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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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rest Evil is best stop'd in the beginning If when first we begun to grow careless we had taken heed it would never have come to that sad issue it doth afterwards an heavy body running downwards gathers strength by running and still moveth faster Look then to your first breaking off from God and remitting your watch and Spiritual fervour 'T is easier to crush the the egg than kill the serpent He that keepeth a house in constant repair prevents the fall and ruin of it When first the evil heart beginneth to draw us off from God and to be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin then we must Heb. 3.12 13. humble our Souls betime that we may stick close to Christ. 2. By way of recovery where there hath been a decay Take the advice of the Holy-Ghost Rev. 2.5 Remember from whence thou art faln and repent and do thy first works 1. A serious consideration of our condition in those words remember from whence thou art faln Recollect and sadly consider what a difference there is between thee and thy self thy self living and acting in the sense and power of the love of God and thy self now under the power of some worldly and fleshly lust Consider what an advantage thou hadst against Temptations of the Devil the World and the Flesh when love was in strengh and how much the case is altered with thee now how feeble and impotant in the resistance of any sin Say as Job Job 29.2 3. Oh that it were as in the months past In the day when God preserved me when his candle shined upon my head Or as the Church Hosea 2.7 It was better with me then than now In our returning we should have such thoughts as these I was wont to spend some time every day with God 't was a delight to me to think of him or speak of him or to him now I have no heart to pray or meditate 'T was the joy of my Soul to wait upon his Ordinances the returns of the Sabbath were well-come unto me But now what a weariness is it Time was when my heart did rise up in arms against sin when a vain thought was a grief to my Soul why is it thus with me now Is sin grown less odious or God less lovely 2. The next advice is repent That is humble your selves before God for your defection 'T is not enough to feel your selves faln many are convinced of their faln and lapsed estate but do not humble and judge themselves for it in Gods presence bewailing their case smiting on the thigh praying for pardon 'T is a great sin to grow weary of God Isa. 43.22 Thou hast not called upon me O Jacob Thou hast been weary of me Oh Israel And Mich. 6.3 Oh my people what have I done unto thee And wherein have I wearied thee Testify against me His honour is concerned in it therefore you must the more feelingly bewail it 3. Do thy first works We must not spend the time in idle complaints Many are sensible that do not repent Many repent i. e. seem to bewail their case but languish in idle complaints for want of love but do not recover this loss by serious endeavours You must not rest till you recover your former seriousness and mindfulness of God 'T is one of the deceits of our hearts to complain of negligence and not redress it The Nazarite who had broken his vow he was to begin all again Numbers 6.12 So you that have broken with God you must do what you did at first conversion let your work be sin-abhorring every day and ingaging your heart anew to God And make no reservation but so give up your selves to the Lord that his interests may prevail in your hearts again above all sinful and vile inclinations or whatever hath been the cause of the withdrawing your hearts from God and the decay of your love to him SERMON XXVI 2 Cor. 5.14 For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus Iudge that if one dyed for all then were all dead WE come now to the fifth case of Conscience about loving God with all the heart a thing often required in Scripture the original place is Deut. 6.5 And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy Soul and all thy might 'T is repeated by our Lord Matth. 22.37 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy Soul and all thy mind But in Mark 10.30 And Luke 10.27 With all thy heart and all thy Soul and all thy mind and all thy strength This sentence was famous 't was one of the four Paragraphs which the Jews were wont to write upon their Phylacteries and fastened to their door posts and read in their houses twice a day Mark here is variety of words sometimes three words are used and sometimes four some go about accurately to distinguish them by the heart interpreting the will by the Soul the appetite and affections by the mind the understanding and by might bodily strength All put together with that intensive particle all imply great love to God Now a doubt ariseth hereupon how this is reconcilable with the defects of Gods Children and the weaknesses of the present state Yea it seemeth to confine our affections that there will be love left for no other things For if God have all the heart and all the Soul and all the mind and all the strength what is there left for Husband Wife Children Christian Friends and other Relations Without which respect humane society cannot be upheld and preserved The doubt may be referred to two heads 1. The irreconcilableness of the rule with present defects 2. The confinement intimated is destructive of our respect to our natural comforts and relations 1. Concerning the first how it is reconcileable with those many partibilities and defects of Gods Children I answer First By distinguishing this sentence may be considered as an exaction of the Law Or as a rule of the Gospel 1. As an exaction of the Law And so it serveth to shew us what duty the perfect Law of God requireth compleat love without the least defect All the heart all the Soul and all the might a grain wanting maketh the whole unacceptable As one condition not observed forfeiteth the whole lease though all the rest be kept That this reference is not to be altogether slighted appeareth by the occasion A Lawyer asked him a Question tempting him saying Master which is the great Commandment of the Law Matth. 22.35 Now Christs aim was to beat down his confidence by proposing the rigour of the Law Luke 10.28 This do and thou shalt live The best course to convince self-justiciaries such as this Lawyer was thereby to rebate their confidence and to shew the necessity of a better righteousness And so 't is of use this way for a double end First To convince us of the necessity of looking after the grace of the Redeemer Secondly To
God Idolatry and Prophaneness had never crept into the world if men had kept up the sense of Gods bounty Some never regard the End of Mercies which is to draw in our hearts to God therefore called the Cords of a man Hos. 6.4 being so many bonds and ties upon us What honour hath been done to God for this and that mercy I allude to that in Hest. 6.3 See how David reasoneth 2 Sam. 7.2 I dwell in an house of Cedar but the Ark of God within Curtains When the Heart is urging to Duty upon this score God hath been good to me given me food and rayment and plentiful provision for the comfort of this life what have I done for God Not only the Impenitent abuse mercy Rom. 2.4 but David lost his awe of God because he had not a thankful sense of the mercies of God 2 Sam. 12.7 8. So for corrective Providences The Body is a tender part with most men though they are sensible of the smart of the lash yet they do not consider the hand that striketh nor the deserving procuring Cause they do not look upward nor inward they do not see the hand of God in it Isa. 26.11 When his hand is lifted up they will not see look upon it as a chance 1 Sam. 6.4 Job had explicite thoughts of God Job 1.23 The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken Nor the Cause Lam. 3.39 Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sins If Sickness cometh if a Relation be taken away if an Estate blasted a waking Conscience looketh to the Cause For this cause many are sick and many are fallen asleep 1 Cor. 11. We should see the mind of God in his Rod. When the Israelites fled before the men of Ai Joshua looketh out for the Troubler So the Children of God search for the sin that is the cause of their trouble 2. Stupid Dulness and cold Indifferency in heavenly things Their want of Zeal and chearfulness in holy Duties they go about them heavily Dull of hearing Mat. 13.5 Cold in Prayer when they should be fervent and effectual Jam. 5.6 In all things we shew forth an heartless formality Grace is asleep in the Soul and thence cometh a sleepy profession a sleepy hearing a sleepy praying a sleepy receiving The Word that was wont to be as burning Coals leaveth no Impression Luk. 24.32 Your whole Converse with the living God is cold and dead-hearted In such a condition a man heareth as if he heard not and prayeth as if he pray'd not receiveth as if he received not and mourns for sin as if he mourned not and rejoyceth in God as if he rejoyced not looks after Heaven and heavenly things as if he sought them not and so brings little honour to God and little profit and comfort to his own soul. 3. Tedious irksomeness in Gods service They grow weary of the wayes of God Mal. 1.13 Behold what a weariness is it Amos 8.5 When will the new Moons be over and the Sabbath past Shall God do so great things for us in Christ and shall any thing which God hath commanded be grievous to us How unkind is this neither have we an hard Master nor hath he enjoyned us tedious work but all our duties have a sweetness in them Micah 6.3 Do not my words do good You carry it so as if God did not deal well with his people or were not easie to be served His Commands are not grievous and his Yoke is easie Tryals sent by him not above measure his Corrections not above our deserving therefore why should we snuff at his service Weariness and repining at Gods service is an ill sign God loveth and requireth a willing people This weariness though it doth not make us wholly abandon Gods service yet it makes us slight it and mind it no more than how to get it over any way Oh take heed then of growing weary of Religion and attending on the duties thereof to look upon these as distractions or matters by the By or interruptions of the work we would be upon They are lead much by sense and carnality that esteem nothing but what yieldeth a pleasure to sense or gratifyeth the outward Man 4. Forgetfulness of Changes and vain dreams of worldly happiness When we have a carnal Pillow to rest upon we fall asleep Psal. 30.6 7. A Christian should sit loose from all earthly things There was Leven in the Thank-offering We should be contented to dwell in Booths as the Israelites Psal. 39.5 Surely every man in his best estate is vanity 5. Carnal Complacency The peace and pleasure which you live upon is fetched more from the world than from God and Heaven and you live in quietness of mind not so much from the belief of the love of God in Christ and the hope of Heaven as because you feel your selves well in your bodily estate and live at ease and in prosperity in the world and have something grateful to the flesh Luk. 12.19 20 21. Oh! that soul is in a dangerous condition when the World is so pleasing and lovely to it that it can take contentment and delight in it without God or apart from God To many worldly prosperity is so sweet that it can keep them quiet under the guilt of wilfull sins When you have your hearts desire for a while you can forget Eternity or bear those thoughts with security which otherwise would amaze your Souls Secondly Motives 1. Your Enemy watcheth The Devil is never asleep 1 Pet. 5.8 he observeth you in all postures and watcheth all possible advantages against the Children of God and will not you stand upon your Guard and look about you 2. If you sleep you hazard your selves to the Whip or Gods severe Correction Hos. 5.15 God findeth out many times a very smart Rod to whip lazy drowsie Saints to their duty He will not suffer Grace to rust in his Children Your awakening will be sad God sent a Tempest after Jonah Some sharp cross or other will fall upon us 3. The eyes of many are upon us and shall we be slumbring and sleeping 1 Cor. 4.9 W● are made a spectacle to the World Angels and Men. Miscarriages will tend to Gods dishonour 4. When Grace is asleep sin breaketh loose There is no sin but a man is exposed to in a secure Estate therefore the Devil laboureth as much as he can to cast us into this temper When David walked at ease on the top of his House little did he know the evil of his own Heart and the danger of the Temptation 5. Every lesser indisposition that hindreth any degree of Communion with God should be grievous to the Children of God If we do not take heed to the beginnings of sins further Mischief will ensue when Temptations are near importunate and constant Little sticks set green ones on fire when the thatch once taketh fire 't is hard to quench it therefore we should not rest in
may be answerable to the dignity of so great a Lord and Husband 3. Others think an habitual Readiness will serve the turn They mind present duties but do not enliven them by the remembrance of the coming of the Lord or they have not done their main work and therefore take more liberty about the World than others and a greater liberty in the delights of sense and therefore we have that caution Luk. 21.24 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness and the cares of this life and so that day come upon you unawares That will make you wither and contract deadness and drowsiness hinder your comfort and peace and that chearful testimony you may give for God to others as Peter's question Lord speakest thou to us or to all Luk. 12.41 4. Many are ready but think themselves unready It concerneth them to study Gospel Grounds of Comfort and Peace if they can endure the Touch-stone though not the Balance Where there is a sincere bent of heart to please him there is a Law of Liberty Jam. 2.12 a Law of Liberty not for the carnal but the sincere not a Law of Tryal but of Gospel liberty We now come to the Third thing in the Text And the Door was shut The shutting the door noteth the Impossibility of getting our Condition altered when the day of Grace and Tryal is once over There is a twofold Door 1. Janua Misericordiae ad Ignoscendum the door of Christs Pity and Mercy to returning sinners Mat. 7.7 Ask and it shall be given you seek and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened unto you And Joh. 6.37 Him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast off But then this Door is shut 2. Janua Gratiae ad Convertendum there is the Door of Repentance and Conversion but there is no Repentance when we are in termino They may have a sense of their misery but their habitual hatred to God remaineth they that have wittingly and wilfully rejected his Counsel remain so still The fire of Hell doth not soften but harden them their Self-love may make them sensible of their pain Reasons First His Love to his People Though Christ waiteth long for the Preparation of the Wicked yet he will not alwaies delay the desire of the Godly Secondly His Justice 'T is fit that they that live so long in their Unbelief and disobedience of the Counsels and Precepts of the Gospel should at length find this dispensation continued who grow unteachable and hardened in their negligences Psal. 95.7 8. To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts VSE Is to press us to begin with God betimes You that are young take warning this day do not think there is time enough hereafter You that are old do not think it is too late nor be ashamed to begin now 1. The present time is the only opportunity of Salvation or embracing the offer of Gods Grace Heb. 3.7 Psal. 95.7 Oh do not reject his Counsel 2. Love is impatient of delay if we could Hope to prevail with you that way 3. When the Angels sinned the Lord immediately shut the door against them to us he hath given leave Acts 11.13 14. and space to Repent Rev. 2.21 Let us not receive the Grace of God in vain 2 Cor. 6.1 SERMON IX MATTH XXV v. 11 12. Afterwards came also the other Virgins saying Lord Lord open to us But he answered and said Verily I say unto you I know you not IN these Words we have two Branches 1. The Supplication of the Foolish Virgins vers 11. 2. The Answer of the Bridegroom vers 12. In the First consider the time when it was These Foolish Virgins came afterwards when the Door was shut Secondly The Blandishment and Compellation here used Lord Lord. First For the Time when it was These Virgins came afterwards when it was too late They should have knocked and cryed for mercy before the door was shut Isa. 55.6 Seek the Lord while he may be found call upon him while he is near Otherwise our Cries are but howlings the fruit of our discontent rather than our own choice Heb. 11.5 'T is said of Enoch that he pleased God If we would live with God in a blessed Estate hereafter we must please God ere we depart hence This is the time of Grace or Gods Patience Luk. 2.14 Peace upon Earth good will to men and 2 Cor. 6.1 2. This is the time of labour and service Eccl. 9.10 Judgment findeth us as Death leaveth us Eccl. 11.3 Then we are in termino When this life is ended all opportunities of doing good end with it Corn doth not grow in the Barn but in the Field therefore we had need to work now seek Grace now be instant with God now Joh. 9.4 I must work the work of him that sent me while it is day the night cometh wherein no man can work And now that is not only while life lasteth but instantly Secondly Here is the Blandishment and Compellation used Lord Lord So Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven And ver 22. Many will say to me in that day Lord Lord. 1. Here is a Title of honour given to Christ by Hypocrites and 't is ingeminated The Title of honour given to Christ is due to him Joh. 13.13 Ye call me Master and Lord and you say well for so I am But the Title must be verified by suitable practice Men may delight to be flattered with the Title of Lord Lord by those that inwardly bear them no reverence but Christ who knoweth the Heart will not be pleased with those glorious Titles when your Hearts give your Tongues the lie Luk. 6.46 Why call you me Lord Lord and do not the things that I say As they cryed Hail King of the Jews when the Soldiers mocked him Many often entitle Christ to their party take upon them to be his Disciples in words but the Kingdom of God standeth not in word but in power But these served their Master more with Mouth than with Heart therefore Christ doth not accept of them nor approve of them for his Servants They call Christ Lord but obey the Devil are lead and governed by the flesh disobedient to Christs Counsels and Precepts I hear Lord Lord but what means the bleating of the Sheep and the lowing of the Oxen Therefore 't is in vain to use this honourable Title to move pity in the Judge 2. They ingemminate it to shew the Ardency of their desires and earnestness to have Christ for their Lord. Now first or last every knee shall bow to Christ they are forced to fly to him now in their extremity and pressures of misery Though men will not come to Christ for Grace yet they will come to him for Glory Now they cannot come because busied
them that are troubled rest c. This with respect to Christ's Merit and the Qualification of the Parties 3. The Third Righteousness is in Performance of his Promises For though his Promise be free yet if it be once made Justice doth require it and God is not free but bound to perform it Now in these two latter Respects are they capable 3. They are Signs and Tokens of their being approved and accepted with God according to the Gospel-Covenant Christ as God's Steward cometh to distribute the appointed Reward to the Heirs of Glory This is the Evidence he is to proceed by When the destroying Angel was sent to destroy the First-born of the Aegyptians he was to take notice of the Sign of Sprinkling of Blood on the Door-Posts Exod. 12. Not that that Blood deserved but it signified that there dwelt Israelites 4. They are Measures according to the Degrees of Grace and our abounding in the Work of the Lord 2 Cor. 9.6 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly and he that soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully The Reward is more full or sparing according to what we have done or suffered for God VSE To set us right in the Doctrine of Grace and Works we have to do with three Parties 1. The Pharisaical Legalist 2. The Carnal-Gospeller and 3. The Broken-hearted and serious Christian. 1. The Legalist that trusts in himself that he is Righteous and hopeth to be accepted with God for his Works sake Trusting in Works is very natural and very dangerous 'T is very Natural because of the Law written upon our Hearts We all come into the World with a sense of a Duty-Covenant and because every one would be sufficient to his own Happiness an unhumbled Soul is apt to give more to Duty and Personal Righteousness than to Christ Rom. 10.3 For they being ignorant of God's Righteousness and going about to establish their own Righteousness have not submitted themselves unto the Righteousness of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A russet ragged Coat of his own pleaseth a Proud Man better than a silken Coat that is borrowed 'T is dangerous for 't is contrary to all the Declarations of God Eph. 2.9 By Grace ye are saved not of Works lest any man should boast The whole Progress of Salvation from its first Step in Regeneration till its final and last Period in Glorification doth intirely flow from God's Grace and not from our Works The securing the Interest of free Grace in our Salvation is a thing the Spirit of God is very careful of in the Scriptures the Glory of Grace being that which God mainly aimeth at Eph. 1.6 and a thing which we do naturally incline to intrench upon and to rob him of in whole or in part It crosseth the great End which God aimed at in contriving of Man's Salvation which was that all ground of glorying should be taken away from Man as being in the meanest or least respect a Saviour to himself and that all the Glory might be ascribed compleatly to God in Christ 1 Cor. 1.29 30 31. Christ spake a Parable against those that trusted in themselves that they were righteous Luk. 18.9 Two men went up into the Temple to pray the one a Pharisee the other a Publican The one cometh Appealing to Justice The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself God I thank thee that I am not as other men are Extortioners Vnjust c. I fast twice in the Week I give Tythes of all that I possess The other cometh crying out Grace The Publican standing a far off ●ould not lift up so much as his eyes unto Heaven but smote upon his Breast saying God be merciful to me a Sinner The Sinner is justified not the Worker In short to prevent all Mistakes First Our Works whatever they are either Works of Love to God or Man and the good use of External Means or Common Grace are not the moving Cause or Inducement to incline God to give us Christ or the Grace of Faith or Work of Conversion before others but this is the meer work of Grace or the Mercy and good Pleasure of God Tit. 3.5 6. Not by works of Righteousness which we have done but according to his Mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Secondly Works both before and after Conversion are not that Righteousness nor any part of that Righteousness by which Sin is expiated or the Wrath of God appeased or whereby we are reconciled to God and do originally obtain a Right to Eternal Life This is only ascribed to the Merit of Christ Rom. 3.24 25. Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his Blood to declare his Righteousness for the Remission of Sins that are past through the forbearance of God The Merit is in Christ's Blood Christ's Obedience his Ransom and meritorious Price 3. Our Works or what we do to fulfill the Law of God are not that Instrument by vertue of which we apply the Merits of Christ to our selves or receive that Righteousness by vertue of which we are reconciled to God Our Interest in the Merits of Christ our Right to Pardon of Sin and Grace doth not arise from Works but meerly Faith Rom. 3.22 So that in the Plea of Justification or our Suit for the Pardon of Sin we must renounce all our good Works and wholly rely on the Merits of Christ giving up our selves to do the Will of God ' Bate this and then Works indeed come in as the fruits of Faith as Evidences of Eternal Life and the way to Glory 2. The Carnal-Gospeller is the other person we have to do with And to him we say 1. That no man can maintain his Comfort and faithfully relye upon Christs Merits but he that is faithful in doing his Fathers will No other Faith is allowed by the Scriptures for sound in the Judgment of our Consciences but such a Faith Gal. 5.6 For in Christ Jesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor Vncircumcision but Faith which worketh by love No other Faith will be approved by Christ for sound at the last day Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven 2. That the doing of some good Works cannot excuse men for the Omission of others which be as necessary we must not do one act of Charity only but all Many acts are reckoned up of one kind to imply all the rest not only fed but cloathed not only cloathed but visited Therefore besides the goodness of the work which we are bound to do there must be an Uniformity in them There are good Works of divers kinds many Works of the same kind To Prophesie in Christ's Name is a good
far from the Kingdom of God they approve things that are good but they have no mind to take hazard and lot with Christ. 5. If there should be a Profession there is no Power The Net draws bad Fish as well as good There are mixtures in the Church Many revere Godliness but were never acquainted with the Virtue and Power of it Many have an excellent Model of Truth and make a Profession as plausible and glorious in the World as possibly you can desire yet they never knew the Virtue of this Religion it never entred into their Heart 1 Cor. 4.20 For the Kingdom of God is not in Word stands not in plausible Pretences but in Power 1 Thess. 1.5 For our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but also in Power You know the State of Men were represented by Christ in the Parable of the two Sons Mat. 21.28 29 30. A certain Man had two Sons and he came to the first and said Son go to work to day in my Vineyard He answered and said I will not but afterwards he repented and went And he went to the second and said likewise And he answered and said I go Sir and went not Oh there be many that say I will go that pretend fair that are convinced so far as to make a Profession yet never bring their Hearts seriously to addict themselves to God to walk in his Ways and keep his Charge there is no real change of Heart no serious bent of Soul towards God 6. If there be some real Motions as there may be in temporary Believers for we must not think all is Hypocritical yet it is not intire Mark 6.20 Herod did many things and heard John Baptist gladly His Heart and his Profession went a great way together till he was to part with his Bosom-Lust John was safe till he touched upon his Herodias then Conviction grows furious and he turneth into a Devil Therefore take heed of meer Conviction Vse 4. To press the Children of God to express such Fruits of their Union with Christ that they may convince the World Christ prays not only that the World may be convinced but that it might be by those that are real Members of his Mystical Body that they may have a Hand to further it What are the Fruits of the Mystical Union that you may convince the World 1. Love and mutual serviceableness to one another's Good When we live as Members of the same Body that have a mutual care for one another then we shall bring a mighty Honour and Credit to Religion and can with Power give Testimony to the Truths of Christ. Acts 2.44 And all that believed were together and had all things common When Christians were of One Mind and Heart they had all things common O it is a mighty convincing thing when all those that profess Godliness labour to carry on the same Truths and Practices Divisions breed Atheism in the World The Lord Jesus knew it and therefore he prays Let them be all one c. that the World may believe that thou hast sent me We never propagate the Faith so much as by this Union Divisions put a great stop to the progress of Truth When contrary Factions mutually condemn one another it is a wonder any are brought off from their vain Conversations The World is apt to think there is no such thing as Religion and one sort is no better than another they see the World cannot agree about it therefore they stay where they are 2. Holiness and Strictness of Life and Conversation there is a convincing Majesty in it natural Conscience doth homage to it where ever it findeth it Therefore live as those who are taken up into Fellowship with God through Christ. Herod feared John Baptist Why because he was a strict Preacher No but because he was a Just Man Mark 6.20 When you live thus holily and accomplish the Work of Faith with Power then the Lord Jesus is glorified in you 2 Thess. 1.11 12. 3. When you can contemn the Baits of the World and Allurements of Sense this is a mighty Argument to convince the World that you have higher and nobler Principles you are acted by and better Hopes you are called to Tho you have not divested and put off the Interests of Flesh and Blood for you are not Angels yet you can be faithful to God and Christ. The World admireth what kind of Temper Men are made of 1 Pet. 4.4 They think it strange that you run not with them into all excess of Riot They have the same Interests and Concernments and yet how mortified how weaned are they from those Things which others go a whoring after sure they have a felicity which the World knoweth not of they dread and admire this tho they hate you 4. A Chearfulness and Comfortableness in the midst of Troubles and deep Wants when you can live above your Condition take joyfully the spoiling of your Goods Heb. 10.34 and bear Losses with an equal mind for you are not much troubled with these Things then you live as those that are called to a higher Happiness 5. To be more faithful in the Duties of your Relations The Fruits of the Mystical Union run to every part of the Spiritual Life None commend their Religion so much as those that make Conscience of the Duties of their Relations that they may carry themselves as becomes Christians Husbands and Wives Parents and Children Masters and Servants So poor Servants make the Doctrine of the Lord Jesus Christ comely Tit. 2.10 That ye may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things And the Apostle saith Men that do not obey the Word may without the Word be won by the Conversation of their Wives 1 Pet. 3.1 Worldly Men have been much gained by the Lives of Religious Persons Thus you propagate the Truth by carrying your selves usefully in your Relations This hath been ever the Glory of Religion as it was in the Primitive Times Austin makes this Challenge Vbi tales Imperatores c. Let all the Religions in the World shew such Emperors such Captains such Armies such Managers of Publick Treasury as the Christian Religion The World was convinced there was something Divine in them O! it is pity the Glory of Religion should fall to the ground in our days and that the quite contrary should be said none such careless Parents as those that seem to be touched with a sense of Religion None so disobedient to Magistrates none such disobedient Children to Parents as those that seem to be called to Liberty with Christ Therefore if you would honour Christ and propagate the Truth keep up this Testimony and convince the World 6. A Constancy in the Profession of Faith You should live as if Christ and you had one common Interest Sure they believe Christ was sent from God and able to reward them else why should they sacrifice all their Interests for his sake It is said Rev. 12.11 The
wean us from worldly happiness To make us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1.12 Vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory Rom. 9.23 In time you shall be delivered see that you have the beginning and first-fruits and that you daily grow in grace 2. With earnest Longing Rom. 7.23 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death 2 Cor. 5.2 In this we groan earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven 3. As to Faith 1. Fix it and be at a greater certainty against all doubts and fears not only as to your interest but the truth of the promise of eternal Life These doubts may stand with a sincere Faith but not a confirmed Faith we have much of the Unbeliever in our bosoms venture all your happiness temporal and spiritual upon this security 2. Improve it it is the work of Faith to overcome the World and the Flesh 1 Joh. 5.4 5. This is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith Who is he that overcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God to over-rule our sense and appetite and to teach us to make nothing of all that would disswade us against our heavenly interest Acts 20.24 But none of these things move me neither count I my life dear unto my self so that I might finish my course with joy and the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus to testifie the Gospel of the grace of God This is the true Mortification SERMON VIII ROM VI. 9 10. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dyeth no more death hath no more dominion over him For in that he dyed he dyed unto sin once but in that he liveth he liveth unto God THAT I may the better explain the drift of these words let us take the Apostles Method along with us His intent is to prevent an abuse of the Doctrine of the Gospel which publisheth the free Grace of God to Sinners Where sin abounded grace did much more abound From hence some did infer That therefore under the Gospel they might take liberty to sin the more their sins were and the greater they were the more they should occasion God to manifest the abundance of his Grace upon them The Apostle answereth this 1. By way of Detestation Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid 2. By way of Confutation the Argument by which he confuseth it is our Baptismal Vow and Engagement How shall they that are dead to sin live any longer therein To clear this he explaineth our Baptismal Vow in the two branches of it dying to sin and living to righteousness the one direct and the other consequential directly we are baptized into the death of Christ vers 2. but so as that we also rise again to newness of life vers 4 5. for we are united to Christ as dying an● rising and we are by virtue of the Union to express a conformity to both vers 5. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection He proveth the former part vers 6 7. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin for he that is dead is freed from sin The latter he begins to prove vers 8. If we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him How live with him As our spiritual death was answerable to the Death of Christ so our spiritual Life must be answerable to his Resurrection from the Dead as we have a Copy and Pattern for the mortifying sin in his Death so we have also a Copy and Pattern for newness of life in his Resurrection and therefore we do not in vain believe that we shall live spiritually and eternally with him Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dyeth no more death hath no more dominion over him for in that he dyed he dyed unto sin once but in that he liveth he liveth unto God The better to state the Analogy and Proportion between Christs Resurrection and our rising to the Life of Grace first and then of Glory afterward The Life of Christ after his Resurrection is set forth by two thi●●● 1. The Perpetuity or Immortality of it 2. The Perfection and Blessedness of it 1. The Perpetuity and Immortality of it is delivered in three expressions First Actual dying again is denied Christ being raised from the dead dyeth no more Christs Resurrection was not a return to a single Act of Life or Life for a while to shew himself to the World and no more but to an immortal endless estate Secondly His further liableness or subjection to death is denied Death hath no more dominion over him That is thus expressed for two reasons 1. Death had once dominion over Christ when he gave up himself to dye for us he for a while permitted yea subjected himself to the power of it but Christ overcame death and put an end to its power by his Resurrection Acts 2.24 Whom God raised up having loosed the pains of death because it was impossible that he should be holden of it 2. To shew that Christ dyed not only to expiate sin but to take away the dominion and power of it in Believers therefore it is said Death hath no more dominion over him he took away sin by which death reigneth he did enough both as to the satisfying Gods Justice and our Deliverance Thirdly Any further need of his dying again is denied In that he dyed he dyed unto sin once that is he hath done his work his Death needeth not to be repeated he dyed to sin once not in regard of himself for in him was no sin but as charged with the sins of his people he sufficiently took away sin both as to guilt and power 2. The Perfection and Blessedness of his Life is intimated In that he liveth he liveth unto God This expression may imply either the Holiness of his Life in Heaven or the Blessedness of it First The Holiness when Christ was raised from death to life again he liveth to God wholly seeketh to promote his Glory in the World he liveth with God and to God with God as he is sat down at the right hand of Majesty and administreth the Mediatorial Kingdom for his Glory as indeed God hath a great deal of Honour from Christ as Mediator Phil. 2.11 That every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father 2. The Blessedness of it Christ always lived to God even before his Death Joh. 8.29 And he that sent me is with me the Father hath not left me alone but I do always those things that please him Why then is he said after his Resurrection to live to God Answ. As freed from
not under the government of the spirit but under the tyranny of their Fleshly lusts doing whatever it commandeth be it never so base foolish and hurtful if Anger provoke them to revenge they must fight kill and slay and hazzard their worldly interest for Anger 's sake or at least cannot forgive injuries for Gods sake if filthy lusts send them to the lewd Woman away they go like a fool to the correction of the stocks and tho they dishonour God ruin their Estates stain their Fame hazzard their lives yet lust will have it so and they must obey If Covetousness say they must be rich however they get it they rise early go to bed late eat the bread of sorrow and pierce through themselves with many cares yea make no question of right or wrong trample Conscience under foot cast the fear of God behind their backs and all because their imperious Mistress Ambition urgeth them to it If Envy and Malice bid Cain kill his Brother he will break all bonds of nature to do it If Ambition bid Absalom rebel against his Father and kill him too it shall be done or he shall want his will If Covetousness bid Achan take a Wedg of Gold he will do it tho he know it to be a cursed thing if it bid Judas betray his Lord and Master tho he knew if he should do it it had been better he had never been born yet he will do it Thus they are not at their own command to do what Reason and Conscience inclineth them to do if sensible of their bondage would think of God and the world to come and the state of their souls lust will not permit it if to break off this sensual course they are not able they are servants of corruption Some God hangeth up in chains of darkness for a warning to the rest of the world of the power of Drunkenness Gluttony Avarice and wretched worldliness Yea of every carnal man 't is true John 8.34 Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin Therefore if the slavery and imperious disease begin to grow upon you the flesh hath prevailed very far and you need more to look to it and that betimes 3. USE Here is ground of trying your estate before God 'T is a question you ought often seriously to put Shall I be saved or shall I be damned If you have any spark of Conscience left you when you are sick or dying you will put it with anxiousness and trembling of heart Poor Soul whither art thou now a going 'T is better put it now while you have opportunity to correct your error if hitherto you have gone wrong we see in worldly things men would fain know their destiny the King of Babylon stood upon the head of the ways to make Divination we would fain know what God hath hidden in the Womb of Futurity no destiny deserves to be known so much as this not whether I shall be poor or rich good success in this enterprize or bad 't is not of so great moment these distinctions do not outlive time but cease at the graves mouth but 't is a question of greater moment Whether eternally miserable or eternally happy 'T is foolish curiosity to enquire into other things when we have a good God to trust to but it chiefly importeth us to consider whether we are in the way to Salvation or Damnation Nothing will sooner determine this great question than this Text If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live The latter Branch we shall examine afterwards now for the first Clause 1. Some live in defiance of the spirit Cherish the flesh fulfil the works of the flesh Gal. 5.19 'T is no subtil matter to find them out they declare their sin as Sodom while they are drinking whoring sporting quarrelling scoffing at Godliness 2. Others please the flesh in a more cleanly manner but have no due regard to that spiritual and eternal happiness which lieth in the enjoyment of God tho their carriage be blameless and separated from the gross pollutions of the world They care not whether God be pleased or displeased honoured or dishonoured angry or reconciled and besides the works of the flesh are not always interpreted in the gross sense but according to the Scale of the Sanctuary when he saith Adultery Fornication Murther c. are works of the flesh We must not only think of the gross acts but the very first seeds of these sins the secret inclinations and desires of the flesh in this kind Matt. 5.27 28. So lasciviousness not the sinful attempt only but every motion of tongue heart senses by which the eyes and ears the souls and consciences of our selves and others may be polluted to Idolatry Anger inordinate affection of the heart to any creature Eph. 5.5 So by murther not only when it proceedeth to blood but hatred variance strife heresie Matth. 5.21 22. So in short emulation and affectation of applause Gal. 5. last 3. The Prevalence of the divine or carnal principle must determine our condition Now its reign is known 1. By our savour relish and tast Rom. 8.5 For every mans gust is according to his constitution which breedeth oblectation or pleasure of mind now when we savour only the things of the flesh that if it be pleased quiets us in the want of other things contents us in the neglect of God and his service that we have no appetite after nor savour or relish any sweetness but in fleshly things this is an ill sign 2. By our course of walking Which is often insisted on in this Chapter There may be some blemishes in Gods Children some uneveness of obedience through the relicks of the flesh but their main constant course for which they labour and strive is to approve themselves to God and to be accepted with God and to live in obedience to the motions of his sanctifying spirit but where there is a carelessness in the heavenly life the influence of the fleshly life is most discovered in all our actions 3. By our tendency and scope When the heart is turned to or alienated from God the flesh reigneth if the world turn our hearts from him and the flesh pleased before him and we mind our own Things we are lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God SERMON XVIII ROM VIII 13 If ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live WE come now to the second Clause wherein we have Two Things 1. The condition to be performed 2. The blessedness promised In the Condition we have 1. The parties interessed 2. The duty required 1. The Parties interessed are justified believers who are not in the flesh nor after the flesh Yet Two Persons are mentioned the Principal Author and the Subordinate Agent We are the Principal Parties in the Obligation but in the Operation the Spirit is the Principal the Particle through
things as many that do well here in the world fare ill in the world to come but now 't is otherwise with the godly John 16. 20. Your sorrow shall be turned into joy Our last and final portion is most to be ragarded the Christian by temporal trouble goeth to eternal joy the worldling by temporal glory to eternal shame a Christians end is better than his beginning he is best at last a man would not have evil after experience of good 4. The comparison tho it be rightly stated and weighed by us it will have no efficacy unless we have faith or a deep sense of the world to come For unless we believe these things they seem too uncertain and too far off to work upon us 'T is easie to reason down our bodily and worldly choice and to shew how much eternal things exceed temporal but this taketh no hold of the heart till there be a firm belief of the glry oreserved for Gods People Heb. 11.1 Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen and 2 Pet. 1.9 He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off To draw us from things that we see and feel we need a clear light about things we see not Men are sharp sighted enough in things that concern the present world but beyond it we can see nothing but by the perspective of faith and therefore reason as long as we will yet the consideration of the other world doth nothing prevail with us without a lively faith 5. This faith must be often exercised by serious meditations or deep and ponderous thoughts For the greatest truths work not if we do not think of them Faith sheweth us a truth but consideration is the means to improve it that we may make a good choice and our hearts may be fortified against all temptations we must often sit down and count the charges with our selves what it will cost us what we shall lose and what we shall get Luke 14.28 29 30. The Spirit of God will not help us without our thoughts for he dealeth not with us as birds do in feeding their young bringing meat to them and putting it into their mouths while they lie still in the nest and only gape to receive it but as God giveth Corn while we plow sow weed dress and with patience expect his blessing No here the Apostle was reasoning and weighing the case within himself 6. There is besides sound belief and serious consideration need of the influence and assistance of the holy spirit For besides his giving faith and exciting and blessing meditation to dispose and frame our hearts to bide by this conclusion the influence of the Holy Ghost is necessary for God is the chief disposer of hearts 't is not enough notionally to know this but we must be practically resolved and the heart inclined 't is a new inlightned mind and a renewed heart that is only capable of determining thus that we may live by it and that is by another spirit than the spirit of the world which naturally possesseth us even the spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.12 Which is promised to his children and inclineth us to place our happiness not in worldly things but in Christ and his benefits in short sense is too strong for reason without faith and faith cannot do its office without the spirit the flesh seeketh not reason but ease unless the heart be changed and otherwise biassed and bent all is lost USE Now I must shew you the use of this Doctrine 1. Certainly 't is useful for the afflicted in any sort whatever their troubles and afflictions be First for common evils 1. Are you pained with sickness a role to and fro in your bed like a door on the hinges for the weariness of your flesh in Heaven you shall have everlasting ease for that is a state of rest Heb 4.9 We are apprehensive of present pain but not of the greatness of the ease peace and glory that shall succeed tho the pains be acute the sickness lingring and hangeth long upon you yet present time is quickly past but eternity shall have no end 2. Must you dye and the guest be turned out of the old house You have a building with God eternal in the Heavens 2 Cor. 5.1 You do but leave a shed to live in a Palace and forsake an unquiet world for a place of everlasting repose 2. 'T is especially to be applied te those that suffer for righteousness sake Shall we shrink at sufferings for Christ when we shall be in glory with him for evermore How short is the suffering How long the reward For a greater good we should endure a lesser evil A Traveller endureth all the difficulties of the way for the sake of the place where he is going unto so should we What is the evil threatned Are you cast out by man as unworthy to live in any civil society You shall be received by the Lord into an everlasting abode with him 1 Thes. 5.17 And so shall we be ever with the Lord. Have you lost the love of all men for your sincerity and faithfulness You shall everlastingly enjoy the love of God Rom. 8.39 Are you reproached calumniated in the world Then you shall be justified by Christ and your faith found to honour praise and glory 2 Pet. 1.7 Are you cast into Prison you shall shortly be in your Fathers House where there are many mansions John 14.2 Are you reduced to forbid poverty You may read in the Scripture of the riches of the glory of the inheritance of the saints Eph. 1.18 In short are you tempted opposed persecuted consider much of your journey is past away you are nearer eternity than you were when you first believed Rom. 13. 11. They that both tempt and persecute cannot give so much to you or take so much from you as is worthy to be compared with your great hopes Immortal happiness is most desirable and endless misery most terrible therefore be you faithful to the death and you shall have the Crown of Life Rev. 2.10 Is life its self likely to be forced out by the violence of man the sword is but the key to open Heaven Door for you surely this hope will make the greatest sufferings to become light turn pain into pleasure yea and death its self into life 2. 'T is useful for all if only for the afflicted None is exempted and you must hear for the time to come but every good Christian should be of this temper and spirit and wholly fetch his solaces from the world to come else he is not possessed with a true spirit of Christianity which warneth us all to prepare for sufferings and calleth for self-denyal besides this is a great means to mortifie worldly affections which are the great impediment of the heavenly life when we once learn to despise the afflictions of the world our affections to the delights thereof die by consent both are
his Love in Christ this constraineth us intirely to give up our selves to God 2 Cor. 5.14 Minding his Interest studying his Will seeking to please him in all things A man is not to be judged by present pangs but by the constant bent and bias of his Soul 't is set Godward to please him and enjoy him notwithstanding the back bias of Corruption Secondly We now come to the Effects The Effects are Two 1. A constant fitness readiness and propension to doe and suffer what God calleth us unto or an habitual Inclination of Heart towards that which is good 2. An habitual Aversation to that which is evil First An habitual Inclination of Heart towards that which is good this is called in Scripture the having the heart at the right hand Eccles. 10.2 He speaketh not of the natural posture but the leaning of the heart towards Duty he is ready fitted and prepared for Duty And sometimes this is called having our Loins girt 1 Pet. 1.13 as ready to travel or it noteth the ready disposition that should be in us for Duties or Conflicts so we are his workmanship Created in Christ Jesus unto good works Eph. 2.10 that is put into a fitness and aptitude for them As every thing that is created hath a fitness and aptitude for that use for which it serveth the Water to flow the Air to be carryed too and fro so a Christian hath a fitness for his work The opposite to this is that Titus 1.16 To every good work reprobate unfit to be imployed for this holy business Briefly as every habit serveth for this use Vt quis facile jucunde constanter agat to perfect the Operation of that faculty in which it is seated so that a man may act easily pleasantly constantly so doth habitual Grace serve for this use to incline us and fit us for the Service of God There are three things that are found in those that have this work wrought in them 1. There is an Inclination and Propensity to a Godly Life For as God created all Creatures with an inclination to their proper operations so the new Creature hath a tendency to those actions which are proper to its state as the sparks flye upward and the stone falleth downward from an inclination of Nature so are their hearts bent to please God and serve him and what they do therein they do with a kind of naturalness because of this bent and inclination The Law is in their Hearts Psa. 40.8 There is a purpose there Acts 11.23 An inclination there Psa. 119.112 We read in Exod. 35.29 That they gave to the Sanctuary Every one whose Heart made him willing I bring this expression to explain what I am speaking of so their Hearts being thus prepared and renewed by the Holy Ghost make them willing there is some weight and poise within their Hearts to carry them unto God and the Duties that concern his Glory and Service A man may act from a violent Impression contrary to nature as a Stone moveth upward or a Bowl thrown with great strength where the bias is over-ruled so a wicked man may do a good action or two as Saul forced himself but the bent and natural inclination is another thing 'T is good to attend to the principle of our motions whether it be natural or violent whether our spirits make us willing or some accidental reason constrain us As when men are acted by something forreign as the force of holy example whereby many a man is drawn to do otherwise than he would as Joash while Jehoiada lived 2 Chron. 24. A man may be acted by his company follow good examples and may be provoked thereby Heb. 10.24 Let us consider one another to provoke to love and good works It were well if one Christian would more provoke another Man is an imitating Creature loath to be outdone but if this be all we shall soon bewray our unsoundness He may be forced by Envy Vain-glory and by-ends Phil. 1.5 to Preach or Pray forced by natural Conscience Rom. 2.14 15. or set a work by a corrupt Principle The urgings of a natural Conscience are quite another thing than the bent of a renewed Heart there is a principle of life which breedeth an inclination He may be forced by a sense of his misery Self sets him awork to seek after God because he would use him for a turn to help him out of his Distress as those in Psal. 78. verse 34 to the 37 th When he slew them then they sought him and they returned and enquired early after God and they remembred that God was their Rock and the high God their Redeemer Nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth and they lyed to him with their tongues For their heart was not right with him neither were they stedfast in his Covenant Their affections were not sincerely set for God or towards God or bent against sin the sense of a present Wrath or the terrour of an angry God did drive them into a Fit of religiousness for the present which can produce no stedfast purpose They that make Self their utmost end can never endeavour constantly to please and glorifie God but where true Grace is there is a propensity and disposition to every good work which we should alwayes cherish in our selves for as it abateth or increaseth so we are diligent or sluggish in Gods Service 2. There is not only an Inclination but a Readiness or Preparedness which is a further effect of this solid and substantial Grace and often spoken of in Scripture as Titus 3.1 Ready to every good work Ready to distribute 1 Tim. 6.18 Ready to Communicate Heb. 13.16 So Paul Acts 21.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am ready not only to be bound but to die at Jerusalem Or take a general place 2 Tim. 2.4 Prepared to every good work And Luk. 12.47 That Servant that knew his Lords Will and prepared not himself neither did according to his Will So Eph. 2.10 and many other places This goeth beyond Inclination as fire hath an inclination to ascend upward but something may violently keep it down that it cannot ascend actually A Christian may have a Will to good a strong and not a remiss Will yet there are some Impediments Rom. 7.18 For to Will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not Inclination implyeth a remote power but Readiness the next or immediate power Gods People that have the seed of Grace in them yet how unready are they to that which they desire to do therefore a Christian ought alwayes to keep himself in all readiness and fitness of disposition for his Duty whether it concern God or our selves or others This is opposite to dulness sleepiness listlesness or wearisomness in our Service opposite to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Schoolmen make to be one of the seven deadly sins a remiss cold Will hanging off from God 3. An earnest Impulsion which quickeneth
hasty I do observe it the rather because the same happeneth when we expect Christ to help us in our particular distresses Because of the impatiency of the flesh and the levity of our minds and the weariness of expectation the time seemeth long There is our time and Christs time Our time is always with us but his time is not come Jer. 14.19 We looked for peace and there is no good for the time of healing and behold trouble In this sense Christ only seemeth to delay his coming We are eager upon enjoyment we would have it now 2. Really He doth tarry and suspends his coming There is a great efflux of time between his Ascension and second Coming and that for wise Reasons 1. That all this while there may be space for the World to repent Mora Sponsi poenitentiae tempus est saith Jerom. Rom. 2.4 Despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long suffering not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance There is finis operis operantis Whatever Gods intentions be his dealings his forbearance and long suffering should lead us to repentance God useth great patience to the wicked Rom. 9 22. Endureth with much long suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction So Rev. 2.21 I gave her space to repent and she repented not God giveth leave to repent visible means to repent and space to repent even there where he giveth not effectual grace Wicked men abuse his patience take encouragement from thence to run into all extravagancy but Gods aim is to leave them without excuse 2. That all the Elect may be gathered 2 Pet. 3.9 The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long suffering to us ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance God would have the World filled with Man-kind and endure for many Generations till it come to that period which his Providence hath appointed And what is that period 'Till all that belong to the Election of his Grace be brought in to him For all things are for the Elects sake Now when his number is full he will come These were not to be born all at once and it requireth time and pains to work upon each Elect Soul after they are come into the World Therefore he is not slack as men are slack Mens slowness in performing their Promises cometh from their unwillingness or backwardness to do the thing or from impotency and weakness or want of foresight of all possible difficulties or else from their forgetfulness None of these are in God Not forgetfulness for he is mindful of his people Psal. 41.5 He will not stay longer than the appointed time Not backwardness for he waiteth as well as you wait for the fittest time Isa. 30.18 Not from weariness for he can do whatever he will 3. To exercise our Patience to the full Col. 1.24 Who now rejoyce in my sufferings for you that fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in the flesh for his bodies sake which is his Church Not as if Christs personal Sufferings for the Redemption of Sinners were imperfect and so to be supplyed by the sufferings of others No 't is meant of Christ mystical So the sufferings are not perfect or filled up till every Member of his Body endure their allotted portion and share This Cup goeth by course and round Christ first we next It goeth from hand to hand while the World continueth Jam. 1.4 Let patience have its perfect work That cannot be but under great and long troubles And as it is for the exercise of our patience so to awaken our desires 2 Pet. 3.12 Looking for and hastening to the coming of the day of God Hasten it by your Prayers and further the great works that are to be done before God will not bestow Heaven upon us as we lay on gilding and fair colours on wood or stone that have no sense of it nor desire of it but we must first groan Rom. 8.23 Thirdly His coming at Midnight He tarryed somewhat beyond the season to shew that he would come unlooked for Jerom saith It was an ancient Tradition that Christ should come at midnight and therefore in the Vigil or watch before Easter anciently they were not wont to be sent away till midnight But of that day and hour knoweth no man 'T is put for an unexpected time as Zech. 13.9 At evening it shall be light Christ cometh when he is least expected when the World groweth secure and his own people weary with looking His coming is often compared in Scripture to the coming of a Thief in the night 1 Thes. 5.2 For ye your selves know perfectly that the day of the Lord cometh as a thief in the night by way of surprize The Thief doth not make appointment nor forewarn the good man of the House Luk. 12.46 The Lord of those servants shall come in a day that he looketh not for him Now God hideth this day from us 1. To shew his Sovereignty Prov. 25.2 The glory of God is to conceal a thing There are Arcana Imperii and the time and season of his coming to Judgment is one of Gods secrets 2. That we might alwayes keep ready Rev. 3.3 Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent If therefore thou shalt not watch I will come on thee as a Thief and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee And Rev. 16.15 Behold I come as a thief blessed is he that watcheth Caesar would never let his Souldiers know his resolution for Battle onset or the removal of his Camp Vt paratum intentum momentis omnibus quo vellet statim educeret That they might be always in a ready posture So Christ's coming at the last day will be by way of surprizal that he may have us always ready Had it been expedient for us to know he would have told us of it Men will say if they knew just the hour and the day they would be found praying But you should always watch and be ready because you know not the hour Would our preparation be hastened think you No we should say as they Isa. 22.13 And behold joy and gladness slaying of Oxen and killing of Sheep eating flesh and drinking wine Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die And 1 Cor. 15.32 Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die Therefore Christ will chuse his own time Fourthly I come to speak of the Cry made The Cry is the means whereby God rouzeth them up out of this slumber Christ sendeth his cry to awaken Souls before his coming This Cry is twofold 1. The more remote Cry which is for the rouzing of particular persons in all Ages And that is the voice of the Ministry of the Word Thus Christ at his first coming had a Cryer went before him to alarm the World
any mixture of Errors that have any considerable Influence upon the main of Religion Others are in that Communion in which those Doctrines are as yet taught that are indeed necessary to Salvation but many things are added which are indeed pernicious and dangerous in their own nature So that if a Man should possibly be saved in that Profession he is saved as by Fire 1 Cor. 3.13 And 't is a strange escape as if one had Poyson mingled among his Meat the goodness of his Digestion and strength of Nature might work it out but the Man runneth a great hazard As the Papists acknowledge Christ for the Redeemer and Mediatour between God and Men They own his two Natures and Satisfaction though they mingle Doctrines that strangely weaken these Foundations The Turks deny not Christ to be a great Prophet but they deny him to be the Son of God and the Saviour of the World and the Redeemer of Mankind and wickedly prefer their false Prophet before him The Jews confess there was a I●sus the Son of Mary that gave out himself in their Country of Judea to be the Messiah and gathered Disciples who from him are called Christians But they call him an Impostor question all the Miracles done by him as done by the Power of the Devil Now all these shall be judged by the Gospel which is so proudly and obstinately rejected by them The Spirit shall convince the World of Sin because they believe not in me Joh. 16.9 he hath so proved himself to be the Christ the Son of God the great Prophet and true Messiah that their rejecting and not believing in him and his Testimony will be found to be a great and damning Sin both in its self and as it bindeth their other Sins upon them however their Judgment shall be lighter or heavier according to the diversity of their Offence and the invincible Prejudices they lie under The Corrupters of the Christian Religion because they have perverted the Truth of the Gospel to serve their Interests Ambition Avarice or any Humane Passion their Doom will be exceeding great 2 Thess. 2.10 11 12. And with all Deceivableness of Vnrighteousness in them that perish because they received not the Love of the Truth that they might be saved And for this cause God shall send them strong Delusions that they should believe a Lie That thy all might be damned who believed not the Truth but had pleasure in Vnrighteousness To poyson Fountains was the highest way of Murther to royle the Waters of the Sanctuary to mangle Christ's Ordinances is a Crime of a high Nature The Jews that rejected Christ in so clear Light of Miracles Joh. 8.24 Christ saith If you believe not that I am he ye shall die in your Sins it maketh the Judgment the more heavy upon them Others to whom Christ is less perspicuously revealed shall have a more tolerable Judgment For the clearer the Revelation of the Truth is the more culpable is the Rejection or Contempt of it For there is no Man that heareth of Christ's Coming into the World suffering for Sinners and Rising again from the Dead and Ascending into Heaven but is bound more diligently to enquire into it and to receive and embrace this Truth Carnal Christians their Profession condemneth them They are inexcusable they deny in Works what in Word they seem to acknowledge 3. Some lived under the Legal Administration of the Covenant of Grace To whom two things are propounded 1. The Duty of the Law 2. Some Scriptures and obscure Beginnings of the Gospel They shall be judged according to that Administration they are under either for violating the Law or neglecting the Gospel or those first Dawnings of Grace which God offered to their View and Study Indeed the Law was more manifest but the Gospel was not so obscure but they might have understood it Therefore God will call them to an Account about keeping his Law by which who can be Justified Or whether by true Repentance they have fled to the Mercy of God which by divers wayes was then revealed to them and have owned the Messiah in his Types Psal. 145.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy Sight shall no Man living be Justified Psal. 130.3 4. If thou shouldst mark Iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is Forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared Which if not clear they shall be condemned not only for not keeping the Law but also for neglect of Grace Though their Unbelief and Impenitency be not so odious as theirs is that lived under a clearer Revelation yet a grievous Sin it was which will bring Judgment upon them 4. There are some that have no other Discovery of God but what they could make from the Courses of Nature and some Instincts of Conscience as meer Pagans The Apostle having told us of the Righteous Judgment of God Rom. 2.5 and how managed Vers. 6 7 8. and how aggravated the Jew first and then the Gentile he then concludeth Vers. 12. For as many as have sinned without the Law shall perish without the Law but as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law That is the Jews as the other is to be understood of the Gentiles To whose notice no Fame of Christ or the Law of Moses could possibly come To perish without the Law is to be punished and Punishment followeth upon Condemnation and Condemnation is in this Judgment Therefore Pagans and Heathens that lived most remote from the Tydings of the Gospel and Divine Revelation must appear before Christ's Tribunal to be judged But by what Rule He telleth us Vers. 14 15. For wh●n the Gentiles which have not the Law do by Nature the things contained in the Law these having not a Law are a Law to themselves Which shew the Work of the Law written upon their Hearts their Conscience also bearing Witness and their Thoughts th●m an while accusing or excusing one another They knew themselves to have sinned by that Rule by the natural Knowledge of God and some sense of their Duty impressed upon their Hearts Nature it self told them what was well or ill done The Law of Nature taught them their Duty and had some Affinity with the Law of M●ses And the Course of God's Providence taught that God was placable which hath some Affinity with these Gospel Rudiments and first Strictures Therefore the Goodness and Long-suffering of God should lead them to Repentance Rom. 2.4 Surely then the Impenitency of the Jews will meet with an heavy Condemnation according to the Proportion of Clearness in their Revelation 5. Men of all Conditions high and low rich and poor mighty and powerful or weak and oppressed Kings Subjects Revel 20.12 I saw the Dead both small and great stand before God No Rank or Degree in the World can exempt us These Distinctions do not ou●-live Time they cease at the Graves Mouth there all stand upon the same Level and are
if in want we would relieve him Christ is so nearly conjoyned with his Servants that in their Afflictions he is afflicted in their Comforts he is comforted he looks upon it as done to him The Godly of old time thought themselves much Honoured if they could get a Prophet or an Apostle to their Houses Heb. 13.1 Be not forgetful to entertain strangers for thereby some have entertained Angels unawares Here 's Christ himself will you refuse him who is Heir of all things 3. 'T is the great Question Interrogated by him at the great day of Accounts 'T is not Have you Heard have you Prophesyed have you Eat and Drank in my Presence But have you Fed have you Cloathed have you Visited We are one day to come to this Account and what sorry Accounts shall we make So much for Pleasure for Riot for Luxury for Bravery in Apparel and Pomp in Living and little or nothing for God and his People As if a Steward should bring in his Bill So much spent in Feasts in Rioting in merry Company when his Masters House lyeth to ruine the Children starved and the Servants neglected We are very liberal to our Lusts but sparing to God A man that expecteth to be posed is preparing himself and would fain know the Questions aforehand Christ hath told us our Question SERMON XXIII MATTH XXV v. 37 38 39 40. Then shall the Righteous answer and say Lord When saw we thee an Hungred and fed thee and Thirsty and gave thee Drink When saw we thee a Stranger and took thee in and Naked and Cloathed thee Or when saw we thee Sick and in Prison and came unto thee And the King shall answer and say unto them Verily I say unto you In so much as you have done it unto one of the least of these my Brethren ye have done it unto me WE have handled the Sentence and the Reason The Reason is amplified in some Parabolical passages which contain a Dialogue or interchangeable Discourse between Christ the King and his Elect Servants In which you may observe First Their Question verses 37 38 39. Secondly Christ's Reply and Answer verse 40. Not that such formal words shall pass too and fro at the day of Judgment between the Judge and the Judged but only to represent the matter more sensibly and in a more lively and impressive way to our minds First For their Question certainly 't is not moved 1. By way of Doubt or exception to the Reason alleadged by the Judge in his Sentence there being a perfect Agreement and harmony of mind and will between them Neither 2. Out of Ignorance as if they knew not that Christ was so much concerned in their works of Love done to his Children for his sake for this they knew aforehand that what was done to Christians is done to Christ and upon that account they do it as to Christ and such Ignorance cannot be supposed to be found in the glorified Saints 3. Some say the Question is put to express an holy wonder at what they hear and see and no question Christ will then be admired in his Saints 2 Thes. 1.10 And three Causes there may be of this wonder 1. Their humble sense of their own Nothingness that their Services should be taken notice of and rewarded that he should have such a respect for their mean offices of Love which they little esteemed of and had no confidence in them 2. The greatness of Christs Condescention that he should have such a care of his mean Servants who were so despicable in the world 3. The greatness of the Reward Christ shall so incomparably above all that they could ask or think reward his People that they shall wonder at it This sense is pious taken up by most Interpreters I should acquiesce in it but that I find the same question put by the Reprobates afterwards vers 42 43 44. they use the same words therefore I think the words are barely Parabolical brought in by Christ that he might have occasion further to declare himself how they fed him and cloathed him and what esteem he will put upon works of Charity and to impress this truth the more upon our minds that what is done to his People is accepted by him as if it were done to his Person However because the former sense is useful I shall a little insist upon it in this note Doctrine That when Christ shall come to Reward his People they shall have great cause to wonder at all that they see hear and enjoy 1. They shall wonder at the Reason alleadged They that are holy ever think humbly of their own works and therefore considering their no deservings their ill-deservings they cannot satisfie themselves in admiring and extolling the rich Grace of their Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ that he should take notice of any thing of theirs and produce it into Judgment see how they express themselves now Psal. 143.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant Non dicit cum hostibus tuis So Psal. 130.3 If thou shouldest mark Iniquity O Lord who shall stand So 1 Cor. 4.4 For I know nothing by my self yet am not I thereby Justified Isa. 64.6 But we are as an unclean thing and all our Righteousnesses are as filthy rags This thought they have of all they do and their minds are not altered then for this is the Judgment of Truth as well as of Humility Luk. 17.10 When we have done all we are unprofitable Servants Their Lord hath taught them to say so and think so they did not this out of Complement And for their works of Mercy they were not to let their left hand know what their right hand did Math. 6.3 'T is a Proverb that teaches us that we should not suffer our selves to take notice of what we give in Alms nor esteem much of it as if there were any worth therein and therefore when Christ maketh such reckoning of these things their wonder will be raised they will say Lord when saw we thee an hungry or athirst Their true and sincere Humility will make them cast their Crowns before the Throne saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour Lord 't is thy Goodness what have we done The Saints when they are highest still shew the lowest signs of Humility to their Redeemer and confess that all the glory they have they have it from him and are contented to lay it down at his feet as holding it by his Acceptance and not their own Merit they have all and hold all by his Grace and therefore would have him receive the Glory of all 2. They shall wonder at the greatness of Christs Condescention and hearty Love to his Servants though poor and despicable for in the day of Judgment he doth not commemorate the Benefits done to him in Person in the dayes of his Flesh but to his Members in the time of his Exaltation he doth not mention the Alabaster box of precious Oyntment poured
sent From Christ's suing for Glory upon this Argument I might note That we may plead Promises God saith Put me in remembrance There is difference between a Plea and a Challenge Hypocrites challenge God upon the Merit of their Works Believers humbly urge him with his own Promises Not as if God did need excitement to make good his Word but we need grounds of Hope and Confidence Again Because Christ asketh nothing but what God will give I might observe That when we have done our Work we may expect our portion of Glory But I rather come to the particular discussion of the Words The words may be considered in a Mediatory or in a Moral Sence In a Mediatory sence so they are proper to Christ he prayed to the Father that thy Son may glorify thee Vers. 1. Now he saith I have glorified thee meaning in the days of his Flesh. By a Moral Accommodation they may be applied to every Christian every Christian should say as Christ I have glorified thee on the Earth I have finished the Work which thou gavest me to do First And which is most proper Let us consider them in the Mystical and Mediatory sense The first Phrase is I have glorified thee Christ glorified God many ways by his Person as being the express Image of his Father's Glory Heb. 1.3 By his Life and perfect Obedience John 8.46 Which of you convinceth me of Sin And Vers. 49. I have not a Devil but I honour my Father By discovering his Mercy John 1.14 We beheld his Glory the Glory as of the only begotten of the Father full of Grace and Truth By his Miracles then the sick of the Palsy was cured it is said the multitude glorified God Mat. 9.8 Mark 15.31 at other Miracles they glorified the God of Israel Mark 2.12 So his Passion exceedingly glorified God's Justice In his Doctrine by discovering his glorious Essence and the Purity of his Worship The System of Divinity was much perfected and advanced by the coming of Christ. Doct. That God was much glorified in Christ. God was much glorified in the Creation of the World Psal. 19.1 The Heavens declare the Glory of the Lord and the Firmament sheweth his handy-work The Fabrick of the whole World especially of the Heavens declares his Goodness Wisdom and Power His Goodness in communicating Being to all Creatures Life and Motion to some His Wisdom in making the Creatures so various and so excellent in their general kinds His Power in educing all things out of the Womb of Mother Nothing God was glorified in his Providences especially in the great Deliverances of the Church from Egypt and from the North but mostly in Christ Redemption being the most noble Work with which he was ever acquainted It is notable that the Spirit of God in Scripture often varieth the Expression at first it was Blessed be God that made Heaven and Earth then I am the God that brought thee out of the Land of Egypt then it is Jer. 16.14 15. It shall no more be said The Lord liveth that brought up the Children of Israel out of the Land of Egypt But the Lord liveth that brought up the Children of Israel from the Land of the North then it is Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Ephes. 1.3 In Creation the Wisdom Goodness and Power of God appeared there was no need of other Attributes In Providence the Justice Mercy and Truth of God appears but these in Christ in a more raised degree In Creation the Object was pure Nothing as there was no help so no hindrance but now in Redemption Sin hinders so that here is shown not only Goodness but Mercy In Creation we deserve nothing now we deserve the contrary There was more Wisdom seen in our Redemption The Quarrel taken up between Justice and Mercy Mercy would pity and Justice could not spare In Redemption there is more Power in Creation Man is taken out of the Earth in Redemption out of Hell God's Justice opposed Redemption Christ must be sent to satisfy Justice and the Spirit sent to take away Unbelief God made all with a Word he saved all with a Plot of Grace In Creation Man was made like God in Redemption God is made like Man No Deliverance like this Babylon was nothing to Hell and the Brick-kilns of Egypt to the Lake that burneth with Fire and Brimstone When God delivered his People out of Babylon he had to do with Creatures when he delivered them from the Wrath to come he had to do with Himself Justice put in high Demands against the compassions of Mercy his own Son must die with the Wrath of God and his own Spirit must be grieved in wrestling with the Denials of Men. Instead of our own Obedience we have the Merit of Christ. Oh here are depths of Mystery and Wonder Vse God loseth no honour by Christ. God hath more Glory and we have larger Demesnes of Comfort and Grace to live upon All Parties are satisfied we have a better Portion Adam had Paradise we have Heaven God hath more Glory the Creatures are more acquainted with the infiniteness of Mercy Power and Wisdom Innocence continued had been a great benefit but now it is more gracious and free and it is not the greatness of a Benefit that worketh on Gratitude so much as the graciousness and freeness of it Our Heaven costeth a greater price and it is not given to God's Friends but those that were once his Enemies On Earth This Phrase signifieth that Christ did not increase God's Essential Glory for that is uncapable of any addition his Nature is infinite and cannot be made more glorious and excellent but only that Christ manifested his Glory more fully to the World Observe Christ came down from Heaven to make Men glorify God We had Lesson enough before us in Creation and Providence but Men were stupid Things to which we are accustomed do not work upon us in the Gospel God would set his Praise to a new Tune God needeth us not and our Respects are due and yet at what cost is God to purchase the Praise of the Creature Blind and unthankful Men to dethrone the great God and set up every paltry Creature Therefore God sent his Son to revive the Notions of the Godhead and to give us further manifestations of his Glory That was Christ's Errand to glorify him on the Earth I have finished the Work Christ's Work was to manifest the Gospel and to redeem Sinners and how can he say I have finished the Work seeing the chief Work of Redemption was yet to come the offering up himself to Divine Justice upon the Cross I Answer He had determined to undergo Death and it was now at hand in the consent and full determination of his Will it was done So upon the Cross just before his Death he crieth It was finished John 19.30 It implieth 1. The Submission Faithfulness and Diligence of Christ he never left doing of
given him out of the World by the inward Work of his Grace Moral Suasion is common to all but he taketh some aside and worketh on their Hearts 2. For the manner of this Teaching it is accompanied with Force and Power There is always an Operation that goeth along with this teaching John 6.44 45. No Man can come to me except the Father that hath sent me draw him It is written in the Prophets they shall be all taught of God There is Teaching and Drawing The Inspiration and the Impression go together He is an incomparable Teacher he giveth the Lesson and an Heart to learn it with Information he reformeth and with the Knowledg of our Duty he giveth a Will and Power to do it He teacheth the Promise so as to make us believe it the Commandment so as to make us obey it The Soul is God's Eccho Psal. 27.8 When thou sayest Seek ye my Face my Heart said unto thee Thy Face Lord will I seek He reformeth by his Light and exciteth by the Power of his Grace In short it is a powerful Teaching joined with an inward Working His Scholars are sure of Proficiency for he hath their Hearts in his Hands and can move them according to his own Pleasure There is not only an Illumination of the Mind but a Bowing of the Will Corrupt Nature in Man is strong enough to resist any thing of Man as he is Man 3. The necessity of this inward Light without it the Word will not work Many bear outwardly that are never the better John 6.44 No Man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him There must be an inward Light an inward Operation on the Soul or the Word is without Effect the Heart must be opened as well as the Scriptures As all the Multitude that thronged on Christ did not touch him as the diseased Woman did who touched the Hem of his Garment Who touched me saith Christ knowing that virtue had gone out of him Mark 5.30 Many may come to an Ordinance but virtue passeth out to few The outward Minister can but speak to the Ear it is Christ works Grace in the Heart unless the Holy Ghost come down and open the Mouths of Preachers to speak and the Hearts of People to hear all is to no purpose Vse Well then Every time you come to the opening of the Scriptures look for this inward Light to shine into your Hearts that you may have a saving Knowledg of God in Christ. Remember you come to hear that Doctrine which Christ hath brought down from the Bosom of the Father and he must bring it into your Bosoms There are two sorts of Hearers 1. Some are careless that come hither but scarce hear the Minister their Bodies are in the Sanctuary but their Spirits are in the Corners of the Earth Their coming is made fruitless by the wandring of their Hearts they have experience of the Power of Satan not of Christ The Devil presenteth to their Fancy such Objects as carry their Spirits from God and his Work Ezek. 33.31 They come unto thee as the People cometh and they sit before thee as my People and they hear thy Words but they will not do them for with their Mouth they shew much Love but their Heart goeth after their Covetousness Carcases without a Spirit are but Carrion Clothes stuffed with Straw that were a mocking So is a Body present at hearing the Word without a Soul What is the difference between an absent Body and a wandring Spirit God knocketh at the Heart but there is none within to hear him 2. Some hear the Minister but do not wait for the Illumination of Christ which sometimes God grants to us in the hearing of the Word Acts 11.15 As I began to speak the Holy Ghost fell on them this is to draw us to Attention Acts 16.14 Whose Heart the Lord opened that she attended to those things that were spoken by Paul When God disposeth us to hear his Word attentively he approacheth to us in Mercy SERMON VIII JOHN XVII 6 I have manifested thy Name unto the Men which thou gavest me out of the World thine they were and thou gavest them me and they have kept thy Word II. THE next Argument is what the Father had done in and about Believers he disposed them into the Hands of Christ Thine they were and thou gavest them me Where is First His Interest in Believers Secondly His Act about Believers First His Interest in Believers Thine they were How is this to be understood Divers have framed divers Sences thine by Creation thine by Election thine by Sanctification The Father being first in Order of the Persons all Original Works are proper to him So Creation is ascribed to him so the Lord saith Ezek. 18.4 All Souls are mine all created by him But this sence is not so proper to this place because those for whom Christ prayed not might plead this Interest so Satan is God's the Wicked and all Creatures are God's By Election thine by free Election mine by special Donation 1 Pet. 2.9 Ye are a chosen Generation a peculiar People the first and highest Act of Grace is ascribed to him they are his chosen and peculiar Ones These were eternally his and by the continuation of the same purpose of Grace they are always his This is proper to this place only Sanctification may be included which is as it were an Actual Election As by Original Election the Heirs of Salvation are distinguished from others in God's Purpose and Counsel so by Actual Election they are visibly distinguished and set apart from others So thine they were by an excitement of thy Spirit and Grace stirred up to follow me and chuse me in this special way of Service Sanctification is also ascribed to the Father John 6.44 No Man can come unto me except the Father that hath sent me draw him and Jude 1. To them that are sanctified by God the Father The first Effect of Saving-Grace is ascribed to him as the first rise of Grace is from his Love I prefer the middle Sence and do only take in the latter as the Effect Thine they were they were chosen by the Purposes of thy Grace and called which is the Effect of that Grace passing upon their Hearts From hence 1. Observe That Christ pleadeth Interest as an Argument in Prayer It is meet when we come to pray to God that we can say We are his This way would Christ endear his own Disciples to the Father's Respect and Grace Psal. 119.44 I am thine save me The great Work of Christians should be to discern their Interest that they may come to God with some confidence Though you cannot say I am thine with respect to the purposes of his Grace yet at least you should say I am thine in your own Dedication and Choice Si nostra tueri non vultis tamen vestra defendetis Many a trembling Christian dareth not say He is mine but
to the end of the World Into whatsoever place and time of the World our Lot is cast we may have an assurance of Christ's Presence that is of his Assistance and Blessing as much as if he were actually and corporally present with us To Ministers Now if they improve their Interest they might have Christ in their Company as the Apostles had they are taken into the same Patent and Charter So also to all Believers Mat. 18.20 Where-ever two or three are met together in my Name I am present in the midst of them Whenever we are met together in any religious Work and Business Christ's gracious presence is with us in this sence he will never depart from Believers Now this gracious Presence was not vouchsafed till his corporal Presence was removed Partly because Christ will do nothing unnecessarily When he was personally present to solve their Doubts to instruct them in all Cases the Spirit was not poured out in such abundance as it is usual still with God to make up to us in spiritual Supplies what we want in outward Helps Partly because his Disciples had carnal Thoughts of his bodily Presence and rested in it which was to be confuted by his absence Partly to make way for his unlimited universal Influence his bodily Presence could only be in some Places but now he is ascended he filleth all things Eph. 4.10 As the Sun if it should come down and shine on one particular Field it could not diffuse its Beams far and near but now it is fixed in the Firmament nothing is hidden from its Light So Christ exalted scattereth his Beams and Influences every where into all parts and corners of the World Partly because it was meet that Christ should enter into his Glory and Kingdom before he declared his Efficacy to Men by the more plentiful pouring out the Spirit as Princes use at their Coronation to give Gifts and send abroad Ambassadors So when Christ was in his Royal Palace he gave Gifts unto Men and he gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers Ephes. 4.8 11. Vse 1. For confutation of the Lutherans who to establish their Doctrine of Consubstantiation make Christ's Ascension to be not a local Remove but only a change of the manner of his Presence they say he is still corporally present but not visibly as if the Humane Nature of Christ were made invisibly Omnipresent and not locally removed and carried into Heaven This is a Doctrine contrary to Scriptures for it is expresly said Acts 1.11 that he was taken up into Heaven And by virtue of this taking up he is no more in the World no more in the Earth nor in any place thereof For it is said Acts 3.21 That the Heavens must contain him till the time of the restitution of all things there is his personal-Presence fixed And therefore if any say Lo here or Lo there believe him not it is flatly contradictory to Scripture that Christ should be corporally present on Earth till he cometh to Judgment and it is contrary to the Truth of Christ's Body though it be glorified it is not deified a Body cannot be Omnipresent and without Quantity for then it is no more a Body And it is a Doctrine barren and of no use the Presence of Christ's Body is not so absolutely necessary to the comfort of a Christian John 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickneth the Flesh profiteth nothing Nearness or distance of place doth not help or hinder his Presence with us or Efficacy upon us The Degree of his gracious Operation doth not depend upon the Degree of his Personal Presence as if Christ were like the Sun shining more or less hot according to the difference of his Posture and Scituation Christ doth not work like a natural Agent by Contact but according to his free Pleasure and the wise Dispensation of his own Will and our Communion with him is wholly Spiritual and Mystical not Gross and Carnal the Flesh profiteth nothing Yea it is against our Comfort Christ hath Business to do for us in Heaven and it is our Advantage that he is no more in the World If he were not in Heaven he were not a Priest Heb. 8.4 If he were on Earth he could not be a Priest And again Heb. 7.26 we had need of a Priest who is made higher than the Heavens that is that is ascended into the Third Heaven those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those Holy Places not made with hands now to appear in the Presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 But to leave this Vse 2. To press Christians to look for the Spiritual Presence of Christ tho they do not enjoy his Bodily You may make use of Christ now he is in Heaven as the Disciples did on Earth to ask him Questions to seek his Counsel to commend your Prayers and Persons to God It is no disadvantage to Faith that Christ is removed out of sight but only an occasion given whereby it may discover it self with more praise Therefore let us believe in Christ tho we see him not we shall one day see him in the Heavens to our Comfort and to the Terror of the Wicked in the mean time let Faith serve instead of Vision It will be your commendation whom having not seen ye love 1 Pet. 1.8 God hath removed Christ out of sight to make way for the Exercise of Faith and Love and it is much better by Faith to converse with him in Heaven than by sight to see him upon Earth John 20.29 Blessed are they that have not seen and yet believe Thomas would make his Senses the Judg he must feel the Wounds and put his Finger in the print of the Nails and thrust his Hand into his Side which discovered the weakness of his Faith Faith is not grounded on Sense but Testimony Be not discouraged tho you never saw him in the Flesh you shall one day see him in Heaven tho you could not hear his gracious Words yet you have Whispers and Counsels from his Spirit You saw him not hanging on the Cross yet he is crucified before your Eyes Gal. 3.1 In the Word and Sacraments he is notably and plainly laid forth to Faith The Gospel is a Magical Glass as it were wherein God will have the Soul look that we may see our absent Friend Sic Oculos sic ille Manus sic or a ferebat there are the very Postures of Christ. Therefore let us make use of our present Advantages you may expect as powerful Influences from him as if present in Person as the Sun doth not come down from Heaven but only his Influence There is a derivation of Virtue from his Person yea Christ is not like the Sun the farther absent from us in Body the more powerful is his Influence Ephes. 4.10 When he ascended up on high he filled all things Briefly then if you have any thing to do with Christ you know where to seek him Those
moved with fear prepared an Ark to the saving of his Family whereby be condemned the World Your Life is a Reproof that maketh them ashamed John 7.7 The World hateth me because I testify of it that the Works thereof are evil Every wicked Man loveth another velut fautorem adjutatorem excusatorem sui criminis One wicked Man doth not put another to the Blush It is no shame to be black in a Country of Negroes where all are black Their Conversation is a living Reproof Thy Guilt is upbraided by their righteous Works their Conversation upbraideth thy Conscience the sense of thy Guilt and Negligence is revived by their righteous Works and serious Diligence in Heaven's Way We are impatient of a verbal Reproof much more of a real Their holy Lives beget a Fear and Awe Mark 6.20 Herod feared John knowing that he was a just Man and holy and observed him Christ saith here not only I have given them thy Word but They are not of the World They do not only teach things contrary to the World but live contrary to the World Many a strict Preacher may be a carnal Man and the World and he may agree well enough They look upon Sermons as Words spoken of course it is the holy Conversation that enrageth most as Elephants are enraged with gorgeous Apparel They have no Vail and Cloak for their Sins Thieves rob in the Night they would fain extinguish the Light The World cannot endure to be condemned from that Light that shineth from the Godly as the Sun is burdensom to the Owl and other Night-Birds John 3.19 20. This is the Condemnation that Light is come into the World and Men loved Darkness rather than Light because their Deeds were Evil. For every one that doth Evil hateth the Light neither cometh he to the Light lest his Deeds should be reproved 2. Envy at God's Favours bestowed on them John 15.19 If ye were of the World the World would love its own but because ye are not of the World but I have chosen you out of the World therefore the World hateth you Cain was not only upbraided by Abel's better Sacrifice but envied God's acceptance of him Gen. 4.4 5. Joseph's party-coloured Coat and his Father's Favour stirred up envy in his Brethren This is the difference between Envy and Emulation Envy is accompanied with Laziness as Emulation with Industry There is between the Good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a good contention Heb. 10.24 who shall be most forward Emulation is good if separated from Carnal Aims but Envy which is accompanied with Sloth maketh a Man malign that Good which is in others Envy hath an evil Eye it cannot look upon Goodness without grief When others are at the top of the Hill and they lie lazily at the bottom they fret at those which are at the top they will not put in for the Privileges of Christianity and therefore are troubled with those that do so Divine Grace hath made a distinction and those whom God blesseth to be Objects of his Love the World chuseth to be Objects of Hatred Vse 1. If the Children of God have the World's respect at any time they have need to look to their Consciences Do not you symbolize with them in Carnal Practices Luke 6.26 Cursed are you when all Men speak well of you for so they did to the false Prophets Phocion upon a general applause went home and said Quid mali feci Do not you at least let fall the Majesty of your Conversation A Child of God may find external Favour as the three Children did in Babylon by God's over-ruling Power on Men's Spirits Prov. 16.7 When a Man's ways please the Lord he maketh his Enemies to be at peace with him The World may do it in design as Hannibal abstained from Fabius his Fields to render him suspected or else to oblige by Courtesies and gain them to their Faction and Party However you have cause to look to your selves it is ill to be sollicited as a chast Matron is troubled to be sollicited to Lust. Have not you given them some advantage Do not you share with them in their Wickedness When the World's Respects run out so fairly and smoothly towards you you have cause to suspect your selves At least take the more heed that you do not seek to make your Conversation more pleasing by suiting your self to the Customs and sinful Courses of Carnal Men. Vse 2. To press all to avoid this Sin and Snare of Death especially in these Times of Dissention Oh take heed whatever you do whatever Differences you cherish or whatever Party you stick to that you be not guilty of Hatred against the Power of Godliness Let not the Saints act the Wickeds part The spirit of Enmity seeketh other Pretences Hold not Communion with the wicked World in their malignity and spight against God's Children 1. It is a mark of a Child of the Devil the express Image of Satan Thereby our Saviour convinced the Jews to be of their Father the Devil because they hated him that came from God John 8.40 41. But now ye seek to kill me a Man that have told you the truth which I have heard of God this did not Abraham Ye do the Deeds of your Father And Vers. 44. Ye are of your Father the Devil and the Lusts of your Father ye will do he was a Murderer from the beginning and abode not in the Truth because there is no Truth in him And St. John 1 Epist. 3.10 In this the Children of God are manifest and the Children of the Devil whosoever doth not Righteousness is not of God neither he that loveth not his Brother This manifests Men to be the Children of Satan because they love not their Brethren as Cain loved not Abel You express the Image of Satan to the Life when this is the ground of your hatred 2. It is very provoking Sin and it is the more provoking because we enjoy so many Benefits by them It is sad to hate Men for their Godliness for Christ's Names sake Look as it is a commendation of Kindness on the one side so it is an aggravation of Injury on the other Mat. 10.42 Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little Ones a Cup of cold Water only in the name of a Disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his Reward The height of this Sin is the Sin against the Holy Ghost the wilful persecuting of the known Truth therefore take heed that you be not guilty of any spice and degree of it 3. It is possible for them that profess Religion to hate one another for their strictness in that Religion Pseudo-Christians may be hot and violent the Beast pusheth with the Lamb's Horns Rev. 13. Isa. 66.5 Your Brethren that hated you that cast you out for my Names sake said Let the Lord be glorified Men that are Brethren that had great pretences of Zeal hate you for my Name 's sake
You think God is not wise enough you will teach him whom to advance and whom not Princes have their Arcana Imperii Shall our Servants know all our Counsels Many times God raiseth bad Men to high Places not because they deserve it but because the Age deserveth no better Phil. 2.14 15. Do all things without murmurings and disputings that ye may be blameless and harmless the Sons of God 3. If you are favoured by God why should you trouble your selves about the World's Respects In chusing Heirs to Salvation God doth not ask their Counsel thou hast the testimony of God's Spirit and many now in Hell have had much of the World's Respects Their Disrespect cannot hurt thee it may profit thee if thou art not wanting to thy self If God should take Counsel of the World whether he should assume thee to Glory or cast thee into Hell then their Respects were to be sought after but God will deal with thee alone not ask their Opinion but refer it to thine own Conscience If all the World should respect thee what is this to God who will judg thee by another Rule They had need of steady Heads that walk on high Places When Men study to preserve the World's good Opinion they lose it God is Master of their Respects if Men did not study to please the World they would not only have more quiet but more success 2. Observe again An excellent means to digest the World's Neglect is to consider the Example of Christ. It is our Duty it will be for our Comfort and it turneth to our Profit 1. It is our Duty In his Example we have a taste of his Spirit I am not of the World saith Christ and we should imitate Christ as dear Children Ephes. 5.1 They that love to live in delight and pleasures are but Christians in Name If we had no other Reason to contemn the vanity of the World than the Life of Christ this were enough Who was wisest Christ or you Who can make the better choice Christ or you Who is in an Error Christ or you Christ chose a poor Life and you affect Greatness 2. It will be your Comfort It is a sweet comfort in all Conditions to remember the similitude of condition between Christ and us Shall the Disciple be above the Lord What more honourable than to carry the Cross after Jesus Christ Christ hath worn this Garment Col. 1.24 Who now rejoice in my Sufferings for you and fill up that which is behind of the Afflictions of Christ in my Flesh. Christ was exposed to the envy of Satan and his Agents Art thou better than Christ He suffereth with us because we should suffer with him Mat. 25.45 Verily I say unto you in as much as ye did it no● to one of the least of these ye did it not to me Acts 9.4 Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Man and Wife if they love one another had rather live together in the meanest Estate than in the greatest Glory and Abundance asunder Christ and a Christian are fellow-Sufferers we are conformed to his Sufferings and he hath a feeling of ours 3. It will be for our Profit The Issue will be glorious we must first suffer then enter into Glory Winter is before the Spring Rom. 8.17 If so be that we suffer with him that we may be also glorified together 2 Cor. 4.10 Always bearing about in my Body the dying of the Lord Jesus that the Life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal Flesh. 2 Tim. 2.11 12. It is a faithful saying for if we be dead with him we shall also live with him If we suffer we shall also reign with him If we would be like Christ in Glory we must be like him in suffering Vse Meditate on this God had but one Son he came into the World without Sin but he could not get out without a Cross. Art thou poor so was Christ Hast thou Enemies so had He Art thou disdained Christ went this way to Glory and so must thou He was charged maliciously blackned with Slanders accused falsly c. the like usage you must expect Secondly With respect to God How sollicitous is Christ about those who are not of the World compare Vers. 14. with this His Father's Choice must be made good his own delight is in those that are like him Christ loveth himself and his own reflection in the Saints Christ is at a perfect antipathy with the World and a Christian loveth what he loves and hateth what he hates If you have the World's hatred against you remember you have Christ's Prayers SERMON XXVI JOHN XVII 17 Sanctify them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth HERE is Christ's second Request for his Disciples Where First The Request it self Sanctify them Secondly The Manner how it is to be accomplished through thy Truth Thirdly The Reason why it is to be so accomplished thy Word is Truth The main Points are the influence of Truth upon Sanctification and that the Word is the publick Record and Register of this Truth Now I shall make some entrance upon the Verse First The Request And here I. What he prayeth for II. To whom III. For whom I. What he prayeth for Sanctification 1. Observe Our chief Aim in Prayer for our selves and others should be to be sanctified Christ prayeth for Sanctification 1. What it is to be sanctified To Sanctify is 1. To Consecrate or set apart for some Holy Use. 2. To Cleanse or Purify 3. To Adorn with Gifts of Grace Some prefer the first Acceptation and apply it particularly to the Apostolical Calling Sanctify them that is separate them and set them apart for the Work of an Apostle So Christ was sanctified that is set apart for the Work of Redemption But it is not sanctify them for thy Truth but in or by thy Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore this Scripture hath a more general respect and signification However in the Work of Holiness all the Senses may be taken in for whoever are sanctified are set apart cleansed and adorned with Grace 1. Set apart by God and by themselves By God both in time and before time Before time they are set apart by God's Decree to be an holy Seed to himself in and by Christ separated from the perishing World to be Vessels of Honour as the Reprobate are called Vessels of Wrath and Dishonour set apart by God's Election chosen to be holy Eph. 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the Foundation of the World that we should be holy and without blame before him in Love But then in time they are regenerated and so actually set apart Sanctification is an actual Election By Election they are distinguished from others in God himself so by Regeneration and Sanctification they are distinguished from others in themselves separated and set apart from the perishing World to act for God to seek the things that may make for his Glory James 1.18 Of his
in their place but by their Faith and the Godly are elsewhere called of the H●●shold of Faith Where ever our Implantation into Christ or Participation of the Privileges of his Death or our Spiritual Communion in the Church is spoken of the Condition is Faith It is a Grace that sendeth us out of our selves to look for all in another It is the Mother of Obedience as all Disobedience is by Unbelief so all Obedience is by Faith First he said Ye shall not die and then Ye shall be as Gods First he seeketh to weaken their Faith in the Word they could not be proud and ambitious till they did disbelieve Therefore above all Things let us labour after Faith Our Hearts are taken up with the World the Honours and Pleasures of it these cannot make us happy but Christian Privileges will all which are conveyed to us by Faith But let us come to the second Point Doct. 2. That in the reckoning and sense of the Gospel they are Believers that are wrought upon to believe in Christ through the Word Here is the Object Christ the Ground Warrant and Instrumental Cause and that is the Word The Warrant must be distinguished from the Object the Warrant is the Word and the proper object of Faith is Christ as considered in his Mediatory Office Sometimes the Act of Faith is terminated on the Person of Christ and sometimes on the Promise to shew there is no closing with Christ without the Promise and no closing with the Promise without Christ. As in a Contract there is not only a receiving of the Lea●e or Conveyance but a receiving of Lands by virtue of such a Deed and Conveyance So there is a receiving of the Word and a receiving of Christ through the Word the one maketh way for the other the Promise for our Affiance in Christ. Faith that assents to the Promise doth also accept of Christ there is an Act terminated on his Person Faith is not assensus axiomati a naked Assent to the Propositions of the Word but a Consent to take Christ that we may rely upon him and obey him as an Alsufficient Saviour But now let us speak of these distinctly First Of the Object that is to believe in Christ. There is believing of Christ and believing in Christ. He doth not say those that believe me but those that believe in me through their Word Believing Christ implieth a Credulity and Assent to the Word and believing in Christ Confidence and Reliance Once more Believing in Christ is a Notion distinct from Believing in God Joh. 14.1 Ye believe in God believe also in me Since the Incarnation and since Christ came to exercise the Office of a Mediator there is a distinct Faith required in him because there are distinct grounds of Confidence because in him we see God in our Nature we have a claim by Justice as well as Mercy we have a Mediator who partaketh of God's Nature and Ours and so is fit to go between God and us Briefly to open this believing in Christ it may be opened by the Implicit or Explicit Acts of it 1. There is something Implicite in this Confidence and Reliance upon Christ and that is a lively sense of our own Misery and the Wrath of God due for Sin All God's Acts take date from the Nothingness and Necessity of the Creature and from thence also do begin our own Addresses to God God's Acts begin thence that he may be All in All from the Creation to the Resurrection God keepeth this Course and then the Dispensation ceaseth for then there is no more want but fulness Creation is out of Nothing Providence interposeth when we are as good as Nothing at the Resurrection we are nothing but Dust God worketh on the few Relicts of Death and Time So in all Moral Matters as well as Natural it is one of his Names He comforteth those that are cast down When he came to convert Adam he first terrified him They heard the Voice of God in the Garden and were afraid Gen. 3.10 He delivered Israel out of Egypt when their Souls were full of Anguish We are first exercised with the Ministry of the Condemnation before Light and Immortality are brought to Life in the Gospel and still God keeps his old Course Men are first burdened and sensible of their Load before he giveth them ease and refreshment in Christ. At the first Gospel-Sermon preached after the pouring forth of the Spirit Acts 2.37 They were pricked in their Hearts Christ's Commission was to preach the Gospel to the poor and broken-hearted and bruised Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord was upon me because the Lord hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the Poor he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted to preach Deliverance to the Captives the recovering of Sight to the Blind to set at liberty them that are bruised This is the Road-way to Christ. And all our Addresses to God begin too thence Man is careless Mat. 22.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they made light of it and proud Rom. 10.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have not submitted themselves to the Righteousness of God The Israelites were not weary of Egypt till they were filled with Anguish Adonijah when he found himself guilty of Death he laid hold on the Horns of the Altar The Prodigal never thought of returning till he began to be in want and to be soundly pinched Therefore till there be a due sense and conviction of Conscience it is not Faith but carnal Security In short we can never be truly desirous of Grace we cannot prize it we do not run for refuge Heb. 6.18 We are not earnest for a Deliverance till there be some such Work There are two Things keep the Conscience quiet without Christ Peace and Self Carnal-security and Self-sufficiency 1. It is hard to wean Men from the Pleasures of Sense and to make them serious in the Matters of their Peace before Christ and they be brought together they and themselves must be brought together This God seeketh to do by outward Afflictions that he may take them in their Month as the Ram was caught in the Briars In Afflictions Men bethink themselves 1 Kings 8.47 If they shall bethink themselves in the Land whither they are carried Captives c. It makes them to return upon themselves how it is between God and them If Affliction worketh not he joineth the Word it is a Glass wherein we see our natural Face James 1.21 God sheweth them what loathsome Creatures they are how liable to Wrath. Or if not by the Power of his Spirit upon their Consciences their Reins may chasten them they cannot wake in the Night or be solitary in the Day but their Hearts are upon them so great a Matter is it to bring Men to be serious 2. Self When the Prodigal began to be in want he joined himself to a Man of that Country Luke 15.15 We have slight Promises and Resolutions and
a good Purchase to have a special Title and Interest in us and rested satisfied having gained sufficient by all his expence of Blood and Merit We are all Benoni's Sons of Sorrow to him 2. By way of Charge John 6.37 38 39. All that the Father giveth me shall come to me and he that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out For I came down from Heaven not to do mine own Will but the Will of him that sent me And this is the Father's Will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last Day God calleth Christ to account for the Elect and his Number and Tale must be full The Elect are given to Christ not by way of Alienation but Oppignoration that he may guide them safe to Glory as the Shepherd must give an account of the Sheep to the Owner that sets him a work And so doth Christ at the last Day Heb. 2.13 Behold I and the Children which God hath given me God looketh narrowly what is become of the Elect not one of the Tale is wanting Vse Are you of this Number If you be given by God you give up your selves to him Our Faith is nothing else but our Consent to God's Eternal Decrees All the Father's Acts are ratified in time by the Creatures Consent God giveth by way of Reward and Charge so there is a Committing and a Consecrating both together 1. Committing your selves to Christ. 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by an advised Act of Trust. Can you put your Souls into his Hands The Father is wiser than we he knew well enough what he did when he left us in Charge with Christ. It argueth a sense of Danger a sollicitous Care about the Soul and then an advised Trust grounded on the belief of Christ's Sufficiency Many think their Souls were never in danger therefore they are not careful about putting them into safe Hands Canst thou venture upon Eternity on such Assurances Well I have trusted Christ with my Soul Oh it is the hardest matter in the World to trust Christ with our Souls advisedly and knowingly Presumption is an inconsiderate Act a Fruit of Incogitancy and therefore very easy 2. Consecrating Rom. 12.1 I beseech you Brethren by the Mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable Service yield up your selves to Christ. So David Psal. 119.94 I am thine save me Personal Dedication sheweth God's Act is not fruitless In a serious self-surrender we must give up our selves to God not with any reservation to use our selves as our own but absolutely to be at God's dispose to live and act for him O Christians if you would clear up your Interest this is your Duty for this is but making good his Grant to Christ. It goeth under the Name of our Deed but it is God's Work in us The Altar the Sacrifice the Fire is sent down from Heaven It is God's giving still the receiving is on our part for by renouncing Self we enjoy Self most Do we out of a sense of Duty thus give up our selves Do we make good our Vows God lendeth us to our selves to be employed to his Honour Fourthly The next thing is the Matter of the Request Presence and the Beatifical Vision as the Fruit of that Presence 1. That they may be where I am that is where I am according to my Humanity presently to be for he doth not speak of the Earthly Jerusalem where he was then visibly and corporally 1. Observe It is no small part of our Happiness that we shall be there where Christ is Now Christ is with us but then we are with him It is the Inchoation of our Happiness that he is with us graciously I am with you to the end of the World Mat. 28.20 It shall be the Consummation of our Happiness when we shall be with him Thus it is often expressed 2 Cor. 5.8 We are willing rather to be absent from the Body and to be present with the Lord. So David expresseth our State of Blessedness Psal. 16. ult In thy Presence is Fulness of Joy and at thy right Hand there are Pleasures for evermore This makes Heaven to be Heaven because Christ is there as the King makes the Court where-ever he is it is not the Court maketh the King John 12.26 Where I am there shall my Servant be It is our Happiness to stand always in our Master's Presence an Happiness that Wicked Men are not capable of because of their bondage and estrangement from God Therefore Christ telleth the Carnal Jews John 7.34 Where I am thither ye cannot come Wicked Men have no grant no leave to come Paradise is still closed up against them with a flaming Sword and they have no Heart to come because they cannot endure the Majesty and Purity of his Presence But when shall we be there where Christ is Presently after Death our Souls shall be there and at the Resurrection Body and Soul together 1. Presently after Death the Soul is where Christ is So Paul thought Phil. 1.23 I desire to depart and to be with Christ that is with him in Glory otherwise it were a loss of Happiness for Paul to be dissolved It is a sorry Blessedness to lie rotting in the Grave and only to be eased of present Labours for God's People are wont to reckon much on their present Service and Enjoiment of God tho it be accompanied with Affliction Paul was in a strait and he saith it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more better to be dissolved A stupid Sleep without the enjoiment of God is far worse what happiness were that to be in such a Condition wherein we do nothing and feel nothing God's Children are wont to prefer the most afflicted Condition with God's Presence above the greatest Riches and Contentment in his absence If thou goest not up with us carry us not hence Exod. 33.15 Better be with God in the Wilderness than in Canaan without him Therefore Paul would never be in such a strait if this drowsy Doctrine were true that the Soul lay in such an unactive state of Sleep and Rest till the Resurrection He would be no happier than a Stone or the inanimate Creatures are Again Luk. 23.43 This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise saith Christ to the good Thief Some to evade this place refer this Day to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the pointing in all the Greek Copies confuteth it as also the sense of the Place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 answereth to the Thieves words Remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom Christ promiseth more than he asketh as God doth usually abundantly for us above what we can ask or think He had reference to Christ's
Love of Christ is there too His Love may be in us in the Sense and Feeling when we have the assurance of it Rom. 5.5 The Love of God is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Holy Ghost which he hath given to us that they may feel it in their Hearts that God loved them in Christ. There is the Work of the Spirit and the Witness of the Spirit both are intended in that Expression chiefly the latter such a Sense of God's Love as stirreth up Joy and Thankfulness and Hope The precious Ointment gave no savour while it was shut up in a Box till it was poured out So God's Love while it is kept secret it yieldeth no reviving Fragrancy These two differ for many have the Effects of God's Love but not the Sense and the Effects of Love do always abide for it is an Immortal Seed but the Sense of Love is flitting and changeable Nothing can separate us from the Love of God in Christ yet the Love of God in Christ is often beclouded overcast and interrupted and some have more Effects tho less Sense the most shining Years are not always the most Fruitful a Man may have greater increase of Grace tho less comfort Observe for your Comfort that Christ prayeth for both he hath prayed not only for Grace but for Assurance that we may feel our selves beloved by the Father The Lord delighteth not only to love us but to assure us of his Love It is no comfort to a blind Man to hear of a glorious Sun or brave Shews he cannot see them God would not leave us in the dark but give us an Experience of his Love II. How this ariseth from the Manifestation of God's Name in the Gospel 1. The Knowledg of God is a means to kindle our Respects to God 2. To convey the Influence of his Grace to us 1. It is a means to kindle our Respects to God as Trust Psal. 9.10 They that know thy Name will put their Trust in thee Men are ignorant of God's Goodness Mercy and Truth and therefore they make so little use of him Usually Fears are in the Night Doubts come from Ignorance of the Tenour of the Gospel if we did believe those Things to be true which are revealed concerning his Mercy and Love to Sinners we should trust in him Fire once kindled would burst out of it self into a Flame so did we once savingly know God's Name there would be more Trust and Confidence in God Isa. 50.10 Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obey the Voice of his Servant that walketh in Darkness and hath no Light let him trust in the Name of the Lord and stay upon his God We are overwhelmed with Difficulties and Straits for want of studying God's Name So also for Love Cant. 1.3 Thy Name is as Ointment poured forth therefore do the Virgins love thee Ignoti nulla cupido Love springeth from Knowledg In the Beams of the Sun there is a mixture of Warmth and Light We know not the Gift of God and therefore our Bowels are not troubled Did we but see him as he is it would set us all on Fire 2. It is the means to convey all the Influences of Grace to us 2 Pet. 1.2 Grace and Peace be multiplied unto you through the Knowledg of God and of Jesus our Lord. God worketh upon us as rational Creatures agreeably to an intelligent Nature and so nothing can be wrought unless Knowledg go before An House the more the Windows stand open the more it is filled with Light so the more Knowledg the more is the capacity of the Soul inlarged to receive Comfort and Grace Guilty Nature is full of Fears more presagious of Evil than of Good and therefore it must have clear grounds of Comfort and Hope But you will say How comes it to pass that Persons of great Knowledg want Comfort and have no sense of God's Love I Answer It is not the Light of Parts but of the Spirit I have declared c. It is God's Prerogative to settle the Conscience I create the Fruit of the Lips Peace Peace c. Isa. 57.19 The Gospel is a Sovereign Plaister but God maketh it work Our own Thoughts do nothing unless God put in with them Vse 1. It informeth us of a double Duty 1. To study God's Name It would settle the Conscience to meditate upon those Declarations which Christ hath made of his Will Deep Thoughts fasten things upon the Spirit and musing maketh the Fire to burn How hath God declared himself we may trust him upon his Word Psal. 104.34 My Meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord. We should oftner find sweetness if we did oftner meditate of God It is sweet thus to inlarge our Thoughts upon the Promises and Comforts of the Gospel 2. To apply it When God's Name is proclaimed and made known to thee urge thy own Soul with it Rom. 8.31 What shall we say to these things Job 5.27 Lo this we have searched it so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good This is Christ's Aim that Knowledg should beget Love in them Knowledg without Application doth no good We must take out our Share The Riches of God's Goodness are laid open to us for this End and Purpose that we may feel what is expressed We have known and believed the Love that God hath to us 1 John 4.16 It is no presumption it is the great End why the Gospel was written Wicked Men are too forward and presumptuous of God's Love they continue their ungodly Courses do those things which offend him and yet are perswaded that God loveth them God's Children pray against their Sins and fight against their Sins and yet after all cannot be perswaded of it There is a fear of Presumption and a fear of Security 1. A fear of Presumption as some say I am not worthy it is as if you should say I am too poor to ask or receive an Alms too filthy to be washed say not so for this is the way to make you worthy 2. Of Security this is to say If I take the Physick I shall be sick whereas it is not by applying Christ that we are endangered but by an insensibleness of our Misery If thou feelest thy Misery there is no danger of Security it is not every thing will satisfy a sensible Sinner not every slight Comfort Vse 2. Examination Whether you have gotten benefit by the Gospel Is God's Love in you Have you any Fruits or Feeling of his Love Can you say God loveth you All God's Children cannot feel his Love but have you the Fruits of his Love The Feeling of his Love is to be improved immediately to Thankfulness and the Fruits of his Love are to be improved by Spiritual Discourse to Confidence The present Argument will afford us ground of search and enquiry 1. Things without us are excluded they can be no Evidence or Argument of God's Love It
denounceth Judgment it terrifieth by its Threatnings and raiseth a tempest in the Conscience but it doth not afford us any help and relief and so rather irritateth and provoketh the power of sin than suppresseth it Rom. 7.8 Sin taking occasion wrought in me all manner of concupiscence for without the Law sin was dead as a River swelleth the more it is restrained by any lett or damm so is corruption stirred and then a man is discouraged giveth over all endeavour of repressing it So 2 Cor. 3.6 The letter killeth but the Spirit giveth life The first Covenant did only denounce and aggravate our condemnation and put us in despair 2. Affirmatively and Positively expressed But under Grace under the new Covenant or under the Grace of Jesus Christ who hath not only redeemed us from the guilt of sin but also from the power of sin The Grace of Remission is our encouragement and the Grace of Sanctification our help and relief First The Grace of Remission is a great encouragement freeth us from the bondage of despairing thoughts which weaken our endeavours Therefore the Apostle opposeth the Spirit of Power to the Spirit of Fear Christ offering a Pardon upon Repentance doth strengthen our hands in our work Secondly The Grace of Sanctification is our help God by his Spirit giveth life and strength to do what he requires of us and power to resist sin that we may overcome it Rom. 8.2 The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death 1 Joh. 5.4 Whosoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory whereby we overcome the world even our faith Lex jubet Gratia juvat The Law commandeth but Grace helpeth Doctrine That sin should not and shall not reign over those who are under the sacred Power and Influence of Iesus Christ. 1. De Jure it should not reign over them it hath no right to rule it is an Usurper They who are redeemed by Christ should bind this Duty upon their hearts charge themselves with it to take heed that sin doth not reign it was once our Lord and Master but we have changed Masters and profess our selves now to be dead to sin and alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord therefore we should strive against it lest it recover its old dominion over us 2. De Facto it is not fully obeyed it doth not absolutely get the Victory and bear rule in our hearts but is weakened more and more in them who have given up themselves to the Regiment and Government of Grace Here 1. What is the Dominion of Sin 2. What need the Children of God to take heed it be not set up in their hearts 3. What hopes and incouragements they have by the Gospel or Grace of Jesus Christ whilst they are striving against it 1. What is the Dominion of Sin That will be best known by some Distinctions and Propositions 1. We must distinguish between the Being and Reign of Sin The Apostle doth not say Ye shall not sin any more because ye are not under the Law but under Grace but sin shall not have dominion over you it shall not get the better Sin doth remain and dwell in the Saints though not reign over them as the Beasts in Dan. 7.12 Their dominion was taken away yet their lives were prolonged for a season and time It is cast down in regard of Regency but not cast out in regard of Inherency Grace doth not wholly extinguish it but only repel the motions of it Sin will rebel but it shall not reign they do not give way to it nor actually obey and embrace the commands of it they do not do all that sin would have them to do If the Apostle had said Let not sin be in your mortal bodies as long as we carry flesh about us he would not have expected the Exhortation to have been fully answered but he saith Let it not reign which as well can as it ought to be complied with 2. Sin doth reign when either it is not opposed or when it is opposed weakly and with a faint resistance Where it is not opposed there it remaineth in its full strength and where it is opposed weakly and without any victory and success it argueth only a sense of Duty but no effect of Grace 1. Sin reigneth when it is not opposed when a man doth yield up himself to execute all the commands thereof and doth fulfil and obey its lusts as the Ambitious the Worldly and the Voluptuous do whatsoever their lusts command them with a miserable bondage yea they willingly walk after it Prov. 7.22 He goeth after her straightway as an ox to the slaughter or as a fool to the correction of the stocks Sin is as a Guest to evil men but as a Thief and Robber to the godly welcome to the one but the other would not have it come into their hearts It is one thing to wear a Chain as an Ornament another as a Bond and Fetter to give way to sin or to have it break in upon us to put it on willingly or to have it put and forced upon us It may be they may be sensible of it they may purpose not to do it or may complain of it but this is a constant Truth That we oftner complain of sin than we do resist it and oftner resist it than prevail against it It is not enough for men to see their sins or blame them in themselves or to purpose to amend them and forsake them but they must strive to overcome them and in striving prevail But we speak now of the first complaining of sin There is a double deceit of heart whereby men harden themselves in complaining of sin without resistance of it 1. Either men complain of other sins and not the main as if a man should complain of an aking tooth when the disease hath seized upon the Vitals or of a cut finger when at the same time he is wounded at the heart of wandring thoughts in Prayer when at the same time the heart is habitually averse or estranged from God through some Idols which are set up there Ezek ●4 3 5. Son of man these men have set up their Idols in their heart and put the stumbling-block of their iniquity before their face should I be inquired of at all by them And vers 5. That I may take the house of Israel in their own heart because they are all estranged from me through their Idols They complain of want of quickening Grace when it may be they want converting Grace as if we would have the Spirit of God to blow to a dead coal So when we pray for strengthening Grace when we should ask renewing Grace and confess only the infirmities of the Saints when we should bewail the misery of an unregenerate carnal estate And we cry out of some incident weaknesses when we should first see that our habitual aversion from
chains of darkness till the Supreme Judge execute deserved wrath upon them Augustine complaineth Ligatus eram non ferro alieno sed meâ ferreâ voluntate velle meum tenebat i●imicus me ●ihi catenam fecerat constriuxerat me Lord I am bound not with iron but with an obstinate will I gave my will to mine enemy and he made a chain of it to bind me and keep me from thee quippe ex voluntate perversa facta est libido dum servitur libidixi facta est consuetudo 〈◊〉 consuetudini non resistitur facta est necessitas a perverse will gave way to lustings and lusting made way for a custom and custom let alone brought a necessity upon me that I can do nothing but sin against thee Thus are we by little and little enslaved and brought under the power of every carnal Vanity Well now put all together are these things spoken of our selves or of another Is it so indeed that there is such a warring and are we not obliged to be watchful and careful 2. From the mischievous Influence and hainous Nature of reigning Sin 1. When sin reigneth it plucketh the Scepter out of Gods hands and giveth it to some vile and base thing which is set up in Gods stead as the setting up of an Usurper is the rejection of the lawful King The Throne belonging to God must be kept for him alone therefore every degree of service done to Sin includeth a like degree of Treason and Infidelity to Christ. Our Lord telleth us Mat. 6.24 No man can serve two masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or else he will hold to the one and despise the other ye cannot serve God and Mammon As no man can serve two Masters God and Mammon so every one serveth one of these God or Mammon for the Throne is never empty but between both of them you cannot divide your heart Neither Dominion nor Wedlock can endure Partners so that by cleaving to the one you refuse and renounce the other To serve God is to give up a mans mind and heart and whole man to know and do what God requireth whatever be the consequences now this doth necessarily imply a renunciation of all those things which cross and contradict the Will of God be it Devil World or Flesh. So to serve Mammon is to give up a mans mind heart endeavour to find out and follow after the Riches Honours and Pleasures of the World whatever may come of it He that would serve God must do nothing but what God alloweth him in the matter of Pleasure Profit or Preferment or any other thing for God is not well served unless he be served as a Master commanding and governing all our actions On the other side he that serveth the World giveth God only what the World and Flesh can spare so much Religion strictness and good Conscience as will stand with his carnal ends and affections for then the World is served as a Master when men dispose of themselves and all their concernments and rule themselves and please themselves according to that fleshly and worldly appetite and fancy that governeth them and God is no further loved obeyed pleased than that love of Honour Profit or Pleasure will give leave Well then by this you may plainly see that the setting up of any Lust to reign is a laying aside and a deposing of God for if a man be bound absolutely to resign up himself to the will and disposal of God and to obey him and love and serve him with all his powers and this man on the contrary giveth up himself into the hands of some carnal affection of his be it Pride Sensuality or Love of worldly things and this ruleth him and this governeth him and this he studieth to please and gratifie certainly these Pleasures or Profits or Honours are set up in Gods stead it is a plain refusing one and a cleaving to the other a despising God and Christ and a preferring the World and Satan And it will not help the matter though we profess Christ to be the Lord all formal Titles are a Mockage Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven Luke 6.46 And why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things which I say Many who profess Christ to be their Lord are as true bond-men to Satan as the Heathen who offered Sacrifice to him and a drunken and unclean Christian is as true a servant to the Devil as the Votaries and Worshippers of Priapus or Bacchus or Venus for he doth as absolutely command your affections as he did theirs and though you are Christs by Profession yet you are Satans by Possession and Occupation and the bond of your servitude is altogether as firm and as strong though it be more inward and secret than their Rites of Worship Neither will it help the matter that as you do not profess so you do not intend so though we do not formally intend this yet virtually we do and so God will account it it is finis operis though not operantis If a Wife be false to her Husbands bed will it be excuse enough to say she did not intend to wrong him or will such a saying excuse a Subject that is disloyal to his Prince and sets up an Usurper Well then what horrour should this beget in our minds and what care should we take that sin may not reign 2. The Reign of Sin is mischievous to us Sin when it once gets the Throne it groweth outragious and involveth us in so many inconveniences that we cannot easily disintangle our selves and get out again 1. This is one that it turneth the man upside down and degradeth and depresseth him to the rank of Beasts A brutish Worldling that once gratifieth his carnal affections is but a nobler kind of Beast he imployeth his Reason to gratifie his Appetite and puts Conscience under the Dominion of Sense and so inverteth the whole Nature of a man Tit. 3.3 Serving divers lusts and pleasures The worldly bait taketh advantage of the brutish part when Reason is asleep and then the Beast rideth and ruleth the man and Reason becometh a slave to Sensuality 2. This servitude is so burdensom as well as base and attended with so much pain and shame that those that know the service of sin as we all do by sad experience should use all caution that it never bring them into bondage Again the Apostle disswadeth from the reign of sin by this Argument Rom. 6.21 When ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness what fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed As if he had said You have full experience of the service of sin and the fruits of it what fruit then before you had a contrary Principle set up in your hearts you
The life spent in the service of God 3. I assert This is the only amiable Life because the Life spent in sin is full of shame and horrour of shame because of the baseness and turpitude of that Life disagreeable to the reasonable Nature of horrour because of the dreadful issue The end of these things is death On the contrary this Life spent in the Service of God is amiable 1. Because of the present Fruit Sanctification or Holiness which daily increasing in them breedeth comfort and confidence and will never be matter of shame to them 2. Because of the final issue Eternal Life is the consummation of it the matter doth not rest in Sanctification but looketh further at last they obtain everlasting Happiness the hope of which breedeth joy and comfort in us Well then it rests upon me to prove two things That this Life is the most amiable Life because of the Pleasure and Honour that doth accompany it the Pleasure because of the End the Honour because of the Work 1. The Pleasure of a Life spent in Gods Service Man is ever inviting himself to some delight and so far Nature and Grace are agreed but the difference is where true pleasure of mind is to be found Man in his natural estate consults with flesh and blood for then the Beast rideth the Man and he careth for the Body more than the Soul and nothing is sweet and pleasant but what gratifieth sensual Appetite but this soon bringeth slavery upon us for it was our old bondage and servitude to prefer Appetite before Reason and Conscience Tit. 3.3 We were sometimes disobedient serving divers lusts and pleasures These delights corrupt the Mind and make it an incompetent Judge of what is true and sincere pleasantness to such a Creature as man is who hath a Conscience and is capable of an immortal Estate and to give an account of his actions to the God that made him and besides they pervert the heart and dull our desires and endeavours towards better things and breed such a peace as is not the quiet and repose of the Soul in God but a numness and deadness of Conscience as may be called carnal Security rather than a true and solid Peace But by Grace we are invited to more chast and rational delights such as ennoble the Soul and raise it to God whose matter is not base and dreggy but heavenly and spiritual and cannot ensnare Nature by any excess but perfect it so that a man shall live as a man not as a beast and have a solid peace and durable comfort and confidence that will not fail him in any condition and this pleasure we can only have by having our fruit unto Holiness I prove it thus 1. It is pleasant to do good there is a pleasure and a peace that resulteth from the very rectitude of our actions Psal. 119.165 Great peace have they that love thy Law and nothing shall offend them Our Will is conformed to the Law and Will of God now the compliance of our Will with the Will of God carrieth a quieting pleasure with it for then it agreeth with its proper rule and measure all is right as it should be Our subjection to God is to the Soul as health to the Body when all the humors and members of the Body keep their due proportion temper and place according to the intention of Nature a man findeth himself at ease both in his work and in his rest and as to his Body he injoyeth himself with full contentment of mind It is so as to his Soul when Sense and Appetite is subordinated to Reason and Reason guided by the Will of God all is in its proper place and there must needs be a serenity and contentment of mind 2. God owneth him that liveth in his Service for those that love him and keep his commandments he will love them and manifest himself to them Joh. 14.21 23. Two ways doth God owne them 1. He will forgive their Sins 2. Assure them of his Love 1. He will forgive their Sins how can any man be truly chearful till his sins be forgiven If Conscience be but a little awakened in the midst of all his mirth he would see a sharp Sword hanging over his head by a slender thread and ready to drop upon him every moment and that all his jollity is but like dancing about the bottomless pit into which ever and anon he is ready to tumble Nay let him stifle Conscience as much as he can he can never totally get the Victory of it but he hath his qualms and pangs and hidden fears and stinging remorse of Conscience which though not always felt are soon awakened So that if you could dig a carnal man to the bottom you will find that he is never truly and sincerely merry Suppose none of this ever felt yet you must grant that there cannot be a man who ever recollects his ways or life and hath any serious consideration why he came into the World or where he shall be when he goes out of it but this trouble is revived and will haunt him and sour his contentments and put a damp upon all his mirth But now he that hath sued out his Pardon and being made free from sin is become a Servant unto God and so hath his fruit to Holiness he hath true and solid cause of rejoycing for God owneth him as one that is pardoned and adopted into his Family and admitted into Fellowship with him 1 Joh. 1.7 If we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin His great care is over his wounds are healed he hath got rid of his great sore and burden which made his Soul sit uneasie with him Mat. 9.2 Son be of good chear thy sins are forgiven thee When the guilt of sin is taken away the root of all trouble is taken away 2. He will assure him of his Love Joh. 15.10 If ye keep my commandments ye shall abide in my love as I have kept my Fathers commandments and abide in his love Holiness and Obedience as it is an evidence of our Love to Christ so it is a means of keeping up the sense and assurance of his Love to us holy walking giveth us a large share of the Love of God and Christ the Lord delighteth to owne such and to put peculiar marks of his Favour upon them Now it is a comfortable Life to live in the Love of God if all the World loveth you and God hateth you you can have no solid peace for you must at length fall into his hands but if you have all the World at will you may have it with Gods hatred who can make you miserable whenever he pleaseth he can blast you with diseases fill you with disquiets of Soul imbitter all your comforts but if God loveth you and assureth you of his Love what is wanting
promising life to the good and threatning death to the evil Out of all this discourse about the Wisdom Justice and Holiness of God we conclude the suitableness of Death to Sin That the difference between good and evil is not more naturally known than it is also evidently known that the one is rewarded and the other punished Other cannot be looked for if we consider the Wisdom of God which suiteth all things according to their natural order therefore sin which is a moral evil is punished with suffering somewhat that is a natural evil that is the feeling something that is painful and afflictive to nature or if we consider the Justice of God which dealeth differently with men that differ in themselves And the Holiness of God who will express his love to the good in making them happy and his Detestation of the wicked in the misery of their punishment 2. The certainty of this connection of sin and death was the Second Thing proposed 1. Reason sheweth in part That there is a state of torment and bliss after this life or Eternal Life and Death All men are perswaded there is a God and very few have doubted whether he be a punisher of the wicked and a rewarder of them that diligently seek after him now neither the one or the orher is fully accomplished in this world even in the judgment of those who have no great knowledg of the nature and malignity of sin or what punishment is competent thereunto Therefore there must be some time after that of sojourning in the body when men shall receive their full punishment and reward since here we see so little of what might be expected at the hand of God Surely if man be Gods Subject when his work is ended he must look to receive his Wages accordingly as he performed his duty or fail in it now our work is not over till this life be ended then God dealeth with us by way of Recompence giving us eternal life or the wages of sin which is death 2. Conscience hath a sense of it Conscience is nothing else but serious and applicative reason now the Consciences of sinners stand in dread of eternal death Rom. 1.32 Who knowing the judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death This Thought haunts men living and dying living Heb. 2.15 And deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage But chiefly dying 1 Cor. 15.56 The sting of death is sin For then men are most serious and apprehend themselves nearest to danger Stings of conscience are most quick and sensible then and a terrible Tempest ariseth in sinners souls when they are to die 3. Scripture if we take Gods Word for it is express the first Threatning Gen. 2.27 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die and Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death and 21. What fruit have you in those things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of those things is death Will you believe this or venture and put it upon the Trial Oh! Take heed of sin The dead are there and her guests are in the depths of hell Prov. 9.18 Men are destroyed by their heedlessness and incredulity in what a woful case are you if it prove true and prove true it will as sure as God is true 3. Consider the terribleness of this death The Life to come and the Wrath to come are both eternal Punishment in one scale holdeth conformity with the reward in the other as those that escape have an eternal and far more exceeding weight of glory so they that still remain under the sentence of death for sin are condemned to an eternal abode both in body and soul under torments Mat. 25.46 These shall go away into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternal Oh how woful is their condition whose bodies and souls meet again at the Resurrection after a long separation but a sad meeting it will be when both must presently be cast into everlasting fire if we did only deal with you upon slight and cheap motives you might refuse to hearken they are but slight matters that can be hoped or feared from man whose power of doing good or evil is limited to this life but it is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10.31 The afflictions and sorrows of this life are a part of this death our miseries here are the fruit of sin and after them followeth that death which consists in the separation of the soul from the body called in the book of Job the King of Terrors but after that there is a second death which is far more terrible which consists in an eternal separation from the Blessed and Glorious Presence of the Lord. In all Creatures that have sense death is accompanied with some pain but this is a perpetual living to deadly pain and torment from which there is no release there is no change of estate in the other world after our trial is over and things of faith become meer matter of sense the gulf is then fixed there is no passage from torments to joys Luk. 16.26 Things to come would not considerably counterballance things present if there were not eternity in the case therefore this death is the more terrible that men might abhor the pleasures of sin Well then this is the condition of all men once to be under sin and under the sentence of this death which is a woful bondage 2. Our liberty must answer the bondage To be redeemed from wrath is a great Mercy so it is also to be redeemed from sin these are the branches Christ delivered us from wrath to come 2 Thes. 1.10 He hath redeemed us also from all iniquity Tit. 2.14 The first part of freedom from the power of sin is spoken of Rom. 6.18 Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness Man in his natural estate is free from righteousness v. 10. That is Righteousness or Grace had no hand and power over him but in his renewed estate he is free from sin To be under the dominion of sin is the greatest slavery and to be under the dominion of Grace is the greatest liberty and inlargement they that are free from righteousness have no inclinations or impressions of heart to that which is good no fear to offend no care to please God are not brought under the awe and power of Religion on the other side then are we free from sin when we resist our lusts so as to overcome them and have a strong inclination and bent of heart to please God in all things and accordingly make it our business trade and course of Life Luk. 1.75 That being delivered from the hands of our enemies we might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life The other part of the Liberty is when we are freed from the sentence of death
Psal. 39.2 3. I was dumb with silence I held my peace even from good and my sorrow was stirred my heart was hot within me while I was musing the fire burned But in holy company they that fear the Lord speak often one to another Mal. 3.16 In the general men will speak as they are affected Psal. 37.30 The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom and his tongue talketh of judgment He studieth to glorifie God and edifie others because the law of God is in his heart v. 31. that is the Reason rendred there that is because his mind is upon it 3. For Actions Men are known by their constant exercise what they pursue and seek after whether their life be a sowing to the flesh or a sowing to the spirit Gal. 6.8 III. The Reasons to prove it That we may fix the Reasons we must again in a shorter method consider what minding implieth It implieth our savour and our walk or to divest it from the Metaphor our Affections and Endeavours so the Reasons will be Two suitable to these Two Notions 1. As minding implieth our savour and affections mens gust is according to their constitutions and the bait discovereth the Temper for pleasure is applicatio convenientis convenienti when the Object and the Faculty suit things please us and are minded by us as they are agreeable to our humour Luke 16.25 Son remember that thou in thy life-time hast received thy good things Carnal men have their good things and the children of God their good things Our relish is agreeable to our Nature A Fish hath small pleasure on the dry Land or a Beast at Sea A fleshly creature can arise no higher than a fleshly inclination moveth it therefore mens complacency and displacency sheweth of what Nature they are The Nature is hidden but the Operations and Affections discover it 2. As it implieth our walk and endeavour mens Actions are according to their predominant Principle as the Tree is so is the Fruit Mar. 7.18 every good tree bringeth forth good fruit but a corrupt tree bringeth forth corrupt fruit and as a man is so his Work will be for the course of his life sheweth the constitution of his soul such as the man is so will his Works be Can a man be said to be after the Spirit that only looketh after those things which please the sences and scarce admitteth a serious thought of God or the life to come Or on the other side can he be said to be after the Flesh that maketh it his business to tame the Flesh and his work to please and enjoy God 3 From both Things that suit with the disposition and inclination of our hearts do banish all love of contrary things As the carnal minding is opposite to the spiritual minding and quencheth and weakneth it more and more so the spiritual minding weakeneth the inclinations and retrencheth the interests of the Flesh Gal. 5.16 Walk in the spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh There is no such care of minding the things of the Flesh as by diversion to nobler Objects and obeying an higher Principle Our Affections cannot lie idle while we are awake to the World we sleep to God and while we are dead to the Spirit we are alive to the Flesh and so on the contrary SERMON VII I Proceed now to the Application of the former Discourse VSE 1. To put us upon serious self-reflection of what sort are we after the Flesh or after the Spirit I pray let us go to a thorough search and tryal and to deal more plainly in it 1. Consider there are Three sorts of Persons in the World 1. Some are wholly carried away by the desires of the Flesh and seek their happiness here but neglect things to come The case is clear that they are after the Flesh and so for the present in a state of Death and Damnation And they had need to look to it betimes for to be carnally minded is death meritoriè effectivè They provoke God to deny them life whom they despise for their lusts sake and dispense with their duty to him to satisfie some foolish and inordinate desire And effectivè they have no sound belief nor desire of the World to come and do you think God will save them against their Wills and thrust and force these things upon them without their consent or besides their purpose and inclination No it will not be Surely there is no difficulty in the case to state their condition who grosly set more by their Lusts than by their obedience to God The things of the Flesh are the chief scope and business of their Lives and they care not whether God be pleased or displeased obeyed or disobeyed honoured or dishonoured a Friend or an Enemy so the Flesh be pleased that is all their desire and aim 2. There is another sort of men who do many things that are good but the Flesh too often gets the upper hand and tho they do many things that appertain to the Spirit yet in other things they shew they are influenced-by the carnal life as is evident 3. Some unquestionably shew they are after the Spirit by their deep sense of Heavenly things their care about them their diligence and watchfulness over the desires and inclinations of the Flesh and holding an hard hand over the passions and affections thereof and their serious endeavours to please God There is no doubt but these are born of God 2. All the difficulty is about the middle sort to understand their condition They must be again distinguished 1. Some are far off from the Kingdom of God 2. Others are actually admitted tho Grace be in some weak degree 1. For the first Those that are not far from the Kingdom of God they are such as have the Grace of the third ground described Luke 8.14 And that which fell among thorns are they who having heard go forth and are choaked with cares and riches and the pleasures of this life and bring no fruit to perfection They have good sentiments of Religion and retain them longer than the stony ground doth but they are over-mastered with the cares of this World and voluptuous living so as that they attain not to the perfection of that holy and heavenly life that should be in Christians They do not lay aside the Profession but have not felt the power of Christianity in mortifying their fleshly and worldly Lusts that they may be more at liberty for God and the duties of their heavenly calling and so cherish a kind of imperfect Christianity which little honoureth God in the World or doth good to their own souls They are neither wholly on nor off from Religion The bane of it is that carnal and temporal things lie too near their hearts so that they cannot fully commence into the divine Life and never took pains to overcome the natural Spirit which lusteth to Sensuality Envy Pride and Worldliness There are some good
it is broken that it cannot with such strength bring forth the deeds of the body 2. By the continual and renewed influence of his grace He doth more and more weaken the power of sin Mich. 7.19 He will have compassion on us and subdue our iniquities 'T is Gods work Alas without this if we be left to our selves the more we resist sin the more it is irritated and encreased in us 3. God doth it by his word which is the great instrument which he useth to convey the power of his grace John 17.17 There we see the evil of sin and the danger of it are stirred up to resolve cry and pray against it and are told of the great remedy which is Christs death 4. He mortifieth us by his Providence as he taketh away the fuel and provision of our lusts and awakeneth us to a more earnest conflict with sin Out of love to our souls he crosseth our humours John 15.2 Every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit The Vine-dresser cutteth and pareth off the luxuriant and superfluous branches Isa. 27.9 By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged and this is all the fruit to take away his sin Now all this is passive Mortification necessary to be observed by us that we may submit to Gods work and improve the impressions of his Word Spirit and Providence 2. Active Mortification is the constant endeavour of a renewed soul to subdue sin dwelling in us that we may be more at liberty to serve please and glorifie God 'T is a constant endeavour for in a leaking ship there is a continual use of the Pump Sin is a continual burden and clog to the new nature and 't is every days business to get rid of it we groan under it Rom. 7.24 and we must strive as well as groan the spirit or new nature lusteth against the flesh Gal. 5.17 not only by a disliking thought which may check actual motions of the flesh but also by a constant use of all holy means that we may get the mastery of it they are bound to dye unto sin therefore will not let it reign Rom 6.11 12. and the end of mortification is vivification or liberty towards God which the soul aspireth after more and more for we grow dead to sin that we may be alive to righteousness In short this work must be continued till we have gotten some power against our corruptions and it be weakened tho not subdued totally 2. There is a general and particular Mortification The general Mortification is The putting off the whole body of the sins of the flesh Col. 2.11 The particular Mortification is when we subdue or weaken this or that particular lust Psal. 18.23 I was also upright before him and kept my self from mine iniquity Now the rule is That the general Mortification must go before the particular otherwise all that we do is but stopping an hole in a ruinous fabrick that is ready to drop down upon our heads or to make much ado about a cut finger when we have a mortal disease upon us Besides particular Mortification dependeth on the general for till we be renewed by God how can we mortifie sin Col. 3.8 Put off all these anger wrath malice blasphemy filthy communication out of your mouths seeing ye have put off the old man with his deeds Seeing you have put off all corruption allow your selves to live in no one sin Alas to set against a particular sin before we set upon the whole body of sin 't is but to put a new patch upon a torn garment and so make the rent the worse or to cut off a branch or two while the root or trunk remaineth in full life and vigor and so sprouteth the more for cutting First look after the general work that sin be stabbed at the heart and then the particular branches and limbs of it dye by degrees 3. There is a double way of mortification Privative and Positive The one standeth in the cutting off the fuel and provisions of the flesh or those things by which sinful and corrupt nature is kept alive the other lieth in resistance and active endeavours against it as fire is put out either by withdrawing wood or combustible matter or pouring on water or an enemy is destroyed by starving or battel as Antigonus answered to a Captain that kept a Garison in a City subject to Rebellions and Mutinyings That he should not only fasten the clog but starve the dog meaning thereby that he should strengthen the garison and weaken the City Both these ways must Christians go to work in the business of mortification The one by shunning the occasions of sin and cutting off the provisions which feed the distemper in our Souls Rom. 13.14 Make no provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof When men entertain themselves with all sensual delights as if their business were to hearten the enemy to keep the flesh alive after they have undertaken its death in Baptism The other is using the means which tend to the subduing of it such as prayer 2 Cor. 12.8 For this thing I sought the Lord thrice Hearing the word John 15.3 Now are ye clean through the word which I have spoken to you And such like as on the one side we must not provide oyl to feed the flame so on the other there must be striving praying exercising our selves unto Godliness that grace may be strengthened in war against sin 4. There is a daylie and ordinary course of mortification and a solemn extraordinary setting about this work in special seasons The daily course is needful because sin is at continual work in our Hearts and as soon as a Christian neglects his Soul the effects do soon appear In this sense a Christian must die daylie that is to his sins and corruptions he must still watch and strive and get some advantage against them by every prayer he maketh to God every act of receiving the Lords Supper or hearing the word it is his constant task but there are certain seasons when he must solemnly set about this works as 1. When God maketh sin bitter by afflictions and we are threshed that our husk may fly of Affliction is a special time of dealing against sin Jer. 2.19 We must not hinder the working of Gods physick but further it rather exercise our selves under the rod Heb. 12.11 It yeildeth the peacable fruit of righteousness to them that are exercised thereby Use it to Gods ends and purposes the smartness of the rod should make sin more heteful to us 2. When you have some serious stirrings upon hearing the word or some new powerful consideration is given you to quicken your hatred against sin when a truth is born in with great light power and evidence upon the heart there is a Providence that goeth with Sermons many gracious opportunities are lost by our negligence certainly when the Waters are stirred it is good
〈◊〉 passions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affections The first word noteth vexing passions the next desirable lusts There are two dispositions in the soul of man of aversation and prosecution by the one we eschew evil by the other we pursue good Corruption hath invaded both and therefore Grace is necessary to rectifie and govern both 2 Cor. 6.7 By the armour of righteousness both on the right hand and on the left 1. We must crucifie our passions which have to do with evils vexatious to the flesh and we must subdue our lusts or affections which have to do with those good things which are pleasing to the flesh there are vexing evils in which the mind suffereth a kind of affliction but 't is a disorder arising from self-love and therefore it must be mortified as envy which corrodeth and fretteth the heart of him that is surprized by it but yet self love is the cause of it for we are troubled that any water should pass by our Mill or that others should enjoy any honour or esteem or trade or profit which we covet for our selves so anger at any thing done by man which is displeasing to us and if given way to is a short fury and madness and hindreth a clear discovering of what is right and equal Jam. 1.20 So worldly sorrow at any thing done by God displeasing to the flesh 2 Cor. 7. Worldly sorrow works death So inordinate fear which betrayeth the succors which reason and grace offereth to fortifie us upon any sudden incursion of evil The fear of man bringeth a snare Prov. 29.25 So worldly cares which divert us from God and dependance on his Providence Phil. 4.6 7. Yea set up an anti-providence in our own hearts The like may be said of malice and revenge all which bring a torture with them and if allowed or indulged would soon destroy our love to God or men as if God withholdeth from us any good that we desire or sendeth that which we desire not but crosseth our humor as sickness want reproach or disrespect or whatever the heart is carried to eschew or if men enjoy any thing more than we would have them or do any thing contrary to the conveniency of our flesh we storm and fret justifie our passions think we do well to be angry tho these are a sort of sins which are a punishment to themselves and do destroy not only our duty but our peace and disquiet and torment and soul that harbors them yea will soon destroy that love we owe to God or man therefore they must be mortified 2. Not only our passions but our affections must be mortified Or more pleasant lusts to which we are carried by a sweeter inclination of nature such as are stirred up by carnal baits and pleasures as to instance in sins of the more sordid and brutish part of mankind motions to Intemperance Luxury Uncleanness and brutish Satisfactions or to instance in the more refined part of the world to worldly Greatness Honour and vain delights to be distinguished from others by Estate Rank and outward Dignity as every man is apt to be carried away by some inordinate lust or other now whatever the distemper be it must be purged out of the heart if we would have Christ have any interest there And here we must not only restrain the act but mortifie the habits for otherwise we cannot be safe for every temptation falleth in with some or other of these sins and giveth a new life to it unless the lusts are weakned the conversation cannot be Christian 1 Pet. 2.4 Abstain from fleshly lusts having your conversations honest and Jam. 4.1 From whence come wars and fighting Come they not hence even from your lusts that war in your members All their strifes and contentions come from their carnal hearts or sensual inclinations which first rebelled against the upper part of the soul or the dictates of Grace and Reason and then broke out into outragious or misbecoming practises And our Saviour telleth us that Murthers Thefts Adulteries come first out of the heart Matth. 15.19 From the polluted fountain of the heart floweth all the pollution of the life And if the act should be restrained yet unless the heart be cleansed all is loathsome to God Matth. 23.27 Therefore kill the lusts in your heart and ye shall more easily curb the sins of the outward man that they may not break out to Gods dishonour Many think to fashion the life but neglect the heart and if they keep from scandal yet they do not advance the Authority and Power of Grace in the Heart but self-love securely beareth rule in the soul. Many die by inward bleeding as well as by outward wounds therefore unless our irrascible or concupiscible faculty be bridled and made pliable to the conduct of the heavenly mind we shall do nothing in Christianity to any good effect 3. As to actual temptations when they stir indwelling sin complain of the violence to God Rom. 7.24 Oh wretched man that I am Who shall deliver me from this body of death Bemoan your selves to him who alone can help you and is ready to do so when you are afraid of doing any thing contrary to your duty and an humble sense of your impotency is not only a good preparative to receive his graces but also to defy and rebuke the temptation Matth. 4.10 Get thee behind me Satan and Gen. 39.9 How shall I do this great wickedness and sin against God These are best smothered in the birth 4. Take heed of those sins which the people of God are most in danger of 'T is hard to say what they are for all sins when they are near and importune the flesh by the easie and profitable practice of them without danger or discovery may tempt an unwary heart Therefore we must have always our eyes in our head and stand upon our guard the secure are next to a fall there is no cessation of arms in this warfare nor treaty and conclusion of peace to be made with our lusts Sin is a bosome-friend but yet the sorest enemy and if we be not resolute and vigilant our appetites and senses or passions may betray us and if you be not daylie deadning worldly inclinations self-esteem and conceit you cannot stand out against the smallest temptation But they are most in danger of those sins which the temperature of body and constitution do incline them unto tho we must watch against all sins for all are hateful to God and contrary to his law and incident to us yet we are inclined to one sin more than to another there is something that is our privy sore and may be called the plague of our own hearts 1 Kings 8.38 Now this must be watched and striven against and here the victory is never cheap nor easie Many a groan many a prayer many a serious thought many an hearty endeavour it will cost us these master lusts they never go alone like great diseases that
earth And 't is our act or else we can have no comfort in it Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof and 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit Under the Law the Leper was first to be cleansed by the Priest and afterwards to wash himself in running-water and shave his hair Levit. 14.8 After being sprinkled with the Priest the necessary ceremony he himself was to wash The Ceremonies which the Priest used are considerable therefore I shall explain them a little Two Sparrows were to be taken and one of them killed in an earthen vessel over running water and the other after he was dipped in the blood of the sparrow that was to be killed let loose in the open field to fly up in the air as it were in the sight of God there was a notable Mystery couched under this Type for the bird killed over the running water signified the death of Christ accompanied with the Sanctification of the Spirit typed by the running water the only means to cleanse us from our Leprosie and the bird that was let go alive having his wings sprinkled with blood signifieth the Intercession of Christ who is gone with blood to the Mercy-Seat and we are told that Christ came not by Water only but by Water and Blood No other Bath for spiritual Leprosie but Water and Blood the Merit of Christs Sacrifice and Intercession and the Spirit of Grace to heal our natures but after all this the man was to wash himself which figured the endeavours that Gods people should use to cleanse themselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit 4. It being our duty we must use the means which tend to mortification for to dream of a Mortification which shall be wrought in us without our consent or endeavours as well whilst we are sleeping as whilst we are waking is to delude our selves with a vain fancy no we must set a careful watch over our Thoughts Affections and Works the Spirits Operation doth license no man to be idle we must join with him and obey him in his strivings against the flesh for the Spirit worketh not on a man as a dead thing which hath no principle of activity in himself therefore those that upon the Spirits doing all will lie idle abuse the spirit who both urgeth us to the duty and quickneth us to the use of means or stirreth us up to use our endeavours that the end may be obtained otherwise we neither obey the Spirit nor desire the benefit We do not obey the Spirit for he doth first sanctifie us then quicken us to use the means and blesseth the means so used and we do not desire the benefit 't is but a wish not a desire a ve●leity not a volition as Prov. 13.4 The soul of the s●uggard desireth and hath nothing because his hands refuse to labour Many a man hath wishes that he could leave his sins especially when he thinketh of the shame and punishment as many an incontinent Person Adulterer Glutton or Drunkard hath a wish to part with his sin but not a will for he doth not seriously strive against it his love to it remaineth unconquered and unbroken Well then let us see how far we have gained the point in hand First Every Christian must determine that the flesh must be mortified secondly mortified it must be by us every man must mortifie his own flesh thirdly that mortified it cannot be by us without the Spirit the Spirit will not without us and we cannot without the Spirit neither when we are first to begin this work nor can we carry it on without his assistance 5. The Spirit mortifieth sin in us as a spirit of Light Life and Love 1. As a Spirie of Light affecting the soul with a sight and sense of sin so as we groan under the burden of it nothing cometh to the heart but by the understanding conviction maketh way for compunction and compunction for a detestation and hatred of sin and detestation and hatred for the destruction and expulsion of it Sin is alwayes loathsom but we have not alwayes eyes to see it When we look upon it through Satans spectacles or the cloud of our own passions and corrupt affections we make nothing of it it seemeth lovely rather than loathsom to us But when the spirit anointeth our eyes with his eye-salve it is the most hateful thing to the soul that can be imagined Jer. 31.18 After I was instructed I smote upon the thigh yea I was ashamed and confounded We see sin to be another manner of thing than ever we thought it before Psal. 119.108 Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way When the heart is thoroughly possessed of the evil of sin and we dare not dandle and indulge or pass it over as a thing of nought fear of punishment may suspend the act of sin but the sight of the evil of it doth help to mortify the root 2. As a spirit of life for Jesus Christ to all his seed is a quickening spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 We have life Natural from Adam but life spiritual and eternal from Christ and that by the spirit for we are said to be born again of the spirit John 3.5 The spirit reneweth us and maketh us partakers of the life and likeness of God Titus 3.5 Now when this life is infused there is an opposite principle set up in us to subdue the lusts of the flesh and also to prevent the power of the objects of sense which serve and feed them for the flesh doth obstruct the operations of this new life and cross the tendency of it The operations of this new life are obstructed by the flesh for Gal. 5.17 For the flesh lusteth against the spirit And life is sensible of what annoyeth it the operations of it are the serving and pleasing of God Gal. 5.25 If we live in the spirit let us also walk in the spirit And we see a weight hanging upon us and sin doth easily beset us that we cannot serve God with that liberty purity and delight that we desire And therefore this is an heavy grievance and burden to the new nature that we desire to get rid of it by all means and labour and strive in it and that with good effect a new life also hath a new tendency as soon as 't is infused it discovereth its self by its tendency to its end and rest which is God and Heaven so the objects of sense have the less force and power upon us Well then the flesh is an enemy to this new life and this new life an enemy to it as having contrary operations and tendencies Now how doth this new life discover its enmity Partly by complaining of it as a sore burden and annoyance Rom. 7.24 Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death Paul was whipped scourged imprisoned
Belief of the threatnings of God from whence ariseth a sense of our sinful and miserable condition so far 't is good and useful Partly from an ill cause the Devil who delighteth to vex us with unreasonable terrors 1 Sam. 16.14 The spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an evil spirit from the Lord vexed him The Devil both tempteth and troubleth as the Huntsman hideth himself till the poor Beast be gotten into the toile then he appeareth with shouts and cryes Partly from the corruption of mans heart which either turneth this work to an utter aversation from God or some perfunctory and unwilling way of serving him some know the right use of the Covenant others not and therefore we must consider not only how 't is wrought by the spirit but how 't is entertained by man through our corruption our conviction of sin and misery by the spirit turneth into Bondage and servitude 2. The spirit of bondage is better than a profane spirit Some cast off all thoughts of God and the World to come and are not so serious and mindful of religion as to be much troubled with any fears about their eternal condition it were happy for them if they were come so far as a spirit of Bondage they that are under it have a conscience of their duty but such as perplexeth them and lasheth and stingeth them with the dread and horror of that God whom they serve Now this is better than the prophane spirit that wholly forgets God Psa. 10.4 God is not in all their thoughts whether he be pleased or displeased honoured or dishonoured this may tend to good the gradus ad rem gradus in re Yea it may in some degree be consistent with sincerity for though to have no love to God is inconsistent with a state of grace or to have less love to God than sin yet to have more fear than love is consistent with some weak degree of grace especially if the case be so that love is less felt in act than fear and therefore though men are conscious to much backwardness yet keep up a seriousness though to their feeling 't is more fear than love which moveth them yet we dare not pronounce them graceless for there may be a love to God and a complacency in his ways though it be oppressed by fear that the spirit of adoption is not so much discovered for the time 3. That 't is an ill frame of spirit to be cherished or rested in For while men are under the sole and predominant influence of it they are never converted to God fear doth begin the work of conversion but love maketh it sincere the spirit by fear doth awaken men to make them see their condition terrifying them by the belief of Gods threatning and the sense of his indignation that they may flee from wrath to come Matth. 3.7 Or cry out What shall I do to be saved Acts 2.37 But yet tho they have a sensible work they have not a saving work Some by these fears are but troubled and restrained a little and so settle again in their sensual course but to their great loss for God may never give them like advantages again Others betake themselves to a kind of religiousness and forsake the practice of those grosser sins which breed their fears and so resting here continue in a state of hypocrisie and self-deceiving religiousness 1. USE is Information and Instruction to teach us how to carry it as to the spirit of Bondage First 't is not to be slighted partly from the matter which breedeth the fear and bondage which is the law of God the supreme rule and reason of our duty by which all debates of conscience are to be decided partly from the Author this sense of sin and misery is stirred up in us and made more active by the Operation of the Spirit of God partly from the faculty wherein 't is seated the conscience of a reasonable creature the most lively and sensible power of mans soul which cannot be pacified but upon solid grounds and reasons partly from the effect the fear of eternal death the greatest misery that can befall us for surely 't is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the Living God Heb. 10.31 To smother and stifle checks of conscience doth increase our misery not remove it and produceth hardness of heart and contempt of God therefore when our souls are at this pass that we see we are in bondage to sin and know not how to help it in bondage to wrath and know not how to quench these fears which are awakened in us by the spirit surely we should look after solid satisfaction and peace of soul setled on us upon Gospel Terms Run to the blood of sprinkling Heb. 10.20 2. Yet 't is not a thing to be chosen prayed for or rested in Partly because 't is a judiciary Impression a spark of Hell kindled in the conscience a tender conscience we may and must pray for but not a stormy conscience when we ask legal terrors we know not what we ask a belief of the threatnings belong to our duty as well as a belief of the promises but we must not so reflect upon terrors as to exclude the comfort and hope of the Gospel when under a spirit of Bondage we are in a most servile condition far from all solid comfort courage and boldness but is it not an help to conversion Answer Let God take his own way we are not to look after the deepness of the wound but the soundness of the cure not terrible representations of sin and wrath but such an anxiousness as will make us serious and solicitous partly because the Law-Covenant is an antiquated dispensation the law of nature bindeth not as a Covenant for the promise of life ceased upon the incapacity of the subjects when under a natural impossibility of keeping it the threatning and penalty lieth upon us indeed till we flee to another court and covenant The Jewish Covenant was abolished when Christ repealed the Law of Moses that Covenant dealt with us as servants the Gospel dealeth with us as sons in a more ingenuous way and inviting us to God upon nobler motives and partly from the nature of that fear that doth accompany it it driveth us from God not to God Gen. 3.5 Adam hid himself among the bushes and he gives us this reason because he was afraid and still we all fly from a condemning God but to a pardoning God we are incouraged to come nigh Psal. 103.4 There is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared In the wicked the fear of Gods Wrath once begun it increaseth daily till it come to the desperate fear of the damned and the fault is not in the law or in the spirit but in man who runneth from his own happiness and maketh an ill use of Gods Warnings 2. USE is to put us upon tryal and self-reflection All that attend upon Ordinances receive some spirit
will without which it would lie sluggish and idle or like a Chariot without wheels and horses or a Bird when her wings are clipped therefore the Holy Ghost stirreth up these affections and our heart within us makes us willing and this bringeth the Soul to God for no other can give us satisfaction but he alone And the difficulties of Salvation are so many that we cannot overcome them but in his power and strength Now sense of wants and an earnest desire of a supply will ordinarily put words into a mans mouth and affections beget expressions Yet because many accidental reasons may hinder it the weight of Prayer is not to be layed so much upon the expression as the affection if there be a strong and an earnest desire after grace it will make us express our selves to God in the best manner that we can As long as you Pray for necessary graces and other things in subordination thereunto and can heartily groan and sigh to God for what you want with respect to your great end the Prayer is well performed there may be a great petulancy and extravagance of words where there is not a good and an honest heart vain bablings without faith or feeling or spiritual affection 4. 'T is not to be understood as if all that pray graciously had the spirit in a like measure or the same persons always in the same measure No the wind bloweth where it li●●eth John 3.7 And he giveth us to will and to do We cannot find the assistance at our own pleasure some have it in a more plentiful others in a scanty measure tho all have i● Jesus Christ himself tho he had not the spirit by measure yet he exercised and acted the spirit of Prayer more at one time Luke 22.44 And being in an agony he prayed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more earnestly His love to God was always the same but the expression of it different So Gods Children seek Heavenly things with a weaker degree of desire and sometimes with a stronger at sometimes we have the directing work of the Spirit and are not sensible of those earnest and unexpressible groans That is to say we put up our requests for things lawful and useful and most necessary for us at the time but not with that ardour and fervency that we do desire we cannot say that the Holy Ghost doth not assist these Prayers as sometimes the assistance is given us more largely as to the groaning part and men are all in a flame strong and passionate affections do most bewray themselves Sometimes as a spirit of confidence and Holy liberty with our Father and faith is clearly predominant in Prayer at other times repentance and Child-like reverence and fear are altogether in action in the Prayer and there is a great seriousness tho not such life and vigour or strength of faith as grief for sin bemoaning our failings 5. Gifts are more necessary when we joyn with others and are their mouth to God But the Spirit of Prayer is of most use when we are alone and we have nothing to do but to set our selves before the searcher of hearts and draw forth our desires after him when without taking in the necessities of others we present our personal requests to God and lament the defects of our own Hearts and the plague of our own Souls When we pray alone 't is good to observe the workings of our own hearts surely whatever Prayer we make to God we should find it in our hearts 2 Sam. 7.27 Therefore hath thy serv●nt found in his heart to pray this prayer unto thee Having a deep sense of our wants a real desire of the blessing we ask exercising grace rather than memory and invention pouring out our very Souls to God with sighs and groans rather than words we are liberty there to use or not use the voice to continue speech and break it off and lift up the heart by strong desires to God VSE It informeth us 1. What kind of help we have from the spirit of God in prayer his work is to guide and quicken you First to guide you in Prayer that you may Pray to God in an Holy manner we know not what to pray for as we ought on a fourfold reason 1. As blinded with self-l●ve 2. As discomposed by trouble 3. As struck dumb by guilt 4. As straitned by barreness and leanness of soul. 1. As blinded by self-love Oh what strange prayers will men put up to God if they take counsel of their lusts and interests as the Disciples that called for fire from Heaven Christ told them ye know not of what manner of spirit ye are of Luke 9.55 Self love so blindeth us that if we be lead by it we shall rather beg our ruin than our salvation for we know not what is either profitable or prejudical to us so that it would be an argument of Gods anger to grant our requests The Ambitious if he should pray from the passion that possesseth him would only ask honour and worldly greatness The Covetous only that God would double his worldly portion and inlarge his estate according to his vast desires the Sensual the ability and opportunity of glutting his bruitish inclinations the Vindictive that he may interess God in his quarrels All sinners would serve him only to serve their carnal turns whatever words we use to God in Prayer if we serve him to these ends and hope that by praying they shall be the better gratified our Prayer is turned into sin but he that is guided by the Spirit intreateth nothing of God but what is pleasing to him and suiteth with his Glory we come to our Father which is in Heaven when we Pray and our welfare in the World must be subordinated to our Eternal and Heavenly estate And we come in the name of Christ now to ask honours in his name who was born in a Stable and Dyed on a Cross pleasures in his name who was a man of sorrows is utterly incongruous no! Gods Glory Kingdom Will must be preferred before our inclinations other things asked with reservation and submission 2. Our minds are discomposed by trouble that we scarce know what to do or say 2 Chron 20.12 Lord we know not what to do but our eyes are unto thee Our Lord Christ John 12.27 My soul is troubled what shall I say in great grief Christ himself was at a loss The great Teacher of the Church who hath so much to say for our comfort and counsel in such cases yet was amazed and at a nonplus and David Psal. 77.4 I am sore troubled I cannot speak Our words stoppeth the mouth Now when our thoughts are thus confounded we scarce know what to pray for the Spirit teacheth us what to say Look as in the case of the fear of men Luke 12.12 For the Holy Ghost shall teach you in the same hour what you shall say So in our perplexities when we are scarce able to open
to limit this universal particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so have lost the advantage but whether they limit it enough let us see 'T is one thing to say they shall not hurt us 'T is another to say they shall conduce to our good or are means appointed to that end 4. If God make use of our infirmities for good 't is to be ascribed to his grace who bringeth good out of so great an evil As David by his fall got wisdom Psal. 51.6 't was the Lords mercy that made him thereby more sensible of his duty watchful over a naughty heart But this is no natural effect of sin and to say God hath promised it it would tempt us to omit our caution and so we should lose this benefit God of his wonderful grace may do many things which he doth not think fit to assure us of by promise 5. We see many Christians fall from some degrees of grace which they never afterwards recover again though preserved in the state of grace for the main God will not vouchsafe to them such a liberal portion of his spirit as they had before Jeh●shaphat is said 2 Chron. 17.3 to have walked in the first ways of his Father David His first ways were his best ways when he kept himself free from those scandalous crimes he fell into in his latter time But doth it not imply that our prosperity shall turn to good as well as adversity Answer Though it be not formally expressed in this place which speaketh only of sufferings and afflictions yet 't is virtually included For 1. God keepeth off or bringeth on the cross as it worketh for our good And all providences wherein the elect are concerned are over-ruled by his grace for their good Cant. 4 16. Awake O north-wind and come thou south blow upon my garden that the spices therein may flow out Out of what corner soever the wind bloweth it bloweth good to the saints The sharp north-wind or the sultry south-wind 2. 'T is a threatning to them that do not love God that their prosperity tendeth to their hurt Psal. 69.22 Let their table become a snare and that which should be for their welfare become a trap Their worldly comforts serve to harden their hearts in ●in 3. The sanctifying of their prosperity is included in a Christians charter 1 Cor. 3.21 22 23. All things are yours life or death the present world and the future world because you are Christs and Christ is Gods Their prosperity cometh from the love of God and tendeth to their good Therefore let this be included though afflictions are chiefly spoken of in the Context 2. The manner of bringing it about they work together Take any thing single and apart and it seemeth to be against us We must distinguish between a part of Gods work and the end of it We cannot understand Gods providence till he hath done his work he is an impatient spectator that cannot tarry till the last act wherein all errors are reconciled as Christ told Peter John 13.6 7. What I do thou knowest not now but thou shalt know hereafter We are much in the dark we look only to present sense and appearance his purposes are hidden from us for the Agent is wise in Counsel and excellent in working his way of working is under a vail of contraries and unperceivable to an ordinary eye He bringeth something out of nothing light out of darkness meat out of the eater his end is not to satisfie our sense and curiosity but try our faith John 6.7 To exercise our submission and patience as in the case of Job And our dependance and prayer God knoweth what he is a doing with you when you know not Jer. 29.11 For I know the thoughts that I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you an expected end When we view providence by pieces and see God rending and tearing all things in pieces we are perplexed Therefore we must not judge of Gods providence by the beginnings till all work together When we apprehend nothing but ruine God may be designing to u● the choicest mercies Psal. 31.22 For I said in my haste I am cut off from before thine ●●es nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplication So Psal. 116.11 I said in my h●ste all men are lyars Samuel and all that had told him he should injoy the kingdom H●ste never speaketh well of God and his promises nor maketh any good comment on his dealings we must stay till all causes work 3. The end and issue for good 1. Sometimes to good temporal or our better preservation during our service Gen. 50.20 But as for you ye thought evil against me but God meant it unto good to bring it to pass as it is at this day and to save much people alive Both the Egyptians and themselves had wanted a preserver if he had not been sold and sent into Egypt We often find by experience that God ordereth our disappointments for good suppose a mans heart were much set upon a voyage to sea but he is hindered by many impediments and before he cometh the ship is gone and afterwards he heareth that all that were in the vessel were drowned this disappointment is for good Crassus his Rival in the Persian war when he heard how that Army was intercepted and cut off by the craft of the Barbarians had no reason to stomach his being refused Many of us whose hearts are set upon some worldly thing have cause to say we had perished if we had not peristed and suffered more if we had suffered less In the story of Joseph there is a notable scheme and draught of providence He is cast into a pit there to perish thence upon second thoughts drawn sorth to be sold to the ●shmaelites by them brought into Egypt sold for a slave again What doth God mean to do with poor Joseph While a slave he is tempted to Adultery refusing the temptation he is falsly accused kept a long time in ward and duress all this is against him Who would have thought that in the issue all should have turned to his good Who would have thought that the prison had been the way to preferment That by the pit he should come to the palace of the King of Egypt That he should exchange his parti-coloured coat for the Royal robes of a Kings Court Thus in temporal things we gain by our losses and God chooseth better for us than we could have chosen for our selves 2. Spiritual good So all affliction is made up and recompenced to the soul it afflicts the body but bettereth the heart Psal. 119.71 It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes There is more to be learned in affliction than in the vastest Libraries No book will teach us so much as experience under Gods discipline Mad men are kept in the dark and under hardship to bring them to their wits
every evil work 2 Tim. 4.18 Therefore we should submit to endure the evil of chastisement that we may escape the evil of sin 't is worse to be sinful than miserable to be unclean than to be sick to be volupteous than to be poor and so the affliction bringeth greater good than it taketh from you therefore Christians should be careful that they murmur not against Gods dispensations for there are two evils that we bewray thereby 1. A despising of God 2. A despising of holiness And a Christian should be tender of either 1. A despising of God as if he knew not what was fittest and best for you and would send any trouble upon you that he knoweth not how to turn to good Job 34.33 Should it be acording to thy mind he will recompence it whether thou refuse or whether thou chuse Should our condition be at our own disposal and should God ask of us whether we like it or no is it not better to be satisfied in his will and say Surely God would not send this affliction if he did not know how it should be good for me We would carve out our own condition and have our will in every thing but is this wise or just Must God be subject to our passions and affections No whether we will or no he will take his own way 2. 'T is a lessening the value of holiness as if this profit did not countervail our l●ss We profess we esteem grace more than wealth and spiritual things more than carnal but when we are put to the tryal we little regard holiness but only mind the ease of the flesh and therefore are so hardly reconciled to the Cross surely that which doth us good should not be entertained with such impatient resentment 't is worse in Christians who are more obliged to count all things dung and dross Phil. 3.7 8 9 10. But what things were gain to me those I counted loss for Christ yea doubtless and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledg of Christ Jesus my Lord for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and do count them but dung that I may win Christ and be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by faith that I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable to his death But we may say as Moses to God B●hold the children of Israel have not hearkened unto me how then shall Pharoah hear me We cannot hope to convince a worldly man of this That loss of estate or poverty is good the ambitious man that 't is good to be despised and contemned and the voluptuous man that pain is sometimes better than ease and sickness that checketh the desires of the flesh is better than health that gratifieth them Alas the children of God are hardly convinced that mortifying affliction is better than carnal prosperity how then will the world believe it 2. What profit is there to be gotten by afflictions 'T is hard to instance in all particulars because God hath several ends in our afflictions according to the distempers that need cure but the usual profit of afflictions is seen in these things 1. That the time of affliction is a serious thinking time 1 Kings 8.47 if they shall bethink themselves in the land of their captivity We have more liberty to retire into ourselves being freed from the attractive allurements of worldly vanities and for the present there is some restraint on the delights of the flesh which use to besot the mind and hinder better thoughts Adversity maketh men serious the Prodigal came to himself when he began to be in want Luke 15.17 Sad objects make a deeper impression on our sou●s than delightful do they help us to consider our ways and Gods righteous dealings that we may behave ourselves wisely and suitable to the dispensation we are under Eccles. 7.14 in the day of adversity consider See from what hand it cometh to what issue it tendeth what is thy duty under it how little thou canst mend thy self without submitting to God that to hope to escape by ill means is but like an attempt to break prison 't is better to make supplications to our Judg these Providences are not to be lightly passed over the Author of them is God the occasion sin the end repentance 2. 'T is an awakening quickning time Some are awakened out of the sleep of death and are first wrought upon by afflictions this is one powerful means to bring in souls to God and opening their ears to discipline Job 36.10 They had still slept in their sins if God had not awakened them by the smart discipline of the Cross but others are quickned and awakened to more carefulness of their duty more watchfulness against sin and the graces of the spirit which lay dormant in us through neglect are more set a work sense pleasing objects deaden the heart Gods best children sleep when they have a carnal pillow under their heads Psal. 30.6 And in my prosperity I said I shall never be moved But now because they do not stir up themselves God stirreth them up by a smart rod that faith may be working love fervent hope lively prayers carried on with warmth and zeal prayers otherwise are dead thoughts of Heaven cold or none wherein all these graces are acted Isa. 26.16 Lord in trouble they have visited thee they pour out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them And Hosea 5.15 I will go and return to my place till they acknowledge their offence and seek my face in their affliction they will seek me early When our gust and tast of spiritual and heavenly things is recovered then we are awakened and in good earnest 3. 'T is a learning time this the Scripture witnesseth every where Psal. 119.71 'T is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes Psal. 94.12 Blessed is the man whom thou chastnest O Lord and teachest him out of thy law God teacheth us though he teach us as Gideon did the men of Succoth with briars and thorns And we read of Christ Jesus himself Heb. 5.8 He learned obedience from the things which he suffered He did experimentally understand what obedience was in hard and difficult cases and so could the better pity and help sinners when they obey God at a dear rate In affliction we have an experimental knowledge of that of which but a notional knowledge before We come by experience to see how false and changeable the world is what a burden sin is What sweetness there is in the promises What a reality in the world to come How comfortable an interest in God is Luther said Qui tribulantur sacras Scripturas melius intelligunt securi fortunati eas legunt sicut Ovidii carmen The afflicted see
Body and so remaineth a widdow as it were till the Body be raised up and united to it 'T is without its mate and companion so that it remaineth destitute of half its self which though it may be born for a while yet not for ever 2dly 'T is agreeable to the Wisdom Justice and Goodness of God that the Body which had its share in the work should have its share in the reward 'T is the Body which is most gratified in sin and the Body which is most pained in obedience What is it that was wearyed and tyred and endured all the labours and troubles of Christianity Therefore the Body that is the Souls Sister and Coheir is to share with it in its Eternal Estate whatsoever it be before that the wicked are but in part punished and the Godly in part rewarded There is a time when God will deal with the whole man 3dly The state of those that dye will not be worse then the state of those that are only changed at Christs coming The Bodies are not destroyed but perfected the substance is preserved only endued with new qualities Now there would be a disparity among the glorified if some should have their Bodies others not 4thly In the Heavenly estate there are many objects which can only be discerned by our Bodily senses The Humane Nature of Christ the beauty of the Heavenly place or Mansion of the Blessed with other the works of God which certainly are offered to our contemplation Now if God find objects he will find faculties How shall we see those things which are to be seen hear those things which are to be heard unless we have Bodies and Bodily senses 5thly As Christ was taken into Heaven so we For we shall bear the Image of the Heavenly He carryed no other flesh into Heaven but what he assumed from the Virgin that very Body which was carryed in her womb which was laid down as a sacrifice for sin that very Body was carryed into Heaven Phil. 3.21 The Body that is subject to so many infirmities that is harrassed and worn out with labours exposed to such pains and sufferings even that Body shall be like Christs Glorious Body 1 Cor. 15.43 44. It shall not be decayed with Age nor wasted with sickness nor need the supplies of meat and drink nor be subject to pains and Aches c. Well then let us serve God Faithfully 1 Cor. 15.58 Therefore my beloved brethren be ye stedfast unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as ye know that your Labour is not in vain in the Lord. SERMON VII 2 Cor. 5.5 Now he that hath wrought us for this self same thing is God who also hath given unto us the Earnest of his Spirit HAving shewed 1. The Persons who desire Eternal Glory v. 3. 2. The Manner of desiring not simply to be unclothed v. 4. 3. He now shews the grounds of desiring in this verse They are two 1. God hath fitted us for this very thing 2. He hath given us the Pledge and Earnest of this Glorious estate All the business will be 1. To open the Expressions 2. To shew how these are grounds of the Desire First To open the meaning of the Expressions 1. God's forming us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is that self same thing he speaketh of A groaning and an earnest desire after Immortality say some We would gladly be rid of our Burthen here and be in Heaven and surely the sense of Nature would not incline us to so holy an Affection No God hath wrought us for this self same thing hath framed such a desire in us We know and are assured that when this earthly Tabernacle is dissolved we have a Building c. say others Surely this persuasion is of God created and produced in the hearts of his People by his Special Grace Flesh and Blood hath not shewed it to us Still good Others carry it higher That we eye things unseen and make them our scope still this is from Grace not from Nature for Nature looketh only to things before us to present welfare That we are contented though our outward man perish so that our inward man be renewed Surely all this is from God A man may admire Coelestial Happiness but not industriously desire it and self-denyingly seek after it to the loss of the Contentments and Interests of the bodily life unless God move his heart and supernaturally bestow such a disposition towards himself All this is true and good but 't is a part of this sense The Apostle speaketh not of the Desire but of the Happiness its self that we may be capable of it He first formeth us and frameth us for this very thing 1. Here in this World he fits us and prepareth the Soul by Sanctification or Regeneration purifying and cleansing us from sin 2. For the Body the Spirit that now dwelleth in us will at last raise our mortal Bodies Rom. 8.11 and prepare us for that Immortality God now frameth the Souls of his People hereafter their Bodies They are wrought to this thing Man must be new made before he is capable of entring into glory There is a new work on the Souls and on the Bodies of his Saints they must be new moulded and transformed before they are brought into this Blessed estate The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noteth a powerful work and an exact work None who are unfit or unmeet for Heaven get an access to it no we are framed for this very thing II. Given us the Earnest of his Spirit This better life is sealed and confirmed to us by Earnest Dona gifts that is one thing As we give a shilling to a Beggar Pignus a pawn or pledge is another As when a poor man layeth his Tools at pledge with an intent when he can make up the money borrowed to fetch it away again But Arrha earnest is a part of the bargain till the whole be performed God will not deal with us by bare Covenant but give Earnest to assure us the more of that life which he hath promised in his Covenant we have a tast and experience of it in the present work of his Spirit Secondly How these are grounds of this Desire There are Two things considerable in that glorious estate which we expect according to promise the Certainty and the Excellency both are confirmed by God's working us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And giving us the Earnest c. 1. The Certainty of it is confirmed by both these by things the frame of the New Creature and Earnest of the Spirit 1. By the Frame of the New Creature If a Vessel be formed 't is for some end and what doth not attain its end is vain and lost A man may make a thing useless and short of its end but God cannot for he cannot mistake in the forming nor change his mind and therefore if God had made us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the end is sure to be
abhor their kinds of Conversation and therefore censure and judge them as a sort of crasy brains that do not know what is good for them Men that live in any sinful course are unwilling that any should part company with them in their way wherein they will go that there may be none to make them ashamed which testify that their deeds are evil Job 7.7 Or to condemn by their practice what they allow Heb. 11.7 And the sweetness of Christs service is wholly hid from them and therefore are never more furiously confident then when most deceived and most blind and others appear in a real contradiction to their humours 4. Let us see how justly this crimination may be retorted and that their way is properly madness And in this sense Bedlam is every where the whole World is a dreaming distracted World a meer incurable Bedlam 1. If you will stand to the Judgment of God the case is determined that every carnal man is a fool and out of his wits There is all the reason in the World that he should be counted a fool and one besides himself whom God calleth fool for he is best able to Judge because he is the Fountain of Wisdom Psa. 49.13 The Holy-Ghost hath determined the case this their way is their folly Jobs Hypocrites and Solomons fools and those whom John calleth the World and Paul the carnal they are all the same company only diversified in the notion 2. We will give them as partial a Judge as can be First in the Judgment of their own hearts they are fools and mad-men when they are serious As when a man is convinced by the Spirit of God he cometh to himself as 't is said of the prodigal Luke 15.17 He came to himself The First thing that he is convinced of is the folly and madness of his carnal course Therefore every one of us must become a fool that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3.18 A Child of God when he cometh out of a Temptation Psa. 73.22 I was as a beast before thee Titus 3.3 We were sometimes foolish mad men or men out of their wits in regard of our perverse choice and till we repent we are never our selves then we are in our wits again The prodigal grew in his folly till he came to his Father and he went not to his Father till he came to himself We then come to our selves when we know our folly mourn for it and seriously amend it The First degree of wisdom is to know our folly The Second to turn from it and betake our selves to a wiser course 2dly When he cometh to die Luke 12.20 Thou fool this night thy Soul shall be required of theee Why fool Because every thing was provided for but that which should be most provided for his precious and Immortal Soul He that provideth but for half and that the worser half and that but for a short time is a fool In his greatest extremity his Eyes are opened Jer. 17 11. At his latter end he shall be a fool In the conviction of his own Conscience his heart will rave at him Oh fool oh vain mad-man death bloweth away all vain conceits and fancies when all our vain pursuits and projects will leave us in the dirt 3. plain reason will evidence carnal men to be besides themselves I prove it thus There is in madness two things amenti● furor folly and fury That there are both these in a carnal man I shall prove by these Demonstrations for a tast 1. There is in them the folly of a distracted man or one bereft of his senses even in the wisest Worldlings and sensualists 1. Though they acknowledge a God by whom and for whom they were made and from whom they are faln by sin and cannot be happy but in returning to him yet the Worldly man knoweth no misery but in bodily and Worldly things no happiness but in pleasing his senses The beginning progress and end of his course is all from himself in himself and to himself looking only to things near at hand every toy that pleaseth his humour is good to him poureth out his heart upon it and loseth himself for it and will neither admit information of his errour nor reformation of his practice till death destroy him and the God that made him is forgotten days without number Rom. 3.10 There is none that understandeth and seeketh after God 2. They that neglect their main business and leave it undone and run up and down they know not why nor wherefore surely they act like mad and distracted not like wise and rational men Now alas worldly and carnal men spend their time and cares for nothing like Children and Boys that follow a Bubble blown out of a shell of soap till it break and dissolve This is the most serious business of worldly wise men they court a vain World which they seem to count Religion and though they believe Eternal Life and Death yet they make no great matter of it And though all their Life should be spent in fleeing from wrath to come and seeking after Heaven in the first place yet they never seriously enquire whether they shall be in Heaven or in Hell They know they must shortly die and be in one of them either endless joy or misery Yet they have not the wit to avoid Damnation or to prefer Heaven above inconsiderable vanities But like busy Ants run up and down their molehill lay out their time and thoughts upon impertinencies and some of them are blaspheming of God and scoffing at the Religion they do profess others whoring and debauching others flying in the face of them that would curb their folly others running after preferment and so eager in the pursuit of some worldly honour which they know to be slippery but they run after it as if it were their only felicity over-running one another like Boys at Foot-Ball and contending so earnestly as if it were some great desirable prize Others grasping after the World with both hands though within a little while it must fall to they know not who and be spent they know not how Come to any of those and interpose a few sober and serious words about Eternity they will answer as Antigonus when one presented him with a treatise of summum bonum or true Happiness he answered I am not at leisure Or as Felix when his Conscience wambled said to Paul I will send for thee at a more Convenient season Now what are all these but a company of mad-men Their great business lyeth by and trifles take up their time and care and thoughts men are sundry ways out of their wits and only one way in them That is when the true fear of God and the sense of the other World ruleth in their Hearts But every one is so wedded to his lusts that they will not consider and repent or suffer admonition Oh the folly and madness of the World Oftentimes 't is seen that men are
God to be what he is we are but a kind of witnesses to Gods Glory But he is an efficient in our Glory He bestoweth upon us what was not before and the Glory he bestoweth upon us answereth the greatness of his being 2 Cor. 4.17 For our light afflictions which are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and Eternal weight of Glory He will at length act like himself as an Infinite and Eternal Power His gift shall answer his nature a far more exceeding and Eternal weight of Glory 6. Gratitude bindeth us continually to live unto God Every moment God is at work for us and therefore every moment we should be at work for God John 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto and I work In every thing we should be mindful of him you are upheld by him every moment and have life and breath and all things from him 7. Our great end must fix our minds which otherwise will be tossed up and down in several and various uncertainties and distracted by a multiplicity of ends and objects that it cannot continue in any composed and setled frame Psa. 86.11 Vnite my heart And Jam. 1.8 A double minded man is unstable in all his ways An uncertain mind breedeth an uncertain life not one part of our lives will agree with another because the whole is not firmly knit by the power of their last end running through them Most mens lives are but a meer lottery because they never minded in good earnest why they came into the World The fancies they are governed by are jumbled together by chance if right 't is but a good hit a casual thing They live at peradventure and then no wonder they walk at random Means 1. Rowse up thy self and consider often the end for which you were created and sent into the World Our Lord saith John 18.37 For this cause was I born and for this end sent into the World that I might bear witness to the truth So should every one consider for what errand God sent him into the World If these self-communings were more rife they would do us a great deal of good Why do I live here what have I done in pursuance of my great end Most men live as beasts eat and drink and trade and die and there is all that can be said of them little have they served God or done good in their Generation Certainly you were not made to serve your selves nor any other Creatures but that other Creatures might serve you and ye serve God Will ye once sit down in good earnest about this business and mind the work for which ye were born Many never asked yet in good earnest for what purpose they came into the World and then no wonder they wander and walk at random since they have not as yet proposed any certain scope and aim to themselves All that we have to know is what is our end and the right way to obtain it And all that we have to do is to seek the end by those means Now we should often consider whether we do so yea or no for comparing our ways with our rule is the way to awake and come to Wisdom Psa. 119.59 I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy Testimononies I labour I take pains I rise early I go to bed late but to what end is all this What is it that my Soul doth principally aim at in all these things Oh consider seriously and frequently for whom are you at work for whom are you speaking and spending your time For whom do you use your Bodies your Souls your time your estate your labours and cares Oh my Soul what is thy end in all these things 2. Remember thou art not thine own to dispose of The sense of Gods interest in us should be often renewed upon our hearts 1 Cor. 6.19 Ye are not your own therefore glorify God He hath a full right in all that we have and do Rom. 14.8 For whether we live we live unto the Lord Or whether we die we die unto the Lord Whether we live therefore or die we are the Lords he hath jus possidendi disponendi utendi a power to possess dispose and use the Creature at his own pleasure And if they alienate themselves from him or use themselves to any other purpose than for his Service and Glory they do as much as in them lyeth to disposess him of his right there is nothing doth so strongly bind us absolutely to resign our selves to the will use and service of our Creator as his right and interest in us 'T is meet that God should be served with his own Every man expecteth to receive the fruit of his vineyard the improvement of his own money and goods We think we speak reasonably when we say we demand but our own All the disorder of the Creature proceedeth from the denyal or forgetfulness of Gods Propriety in us Psa. 12.4 Our tongues are our own who is Lord over us Therefore if we would live unto God we must often think of it and revive it upon our Souls that we may not dispose of our selves or any thing that is ours but for the Glory of God and prefer his interest before our own 3. Consider how much we are bound in gratitude to devote our selves to Gods use and service for the great mercies of Creation Redemption and daily Providence Certainly if we have a due sense of the Lords goodness to us we will devote the whole man our whole time and strength to his service will and honour the glorifying of God is the fruit of love The context sheweth that Love is but the reflex of Gods Love or the beating back of his beam upon himself Because he hath loved us we love him and because we love him we live to him and seek his Glory and Honour 'T is gratitude keepeth this resolution afoot of being and doing all things for God he shewed love to us in Creation when we started out of nothing into the life and being of man But he shewed more love to us in Redemption when his own Son came to die for us And that 's the greater ingagement to bind us to live unto God And so 't is pressed every where in the Scripture But yet God reneweth his mercies to us every day that the variety and freshness of them producing new delight may revive the feelings of his love and goodness and excite us to renewed zeal for his Glory and delight in his service and to imploy our time and strength to his Glory with a thankful heart In short Creation bindeth us for to whom should we live but to him from whom and by whom we live Having all from God we should in gratitude bring back all to him Redemption bindeth us for we are purchased to God not to our selves And God carryed it on in such an astonishing way the more to oblige us that we might readily and freely yield up our selves
glorified in it Holiness as 't is a conformity to God and the work for the works sake Not but the other considerations tend to this and have an influence upon this so much obliged to Christ that every thing is sweet as it cometh from him or relateth to him 2. Sinful respect to the benefits and rewards of religion bewrayeth its self in four things 1 When Christ is loved for worldly advantages We must always distinguish between our Spiritual Interests and our Carnal To respect Christ for our Temporal advantage is that which God abhorreth as those that followed Christ for the loaves John 6.28 To be fed with a 〈◊〉 without labour and pains 〈◊〉 vix diligitur Jesus propter Jesam Scarce is Jesus loved for Jesus sake And still Christs name is reverenced but his office and saving grace are disregarded and men are content with his common gifts not seeking after his special benefits 'T is no great matter to own that which is publickly esteemed and now Christ is every where received to make a general profession of being Christians Saith Gilbert Now the Doctrine of Christ is handled in Councils disputed of in the Schools preached in Assemblies and his religion made the publick profession of Nations 'T is no great matter of thanks to own the general belief of Christianity There are many bastard motives of closing with Christ and his ways as fame and ease and carnal honour and the ●un-shine of Worldly countenance These are quite another thing than when a poor Soul out of the sense of his lost estate would desire Christ and would fain part with any thing ●o gain Christ Phil. 3.7 8 9. And a sound conviction of our misery and a sense of his excellency and our suitableness maketh us to close with him The other followed him for the loaves Indeed because his bread was buttered with worldly conveniencies By a respect to such base motives religion is prostituted to secular interests 2. When we have a carnal notion of the true rewards of godliness Carnal men look upon Heaven as a place of case and pleasure when Christ had spoken of the bread that will make men live for ever John 6. 34. They cryed out evermore give us of this bread of life They thought no more than of an everlasting continuance in the present earthly estate such carnal notions have men of Heaven as of a Turkish paradise but to know God and love God and have the Soul filled up with God to be with Christ and to be perfected in holiness these things work little upon them The Heaven of Christians is to injoy an everlasting communion with God To live in the belief and hopes of such an Heaven and to delight our Souls in the forethought of the endless sight and love of God This is a true act of sincere love to Christ seeking its full satisfaction Here we see him but as in a glass there face to face We shall behold the Glory of God in Heaven and the delights of love will then be perfect But usually men have a carnal notion of Heaven by a voluptuous life without labour and pain and trouble and this tainteth their hearts their apprehensions of benefit by Christ are Faeculent Earthly and drossy 3. When our respects to benefits are disorderly not in the frame wherein God hath set them As for instance when we desire some benefits and not others or hate his ways and love his benefits Numb 23.10 Oh that I might die the death of the righteous They love him as a Redeemer but hate him as a Law-giver A carnal man would sever the benefits from the duties As Ephraim is as an heifer not taught which would tread out the Corn but not break the clods Hosea 10.11 Their threshing was by the feet of Oxen shod with Iron Now the mouth of the Ox that treadeth out the Corn was not to be muzzled But harrowing and breaking the clods was a meer labour and no priviledge they would do the one but not the other If you love Christs benefits you must love them altogether Not taking one and leaving out another you shall not have pardon without sanctification nor the comforts of his Spirit without his quickening and purifying influence Nor freedom from Hell without freedom from sin Christ must guide you and rule you dwell in you and bless you and justify you and what ever he is made of God that he must be to you 1 Cor. 1.30 He will not give you any such grace as shall discharge you from duty and be a kind of licence and priviledge to sin 4. When we rest in the lowest acts of love and do not go on the perfection The first acts have more of self-love in them than love to God you must go on from them to gratitude and from gratitude to adoration an humble adoration of the Divine excellencies for the Divine excellencies are lovely in themselves as well as his benefits are comfortable to us and by an acquaintance with God in Christ we must settle into a more intire friendship with him and delight as much in praising him for his excellencies as we do in blessing him for his benefits The Angels and blessed Spirits that are above do admire and adore God because of the excellencies of his Nature not only for the benefits they have received from him they are represented as crying out Isa. 6.3 Holy Holy Holy Lord God of Hosts By admiring and being affected with his Holy Nature and Soveraign Majesty and dominion and are we no way concerned in this Surely God must be lauded and served on Earth as he is in Heaven and though we cannot reach to their degree yet some kind of this respect belongeth unto us In the Revelations the Four living Weights and TwentyFour Elders are brought in Rev. 4 8. Saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come Now by the four Beasts or four living Weights and the TwentyFour Elders the Interpreters generally understand the Gospel Church who are continually praising God for the Unity of his Essence the Trinity of Persons together with his Eternity Omnipotency and Holiness to shew we should love these things and be affected with these things as well as his bounty and goodness to us Indeed a Christian is like a River when it first boileth up out of the fountain it contenteth its self with a little hole but afterwards it seeketh for a larger channel but is still pent within banks and bounds but when it emp●●et● it self into the Ocean it expatiateth and inlargeth its self and is wholly mingled with the Ocean 2. Case is about the actual perswasion of Gods love to us For since this love of gratitude ariseth from a sense or apprehension of Gods love to us in Christ Therefore Gods Children are troubled when they cannot make particular application as Paul and say he loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2.20 Ans. 1. A particular persuasion of Gods love