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A39663 The fountain of life opened, or, A display of Christ in his essential and mediatorial glory wherein the impetration of our redemption by Jesus Christ is orderly unfolded as it was begun, carryed on, and finished by his covenant-transaction, mysterious incarnation, solemn call and dedication ... / by John Flavell ... Flavel, John, 1630?-1691. 1673 (1673) Wing F1162; ESTC R20462 564,655 688

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another body to be raised instead of this it would not be a Resurrection but a Creation for non Resurrectio dici poterit ubi non resurgit quod cecidit That can't be call'd a Resurrection where one thing falls and another thing rises as Gregory long since pertinently observed Secondly His body was raised not by a word of power from the Father but by his own spirit So will ours Indeed the power of God shall go forth to unburrough sinners and fetch them forcibly out of their Graves but the Resurrection of the Saints is to be effected another way as I opened but now to you Even by his spirit which now dwelleth in them That very spirit of Christ which effected their spiritual Resurrection from sin shall effect their corporal Resurrection also from the Grave Thirdly His body was raised first he had in this as well as in other things the preheminence so shall the Saints in respect of the wicked have the preheminence in the Resurrection 1 Thes. 4.16 The dead in Christ shall rise first They are to attend the Lord at his coming and will be knockt up ●ooner than the rest of the world to attend on that service As the Sheriff with his men go for●h to meet the Judge before the Jaylor brings forth his prisoner Fourthly Christs body was marvelously improved by the Resurrection and so will ours It fell in weakness but was raised in power no more capable of sorrows pains and dishonours In like manner our bodies are sown in weakness but raised in strength sown in dishonour raised in glory Sown natural bodies raised spiritural bodies as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 15.43 44. Spiritual bodies not properly but Analogically No distempers hang about glorified bodies nor are they thence forth subject to any of those natural necessities to which they are now tyed There are no flaws defects or deformities in the children of the Resurrection What members are now defective or deformed will then be restored to their perfect being and beauty for if the universal death of all parts be rescinded by the Resurrection how much more the partial Death of any single member As Turtullian speaks and from thence forth they are free from the Law of mortality they can die no more Luk. 20 35 36. Thus shall they be improved by their Resurrection Fifthly To conclude Christs body was raised from the Dead to be glorified and crowned with honour Oh it was a joyful day to him and so will the Resurrection of the Saints be to them the day of the gladness of their hearts It will be said to them in that morning awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust as Isa. 26.19 O how comfortable will be the meeting betwixt the glorified soul and its new raised body Much more comfortable than that of Iacobs and Iosephs after twenty years absence Gen. 46.29 Or that of Davids with Jonathan when he came out of the Cave to him 1 Sam. 20.41 Or that of the Father of the prodigal with his Son who was dead and is alive was lost and is found As he speaks Luk. 15. And there are three things will make it so First The gratifications of the Soul by the satisfaction of its natural appetite of union with its own body For even glorified souls in heaven have such an appetition and desire of re-union Indeed the Angels who are pure spirits as they never h●d union with so they have no inclination to matter but souls are otherwise tempered and disposed We are all sensible of its affection to the body now in its compounded state we feel the tender care it hath for the body the sympathy with it and loathness to be separated from it It 's said 1 Cor. 5.6 To be at home in the body And had not God implanted such an inclination to this its Tabernacle in it it would not have paid that due respect it ows the body while it inhabited in it nor have regarded what became of it when it left it This inclination remains still with it in heaven it reckons not it self compleatly happy till its old dear Companion and partner be with it and to that sence some understand those words Iob 14.14 All the daies of my appointed time i. e. of the time appointed ●or my body to remain in the Grave will I wait till my change viz. that which will be made by the Resurrection come for it 's manifest enough he speaks there of the Resurrection Now when this its inclination to its own body its longings and hankerings after it are gratified with a sight and enjoyment of it again oh what a comfortable meeting will this make it Especially if we consider Secondly The excellent temper and state in which they shall meet each other For as the body shall be raised with all the improvements and endownments imaginable which may render it amiable and every way desireable so the soul comes down immediatly from God out of Heaven shining in its holiness and glory It comes perfumed out of those Ivory Palaces with a strong scent of Heaven upon it And thus it re-enters its body and animates it again But Thirdly And principally that wherein the chief joy of this meeting consists is the end for which the glorified soul comes down to quicken and repossess it Namely to meet the Lord and ever to be with the Lord. To receive a full reward for all the labours and services it performed to God in this world This must needs make that day a day of Triumph and Exaltation It comes out of the grave as Ioseph out of his prison to be advanced to highest honour O do but imagine what an extasie of Joy and ravishing pleasure it will be for a soul thus to resume its own body and say as it were unto it come away my dear my ancient friend who servedst and sufferedst with me in the world come along with me to meet the Lord in whose presence I have bee ever since I parted with thee Now thy bountiful Lord hath remembred thee also and the day of thy glorification is come Surely it will be a joyful awaking For do but imagine what a Joy it is for dear friends to meet after long separation how do they use to give demonstrations of their love and delight in each other by Embraces Kisses Tears c. Or frame but to your selves a notion of perfect health when a sprightly vivacity runs through every part and the spirits do as it were dance before us when we go to any business Especially to such a business as the business of that day will be to receive a Crown and a Kingdom Do but imagine then what a Sun-shine morning this will be and how the pains and agonies cold sweats and bitter groans at parting will be recompenced by the joy of such a meeting And thus I have shewed you briefly the certainty of Christs Resurrection the nature and properties of it the threefold influence it hath on the
can command or open the heart We may stand and knock at mens hearts till our own ake but no opening till Christ come He can fit a key to all the cross wards of the will and with sweet efficacy open it and that without any force or violence to it These things are carried in this part of his office Consisting in opening the heart Which was the first thing propounded for explication Secondly In the next place let us see by what acts Jesus Christ performs this work of his and what way and method he takes to open the heart of Sinners And there are two principal ways by which Christ opens the understandings and hearts of men viz. By His word And spirit First by his word to this end was Paul commissionated and sent to preach the Gospel Act. 26.18 To open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God The Lord can if he pleases accomplish this immediately but though he can do it he will not do it ordinarily without means because he will honour his own institutions Therefore you shall observe that when Lydia's heart was to be opened there appeared unto Paul a man of Macedonia who prayed him saying come over into Macedonia and help us Act. 19.9 God will keep up the reputation of his ordinances among men And though he hath not tyed himself yet he hath tyed us to them Cornelius must send for Peter God can make the earth produce corn as it did at first without cultivation and labour but he that shall now expect it in the neglect of means may perish for want of bread Secondly But the ordinances in themselves cannot do it as I noted before and therefore Jesus Christ hath sent forth the Spirit who is his Pro Rex his vicegerent to carry on this work upon the hearts of his Elect. And when the Spirit comes down upon Souls in the administration of the ordinances he effectually opens the heart to receive the Lord Jesus by the hearing of faith He breaks in upon the understanding and conscience by powerful convictions and compunctions so much that word Iohn 16.8 imports he shall convince the world of Sin Convince by clear demonstration such as inforces assent so that the Soul can not but yeeld it to be so And yet the door of the heart is not opened till he have also put forth his power upon the will and by a sweet and secret efficacy overcome all it's reluctations and the Soul be made willing in the day of his power When this is done the heart is opened Saving light now shines in it and this light set up by the Spirit in the Soul is First a new light in which all things appear far otherwise than they did before The name of Christ and Sin the word Heaven and Hell have an other sound in that mans ears than formerly they had When he comes to read the same Scriptures which possibly he had read an hundred times before he wonders he should be so blind as he was to over look such great weighty and concerning things as he now beholds in them and saith where were mine eyes that I could never see these things before Secondly It is a very affecting light A light that hath heat and powerful influences in it which makes deep impressions on the heart Hence they whose eyes the great Prophet opens are said to be brought out of darkness into his marvelous light 1 Pet. 2.9 The Soul is greatly affected with what it sees The beams of light are contracted and twisted together in the mind and being reflected on the heart and affections soon cause them to smoak and burn Did not our hearts burn within us whilst he talked with us and opened to us the Scriptures Thirdly And it is a growing light Like the light of the morning which shines more and more unto a perfect Day Prov. 4.18 When the Spirit first opens the understanding he doth not give it at once a full sight of all truths or a full sence of the power sweetness and goodness of any truth but the Soul in the use of means grows up to a greater clearness day by day It 's knowledge grows extensively in measure and intensively in power and efficacy And thus the Lord Jesus by his Spirit opens the understanding Now the use of this follows in 5. practical deductions Inference 1. If this be the work and office of Jesus Christ to open the understandings of men Hence we infer the misery that lyes upon those men whose understandings to this day Iesus Christ hath not opened Of whom we may say as it is Deut. 29.4 To this day Christ hath not given them eyes to see Natural blindness whereby we are deprived of the light of this world is sad but spiritual blindness is much more sad See how dolefully their case is represented 2 Cor. 4.3 4. But if our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost whose eyes the God of this world hath blinded lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the image of God should shine unto them He means a total and final concealment of the saving power of the word from them Why what if Jesus Christ withhold it and will not be a Prophet to them what is their condition truly no better than lost men It is hid 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to them that are to perish or be destroyed This blindness like the covering of the face or tying the handkerchief over the eyes is in order to their turning off into Hell More particularly because the point is of deep concernment let us consider First the Iudgement inflicted and that 's spiritual blindness A sore misery indeed Not anuniversal ignorance of all truths O no in natural and moral truths they are often times acute and sharpe sighted men but in that part of knowledge which wrape up eternal life Iohn 17.2 there they are utterly blinded As it 's said of the Iews upon whom this misery lies that blindness in part is happened to Israel They are learned and knowing persons in other matters but they know not Jesus Christ there is the grand and sad defect Secondly the subject of this Judgement the mind which is the eye of the soul. If it were but upon the body it would not be so considerable this falls immediately upon the soul the noblest part of man and upon the mind the highest and noblest faculty of the soul whereby we understand think and reason This in Scripture is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spirit The intellectual rational faculty which Philosophers call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leading directive faculty which is to the soul what the natural eye 〈◊〉 to the body Now the soul being the most active and restless thing in the world always working and its leading directive power blind Judge what a sad and dangerous state such a soul is in Just like a fiery high metled
how apt are we to regret at providences as if it had no conducency at all to the glory of God or to our good Exod. 5.22 Yea to limit providence to our way and time thus the Israelites tempted God and limited the Holy One Psal. 78.20 41. How often also do we unbelievingly distrust providence as though it could never accomplish what we profess to expect and believe Ezek. 37.11 Our bones are dry our hope is lost we are cut off for our part So Gen. 18.13 14. Isai. 40.27 There are but few Abrahams among believers who against hope believed in hope giving glory to God Rom. 4.20 And it is but too common for good men to repine and fret at providence when their wills lusts or humours are crossed by it This was the great sin of Ionah Brethren these things ought not to be so Did you but seriously consider either the design of providence which is to bring about the gratious designs and purposes of God upon you which were laid before this world was Eph. 1.11 or that it is a lifting up of thy wisdom against his as if thou couldst better order thine affairs if thou hadst the conduct and management of them Or that you have to do herein with a great and dreadful God in whose hands you are as the clay in the Potters hand that may do what he will with you and all that is yours without giving you an account of any of his matters Iob 33.13 Or whether providence hath cast others as good by nature as your selves tumbled them down from the top of health wealth honours and pleasures to the bottom of Hell Or Lastly Did you but consider how often it hath formerly baffled and befool'd your selves Made you retract with shame your rash headlong censures of it and enforced you by the sight of its births and issues to confess your folly and ignorance as Asaph did Psal. 73.22 I say if such considerations as these could but have place with you in your troubles and temptations they would quickly mould your hearts into a better and more quiet frame O that I could but perswade you to resign all to Christ. He is a cunning workman as he he is called Prov. 8.30 and can effect what he pleaseth It 's a good rule de operibus Dei non est judicandum ante quintum actum Let God work out all that he intends have but patience till he hath put the last hand to his work and then find fault with it if you can You have heard of the patience of Iob and have seen the end of the Lord. Iam. 5.11 Inference 3. If Christ be Lord and King over the providential Kingdom and that for the good of his people let none that are Christs henceforth stand in a slavish fear of creatures It 's a good note that Grotius hath upon my text It 's a marvailous consolation saith he that Christ hath so great an Empire and that he governs it for the good of his people as an head consulting the good of the body Our Head and Husband is Lord General of all the Hosts of Heaven and Earth No creature can move hand or tongue without his leave or order The power they have is given them from above Ioh. 19.11 12. The serious consideration of this truth will make the feeblest spirit cease trembling and fall a singing Psal. 47.7 The Lord is King of all the earth sing ye praises with understanding that is as some well paraphase it every one that hath understanding of this comfortable truth Hath he not given you abundant security in many express promises that all shall issue well for you that fear him Rom. 8.28 All things shall work together for good to them that love God And Eccles. 8.12 Verily it shall be well with them that fear God even with them that fear before him And suppose he had not yet the very understanding of our relation to such a King should in it self be sufficient security For he is the universal supream absolute meek and merciful victorious and immortal King He sits in glory at the Fathers right hand and to make his seat the easier his enemies are a footstool for him His love to his people is unspeakably tender and fervent He that touches them touches the apple of his eye Zech. And it 's hardly imaginable that Jesus Christ will sit still and suffer his enemies to thrust out his eyes Till this be forgotten the wrath of man is not feared Isai. 51.12 13. He that fears a man that shall die forgets the Lord his Maker he loves you too well to sign any order to your prejudice and without his order none can touch you Inference 4. If the Government of the world be in the hands of Christ then our engaging and entitling of Christ to all our affairs and business is the true and ready way to their success and prosperity if all depend upon his pleasure then sure it 's your wisdom to take him along with you to every action and business It 's no lost time that 's spent in prayer wherein we ask his leave and beg his presence with us And take it for a clear truth that which is not prefaced with prayer will be followed with trouble How easily can Jesus Christ dash all your designs when they are at the very birth and article of execution and break off in a moment all the purposes of your hearts It 's a Proverb among the Papists that Mass and Meat hinder no nan The Turks will pray five times a day how urgent soever their business be Blush you that enterprise your affairs without God I reckon that business as good as done to which we have gotten Christs leave and engaged his presence to accompany us to it Inference 5. Lastly Eye Christ in all the events of providence see his hand in all that befals you whether it be evil or good The works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein Psal. 111.2 How much good might we get by observation of the good or evil that befals us throughout our course First In all the evils of trouble and affliction that befal you eye Jesus Christ in it all And set your hearts to the study of these four things in affliction First Study his Soveraignty and Dominion For he creates and forms them They rise not out of the dust nor do they befal you casually But he raises them up and gives them their commission Jer. 18.11 Behold I create evil and devise a device against you He elects the instrument of your trouble He makes the rod as afflictive as he pleaseth He orders the continuance and end of your troubles And they will not cease to be afflictive to you till Christ say leave off it is enough The Centurion wisely considered this when He told him Luk. 7.8 I have souldiers under me and I say to one go and
unrighteousness And over these Caiphas a head fit for such a body at this time precided And though there was still some face of a Court among them yet their power was now abridged by the Romans that they could not hear and determine judge and condemn in Capital matters as formery For as Iosephus their own Historian informs us Herod in the beginning of his reign took away this power from them and that Scripture seems to confirm it Joh. 18.31 It is not lawful for us to put any man to death And therefore they bring him to Pilates Bar. He also understood him to be a Galilean and Herod being Tetrarch of Galilee and at that time in Ierusalem he is sent to him and by him remitted to Pilate Thirdly As he was at first heard and judged by a Court that had no authority to Judge him so when he stood at Pilates bar he was accused of perverting the Nation and denying tribute to Caesar than which nothing was more notoriously false For as all his Doctrine was pure and heavenly and malice it self could not find a flaw in it so he was alwaies observant of the Laws under which he lived and scrupulous of giving the least just offence to the civil powers Yea he not only paid the Tribute himself though he might have pleaded exemption but charged it upon others as their duty so to do Matth. 22.24 give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars and yet with such palpable untruths is Christ charged Fourthly Yea and what is most abominable and unparallel'd to compass their malitious designs they industriously labour to suborn false witnesses to take away his life not sticking at the grossest perjury and manifest injustice so they might destroy him So you read Matth. 25.59 Now the Chief-Priests and Elders and all the council sought salse witnesses against Iesus to put him to death Abominable wickedness For such men and so many to complot to shed the blood of the innocent by known and studied perjury What will not malice against Christ transport men to Fifthly Moreover the carriage of the Court was most insolent and base towards him during the trial For whilst he stood before them as a prisoner yet uncondemned sometimes they are angry at him for his silence and when he speaks and that pertinently to the point they smite him on the mouth for speaking and scoff at what he speaks To some of their light frivolous and ensnaring questions he is silent not for want of an answer but because he heard nothing worthy of an answer And to fulfil what the Prophet Isaiah had long before predicted of him he was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his mouth He is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb so he opened not his mouth Isai. 53.7 as also to leave us a president when to speak and when to be silent when we for his name sake shall be brought before Governours for such reasons as these he sometimes answers not a word and then they are ready to condemn him for a mute Answerest thou nothing saith the High-Priest what is it that these witness against thee Matth. 26.62 hearest thou not how many things they witness against thee saith Pilate Matth. 27.13 And when he makes his defence in words of truth and soberness they smite him for speaking Jo● 18.22 And when he had thus spoken one of the Officers which stood by stroke Iesus with the palm of his hand saying answerest thou the High-Priest so And what had he spoken to exasperate them Had he spoken impertinently Not at all What he said was but this when they would have had him insnare himself with his own lips Iesus answered I spake openly in the world I ever taught in the Synagogue and in the Temple whither the Iews alwaies resort and in secret have I said nothing Why askest thou me ask them that heard me behold they know what I said q. d. I am not obliged to accuse and ensnare my self but you ought to proceed secundum allegata probata according to what is alledged and proved Did he deserve a blow on his mouth for this O who but himself could have so patiently digested such abuses under all this he stands in perfect innocency and patience making no other return to that wretch that smote him but this if I have spoken evil bear witness of the evil but if well why smitest thou me Sixthly Lastly To instance in no more He is condemned to die by that very mouth which had once and again professed he found no fault in him He had heard all that could be alledged against him and saw it was a perfect piece of malice and envy When they urge Pilate to proceed to sentence him why faith he what evil hath he done Matth. 27.23 nay in the preface to the very sentence it self he acknowledges him to be a just person Matth. 27.24 When Pilate saw he could prevail nothing but that rather a tumult was made he took water and washed his hands before the multitude and said I am innocent of the blood of this just person see ye to it Here the innocency of Christ brake out like the Sun wading out of a cloud convincing the conscience of his Judge that he was just and yet he must give sentence on him for all that to please the people Inference 1. Was Christ thus used when he stood before the great Council the Scribes and Elders of Israel then surely great men are not alwaies wise neither do the aged understand Iudgement Job 32.9 Here were many great men many aged men many politick men in Council but not one wise or good man among them In this Council were men of parts and learning men of great abilities and by so much the more pernicious and able to do mischief Wickedness in a great man in a learned man is like poyson given in wine which is the more operative and deadly Christs greatest enemies were such as these Heathen Pilate had more pity for him than superstitious Caiphas Luther tells us that his greatest adversaries did not rise out of the Ale-houses or Brothel-houses but out of Monasteries Convents and Religious-houses Inference 2. Hence also we learn That though we are not obliged to answer every captious idle or ensnaring question yet we are bound faithfully to own and confess the truth when we are solemnly called thereunto It 's true Christ was sometimes silent and as a deaf man that heard not but when the question was solemnly put art thou the Christ The Son of the Blessed Iesus said I am Mark 14.61 62. He knew that answer would cost his life and yet he dare not deny it On this account the Apostle saith he witnessed a good confession before Pontius Pilate I Tim. 6.13 Herein Christ hath ruled out the way of our duty and by his own example as well as precept obliged us to a sincere confession of
and unpattern'd meekness of Christ supporting such a burden with such evenness and steadiness of spirit Christian patience or the grace Patience is an ability or power to suffer hard and heavy things according to the will of God It is a power and a glorious power that strengthens the suffering Soul to bear It is our passive fortitude Col. 1.11 Strengthened with all might according to the glorious power unto all patience and long suffering with Ioyfulness i. e. strengthened with a might or power corresponding to the glorious power of God himself Or such as might appear to be the proper impress and image of that divine power which is both its principle and pattern For the Patience which God exercises towards sinners that daily wrong and load him is call'd power and great power Num. 14.17 Let the power of my Lord be great as thou hast spoken saying the Lord is long Suffering forgiving c. Hence it 's observed Prov. 24.10 That the loss or breaking of our patience under adversity argues a decay of strength in the soul. If thou faint in the day of adversity thy strength is small It 's a power or ability in the soul to bear hard heavy and difficult things Such only are the objects of patience God hath several sorts of burdens to impose upon his people Some heavier others lighter Some to be carried but a few hours others many days Others all our days Some more spiritual bearing upon the Soul Some more external touching or punishing the flesh imediatly and the spirit by way of Sympathy And sometimes both sorts are laid on together So they were at this time on Christ. His Soul burdened as deep as it could swim Full of the sence the bitter sence and apprehension of the wrath of God His Body fill'd with tortures In every member and sence grief took up his lodging Here was the highest exercise of Patience It 's a power to bear hard and heavy things according to the Will of God The involving of that respect differs patience the Christian grace from patience the Moral Vertue So the Apostle describes it 1 Pet. 4.19 Let them that suffer according to the will of God c. i. e. who exercise patience gratiously as God would have them And then our patience is as Christs most exactly was according to the will of God when it is as extensive as intensive and as protensive as God requires it to be First When it is as extensive as God would have it So was Christs patience It was a patience that stretched and extended it self to all and every trouble and affliction that came upon him Troubles came upon him in troops in multitudes It 's said Psal. 40.12 Innumerable evils have compassed me about Yet he found patience enough to receive them all It is not so with us Our patience is often worn out And like fick people we fancy if we were in another Chamber or Bed it would be better If it were any other trouble than this we could bear it Christ had no exceptions at any burden his Father would lay on His patience was as large as his trouble and that was large indeed Secondly It 's then according to the will of God when it is as intensive as God reuqires it to be i. e. in the Apostles phrase Iam. 1.4 When it hath it's perfect work or exercise when it 's not only extended to all kinds of troubles but when it works in the highest and most perfect degree And then may patience be said to be perfect as it was in Christ when it is plenum sui prohibens alieni full of it self and exclusive of its opposites Christs patience was full of its self i. e. it included all that belonged to it It was full of submission peace and serenity full of obedience and complacency in his Fathers Will. He was in a perfect calm As a Lamb or Sheep saith the Text that houls not opposes not but is dumb and quiet And as his external behaviour so his internal frame and temper of soul was most serene and cal●● Not one repining thought against God Not one revengeful thought against man once ru●●led his Spirit Father forgive them for they know not what they do was all the hurt he wisht his worst enemies And as it included all that belonged to it so his perfect patience excluded all its opposites No discontents murmurings despondencies had place in his heart So that his patience was a most intensive perfect patience And as it was as extensive and as intensive so it was Thirdly As Pr●tensive as God required it to be i. e. it held out to the end or his ●ryal He did not faint at last His ●roubles did not out-live his patience He indeed was strengthened with all might unto all patience and long-suffering This was the patience of Christ our perfect pattern He had not only patience but Longanimity Thirdly In the last place let us inquire into the grounds and reasons of this his most perfect patience And if you do so you shall find perfect Holiness Wisdom Foreknowledge Faith Heavenly mindedness and obedience at the root of this his perfect Patience First This admirable patience and meekness of Christ was the fruit and off-spring of his perfect Holiness His nature was free from those corruptions that ours groan and labour under otherwise he could never have carryed it at this rate Take the meek Moses who excell'd all others in that grace and let him be tryed in that very grace wherein he excells and see how unadvisedly he may speak with his Lips Psal. 106.33 Take a Iob whose famous patience is trumpeted and resounded over all the world ye have heard of the patience of Iob. And let him be tryed by outward and inward troubles meeting upon him in one day and even a Iob may curse the day when he was born Envy revenge discontent despondencies are weeds naturally springing up in the corrupt soil of our sinful natures I saw a little Child grow pale with envy said Austin And the Spirit that is in us lusteth unto envy saith the Apostle Iam. 4.5 The principles of all these evils being in our natures they will shew themselves in time of Tryal The old man is fretful and passionate But it was otherwise with Christ. His nature was like a pure Christal Glass full of pure Fountain water which though shaken and agitated never so much cannot shew because it hath no dregs The Prince of this world cometh and hath nought in me Joh. 14.30 No principle of corruption for a handle to temptation Our High Priest was holy harmless undefil'd separate from sinners Heb. 7.26 Secondly The Meekness and Patience of Christ proceeded from the infinite wisdom with which he was filled The wiser any man is the more patient he is Hence meekness the fruit is denominated from patience the root that bears it Iam. 3.13 The meekness of wisdom And anger is lodged in folly as its proper
that was mainly in two particulars viz. the begging and perfuming of the body His body could not be buried till by begging his friends had obtain'd it is as a favour from his Judge The dead body was by Law in the power of Pilate who adjudged it to death as the bodies of those that are hanged are in the power of the Judge to dispose of them as he pleases And when they had gotten it from Pilate they winde it in fine linen cloaths with Spices But what need of Spices to perfume that blessed body His own Love was perfume enough to keep it sweet in the remembrance of his people to all generations However by this they will manifest as they are able the dear affection they have for him The bearers that carried his body to its Grave Ioseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus two secret Disciples They were both men of estate and honour None could imagine that these would have appeared at a time of so much danger with such boldness for Christ. That ever they would have gone openly and boldly to manifest their love to Christ when dead who were afraid to come to him except by night when he was living But now a spirit of Zeal and courage is come upon them when those that made greater and more open confessions of him are gone Thirdly The attendants who followed the Hearse were the women that followed him out of Galilee Among whom the two Marys and the Mother of Zebedes children whom Mark calls Salome are only named Fourthly The Grave or Sepulcher where they laid him It was in Iosephs new Tomb which he had prepared in the garden near unto Golgotha where our Lord died Two things are remarkable about this Tomb. It was anothers Tomb and it was a new Tomb. It was anothers For as he had not an house of his own wherein to lay his head whilst he lived so he had not a Tomb of his own to lay his body in when dead As he lived in other mens houses so he lay in another mans Tomb. And it was a new Tomb wherein never man was yet laid Doubtless there was much of providence in this for had any other been laid there before him it might have proved an occasion both to shake the Credit and slur the glory of his Resurrection by pretending it was some former body and not the Lords that rose out of it In this also divine providence had a respect to that Prophesie Esa. 53.9 Which was to be fulfill'd at this funeral He made his Grave with the rich because he had done no violence c. Fifthly The disposition of the body in that Tomb. 'T is true there is no mention made of the groans and tears with which they laid him in his Sepulcher yet we may well presume they were not wanting in plentiful expressions of their sorrow that way For as they wept and smote their breasts when he dyed Luk. 23.48 So do doubt they laid him with melting hearts and flowing eyes in his Tomb when dead Sixthly And lastly the last remarkable particular in the Text is the solemnity with which his funeral rites were performed and they were all suitable to his humbled state It was indeed a funeral as decently order'd as the straights of time and state of things would then permit but there was nothing of pomp or outward state at all observed Few marks of honour set by men upon it Only the heavens adorned it with diverse miraculous works which in their proper place will be spoken to Thus was he laid in his Grave where he continued for three incompleat daies and nights in the territories of Death in the Land of darkness and forgetfulness Partly to correspond with Ionah his Type and partly to ascertain the world of the reality of his Death Whence our observation is DOCT. That the dead Body of our Lord Iesus Christ was decently interr'd by a small number of his own Disciples and continued in the state of the dead for a time This Observation containing matter of fact and that so plainly and faithfully delivered to us by the Pens of the several Evangelists we need do no more to prepare it for our use than to satisfie these two inquiries why had Christ any funeral at all since his Resurrection was so soon to follow his Death And what manner of funeral Christ had First Why had Christ any funeral at all since he was to rise again from the dead within that space of time that other men commonly have to lie by the wall before their interment and had it continued longer unburied it could see no corruption having never been tainted by sin Why though there was no need of it at all upon that account that a funeral is needful for other bodies yet there were these four weighty ends and Reasons of it Reason 1. First It was necessary Christ should be buried to ascertain his death else it might have been looked upon as a Cheat. For as they w●re ready enough to impose so gross a Cheat upon the world at his Resurrection That the D●sciples came by night and stole him away much more would they have denied at once the reality both of his death and Resurrection had he not been so perfumed and interred but this cut off all pretentions For in this kind of embalming his mouth ears nostrils were all filled with their Spices and odours Bound up in Linen and laid long enough in the Tomb to give full assurance to the world of the certainty of of his death So that there could be no latent principle of life in him Now since our eternal life is wrapt up in Christs death it can never be too firmly established To this therefore we may well suppose providence had special respect in his burial and the manner of it Reason 2. Secondly He must be buried to fulfill the Types and Prophesies that went before His abode in the Grave was prefigured by Ionahs abode three daies and nights in the belly of the Whale Matth. 12.40 So must the Son of man be three daies and threee nights in the heart of the earth Yea the Prophet had described the very manner of his funeral and long before he was born foretold in what kind of Tomb his body should be laid Isa. 53.9 He made his Grave with the wicked and with the rich in his death Pointing by that expression at this Tomb of Ioseph who was a rich man and the Scriptures cannot be broken Reason 3. Thirdly He must be buried to compleat his humiliation this being the lowest step he could possibly descend in his abased state They have brought me to the dust of Death Lower he could not be laid and so low he must lay his blessed head else he had not been humbled to the lowest Reason 4. Fourthly But the great end and reason of his interment was the conquering of Death in its own dominion and territories which victory over the Grave furnisheth the Saints with that
triumphant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 song of deliverance 1 Cor. 15.55 O Death where is thy Sting O Grave where is thy De●truction Our Graves would not be so sweet and comfortable to us when we come to lie down in them if Jesus had not layen there before us and for us Death is a Dragon the Grave its Den a place of dread and terror but Christs goes into its Den there grapples with it and for ever overcomes it Disarms it of all its terror and not only makes it cease to be enemical but to become exceeding beneficial to the Saints A bed of rest and a perfumed bed They do but go into Christs bed where he lay before them For these ends he must be buried Secondly Next let us inquire what manner of funeral Christ had And if we intently observe it we shall find many remarkable properties in it First We shall find it to be a very obscure and private funeral Here was no external pomp or gallantry Christ affected it not in his life and it was no way suitable to the ends and manner of his death Humiliation was designed in his death And state is inconsistent with such an end Besides he dyed upon the Tree and persons so dying don 't use to have much ceremony and state at their funerals Three things shew it to be a very humble and obscure funeral as to what concerned outward glory with which the great ones of the earth are usually interred For First The dead body of the Lord was not brought from his own house as other mens commonly are but from the Tree They beg'd it of his Judge As who should say go bring the Corps from Tyburn Had they not obtained this favour from Pilate it must have been buried in Golgotha It had been tumbled into a pit digged under the Cross. Secondly As it was first beg'd then buried so it was attended with a very poor train A few sorrowful women followed the Bier Other men are accompanied to their Graves by their Relations and Friends The Disciples were all scattered from him Affraid to owne him dying and dead Thirdly And these few that were resolved to give him a funeral are forced by reason of the straights of time to do it in shuffling haste Time was short they take the next sepulcher they can get and hurry him away that evening into it For the preparation for the Passover was at hand This was the obscure ●uneral which the body of the Lord had Thus was the Prince of the Kings of the earth who hath the Keys of Death and Hell laid into his Grave Secondly Yet though men could bestow little honour upon it the heavens bestowed several marks of honour upon it Adorn'd it with divers Miracles which wiped off the reproach of his dea●h from him These Miracles were antecedent to his interment or concomitants of it First There was that extraordinary and preternatural Eclipse of the Sun Such an Eclipse as was never seen since it first shone in heaven The Sun fainted at the sight of such a ruful spectacle and cloathed the whole heaven in black The sight of this caused a great Philosopher who was then far from the place where this unparallel'd Tragedy was acting to cry out upon the sight of it either the God of nature now suffers or the frame of the world is now dissolved The same Dionysius writing to Apollophanes a Philosopher who would not embrace the Christian Faith thus goes about to convince him What thinkest thou saith he of the Eclipse when Christ was Crucified Were we not both of us then at Heliopolis and standing in the same place did we not see the Moon in a new manner following the Sun and not in the time of conjunction but from the ninth hour until the evening by a reason unknown in nature directly opposite to the Sun Didst thou not then being greatly terrified say unto me O my Dionysius what strange commutations of the heavenly bodies are these Such a preternatural Eclipse is remembred in no other History For it was not in time of conjunction but opposition the Moon being then at full From the sixth to the ninth hour the Sun and Moon were together in the midst of heaven but in the evening she appeared in the East her own place opposite to the Sun And then miraculously returning from East to West did not pass by the Sun and set in the West before it but kept it company for the space of three hours and then returned to the East again And whereas in all other natural Eclipses the Eclipse alwaies begins on the western part of the body of the Sun and that part is also first cleared it was quite contrary in this for though the Moon were opposite to the Sun and distant from it the whole breadth of heaven yet with a miraculous swiftness it overtook the Sun and darkned first the Eastern part of it and soon prevailed over its whole body Which caused darkness over all the the Land that is say some over the whole Earth or as others over the whole Land of Iewry Or as others over the whole Horizon and all places of the same altitude and latitude Which is most probable Secondly And as Christs funeral was adorned with such a miraculous Eclipse which put the heavens and earth into a mourning so the rocks did rend the vail of the Temple rent in twain from top to bottom The graves opened and the dead bodies of many Saints arose and went into the holy City and were seen of many The rending of the Rocks was a sign of Gods fierce indignation Nahum 1.6 And a discovery of the greatness of his power shewing them what they deserved and what he could do to them that had committed this horrid fact though he rather chose at this time to shew the dreadful effects of it upon inanimate Rocks than Rocky hearted sinners But especially it served to convince the world that it was none other but the Son of God that dyed Which was farther manifested by these concomitant Miracles As for the rending in twain of the vail It was a notable Miracle plainly shewing that all ceremonies were now accomplished and abolished No more vails now As also that believers have now most free access into heaven At that very instant when the vail rent the High Priest was officiating in the most holy place and the vail which hid him from the people being rent they might freely see him about his work in the holy of holies A lively Emblem of our High Priest whom now we see by faith in the heavens there performing his intercession work for us The opening of the Graves plainly shew'd the design and end of Christs going into it That it might not have dominion over the bodies of the Saints but being vanquisht and destroyed by Christ le ts go all that are his whom he ransomed from the Grave as a prey out of its paws A Specimen whereof was given in
rose at that time also Yet it was by the vertue of Christs Resurrection that their Graves were opened and their bodies quickned In which respect he saith Ioh. 11.25 when he raised dead Lazarus I am the Resurrection and the life i. e. the principle of life and quickning by which the dead Saints are raised Fourthly And therefore it may be truly affirmed that though some dead Saints were raised to life before the Resurrection of Christ yet that Christ is the first-born from the dead as he is call'd Col. 1.18 For though Lazarus and others were raised yet not by themselves but by Christ. It was by his vertue and power not their own And though they were raised to life yet they died again Death recovered them again but Christ dieth no more Death hath no dominion over him He was the first that opened the womb of the Earth the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preheminence Fifthly But lastly Christ rose as a publick or common person As the first fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15.20 I desire this may be well understood ●or upon this account it is that our Resurrection is secured to us by the Resurrection of Christ and not a Resurrection only but a blessed and happy one for the first fruits both assured and sanctified the whole crop or harvest Now that Christ did rise as a publick person representing and comprehending all the Elect who are called the children of the Resurrection is plain from Eph. 2.6 Where we are said to be risen with or in him So that as we are said to die in Adam who also was a common person as the branches die in the death of the root so we are said to be raised from death in Christ who is the head root and representative of all his Elect seed And why is he called the first-born and first begotten from the dead but with respect to the whole number of the Elect that are to be born from the dead in their time and order also and as sure as the whole harvest follows the first fruits so shall the general Resurrection of the Saints to life eternal follow this birth of the first-born from the dead It shall surely follow it I say and that not only as a consequent follows an antecedent but as an effect follows its proper cause Now there is a three fold causality or influence that Christs Resurrection hath upon the Saints Resurrection of which it is both the meritorious efficient and exemplary cause First The Resurrection of Christ is the meritorious cause of the Saints Resurrection as it compleated his satisfaction and finished his payment and so our Justification is properly assigned to it as before was noted from Rom. 4.25 This his Resurrection was the receiving of the acquittance the cancelling of the bond And had not this been done we had still been in our sins as he speaks 1 Cor. 15.17 And so our guilt had been still a bar to our happy Resurrection But now the price being paid in his Death which payment was finished when he revived and the discharge then received for us now there is nothing lies in bar against our Resurrection to eternal life Secondly As it is the meritorious cause of our Resurrection so so it is the efficient cause of it also For when the time shall come that the Saints shall rise out of the dust they shall be raised by Christ as their head in whom the effective principle of their life is Your life is hid with Christ in God as it is Col. 3.3 As when a man awakes out of sleep the animal spirits seated in the brain being set at liberty by the digestion of those vapours that bound them up do play freely through every part and member of the body so Christ the believers mystical head being quickned the spirit of life which is in him shall be diffused through all his members to quicken them also in the morning of the Resurrection Hence the warm animating dew of Christs Resurrection is said to be to our bodies as the dew of the morning is to the withered languishing plants which revive by it Isa. 26.19 Thy dew is as the dew of Herbs and then it follows the earth shall cast forth her dead So that by the same Faith we put Christs Resurrection into the Premises we may put the believers Resurrection into the Conclusion And therefore the Apostle makes them convertibles reasoning forward from Christs to ours and back again from ours to his 1 Cor. 15.12 13. Which is also the sence of that Scripture Rom. 8.10 11. And if Christ be in you the body indeed is dead because of sin but the spirit is life because of righteousness i. e. though you are really united to Christ by the Spirit yet your bodies must die as well as other mens but your souls shall be presently upon your dissolution swallowed up in life And then it follows vers 11. But if the spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you i. e. though your bodies must die yet they shall live again in the Resurrection and that by vertue of the spirit of Christ which dwelleth in you and is the bond of your mystical union with him your head You shall not be raised as others are by a meer word of power but by the spirit of life dwelling in Christ your head which is a choice prerogative indeed Thirdly Christs Resurrection is not only the meritorious and efficient cause but it is also the exemplary cause or pattern of our Resurrection He being the first and best is therefore the pattern and measure of all the rest So you read Phil. 3.21 Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body Now the Conformity of our Resurrection to Christs stands in the following particulars Christs body was raised substantially the same so will ours His body was raised first so will ours be raised before the rest of the dead His body was wonderfully improved by the Resurrection so will ours His body was raised to be glorified and so will ours First Christs body was raised substantially the same that it was before and so will ours Not another but the same body Upon this very reason the Apostle us●s that idential expression 1 Cor. 15.53 This corruptible must put on incorruption and th● mortal immortality Pointing as it were to his own body when he spake it the same body I say and that not only Specifically the same for indeed no other Species of flesh is so priviledged but the same numerically that very body not a new or another body in its steed So that it shall be both the what it was and the who it was And indeed to deny this is to deny the Resurrection it self For should God prepare
Saints Resurrection and the conformity of ours unto his in these five respects His body rose substantially the same so shall ours His body was raised by the spirit so shall ours Not by the God-head of Christ as his was but by the Spirit who is the bond of our union with Christ. He was raised as the first begotten from the dead so the dead in Christ shall rise first His body was improved by the Resurrection so shall ours From the consideration of all which Inference 1. We Infer That if Christ was thus raised from the dead then death is fairly overcome and smallowed up in Victory Were it not so it had never let Christ escape out of the Grave The prey of the terrible had never been thus rescued out of its paws Death is a dreadful enemy it defies all the Sons and Daughters of Adam None durst cope with this King of terrors but Christ. And he by dying went into the very den of this Dragon fought with it and foiled it in the Grave its own territories and dominions and came off a Conqueror For as the Apostle speaks Acts 2.24 It was impossible it should hold or detain him Never did death meet with its over match before it met with Christ. And he conquering it for us and in our names rising as our representative now every single Saint triumphs over it as a vanquisht enemy 1 Cor. 15.55 O death where is thy Sting O Grave where is thy Victory Thanks be to God who hath given us the Victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. Thus like Ioshua they set the foot of faith upon the neck of that King and with an holy scorn deride its power O death where is thy Sting If it be objected that it 's said 1 Cor. 15.26 The last enemy that is to be destroyed is Death And if so then it should seem the Victory is not yet atchieved and so we do but boast before the Victory It is at hand to reply that the Victory over death obtained by Christs Resurrection is twofold either personal and incompleat or general and compleat He actually overcame it at his Resurrection in his own person perfectly and vertually for us as our head but at the general Resurrection of the Saints which his Resurrection as the first fruits assures them of then it 's utterly vanquisht and destroyed Till then it will exercise some little power over the bodies of the Saints in which respect it 's called the last enemy For sin the chief enemy that let it in that was conquered utterly and eradicated when they died but death holds their bodies in the Grave till the coming of Christ and then it is utterly to be vanquished For after that they can die no more Luk. 20.35 And then shall be brought to pass that saying that is written death is swallowed up in Victory Then and not till then will that conquest be fully compleated in our persons though it be already so in Christs incompleatly in ours and then compleatly and fully for ever For the same word which signifies Victory doth also signifie Perpetuity and in this place a final or perpetual conquest And indeed it drives but a poor trade for present smiting only with its Dart not with its Sting and that but the believers body only and the body but for a time remains under it neither So that there is no reason why a believer should stand in a slavish fear of it Inference 2. Is Christ risen and hath his Resurrection such a potent and comfortable influence into the Resurrection of the Saints Then it is the duty and will be the wisdom of the people of God so to Govern dispose and imploy their bodies as becomes men and women that understand what glory is prepared for them at the Resurrection of the Iust. Particularly First Be not fondly tender of them but imploy and use them for God here How many good duties are lost and spoiled by sinful indulgence to our bodies Alas we are generally more solicitous to live long than to live usefully How many Saints have active vigorous bodies yet God hath little service from them If your bodies were animated by some other souls that love God more than you do and burn with holy Zeal to his service more work would be done for God by your bodies in a day than is now done in a month To have an able healthy body and not use it for God for fear of hurting it is as if one should give you a strong and stately Horse upon condition you must not work or ride him Wherein is the mercy of having a body except it be imployed for God Will not its reward at the Resurrection be sufficient for all the pains you now put it to in his service Secondly See that you preserve the due honour of your bodies Possess them in Sanctification and honour 1 Thes. 4.4 O let not those eyes be now defiled with sin by which you shall see God Those ears be in-lets to vanity which shall hear the Alaleujahs of the blessed God hath designed honour for your bodies O make them not either the instruments or objects of sin There are sins against the body 1 Cor. 6.18 Preserve your bodies from those defilements for they are the Temples of God If any man defile the Temple of God him will God destroy 1 Cor. 3.17 Thirdly Let not the contentment and accomodation of your bodies draw your souls into snares and bring them under the power of Temptations to sin This is a very common case O how many thousands of pretious souls perish eternally for the satisfaction of a vile body for a momen● Their Souls must because their bodies cannot suffer It is recorded to the immortal honour of those worthies in Heb. 11.35 That they accepted not deliverance that they might obtain a better Resurrection They might have had a Temporal Resurrection from death to life from reproach to honour from poverty to riches from pains to pleasure but upon such terms they Judged it not worth acceptance They would not expose their souls to secure their bodies They had the same natural affections that other men have They were made of as tender flesh as we are but such was the care they had of their souls and the hope of a better Resurrection that they listned not to the complaints and whinings of their bodies O that we were all in the same resolutions with them Fourthly Withhold not upon the pretence of the wants your own bodies may be in that which God and conscience bids you to communicate for the refreshment of the Saints whose present necessities require your assistance O be not too indulgent to your own flesh and cruel to others Certainly the consideration of that reward which shall be given you at the Resurrection for every act of Christian Charity is the greatest spur and incentive in the world to it And to that end it 's urged as a motive to Charity Luk. 14.13 14.
When thou makest a feast call the poor the maimed the lame the blind and thou shalt be blessed for they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt be recompensed at the Resurrection of the Iust. It was the opinion of an eminent modern Divine that no man living fully understands and believes that Scripture Matth. 25.40 In as much as ye have done it to one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto me How few Saints would be exposed to daily wants and necessities if that Scripture were but fully understood and believed Inference 3. Is Christ risen from the dead and that as a publick person and representative of believers How are we all concerned then to secure to our selves an interest in Christ and consequently to this blessed Resurrection What consolation would be left in this world if the hope of the Resurrection were taken away 'T is this blesed hope that must support you under all the Troubles of life and in the Agonies of Death The securing of a blessed Resurrection to your selves is therefore the most deep concernment you have in this world And it may be secured to your selves if upon serious heart examination you can discover the following Evidences Evidence 1. First If you are regenerated Creatures brought forth in a new nature to God for we are begotten again to a lively hope by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead Christs Resurrection is the ground-work of our hope And the new birth is our title or evidence of our interest in it So that until our souls are partakers of the spiritual Resurrection from the death of sin we can have no assurance our bodies shall be partakers of that blessed Resurrection to life Blessed and holy saith the Spirit is he that hath part in the first Resurrection on such the second death hath no power Rev. 20.6 Never let unregenerated souls expect a comfortable meeting with their bodies again Rise they shall by Gods terrible Citation at the sound of the last trump but not to the same end that the Saints arise nor by the same principle They to whom the spirit is now a principle of Sanctification to them he will be the principle of a joyful Resurrection See then that you get gratious souls now or never expect glorious bodies then Evid 2. If you be dead with Christ you shall live again by the life of Christ. If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection Rom. 6.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Planted together some refer it to believers themselves Jews and Gentiles are planted together in Christ. So Erasmus believers grow together like branches upon the same root which should powerfully inforce the great Gospel duty of unity among themselves But I would rather understand it with reference to Christ and believers with whom believers are in other Scriptures said to suffer together and be glorified together to die together and live together to be Crucified together and buried together all noting the communion they have with Christ both in his death and in his life Now if the power of Christs death i. e. the mortifying influence of it have been upon our hearts killing their Lusts deading their affections and flatting their appetites to the Creature then the power of his life or Resurrection shall come like the animating dew upon our dead withered bodies to revive and raise them up to live with him in glory Evid 3. If your hearts and affections be now with Christ in Heaven your bodies in due time shall be there also and conformed to his glorious body So you find it Phil. 3.20 21. For our conversation is in heaven from whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his own glorious body The body is here called vile or the body of our vileness Not as God made it but as sin hath marred it Not absolutely and in it self but relatively and in comparison of what it will be in its second edition at the Resurrection Then those scattered bones and dispersed dust like pieces of old broken battered Silver will be new cast and wrought in the best and newest fashion even like to Christs glorious body Whereof we have this evidence that our conversation is already heavenly The temper frame and disposition of our souls is already so therefore the frame and temper of our bodies in due time shall be so Evid 4. If you strive now by any means to attain the Resurrection of the dead no doubt but you shall then attain what you now strive for This was Pauls great ambition that by any means he might attain the Resurrection of the dead Phil. 3.11 He means not simply a Resurrection from the dead for that all men shall attain whether they strive for it or no. But by a metonymy of the Subject for the Ajunct he intends that compleat holiness and perfection which shall attend the state of the Resurrection so it is expounded vers 12. So then if God have raised in your hearts a vehement desire and assiduous endeavour aft●r a perfect freedom from sin and full Conformity to God in the beauties of holiness that very love of holiness your present pantings and tendencies after perfection speaks you to be persons designed for it Evid 5. If you are such as do good in your Generation If you be fruitful and useful men and women in the world you shall have part in this blessed Resurrection Ioh. 5.29 All that are in the Graves shall hear his voice and shall come forth they that have done good unto the Resurrection of Life Now it is not every act materially good that entitles a man to this priviledge but the same requisites that the School-men assign to make a good prayer are also necessary to every good work The person matter manner and end must be good Nor is it any single good act but a series and course of holy actions that is here meant What a spur should this be to us all as indeed the Apostle makes it closing up the Doctrine of the Resurrection with this solemn exhortation 1 Cor. 15. Last with which I also close mine Therefore my beloved brethren be ye stedfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Thanks be to God for his unspeakable Gift The FORTIETH SERMON JOH XX. XVII Iesus saith unto her touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father but go to my Brethren and say unto them I ascend unto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God IN all the former Sermons we have been following Christ through his Humiliation from the time that he left the blessed bosom of his Father and now having finished the whole course of his obedience on