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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

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shall come in Who is the King of Glory The Lord strong and mighty the Lord mighty in Battel Lift up your heads O ye gates even lift them up ye everlasting doors and the King of glory shall come in Who is the King of Glory The Lord of Hosts Jesus the Son of God he is the King of Glory Now the King of Glory Christ Jesus blessed for ever he being entred behold the Father entertaining him with a plenary grant of his Petition in that consecratory Prayer before his Passion John 17.45 Father says he I have glorified thee on Earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O Father glorifie me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was In full answer to this Petition says the Father unto Christ when entred into glory Sit thou on my right hand Psal 110.1 until I make thine enemies thy footstool And our Lord and Saviour being thus exalted All the Angels of God all the Host of Heaven they pay him homage they acknowledge him their King they fall down and worship him Heb. 1.6 worship him as the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the pre-eminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Having done with the first branch of Divine Mysteries How Christ is said to be the Head of the Church we proceed to the second What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head And for the Explication of this we shall speak of the Church in these three particulars its larger acception it s nearer relation and its different adjuncts 1. It s larger acception as the Church of the Elect. 2. It s nearer relation as the Church of the Redeemed 3. It s different adjuncts as visible and invisible 1. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head Explic. in its larger acception as the Church of the Elect. In this extended sense the Church compriseth the heavenly orders of the Angelical Hierarchy who being of the Elect of God 1 Tim. 5.21 Col. 2.10 are also of the Church of Christ who is therefore called The Head of all principality and power The Elect Angels receiving their confirmation as the Elect. Saints their Redemption by Jesus the Mediator True it is as concerning the Angels that Christ he assumed not their nature in his Conception and so neither did he sustain their person in his Passion He took not on him the nature of Angels Heb. 2.16 but the seed of Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He took not hold on Angels a Metaphor signifying an eager following after and laying hold on one running away to bring him back or a catching him that is faln to recover him from the pit This Christ did do for men this this he did not do for Angels but as those which fell sinned without a tempter Ambr. Ser. 8. in Psal 119. so they perish in their sin without a Saviour But as for the Elect Angels St. Ambrose tells us that they needed Christ to preserve them from falling into sin as men did need him to free them from sin into which they were faln and in this St. Bernard joyns issue with St. Ambrose Bern. Tract de dilig D. affirming Qui hominibus subvenit in tali necessitate Angelos servavit a tali necessitate He that succored men in such a necessity saved the Angels from the like necessity Aug. Enchir. c 62. To all this add we that of St. Augustine Quod in Angelis lapsum ex hominibus redditum the number of those Angels which are faln shall be made up by those men whom Christ hath redeemed all which expressions and opinions are several descants and glosses upon the Apostles words in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 telling us Eph. 1.10 Of all things gathered together in one even in Christ the Head of all Excellency and the Center of all Unity Angels and Men were indeed created happy in that natural blessedness of Spiritual contemplation but not in that supernatural bliss of the beatifical Vision Which beatifical Vision being the last end of the rational and intellectual Creature could not be attained by any ordinary work of nature but by some extraordinary act of grace for to be and to be blessed is one and the same in none but God And therefore to be is from nature but to be perfectly blessed is from grace as the last end of being in a perfect communion with God through Christ by love So that it is consonant to the Analogy of Faith to believe and affirm That the estate of the now blessed Angels was at the first mutable and subject to alteration and that presently by the supererogating grace of God thorow Christ they became no longer subject to mutability and change now inseparably adhering to God and so possessing perfect happiness Matth. 18.10 of whom our Saviour hath said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They always behold the face of his Father which is in Heaven This benefit then the Angels have by Christ that they are confirmed in their full and perfect union with God Heb 1.6 Wherefore Let all the Angels of God worship him yea and joyn we too with the Angels in that worship as having communion with them in the same Head even Jesus the Mediator who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the pre-eminence c. 2. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be head in its nearer relation as the Church of the redeemed and redeemed not onely in the infinite sufficiency but also in the actual efficacy of his merit yea and effectual sanctification of his grace For observe Christ he is according to the promise Gen. 3.15 the Seed of the woman not in a common and carnal generation but in a proper and spiritual conception conceived by the Holy Ghost And therefore Christ is not properly the Head of all mankinde but of that part which is regenerated by the same Spirit by which he was conceived So that 1 Cor 1.2 Rom. 8 30. it is effectual calling which constitutes the Church of Christ in actual being as to its internal and essential form Which Church is diversly defined and described by divers men according to the difference of their faiths or fancies To omit then the needless and avoid the curious we may thus define the Church of Christ to be The whole company of Gods Saints called of God in Christ out of the state of sin and death into the state of grace and glory And this in the Language of the sacred Scriptures this is Christs Spouse this the Kings Daughter this the Mount Sion this the Heavenly Jerusalem this the Mother of us all Virgo virtute mater prole so St. Ambrose a Virgin indeed for purity
a Mother for fruitfulness this the Kingdom of Heaven this the Body of Christ this the Church Universal the Church Catholick which is invisible the object of Faith and not of Sense and therefore we say in our Creed I believe the holy Catholick Church Which holy Catholick Church ● Tim ● 15 Cant. 6.8 as by S. Paul it is said to be Columna Veritatis the Pillar of Truth so by Solomon Columna Unitatis the Dove of Unity Indeed the Church can be but one because Christ her Head is but one who is the same yesterday to day Heb. 1● 8 and for ever The same 1. Objectivè in his Word yesterday shadowed in the Law to day shewed in the Gospel the New Testament being claspt up in the Old and the Old laid open in the New The Old Testament and the New like two concentrick circles they differ in their circumference yet agree in one center and that center Christ 2. As Christ is the same objectivè in his Word so is he the same subjectivè in his Attributes his Wisdom Goodness Power yea dignity and authority one and the same Shepherd of his Flock one and the same King of his people one and the same Head of his Church 3. The same effective in the gifts and graces of his Spirit in the power and efficacy of his Word and of his Sacraments Now the light of the Gentiles Luke 2.32 as before the glory of his people Israel as yesterday to Abraham Isaac and Jacob so to day he is to as many as believe on him Jesus a Saviour And if thus but one Head then necessarily but one Body if but one Christ then but one Church But one Church however it receives its divers names of distinction according to its different degrees of communion as being either militant or triumphant The Church militant in tempore peregrinationis in the time of her sojourning here in fear and the Church triumphant in aeternitate mansionis Aug. Enchi● c 56. in the eternity of her dwelling with Christ in glory so S. Augustine Militant is that part of the Church which is on earth still fighting in a continued warfare against the flesh the world and the devil Triumphant is that part of the Church which now rest from their labours Rev. 14.13 who by the power of Christ have vanquish'd the powers of darkness and therefore with victorious palms in their hands clothed with the robes of glory they stand continually before the throne of God Rev. 7.9 15. and serve him in his temple Both these the Militant and Triumphant make up one Church Catholick Aug. ibid. one now in vinculo charitatis in the bond of charity and shall be for ever one in consortio aeternitatis in the fellowship of eternity But further this Catholick Church with which we have communion with Christ as she is Columba Unitatis the Dove of Unity so Columba Puritatis too the Dove of Purity she is the holy Catholick Church Though on Earth indeed she be incompassed with many infirmities Psal 45.13 overshadowed with many afflictions yet is she the Kings daughter all glorious within indued she is with Christs holy Spirit adorned she is with his holy Graces clothed she is with his perfect Righteousness Holy the Church is 1 In Christ her Head who is perfectly holy even holiness it self 2 Holy she is in her Triumphant part Eph. 5.27 which is made compleat in Holiness sine ruga aut macula without either wrincle or spot without either wrincle of imperfection or spot of uncleanness 3 Holy she is in her Militant part also holy by sanctification partially and by imputation of Christs Righteousness perfectly so sanctified she is not as to be free from all abiding of sin Rom. 6.12 that 's for the estate of glory but so as to be free from the reigning of sin that 's for the state of grace Our holiness in this life it is but inchoative and in part in fieri not in facto our perfection of holiness shall not be till our consummation in happiness and when we shall be made compleatly happy then shall we be made also perfectly holy Thus you have seen what is the Church of Christ in its larger acception and in its nearer relation In its larger acception as the Church of the Elect the Elect Angels and Elect Saints in its nearer relation as the Church of the redeemed redeemed in an effectual communication of Christs fulness as he is the Head The Head of the Body the Church c. 3. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head in its different adjuncts as visible and invisible The Church Catholick or Universal not being genericè but integraliter Universale the Universal Church as we say the Universal World as it is aptly distinguished according to its different states into the Church Militant and Triumphant so is it distinguished no less aptly according to its divers adjuncts into the Church visible and invisible Which distinction being observed to be not a distribution of the Genu● into its Species nor of the whole into its parts as if either one Church or one part of the Church were visible and another invisible but a distinction of adjuncts to the same subject This being observed we may the better answer and retort the Arguments of the Romish adversary in the great contest concerning the visibility of the Church To be invisible is an affection of the Catholick Church in respect of its internal and essential form To be visible is an affection of the same Catholick Church according to its form external and accidental The internal and essential form of the Church consists in union with Christ through the Spirit the object of Faith and not of Sense in which regard the Church must needs be invisible But now the external and accidental form of the Church is the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments with a publick profession of the true Faith of Christ and in this the Church must needs be visible yea by how much that profession and Ministry is the more publick and pure by so much is the Church the more conspicuous and glorious The Church then as it is visible may be thus defined to be The whole company of men and women professing the Faith of Christ in the sincere preaching of the Word and right administration of the Sacraments And this is the definition of the Church according to its external and accidental form that definition before given being according to its form Internal and Essential and by this we may understand how men are said to be of the Church and to be in Christ either by outward profession or by inward sanctification that an external this an internal communion by the outward profession of an external communion onely so the Formal Hypocrite by the inward sanctification of an internal as well as the outward profession of an external communion so the Truly Regenerate
disturbs not that which preserves the quiet of the house the peace of the soul that which does extinguish not that which does inflame our charity that which is a servile not that which is a filial fear To fear because we have sinned against God as an avenging Iudge this servile fear love quiet casts out of doors but not to sin because we fear offending God as a gracious Father this filial fear it is so far from being cast out that it is loves dearest inmate the one mutually sustaining the other so that we may well pray as the Church hath well taught us Collect second Sund af Trin. Lord make us to have a perpetual fear and love of thy holy name § 7. However then the external profession of the truly religious may be imitated by that artificial sanctity of the formal hypocrite yet who is' t that can draw out the lineaments of life sense and motion Who can counterfeit the internal forms and active principles of grace secrets not visible to the eye but sensible to the soul from whence we draw an infallible argument of Gods blessing to say with David The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant § 8. The second Medium the manifestations of his love He will shew them his Covenant 1 Cor. 2.14 the natural man knoweth not the things of the Spirit of God and no wonder for he is blind at least 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.9 as St. Peter speaks non procul videns one sand-blind that cannot see a far off the good things of Gods Covenant and grace they are deep and in their depth have too much of misterious darkness they are high and in their height have too much of glorious brightness for the purblind eye of the earthly soul and carnal man to search and apprehend And O the refreshings of divine love to the truely penitent when God by his word discovers their sin then by his spirit he withal manifests his grace he shews them his Covenant even life and salvation by Jesus Christ And by this we may know whether the discovery of sin be a temptation or an humiliation whether it be from Satan to tempt to despair or from God to humble in repentance § 9. The spirit of grace and truth laies open sin in the soul as a careful Chyrurgeon doth a wound in the body in a warm room among tender friends and with suppleing remedies his end not being to torture but to heal not to make soar but to make whole but now the spirit of error and wickedness laies open sin as the mischeivous murderer does the wound in the open air and the soul drawn away from Christ and his promises on purpose to torment and kill not to cure and save The promises priviledges and blessings then of Gods Covenant they are not known in their saving truth but by the humble soul even by those who fear the Lord for that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the Sept. to them the Lord will declare and make known his Covenant even his Covenant of Crace in which are concentred all the promises of the Gospel and this Covenant he will shew to them that fear him especially in that which is the firm foundation of their comforts as to the immutability of his love and the stability of his promise § 10. First The immutability of his love the grace and love of God as the Agent is not founded upon any motives or reasons in man as the object as if merit or worth in man did either beget or continue favor and love in God Rom. 4.5 Rom. 5.10 Ephes 2.5 Rom. 3.24 no he justifies us when ungodly he reconciles us when enemies he quickens us when dead and therefore must it be that we are freely justified and so eternally saved by his grace through the redemption that is in Iesus Christ Now if when enemies by wicked works Col. 1.21 we were reconciled by the death of Christ if when dead in sins we were were quickened by the Spirit of grace how much more being quickened being reconciled shall our infirmities be pardoned our falls repaired our persons accepted and our services rewarded If when we were enemies Gods grace did prevent us to make us his children how much more being Gods children shall the same grace preserve us from becoming his enemies § 11. The love of God in his Covenant of grace Jer. 31.3 it is an everlasting love which everlasting love sure cannot end in an eternal hate So that though we are unworthy yet does he continue gracious though we deserve his wrath yet will he bestow his love his love unchangeable like himself for God is love and as Mal. 3.6 I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed § 12. 2. The stability of his promise In Jer. 32.40 God tells us he will make an everlasting Covenant with his people And how is ●t everlasting why says God I will not turn away from them to do them good But though God be immutable in his grace unchangeable in his love and so constant in his promise yet what if his people through humane frailty fall from him and so make void the Covenant of the Almighty To this God himself gives answer v. 40. for the comfort of all the faithful I will put my fear into their hearts saith the Lord that they shall not depart from me Thus does God give the promise and strengthens man to the condition of his Covenant so that they who are begotten to a lively hope by Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.5 are kept by the power of God through faith to salvation And thus our holiness depends upon Gods promise not Gods promise upon our holiness Deus facit ut nos faciamus quae praecepit nos non facimus ut ille faciat quae promisit so S. Aug. God makes us to do what he hath commanded we do not make God to do what he hath promised But as remission of sins is from his grace even his gracious favor accepting so is the obedience of faith from his grace too even the grace of his Spirit sanctifying § 13. So that all our comfort of soul and peace of conscience is firmly fixt upon this sure Basis this firm foundation the immutability of Gods love and the stability of his promise For so Heb. 6.17 God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel and in that his love he confirm'd it by an oath And wherefore Was it to make his obligation more firm No but to make our consolation more full For so v. 18. it was that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have strong consolation Gods covenant is not made the more firm or sure by oath then by promise for that his truth as his nature it is without variableness or shadow of turning
the ministration of the Sacraments Now to spoil us of the treasure to rob us of the comfort of this salvation is Satans grand design in his temptations unto sin and his suggestions of distrust for by these he labors to withdraw us from our God and deprive us of communion with Christ who is our love and our life But when the bird is mounted on the wing it is safe from the Fowlers net and the soul raised in communion with Christ is preserved from Satans snare And if through infirmity the soul flag and fall to the earth and so become intangled in carnal and worldly affections yet keeping the eye fixt upon Christ looking to him in his Ordinances to rece ve the quickening power of his grace though corrupt affections may intangle Rom. 8 2. Rom. 6.14 yet shall they not inthral the soul which becomes restored by the power of Christs Spirit a Spirit of life and liberty a Spirit of Grace and holiness delivering from the power of Satan and from the dominion of sin § 2. And this this is Davids practise and experience registred here by the Holy Ghost for our pattern and comfort when to the meditation of Gods promise and the manifestations of his love he joyns this profession of faith saying Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord c. In which profession of Davids faith we have two particulars 1. It s firm affiance 2. It s comfortable assurance 1. It s firm affiance Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord. 2. It s comfortable assurance For he shall pluck my feet out of the net § 3. First The firm affiance of Davids faith Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord. Mine eyes so general and sovereign an influence hath faith into the actual exercise of the divine graces that it does supply the office of the choycest members in the spiritual man therefore is Faith the legs that support the hand that receives the arms that imbrace the pallate that tastes the eye that beholds yea it is the heart of the inward man the seat of spiritual life for so says the Apostle the just shall live by faith and again I live Rom. 1 17. Gal. 2.20 yet not I but Christ that liveth in me and the life that I now live I live by the faith of the Son of God And very apt is this metaphor of faith that it is the eye of the soul whereby it discerns those things which are invisible invisible to the eye of sence and the eye of reason 2 Cor 4.18 yet made evident and visible by an enlightning power of the Spirit to the eye of faith and therefore is faith called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11.1 a sacred evidence and divine demonstration of the truth of those things which neither sence nor reason can apprehend § 4. Many indeed there are eminent in Caldean learning and Mathematical science who in the height of their knowledge and with the eye of reason pierce the clouds discern the coelest●al motions of the heavenly bodies the inclining not necessitating influence of the Stars and Constellations yet how far short is all this of that Philo calls fides oculata an illuminated Faith the eye of the sanctified soul whereby it pierceth within the vail Heb. 6 19. looks into the holy of holies the most sacred and secret mysteries of grace and glory This is that Eagles eye which can receive the Rays of the Sun of righteousness being ever towards the Lord in the sweetness of his love and the riches of his fulness By this piercing eye of faith it is that Abraham through a bleeding sword and a sacrificed son does see a posterity numerous as the stars in heaven by this piercing eye of faith it is that Israel through a red Sea and a barren Wilderness does see a land of promise a Canaan of rest By this piercing eye of faith it is that David through a despised Crown and a broken Scepter does see a glorious Throne and famous Government yea by this peircing eye of faith it is that Jerusalem a type of the Church through a night of distress and a grave of capcaptivity does see a resurrection of peace and a full Noon of glory § 5. An enlightned faith is not discouraged with difficulties 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazian in Cyp. nor dampt with dangers knowing well that God oftentimes so orders the administrations of his Providence as that he works his own ends even by contrary means So that man is at a stand to determine whether is greater the wonder or the mercy of his Churches deliverance Now where lies the strength of faith why know not in the habit but in the object even in the Lord the creatures the Word the Sacraments they are good mediums but no full objects we must look thorow them as thorow a glass by which we behold God and Christ as the full and final object whereon to fix the the eye of faith and wherewith to terminate the sight of the soul § 6. Yea the blessings of providence and the graces of the spirit they are but the streams the Lord the Lord he is the fountain so that when all outward hopes fail and all inward comforts faint when there is a perfect vacuum in the creatures a seeming emptiness in the Ordinances even then the poor soul and afflicted Saint doth find rest and comfort in the Lord. Psal 116.7 In him faith sees an Almighty power and an omniscient wisdom an infinite grace and an all-sufficient merit yea an all-compassionating mercy So that were there indeed no life in the Ordinances no comfort in the Promises yet would faith by Christs assistance fetch both life and comfort from this fountain of the Lords fulness § 7. Who art thou then O thou afflicted soul who in thy spiritual desertions walkest in darkness clouded with sorrows Oh in thy greatest dejections lift up thine eyes unto the Lord Psal 123.1 that when the rising Sun appears thou mayst see his refreshing light and however now by reason of thy present anguish thou canst not serve God in alacrity of performance yet do it in sincerity of obedience and this this will be a cranny to convey some beams of light even in the lowest dungeon of thy spiritual distress Wait upon the Lord having thy eye of faith still towards him Psal 27.14 and so shall comforts be redoubled in a life recovered and thy difficulties of obtaining shall the more sweeten thy delights of injoying even of injoying God and Christ in the refreshing comforts of the Spirit conveyed and confirmed in his blessed Sacrament In which blessed Sacrament especially let thine eyes be still towards the Lord in his merits in his grace in his benefits in his love let him have thy fixed heart and thine intent eye yea let him have thy whole man for to this end it is that he here gives thee his whole self § 8. And Oh the sweet converses of the devout
its joy and delights says as David Look upon my affliction and my pain § 13. 2 In the exercise of fervent prayer whose voyce is louder from the heart then from the mouth louder from the eye then from the tongue sighs and tears are the best Rhetorick of the devout mans prayers The right gift of prayer and true grace of supplication not being as many fondly fancy it in the ready or large expression of words Rom. 8.26 but in sighs and groans which cannot be exprest O then then are we most fervent in prayer when our troubled souls become big with desires which cannot be uttered and therefore the tongue being unable to declare them in words they force their passage at the eyes in a flood of tears Thus thus pray we for the Church of Christ for the chosen of God that in a sympathy of their sufferings we may say with David Behold mine affliction and my pain § 14. 3 In the sense of their many infirmities The Saints of God exercised with ecstatical devotions in the holy excess of divine love Gal. 2.20 as St. Paul They live yet not they but Christ that liveth in them Col. 3.3 and their life is hid with Christ in God even as the stars without losing their light they shine not in the presence of the Sun but the Sun shines in them and their light is hid in the light of the Sun thus the Soul without losing its life it lives not being ecstatically swallowed up in Christ but Christ he lives in the soul and the souls life is hid in the life of Christ But now after the soul is descended from the Mount Tabor of her divine ecstasies how does she find herself in the Valley of Tears by reason of her humane infirmities And when the heart is wounded with the dart of love and the desire is not accomplisht in the enjoyment of its beloved what can be more afflicting As hope deferred makes the heart faint Prov. 13 12. so desires not satisfied make the soul languish Thus the Psalmist Psal 42.1 As the hart panteth after the water-brooks so longeth my soul after thee O God my soul is athirst for God for thee the living God c. § 15. Oh when the devout soul would fain take wing and flie away to her sweet repose in the bosom of her beloved oh the secret trouble and anguish of spirit to find it self clogg'd and chain'd to the servile miseries of this mortal life yea the impure motions of corrupt affections So that the devout Saint cries out with the blessed Apostle Wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 who shall deliver me from this body of sin and of death There is certainly no pleasure like that of pleasing God no joy like that of enjoying Christ And now for such a person as hath placed his liberty in Gods service his life in Gods love his comfort in Gods favor for such a person to be so infested with carnal earthly and corrupt affections that he calls in question his faith as false his hope as vain his service as fruitless who can conceive the Convulsion-fits of his spiritual anguish the laboring throes of his souls perplexities in which he cries out Vide afflictionem Behold my affliction and my pain § 16. 2. The firm ground of the souls peace Sins forgiven us Forgive all my sins Rom. 5.1 there says the Apostle Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Here we see plainly that Peace of conscience it is the fruit of Justification So that the root from whence springs this blessed fruit it is this an humble assurance of Gods love in Christ in the free and full pardon of our sins We may observe that till Christ had reconcil'd the Fa●her by his sufferings and death and had given an assurance thereof unto his Church by his Resurrection the Holy Ghost the Comforter did not come down upon the Apostles so now Joh. 7.39 till we be reconciled unto God by Christ in the remission of our sins and have some assurance hereof wrought in our hearts through faith the Comforter the Holy Ghost does not fill our souls with his divine consolations He does not refresh our spirits with his heavenly dew and sacred influence Peace of Conscience § 17. Therefore Isa 57.21 There is no peace saith my God to the wicked their worm of conscience is still gnawing in the midst of outward jollities fretting their souls with inward tortures So that the wicked flee when no man pursueth Pro. 28.1 no man pursueth without yet there is that pursueth within even the stinging guilt of an evil conscience So that seeing he every where carries with him his tormentor no wonder this if he can no way flie to escape his torment impossible it is he should flie from his misery since he cannot flie from himself his guilty conscience that makes his wound incurable his plague unavoidable But now when God speaks comfort unto his people Hos 2.14 it is ad Cor Comfort to the heart making the good Conscience to be a continual feast a feast furnished with those dainties of Christs banquetting-house Cant. 2.4 laid up in store for his Spouse the humble and penitent soul Let not then the heart that is drowned in worldly pleasure think to partake of those heavenly delights Let not the soul which is in the gall of bitterness think to participate of this divine sweetness this hidden Manna as our Saviour calls it Rev. 2.17 hidden to the world and the men of the world for that the blessedness of comfort which is in this sweet peace of conscience no man knows but he that tastes § 18. The better to represent by some measure of proportion what the comforts of the soul are in the peace of Conscience after its languishing under the terror of sin let those men give a shadow of it who from the safe and quiet port do behold the waves and billows of that raging sea in which they themselves were even now overwhelmed and by a miracle of providence are happily escaped or let those women in some sort declare it who after their bitter throes and laboring pangs have enjoyed the quiet ease of a bed of rest for such is the Peace of Conscience to the mournful Penitent after the terrors of sin and his horrors of soul as is the safe Port to the shipwrackt Mariner after the raging tempest or as the easeful bed to the laboring woman after her painful travel § 19. These may give us the shadow but as for the substance such is the excellencie of that as S. Paul tells us it passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 so that we can never rightly conceive it by description from others till we truly know it by experience in our selves Which of us can conceive that has not felt what is the blessed comfort of that mans soul who in the peace of his conscience can see
his wisdom or puzzle his power to effect a deliverance but as his counsel is unsearchable Deut. 33.27 2 Cor. 12.9 so his strength is everlasting and this strength is made perfect in weakness Wherefore when we pray if God does not answer it is not because he does not hear but that we should farther ●mportune Ostium coeli propterea clausum ut tu fortiùs pulses The gate of heaven is shut not that entrance is denied but that thou shouldst knock the harder even with more faith and more servor more patience and more importunity praying again and again Deliver Israel O God out of all his troubles § 15. 3 The extent of Israels deliverance out of all trouble Deliver Israel O God out of all his troubles Many there are whose seared consciences have made them obdurate hearts they are become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men void of all relenting affections wholly insensible of the Churches sufferings So they can raise themselves upon her ruines and enrich themselves with her spoils they care not to see her lie in the dust yea wallow in her blood torne with Schism and defiled with profanenesses But most certain it is the Good Heart can never be without trouble whilst the Church continues in her distress still preferring Jerusalems peace before its chief joy Ps 137.6 § 16. Yea our sad experience we know will subscribe the acknowledgment of this truth that the present waters of the Churches affliction like the former oil of her sacred unction it hath run down from the crown of the head to the skirts of the garments Ps 133.2 from the highest Prince to the lowest Peasant And now then let Compassion be the mother of devotion and by how much our sense of her sorrows is the more deep by so much let the fervor of our prayers be the more zealous that God would deliver her out of all her troubles Exod. 4.22 Exod. 19.5 6. But what deliver Israel out of all his troubles Israel Gods first-born his peculiar treasure his chosen nation is he in trouble and in many troubles too Yes it is so Let not then any place plead priviledge nor any person no not the most Sacred on earth any prerogative to exempt or acquit them from the chastising scourge of the most high God Gen. 6.12 § 17. All flesh saith God have corrupted themselves before me And if all flesh be corrupted all flesh must suffer the Chyrurgions hand either ad sanandum or ad excindendum either for the curing or for the cutting off Even he who was the Son of God taking upon him the flesh of man though he was without sin yet was he not without suffering Wonder not then that Gods first-born Israel whilst the onely-begotten of the Father Christ Jesus suffers affliction for Non decet sub spinoso capite corpus esse delicatum It is not comely that the head being crown'd with pricking thorns the body be clothed with delicate purple The Spouse must share in her Husbands lot the Church have fellowship with Christ in his sufferings And it is his promise Phil 3.10 2 Tim 2.12 if we suffer with him we shall also reign with him in which triumphant estate alone it is that the Church shall have her full freedom from all miseries her full deliverance out of all troubles § 18. Here to represent the Troubles of our Israel and then to mind us of the fit season and service to pray for Israels deliverance even the celebration of the blessed Eucharist 1. To represent us the troubles of out Israel A sum whereof we have so exactly set down by S. Paul in 2 Tim. 3. that he seems not only to have aim'd at our times but also to have pointed at our Land For what was his sure prophesie hath been our sad experience and it is but changing the tense to make his Prophetical prediction an historical narration even that as v. 2. Men are become lovers of their own selves from which unclean fountain of self love do issue those filthy streams of all the following imp●eties which give so fit a character of our Apostate times in which men are become through self-love covetous boasters proud blasphemers disobedient to parents unthankful unholy All which evils they are set down by the Apostle and are plainly to be discerned by us to be the adulterate b●ood and bastard brats of Heresie and Schism § 19. By whose venom and fury see oh see the Tragical Scene of tumults and wars of rapines and spoils of treachery and violence See a Nation sick and fainting a Church ruin'd and in the dust a People in fatuated and divided Oh see Justice despised and Truth rejected yea see the Ministry ordinances and worship of God violated invaded Priests being made of the lowest of the people and who will 1 King 13.33 putting himself into the Sacred function the least fitted being best accepted and most approved Men women and boys step from the shop from the stall from the kirchin almost from the cradle to the Pulpit and these undertake the dispensing of the Word and the administring of the Ordinances as if the Church were another Capitol or our days those of Jereboam to worship Calves § 20. Indeed Zeal and the Spirit is pretended yet we know well enough it is the Clusters of grapes which invite the Foxes into the vin●yard the Revenues of the Church that draws Faction into the Ministry And by these intruders see oh see how the greatest testimonies of Christs presence and the dearest pledges of his love his blessed Sacraments they are either quite removed or impiously prosan'd Yea see weak men and silly women suffer their precious souls to be vainly seduc'd and through fond pretences of piety yea some in open professions of blasphemy make shipwrack of their faith 1 Tim. 1.19 O God! in what a maze of perplexities and labyrinth of miseries are we involv'd such as no hand save that of thine extraordinary providence can lead us out § 21. And oh the hainousness of our sins through our impenitence which stand as a thick cloud betwixt us and our God that our prayer Lam 3.44 cannot pass through And thus our continuing in sin is the prolonging of his Judgments and whilst we thus lie wallowing in our lusts restless in our malice and helpless in our misery God he hides his face in anger end our enemies look on with scorn God he goes on in his wrath farther to afflict us and our Enemies continue in their hatred still to deride and mock us Lam. 2.16 This say they this is the day we looked for now Gods vengeance hath overtaken them and his fury seizd upon them In the thoughts of these sad troubles and deep distresses quis temperet à lachrymis who can refrain from tears of mourning who can refrain his sorrows of compassion And who is' t that feelingly compassionates the troubles of our Israel that will not servently
Body as Baptism is sometimes and in some places administred into its Bosom as into a Sepulchre Rom. 6.4 whereby we are said to be buried with Christ but raised from the Water the Grave gives up her dead and we are risen with Christ renewed again to life by the quickning power of the Spirit in the efficacy and operation of his grace Rom. 6.3 So that as we are Baptized into Christs death so are we baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Theodoret into a participation of the Lords Resurrection Very fitly then is the Font of holy Baptism compared by Leo to the Womb of the Blessed Virgin in which the Holy Ghost is powerfully present for our Spiritual Conception 1 Pet. 1.3 In begetting us again unto God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ For as of Christ risen Acts 13.33 so of the Infant Baptized does God seem to say This day have I begotten thee And to them who are thus begotten again hear St. Chrysostome reckon up the several Divine Benefits and Blessings Quasi tot Baptismatis largitates honores As so many acts of grace and titles of honor accompanying their Baptism They are become not onely Citizens but also Saints and not onely Saints but also sons and not onely sons but also heirs and not onely heirs of God but also brethren of Christ Rom. 8.17 and not onely brethren of Christ but also coheirs with Christ and not onely coheirs of his Kingdom but also members of his body and not onely members of his body but also temples of his presence and not onely temples of his presence but also organs of his Spirit Et hac de causa etiam Infantes Baptizamus And for this cause also we Baptize Infants that they may be sanctified that they may be justified and that they may be adopted Chrys Tom. 5. Hom. ad Neophyt recited by Aug. l. 1. cont Julian c. 6. Cassand de Bapt. Infant so St. Chrysostome as he is recited by St. Augustine Justification and Adoption being relactive acts the admitting them in Infants is no difficulty but concerning Sanctification as a real work by infusion of inherent holiness whether we shall allow that to Infants in Baptism is a great dispute Cassander from the Antients he makes the Baptismal Regeneration of Infants to consist in the remission of original sin which is Justification and in the acceptation to eternal life which is Adoption But now what the Sacramental Sanctification which accompanies this Justification and Adoption is St. Augustine resolves Difficile est dicere Aug. con● Donat. l. 4. c. 23. Episc Satisb Epist ad D. Ward It is hard to say yea he that shall undertake the cause as to quit it of all difficulties Ego me Auditorem libentissimè profiterer says our English Augustine I would most willingly profess my self an Auditor and yield the chair Even they who deny Grace inherent habits infused do yet acknowledge the presence and habitation of the Holy Ghost now sure we are the Holy Ghost dwells not but in an holy Temple yet how far the baptized Infant is sanctified to be this Temple and wherein expresly that Sanctification doth consist Explicet qui intelligit ego fateor me non intelligere saith that Learned Author Episc Satisb ibid. and Reverend Father much the honor of our Nation and Ornament of our Church Let him unfold it that understands it for my part I confess mine ignorance That Children are capable of real Sanctification we must needs grant believing them liable to original Pollution For that doubtless the grace of the second Adam is as effectual to make holy as the sin of the first Adam is to make corrupt Besides we say original Righteousness should have been inherent in children transmitted from their Parents by natural propagation if Adam had stood and if so sure children must needs be capable of receiving a superinduced principle of spiritual life from Christ now that Adam and we in him are fain To close then of this we may be assured Baptized Infants have their effectual manner and real measure of Sanctification by the Holy Ghost because pro conditione parvulorum according to the condition of their tender age they are stated in a present ordination to eternal life for that Without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 Having thus explained unto you with the original and use the benefits and effects of Baptism I shall seasonably resolve you these three Quares 1. What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those Infants which die baptized 2. As to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Orthodox 3. As to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Anabaptists Quest 1 First What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those Infants which die baptized Answ I answer Though there is some dispute among the Ancient Fathers a hot contest in the after Schoolmen and a more moderate debate in Modern Divines as to the nature and manner of Infants Regeneration the nature of its being and the manner of its causation yet all consent in this all Primitive Popish and Protestant Writers Fathers Schoolmen and others all consent in this judgment and determination from Grounds of Scripture and Divine Reason That Infants lawfully baptized are in such an estate of Justification Sanctification and Adoption as that so dying they are undoubtedly saved And herein our own Mother the Church of England In the Rubrick before the Catechism she is most clear and full Onely observe in those children that live what by Divine Ordination was sufficient to state them capable of Salvation whilst Infants does become insufficient when adult and come to the use of Reason for then is required their actual Faith and Repentance actual Conversion unto God and obedience unto the Gospel of Christ without which they cannot then be saved Quest 2 Secondly What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Orthodox Answ I answer Herein the Judgment of the Church is not so generally one St. Augustine and some in his time and since most of the Roman Church resolve That such Infants so dying they are not saved they have paena damni though not paena sensus they have a punishment of loss though not of sense they enjoy not Gods blissful presence and yet are not cast into hellish flames they have a Limbus Infantum for them but it is of their own fancying not of Gods providing The truth is the Scripture hath not clearly revealed whereby this Quaere may be so convincingly determined And therefore when some sudden surprise of death doth nip those Buds snatch away our tender Babes our duty is to submit with humility to Gods dispensation resigning them up to his mercy and comforting our selves with this resolution of the Orthodox That as in the
then that will intrust his liberty or estate to the judgment of a few puny Novices rather then the sage Baristers of the Law And what shall we intrust our Faith and in that our Souls to the opinions of Fanatick Enthusiasts and not rather to the Religious Pastors of the Church and faithful Preachers of the Gospel Yea let me propose it to the judicature of your own reason whether it be equal when any ware hath been judged warrantable or sophisticate by any of your companies that then the judgment of some puny Journeymen should be preferred The like case is in the Controversies of the Church and what will you have more regard to your wares then to your Faith to your commodities then to your Salvations and allow that in the Church which you will not admit of in your shop I urge this the rather because though we may say of our Church what Lyrinensis does of Origens family Vincent Ly● cont Donat. c. 23. that it is illustrata mantyrio made glorious by Martyrdom such Martyrdom as no Church in the World can out-vy in its Crown of Glory yea beautified with the richest and most magnificent furniture of all kinde of learning yet as Iraeneus tells us of the Hereticks of old Iren. l. 3 c. 1. That they took upon them to be Emendatores Apostolorum Reformers of the Apostles so since that the Romanists have took upon them to be Emendatores Patrum Reformers of the Fathers witness their Index Expurgatorius yea we have them rose up amongst us who will be Emendatores Reformatorum such as reform our Reformers calling into question that Gold which the whole Company of Goldsmiths have tryed by the Touchstone Those Doctrines our Church hath examined and determined according to Gods Word and given Testimony too to those Truths sealing them with their blood Wherefore seeing in the publick ruptures of our Church Heresies and Schisms as in the broken Walls of a Palace Adders and Serpents do breed and multiply that you may avoid their infection and sting 1 John 4.1 Believe not every Spirit Non omni quia omni Believe not every Spirit because it will be every thing any thing but what it ought to be Eph. 4.4 believe that Spirit which is but one but one Spirit as but one Truth One truth delivered us by the faithful Pastors of the Church as by one mouth whereas the factious and heretical they are divided in their spirits Tert. de praescript c. 42. and their opinions so that Schisma est unitas ipsis as Tertullian tells us their unity is that of Schism not of Faith not of Faith for that hearkens to the voice and Ministry of the Church delivering the Word and Truth of God in which we are taught whatsoever Christ hath commanded In the farther prosecution of the two parts of our Saviours Instruction establishing to us the Authority of the Scriptures and the Doctrine of his Church we will resolve you three seasonable questions and clear unto you two vulgar Errors 1. Resolve you three seasonable questions which are these 1. What is the Authority of the Church compared with the Scriptures 2. How do we come to believe that the Scriptures are the Word of God 3. In doubtful cases how may we best interpret the Scriptures First What is the Authority of the Church compared with the Quest 1 Scriptures I answer Answ The Church of England keeps the middle path betwixt two extreams both by ways of Error she gives due honor to the Catholick Church but cheif honor to the sacred Scriptures whereas the Romanist exalting the Churches dignity debaseth the Scriptures Authority and the Sectary advancing the Scriptures Authority debaseth the Churches dignity Avoiding then the Errors of Papism and Faction we acknowledge with St. Paul Eph. 2.20 Quippè illud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tam de doctrina quàm de persona intelligendum Ambros de Fid. l. 1. c. 4. That the Church hath its Foundation fixt upon the Scriptures and from thence we infer infallibly the Scriptures cannot have their Authority derived from the Church And therefore St. Ambrose makes his challenge to the Emperor Gratian Nolo argumento credas sancte Imperator nostrae disputationi Scripturas interrogemus in terrogemus Apostolos interrogemus Prophetas interrogemus Christum quod multum Patrem interrogemus cujus honori studere se dicunt I desire not O sacred Emperor that thou shouldst believe our Argument and Dispute let us ask the question of the Apostles of the Prophets of Christ What shall I say more Let us ask the Father whose honor they say being Arians they contend for And we hearken with consent of judgment to that known resolution of Faith given by St. Augustine Audi non dicit Donatus hear Aug. ep 48. it is not said Thus saith Donatus thus saith Rogatus or thus saith Vincentius or thus saith Hilarius or thus saith Austine no but Thus saith the Lord. It is the Authority then of the Scripture which gives firmness of truth to the Doctrines of the Church Yet again we acknowledge what St. Paul affirms 1 Tim. 3.15 That the Church is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the pillar and stay of truth in that as the Edicts of Kings are fastned unto Pillars so the Word of Truth the Gospel of Christ is committed unto the Church to be held forth in its genuine sense and proper interpretation to the view of all as the sole object of Faith So that the seat of saving Truth the custody of the Gospels promises the treasury of spiritual riches in a word the faithful depositary of Gods Word is to be found in Sion the City of the living God the Church of Jesus Christ And thus the Church does not give Authority to the Scriptures yet declares the Authority of the Scriptures she doth not impose a sense but expounds it So that the Church is the Heavenly Orbe in which the glorious light of saving Truth and Gospel Mysteries shines forth unto the Faithful Secondly How do we come to believe that the Scriptures are the Quest 2 Word of God In answer to this observe Answ Ep● 3.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Mysteries of the Gospel contain such a manifold wisdom as is the Angels astonishment so that needs must they be the Council of Gods Bosom not the invention of mans brain However then the Grammatical sense and Logical connexion of words and phrases be discerned by the common light of Humane Reason yet that of our Saviours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conviction of the Spirit John 16.8 1 Cor. 2.4 2 Cor. 4.2 and St. Pauls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 demonstration and manifestation of the Spirit is a work transcending the skill a wonder surpassing the discovery of natural men here Omnis Platonicorum caligavit subtilit as Cypr. de Sp. Sancto All the subtlety of Plato's School is put to silence A Deo then
of Mediator that he is the head of the body the Church In this observe three branches of divine mysteries upon which we shall insist by Explication and gather some fruit from each branch by Application The branches of divine mysteries these 1. How Christ is said to be the Head of the Church 2. What the Church is of which he is Head And 3. How the Church of Christ of which he is Head is said to be a Body 1. How Christ is said to be the Head of the Church viz. In th●se four particulars 1. The fulness of his perfection 2. The excellency of his glory 3. The lively operations of his Spirit 4. The real communication of his benefits 1. The fulness of his perfection S. Paul writing of the mysteries of Grace Eph. 1.10 tells us of God gathering together in one all things in Christ The Original expresseth it by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which S. Hierom renders by a recapitulari as a metaphor taken from the manner of Orators whose usual art it is to sum up the chief parts of the whole Oration in a short yet full Epilogue Thus hath God made Christ as Head of the Church to be a recapitulation or compendium of all the excellencies in the creatures So that whatsoever was eminent in the Patriarks Kings or Prophets whatsoever was glorious in the creation of the World or promulgation of the Law whatsoever glory was in Moses's Sanctuary Solomon's Temple or the Jewish Sacrifices whatsoever grace is in his Saints or excellency in the Angels All that and what more can possibly be expressed or conceived it is an higher degree of perfection and in a greater measure of fulness comprised and contained in him who is the Fountain of all Christ Jesus the Head of the Church This this our Apostle makes the very formal constituting cause of Christs office and dignity as Mediator and Head of the Church that in him all fulness dwells even the fulness of grace of wisdom of power and of the Divinity it self According to that of the Apostle to his Colossians Col. 2.9 In him dwells the fulness of the Godhead bodily 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no temporary sojourning but a perpetual habitation In him dwells the fulness of the Godhead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily not in shadows and figures but in substance and truth not meerly by a vertual operation but even in a personal union God he dwells in Heaven by his glorious presence in the hearts of his Saints by his gracious Spirit but in Christ alone by union hypostatical From which hypostatical union does flow Christs fulness of perfection And needs must he have the greatest fulness in whom are hid the richest treasures Col. 2.3 the treasures of wisdom and knowledge of righteousness and truth of peace and of joy of holiness and of happiness Yea as in the Head is the source of all the Senses so in Christ the fulness of all the Graces And thus is Christ the Head of the Church for his fulness of perfection 2. The excellency of his glory The Head is most noble and excellent in the body natural and so is Christ in the body mystical Joh. 1.21 He is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the Prophet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by an excellency above all the Prophets So that Joh. 1.18 though no man hath seen God at any time yet the only begotten in the bosom of the Father this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this the Prophet he hath revealed him He is that Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Heb 5.6 Heb. 4.14 that High-Priest that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that great High-Priest who by his own blood hath passed into the Heavens and ever lives to make intercession for us 1 Pet. 5 4. Joh. 10.11 He is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that chief Shepherd that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that one and only Shepherd who lays down his life for his sheep and delivers his Lambs from the mouth of the Lyon He it is whose name is Wonderfull Isa 9.6 1 Tim. 6.15 Counsellor the mighty God the everlasting Father the Prince of peace He is that the blessed and only Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the blessed even blessedness it self Gal. 3.8.16 in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed The highest excellency of Christ's glory is set forth unto us by his sitting at the right hand of the Father where the right hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 metaphorically and after the manner of men Ps 44.3 Ps 110.1 Ps 16.11 is transferred to God which signifies in the language of the sacred Scriptures sometimes might and power sometimes majesty and glory sometimes eternal joy and perfect felicity in all which respects Christ alone is said to be set at the right hand of his Father though in might majesty and happiness equal to the Father according to his Godhead yet ad dextram Patris at the right hand that is next indeed yet inferior to the Father according to his manhood Ps 45.9 And thus in that Allegorical Hymn and Spiritual Epithalamium it is said Upon thy right hand did stand the Queen in gold of Ophir that is The Church clothed with glory is seated in perfect felicity next to Christ as Christ is next to his Father To close then viz. Upon Ascension-day This is what the Church commemorates the highest degree of Christs exaltation in might majesty and happiness that He is set down at the right hand of God And thus having finish'd the work of mans redemption after his many humiliations in the body he is exalted in the same body and whereas his Divinity was clouded in his humiliation Eph. 4.8 it shines forth gloriously in his exaltation when ascending up on high he leads Captivity captive and entring the heavenly Jerusalem he is invested and adored crowned and worshipped as King of Angels and Saints Head of the body the Church This the second particular Christ the Head of the Church as for the fulness of his perfection so for the excellency of his glory 3. The lively Operations of his Spirit As the head gives sense and motion to the body so does Christ a quickening and actuating vigor to his Church Act. 17.28 By him we live move and have our being Mal 4.2 Joh. 1.9 as in life natural so in life spiritual whether it be that of Grace or that of Glory He is the Sun of Righteousness that true light which lighteth every one that cometh into the World He is the overflowing and ever flowing Fountain of whose fulness do we all receive grace for grace Joh. 1.16 From him we have the grace of Justification by his blood the grace of Sanctification by his Spirit He it is that ingrafts faith in us and strengthens it that kindles Charity