Selected quad for the lemma: prayer_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
prayer_n church_n hand_n imposition_n 2,100 5 10.5630 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Ministers of Error and Schisms Teachers of Heresie and Blasphemy They go before they are sent Jer. 14.14 23.21 they will run before they are bid go But stop we them here in their haste and question we their Commission Dear Brethren ye that are so hasty to be Preachers tell us by what hand are you sent You will say by the Spirits Mission I ask then What is the outward Testimony and Warrant You answer You look not further then the inward call Strange that men dare pretend to a call beyond that of Timothy and Titus yea of Paul and Barnabas who though inwardly called yea extraordinarily immediately yet they had their outward Testimony their Ecclesiastical Warrant Acts 13.2 3. their Apostolical Mission and this by imposition of hands But further Some others there are who will not go but as sent and sent by Ordination too but tell us Dear Brethren by what hands are you ordained by what authority are you sent The former go without Mission you go but is it not by a forged Mission Those usurpe the Office Ministerial in execution do not you in execution and ordination too And where then is the greater guilt of iniquity but in the greater violation of the Ministry Wherefore to give you our Explication full I have three particulars to insist upon First That our Lord Jesus Christ did constitute a Ministry to be perpetuated in the Church Secondly That there is no admission into this Ministry but by imposition of hands in Ordination Thirdly That this admission into the Ministry by imposition of hands in Ordination was * Viz For the space of above 500 years after Christ never in the power of any meer Presbyter And these being proved it will easily appear from what hand to receive Ordination our lawful Mission into the Ministry our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye 1. Our Lord Jesus Christ did constitute a Ministry to be perpetuated in the Church Our Lord and Saviour as it was prophesied of him so it was performed by him the Government was upon his shoulder Isa 9.6 He the founder of Ecclesiastical polity the constitutor of Order and Government in his Church as being our Apostle sent from God our Prophet our great High Priest the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls the Head and King of his Church whose Ministerial Government shall continue 1 Cor. 15.24 till he come to give up the Kingdom unto his Father and God be all in all Now as the Father sent Christ Joh. 20.21 so Christ hath sent his Apostles and sent them to be a standing Ministry by a communicated power not seated in the people but in the Pastors of the Church who are to continue unto the end of the World even to the fulness of Christ and his Church as in the close of my Text and in the Epistle to the Ephesians Eph. 4.11 12 13. is most plain and evident If a Gospel Ministry was not established successive in the Church to what purpose did the Apostles themselves ordain and leave in charge to those Apostolick-men which came after them that they should ordain For so St. Paul left in charge with Titus for Creet and Timothy for Ephesus yea to what purpose hath the Spirit dictated St. Paul penned and the Church preserved the particular instructions who are to be admitted to Ordination if none were to be ordained How frivolous and useless were the Apostles setting down the Deacons and Bishops qualifications 1 Tim. 3. Tit. 1. Rev. 2.1 if they were to receive no Ordination And sure the Angels of those Churches were approved in their Ministry by Christ who held them as Stars in his right hand And that of the Psalmist Psal 45.16 St. Hierom. in loc Instead of thy Fathers shall be thy children St. Hierome applies to the Apostolical prefecture and presidency in Bishops Quia Apostolis à mundo recessis habes pro illis Episcopos filios Because the Apostles as Fathers being dead the Church hath her Bishops as Sons surviving in their stead 2. No admission into this Ministry but by imposition of hands in Ordination We read of Paul and Barnabas Acts 14.23 that they ordained Elders in every Church And for this purpose Tit. 1.5 St. Paul left Titus in Creet that he should ordain Elders in every City And that this Ordination had its outward ceremony of Imposition of hands nothing is more plain from Apostolical practise in Scripture and the continued custom of Christs Church But because men little regard the Churches custom we will wave that to insist upon the Apostolical practice Act. 6.6 Thus those seven persons commonly called the seven Deacons they are ordained to their intended Ministration by the Apostles And how Why by Prayer and Imposition of hands Acts 13.3 Again Paul and Barnabas are separated to the work of the Ministry and how with Fasting and Prayer and laying on of hands Again Timothy is received into the Ministry and though it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by prophecy 1 Tim. 4.14 yet is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the laying on of hands Object 1 But some may say True as to the higher acts and offices of the Ministry as Baptism and the Lords Supper to be admitted to the dispensing of these Ordination may be requisite but not to the Preaching of the Word Answ I answer If Commission and Ordination be required for Baptism much more for Preaching the Word 1 Cor. 1.17 for this St. Pauls prefers before Baptism as being the more honorable and more weighty part of the Ministry And indeed most needful it is that none be admitted to publick Teaching but he that can declare his lawful Call and Ordination seeing upon this depends so very much the truth and peace the life and health the being and the welbeing of the Church yea of Christianity it self For if the office of publick Teaching lie open to all invaders and who pretends to the Spirit may take upon him to Minister the Word it will soon appear what Harvest we shall reap from such Seedsmen what mischiefs and miseries what Heresies and Schisms shall arise from such Teachers whose ignorance and boldness qualifies them for nothing more then Errors and Impieties Such as is the Teaching such will be the Church a Synagogue of Satan if taught by a spirit of Error and the spirit of Error still accompanies the spirit of Pride and a broaching of Heresie attends an invading the Ministry I ask the question then Is Publick Teaching a proper office of the Ministry that it is so sacred Scripture the Churches authority and divine Reason all prove and evidence St. Pauls testimony is plain and full when he tells us of publick offices given by Christ unto the Church Eph. 4.11 12. amongst which are Pastors and Teachers and these For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ Now if
THE PREACHERS Tripartite IN THREE BOOKS THE FIRST To raise DEVOTION in Divine Meditations upon PSALM XXV THE SECOND To Administer COMFORT by Conference with the Soul in particular Cases of Conscience THE THIRD To establish TRUTH and PEACE in several Sermons Against the present Heresies and Schisms By R. Mossom Preacher of Gods Word late at St. Peters Pauls-wharf London Quondam è Col. S. P. C. S. Aug. Hom. 28. in Ezek. 3.19 Si me non audierîtis tamen ego non tacuero liberabo animam meam sed nolo salvus esse sine vobis LONDON Printed by Thomas Newcomb and are to be sold in St. Pauls Church-yard at the sign of the Bible on Ludgate-hill and in Fleet-street 1657. To the Right Honorable KATHERINE Countess of PEMBROKE c. Together with her truly Noble Sister THE LADY MARY SOANDES As dear in affection as near in blood The Ornament of their Sex and Name AND To the true Exemplars of Piety Honor and Faithfulness whether of Nobility Gentry Ministry or Citizens Late Auditors and Communicants at the preaching of the Word and ministration of the Eucharist At S. PETERS Robert Mossom Dedicates the ensuing MEDITATIONS which conceiv'd in the Closet have had their Birth from the Pulpit and being now grown up to the Press they take heart to travel the World under so just a Patronage and Protection AND The same holy Spirit of Truth which accompanied them to the ear and the heart of each reverent Auditor bless them also to the eye and the soul of every ingenuous Reader For a sustaining with grace in the present Warfare and a crowning with glory in the future Triumph of Christs holy Church Amen TO THE Ingenuous Readers BEcause just Promises are due Debts I acknowledge my self a Debtor to the Church by promise under mine hand for the Second Part of my Sions Prospect which if they who importune me by their desires assist me with their prayers I doubt not by Gods blessing to perfect notwithstanding the encumbrances to retard and difficulties to discourage Indeed did not my Ministerial service unexpected when I past my word engage what time of the Night I might spare from my necessary rest and my School-employment take up what time of the Day I could spare from my Family-charge I had not run into so great arrears in being so long behind-hand with so just a debt Yet now with that honest though necessitated person in the Parable I plead a Patientiam habete Have patience with me and I will pay you all and till I can pay the Principal accept the Interest These Treatises and Sermons a part of my Five years Service which by a good hand of Providence amidst all the variety of Secular changes I did continue in a plenary discharge of all Ministerial duties according to the legally established viz. Ab Ann 1650. ad Ann. 1652. and ever piously to be esteemed Order of the Churches Liturgy And when I was forc'd from any longer Ministry at S. Peters I may say with confidence a Congregation was dissolved which for reverence charity and devotion was not outvied if parallel'd by any in the World For their sakes especially that they may the better call to mind what they have heard and so the more fully practise what they have been taught I here publish to the eye those Instructions I once delivered to the ear And what many of mine Auditory have importuned me for in a Transcript I here present them with advantage by an Impression viz. Those Divine Meditations which once warm'd their hearts with a devout fervor when Communicants in the monthly ministration of the blessed Eucharist Also those Choice Cordials which refresht their Souls with a chearing vigor when Combatants in the Christian warfare of their Spiritual Conflicts Lastly See our Contests with Heresie and Schism in zeal not so much to confute the Adversary as to confirm the Orthodox confirm them even in Truth and Holiness In which Contests it is not the Bays but the Olive not victory but peace even the peace of Jerusalem which is the aim and end of my Preaching and God who is the Searcher of hearts will bear witness to the sincerity of this profession I know well what I publish in Print will find a Critical Comment and censorious Paraphrase from some but if I may benefit the souls of Gods suffering Saints I am not careful to stop the mouth or smooth the brow of a clamorous or supercilious censure I will not fear it worse nor expect it better in the whole Volume then in a large Vineyard that there be tàm uvae quàm labruscae some clusters of sound and sweet grapes which have their full blood and true spiritual vigor though withall some of lighter digestion not so happy in their soil or sun and therefore not ripened to so divine a maturity and sweetness Neither am I ignorant or unexperienc'd how much less the mind is affected with reading then with hearing even by how much a Preacher in the particular gift of utterance is the more master of his tongue then pen and so can speak much more piercingly to the eye as an Orator then as a Scribe But what my Pulpit-conceptions do lose by the Press as to their affecting heat I hope they will have repair'd them by their informing light the Judgment being more thorowly convinced by a frequent perusal then a single delivery Whatsoever then you meet with of a devout vigor and solid nourishment receive it as from the Store-house of Heaven and only ministred by my hand it is wholly God's and yours But whatsoever is flat or crude weak and indigested that 's all mine own it 's like my self and I shall not refuse though blush to father it Accept the former and excuse the latter And as in that I shall further your Piety so in this do you express your Charity the charity of a fair construction considering my busie and distracting charge of a School-Tuition in which I am still engag'd and I bless God I am so as well to get subsistence as employ my talent This troublesom Task may well plead a favorable interpretation Which yet is not all the kindness I crave your Prayers I sue for viz. That God will make me farther serviceable to his Church and you whose I am in the strictest bond of love and heartiest zeal of devotion From my House near Black-Friers over agrinst the Old-Wardrobe Pridiè Nonar Febr. 1657. Robert Mossom Divine Meditations UPON PSALM XXV THE INTRODUCTION § 1. WEll might David be called the sweet Singer of Israel ● Sam. 23.1 Non minus vivendi genere quàm canendi juavitate immorta●em Deo sui fudisse Cantilenam dicit S Ambr. lib. de offic c. 22. whose Heart was more divinely musical then his Harp and the harmony of whose devout Soul did outvie that of his composed Song His whole life what was it but a continued Antheme His several failings through the indulgent mercy of his
fulness here set open in this Ordinance Psal 36.8 9. may satisfie and fill them here behold the promises of life sealed here feel the riches of grace communicated here see the earnest of salvation and glory confirmed yea here shall the soul find Davids double petition of prayer accepted and his twofold argument of faith approved O let me not be ashamed for I put my trust in thee Let integrity and uprightness preserve me for I wait on thee Vers ult Redeem Israel O God out of all his troubles § 1. AS there is no greater incentive of divine wrath then sin so nor is there any greater obstructive of devout prayer in removing that wrath then impenitence impenitence clogs yea clips the wing of devotion so that it cannot mount aloft it cannot reach the Throne of Grace and of this David himself gives us his profession from his experience saying Psal 66 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Quantum à praeceptis tantum ab auribus Dei longè summ So Tertul. Look how far our lives are from Gods precepts to obey them so far are Gods ears from our prayers to hearken to them The person then must be accepted before the petition and so a sincere penitent is the best suppliant for that our Lord Jesus Christ being the Priest that offers Heb. 4.14.15.16 and the Altar that sanctifies all our services there can be no acceptation without his mediation and sure I am he will not be our Advocate unless he be our Lord he will not be our Priest unless he be our King he will not present God our prayers unless we present him our persons and whom faith and repentance consecrates through the spirit him grace and mercy accepts through Christ § 2. Very aptly then doth David in his penitence as put up supplications for himself so make intercession for the Church the guilt of his transgressions he knew well did add to the heap of the Churches afflictions and therefore when he bewails his sin with penitent tears he remembers her trouble in a compassionate sorrow And that he might make the Church some amends whereas his guilt did help to the heighten●ng her distress his prayers shall contribute to the hastening her deliverance and for this reason doth he close this penitential Psalm with this pathetical petition Deliver Israel O God out of all his troubles Which words are Davids intercession for Gods Church And in them we have first the subject matter of his intercession Israels deliverance deliver Israel which deliv rance is set forth in its Author and its extent its Author God and its extent out of all trouble Redeem or deliver Israel O God out of all his troubles § 3. 1. The subject matter Israels deliverance deliver Israel God in a gracious vouchsafement of love will have h●s Saints to be his Remembrancers Isa 62.6 7. by the importunity of their prayers minding him of his promises Not giving him rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem even his Church a praise in the earth And therefore hear the Prophets zealous devotion well worthy our devoutest imitation For Zions sake will I not hold my peace Isa 62.1 and for Jerusalems sake I will not rest untill the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth even made visible and glorious in the sight of m●n and of Angels § 4. But what in the Churches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in her fixt season and determined method of deliverance is not the decree past Dan. 8.19 Hab. 2.3 Psal 102.13 and the time set And so as that we cannot hasten the time nor alter the decree by our prayers and if so to what purpose is it to importune God for the Churches deliverance I answer True it is that Gods will being immutable in its determinations his providence must needs be infallible in its administrations yet neither the deliberations of councels the industry of endeavours nor the importunity of prayers are taken away or made void but rather confirmed and made good by the infallibility of God providence in the determinations of his will For that God determining the end doth also order the means means proportionable and agreeable to that end which maketh much for the strengthning our faith quickening our obedience and confirming our hope hope of obtaining the end as determined by Gods will when we observe the means as appointed in Gods word § 5. So that to establish the means and deny the providence of God determining the end is a part of Atheism to establish the providence of God determining the end and despise the means is great prophaneness but to use the means so as withall to trust and attend Gods providence for obtaning the end Hab. 2.3 this this is the way of truth and a work of righteousness knowing this that prayers and councels and endevours they are appointed of God not whereby we should alter his Will but perform it not whereby we should change his Decree but fulfill it and in what we as yet obtain not our desires we testifie our obedience Wherefore God having past the Decree and given the promise of his Churches deliverance through his will be unchangeable and his Decrees immutable Heb. 6.17 18. yet are not our prayers fruitless our supplications needless for that the Decrees of Gods counsel and the Prayers of Gods chosen they are subordinate and we say Subordinata non inter se pugnant Things subordinate in their being oppose not each other in their working The w●mb of all Gods blessings to his Church it is his gracious Decree and the Midwife to bring them forth is the Prayer of the faithful § 6. Further yet whereas God hath given many promises of deliverance to his Church we must know that his promises to us they are the very ground of our prayers to him Thus Dan. 9. and thus Psal 102. Yea God having given the Promise it is an implied Condition that we ask by Prayer thereby testifying that his Promises are of free grace not of due debt of mercy in him not of merit in us Yea as we subscribe to the acknowledgment of his mercy and goodness in giving the Promise so we submit to the dispose of his wisdom and power in ordering the performance And thus whatsoever blessing it is of life of grace or of glory of supply of support or of deliverance upon our selves in particular or upon the Church in general whatsoever blessing I say it is which we receive from Gods hand it must be on our knees as an effect of his Promise so a fruit of our Prayer § 7. Thus God having promised to build the ruin'd places Ezek. 36.36.37 and to plant the desolate he tels the house of Israel that for this he will be enquired of to do it for them And again hear the promise God makes unto Israel by the Prophet Jeremy Thus saith
manifestation of himself to his Saints In this Sanctuary is the Golden Pot of Manna even an abundant fulness of Divine Joy whose sweetness is incorruptible and everlasting yea here is Aarons Rod which being withered after budded flowred and brought forth ripe Almonds that is the dead bodies of Gods Saints raised to life are cloathed with immortality and glory Or further By the Tabernacle and Sanctuary was represented not onely the Mystical but also the Natural Body of Christ not onely his Church but also himself He the Ark of the Testament as the Word of the Father placed in the Tabernacle as cloathed with flesh He the Table of Shew-bread as our Life and Food in the Eucharist he the Candlestick as our Spiritual Light he the Incense in the sweet savor of his Merits he the Sacrifice in the sufferings of his Cross he the Altar in the efficacy of his Mediation by which ou● persons and our Prayers our selves and our services become accepted of the Father Further yet The Tabernacle and Sanctuary was a Map of the Universe the greater World and of Man the lesser World 1. A Map of the Universe the greater World the outward Court representing the outmost Creation the holy Place the Church of Christ and the Holy of Holies the Heavenly Presence 2. A Map of Man the lesser World consisting of Body Soul and Spirit the outward Court that 's the Body 1 Thess 5.23 the inward Tabernacle that 's the Soul and the holy Sanctuary that 's the Spirit by which Spirit we have our communion yea and our communication too with our God And well may the Temple of God be compared unto man 1 Cor. 3.16 1 Cor. 6.16 seeing man so often in Scripture is called The Temple of God Now how well might David in all these Representations of the Sanctuary contemplate a Beauty and that Beauty divine even the Beauty of the Lord No wonder then if David be so importunate in his suit to have his dwelling in so pleasant a seat as the House of the Lord an Habitation which hath Heaven for its prospect the beauty of the Lord for the object of the eye and delight of the Soul But however David doth behold the beauty of the Lord in the Sanctuary yet where is that beauty in our Churches what is that glory of his presence as may denominate them his Houses Why see it in our Churches sacred Liturgy both as to the decency and order of her daily Service and Sacramental Administrations First As to the decency and order of her daily Service There being nothing in Devotion nothing in Doctrine nothing in Substance nothing in Circumstance but what Gods Word either explicitely commands or implicitely allows O lovely Order of holy Worship right a form of Divine Service as being a continued Exercise of all the parts of holy Worship taking up the whole minde and soul of the Spiritual man In this Divine service the Church by an orderly progress of Piety and performance of Devotion sometimes makes confession of sin sometimes deprecations of wrath sometimes Petitions of mercy sometimes intercessions for all men even all estates and conditions of men whatsoever from the highest Prince to the meanest Peasant from the holiest Saint to the vilest sinners Turks and Infidels not excepted Yea in this Form of Divine service and Publick worship see how the Church of Christ doth sometimes adore Gods sacred Majesty sometimes extol his glorious attributes sometimes commemorate his famous acts sometimes recount his gracious blessings sometimes denounce his severe judgments sometimes declare his Fatherly promises sometimes set forth his heavenly praises Sometimes the Church makes profession of her Faith sometimes she publisheth the commands of her God sometimes she is humbled in larger yet not long winded supplications sometimes she is exercised in shorter yet piercing and pathetical ejaculations All which hang together not as mens extemporary non-sense like ropes of Sand but in an orderly composure like a chain of Gold one part still linkt within another to become a fit ornament to set off the Churches beauty whereby she is the more comely and fair in the eyes of her beloved Secondly View we the Beauty of holy Worship in the Churches Publick Administrations to instance in that one of the blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist O how does Divine Order Reverence and Devotion mutually contend which shall give greatest lustre to the Beauty of this solemnity First the judgment is rightly informed from sacred Scripture in the Mysteries of that blessed Sacrament And the judgment being rightly informed by instruction the affections are divinely raised by exhortation set on with that perswasive argument and inforcing motive the riches of grace and promises of life which God hath vouchsafed unto his chosen through Christ This done the Church proceeds to an oral confession of sins and upon that a Ministerial absolution of the penitent and after with heart and hands and eyes lift up to Heaven all joyn together in the devout Harmony of Prayers and Praises Then the Faithful Pastor of the Flock having offered unto God the Sacrifice of his own Rev. 8.3 and others Devotion ascending up before the Throne of Grace as sacred Odors made acceptable through the Incense of Christs merits he proceeds with fear and reverence to the Consecration of the Sacramental Elements and how is this why observe It is with a most pathetical commemoration of Gods love of Christs passion and of mans redemption yea with an obediential and Eucharistical acknowledgement of Christs holy Institution with the Order and End of the blessed Sacrament Upon which is pronounced the Word of blessing with Prayer consecrating the Bread and Wine to be the Sacramental signs and seal of Christs Body and Blood The Consecration ended View we the Administration in which the dearest pledges of Divine love are delivered with a Summary Recapitulation of the whole Sacraments mystery That so the Soul of the receiver may have a present impression of renewed Devotion in the very act of receiving This Ministration being performed the close of the whole service is applicatory of the whole solemnity in most devout and pathetical Prayers with Heavenly and Evangelical praises which being ended the Congregation is dismist with a Ministerial Benediction Now ex pede Herculem know ye the Eagle by its Feather the Diamond by its spark the excellency of the Churches Liturgy by this one part of her Publick service the solemnity of the Eucharist of which Sacraments administring I may say what St. Paul said of the Corinthians prophesying 1 Cor. 14.25 That if an unbeliever or any one except a pertinacious Separatist come into the Congregation of Gods people while they are exercised in this solemn service of Divine Order Reverence and Devotion he will be ready to fall down upon his face and worship God reporting that God is in them of a truth I may confidently affirm That so lovely is the Beauty of the Churches Order
that in holding faith and a good conscience though I lose all things else I have enough if I save my soul and in deserting faith and a good conscience if I lose my soul I have nothing though I save all things else But further O keep my soul yet not so properly mine as in a more peculiar right of propriety thine thine O blessed Jesu by right of donation from thy Father who hath made thee Lord and Christ and hath given me to thee Act 2.36 Eph. 1.22 as thou art Head over all things unto thy Church Thine by right of purchase thou having bought us with a price and given thy self 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Ransom yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Ransom in kind 2 Tim. 2.6 even thine own soul and body to redeem unto thy self the souls and bodies of the faithful § 18. Further thine by right of conquest in which thou hast made us free from the law of sin and of death having for our sake Rom 8.2 and in our name spoil'd principalities and powers Col. 2 1● triumphing over them Further yet thine by right of Covenant in which thou hast promised thy self to be our God and we to be thy people Lastly Heb. 8.10 thine by right of Communion for that all we are and all we have are from thy fulness our life our love our joy our holiness our happiness all is in thee and from thee Thus I am thine my body thine my soul thine thine in the nearest relation in the strictest union and in the dearest affection True it is all is thine the Devils are thine thy vassals the wicked are thine thy prisoners the Angels are thine thy subjects the Creatures are thine thy servants But only the sanctified are thine thy brethren thy members yea the faithful are thy treasure thy jewels thy jewels of ornament and delight Thus oh thus keep my soul as one of thy jewels a part of thy treasure § 19. 3. Deliver me The propriety Christ hath in us is a strong engagement of his care over us as it is with his children in general 1 Tim. 3.15 Cant. 4.8 so with each of his chosen in particular Though Christs Church be full of enemies yet seeing it is his own house he will raise and repair it though it be black yet seeing it is his own Spouse he will pitty and cherish it Isa 5.4 though it bring forth wild grapes yet being his own Vine he will fence and prune it though it wander from his truth 1 Pet. 5.2 yet because it is his own Flock he will watch and gather it This then is the argument of faith which the devout soul makes unto Christ Because I am thy purchase O do thou Lord preserve me because I am of thy houshold do thou provide for me Ps 119.94 because I am one of thine whom thou ownest O keep my soul and deliver me Deliver me not only from the conquest but also from the conflict of sin For that Conflictus licet non fit damnabilis quia non perficit iniquitatem miserabilis tamen quia non habet pacem Aug. de nupt concupisc l. 2. c. 2. Though our conflict with our lusts is not damnable because the act of sin is not perfected yet is it miserable because the peace of the soul is disturbed § 20. This very conflict with sin it was which put S. Paul to his exclamation Rom. 17.24 Wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death Which complaint he answers with this profession I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord for that the grace of Christ doth weaken the strength the blood of Christ doth pardon the guilt and the glory of Christ shall annihilate the being of sin In renascentibus remittitur S. Aug. contra Jul. l. 6. c. 16. in proficientibus minuitur in resurgentibus tollitur Sin in justification through Christ is remitted in sanctification by Christ is weakened and in glorification with Christ shall be destroyed in which glorification the deliverance of Christs Church and chosen is perfected and till that perfecting be accomplish'd this will be the continued complaint and mournful prayer of Gods holiest Saints Consider mine enemies for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred O keep my soul and deliver me § 21. Thus being in conflict then with our lusts how may we best order our lives as to the safety and peace of our souls I answer in several rules of direction 1. Be we the more fervent the more importunate in our prayers by how much our lusts are the more eager the more vehement in their desires For this we have S. Pauls example for our imitation 2 Cor. 12.9 when he proportions the vehemencie of his devotion to the violence of his temptation and by how much the Messenger of Satan doth the more furiously reiterate his buffetings by so much the Apostle of the Gentiles doth the more zealously renew his prayers and at length he receives this comfortable answer to his sorrowful complaint My grace is sufficient for thee sufficient to pardon thy guilt sufficient to cure thy wound sufficient to strengthen thy weakness sufficient to perfect thy deliverance § 22. 2. Entertain we no parley no treaty with our lusts have no commerce or company with them silence their suggestions or if they will needs be suggesting give them not the ear lest they make that the passage to the heart Qui deliberant desciverunt so Tacit. We betray our selves to sin whensoever we treat with our lusts conference with them is the way to be ensnared by them We must flie sin as a serpent not let in the head lest it draw in its body not yield to the first motion lest we be engaged in its full commission § 23. 3. Set we up the Law of the Spirit and life in our hearts Rom. 8.2 and by how much the Law of Sin will be stirring in our thoughts by so much the more let this royal law of Christs spirit life bear sway in our souls And to that end especially now in the solemnity of the blessed Eucharist renew we our purposes our vows our covenants renew we our self-denial our total resignation thereby to obtain a further quickening in grace a further strengthening of the inward man Joh. 1.16 and all by a nearer communion with Christ in his fulness Thus this holy Sacrament shall seal unto our hearts the comfort of this assurance that God so considers our enemies which are many and hate us with a cruel hatred that He will keep our souls and deliver us Vers 20. part and v. 21. Let me not be ashamed for I put my trust in thee Let integrity and uprightness preserve me for I wait on thee § 1. THE Creatures were made subject to change by the law of their creation which mutability hath been much improved by the sin of man whose guilt
us belongeth confusion of f ce to our Kings to our Princes and to our Fathers because we have sinned against thee Yea humility prompteth the soul in the midst of Gods judgments to an advancement of his mercy Thus the Psalmist Psal 1●3 10 He hath not dealt with us according to our sins neither hath he rewarded us according to our iniquities and it is the humble acknowledgment of Gods Church in her lamentations of sorrow saying Lam. 3.22 It is of the Lords mercy that we are not consumed § 15. 2. Faith the Apostle calls faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the substance Heb. 11 1. so the subsistence of things hoped for the subsistence makeing that glory and blessedness that salvation and deliverance to have a present subsistence with us which we look upon through hope as in their future existence to us Wherefore then is it that the conscientious confesso●s of Christs truth so calmly so patiently yea so chearfully suffer the disgrace of the world and the violence of the wicked is it not because they see by faith that to suffer for righteousness truely makes them what Turtullian elegantly stiles them Coelestis gloriae candidatos Candidates of the celestial glory haveing received the earnest of the spirit the seal of their redemption 2 Cor. 1.22 Ephes 4.30 Rom 8.23 the first fruits of glory they see by faith that whilst men load them with injuries they heap up their rewards whilst they spoil their earthly goods they encrease their heavenly treasure yea each scornful reproach they see by faith it does but add a flower to their garland each violent act a jewel to their Crown 2 Cor 4 17. all their light affliction which is but for a moment they see by faith how it works for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory § 16. 3. Hope such as that of Davids which he commends unto the Church upon his own experience of good success Psal 130.7 Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plentious redempteon Wherefore when the Church mourneth and the gates of Zion languish this the hope which strengthens the patience and comforts the souls of Gods Saints that he will either vouchsafe them a temporal deliverance or crown their sufferings with an eternal salvation this that hope of which saith the Apostle Rom. ● 5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non confundit so the vulg it brings no shame of face no confusion of soul it fears no deficiency on Gods part and preserves from Apostacy on mans part and so becomes a right what the Apostle stiles it the Anchor of the soul He● 6 ● both sure and stedfast § 17. 3. What the best duties of devotion Answ Solemn humiliation fervent prayer and a worthy receiving the blessed Eucharist 1. solemn humiliation solemn for time for measure and the manner of performance for time some day in the week or at least in the moneth set apart and dedicated to this service For measure not the dropping of a tear the breathing of a sigh and so away Psal 51 1● no we must offer unto God the Sacrifice of a broken heart and a contrite spirit the sorrows of our contrition must be like that of one mourning for the dead a funeral sorrow the deepest of mournings yea Zech. 12.10 like that of one mourning for her onely Son the saddest of Funerals Indeed the Church by our sins is laid in the depth of calamities fit it is that we for our sin lie down in the deepest of humiliations For manner of performance confessing the guilt of sin bewailing the bitterness of distress deprecating Gods wrath and imploring his mercy § 18. To affect our souls with the greater relentings of contrition and meltings of compassion see oh see we how this Church our Mother Lam. 1.1 sits as a disconsolate widow mourning in her distress her hair dishevel'd her beauty defac'd her garments rent her body wounded her blood flowing her spirits fainting yea see see a flood of tears overtakes her streams of blood her sorrow accompanies her pain and her mourning her affliction And yet how do too too many who boast themselves her Sons Oh! how do they by their oaths their drunkenness their whoredoms and other their abominable pollutions how do they even drag this their Mother by that hair which sorrow hath dishevel'd How do they trample upon her whilst she sits in the dust how do they widen her wounds sharpen her pains imbitter her sorrows and every way aggravate her misery Wherefore as many as are affected with the Churches deep affliction and wait upon God for her gracious restauration let them thus wait even in this sacred duty of holy devotion Solemn humiliation Iam. 5.13 § 19. 2. Fervent prayer this is St. James's Catholicon his general remedy for all spiritual distempers If any man among you be afflicted let let him pray the Original is very emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken in the large sence as here most proper we may thus paraphrase the words of the Apostle Doth any among you suffer any evill of body or of mind as the readiest means of his redress and succour let him pray and in our prayers do we prescribe to our selves some solemn service of devotion more peculiarly appropriate to this sacred blessing Nehem. 1. Dan. 9. the Churches restauration and peace Thus did Nehemiah thus did Daniel and Psal 137. the faithful are so zealous for Jerusalem the type of the Church that they seal the resolution of earnest prayer with this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this dreadful imprecation Psal 137.6 that if they remember her not their tongues may cleave to the roof of their mouthes intimating this zealous w●sh that they may never have tongues to pray for themselves if they forget to pray for Jerusalem § 20. 3. The blessed Eucharist here we have an unmoveable center to rest on God our portion Christ our fulness an object larger then the heavens Oh that our faith were now suitable to its object the firmness of our trust to the fulness of our God our Jesus had the widow of Sarepta prepared more vessels she had received more oil 1 King 17.14 and that we receive less in the supplies of grace and the bounties of love from God and Christ it is because we are straitned in our faith not God or Christ straitned in his bounty we less capable to receive not he less willing or able to give the Widows vessels were all filled and here each humble soul shall be replenish'd according to the measure of their capacity not the riches of Christs fulness who as the Sea can fill the vessels though never so large and therefore where the measure is but little there the vessels are but small Enlarge we then the thirsting desires of our soul that the fountain of Christs
the Lord After seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will visit you Jer. 29.10 11. and perform my good word towards you in causing you to return to this place For I know the thoughts that I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you an expected end But how shall this gracious Promise be brought to full performance Why it is by fervent prayer for so saith God v. 12.13 14. Then shall ye call upon me and ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken unto you and ye shall seek me and find me when ye shall search for me with all your heart and I will be found of you saith the Lord and I will turn away your captivity and I will gather you from all the nations and from all the places whither I have driven you saith the Lord and I will bring you again into the place whence I caused you to be carried away captive This then emboldens the confidence and enlargeth the comfort of our prayers that what we ask is according to Gods will made ours in the promise by which we have a right of grace from our God and may thereby make good our claim by faith in Christ in whom all the Promises are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 2 20. most sure and firm § 8. And thus whether we look upon the purposes of Gods will or the promises of Gods word this is a requisite condition and means of their execution and performance even our prayers Wherefore though the Decree be past and the time be set for the Churches deliverance yet not to alter to execute that decree not to shotten but to accomplish that time we must be instant in our prayers and then most instant in our prayers when most earnest in our penitence interceding for the Church as David here does when he closeth his devotion with the fervor of this Petition Deliver Israel O God out of all his troubles § 9. 2 The Author of Israels deliverance God Deliver Israel O God As we acknowledg none other Mediator of intercession but Christ none other Master of our requests but the Spirit so none other Author of salvation but God who alone is all sufficient to save Jer. 3.23 Thus the Prophet Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the hills and from the multitude of mountains truly in the Lord our God is the salvation of Israel Where by hills and multitude of mountains is meant in an Allegory the strongest defence and surest protection which shall certainly betray us to ruine unless Gods strength make that protection strong and his power give safety to that defence O the inconstancy solly weakness and vanity of all worldly supports and carnal succors without God whether it be for salvation temporal or eternal § 10. 1 Salvation temporal O the inconstancy of Popular esteems various as the wind To day Hosanna to morrow Crucifige O the folly of Carnal wisdom whilst the subtilest Achitophelt clash in their counsels Luk. 19 38. 25.21 and become puzzel'd with intricacies hamper'd in different designs and divers interests O the weakness of worldly force The strongest Armies having Reubens sate and character unstable as the water Gen. 49.4 they have their tide and ebbe they sometimes flow to an inundation and then again sink away to nothing And O the vanity of the vastest Treasures more matter of prey to the mighty then means of help to the miserable they betray to ruine rather then protect from danger As all men so all creatures in themselves are lyers Ps 116.11 Lyers either through impotencie or through imposture either through imposture deceiving in what they promise or through impotencie failing in what they undertake This the insufficiencie of all the Creatures for salvation temporal § 11. And 2 much more insufficient are they for salvation eternal Sure we are he who cannot span his own length shall never be able to grasp the heavens He who cannot with Sampson bear away the Gates of Gaza Judg. 16.3 shall never be able with Atlas to support the Universe If the Creatures I mean be all insufficient to work that salvation which is temporal they shall never be able to effect that which is eternal Ps 49 7 8. It is not then the wealth of worldlings nor the merits of Saints no nor the power of Angels that can save a sinner Wherefore when we make the deliverance the Church the subject of our prayers it must be to him who is stiled The God that heareth prayers Ps 44 4. and who alone can command deliverances for his Church § 12. But here some may say Alas I have often prayed for the deliverance of the Church but God either hears not or he answers not yea he rather contradicts by his providence what I importune by prayer involving his Church in greater distress rather then delivering it out of all its troubles But to this I answer The stay of our faith and so the ground or our prayer is the word of Gods promise which word of promise is most certain though the means of performance is not so evident And to measure the truth of Gods word by the strength of our reason is to wrong his power and debase his wisdom And therefore when we eye God in his promises or deliverance to his Church we must look beyond all secendary causes and view his wisdom infinite in contriving and his power omnipotent in effecting the execution of his will and performance of his word § 13. The unbelief of the Churches restauration and the Bodies resurrection are both from one and the same principle of error and misapprehension even a not knowing the Scriptures and power of God Mat. 22.29 And therefore we observe how aptly God speaks concerning Israels deliverance from Babylons Captivity Israel had said that by reason of their desperate estate their bones were dryed their hope lost and they cut off for their parts But now Thus saith the Lord God Ezek. 27.11 Behold O my people I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves and bring you into the land of Israel v. 12 13. and then ye shall know that I am the Lord. Ye shall know it how why in the experience of mine omnipotent power § 14. Wherefore what St. Augustine speaks concerning the resurrection of the body we may apply to the restauration of the Church Considera Authorem tolle Dubitationem Consider the Author to whom nothing is impossible and this will take away all doubting of what seems incredible Consider the Author it is the Lord Jehovah He is the Original of all being who not only does work but also can command and not only does command but also can create deliverance for his people yea he can bring light and salvation out of darkness and desolation no estate so miserable and no misery to desperate which can either pose
implore its deliverance And when when more seasonably help the Church with our prayers then now when her Prayers are violently wrested from the Church § 22. But more especially 2 to mind us of the fit season and service to pray for Israels deliverance even the celebration of the blessed Eucharist Seeing so great wrath is come upon us from the Almighty do we this day lay hold on the horns of the Altar do we in the celebration of this blessed Sacrament deeply sigh and contritely mourn for all the abominations that are committed in the Land that so Ezek. 9.4 with those Penitentiaries in Ezekiel we may receive our mark even that blood of Christ upon out souls that so the destroying Angel may yet pass over us and in the behalf of this our Israel do we in our most enlarged devotions make this or the like intercession unto God in the holy Eucharist Look down oh look down heavenly Father from the height of Heaven thy celestial Sanctuary and behold the sacred Hoast the blood of our Jesus speaking better things then that of Abel Heb. 12.24 even things of grace and of mercy of pardon and of peace of reconciliation and of restauration And seeing in him thy justice is satisfied let thy wrath be appeased and through the merit of his blood oh let the bleeding wounds of our fainting Land be healed and the faint●ng heart of our languishing Church reviv'd § 23. And here let the outward distractions of our Israel minde us of the inward distempers of our hearts the great profanations in the Church prompt us to a strict purifying of our Consciences yea our longing desires after better days quicken our holy endeavours after better lives So shall we find by an happy experience God who did watch for our deliverance when we knew not our danger In the Powder-plot 1605. he will not sleep now we know our danger and pray for our deliverance No as for the Enemies of Sion evil shall fall upon them and sudden desolation Isa 47.11 nescient ortum ejus they shall not know from whence it ariseth But as for the Israel of God he shall deliver them as a bird out of the Fowlers net Ps 124 6 7. and as a prey out of the Lyons teeth at once making it the praise of our faith then to believe when our trust seems to be against hope Rom. 4.18 and the glory of his power then to save when our condition seems to be past succor And thus for the share we have in the sorrow of Israels troubles we shall have our portion in the joy of Israels deliverance Is 35.10 if not whilst the Church is militant on earth yet most assuredly then when triumphant in heaven of which this blessed Sacrament is the seal and pledge confirming the Royal grant of this humble Petition to every faithful soul that prays with David Deliver Israel O God out of all his troubles Halleluiah THE Preacher's Tripartite BOOK II. To administer COMFORT BY CONFERENCE with the SOUL IN ITS Spiritual Conflicts Reduced to particular CASES of CONSCIENCE Viz. 1. The importunate Crowd of Vain Thoughts 2. The frightful Suggestions of Foul Thoughts 3. Some late Relapses into Sin 4. Daily Conflicts with Sin 5. A Distrust of the Graces sincerity in general of Faith and of Repentance in particular 6. The sense of Barrenness in holy Duties 7. The misapprehension of Gods withdrawing the Comforts of his gracious presence 8. The misinterpretation of the Order of Gods Providence as to the Tribulations of the Godly and as to the Prosperity of the Wicked 9. The long Continuance of Temptations and Afflictions By ROBERT MOSSOM LONDON Printed by Thomas Newcomb 1657. TO THE Right Honorable Lady FRANCES Marchioness of HERTFORD c. MADAM I Acknowledge it mine ambition that I seek your Honor's Patronage but dare adventure upon this guilt in confidence of a Favorable Pardon as well as an Honorable Protection to your Suppliant I know no vice in Morals unpardonable like that of Ingratitude and therefore to avoid the sin and censure of this Apostacy I declare it Madam your Reward of Goodness exceeding the Merit of a former Present which hath obliged the duty of this Dedication What are the charitable supplies of your Eleemosynary bounties notwithstanding Modesty is at once the Vail and Ornament of your Vertues there is a Trumpet of Honorable Fame that proclaims it That I have my self received an encouragement of my Studies by your Nobleness I willingly embrace this opportunity thankfully to acknowledge and record Besides Madam it were improper to intitle the SOUL'S CONFERENCE to any other then an experienced Piety whose Spiritual Conflicts sustained can give testimony to the Comforts administred which not Greatness but Goodness can best approve and Patronize Here then Madam to your Goodness as great in Honor and to your Honor as great in Goodness is humbly presented this Freewill-offering the Work and the Author and no Votary can do more then make his whole Possession one Oblation as ambitious to bear the name and attribute of being NOBLE MADAM Your Honors Faithfully Devoted Servant R. MOSSOM CONFERENCE WITH THE SOUL In its Spiritual Conflicts THE INTRODUCTION IT is the great design of Satan in a malicious envy to Man if he cannot spoil us of our Crown Lam. 3.17 18. then to rob us of our Comfort If he cannot deprive us of Grace then to bereave us of our Peace Which thing he doth not only attempt but often attain by raising in our hearts an infernal fog of diffidence and distrust Ps 77.8 9. Ps 88.5 6. begetting such doubts and fears and affrighting terrors as do make the Soul against all the light of counsel and of comfort in the Word conclude against it self to have lost all interest in Gods love Job 38.2 and Christs merits Lam 5.22 Isa 49.14 all Communion with the Spirit of grace and of life pleading with much vehemencie of passion and impatience that its former hopes have been but deceitful presumptions and its exercises of holiness hypocritical delusions Oh the thick darkness which this mist and fog of Satans suggestions casts upon the inward man How doth it become the very shop of fears the womb of terrors Ps 23 4. yea the valley and shadow of death the cheering light of the Sun of Righteousness being thereby eclipsed from the Soul Now there is no greater advantage unto Satan in his temptations then the ignorance and error of the mind when the Understanding is darkened or deceiv'd darkened through want of knowledge or deceiv'd with a false light For Satan he works still contrary unto God and yet in imitation of him too And therefore as God in his operations of grace to beget life Eph. 1.17 18. he first enlightens and illuminates so Satan in his temptations unto sin to destroy grace he first darkens and deceives 2 Cor. 4.4 Eph. 4.18 Luk. 22.64 He doth with the
in our mind and this will conduce much to the composing our souls when their Words of Complaint are answered with Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction CHAP. I. The Souls Conflict from the importunate Crowd of Vain Thoughts OUr secret Thoughts are commonly the immediate issue of our inward Principles vile affections still begetting vain imaginations and holy desires administring matter for divine thoughts Wherefore when our Lord Jesus Christ sets up his Throne in the Heart he there governs by the golden Scepter of his Grace which Grace it is that casts down every high imagination and brings into captivity every vain thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which vain thoughts however they may seem small sins yet their strength of evil like that of the Egyptian caterpillars it is in their number Ps 10 5.34 35. whereby they prevail oftentimes to eat up every green thing in the land every good motion in the heart And this importunate crowd of vain Thoughts is not the least of Satans temptations in which he is right Beelzebub the God of Flyes Mat. 12.24 for as busie Flyes were to the Altars sacrifices so are vain thoughts to our holy services their continual buzzing disturbs the Mind and distracts its devotion This Cogitationum tumultus this tumult and crowd of vain Thoughts was once S. Bernards trouble of which he complains Bern. de inter Dem. that introeunt exeunt they pass and repass come in and go out and will not be controll'd Amovere volo nec valeo I would fain saith he remove them but cannot either as slie Thieves they creep in undiscern'd or as bold Guests they force admittance though they find no welcome Now because nothing is more dreadful to the godly man then sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so says S. Chrysostom that to him is death that to him is hell Even therefore though no exorbitancie of life be discerned by man yet is he afflicted deeply afflicted for the very risings and rebellions of his Thoughts which being in the secret closet of the Heart can only appear unto God And in this his affliction hear we his Complaint The Words of Complaint Oh the perplexing trouble of my distracting thoughts How do they by their slie insinuations and secret importunities continually disturb the quiet of my mind and make my holy duties become a weariness to my soul They cool the heat they damp the vigor they dead the comfort of all my devotions Even when I pray God to forgive my sins I then sin whilst I am praying for forgiveness yea whether it be in the Church or in the Closet so frequently and so violently do these vain Thoughts withdraw mine heart from Gods service that I cannot have confidence he hears my suit because I know by experience I do not hear my self and therefore sure needs must God be far off from my prayer whilst my Heart is so far out of his presence hurried away with a crowd of vain Imaginations The Grounds of Comfort 1. These vain Thoughts O thou afflicted soul being indeed thy burden they shall not be thy ruine and though they do take from the sweetness yet they shall not take from the sincerity of thy devotions Yea 2 King 10.16.31 Ps 26.2 3. hereby thy sincerity is approv'd for that some external interest of temporal relations may make us guard our words our actions but it must be some internal Principle of holy fear which makes us to watch our thoughts our desires If then thy devotions were not sincere thy heart would not be troubled for to be taken off from a work we regard not Ps 119 115. is no disquet to the mind but it is an argument we set a value and esteem upon the work in hand when we are loth to be disturbed in the doing Ps 7.9 139.2 Jer. 11.20 2. It is no little glory which we give to God in the acknowledgment of his omnipresence and omniscience that we own him present in the Closet of our Hearts and privy to the first risings of our most inward thoughts And as it is the excellencie of Gods law that it reacheth our thoughts to discern and judge them Heb. 4.12 Luk. 2.35 so it is the riches of Gods mercy that it goes beyond the number of our thoughts to remit and pardon them Were it not indeed for the multitude of Gods compassions Ps 51.1 Gen. 6.5 dangerous yea desperate were our condition in the multitude of our sinful imaginations Which Imaginations being in number infinite are not to he forgiven but by those Mercies which are infinite and numberless Ps 145 8 9. This oh this is the sure foundation of firm comfort to the soul the tender mercies of its God! 3. It is much the experience of Gods children even the devoutest Saints that their thoughts of God and of Christ of heaven and of holiness are very unsteady and fleeting Like the sight of a Star through an Optick glass when held by a Palsey-hand such is our view of Divine objects we are long in finding them and soon lose them our thoughts wavering through our minds weakness Besides when we are most intent and our eye fixt then is Satan ready to strike us on the elbow Ps 57.7 Ps 31.21 22. and by some suggestion to shake us from our steadiness and disturb our devotions Indeed as Satan so the World and the Flesh they are most importunate suitors and let our communication with God and with Christ in fervent Prayer or any other holy service be ne'r so earnest and secret yet will they thrust in upon the soul for reception and audience Yea though we observe our Lords command and watch unto prayer Mar. 13.33 yet in our strictest Watch how do these enemies slip by our Guards If we stop and turn back some vain Thoughts yet even then whilst we are busied in that watchful care how are we surprised with some other as vain imaginations notwithstanding all our care and watchfulness Think not then O distressed soul think not 1 Cor. 10 13 in the common condition of Gods children that thou art cast out of Gods favor 4. Know thou hast the gracious mediation of an alsufficient Saviour to supply thy defects and procure an acceptance of thy sincere though imperfect Devotions In thy Saviours mediation Heb. 2.17 Joh. 6.27 Luk. 4.18 Rom. 8.34 Heb. 7 25. behold him a merciful and a faithful High Priest seal'd of the Father and annointed by the Spirit to this very office that being entred the Holy of Holies and set down at the right hand of the Majesty on high he should ever live to make intercession for us so that he he it is who compassionately toucht with a feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4 15. presents the sincere desires of our souls and holy purposes of our hearts as the firstlings of our flock made acceptable unto God through
minds from Gods holy worship Indeed our natures are too weak to b●held always intent upon holy duties and therefore Gods woship hath its necessary intermissions in which intermissions the works of our callings are ordain'd for the keeping our minds innocent in their thoughts and renewed in their vigor for his more holy service Here then O thou afflicted soul who complainest of the secret trouble and vexing importunity of thy Vain thoughts here thou hast thy Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction God give thee his Spirit of Grace and Truth to order thy practice and administer thee Consolation through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen! CHAP. II. The Souls Conflict from the frightful Suggestions of Foul Thoughts GReat is the activity of the Soul discovered by the Thoughts which are more quick in their motion then Lightening darting forth in a moment from Earth to Heaven Ps 139.17 18. Phil. 3.20 and back again from Heaven to Earth Which excellencie of Man in the activity of the Mind was given of God for this end that he might turn away from sin at the first appearance of evil But now oh how hath the guilt of sin laid fetters upon this freedom of the mind and made it servile unto Satan if not to act his suggestions yet to suffer his buffetings 2 Cor. 12.7 So that those very thoughts of sin which the soul abhors those the imagination receives and the mind cannot free it self from horror Ps 19 4. through fear of guilt knowing well that as Devout meditations are acceptable so Foul imaginations must needs be abominable abominable to that God Hab. 1.13 who is of most pure eyes and such as cannot behold iniquity Besides whereas our Thoughts present the Idols which our hearts worship and that the Israelites bowing the knee to Baalim and Ashtaroth were not more truly Idolaters Judg. 2.13 Col. 3.5 then the Covetous the Ambitious the Voluptuous who bow the heart to Riches to Honors to Pleasures and the like Therefore the afflicted soul dreads the guilt of the vilest Idolatry even lest by its blasphemous thoughts it fall down to Satan Mat. 4.9 and worship him Oh! how doth the sad experience of many pious souls witness a dreadful horror in their sudden and frequent thoughts of Infidelity Atheism and Blasphemy calling into question the Truth of Gods Word the Order of his Providence and the very Being of his Deity yea such thoughts as for their foulness are not fit to be uttered And therefore many souls languish in dejection asham'd to declare their grief These the Cogitationes onerosae in the language of S. Bernard the burdensom thoughts which load the soul with an unsupportable weight of mournful distress and press it down with an inconceivable anguish of spiritual dejections In which Dejections and Distress hear and compassionate the Souls Complaint The Words of Complaint Oh! oh the Dunghil of mine unclean Heart which sends forth such filthy vapors Needs must my soul be a very Sink of sin whilst there ariseth from thence such a noisom stench of corrupt Thoughts Sure if ever I had been wash'd with the least drop of my Saviours blood or purified with the least spark of his Spirit and grace so great a filth and so foul a corruption could never cleave unto my soul But oh wo is me I see I am so far from being the Temple of the Lord that I am become the very Den of the Devil the flames of Hell already flash in my face and the amazing terrors of cursed Blasphemies torture my soul and wound my Conscience even unto death yea I could rather chuse to die ten thousand deaths then undergo the fears and frights and bitter pangs of my amazing thoughts and dreadful imaginations Ah what what shall I do with these Egyptian frogs my foul Suggestions which are still croaking In every place and in every action in the Church and in the Closet in my meditations and in my prayers still they crawl in and dead my heart yea their noisom stink makes me loath my self and all my services Oh I faint I die I perish whilst asham'd to speak what I abhor to think I must needs despair of cure not knowing how to lay open my sore The Grounds of Comfort 1. The horrid Blasphemies which affright thy soul though they are thy thoughts yet are they Satans suggestions and not having thy consent of will they bring no guilt upon the conscience Jam. 1.44 15. Non nocet sensus ubi non est consensus is the resolution of S. Bernard agreeable to the truth of Gods Word and the judgment of all both Antient and Modern Divines that where the Will yields no consent there the soul may suffer a temptation but act no sin Yea 2 Cor. 12.7 Quod resistentem fatigat vincentem coronat saith the same Father The importunity and frepuencie of the suggestions which weary the soul resisting shall bring the greater crown of glory in its overcoming True it is He that is born of God keepeth himself 1 Joh. 5 18. and that wicked one toucheth him not But how toucheth him not Is it meant of wicked temptations No sure but of wilful transgressions He toucheth him not tachi qualitativo we say and that aright not so touch as to make like himself in an impress of sin and guilt upon the soul Now then that it is no sin to be tempted is more then evident from this one argument That otherwise our Lord and Saviour himself Heb. 4.15 who was tempted had also finn'd Wherefore this is sin to admit the temptation wish allowance or delight 2. That these foul and frightful suggestions have not thy consent of will appears by this that thou hast a loathing and an abhorring of them which speaks the greatest aversion Desst 7.26 Rom. 22.9 and so is far from a consenting of the will As when the stomach loaths any meat though it be forceably cast into the belly yet can it not be said to be receiv'd with rppetite So when the Will abhorrs any suggestion though forcibly cast into the mind yet can it not be said to be receiv'd with Consent And know we are less able to keep the Mind free from Satans suggesting thoughts we abhor then we are to keep the stomach free from anothers forcing meats we loath Thy thoughts then O distressed soul being injected not inbred thoughts cast in from some suggestion without not rais'd up from some corruption within they are only brats laid at thy door not children of thine own begetting they are Satans buffetings in which the soul is meerly passive a sufferer not a doer 2 Cor. 12.7 And therefore as much need of patience as of penitence of fortitude to resist as of contrition to bewail Obj. 1 Ay but thou sayest Sure it is the corruption of my heart from whence these foul thoughts are rais'd and so though the Devil in his malice be the Father yet my corrupt flesh
Rom. 6.6 Col. 2.11 but in the whole body not reserving any lust which we are not willing to sacrifice on his Cross Thus is our repentance sincere when free when full and thereby to mortifie sin is the readiest way to remove wrath and abate the prosperity of the Church's enemies 3. Let not the calamities of the Church deter thee or the prosperity of her enemies seduce thee from the stedfastness of thy faith the integrity of her cause and the innocency of thy sufferings Innocency is the surest guard Goliah fenc'd with brass is not so safe as a naked man arm'd with innocency and whilst we hold fast our innocency in all our tribulation God sets us forth not as Malefactors to suffer but as Champions to conquer and after conquest follows a crown The way of the Lord is our surest path and safest walk in this the Lord will be our stay and strength and his Angels our guardians He shall give his Angels charge over us Ps 91 11. to keep us in all our ways Observe it is in viis non in praecipitiis in our lawful actions not our unlawful presumptions we have no promise of support or protection unless we retain our innocency and uprightness Being beaten then with the storms and distrest with the tempest of Gods judgments take we heed how we offer to land at any shore of carnal interest or worldly policy This is dangerous to the soul lest it shipwrack its faith and its self Rather as is best prudence as well as piety keep we in the Main though pursued with the storm God will at last rebuke the wind and the sea and so still the tempest and save the ship cease his judgments and deliver his Church To wind our selves out of worldly troubles by entangling our selves in sinful courses is such a folly or madness rather as is like his who thinks to heal his wound by an invenom'd plaister or cure his disease with a poison'd potion or indeed to quench the flame by pouring in oil And as a sure testimony of our greater integrity do we with much zeal mortifie that corrupt root of all sinful desires our self-love From hence not only come many mens Apostacies but also most mens complaints yea all mens impatiencies How many in a self love are griev'd for publique calamities out of a respect to their private interest Whereas the upright heart is griev'd for the contempt of Gods ordinances and truth the profanation of his Sanctuary and service These these should be the subject of our complaint and the matter of our mourning But alas Ps 78 34.37 P● 147.9 how many with the Israelites when God smites them then they seek him but their heart is not right with him They call upon God as the Ravens because hunger-bitten or as the gaping Earth because parcht with heat Their devotion is from an impulse of nature weary of pain and seeking for ease not from a principle of grace griev'd for sin and suing for holiness Such men could they enjoy their corn and their wine their peace and their plenty their full trade and their full stock their full barns and their full purse they would neither regard the Sanctuary nor the Service neither the Ordinances nor the Worship no neither the truth nor the faith of Christian religion and righteousness Wherefore O thou afflicted soul do thou mortifie self-love to keep sound thine integrity that so neither the calamities of the Church may deter nor the prosperity of her enemies seduce thee from the stedfastness of thy faith the uprightness of her cause and the innocencie of thy sufferings 4. By how much God does the more increase his temporal blessings upon the wicked by so much the more do thou implore his spiritual graces upon his Church and her temporal deliverance out of troubles And thus the greater conformity thy prayers have unto Gods will the easier access shall they find to his ear and the readier acceptance at his hand What can give peace if God withhold grace what can bring succor if he refuse favor All wealth honor pleasure Scepters Crowns the whole World with its fulness or rather its vanity and emptiness cannot speak comfort where God strikes terror they cannot give rest if he refrain love But if the peace of God dwell in us Phil. 4.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it shall keep our hearts yea praesidio custodiet so Beza it shall keep them as with a Guard So that amidst all outward distractions and distresses all temporal troubles and trials Gods wing of providence shall be our shield of protection the comforts of his promises the encouragements of our faith and the secret of his presence the safety of our souls Indeed Gods grace is the only refuge from Gods anger And therefore as to get within him that strikes at us is the way to avoid the force of his blow so by a communion of prayer to close with God that corrects us is the way to escape the judgment of his wrath And to encourage us in the duty of prayer for the restoring of the Church and the subduing of her enemies know there is no power of earth or hell that is able to withstand the force of prayer Rev. 12.9 1 Pet. 5.8 Rev. 20.2 The Scriptures represent Satan unto us in a threefold resemblance of a Serpent a Lyon and a Dragon a Serpent for the wiliness of his subtlety a Lyon for the mightiness of his strength and a Dragon for the fierceness of his malice Now what is the Churches safest guard to repell and her surest weapon to overthrow this malice might and subtlety of Satan what but the importunity of fervent prayer See it in David Asa and Esther By prayer David befools the counsel of Achitophel 2 Sam. 15.31 2 Chro. 14.11 and therein defeats his and Satans subtlety Again by prayer Asa vanquisheth the Aethiopian host consisting of a Thousand thousand Esth 4.16 and therein he quells theirs and Satans might Lastly by prayer Esther disappoints the design of Haman and therein overthrows his and Satans malice And no wonder if prayer do overthrow the greatest malice might and subtlety of Satan and the world seeing it does fetch in the infinite grace power and wisdom of God and of Christ Yea prayer does besiege heaven and takes it by force Exod. 32.10 and puts God himself to a Dimitte me Let me alone yea such is the prevailing importunity of fervent prayer as breaks through a repulse and is not denied with a denial I will deliver you no more Judg. 10.13 14 15. saith God to Israel yet which shews what stock they came of right Israelites indeed they wrestle with God and conquer him before they conquer their enemies they first overcome God by the importunity of prayer and then through God they overcome the Ammonites by force of arms When God goes on in a resolved wrath and purposed desolation he stops the mouth of prayer
lest that should stay him from striking Thus he bespeaks the Prophet Jeremy Pray not for this people Jer. 7.16 neither lift up cry nor prayer for them neither make intercession to me for I will not hear thee But now on the contrary when the Church is in distress the hearts of the faithful rais'd in devotion is a sure sign of Gods arising to judgment his peoples approaching near unto him in prayer Ps 102. Dan. 9 is the forerunner of his approaching near to his people in deliverance Indeed we may be assured Luk. 18 4.7 if the petition of an importunate Widow could prevail with an unjust Judge much more shall the prayers and sighs and tears of a widow'd Church prevail with the most holy God 5. To fervent Prayer join faithful obedience ●am 3 41. S. Hier. in loc Thus the Church of old Let us lift up our hearts say they with our hands to the Lord in the heavens Upon which S. Hierom gives this gloss Cor cum manibus levat qui orationem operibus roborat He lifts up his heart with his hands who strengthens his prayers with his works The zeal of obedience quickens the fervor of our prayers and the fervor of our prayers quickens the zeal of our obedience Which obedience if it be sincere it will be universal in an impartial respect unto all Gods commandments not allowing the commission of any one sin nor quitting the obligation of any one duty desirous to please God in all things And where there is a breach of this obedience Col. 1.10 Phil. 3 9. the soul applies it self unto Christ by faith for a supply of his righteousness Without this sincerity of obedience no man is upright in his conversion and so not in a fit capacity of temporal deliverance or eternal salvation O consider this all ye that in the bargain of salvation and traffick of heaven stand upon your abatements with Christ the abatement of such a darling lust such a temporal ininterest such a worldly gain such an hard duty or such an irksom task Thus the flesh barters with the spirit and the carnal man turns Huckster with his Saviour But oh consider consider the purchasing Heavens happiness is like a buying the Sybils Prophesies the longer you stand off in dispute of the price the dearer every day will be its purchase it will cost the more difficult task of repentance the more large expence of tears the more deep moans of sorrow the more bitter cryes of prayer the more sharp combats of spiritual conflicts the more painful throws of the new birth and the more strict watchfulness of an after-obedience Vain men ye certainly know not how to value the price of a soul nor the worth of a Saviour who would gain life and salvation upon so easie conditions Ah! this this is the great sin of the Land unfruitfulness under the means of grace Like Rebekah's womb Gen. 25.21 22 23. we have been a barren Nation and therefore God in just wrath hath brought upon us pain in our own bowels the strugling contests of profane Esaus and supplanting Jacobs in the very womb of the Church and Nation Wherefore all ye who own your selves sons and daughters of the Church be faithful unto God and your souls in the duties of a sincere obedience knowing this that the sins of professed enemies are not so much provoking God to temporal judgments as the sins of his people in that they are committed against the testimonies of greater love and exposing Gods truth name and worship to greater contempt Amos 3.2 Thus saith God to Israel by his Prophet You only have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities It is worth our observation that if we consult the sacred Scriptures the Annals of the Church and the Histories of Nations we find that God bears longer with the sinful provocations of a strange Nation then with those of his chosen people The sins of the Amorites are not so soon full as the sins of Israel nor at this day is the measure of the Turkish iniquity so soon fill'd up as that of the Graecian Churches And the reason is those fruits are soonest ripe which are nearest the sun and fattest in so●l and such are sins against blessings of mercy and under the means of grace Amos 8.2 Jer. 1.11 which are therefore call'd by the Prophet the first ripe fruits and the judgment on Gods people is resembled by the rod of an Almond-tree Ezek. 9.6 1 Pet. 4.17 which first puts forth its branches And thus Judgment first begins at the Sanctuary the house of God Indeed where the sun shines hottest there the fruits ripen fastest and fall soonest Unfruitfulness then under the means of grace exposeth to further destruction but sincerity of obedience prepares to a speedy restauration such as shall confute and silence all murmuring complaints in this spiritual conflict arising from the m sinterpretation of the order of Gods providence in the tribulations of the godly and the prosperity of the wicked CHAP. IX The Souls Conflict from the long continuance of its afflictions and temptations O The wonder of divine grace 2 Cor. 12 9. that Gods strength does so gloriously appear in mans weakness as to sustain him against all the malicious oppositions of Satan all the treacherous beguilements of the Flesh and all the various temptations of the World it is the astonishment this of the Angels and that for which Chr●st shall one day be so much admired in his Saints See 2 Thess 1.10 see the spiritual estate of a man truly sanctified whilst he is in his earthly pilgrimage to the heavenly Jerusalem He bears in his flesh the law of sin Rom. 7.23 Mat. 16.24 Eph. 6.12 and on his shoulder the Cross of Christ he walks in a narrow path pusht at by many potent enemies the powers of darkness to throw him down to which end they adde subtlety to their malice policie to their power they spread a net for his feet So that how is it possible without a miracle of grace and of mercy of life and of love of power and of peace how is it possible weak and fainting man should tread so strait a path as the way of righteousness and break through all spiritual difficulties to attain an heavenly rest This is that beaten path which the Patriarchs Kings and Prophets the Apostles Martyrs and Saints have trod before us And if any man shall conceit some other way to heaven then this of difficulties and dangers of afflictions and temptations Secr. schol hist eccl we may say to him as Constantine did to Acesius Erige scalam ascende solus Raise thy self a ladder and climb up alone never any went that way thou dream'st of before thee neither shall any go it after thee But it is no wonder vain man if thou lose thy self when thou takest an unknown
path and leavest the beaten road even that which is right via regia the Kings high-way that way which the King of heaven Christ the Prince of glory Heb 2 10 Luk. 2● 26 9.22 23. both by precept and by pattern by doctrine and example hath chalkt out to us If then we be of the Israel of God having escaped out of the Egypt of an unregenerate state we must expect our Red sea of persecutions our fiery Serpents of temptations and our long Wilderness of afflictions all which we must pass through before we attain the heavenly Canaan the inheritance of promise and of rest And now that we be not discouraged with the difficulties of our passage look we into the Word of life and Gospel of our salvation and there see besides the reward of glory to crown our constancie see the hand that sustains the might that strengthens us to overcome even the power and grace of Christ See the refreshings which keep our souls from fainting and add to our constancie chearfulness even the councels and comforts of the Spirit And these we shall administer to the distressed soul which in its long and continued Conflict makes this sad and languishing complaint The Words of Complaint How long oh how long have I waited for the returns of my God of my Jesus I have often prayed and long expected and yet no comfort comes unto my soul my distress of conscience still continues because my God hides his face and withholds the light of his countenance from me Yea he hath not only laid me in the darkness but also shut me up that I cannot come forth Mine afflictions compass me daily yea all the day they come about me like waters and threaten the swallowing up of my soul And oh what is my help my hope but my God But alas he refuseth to be intreated I am weary of my groaning I have cryed day and night and yet he heareth not so that though the desires of my soul be towards his name and the remembrance of his holiness yet how are my fears and my terrors increased lest I be cut off from his hand cast out of his presence and become one of those that go down into the pit I have been so long in darkness that Satan pleads it in my misgiving thoughts as too plain a sign of being a child of darkness for that sure if the Sun of righteousness were risen upon my soul those clouds this mist that darkness would not continue but as he brings healing in his wings so would he bring comfort in his light refreshings by his Spirit and deliverance by his power The Grounds of Comfort 1. The firm assurance Christ gives of his indulgent care over his Church and chosen Thus he comforted Sion of old When the Prophet in much Pathos of joy Isa 49.13 calls upon the inanimate creatures to make up the Jubile Sing O heaven and be joyful O earth and break forth into singing O mountains for God hath comforted his people and will have mercy upon his afflicted Yet it is Sion's deep complaint in the depth of her calamity v. 14. The Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me But see see the love of God to his afflicted Church exceeds that of the tender mother to her sucking child Naz orat 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no bowels more tender then those of a mother yet more tender far are those of our heavenly Father For so says God in a pathetical expostulation of faithfulness and love v. 15. Can a mother forget her sucking child that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb yea she may forget yet will I not forget thee Think not then O thou afflicted soul when God hides his face that he forgets thee or when he withdraws a while he then forsakes thee For how have we seen the careful and tender Mother wave the Child in her loving arms and pleas'd with its embraces threaten its fall that so fear might make it cling unto her bosom with the more sportful eagerness Thus even thus it is with the humble Saint and his gracious Saviour Videtur deserere quia non vult deseri Christ seems to forsake him on purpose that he may not be forsaken of him And this according to the tenor of Gods everlasting covenant That he will put his fear into the hearts of his chosen that they shall not depart from him Yea Jer. 32 4● see the indeleble characters of Christs love and the infallible testimony of his care Says Christ to his Spouse his Church and in her to every faithful soul Behold I have engraven thee in the palms of my hands Engraven how why s● ●9 16. not with the carving tools but the piercing nails and not upon the skin but quite through the flesh not cover'd over with precious gold but colour'd through with more precious blood which neither age nor eternity shall wear out Thus thus have I engraven thee in the palms of my hands Humanitùs dictum saith Jun us it is spoken after the manner of men Jun. in loc but it is indeed an emphatical expression outvying the highest Courtship of the most amorous Lover to his beloved He it may be will have her Picture hang in his bosom that so forsooth she may be near his heart But Christ he hath his Spouse engraven in his hands that so she may be ever in his eye as well as in his heart she is his care as well as his love Wherefore that the Saints and chosen of God are often and long afflicted is not through want of love to pitty or of care to regard or of power to relieve No sure for what Father or Mother is not compassionately affected affectionately moved with the sufferings and sorrows of their dear children What tender Husband or what indeared Friend will not engage himself for the comfort succour supply and safety of whom he truly loves and lovingly tenders And therefore as David frames the Argument Ps 94 9. He that made the ear shall not he hear He that formed the eye shall not he see and he that teacheth man knowledge shall not he know So say I He who implants love and compassion in his creatures shall not he be much more loving and compassionate to his Saints He who imprints those tender affections in fathers husbands friends shall not he be more tenderly compassionate to his Church and chosen Yes sure Wherefore then Exod. 3.7 Jer 31.20 Ps 65.2 Ps 56.8 Mal. 3.16 he hath an eye of Providence to see their distress bowels of pitty to compassionate their trouble ears of mercy to hear their prayers bottles of love to hold their tears a book of remembrance to register their complaints yea Satan and the World shall know he hath Judgments of righteousness to plead their cause Vials of wrath to avenge their blood an arm of power to deliver their persons and a crown of
the Word of the most High God it alters not but as the Lord is gracious in his promise so will he be faithful in the performance Answ Answ General promises have their particular application and so become as the object of faith so the support of the soul in each particular condition Indeed it hath been the priviledge of some more devout souls and more divine tempers by an experienc'd communion with God in prayer to implore him for particular blessings with as firm an assurance as if they had had a particular promise Thus it is reported of good Latimer Bishop in the beginning of Reformation that he had frequent in his prayers and firm in his confidence these three things Queen Elizabeths obtaining the Crown His sealing the Truth with his blood and the third which he used to express with greatest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of devotion and vehemencey of zeal was this The Gospel restor'd once again once again in England All which God hath fulfilled But what said I all fulfilled No sure Upon perusing this passage of History I was affected in my thoughts observing the duplication of the good Fathers prayer that it was for the Gospels restoring once again and once again in England I hope the Spirit of prayer and of prophecie here went together and as the Gospel hath been already once again restor'd unto our fathers so it shall be once again restor'd unto us and unto our children as it hath been once restor'd from Romish Superstition so it shall be once again restor'd from Heretical Schismatical and Sacrilegious Profanation And this oh this do we further with our prayers our teares our deepest humiliations I call to mind the Historical tradition concerning S. Augustine That his mother Monica frequently applying herself to S. Ambrose that famous Bishop with bitter mournings for her son then a blasphemous Maniche and of a dissolute life though after an Orthodox Father and of a religious conversation S. Ambrose observing her continual lamentations dismist her with these words of comfort and confidence that Tot lachrymarum filius c. The son of so many tears should not perish Oh! did the Sons of this Church for their Mother as Monica the Mother did for her Son Isa 62 6 7. Luk. 18 7. importune God with prayers and tears day and night giving him no rest I could with confidence make particular application of Christs general promise and tell them in the words of S. Ambrose a little chang'd Tot lachrymarum Mater The Mother of so many tears the Church of so many prayers shall not be ruin'd The gates of hell even the policie of men and devils shall not prevail against her But oh I fear I fear our prayers have been so long out of the Church that most men leave the Church out of their prayers However then it be a divine priviledge of Gods devoutest Saints to have a secret perswasion and impulse of the Spirit for the asking by prayer and believing through faith particular blessings as if given in particular promises yet that which is the pattern of our practice is an application of the general promises to our particular conditions with an humble submission unto God in the order of his providence to dispose of our distress and of our deliverance as shall make most for his own glory and his Churches good And though God set a long date of time to the performance of his promise yet let not our hearts faint nor faith fail seeing there is certainly no void and empty space no vacuum in his providence but the interval is that of preparing the seed to harvest the fitting his people for deliverance and as the sharper Winter makes the Spring more fruitful the harvest more plentiful so the sharper affliction makes our graces more pure our deliverance more glorious Obj. 2. I have long expected and could with patience have Obj. 2 longer waited for the the salvation of my God did not the blasting of my hopes make my faith to wither In stead of recovery behold a festering of my wound I expected a mitigation but I find and feel an aggravation of my distress I did hope for a deliverance but now am prest down with a greater trouble Answ Answ If God increase thy burden continue thou instant in prayer and he will doubtless either increase thy strength or else hasten thy deliverance That of S. Paul stands firm God is faithful who will not suffer those that are his to be tempted above what they are able 2 Cor. 10.13 Theoph. in loc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Theophylact God proportions our burden to our strength or else gives strength propor ionable to our burden so that the force of Satans temptations shall not exceed the power of Gods grace Wherefore Thou relying upon the promise of thy God neither shall thine affl ction in its burden of weight nor in its length of continuance so damp thy faith or dead thy devotion as to destroy thy soul Further take this admonition That thou cherish an expectation of distresses happening and withall make good a preparation against the happening of distresses for nothing more discomposeth the frame of soul or disturbeth the peace of mind then when our troubles are sudden beyond expectation and our hearts unfenc'd without preparation We say Quae alii diu patiendo sapiens diu cogitando levia facit Those things which others make light by patience in long-suffering the wise man makes light by patience in long foreseeing Good it is then in afflictions still to expect the worst And thus what ill befalls us will be the lighter and what good happens to us it will be the sweeter Expect we the worst not in a distracting fear but in a wary prudence not in an ill presaging distrust but in a well resolved faith Neither may we fancie groundless troubles and thereby create crosses to our selves To fear shadows argues either guilt of Conscience or weakness of Judgment Neither may we yet anticipate Gods work by imposing a certainty of event upon probable afflictions For this were to double our cross if the evil happens and to create a cross if it happen not Thus O thou afflicted soul it remains firm as a sure Rule of Direction That whatsoever is the weight or continuance of thy trouble thou stay thy self upon the Promise waiting by prayer and patience for the salvation of thy God O Blessed JESVS the Lord of life Prince of glory and Captain of our salvation who hast vanquisht Satan and all the powers of darkness O give victory to all languishing Souls in their Spiritual Conflicts Guide them with thy councels sustain them with thy grace refresh them with thy comforts preserve them in thy love and crown them with thy glory Amen Amen Halleluiah THE Preacher's Tripartite BOOK III. TO Establish TRVTH and PEACE IN SEVERAL SERMONS Against the present Heresies and Schisms ESPECIALLY As to The Gospels Ministry Infants Baptism The Mystery of the Trinity
joy the secret whisper of your secret thoughts returning the Church St. Peters answer of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To whom shall we go Thou hast the words of eternal life O this this is your day of trial as well as of trouble be not then too much offended that there are Heresies amongst us What St. Paul spake to the Church of Corinth it was spoken also to the Church of England 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There must be also Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you Division Observe in the words two general parts A Premonition and a Premunition a Fore-warning and a Fore-arming The Premonition and Fore-warning in the former words There must be also Heresies among you The Premunition and Fore-arming in the latter words That they which are approved may be made manifest among you In the first general part the Premunition observe four particulars the evil foretold in its quality of nature its quantity of guilt its certainty of event and its propinquity of danger First Its quality of nature Heresies Secondly Its quantity of guilt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also or even Heresies Thirdly The certainty of event 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there must be also Heresies Fourthly The propinquity of danger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among you There must be also Heresies among you In the second general part the Premunition observe two particulars a Fore-arming them with Constancy and with Comfort Constancy in the Faith and comfort in their Tryal First Constancy in the Faith That they be approved Secondly Comfort in their Tryal knowing this to be the end of God's permitting Heresies in the Church That they who are approved may be made manifest Thus There must be also Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you Method Explication and Application THe first general part the Premonition Explic. and therein of the first particular The evil foretold in its quality of nature Heresies There must be also Heresies We will consider the name and then the nature 1. The name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is derived say the best Etymologists 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from chusing as being that opinion or sect which a man chuseth to himself At first a word of an indifferent signification till by use in St. Paul's Epistles and Ecclesiastical Writers it became appropriated to signifie that sect or opinion which is opposite to the Truth of Christ and the Faith of his Church From the name then pass we to the nature and joyning the materiale and the formale of Heresie together I conceive we may thus define it to be a Pertinacious error of judgment in the Fundamental Doctrines of Faith Upon which definition we will give you our several Observations As first observe not every Error of Judgment in Doctrines of Observ 1 Faith is Heresie for there are some Doctrines of greater obscurity and some of less moment in which we have the Apostles indulgence Every man to abound in his own sense with this proviso That we violate not the Analogy of Faith Rom. 12.6 and use our liberty without breach of Charity for as there was no noise of Axes or Hammers in the building of the Temple so nor should there be any jars from the difference of Judgment and Opinions in the Edifying of the Church True it is no Instrument was ever so perfectly in tune but the next Artists hand would mend something and so no judgment was ever so perspicaciously knowing but that some fancy or opinion could finde matter of dissent Look we back upon the Primitive times themselves and how do we finde Chrysostome and Epiphanius Basil and Damasus Jerome and Austine Victor and Irenaeus and others though learned and holy men Famous in their Generations yet in matters of some consequence though of less moment differing in their opinions and so necessarily some of them erroneous yet did not their dissention of judgments in which they were excellent Paterns of Hum●lity and Charity yet d●d not I say their dissention of judgments break forth into disunion of hearts but in all things th●y held fast the bond of love as Disciples of Christ and sons of the Church Observ 2 Secondly observe The Error of Heresie must be in the Fundamentals of Faith e●ther evertendo or concutiendo in direct terms or by necessary consequence either manifestly overthrowing or dangerously shaking the very basis and foundation of our Christian Religion But here is the great quaere What Doctrines of Faith are fundamental in which to erre with pertinacy is Heretical Here not to determine the cause but to give you my judgment For I finde the ablest judgments declining the cause as too weak to determine it 1 Cor. 3.11 To give you I say my judgment observe St. Paul Other foundation saith the Apostle can no man lay then that is laid which is Jesus Christ But how then is Jesus Christ objectivè the foundation of our Faith Why in his one Person his divers Natures his different Estates his several Offices and his inestimable Benefits According to all which me thinks our Church gives us the best Commentary upon the Apostles Text in that Analogy of Faith set forth in the Apostles Creed the Decalogue the Lords Prayer and the Doctrine of the Sacraments of the Sacraments as to their Essentials Observ 3 Thirdly observe Heresie is an Error Dogmatical not Practical of judgment in Doctrines of Faith not of manners in actions of life For that Murder Adultery Theft and the like though they be sins of an hainous nature yet are they not of an Heretical guilt to act those sins forbidden by Gods Word is Prophaneness but to deny those acts to be sins and Gods Word to have forbidden them that is Heresie So then dogmatically to deny any Article of our Creed any Command of the Decalogue any Petition of the Lords Prayer any Essential part of the Sacraments is Heretical Observ 4 Fourthly observe It is not the Error of Judgment but the pertinacy of will which does formally constitute the Heretick For so St. Augustine was wont to say Errare possum Haereticus esse nolo I may erre but I will not be an Heretick not be pertinacious in Error wilfully opposing the light and evidence of Divine Truth And it is Bellarmin's Apology which he makes for Durand Bellarm de Euchar. l. 3. c. 13. That though his opinion in some things was Heretical yet was he not himself an Heretick And why Quia paratus fuit Ecclesiae Judicio acquiescere Because he was ready to acquiesce in the Churches judgment Indeed Humility and Charity preserves from Heresie as being formally pertinacious though not as materially erroneous We see it in St. Cyprian in the case of Rebaptization to whom the Church of Christ hath given a general approbation of his Person and Gifts yet an Universal condemnation of his Opinion and Error And it is Vincentius his observation
knowledge do write to communicate it and by writing to communicate it do improve their knowledge O how much precious truth should we have wanted in the Treasury of the Churches stock especially concerning the great Mystery of the Blessed Trinity and Personal Unity and of the Catholick Church if the Sabellians Photinians Arians Eunomians Nestorians Eutycheans Donatists Novations and the like if these and others ejusdem farinae of the same Leaven if they had not rose up by their oppositions of Heresie and Schism to stir up the Study Prayer Zeal and Argumentations of the Holy Learned and Orthodox Fathers Yea let us look home a while and upon an easie observation we may finde That this benefit and advantage our Church hath gained by the eager contentions of spightful Tongues and perverse Mindes That her holy Form of Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government hath been more fully discussed and more clearly vindicated against all the false Imputations and strongest Arguments of her Schismatical and Heretical opposers So that if God shall please to repair the Churches unity and peace and restore her purity and splendor as that he will do it in his due time you helping forward by your Prayers I nothing doubt and I would not you should distrust If God I say shall please to repair the Churches unity and peace and restore her purity and splendor those stale calumnies and unjust cavils of Bishops being Antichristian our Liturgy the Mass our Litany Conjuring our Doctrine Popish our Ceremonies Superstitious our Temples Idolatrous our Ministers Baal 's Priests these and the like clamors of Error and Ignorance of Malice and Madness These I say If God pleaseth to repair and restore our Church they will become then as odious and hateful as they are now acceptable and useful with the vulgar then as much hist down as now cried up then as vain and insufferable as now unjust and unreasonable But if for the sins of the people God shall unchurch the Nation if for our contempt of the light and truth of his Word Rev. 2 5. he shall remove the Candlestick and deprive us of his Ordinances Such is the full conviction of Errors to a confirming all sober mindes in the Faith that I doubt not to say There are many which hear me this day would rather chuse to die and fall with truth then live and flourish with Heresie This the first particular of our first general part the Apostles fore-arming his Corinthians with constancy in the Faith that they be approved 2. With comfort in their Tryal That being approved they shall be made manifest Manifest on Earth and manifest in Heaven 1. Manifest on Earth The furious Zeal and violent Persecution of Heresie is the Furnace Mal. 3.3 4. wherein God oftentimes purifies the faith and faithful separating the dross from the Gold it is that strong wind which shakes down the rotten boughs and corrupt fruit severing it from the strong and sound it is that overflowing floud which overturns the sandy foundation whilst the rocks stand firm or lastly Matth. 7.25 it is that fan which severs the chaff from the Corn men of light fancies Matth. 3.12 and loose affections from those of solid judgments and established hearts How is it with many mens hearts as with musical instruments They are in good tune and temper whilst the pleasant and fair season of peace and prosperity lasts But as upon change of weather the strings do either slack or break so upon change of times do their resolutions either yeeld or faint But oh Beloved an heart established a spirit resolved a minde stedfast Oh how is it the honor and ornament of our Christian Faith By this it is That the Confessors Graces like Lebanons Spices have the sweeter smell in being bruised and in their tryal of Faith they become as more acceptable Sacrifices of Obedience offered unto God so more choice examples of Holiness manifest and set forth in the Church Had it not been then for the Heresies Schisms and Apostacies of the former ages those antient Fathers Irenaeus Athanasius Hilary Nazianzen Basil Chrysostome Hierome Augustine and others They had not been Stars of so great a magnitude in the Firmament of Christs Church And indeed were it not for the Heresies Schisms and Apostacies of these latter days our Church would not have so much to glory of her Cranmer Tindal Whitaker Whitgift Bancroft Bilson Andrews Hooker and others Men famous in their Generations yea our Jewel would not have had his lustre nor our Laud his praise our Dypticks and Church Records of Learned Worthies yea of Royal Patriots would not be so large so venerable and so glorious These and all other Strenui propugnatores fidei stout Champions of the Churches faith They are by a blessing of God made manifest and observe made manifest not onely in the Orthodoxes love but also in the Hereticks hate it is with them as with St. Augustine whose industry and piety in quelling and extinguishing the Pelagian Heresie Hieron ep 80. St. Hierome thus congratulates telling him That his name was venerable in the City and honorable in the Church as the Founder again of the ancient Faith and Quod signum majoris gloriae est omnes Haeretici detestantur and which was a signal of greater glory all the Heretical did hate him However then black-mouthed malice doth spit calumny upon the whitest innocence yet that encomium St. Paul gives the ancient Heroes Heb. 11.39 the Patriarchs Prophets and Martyrs of old the same we may justly give our Protestant Worthies of late That by Faith they have obtained a good report a name that shall out-live all Heresie and Schism a name precious and honorable in the memory of the faithful Thus they who in their oppositions of Heresie become constant in the Faith they are made manifest on Earth But further 2. Manifest also in Heaven For this then observe The Church on Earth is Militant and therefore the Church in right order is said to be terrible as an army with banners Cant. 6.4 Though in disorder an army with banners becomes terrible to the Church The then I say on Earth is Militant 1 Cor. 15.32 and St. Pauls fighting with Beasts at Ephesus was not a combate more honorable and glorious then that of contending for the Faith Jude 3. against the rage of Heresies This this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Certamen illud praeclarum as Beza renders it that good 2 Tim. 4.7 that honorable fight of Faith which hath for its reward a Crown of life Rev. 2.10 or if a Crown of life be the reward of Faith to all the blessed yet then the stout Champions of the Faith shall have some special Jewels in their Crown some particular glory in that blessed life and so being manifest on Earth they are manifest also in Heaven being manifest in the Church Militant for their eminent Grace they shall be manifest also in
the Church Triumphant by some excellent glory According to that of the Prophet Dan. 12 3. They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the Firmament and they that turn many to righteousness as the Stars for ever and ever To close then in days of persecution St. Paul tells us That the suffering Saints of Christs Church 1 Cor. 4.9 they are made a Spectacle unto the World and to Angels and to Men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says the Apostle We are brought forth into the World as upon a stage to play a prize in the view of Heaven and Earth So that being approved we cannot but be manifest yea performing our parts well the Angels themselves shall give a pla●dite at our exit they shall with triumph conveigh our Souls into the Heavenly Presence Heb. 2.10 where Christ the Captain of our Salvation as Arbiter of the Combate shall bestow a Crown of Glory as the reward of Victory 1 Cor 9 25. In days then of tryal and trouble from the persecutions of Heresie Quest How may we best order our lives as such who are approved for constancy in the Faith Answ In the exercise of these Christian Duties Answ fervent Prayer sincere Obedience devout Meditation strict Watchfulness and holy Zeal 1. Fervent Prayer That God would be pleased in mercy to open the eyes and incline the hearts of the Seducers and of the seduced O Beloved you know not the vertue and efficacy of Prayer for the Conversion of Souls Prayer may do it when Preaching fails when the religious and tender mother Monica applied her self to St. Ambrose with this humble suit That he would by his learned Conference reclaim her son Augustine from his Error seduced into the blasphemous Heresie of the Maniches Though she urged her suit with sighs and that Pathetical Oratory of flowing tears yet the pious and prudent Father waves her request and returns her this answer Thy sons heat of youth and pride of sp rit does render him uncapable of my Conviction to his Conversion but thou continuing thy Prayers earnestly soliciting the Throne of Grace Aug. Confes l. 3. c. 12. Ille legendo reperiet quis ille sit error quanta impietas He shall finde by reading in how great an Error and Impiety he is involved For that Tot lachrymarum filius the son of so many tears shall not perish And that this was seasonable and saving advise the manner and method of St. Augustines Conversion evidently declares Let this then be a part of their Prayer who are approved in the Faith That God would open the eyes and incline the hearts of the Seducers and the seduced or if their Seduction be a Judgment of Reprobation and irreversible by Prayer let this be our supplication That God will defend and deliver his Church from the Policies and Practises 2 Thes 3 2. the Pertinacy and Persecution of such unreasonable men as the Apostle calls them And in our Prayers let not our hearts fail nor our faith faint for notwithstanding the thick mists and threatning storms yet God will be seen in the Mount a present help in our pressing troubles and a saving deliverance in our deepest distresses With Jehoshaphat when we know not what to do then Let our eyes be towards the Lord 2 Chron. 20.6 and if our eyes be towards God in Prayer his eye will be towards us in pity and his compassion shall bring Salvation 2. To our fervent Prayer we must joyn a sincere Obedience I doubt not but that we have many of us poured forth many Prayers breathed forth many sighs But what is the reason they have not returned as Noahs Dove Gen. 8.11 With an Olive branch of peace a gracious answer of mercy Is it not because we have sought our selves more then our God Our ease and rest more then his truth and righteousness Psal 65.2 God is a God that heareth Prayers this is a title in which he glories a glory of which he boasts So that our narrow hearts stop his flowing streams and we become straitned in our selves not in our God His Mercies are free and full our Prayers empty and vain and why are our Prayers empty and vain but because our lives are sinful and vile God is not unwilling to give but we uncapable to receive he not backward to bestow but we unfit to enjoy we seek Consolation but not in the way of Sanctification we desire Peace and rest but pursue it not in the way of Truth and Holiness Renewed hearts and reformed lives O how well how well Beloved do they suit the old Faith and antient Truth That truth in which we profess to be constant and that Faith in which we desire to be approved But oh when our sins out-cry our Prayers and our Conversations confute our Supplications no wonder if an Orthodox Church languish And a few Suppliants at the Throne of Grace have their Prayers returned into their own bosoms not availing for the publick good being strongly overborn by a publick gu●lt Wherefore when we implore God in Prayer imitate we the Church in the Lamentations Lam. 3.41 By lifting up our hearts with our hands unto God in the Heavens Hieron in loc Now Cor cum manibus levat qui orationem operibus roborat he lifts up h●s heart with his hands who strengthens his Prayers with his works his hearty Devotion with his sincere Obedience 3. Devout Meditation This in the sacred Scriptures the Pandects of Divine Law from whence we argue the Panoply and Magazin from whence we arm our Tongues and Pens against all that is Heretical Onely our Meditation here must be accompanied with Humility 1 Cor. 8.1 that Knowledge puff not up with Pride And therefore herein especially do we exercise our Humility in not being over-confident of our own knowledge for alas when the best know most how far are they from knowing half of what is contained in the Mysteries of the Grace and Gospel of Christ For that Hierom in Eph. 3. Singuli sermones syllabae apices puncta in divinis scripturis plena sunt sensibus so St. Hierom every word every syllable every letter every title Chrys Proaem C●m in Ep. ad Rom. Dam Scripturae bonae intelliguntur non bene quod in eis non bene intelligitur etiam temerè audacter asseritur Aug. Tract 18. in Joan. Id. Aug. in the sacred Scriptures is full of mystery and divine meaning Now from hence are all Heresies even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a not knowing the Scriptures so St. Chrysostome and St. Augustine more fully hereby men become Heretical when they have not a right understanding of the sacred Scriptures and what they rightly understand not through ignorance they rashly assert with boldness Wherefore when we meditate upon the sacred Scriptures meeting with some more secret and amazing mysteries let our humility teach us that there Melior est fidelis ignorantia
fast to them and to their doctrine keep firm to that profession of Faith which the Orthodox Clergy have preached in their Sermons and still preach in their sufferings such as never yet renounced or contradicted their subscriptions The sum of our Churches Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government contained in the Liturgy in the Thirty nine Articles the Book of Homilies and of Ordination These every Minister did subscribe to even those Ministers did set to their hands in subscription to justifie them who after lift up their hands in Covenant to destroy them But God grant them Repentance and us Perseverance them Repentance of their Revolt and us Perseverance in the Faith that at the last day the Church may say to us what Christ said to his Apostles Lu● ● 28 Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations and then shall Christ in the view of the whole World reward our Patience and crown our Constancy making it manifest fully manifest That we are approved Thus have we done with the several particulars of the Explication and of the Application what remains but your practice Halleluiah THE FIRST SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you Introduction IF we who serve in the Sanctuary do as men intrusted in greatest Affairs and Imployments should do often view our Commission from our Saviour as his Ministers 1 Cor. 4.1 Matth. 10.24 2 Cor. 5.20 from our Lord as his Stewards from our Master as his Servants yea from our King as his Ambassadors This frequent view will animate our Ministry with a zealous vigor encouraged in our Service by the authority and presence of our Lord and Master See the Preface to my Text and we finde our Saviour victoriously risen from the Grave and before he triumphantly ascends into Heaven he orders the affairs of his Church on Earth speaking unto his Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things concerning the Kingdom Acts 1.3 The Kingdom of which he is Soveraign All power being given unto him in Heaven and in Earth which power he hath promised shall never fail his Church For so says Christ unto his Apostles and all their Successors in the close and compline of the Text Behold I am with you unto the end of the World I am with you in the work of your Ministry with you to prosper your labors and protect your persons To prosper your labors making Disciples not to your selves but to me You I have deputed to the Office of Preaching my Word and administring my Sacraments and therefore they who own me their Master shall acknowledge you my Ministers But further I am with you Matth. 10.40 as to prosper your labors so to protect your persons I will plead your right vindicate yo r authority punish your contempt and avenge your injury If any sleight and despise the office of your ministry if any question or doubt the efficacy of mine Ordinances my Word my Sacraments see my power behold my presence maugre all the malice and rage of men and devils of earth and hell the ministry of my Gospel and Grace shall stand let this then be your encouragement and comfort let this be your assurance and establishment I will justifie your Office and make good your Commission for All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth and lo I am with you unto the end of the World And therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye teach all Nations c. The words they are the very basis and foundation of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles Observe in them three parts a Mission Division a Commission and particular Instructions for the exercising that Commission First The Mission delivered in an usual Grecism of the Participle for the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Secondly The Commission not barely no nor properly teach but more fully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Disciples Dìscipulas facìte omnes gentes as Beza Disciple ye all Nations Thirdly The particular instructions for the exercising this Commission 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baptising and Teaching admitting into the School and Church of Christ by Baptism and then tutoring and training up by Doctrine which Baptism is instituted as to the form of its ministration to be In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost and the Doctrine is prescribed as to the extent of its object to be All things whatsoever Christ hath commanded the end of wh ch Doctrine is obedience even to observe and do Thus Go ye disciple all Nations baptising them in the Name of th● Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you 1. The Mission Go ye The three Offices of Christ as Mediator Explic. his Prophetick Priestly and Regal Office These he now exerciseth in his Church on Earth in the outward Ministry by her Pastors and in the inward Ministra●ion by his Spirit In the outward Ministry of the Church her Pastors do expound the Word of God Preach the Gospel of Truth unfold the Mysteries of Grace which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Prophetical Office Again they offer up the Sacrifices of Prayers and Thanksgivings Baptize and bless in the Name of Christ and celebrate the Sacramental solemnity of the holy Eucharist which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Priestly Office Further yet they bind the unbelieving and loose the Believer they excommunicate the scandalous and absolve the penitent they govern by Discipline and correct by censure which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Regal Office Now no part nor portion of this Ministry may any man take upon him Heb. 5.4 but being called as was Aaron that is called even with an inward and outward call as thus A man hath been brought up in the Schools of the Prophets or else where devoted himself to the study of Divinity whereby he is become in a competent measure fitted for the service of the Church 1 Pet. 5.2 when now he findes St. Peter's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a willingness of spirit and readiness of minde to employ his gifts this is the inward call of God But further to testifie and declare this there must be the outward call of the Church Christ receiving him into the Office of the Ministry by the regular Ordination of his Substitutes who alone in this representing his person can give us our Mission of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye But alas the disorder and confusion of Sacriledge and Schism What was the Prophets complaint is now our Churches groan
you the manner so let me minde you of the end of our Mission and Ministry even the good of your Souls and the chiefest good too that of Life and Salvation The office of the Magistrate intends the establishment of Peace the art of the Physitian the health of the Body the profession of the Lawyer the security of the Estate but the calling of the Minister the salvation of the Soul And therefore St. Paul admonisheth Timothy saying 1 Tim 4 16. Take heed unto thy self and unto the doctrine for in so doing thou shalt save thy self and them that hear thee He then that loves his Soul will prize the Ministry and bless God in making him a partaker of the peculiar priviledge of his v●sible Church the publick Ministration of his Word and Sacraments Which gracious priv●ledge of his visible Church Oh! how near are we to the loosing of it Oh help help to prevent it by your Prayers and that which speaks louder then your Prayers the works of an holy Obedience And O how may God justly take away in wrath what men cast off in contempt the office of his Ministry Which sacred Office however slighted by men yet is it honored of God however esteemed of the world as a mean employment for what more contemptible a disdain 1 Tim. 3.2 then thou Priest yet is it stiled by the Apostle an excellent work And see some part of its excellency The Minister in publick Prayer he is the peoples mouth as their Orator unto God and in publick Preaching he is Gods mouth as his Ambassador unto the people and thus what honor on earth greater then this to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nazianzen speaks Naz. Apolog. a Presidentship of Souls and a kinde of Mediatorship betwixt God and Men Behold we the Minister at the Altar and I will not say what Prince on his Throne but what Seraphim in Heaven is employed in a service of more dignity and honor then this to offer unto God the Commemorative Sacrifice of his Sons Body and Blood I might enlarge were it not that I stand before those I know or at least am willing to beleeve not defective in this duty the honorable and reverential esteems of the Gospels Ministry in its several orders and degrees owned by Gods holy Church though despised by men and the wicked world Onely this from the dignity of the Ministration and Office is aggravated the guilt of their usurpation and violence who either thrust themselves into so sacred a function or thrust out others from their lawful Ministry The name of an Ambassador Cicer. in Ver. Non modo inter seciorum jura sed etiam inter hostium tela incolume versetur it is of that reverence and regard that it may not be violated not onely among the rights of confederates but even the weapons of enemies And what are the Ambassadors of earthly Princes sacred and inviolable by the Law of Nations and shall the Ambassadors of the King of Heaven be silenced Numb 16. rejected imprisoned against the Law of God Corah Dathan and Abiram opening their mouths in mutiny against Moses and Aaron the earth opens her mouth in revenge and they sink down quick into the pit Uzziah 2 Chron. 26. King of Judah invading the Priests office he is sequestred from his regal Function being smitten with a Leprosie and so separated from his people And what was God more jealous for the Legal then he is for the Evangelical Ministration did he punish Kings invading the office of the Priest and will he acquit the people usurping the Function of the Minister No sure But know we that under the Law Gods judgments and blessings they were most-what corporal and temporal whereas his judgments and blessings under the Gospel they are most-what spiritual and eternal so that to be given up to a blindness of minde and a reprobate sense which seems to be the judgment of this Nation it is the most dreadful vengeance that can befal a people of which vengeance there can be no surer symptom then this horrid sin even through Schism Heresie Violence Prophaneness and Sacriledge to invade the Function corrupt the Doctrine abuse the Persons debase the honor and spoil the maintenance of that Ministry which Christ hath constituted and constituted here in his Mission and Commission of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. THE SECOND SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Introduction WHilst I behold the Word and Ministry of Christ to to be amongst men as the Ark and Testament among the Philistines scornfully abus'd as in the Temple of Dagon 1 Sam. 5.2 rather then religiously reverenc'd as in the Church of God The sacred Scriptures the Evidences of our salvation not so much read in Devotion as wrested by Faction Malice or Pride being the venemous Spider which converts the wholsom sweetness of saving Truth into the deadly poison of destructive Heresie And as for the Sacramental Seals of Gods holy Covenant whilst I behold them either pluck'd off by the violent or defac'd by the foul hand of Schism and Profaneness so that a question it is Whether the profane neglecting or the unworthy receiving or the disorderly administring the blessed Sacraments bring greater guilt upon the Nation And no wonder then if our dearest blood hath been spilt in so large a profuseness seeing we have spilt Christs precious blood in so open a profaneness Oh! how how have men come to receive the bread and wine of the blessed Eucharist 1 Cor. 11.29 but have not discern'd Christs body and blood through their profane and unworthy participation And now how many oh too too many how do they go to receive Christs body and blood and alas discern not that it is meer bread and wine through an unlawful and Schismatical administration Of these two so horrid evils I cannot suddenly say which is the greater guilt And as for the Sacrament of Baptism whilst I behold Parents cruel to their tender Infants Joh. 3.5 denying them entrance into Christs kingdom and keeping from them the seal of the Covenant of grace out of which Covenant there is no salvation In which see the just judgment of the righteous God that they who in a blind zeal have been so cruel to their mother the Church to eat out her bowels by Schism they are given up to such a blindness of mind that they become cruel to their own children in not admitting them into the Churches bosom her holy communion by baptism And thus those very persons who did load our Church and Ministry with this reproach and scandal that we would bring up our children in the superstition of
Popery God hath preserv'd us entire in the faith and made us live to see them to bring their children to be without the character of Christianity Now whilst I behold these so horrid violations of Schism and Heresie of Sacrilege and Profaneness as I have begun so by Gods blessing I shall go on to vindicate the authority purity and dignity of Christs Ministry Word and Sacraments And to that end I shall make further progress in this present Text the sure Basis of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles Go ye disciple all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Having given you the Explication of the first particular Explicat The Mission Go ye We proceed to the second particular The Commission Not barely no nor properly teach but more fully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Disciples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Disciple all Nations But why disciple rather then teach I answer for a two fold reason the propriety of the word and the congruity of the sense 1. The propriety of the word which neither in profane Authors nor in the sacred Scriptures any where signifies to teach but either to admit another or to give up ones self to be taught To confirm this from the language of the Scripture we observe besides its radix 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which all Lexicons render disco to learn I say besides this we observe that the word here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ill translated to teach is aptly expounded and that according to the use of the Hebrews by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make Disciples Joh. 4 1. which exposi ion is further confirm'd by that of S. Matthew where it is said according to the Greek of Joseph of Arimathea Mat. 27.57 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did signifie to teach must be absurdly rendred He himself taught Jesus But signifying as we interpret it and all Authors use it a giving up to be taught therefore it is properly rendred as our English reads it Himself was Jesus's disciple 2. The Congruity of the sense It appears a Tautology unbeseeming us to put upon the fundamental law of our Saviour in his constitution of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles it appears I say a Tautology to read Go teach baptizing and teaching Yea further we observe if our Saviour had intended the latter teaching either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either by way of explication or of amplification to the former he would have said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifying teaching we are hereby taught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be properly rendred discipling And then the sense runs clear when the word is read true Go make disciples baptizing and teaching them which teaching extends it self to what may be required before or after Baptism according to the capacity of the discipled Thus then Beloved it appears by this little how requisite it is that Humane learning be handmaid to Divine knowledge for that no Translation can be the authentick Word of God any further then it perfectly agrees with the Original How unfit then are they to interpret Scripture who cannot tell you which is Scripture as sure I am no man can tell you upon his own knowledge but he who is competently skilled in the Original tongues In opening then the Apostles Commission we read it Disciple ye all Nations and propose these two particulars for our Explication 1. What it is to disciple 2. Who they are that are to be discipled 1. What it is to disciple That discipling is more then teaching appears by this that many were taught which were not Disciples of Christ and many are Disciples of Christ which yet are not taught Many were taught which were not Disciples of Christ such were many of age and understanding as of old the Pharisees Again many are Disciples of Christ which yet are not taught such are now the Infants of believing parents who are initiated by baptism to be educated in Christs school by teaching To disciple does not exclude teaching but signifies an initiating to be taught an admitting to be Scholars yet because no man will give up himself to a Master he knows not Christ must first be preached to the Nations before the Nations can be made Disciples unto Christ And thus teaching must necessarily precede discipling but this to the adult only persons of age and understanding whose being discipled brings in their children with them as parts of themselves according to the tenor of Gods covenant Camer in loc and the nature of the Churches communion For as it is observed well by the Learned our Saviour's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is answerable to the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his making Disciples to their making Proselytes which still admits the children with the parents into the communion of the Church And it is the Criticks observation Dr. Hammond multis nominibus mihi honorandus that when our Saviour says Suffer little children to come unto me his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is equivalent to the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby Christ receives little children as his Proselytes that is his Disciples Actual discipling then does not consist in teaching but in receiving in to be taught those that have learnt already to be further taught and those that have not learnt through defect not default to be taught so soon as they can learn Which latter is the condition of Infants dedicated unto Christ who though they are not in a capacity to learn as to the outward Ministry yet this does not exclude them from being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught of God Sure Joh. 6.45 those men who oppose Infants disciplining and baptism will not confine the teaching of the Spirit to the Ministry of the Word But however it be with Infants as to present teaching Christs disciples they are as admitted into his family and school made partakers of his Churches communion and prayers receiv'd under his protection and guard Thus then the Apostles execute their Commission they go out among the Nations preach the Gospel and upon their preaching the Gentiles believe upon their believing the parents and children are receiv'd to Baptism thereby initiated as Scholars of Christs School listed as Soldiers of his Army inroll'd as Subjects of his Kingdom receiv'd as Members of his Church So that in sum to make disciples is to admit into Church-communion which Church-communion before the Jews peculiar is now become the Gentiles priviledge who whilst they were without Christ they were Aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel Eph. 2.12 13. and strangers from the Covenants of promise but being made nigh by the blood of Jesus Jew and Gentile are made one one Church of Christ one Temple of the Holy Ghost diruto septo the wall of partition being broken down even the Law of commandments
applied in Scripture that of St. Peter to the Jews that of Philip to the Eunuch and the rest To close then Baptism coming in place of Circumcision as the initiating Seal of Gods Covenant Col. 2.11 12. there must needs be this Analogy in the administration That as Abraham first believed and then was circumcised and Isaac he first circumcised and after believed so in the conversion of the Gentiles and discipling of the Nations the Parents first believe and then are baptized but their children first are baptized and after believe And thus want of actual Faith does no more exclude Infants now from Baptism then it did of old from Circumcision Secondly They are not capable of teaching and our Saviours Object 2 commission runs Go teach and baptize I answer We have already blunted the edge of this weapon Answ repelled the force of this Argument and Objection having made it plain from the propriety of the word and the congruity of the sense that our Saviour bids Go disciple all Nations which discipling refers not to teaching before but after a receiving and admitting into Christs School to be taught And thus the Argument is retorted seeing it is our Saviours express precept to disciple all Nations by Baptism and that all men in all ages account children one part of the Nations they being capable of discipling in its proper notion either they must be plainly excepted or necessarily implied Thirdly They are not liable to Precept not having the use of Object 3 Reason I answer The Precept obligeth the Parents Answ and the Promise reacheth the Children as administring the proper remedy of their original guilt and contagion As when a Medicine is prescribed as the onely cure of the sick Patient though the sick know not the Medicine and so is not obliged to the prescription yet the friends of the sick are bound to prepare what is prescribed otherwise they make breach of charity and duty and if the sick die thorow their neglect of means and contempt of the remedy they bring the guilt of blood upon themselves And observe however it is most certain the Parents sin in the neglect of Baptism does not bring a punishment upon the Infant yet may it yea doubtless does it deprive him of a blessing if of no greater blessing sure we are of that which issues from the benefit of the Churches Prayers Notwithstanding then Infants are now no more capable of Precept as to Baptism then before as to Circumcision yet is the obligation as great to Parents and the benefit as great to Infants now and under the Gospel as before and under the Law To close then Notwithstanding all the Objections of the Adversary Mark 10.15 seeing men must receive the Kingdom of Heaven as little children it is most infallible little children do receive the Kingdom of Heaven as well as men Again seeing Infants are capable of the blessings it is an injury to Gods goodness as well as their Souls to deprive them of the Ordinance of Baptism And whereas the Anabaptists urge us to instance in any Infant baptized in the Scripture we urge them to shew in all Scripture or in any other History where or when any Infant of believing Parents was past by and not baptized till years of discretion let all Records be searched and the account of times examined from that period John Baptist begun his Ministry to that John the Evangelist ended his in all about eighty years in which time we doubt not many millions of Infants of believing Parents grew up to full manhood In all this time I say shew one Infant of believing Parents past by and not baptized till years of discretion and this being done there would be some plausible plea against Infants Baptism But there being no instance as to Fact nor Argument as to Reason no Proof as to Scripture to exclude Infants from Baptism We may confidently aver our Saviours Commission and Instruction extends to Infants as well as Parents Go disciple all Nations baptising them c. 3. Whereas woful experience especially that of the German miseries gave occasion to this Proverbial Speech That the Anabaptists Waters turn to Blood how much sad truth we can witness to this unhappy Proverb I had rather bewail then dispute deplore then declare And Oh! that we were Beloved so deeply so devoutly affected with our sins and sufferings both as to Church and State as to turn our late Baptism of Blood into a Baptism of Waters even of mournful Tears In which it will be piety to become all Anabaptists quenching the fire of Heaven with the waters of Siloam Gods wrath I mean by our penitence and his indignation by our contrition 4. Be we exhorted to testifie our holy Communion by an holy Conversation our Communion with Christs Church which we entred by Baptism Remember we then that innocence meekness peace patience purity and the like which are the silver feathers of the sacred Dove Matth. 3.17 Eph. 1.22 23. that holy Spirit which descended upon Christ the Head and still rests upon those who hold Communion with the Church his Body These these our virtutes Baptismales the Baptismal vertues of our new Birth let them be the continued practise of our whole life chuse we to lose the Humidum radicale the radical moysture of our natural constitution rather then that of our Baptismal Regeneration part we with our lives rather then with Faith and a good Conscience for that hereby it is we hold fast our Communion with Christ and our Communion with his Church sealed us by his Sacrament the Sacrament of our initiation and new birth concerning which our Saviour gives in Commission and Instruction to his Apostles Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them c. THE FOURTH SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Introduction WHen Faith is so much corrupted and Souls are so many subverted who can be silent and be faithful I observe as the receiving of Baptism is the entrance into all the priviledges and blessings of the Covenant and of the Church so the renouncing of Baptism is the open door to the greatest enormities and impieties of this day's Apostates In uno Caesare multi Marii and in one Anabaptist are many Hereticks a Sect as pregnant and fruitful of error and those monstrous too as that Holland-Lady was of children whose numerous brood is said to equal the days in the year It is easie to observe how men first turn Anabaptists despising the Ministry of the Gospel then they become Antinomians rejecting the rule of the Law then Enthusiasts making their fanatick revelations to outvie Gods word then Libertines casting off all Magistracie and Government and then Ranters destroying the very being of humane society yea by their disorders and confusions their blasphemies and execrations making a very
of mens persons some are his elect and chosen Luke 18.7 Ezek. 44 24 Psal 105.15 Mal. 3.8 John 2.16 2 Sam. 7.5 of times and seasons some are his Sabbaths and feasts of servants and attendants some are his Prophets and Ministers of goods and chattels some are his Tithes and Oblations And thus of places and habitations some are his Temples some are his Houses in which Houses and Temples places dedicated to Gods worship and service he vouchsafes to dwell not as thereby confining his presence but therein declaring it For most true it is God hath no bounds of himself but himself his essence is infinite for immensity and omnipresence as well as for majesty and omnipotence He hath heaven for his Throne and earth for his footstool Isai 66.1 and therefore is not contained in Temples made with hands Seeing God then is not inclosed within walls nor confined by place how is he said to be in his Temple as in his house Why it is not to denote him contained but present 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Philo Judaeus gives the short yet full resolution God is present every where as containing all things not contained himself And so though in the immensity of his Omnipresence his being is in all places yet in the manifestation of his gracious presence his dwelling is more especially in his Temple and this in the holy ministrations of his Word and Sacraments And thus hath God his house on earth as well as his house in heaven which two have so good a correspondency in a communion of things Psal 102.19 that they have their analogy in a communication of Names And therefore as we finde in Scripture heaven is called Gods sanctuary so Gods Sanctuary may be called Heaven And thus however men despise the house of Gods worship yet is it the place where his honour dwelleth Psal 26.8 yea as his house above is coeleste solum earth in heaven so his house below it is terrestre coelum heaven on earth But now to attribute holiness to places and call our Churches Gods houses is not this superstitious and Jewish No sure we are otherwayes taught by our Saviour who saith expresly of his Fathers house Mark 11.17 that it shall be called the house of prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to all Nations it shall be called that is palàm erit habebitur it shall so every where be and be accounted as Beza himself gives the glosse And observe We finde not our Saviour using any severities so much as in zeal for Gods house that being prophaned he takes the whip in his hand as well as the Text in his mouth and scourgeth as well as reproveth he whips the oxen and those men more beasts then they the money-changers out of the Temple and justifies his Zeal by a Scriptum est it is written My house shall be called the house of prayer but ye have made it a den of theeves Now that part of the Temple where our Saviour did this was not Atrium populi the Peoples court that wherein the Jewes worshipped but that Atrium gentium the Gentiles court wherein those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 17.4.17 those Grecians and other devout persons spoken of in the Acts Acts 8.27 were admitted and worshipped For we may not think the Jewes who were so zealous for their Temples holiness we may not think they would suffer the Oxen to tread where themselves set foot so charily neither would they suffer shops and stalls and trade and traffick where themselves did not approach b●t cleansed and purified It was that court which was made a thorow-fair Mark 11.16 as appears by the peoples carrying vessels thorow it which none was but that of the Gentiles as being void of legall sanctity and without the first bounds of the Temple yet this being a place of publick prayer our Saviour will have it esteemed as Gods house whereby he establisheth the relative holiness of our Christian Churches The Jewes so zealous that nothing might come within their bounds of the Temple to profane them they were regardless of the Gentiles bounds as not so capable of profanation Our Saviour at once to convince the Jewes error as evill and vindicate the place of the Gentiles worship as holy he sayes of that court where the Gentiles did pray that it is his Fathers house and thereby establisheth the holiness of Christian Oratories to all Nations Wherefore if we be Christians we must approve of the publike places of Gods worship which publike places must be accounted houses of Prayer and if houses of Prayer the houses o● God and what is his is holy And now upon this our Saviours ground have all our Christian Churches been erected and as erected so consecrated Thus when Christianity gained first acceptance with the Imperial authority that famous Church at Jerusalem was consecrated by Eusebius and that at Alexandria by Athanasius And we may observe it was the Churches persecution by Heathens which hindred the building her Temples and sure then to pull down her Temples must be a persecution if not heathenish But why will our Saviour have his Fathers house called the house of prayer why not as well the house of sacrifice and of the Sacraments Quest or the house of prophesying and of preaching I answer Because without prayer all the rest are nothing Answ either as to Gods worship or our benefit And that hereby we see the excellency of prayer above all other duties and of publike prayer above all private devotions Thus I have opened unto you the house of the Lord and we shall proceed further to shew you how David dwells there and discover to you the length of his lease even for term of life so says the Psalmist One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life 1. How David is said to dwell in the house of the Lord. The dwelling David here speaks of is not such as if he would have the pallace of the King to be in the Temple of the Lord or as another Samuel himself continually to attend the Priest no his dwelling is not meant of a proper and continued habitation there but of a frequent and constant repair thither even in the mornings and in the evenings on the Sabbaths and on the Feasts dayes then to attend the publick solemnities of Gods worship and service Psal 84.4 And O blessed are they Lord that thus dwell in thy house they will be still praising thee And it 's worth our observing how Davids desire and resolution answers that of God himself who says of Zion This shall be my rest for ever Psal 132.15 here will I dwell for I have desired it The Lord delights himself in Communion with his Saints and well may his Saints then delight themselves in Communion with their God God dwels with the faithful as in his
Reverence and Devotion in the Publick worship of her daily service and Sacramental administrations as is really attractive of every eye and heart except what is prejudiced by Error and Interest Wherefore though the unparalel'd prophaneness of the present age throw contempt upon the Sanctuary and House of God yet do we there acknowledge a Beauty of Holiness as the object of our desires and delight So that we can say with David in a zeal to Gods Publick worship One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after c. The second Reason of Davids Petition That of Devotion To enquire in his Temple As Cities had their original from single Families so Temples their beginning from single Altars We no sooner read That the holy Seed became propagated into several Families but we presently finde those Families met in a Publick Congregation For so in the days of Enosh did men begin Gen. 4 26. publickly to call upon the Name of the Lord then even in the morning of the World did the Church keep her first Mattins for so doth St. Chrysostom and the Antients yea the best and most of Modern Expositors all interpret that of Mens calling upon the Lord as to his Publick worship and service So that we may well plead Church Liturgy as antient as Church Communion and Church Communion as to Gods Publick worship contemporary with the third generation of mankinde and the third century of the World And if the Church had then their Publick service they had also some publick place to be a Bethel an House of God Gen. 28.19 22. where was consecrated an Altar unto the Lord. No doubt from the beginning of the World God had his Sabbaths and his Sacrifices his Priests and his Altar and his Tithes and therefore times persons place and things consecrate and appropriate to his Worship Of this and all this we are assured from Reasons dictate and Scriptures proof And as it was thus from the beginning so it shall be also unto the end of the World though not in the same kinde yet in the like Analogy for which we have St. Johns prophecy in his Revelation and Christs promise in his Gospel Altar and Priests to the most high God we read to have been from Adam to Melchisedech but a Tabernacle and Temple we finde not till Moses and Solomon The Tabernacle that a Type of our Earthly pilgrimage and temporary sojourning as still flitting and removing in the Wilderness The Temple a Figure of our heavenly rest and eternal habitation as founded and fixt in Canaan When Moses framed the Tabernacle Exod. 25.40 it was according to the pattern in the Mount which pattern was that of Spiritual Mysteries which God shadowed forth by Moses in Mysterial Representations This Tabernacle being pitcht Exod 40.34 38. Moses goes up no more to God in the Mount but God comes down to Moses in the Cloud which Cloud was light and fiery and in that Clem. Alex. ●ta● adhort ad Gent. as Clemens of Alexandria observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a token of grace and fear If Israel were sincere and constant in their obedience God was a light to lead them but if froward and perverse in their iniquity he was a fire to consume them And though God is not now present in our Churches by a visible light and fire which was but a Type yet is he present in grace and fury which is the thing typified grace to accept the prayers of his people and fury to avenge the prophanation of his Sanctuary From which fury it is that never any Nation or Family or Person prospered to the third Generation John 2.16 which either made Gods house a place of Merchandise by prophaning it or Merchandise of Gods house by destroying it The Eagle that takes flesh from the Altar carries coals to fi●e his own Nest and never did any man seek to build his house with the stones of Gods Temple but his honor was laid in the dust and his ruine hath been remarkable Of this it were easie to give you multitudes of sad examples in Gods late and severe judgments upon this Nation and in some neighboring Countreys by which judgments he hath sealed this truth That he owns our Christian Oratories for his holy Temples vindicating their prophanation and mens sacriledge by most dreadful punishments I might set before you the examples of Gods vengeance but I shall wave that and present you rather the evidence of Gods Word confirming to you the relative holiness of Gods Sanctuary and this from that one place of St. Paul where he makes it an Argument unto holiness 1 Cor. 6.19 That we are Gods Temples Which how vain had it been 2 Cor. 3.11 if either God hath no Temple or those Temples be not holy Besides it is St. Pauls argument If that which is done away was glorious much more that which remaineth is glorious If the Gospel then excel the Law and Christs presence in his Sacraments his presence in the Sanctuary then must our Christian Churches excel the Jewish Temple as excel in glory so in beauty even the beauty of Holiness Psal 93.6 For Holiness becometh the House of the Lord for ever And therefore Psal 96.9 the Psalmists admonition still stands good Worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness And worship him not onely by praying at his Altar but also by inquiring at his Oracle Both the inseparable parts and appurtenances of his Temple for saith David I will dwell in the House of the Lord all the days of my life to behold the Beauty of the Lord and to inquire in his Temple To inquire in his Temple Inquire of what why of our right way to Heaven for we are Pilgrims and Travellers and that in the World too as in a Wilderness where it is easie to lose but hard to finde our way Therefore it is well worthy our diligent and frequent inquiry whether we be right or no Now Jacobs Vision will tell us Gen. 28.17 That the House of God it is Scala Janua Cali the Ladder and Gate of Heaven So that our sure way to ascend and enter Heaven it is to hold Communion with Gods Church in the Profession and Devotion of his Publick Worship And to confirm us in this truth we may behold the Servants of the Family who know well the way to their Masters house we may behold the Angels ascending and descending Heb. 1.14 in their several Ministries for the good of those whom God makes Heirs of Salvation And O how much need have we to inquire in Gods Temple seeing David himself is in so great a hazard of being dejected with the tribulations of the godly and seduced by the prosperity of the wicked till he goes into the Sanctuary of the Lord Psal 73.17 there to inquire at his Oracle But what is then Gods Oracle Why it is his sacred Word the sure Interpreter of his holy