Complection sin 4. That sin which a Man is loathest to part with that is the endeared sin Iacob could of all his Sons most hardly part with Benjamin Gen. 42.36 Will ye take Benjamin away So saith the Sinner this and that Sin I have left but must Benjamin go too must I part with this delightful sin that goes to the heart as it is with a castle that hath several Forts about it the first and second Fort are yeilded but when it comes to the main Castle the Governour will rather fight and dye then yeild that So a Man may suffer some of his Sins to be demolished but when it comes to one that is like the taking of the Castle he will never yeild to part with that surely that is the Master-sin take heed especially of this sin the strength of sin lies in the beloved sin This is like an humour striking to the heart which brings Death I have read of a Monarch that being pursued by the Enemy he threw away the Crown of Gold on his head that he might run the faster So that sin which thou didst wear as a Crown of Gold throw it away that thou maiest run the faster to the Kingdom of heaven O if you would not lose Glory mortify the beloved sin set it as Vriah in the Fore-front of the battle to be slain by plucking out this right eye you will see the better to go to heaven 10. If you would not fall short of the kingdom of heaven take heed of inordinate Pashion many a Ship hath been lost in a storm and many a Soul hath been lost in a storm of unruly Passions Every Member of the Body is infected with sin as every Branch of Wormwood is bitter but the Tongue is full of deadly poyson Iam. 3.8 Some care not what they say in their Passion they will censure slander wish evil to others how can Christ be in the heart when the Devil hath taken possession of the tongue Passion disturbs reason it is brevis insania a short Frenzy Ionah in a Passion flies out against God Ionah 4.9 I do well to be angry to the death What to be angry with God and to justify it I do well to be angry the Man was not well in his Wits Passion unfits for Prayer 1 Tim. 2.8 I will therefore that Men pray lifting up holy hands without Wrath He that prays in wrath may lift up his hands in Prayer but he doth not lift up holy hands Water when it is hot soon boils over so when the heart is heated with Anger it soon boils over in fiery passionate Speeches Some curse others in their Passion They whose tongues are set on fire let them take heed that they do not one day in Hell desire a drop of water to cool their tongue O if you would not miss of the heavenly kingdom beware of giving way to your unbridled Passions some say words are but wind but they are such a wind as may blow them to Hell 11. If you would not fall short of the heavenly kingdom beware of too much indulging the sensual Appetite Rom. 13.14 Make not Provision for the flesh the Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make Provision signifies to be Caterers for the flesh Phil. 3.19 Whose God is their Belly The Throat is a slippery place Iudas received the Devil in the Sop and often the Devil slides down in the Liquor Excess in Meat and Drink clouds the Mind choakes good Affections provokes Lust many a Man digs his own Grave with his Teeth the Heathen could say magnus sum ad mojora natus quam ut sim corporis mei mancipium Sen. He was higher born then to be a slave to his Body To pamper the Body and neglect the Soul is to feed the Slave and to starve the Wife Take such a proportion of food as may recruit Nature not surfeit it Excess in things lawful hath lost many the kingdom of heaven A Bee may suck a little honey from the leaf but put it in a Barrel of honey and it is drowned to suck temperately from the Creature God allows but excess ingulphs Men in Perdition 12. If you would not fall short of the Kingdom of Heaven take heed of injustice in your dealings defrauding lies in two things First mixing Commodities as if one mix bad Wheat with good and sell it for pure Wheat this is to defraud Isa. 1.22 Thy Wine is mixed with Water Second Giving scant Measure Amos 5.8 Making the Ephah small Ephah was a Measure which the Iews used in selling they made the Ephah small they scarce gave measure I wish this be not the sin of many Hos. 12.7 He is a Merchant the
boast what we will do to morrow The Apostle seems in the Text to meet with them by way of Answer Do ye know all this Then the greater is your Sin that you do it not To him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is Sin I shall only explain this Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to him it is Sin that is it is an heinous Sin it is Sin with a witness every infirmity every thing that falls short of the Rule is Sin much more that which contradicts the Rule this man's Sin hath an Emphasis it is a crimson Sin and it shall have a greater punishment He that knew his Master's Will and did it not shall be beaten with many stripes Luke 12.47 If he that sins ignorantly be damned then he that sins knowingly shall be double damned 1. Doct. implied That we ought to know to do good know our Duty 2. That we ought not only to know to do good but to do it 3. That he that knoweth to do good and doth it not is of all others most guilty 1. Doct. implied That we ought to know to do good we ought to be well informed of those things which are to be done by us in order to Salvation The Word written is a Rule of Knowledge and the Word preached is a Commentary upon the Word written and both of them are to enrich our understanding and to nurse us up in the knowledge of that which is good The Reasons why we should know to do good are 1. Knowledge is our Lamp and Star to guide us in the Truth It shews us what we are to do and what we are to leave undone If we do not know that which is good we can never practise it Without Knowledge we cannot do any thing in Religion aright we offer up the Blind we cannot give God a reasonable Sacrifice He that doth not know his Trade is like to make but bad Work of it 2. Knowledge is the Foundation of all Grace Every Grace borrows its Light from this Lamp it is the radical Vertue it is the Seed out of which the Flower of Grace grows it ushers in Faith They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee Psal. 9.10 Knowledge carries the Torch before Faith A blind Faith is as bad as a dead Faith It inflames Love Phil. 1.9 This I pray that your Love may abound yet more and more in Knowledge The Knowledge of Christ's Beauty enticeth our Love it breeds Perseverance it is like the Mariner's Lanthorn to direct the Ship and as the Anchor that holds it steddy in Storms and Tempests The Apostle joyns these two together unlearned and unstable 2 Pet. 3.16 Such as are unlearned will be unstable 3. The chief Work in Conversion consists in Knowledge Rom. 12.2 Be ye transformed by the renewing of your Mind The Mind being renewed the Man is transformed The first thing in the Creation was Light so in Conversion the first thing is Illumination The first part of God's Image consists in Knowledge Col. 3.10 The first thing a Limner draws in a Picture is the Eye so the first thing God draws in the Soul is the Eye of Knowledge Psal 51.6 In the hidden part thou shal● make me to know Wisdom 4. There is nothing in Religion though never so excellent can do us good without Knowledge The Blessed Sacrament which is one of the highest Ordinances yet if we come to it without Knowledge it can do us no good What Benefit can he receive that is not able to discern the Lord's Body If one come to a Physick Garden and knows not the Nature of the Herbs he may gather Poison instead of the Physical Herb as he who went into the Field and gathered wild Gourds and then there was Death in the Pot 2 Kings 4.39 So if one understand not the Mystery of the Lord's Supper there is Death in the Cup he eats and drinks his own Damnation Vse See how necessary it is to get the knowledge of what is good It ushers in Salvation 1 Tim. 2.4 We must know to do good before we can do it Omne Peccatum fundatur in ignorantia Ignorance of God is the cause of all Sin Ier. 9.3 They proceed from evil to evil and know not me saith the Lord. Ignorance of God damns Hos. 4.6 My People are destroyed for want of Knowledge 'T is sad to be ignorant in Gospel-times to be blind in the Sun How many go to Hell blind-fold And which is worse not only nescire but nolle scire they do not only not know Good but they are not willing to know Ier. 9.6 They refuse to know me saith the Lord. II. Doct. That we ought not only to know to do Good but to do it This the Apostle implies To him that knows to do good and doth it not he implies that he who knows to do Good should do it The End of Knowledge is Practice Search from one end of the Bible to the other and you will find that it is the practick part of Religion is chiefly intended The Crown is not set upon the Head of Knowledge but Practice Rev. 22.14 Blessed are they that do his Commandments that they may have right to the Tree of Life The Eye is to direct the Foot Knowledge is the Eye that is to direct the Foot of Obedience Vse 1. It shews us wherein most Christians are defective in the Times of Gospel viz. In the doing part of Religion they know how to do Good but do it not They have good Eye-sight but are lame on their Feet they are like Rachel beautiful in regard of Knowledge but barren We are like our first Parents greedy of the Tree of Knowledge Knowledge is an Ornament and People love to hang this Jewel on their Ear but though they know what they ought to do yet they do it not They know they should abstain from evil and pursue Holiness they know to do Good but do it not 1. They know they should abstain from evil They know they should not swear Matth. 5.34 Swear not all yet they do it they are more free of their Oaths than their Alms. They know uncleanness to be a Sin it wastes the Body wounds the Conscience blots the Name damns the Soul Gal. 5.19 Yet they will go on in that Sin and for a Cup of Pleasure drink a Sea of Wrath. They know Drunkenness to be a Sin it doth brutifie them take away their Reason they cannot think to go reeling to Heaven God is brewing a Cup for the Drunkard Rev. 16.19 The Cup of the Wine of the fierceness of his Wrath Wormwood-Wine yet he will not leave his drunken Fits Men know that rash censuring is a Sin Iam. 4.11 Speak not evil one of another Brethren Yet they are guilty of this they will not swear but they will slander and speak to the prejudice of others They can never make them Recompence for this No Physician can heal the Wounds of the