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A29912 Twenty five sermons. The second volume by the Right Reverend Father in God, Ralph Brownrig, late Lord Bishop of Exeter ; published by William Martyn, M.A., sometimes preacher at the Rolls.; Sermons. Selections Brownrig, Ralph, 1592-1659.; Martyn, William.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691. 1664 (1664) Wing B5212; ESTC R36389 357,894 454

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to cry out I am a man of unclean lips Esai vi 5. And S. Paul to cry out Who is sufficient for these things 2 Cor. ii 16. 2. It urges soberness in the Partakers who are admitted to the fellowship of this Mysterie As all irreverence so all vain curiosity is forbidden We must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in these mysteries we must be wise to Sobriety Rom. xii 3. Gravity and Sobriety they are the Handmayds of Piety the Ushers that always attend Religion The applying of any matter in Religion to an inferiour use 't is to debase it The holy Ointment was not to be appliable to common use no Confection to be made like unto it Is it a mysterie then 3. Fide percipiendum Religion and our Christian Doctrine it is a mysterie therefore to be apprehended by Faith not to be fathomed by Reason Reason will judge that to be a foolery which Faith reverences and adores as a mysterie 'T is called The mysterie of Faith 1 Tim. iii. 9. not the mysterie of Reason or Understanding And they who are initiated into these mysteries they are called Believers not men of Reason and Understanding We are called Credentes not Rationales saith S. Aug. 'T is not Intelligendi vivacitas but Credendi simplicitas that must converse in these mysteries Reason laughs at that in Sarah which Faith in Abraham embraces and rejoyces in Faith looks for a Revelation that God saith it is so searches not after Demonstration or Reason why it should be so Sufficit pro universis rationibus autor Deus The mysteries of Religion check and silence Reason as the Angel did Zacharias for asking Whereby shall I know this he would have Reason What saith the Angel Luk. i. 20. Behold thou shalt be dumb he stops his mouth Reason deduced from the principles of Faith and subordinate to the doctrine of Faith 't is lawful but when it opposes Faith then it is unlawful Hagar when she obeys Sarah may be entertain'd as a servant but if she wax malepert against Sarah Cast out the Bondwoman Abandon Reason if it contradicts Faith It is one excellency of Faith 't is quietativa Intellectûs it quiets and satisfies all enquiries with this answer It is a mysterie Reason that questions How can three Persons be one God-head Faith quiets Reason My soul keep thou silence unto God believe and adore it it is a mysterie Reason questions How can God be made man the Divinity and Humanity joyn'd in one Person Faith hears an Oracle of Scripture I must not enquire it is a mysterie Reason murmurs How can a man be born again and regenerate and dye anew and live anew How can water wash away sin Faith answers The work is Spiritual beyond Reason it is a mysterie Reason that cavils How can Christ give us his Flesh to eat and his Bloud to drink How can a piece of Bread and a tast of Wine convey Grace seal up Salvation How can our souls be nourished how united to Christ sitting in heaven Faith answers all 'T is a mysterie Magis sentio quam intelligo Tota ratio operis est potentia operantis No in these supernatural Truths Sapientia hominis it is Officina erroris exclude Reasoning make use of Believing Habet palatum Fides cui sapit mel Dei Aug. 'T is the tast of Faith that can rellish this hidden Manna Faith saith Parisiensis 1. It is Religio Intellectus the Religion of our Intellectual part 2. It is Adoratio Intellectus the Adoration of the Understanding Credendo incurvamus Intellectum ad adorandum Deum 3. It is Fortitudo Intellectus 't is the Strength of the Understanding Sicut molestias perferre 't is Fortitudo Voluntatis sic improbabilia credere 't is Fortitudo Intellectus We have seen the Nature of it 't is a Mysterie Now follows II. The quantity and just proportion of this mysterie it is no petty and inferiour Truth but a mysterie of the first magnitude A great Mysterie The Scripture advances it with all superlative terms magnifies the greatness of it Phil. iii. 8. S. Paul calls it an Excellent Knowledge I count all things but loss for the Excellency of the Knowledge of Iesus Christ. Rom. xi 33. it is called a Rich Knowledge Solomon saith it furnishes a man with all precious and pleasant Riches Prov. xxiv 4. It enriches him that hath it It furnishes and enriches the noblest part of man his Soul the highest faculty of that his Spirit and Understanding Our Saviour accounts the seeking of this Knowledge the seeking of precious Pearls Mat. xiii 45. The kingdom of heaven is like unto a Merchant-man seeking goodly Pearls This of all other is a Pearl of great price They who are conversant in this mysterie they deal with the choysest Commodities with the ●…ichest Pearls The finding of this Knowledge is the finding 〈◊〉 hidden Treasure vers 44. It makes him for ever that is so 〈◊〉 as to meet with it All other knowledge is but poverty to this Treasure all other jewels but pebbles to this Pearl See how the Scripture extends and enlarges the greatness of this mysterie S. Paul ascribes to it all the dimensions of Magnitude Ephes. iii. 18. That ye may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and heighth of this mysterie And Iob thus magnifies the exceeding and incomprehensible largeness of this Knowledge Chap. xi 8 9. It is as high as heaven deeper then hell longer then the earth broader then the sea It exceeds the scantling of all created Perfections The greatness of all other creatures may be fathomed the height of heaven the depth of hell the length of the earth the breadth of the sea all limited and bounded and the understanding of man may reach them As David speaks I see an end of all other perfections but thy Word is exceeding large 1. This mysterie of God-Incarnate 't is a great mysterie because 't is multiplex Mysterium a comprehensive Truth including in it manifold mysteries 'T is a mysterie pregnant to the making up of which many deep mysteries concur God manifested in the Flesh. 1. Here is the mysterie of Christ's two Natures his Divinity and his Humanity A glorious mysterie Christ true and perfect God and true and perfect man too the glory of the Deity and the infirmity of his Manhood both concurring in him 2. Here is the mysterie of the Union and conjoyning both these in one A strange conjunction The circumference of his infinite Deity joyned to the lowest center of Humanity Eternity made subject to Time Infinity comprehended in a poor finite creature Omnipotency joyned with infirmity This is so great a mysterie that it made the Iews to imagine a double Messiah One a weak frail mortal man lyable to sufferings the other an Eternal Omnipotent Immortal God They could not reconcile the several predictions of his glorious Divinity and his infirm Humanity as this mysterie teaches us 3. Here is the
and diligence much exercise and experience to attain unto it Those Arts that have in them many abstruse mysteries are long a learning Oh! the Art of godliness the Trade of piety the Skill of living holily 't is no small matter but very mysterious The Philosopher could say of his Art Ars longa Vita brevis a mans life was too short to attain to the perfection of it How much more is this high Art of Religion the mysterie of godliness It makes David for all his learning to cry out still Teach me Instruct me Make me to understand the way of godliness S. Paul that great Proficient yet professes he fell short Phil. iii. 11 12 13. Brethren I count not my self to have apprehended I have not already attained I am not already perfect but I follow after and press forward if by any means I might attain words of striving and contention How hard a thing is it to attain even to the knowledge of godliness Then how difficult must it be to mortifie thy lusts to subdue thine appetite 'T is call'd a Crucifying Consider it you who think seven years little enough to learn any Trade of life but any little time any poor pains sufficient to learn that which the Saints were practising all their dayes Try thy strength but with one Act but with one Duty of godliness and then tell me If slubbering over a few prayers or coming to Church and yawning out an Amen half asleep half awake be likely to make thee a skilful man in this Trade of piety That 's the first Religion is the mysterie of godliness 2. The second Truth is The Mysterie and the Piety of Religion must go both together We must take both to us not onely content our selves with the mysterie of Christianity but be sure we acquaint our selves with the piety True Religion joyns both together Thus S. Paul describes Christian Religion ' T is a Doctrine according to godliness 1 Tim. vi 3. And Tit. i. 1. it is called the Knowledge of the Truth according unto godliness We may as well separate light from heat in the fire as the mysterie and knowledge of it from the piety Indeed first we must get the mysterie then labour for the piety of it First God created light so it is in mans soul. A man is sooner enlightned then sanctified The Sun enlightens in an instant but it begets heat in the Ayr by length of time but they must never be a sunder Blind Devotion would have the piety without the mysterie Oh! Zealous it would be but not with knowledge Oh! A good heart to God-wards no matter for knowledge And prophane Curiosity that would have the mysterie without the piety understand all secrets and mysteries comprehend all Truths but for the holiness of Christianity they have no list to it True Christianity joyns both together True Religion is not like the tree of Knowledge onely pleasant to the eye and a tree to be desired to make one wise Gen. iii. 6. but it must be to us as the tree of Life for Devotion and Practice Religion is not placed in the upper region of the Brain but in the Heart the seat of affection the fountain of action 'T is a sanctifying Truth Holy Father sanctifie them through thy Truth not enlighten them onely Ioh. xvii 17. There is not any Truth so mystical and contemplative but must be drawn into practice There is no mysterie in Scripture but hath its piety As there is not any creature but it is for some use it is not onely beautiful but useful Non tantum visu delectat sed usu prodest so there 's no Truth in Religion but we may and must extract from it Piety Some Truths at first sight seem but dry as to this but as the Licorish stick at first looks like any weed but chew it and you suck sweetness so those mysteries that seem to be most remote from practice have a juice and sap of piety to be suck'd out of them If ye know these things happy are ye if ye do them Joh. xiii 17. This man shall be blessed in his deed Iam. i. 25. See how Christ checks Curiosity and turns all to Practice Lord are there few that be saved And he said unto them Strive to enter in at the strait gate Luk. xiii 23 24. 1. Piety 't is the end of Christianity 'T is mysterium practicum Not a Science in contemplation but an Art of doing not to make us the wiser but the holier 2. Piety 't is the best keeper of this mysterie The knowledge of Religion 't is a precious Jewel see the Cabinet S. Paul tells us of wherein it must be kept Holding the mysterie of Faith in a pure Conscience 1 Tim. iii. 9. Wouldst thou not erre concerning the Faith Take heed of making shipwrack of a good Conscience Knowledge in this vessel is like the Manna in the golden-pot it is kept sweet In a prophane heart it is like Manna in other vessels that stank and putrified God takes away natural knowledge if we abuse it and live not accordingly When they knew God and glorified him not as God God gave them over to errour and never would call them to the knowledge of the Gospel Rom. i. 21 c. As we try vessels first with water if they will hold and keep it sweet then we pour wine into them They who corrupt natural knowledge God will not trust them with this mysterie Take heed thou divide not the piety from the mysterie In all Truths labour to be better In any mysterie make S. Peter's collection If these things are so What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness We have seen the quality and condition of this mysterie It is a mysterie of godliness Now follows IV. The infallible undoubted certainty of this mysterie It is beyond without all controversie There is a double Certainty 1. A certainty in the thing it self 'T is a most grounded Truth Heaven and earth may sooner fail then the least particle of this Truth It hath the Power and the Truth and the Faithfulness of God nay his Oath to establish it 2. A certainty of perswasion at this the Text ayms See with what confidence and assurance S. Paul seals up this great Truth ' T is without controversie Observe True Faith embraceth these heavenly Truths with all assurance and strength of adhesion and fulness of perswasion 'T is the nature and office of true Faith in matters of God to breed all possible assurance 'T is a Seal He who receives God's testimony of his Son hath set to his Seal that God is true Ioh. iii. 33. Philip shews the assurance of Faith which he requires of the Eunuch Acts viii 37. If thou believest with all thine heart that Iesus is the Son of God Especially in this Truth Iesus God-Incarnate Faith breaks through all controversies and unquestionably must believe 1. This Truth is clearly revealed in Scripture And
there is no recovery then all thoughts perish all hands fall no work or counsel or purpose any more 3. Is Mors exitus Is Death a departure Provide and forecast for a place of refuge Death is like a cruel Landlord turns us out of dores What folly is it not to provide a place to receive us This Christ commends in the Parable of the Steward Make to your selves friends that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting habitations Luk. xvi 9. This was our Saviour's comfort I leave the world and go to the Father Ioh. xvi 28. This was the perplexity of men without Christ. The wisest of them knew not what became of their spirits Animula vagula blandula Quae abibis in loca whether upward or downward as Solomon speaks They that are Christ's are assured of a place after their departure We know if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hand eternal in the heavens vers 2. For in this we groan earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven This made Lot willing to forsake Sodom that he had a Zoar to retire to and the Israelites to leave Egypt that they had a Canaan to go to It was a judgement upon the false Prophet that he should go from chamber to chamber to hide himself 1 Kings xxii 25. That 's the second Natura Conditio Mortis Thirdly Here is Susceptio Conditionis It is called an accomplishment or fulfilling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is Active not Passive not to be fulfilled upon him but by him he himself to accomplish Christ's Death as appointed by God was unavoidable and necessary as inflicted by his enemies it was violent and enforced yet he himself voluntarily undergoing and performing of it it is his action and fulfilling Christ's sufferings were not bare sufferings but voluntary performances He was Lord of his own life No man takes it from me I lay it down That which gave merit and acceptation to Christ's suffering was his willing and free and active undertaking of it And as in Christ so in Christians their sufferings their deaths they are active in them not patients onely A wicked man Death gnaws upon him he is snatch'd to Death a Christian willingly admits of it When God calls he offers himself as Christ did Quis tam facile dormivit I lye me down and rest Egredere ô Anima Non repetent animam ego reddam Now this under-going of death it is called an accomplishing a fulfilling 1. In respect of God's counsel and ordination Christ's death was appointed from eternity he had purposed and forelayd it Act. iv 28. To do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done He is the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world in God's wisdom appointing it in his truth promising it in faith believing it only his actual suffering that accomplish'd it Ought not Christ to suffer these things and so to enter into his glory This makes Christ so studious to admit of death else how should the Scripture be fulfilled This consideration makes the Saints suffer all things Death it self naturally willingly This commandement received I of my Father The end of my times are in thy hand To God belong the issues of death Ps. lxviii If chance or violence only appears Flesh and Bloud may struggle but God's appointment that makes us submit I held my peace because it is thy doing Moses when God expressed his resolution he must die importunes no more goes up to the Mountain layes down his life S. Peter layd down his life as the Lord had shewed him The will of the Lord be done 2. Death is called an accomplishment or fulfilling of our departure because that is but the closure and ending All our life 't is a beginning and progress to our end As all Christ's life it was a pro-passio to his Passio his sufferings were all Viae ad mortem so our life it is a progress to death We no sooner come into the world but we begin to go out We die daily in this sense That part of our life that is gone it is Morti deputanda it runns upon the score of Death Indeed eternal life it is tota simultanea possessio vitae 't is vita in statu fixed but this is in fluxu as waters alwayes flowing Youth 't is the death of Child-hood Man-hood the death of Youth Age the death of Man-hood then Death closes all Philosophers say motus and terminus are but one thing really so our passing and consummation of life it is but one continued-death That 's the third Susceptio conditionis Fourthly Here is Circumstantia susceptionis the place of accomplishment Hierusalem Conceive the purpose of it in three Expressions 1. It is Locus singularitèr designatus a place singularly designed All the Circumstances of Christ's death were fore-sett and appointed The time of it was foretold and calculated by Daniel the manner of it was prefigured and foretold by the Prophets the place all the occasions and instruments and circumstances were designed As the Paschal-Lamb was not onely commanded to be slain but on what day in what place it was to be dressed in what manner to be eaten And as it is so in Christ's death so likewise in ours Our times are set and fixed the period of our life the circumstance of place all occurrents fore-layd Thus God appoints Moses and Aaron both time and place to die in Thus Elias must now and in such a manner be assumed Thus S. Peter was fore-warned by what manner of death he must glorifie God So Agabus shews S. Paul how he must be bound It must settle our hearts Our lives are in God's book set that time is fixed as was the Exodus of the Israelites the self-same day It must make us resigne up our selves our deaths the whole carriage of them to God's wise disposal 2. It is Locus typicè praefiguratus Hierusalem that was foretold and prefigured as the place of Christ's death This was prefigured in Isaac's Offering on Mount Moriah On this Hill David Offer'd to cease the Plague This place he appointed to build the Temple on There was no Altar we know allowed but this of Hierusalem Here the Passeover was to be slain and eaten Thus the Apostle Heb. xiii 11. The bodies of those beasts whose bloud was brought into the Sanctuary by the High Priest for sin are burnt without the Camp v. 12. Wherefore Iesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the Gate It must seal up unto us the fulfilling of all our Redemption Every Circumstance was prefigured and is now accomplished Now was the great Jubilee when Christ dyed now the whole Burnt-Offering was tendred up to God 3. It is Locus moraliter praefigurans Ecclesiam Christ must die at Hierusalem that is his death it is proper to and effectual for his Church
of Scripture the Apostle discourses the state and condition of a Christian. And having in the former part of this Epistle settled the truth of our Justification by the death of Christ now he layes down grounds of comfort against those infirmities and imperfections that Christians find and feel themselves to be subject to 1. He discovers these infirmities chap. vii I know that in me that is in my flesh there dwells no good thing Odi quod sum non sum quod amo Aug. Epist. 106. The good that I would I do not the evil which I would not do that do I. 'T is that which S. Augustine calls Rixa jurgium inter carnem spiritum Hannah and Peninnah under the same roof vexing each other the one provoking the other weeping both disquieting the peace of the soul. And he who is Spiritual like S. Paul will heed and observe them have his eye upon his thoughts and inward inclinations The Naturalists say that man hath two muscles in his eyes more then other creatures that make him look upward A Christian hath two more to make him look inward to search and descry the stirrings of his heart 2. As he discovers them so he bewayls and mourns for them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death See the spirit of S. Paul he rejoyces in afflictions but he mourns for corruptions Vers. 35. Quis separabit He defies afflictions the greatest of them But chap. vii 24. he hath another exclamation Quis liberabit He groans under infirmities and corruptions the least of them Ey here is the true mark of a Spiritual man he chooseth affliction rather then iniquity Affliction sits light but sin sits heavy on him Tu nôsti gemitus cordis mei de hacre flumina oculorum meorum saith S. Augustine bewailing but one of his infirmities 3. He finds and layes hold upon help against them Faith represents Christ and his power ready to succour and deliver him I thank God through Iesus Christ my Lord. These infirmities fetch'd tears from S. Paul but yet he doth not weep out the eye of Faith looks up to Christ as to his soveraign Antidote to cure and recover him And then 4. He comforts himself against those many evils that are consequent fruits arising from these infirmities There are three main evils that arise from them 1. These sinful infirmities in themselves have a condemning power in them they deserve in justice no less then the curse of God and eternal damnation Papists and others may sleight these first motions and count them no sins S. Paul judges them damnable Sin is so strong a poyson that the least grain is deadly and the Gospel doth not make them no sins but makes them pardonable As God destroyed not the fiery Serpents but provided a cure and remedy against them in themselves damnable Against this evil consequent S. Paul finds a Consolation vers 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus that State and Condition brings with it Pardon and Absolution 2. A second evil consequent from these infirmities is that Thraldome and Captivity and Vexation which these remainders of sin bring upon the soul of a Christian. Though he hath his pardon yet his shackles and his bolts are still upon him Though he be freed from the condemning power of these infirmities yet still he suffers encumbrance and vexation from them It is matter of great heaviness to the Saints that they are thus hindred and encumbred that they find such strivings and rebellions in themselves against the law of God that the flesh should resist and oppress the spirit that Hagar should insult over Sarah the bond-woman over the free that Ishmael should over-top Isaac that Esau in the womb of grace should struggle with Iacob that the house of Saul should still be quarrelling with the house of David But against this he comforts himself and others The law of the Spirit hath made us free from the law of sin ye are not in the flesh but in the Spirit vers 9. 3. A third evil is that these infirmities and remainders of sin have a malignant power to make us subject to the law of death Their very being in a Christian is the seed and original of mortality 1. Though sin be pardon'd by the death of Christ 2. Though the dominion and power of it be broken and subdued by the Spirit of Christ yet 3. As long as it remains in us in the least and lowest degree it makes us subject to the power of death Yet against this S. Paul finds a double comfort 1. This subjection to death is not total 't is but half a death the death of the body onely That indeed we are obnoxious to but the soul hath escaped free from the snares of death The body indeed is dead that is subject to death because of sin but the Spirit that is life because of righteousness vers 10. Our chiefest and best part the proper seat of misery or happiness that 's put into a state of spiritual and glorious immortality Fear not that that kills the body and can do no more It is not a total death 2. Even this bodily death to be undergone 't is not perpetual that 's a second comfort It hath a limit of time set to it Death shall not alwayes gnaw upon us in the grave The righteous shall have dominion over Death in the morning Our bodies in the holds of Death are Prisoners of Hope there will be an enlargement Death shall be swallowed up and abolish'd the Power and Spirit of God shall free these mortal bodies bring us like Peter asleep out of the dungeon If the Spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you The Text then 't is the blessed Assurance and Evidence of a Christians happy Resurrection In it observe these four particulars 1. Is the Condition upon which it is promised and we may expect it If the Spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you 2. Is the main Cause and Efficient of this our Resurrection 'T is he who raised up Christ from the dead 3. Is the Acting and Performing of it He shall quicken your mortal bodies 4. Is the Ground and Reason of it Because his Spirit dwells in you First for the Condition If. I call it a Condition and yet it carries a threefold force in it I. It hath the force of a Connexion it makes a Connexion with the former priviledges and comforts of a Christian. 1. No condemnation for sin vers 1. that 's one comfort 2. No dominion nor power nor absolute sway of sin that 's a second comfort 3. No total nor final nor utter destruction by sin Death is abolish'd that 's a third comfort It shews us a blessed concatenation and linck of a Christians priviledges Mercy it begins in Pardon and growes and diffuses it self in Grace and never
Divine revelation is the stay and establishment of Faith Truths that are more obscurely delivered are liable to question and controversie but this Truth that Iesus is the Messias and the Authour of Salvation it is with all evidence propounded to us When God speaks clearly Faith believes firmly Credendum est Deo vel semel loquenti 2. This Truth 't is an immediate and first principle of Religion the grand Maxim and Oracle of Divinity Now in all professions Principles are unquestionable admit no gain-saying He that comes to God must believe 3. 'T is a fundamental Truth the first Stone that is laid in the building of the Church the main Rock upon which the whole Building rests See when Christ builds his Church he chooses this Confession Thou art the Son of the living God he layes that in the foundation Now in all buildings the foundation must be sure and immovable Here Agrippa's almost 't is too weak no here What we have heard and seen and felt 4. Errors in this are most dangerous As errors in the conception are hardly corrected so errors in this first conception of Faith Oh! these prime Truths must be firmly and strongly embraced Other consequential and secondary Truths of less evidence and necessity may admit of discussion In some Truths we may differ Salva compage fidei but in this every error is deadly In some Truths S. Paul's moderation is sweet If any man think otherwise God will reveal it to him account him as a brother But in this he that errs S. Paul's threatning is seasonable You are fallen from grace you are cut off from Christ you must dye in your sins There is a necessary Truth Maria virgo in partu There is a decent Truth Maria virgo post partum Faith puts these Truths without question 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. This is the defiance Faith gives to all the objections and cavils of nature How can God become a man the Creator a creature a Virgin conceive Get thee behind me Satan 't is without all controversie 2. By this it answers and represses the contradictions of infidelity a man's heart is hardly drawn to assent and give credit to these mysteries No Faith tramples all contradictions under foot 't is without all controversie 3. By this it overcomes the weaknesses and infirmities of Faith Faith at first hath many doubts and fears But why do thoughts rise in my heart I know he is a faithful and true witness no word is impossible to him 'T is the victory and triumph that Faith gets over all doubtings it believes stedfastly without all controversie ON CHRIST-MAS DAY The Second Sermon GALAT. iv 4 5. When the fulness of the time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the adoption of Sons WHich words set out unto us the great and gracious work of our Redemption A work undertaken and wrought by the Incarnation of our blessed Saviour The remembrance of which the Church of God doth this day joyfully Celebrate An high Festival it is and to be honoured by us whether we respect Christ and in him the mysterie of the day or respect our selves and in us the mercy and benefit which as on this day was vouchsafed to us 1. Look upon Christ and the mysterie of his Incarnation so 't is a Birth-day Feast the Feast of his Nativity And the feast of the Birth-day especially of some extraordinary and eminent person and such an one above all was the Birth of this day Pharaoh's birth-day and Herod's were nothing to it is kept and celebrated with all joyful solemnity That is the mysterie of the Text Christ made and born of a woman so it is a day of joyfulness 2. Look upon our selves and the mercy and benefit of this day that redounded to us and so it is a Feast of deliverance out of Captivity This day Christ came to redeem us that lay under the Law cast and condemned men And a day of enlargement out of Captivity that is a Feast of Iubile Such was this day No Captivity like that of ours neither the Egyptian when they were born slaves nor that of Babylon when carried away to be slaves both of them fall short of this the bondage of our birth and the slavery of our life none like to it and so no redemption to be compared to it 'T is a day much to be remembred in our generations 1. It is the day of Christ's Nativity keep it with joyfulness 2. It is a day of our enlargement out of Captivity keep it with thankfulness The Apostle then sets out unto us the happy condition that hath betided the Church of God by the coming of Christ in his Incarnation And he expresses it two ways 1. By a comparative opposition to the state of the Church before Christ's coming 2. By a positive or rather superlative illustration of the happy condition of the Church by his coming among us 1. The Church of the Jews before Christ the low condition of that is set out by three steps of depression and inferiority in respect of our state of advancement that Christ's Birth brings to us 1. Respectu Aetatis for its Age it was a Child or an Infant vers 1. A child in knowledge in growth of grace in affections a child weak imperfect unskilful 2. Respectu Conditionis for the usage and condition in which it was it was Servilis it differ'd nothing from a servant under a yoke of servitude kept in more servile fear and subjection then Christians Their spirit was the spirit of fear and bondage our spirit is the spirit of love and liberty 3. Respectu Educationis for its breeding and education it was at the command and under the institution of a curst Schoolmaster the Law and but meanly instructed acquainted onely with the first elements and rudiments of our Religion the high mysteries of our Faith not manifested to them And this threefold depression of the Jewish Church should make us look three steps lower into the sad and forlorn estate of us Gentiles and heathen for such was our original 1. Were they babes and children we far worse dead in our sins not begot again to God by any spiritual Regeneration not so much as in the womb of conception out of the Church uncircumcised Infidels 2. Were they in the condition of servants We not so much as servants strangers rebels cast-aways enemies in a forlorn condition 3. Were they kept under inferiour Tutors and Governours We far worse untaught ignorant foolish like the wild Ass without understanding without God in the world 2. The estate of the Christian Church is illustrated by a superlative eminency and advancement it hath gained by Christ's Incarnation And this benefit we gain by him is expressed in three remarkable particulars 1. The first thing remarkable in this great benefit is the Time when it was performed When the fulness