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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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sinnes in two respects chiefely First because he did undergoe the imputation of all our sinnes our faults were charged upon him as our surety He was made sin for us 2 Cor. 5.21 He stood before Gods justice in our roome Secondly because hee suffered the malediction due to our sinnes by the Law Hee bare our sinnes in being made a sacrifice for sinne He became indebted unto the justice of God as our surety to beare the curses of the Law which our sinnes deserved Esay 53.5 8. Ga● 3.10 And as this is true in generall of all the wrath of God and the fearfull things due to our sinnes so if we marke the story of Christs sufferings wee may observe how the sinnes of our first parents and our owne light heavily upon his backe God suffering our sinnes to be charged upon him in a speciall fitnesse of the judgement to our sinnes and that wee may note both in the circumstances of our sinning and in the sorts of sinnes For the circumstances The first Adam sinnes in a garden the second Adam suffers fearfully for sinne in a garden The second Adam suffers on a tree and so beares the sinne of the first Adam eating the forbidden fruit of a tree For the sorts of sinne Why was Christ betrayed by Iudas denyed by Peter forsaken by all his Disciples refused by the Priests and people but because wee had betrayed denied forsaken and refused God in Paradise And many of us are now guilty of the same or the like sinnes in the course of our lives He was charged to bee a seducer to satisfie for our being seduced for our evill words and sinfull excuses he was silent because wee and our first Parents have preferred the Divell before God therefore was a malefactor preferred before him Why was he mocked buffered and spit upon but to beare the shame was due unto us for our filthinesse and vile conversation Why drank he gall but to pay for our sinfull pleasures Why suffered he reviling and scoffing but to satisfie for our sinfull words Many other things might be observed The consideration whereof should serve for many Uses and so it should teach us divers duties as Uses First since he hath borne our sinnes in the imputation of them and the malediction due unto them wee should bee most ready and willing to beare his crosse as accounting it a great shame to bee unwilling to suffer a little and for a little while for his sake that hath borne such strange things for us we should be content to forsake all for his sake Secondly it should grieve us at the heart for our sinnes considering the fearfull imputation of our faults charged upon him and the bitter things hee suffered to make amends to Gods justice for our wickednesse Zach. 12.10 Thirdly hath Christ borne our sinnes and can wee finde in our hearts to sinne any more shall he againe be charged with our faults shall we againe crucifie him Rom. 6.6 Heb. 10.24 c. and as followeth in the next words of this Text. Fourthly Oh how should we love the Lord Jesus that holy One that bare the imputation of such base crimes and endured such grievous things for us before wee ever knew him or cared for him even for us that were enemies to him Deserve they not to bee accursed that love not the Lord Jesus 1 Pet. 1.9 ● Cor. 16.22 Fiftly we should therefore eat the Passeover with sowre hearbs we should remember his grievous sufferings with hearty affection and melting of soule before the Lord when we come before him to celebrate the memory of his Passion in the Sacrament Sixtly we should no more stagger or waver in faith but with all peace and joy in beleeving rest upon the propiriation made by Christ for our sins wee should therefore confidently beleeve the pardon of all our sinnes because he hath borne ou● iniquities If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes Seventhly we should never more bee afraid of death and hell for our debt being paied by the surety the hand-writing that was against us is now cancelled Col. 2.15 and there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 Heb. 2.14 Eighthly we should not be so much troubled to be unjustly traduced seeing Christ beyond all example suffered most unspeakable ignominie bearing the i●putation of the sinnes of all the Elect. Ninthly seeing he hath beene made in the similitude of sinfull flesh and suffered for sinne in the flesh wee should strive to bee made the righteousnesse of God in him and as he hath borne our sins so should we strive to beare his vertues Who his owne selfe It is emphaticall that the Apostle saith He bare our sinnes his owne selfe for there be two things which are here imported First that he had no partners there were none with him He bare all himselfe Esay 59.16 He trod the wine-presse alone Esay 63.3 5. And therefore it is a vile dishonour to Christ to ascribe any part of satisfaction to our selves or to any Saint or Angel Secondly it imports that therefore his suffering is of infinite value in that he bare all his owne selfe in person who was God and man Then it will follow that he hath made a sufficient propitiation for all the world 2 Iohn 2.1 2. In his body Quest. Why did he not suffer in his soule Answ. Yes for so saith the Scripture He made his soule a sacrifice for sin Esay 53.10 and the Son of man came to give his soule a ransome for many Mat. 20.28 Mark● 10.45 This was shadowed out by the Holocaust or whole burnt-offering for it noted that the whole man should suffer So in the Sacrament the breaking of the bread is not referred so properly to his body for there was not a bone broken of him saith the holy text but fitly to his soule which was broken with sorrowes and heavinesse for our sakes So that by the body he meanes synechdochically whole Christ but yet the body is named because that was the outward sacrifice that was offered for our sins on the tree Christ then bare our sinnes in his body What may wee learne from thence First we see a manifest difference betwixt Christs Priesthood and theirs in the Law For they offered the bodies of beasts or fowles but Christ offered his owne body Secondly we may take comfort in the assurance that he is the Saviour of our bodies as well as our soules Thirdly seeing such grievous things befell the body of Christ why seeke we so much ease for our bodies why pamper we our flesh so and why are we so impatient in the paines of our bodies and remember not what Christ suffered in his body Fourthly we should therefore esteeme his body to be a precious body above all bodies seeing it was laid downe as a price for our sinnes yea we should long to see that glorious body
wicked and dissolute 4. By confession and godly sorrow to beat downe and crucifie our flesh and the lusts thereof when they begin to rise Thus of the matter to be avoided viz. The lusts of their former ignorance The manner followes viz. not to be fashioned unto them which imports that they should not give themselves over out of the liking of sin to the service and obedience of it For to fashion our selves to evill hath in it divers things 1. The imagining of mischiefe praeconsideration deliberation the frame of evill 2. An admiration of the beauty of sin a liking of it a secret inward high estimation of it a kind of adoring of the felicity contained in it a contemplative delight in it 3. A taking care to performe it and accomplish it 4. A framing and ordering of our affaires that they may be obeyed and the inward frame effected 5. A constancy in all this to be every day striving about it 6. A pursuing of sinne though we be disappointed or cloyed in the enjoying of it 7. A laying downe of all our armour and not resisting it The Use of this is 1. For information wee may here note implyedly that Gods servants have their frailties after calling in that he doth only exhort from fashioning our selves to sinne 2. For tryall Art thou grieved for thy daily sinnes and wants and dost thou foare thou dost sinne presumptuously here thou mayest try thy selfe by 1. inquiring whether thou fall to thy old sinnes or no. 2. whether thou sin with study and deliberation 3. whether thou admire sin and accordingly favour it and delight in it 4. whether thou take care for it being vexed if thou be crossed in it casting about for all waies to accomplish it 5. whether thou yeeld thy selfe to it as a servant to obey it or rather as a childe of disobedience to be framed according to it 6. whether thou refuse to beare armes against it 7. and lastly continue in the love of it though thou be disappointed For if thou beare armes against it and art thankfull when thou art disappointed and dost not by covenants yeeld thy selfe to it nor place thy happinesse in it or not sinne by deliberation it is certaine thy sinnes are but of infirmity But contrariwise if these things be in thee before condemned thou sinnest presumptuously Here also men may try whether they decline or no after calling 3. We should be here informed to take heed of any of these degrees of sin and by a daily watch to looke to our selves that wee be not overcome of the deceitfulnesse of sinne and be thankfull to God if thy sins get not this head in thee or if they have dally no longer but repent For certainly thou art fallen away inquire no further into it but repent and amend 4. Lastly here is implyed wherein the holinesse of a Christian doth consist viz. 1. To be free from the power of his old corruptions 2. To fashion himselfe to the law of God and the law of his minde It doth not consist in the perfect resembling of the holinesse of Gods law but in a desire and daily endevour to fit and frame himselfe more and more to the holinesse set before him and that daily striving still to come neerer and neerer to the patterne Ignorance There are three sorts of ignorance 1. There is a profitable ignorance 2. There is an ignorance of meere negation that is no sinne 3. There is a ignorance of corrupt disposition There is a profitable ignorance viz. not to know evill so it had beene good for Adam never to have known evill by experience so had it beene good for the Iewes if they had never known the fashions of the Gentiles and in some respect for Apostates if they had never knowne the truth 2 Pet. 2.21 There is also an ignorance of meere negation as Christ knew not the day of Judgement and husbandmen know not Physick or Astronomie c. and yet sinne not But most usually ignorance is taken in the third sense to note that want of knowledge is joyned with evill disposition also and so it is taken here Now this ignorance is either of frailty or of wilfulnesse and presumption The one is in the godly after calling and they pray against it and confesse it and mourne for it and the other is in wicked men and they like themselves well enough notwithstanding yea they refuse the knowledge of Gods waies and willingly live without knowledge and this latter is here meant But why is ignorance named as the speciall sin to set out their unregenerate estate seeing they were guilty of many other sins Not because men sinne onely by ignorance as the Platonists thinke but 1. It may be the holy Ghost doth of purpose doe it to aggravate the hatefulnesse of the sinne because men use to excuse it and make light of it 2. Because it is a sinne none are free from If he had named whoredome or drunkennesse c. many unregenerate men would have pleaded not-guilty 3. This sinne serves more to taunt and reproch the rebellious nature of man It was the knowledge of good and evill that Adam so much aspired unto and loe now he and all his were set in grosse ignorance as the just fruit of aspiring after forbidden knowledge 4. Because ignorance is the mother and nurse of all sorts of sinnes as these places shew Eph. 4.18 19. 2 Pet. 2.12 Psal. 36.2 3 4. But have unregenerate men no knowledge that he thus directly chargeth the unregenerate estate of the very Elect with ignorance Yes they have some knowledge For they are wise to doe evill and they may have great knowledge and learning in Arts and Sciences and they may have excellent civill knowledge to manage civill affaires and may abound in skill to get money and advance their estates and they have in matters of religion the light of nature and the generall grounds of knowledge of the principles in Scripture yea they may raste of the good word of God and the powers of the life to come But yet they are justly taxed with ignorance because they know no● God as a Father by the light of faith nor whom hee hath sent Christ Iesus and besides they have no desire nor delight to know their owne iniquities or the way how to reforme their owne lives they have no knowledge to doe good These things being thus resolved there are divers observations to be noted from hence 1. That a true Convert must make conscience of inward sins as well as outward of defects as well as evill desires or lusts as here of ignorance as well as of wicked thoughts The same God that saith How long shall thy evill thoughts abide in thee complaines also of ignorance as Esay 1.3 2. That ignorance is no small sin it is exceeding hatefull to God contrary to the doctrine of the Papists that say it is the mother of devotion 3. That without
so Israel was Elect 2. There is an Election to salvation which is the eternall predestination of God appointing certaine men to be vessels of mercy and to enjoy the glory of heaven 3. There is an Election to sanctification which is performed in time by the power of the Gospell separating the fore-ordained from the masse of forlorne men unto holinesse of life This is nothing else but effectuall vocation 4. There is an El●ction to the administration of some office as to the Apostleship Election imports a singling of a man from some thing that is vil● and miserable and so the godly are elect from the masse of condemned men in Adam and from under the power of Sathan and the kingdome of darknesse from the first death from the company of evill men from the tyranny of sinnes of all ●o●●s from 〈◊〉 ●igo● an● 〈◊〉 o●●he law and eternall ●ondemnation These Elect men are not to be knowne by their numbers wit wealth nobility beauty personage nor by their presence paines or priority in Gods vineyard but they are to be knowne both by their birth and by their life By their birth and so they may be knowne for they are borne of God borne by promise borne againe they are then called and converted of God Rom. 8.30 By their life they may be knowne for they depart from iniquity and call upon the name of the Lord. 2 Tim. 2.19 they are fruitfull in well-doing and their fruits remaine Iohn 15.16 they are holy and unreb●keable Ephes. 1.4 they beare the image of the Son of God both in holinesse and sufferings for holinesse Rom. 8.29 They abound in faith vertue godlinesse knowledge temperance patience brotherly love and kindnesse 2 Pet. 1.5.6.10 These Elect men have admirable felicities and priviledges aboue all the men in the world For 1. They have most deare acceptation with God in his beloved Eph. 1.5 they are his delight Psal. 132.13 his chiefe treasure Psal. 135.4 his pe●uliar people Deut. 7.6 26.18 2. They are adopted to bee the children and heires of God in Christ Ephes. 1.4 3. They have the pleasures of Gods house Psal. 65.4 5. 4. In adversity they are sure of countenance Esa. 41.8 9. Protection v. 10. the avenging of their wrongs Esay 41.11 12. Luke 18.8 deliverance and victory Zach. 1.17.20.21 5. The non-suting of all actions and accusations in heaven against them Rom. 8.35 6. They are made the friends of God and from thence have audience in all suites and communication of the secrets of God Iohn 15.15 16. Deut. 4.7.37 7. They are assured of preservation to the end Mat. 24. 8. They shall obtaine glory in Iesus Christ being chosen to salvation ● Thess. 2.13 14 15. Hence we may informe our selves 1. That there is a choice God did not drive in whole Nations Cities Townes c. but a certaine number of them 2. That the doctrine of Election may be taught It is true that it is in some respects strong meate and hath in some things an Abyssus It should also inflame in every one of us both praises and prayers to God that he would above all things remember us with the favour of his people and comfort us with the joy of his chosen and above all care to care to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 What shall it profit a man to be sure of his house money lands c. and not to be sure of the salvation of his soul Know yee not that Christ Iesus is in you except you be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 Such as finde by the signes their Election should abound in all possible thankfulnesse to God 2 Thess. 2. 13. c. Further hath God cho●en us and shall we not live like Gods Elect It should teach us to endeavour to shew by our workes that we are chosen of God separating our selves from the wicked and holding forth the light of the truth in all unrebukablenesse of holy conversation not being discouraged with ill entertainment in the world Deut. 10.12 to 18. 14.1 26.26 c. Ephes. 1.5 2.10 Iohn 15.18 19 20. c. Finally we should hence learne not to be ashamed of Gods Elect but choose unto us whom God hath chosen to him choose them I say both to honor them and to sort with them and to countenance them and defend them Ministers should acknow●edge there in their teaching and great men in conversing This also may be a doctrine of singular terror to wicked men that will not be gathered and called by the meanes of salvation Esay 66.4 5. If it be such a felicity to be chosen of God what misery is it then to be rejected of God for ever If such a vexation to be disgraced and scorned of great men what is it then to be rejected of the great God and this is the more wofull if the fore-runner of the full declaration of it be upon men I meane a spirit of slumber Rom. 11.7.10 And thus of Election This Election is first amplified by the ground of it which is the fore-knowledge of God According to fore-knowledge Praescience or fore-knowledge in God is considered more largely or more strictly more largely and so it notes the whole act of praeordination so in the 20. verse of this chapter it is rendred ordained more strictly and properly for the knowledge of God praeceding in order the appointment to the end and thus it is taken two wayes For there is a praescience they call in schooles absolute by which God from eternity doth know all things simply and absolutely so the word is used 2 Pet. 3.17 There is also a praescience they call speciall by which God not onely knoweth the Elect as hee knoweth other things but acknowledgeth them for his and loves them above all others and this is called the knowledge of approbation Rom. 8.27 11.2 In the first sense there is difference betweene Fore-knowledge Providence and Predestination Praescience reacheth to all things to bee done either by God or any other and so to sinnes Providence reacheth to all that God would doe Predestination onely to the counsell of God about reasonable creatures Quest. If any aske after what maner God viewes things or lookes upon them or knowes them Answ. I answer that we are not able to expresse the maner of divine knowledge unlesse it bee by way of negation that is by denying to God those wayes of knowledge which are in the creatures and note imperfection For God doth not know things 1. By sense as by hearing seeing tasting c. For these things are in God only by an Anthropopathy or Metaphore 2. By opinion or conjecture For that knowledge is neither certaine nor evident and therefore cannot be in God 3. By faith For God knowes nothing by relation or report of others Besides though faith bee a certaine knowledge yet it is not evident Heb. 11.1 4. By Art For
that God may withhold his comforts and lead thee to some tentations to try thee whether thou wilt beleeve without feelings It is not strange for Gods servants after their greatest comforts to be assailed with greatest tryals For so after forgivenesse of sinnes we are taught to looke for tentations and pray against them in the Lords prayer as Christ was tempted presently after his confirmation in Baptisme Paul soiled with vile tentations after his revelations David afflicted worse then before after his annointing 4. It will be profitable to set thy heart in some order and by examination and particular judging of thy selfe resisting evill to reduce thy selfe into a better frame and order of well-doing Thus of the first point For the second wee may here observe that the image of God in us consists in obeying God with the obedience of children where two things may be noted 1. The imperfection of our obedience it is but as the conformity that is in children to the holinesse either inherent or prescribed by the Parent 2. The manner of the truth of our obedience and so there are sixe things imported in that similitude which must be in our obedience 1. It must proceed from love to God and goodnesse not for servile ends 2. It must be without distrustfull care about successe in outward things or a present reward of well-doing so is it in a child 3. With constancy a child is not hired for a day or a year to give over upon a quarters warning 4. With humility and feare 5. With faith or some perswasion of acceptation 6. In all things so doe Children Not fashioning your selves according to the lusts of your former ignorance One great part of our holinesse and Gods image in us is to keep our selves free from the lusts of our former ignorance that is from the power of such sins as we were specially guilty of before our callings or are specially hatefull in unregenerate men Before I enter upon the particular opening of the words in generall these things may be observed 1. That it is a singular dishonour to our holy profession for such as professe sincerity in their carriage to relapse into the similitude of carnall men and to beare againe the image of the old Adam or to fall to the sins againe they have repented of in profession 2. That after calling we must not onely avoid the foule acts of evill but strive against the power of lusts of evill even against the power of internall concupiscence In particular I consider in these words three things 1. The evils to be eschewed viz. lusts and former lusts 2. The manner of eschewing not fashion your selves 3. The motive they were the fruits of former ignorance For the first I propound three things to be also considered 1. What those lusts are of our former lives which are so hatefull after calling and doe so oppose the image of God in us 2. What reasons there are to move us so carefully to preserve our selves against them 3. What meanes we should use to be kept from them For the first By lusts here the Apostle 1. May meane those grosse sinnes which before calling while they were wicked some of them lived in such as were whoredome drunkennesse covetousnesse railings c. For these and such as these in the fourth Chapter hee calleth lusts of the Gentiles and such were some of them 1 Cor. 6.9 Lust signifies sometimes all sorts of sins Ephes. 4.22 Tit. 2.12 It is true it is a most lamentable griefe to see Gods children fall into grosse and soule evils and to run with the times in the same excesse of riot and disorder I say it is lamentable both in respect of the scandall of it and in respect of the wound it makes in the conscience and in respect of the fierce judgement of God wherewith he doth pursue it but I think this is not here meant or not chiefly For this is not enough to shew that we bear the image of Christ after calling that we are free from outward grosse sins but hee goeth further and therefore 2. Hee doth meane those inward evill desires which deforme and disfigure a Christian especially when they shew themselves outwardly by any signes or fruits of them Thus are they called affections Gal. 5.24 and thus there are divers sorts of Lusts especially hatefull after calling 1. The love of worldlinesse and the love of earthly things the relapsing to the desire after earthly things when it is immoderate It is a most lamentable thing to see a Christian that professeth the assurance of a better life lie digging like a mole in the earth c. Eph. ● 3 4. Ier 46. 2. The lusts of envie strife and malice 1 Cor. 3.3 Rom. 13.13 3. The lusts of vaine-glory and conceitednesse Gal. 5.24 25 26. 4. The lusts of uncleannesse and impurity Rom. 13.13 Col. 3.5 5. The lust of Epicurisme viz. the desire to fare deliciously and to weare dainty apparell This was Dives his lust Luke 16. 6. The lust of the eye 1 Ioh. 2.16 It is wonderfull unseemely to behold any of these in Christians The reasons why we should be so carefull to avoid these lusts are 1. It is the speciall will of God and a speciall part of our sanctification 1 Thes. 4.3 4. 2. These defile the soule and make it ill-favoured like a leprosie Matth. 15.19 20. 3. These are works of the flesh Gal. 5. and fruits of corruption in nature called lust o● concupiscence the uncleane issue they are of our corrupt and putrified natures the devill is the father of them and the flesh is the mother it is to beare the image of Sathan Ioh. 8.44 4. These fight against the soule as well as grosse evils 1 Pet. 2.12 5. The Apostle disgraceth them by saying they are foolish and noysome and so they are in their nature and effect 1 Tim. 6.9 6. These hinder the efficacie of Gods ordinances as the word 2 Tim. 3. 6. Mar. 4.19 prayer Iam. 4.1 3 4. 7. These lusts will quickly intise and be intised and quicken yea and bring forth too if they be not watchfully suppressed Iam. 1.15 16. As in this late instance Lust begat chambering Chambering begat sorcerie Sorcerie begat whoredome Whoredome begat desire of divorce Desire of divorce begat murther Murther begat the unknown villanies 8. Here lyeth the proofe of our sincerity in Christ 4.21 22. Now there are foure Preservatives to keepe us from the power of these lusts 1. The sound knowledge of Gods Word For as it is Ignorance that first bred them so is it knowledge that both drives them out and keeps them out Prov. 2.1 3 4. c. Psal. 119.9 especially the promises 2 Cor. 7.1 2 Pet. 1.3 2. Meditation of our short continuance in this world 1 Pet. 2.12 1 Ioh. 2.17 3. To walke before God and to keep our selves in the way of the righteous conversing with the wise and mortified shunning the company of the
reformation of ignorance we cannot be truely turned to God without knowledge the mind is not good therefore to teare the vaile is one part of Gods work in our conversion Prov. 19.3 Esay 25.8 4. That ignorance is wanton and full of lust Eph. 4.18 5. That the way to be rid of lusts is to be rid of ignorance For saving knowledge keeps us from sin Iam. 3.17 A godly man sinneth not because his seed abideth in him knowledge is the sword of the Spirit and here we may see the principall use wee should put our knowledge to viz. to clense our hearts of base thoughts and desires 6. That we may live in places of great meanes for knowledge and yet be grossely ignorant For he writeth here to the Jewes who had the law and the Prophets and the Oracles of God and the Priests c. 7. That all knowledge or learning without the knowledge of Gods favour in Christ and the way how to reforme our owne lives is but grosse darknesse and foolish ignorance as was before explained 8. That habituall lusts are a sure signe of ignorance whatsoever knowledg men pretend Lastly it may be profitably here asked Seeing there is ignorance even in the children of God after calling what are the signes of unregenerate ignorance Unregenerate ignorance may be discerned by divers signes 1. It hardens the heart and works a continued evill disposition to sinne with greedinesse Eph. 4.11 18. Now the ignorance in the godly may be where the heart is softned and the overflowings of corruption stopped 2. It hood winketh the soule in the maine things needfull to salvation as the knowledge of a mans owne iniquities God in Christ the forgivenesse of a mans owne sins and generally all the things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 For either wicked men perceive them not or not spiritually out of desire and care for them without corrupt ends A wicked man may discern spirituall things carnally but not spiritually 3. It hath never beene in the furnace I meane of mortification it hath never been truly repented of whereas the ignorance of the godly hath often been in the fire it hath been often confessed rended mourned for c. 4. It will suffer no saving grace to neighbour by it where ignorance hath not beene repented of there no feare of God no holy contemplation no uprightnesse love of God or his word or his people will dwell Now the ignorance that is in Gods children is well neighboured with many holy graces that can dwell by it And as these ignorances differ in nature and working so they differ in imputation For unto the godly there is a sacrifice for ignorance God d●th not impute ignorance unto the godly it shall be to them according to what they know and not according to what they know not And thus of ignorance and so of the 14. verse Verse 15. But as he which called you is holy so be you holy in all manner of conversation HItherto of the first branch of the description of Gods image in us as his children viz. our conformity to God in holinesse and so the image of God in us is our endevour to be like God in all things in holinesse There are three great considerations in this verse 1. whom we must imitate viz. him that hath called us 2. In what we must imitate him viz. in holinesse 3. how viz in all manner of conversation Ingenerall and from the coherence we must note 1. That it is not enough that we approve our selves to be Gods children that we avoid sin but we must also be employed in doing good Hence we are compared to trees in which barrennesse is as gr●at a fault as ill fruit 2. That the patterne of all holinesse is God himselfe or Christ or rather God in Christ. For whither else should we goe for example If to the dumbe creatures they have not natures capable of holinesse If to Angels they are invisible and so we cannot behold them and in Scripture little is recorded of them and besides we know many of them fell away If to man they are all fallen in Adam and there is none that doth good and good men have their both errors and sins Therefore we may say whom have wee in heaven but God and there is none in earth with him Vse Therefore wee should labour 1. To know God 2. To observe the specialty of his prais●s that are imitable both in his word and works 3. Wee must carry our selves with that humility and piety that we may walke with God else we cannot set him a● a patterne before us 3. That there are two pictur●s as it were presented to the soule and for both there is gre●t pleading for entertainment and liking The one is the picture of sinne even of sinnes repented of which are n●w varnished and with many plausible motives commended by b●th the world and the devill not without the good liking of the flesh The other is the picture as it were of the most holy God pourtraied out in the Gospell especially in the glory o● hi● holinesse Now here we are taught what to avoid and what to follow a●d the rather because here we are put in minde of the experience we have of Gods goodn●sse for it is he that ha●● called us Now of the former lusts t●ere can be assigned no good that we ●ave gotten by them The devill may lyingly tell us of some good to come but wee know that for the time past we got no●hing but shame and sorrow by them Thus of the generall As he that hath called you The first thing i● whom we must imitate a●d that is here exprest by 〈◊〉 to be he that hath called us viz. God and the Lord doth of purp●●● 〈…〉 o● descriptions of himselfe for divers rea●ons 1. 〈…〉 our disability to c●●ceive of God as he is fully and there●●re he 〈◊〉 his knowledg into us by drops or spar●les as it were so far is our nature swarved from the knowledge of God that the doctrine o● God in the whole i● a doctrin● too transcendent for us 2. This God d●th to excite affection in us toward him as taking no delight in a dull c●●templation of him and therefore by such p●riphrases he doth with some 〈◊〉 consideration either gore us if it be a phrase of terror or sudd●nly 〈◊〉 with some divine spa●●les that like lightning force our att●●d●●●● 3. The ●ord doth use such descriptions out of choice of 〈…〉 which is most pertinent to the question in hand The Lord thr●ugh●ut the whole Scripture is every where respective of the names he giveth 〈◊〉 therein shewing us what care we should have in taking up the name or title of God 4. It is a most forcible kind of speaking for compendiously it importeth abundance of matter usually more then the bare title it selfe would import as here thi● phrase He that called you doth not onely shew that it is God that is to be imitated
Solomon Eccles. 11.9 Dan. 7. Mal. 4. and many more after the Law by Christ Mat. 24. Paul 2 Thes. 1. Peter 2 Pet. 3. Iohn Rev. 2● 2. The types of it which are so many pledges doe certainly though fearfully foretell it such as were those dreadfull executions done upon wicked men in all ages as the drowning of the world the burning of the Cities Sodome c. the opening of the earth to swallow Corah Dathan and Abiram the destruction of Ierusalem c. yea he spared not the very Angels Iud. 6.2 Pet. 2.4 These stupendious works are monuments of a strange judgement to come 3. The exact fulfilling of the signs so many of them as belong to times past and present which were given as fore-runners of that judgement such as were 〈◊〉 Christs warres the apostacie of the Church the detection and falling of Antichrist c. 4. From the need of it for in this world the godly are oppressed and not righted and the wicked flourish and are not punished many times therefore of necessity there must be a time wherein all these things must be set in order 1. Let every man repent Act. 17.30 Here is no trifling it will certainly be and therefore repent or perish 2. Judge nothing before the time let us not judge one another but leave all judgement to God 1 Cor. 4.4 3. Let us not be impatient or fret at the prosperity of the wicked or be discouraged at the afflictions of the righteous for there shall come a time wherein the godly shall have full reward and honor and wicked men everlasting shame and paine Every man The whole world must come to judgement good and bad wee must all appeare before the Tribunall seat of Iesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.10 not onely all the godly but all the wicked of all sorts which will appeare by a distribution 1. The Pagans shall come to judgement such as have sinned without the law Rom 2. 2. The Iewes that crucified Christ or still doe deny him to be come in the flesh Rom 2. 3. Papists 2 Thes. 2. 4. Atheists that mock at his comming 2 Pet. 3.3 In the true Church 1. Grosse offenders Mal. 3.7 Rev. 21. 22. 2. Civill honest men Mat. 5.19 3. Rich and mighty men of the world God will not accept the person of Princes Iob 34.19 Iam. 5.1 3. 4. Hypocrites Mat. 23. Psal. 5● 16 5. The unmercifull Mat. 25. Iam. 2.13 6. Apostates Heb. 10.27 2 Pet. 2. 7. All that trouble the godly 2 Thes. 1. Gal. 5 1● 8. Inordinate censurers Rom. 2.1 2.3 Iam. 3.1 9. All unruly persons that will not be ordered according to Gods ordinances Mat. 25. goates 10. All that use scant measures wicked balances and false weights Mat. ● 10 11. Yea as I said before all the godly must be judged we must all appeare It is said the godly shall not be judged Iob. 3.18 6.54 They shall not be judged with the judgement of condemnation The Use. Therefore every man should stir up his heart to a carefull examination of himselfe and make his account and provide for his answer at that day and the rather should wee attend hereunto because the most men are after an unspeakable manner forgetfull of their latter end and suffer themselves to be drowned in the cares of life as if there were no time of cha●ging or reckoning The fourth and last point is the cause of the judgement imported in these words according to their works According to their works It shall be t● every man at that day according to his works if his works be evill he shall be damned if his works be good he shall be saved 2 Cor. 5 1● Rom. 2. For the better understanding of this doctrine divers questions and objections are to be resolved It seemes then faith shall not be inquired after It shall yea and that chiefly as appeares in the 7. verse of this Chapter and in many other Scriptures which avouch we are saved by faith yea and works are mentioned to this end because by them Christ shall evidently prove to the world the faith of his Elect hee will th●n shew their faith by their works yea faith is comprehended under the word works as being indeed the noblest of all works and that which most shineth in the life of a Christian it is the chiefe obedience required in the Gospell and the just live by their faith But how can works be looked upon in the Elect seeing they are not acknowledged as having merit in them Can they be saved by their works Works shall be inquired after in the godly not as meritorious causes of their salvation for the merit of heaven is onely in Christs works which onely are perfect But works shall be examined and judged 1. As the witnesses in that Assise that give in evidence concerning their calling and faith 2. As the conditions of Gods promises concerning reward in heaven not for their merit but of Gods free grace that will so crowne them Observe that the Scripture no where saith for their works but according to their works But how can the works of men be numbred they are so infinite The books shall then be opened viz. first the booke of Gods remembrance in which are fast graven the deeds of all men Rev. 20. Mal. 3.16 Secondly the consciences of all men shall be extended to an exact view of all the works of their life past By what law shall mens works be examined seeing the Pagans have not the Scriptures to guide them and the faithfull have not fulfilled the morall law in their owne persons The infidels shall be judged by the law of nature Rom. 2. the wicked in the Church by the morall law and the godly by the Go●p●ll Shall not wicked men be judged for their originall sin but onely for their evill works By works may be meant 1. both the worke of our fall in Adam as well as 〈…〉 worke 2. This phrase according to workes doth include all workes and yet not exclude the respect of other things besides workes a● faith in the godly and originall sinne in the wicked 3. Workes are but the ●ruits of corruption of nature and so syn●●dochically it is comprehended under them But shall no man be then judged for other mens workes as well as for their owne may not children be iudged for their fathers sinnes or one man iudged for the evill done by another as the Pharises for the blood of Abel and Zachar●as God as an absolute Monarch and iust governor may with temporall punishments chastise the posterity of wicked Parents and to warn the world 〈…〉 but hee cannot iudge them to eternall damnation further then they be guilty of their fathers sinnes either by consent assistance or 〈…〉 the Pharises be sent to hell for Abels bloud onely to farre as they were not warned by that example to avoid bloud To con 〈◊〉 no man
is the greatest happinesse on earth to get rid of the guilt and power of our vaine conversation This is a maine part of our redemption by Christ and chiefly intended 1. Quest. Is there not vanity in the conversation of the godly themselves Answ. There is for even in them there are vaine thoughts distractions in Gods service sometimes delight in vaine things alwaies too much love of earthly things too much liking of their owne waies hidden hypocrisie pride and such like 2 Quest. But how then can men be said to be redeemed from their vanity or vaine conversation seeing there is vanity still in them Answ. There are five degrees of our redemption from our vaine conversation 1. The first is the promise of it in the word 2. The second is the purchase of it by paying the price 3. The third is the imputation of it God justifying the sinner in Christ. 4. The fourth is the ●●cboation of it by the renewing of our natures in part 5. The fift is the consummation of it in heaven Foure of the degrees are past upon the godly onely the fift remaines 3. Quest. But by what signes may a man know his owne redemption from his vaine conversation Answ. Our redemption from our sinfull and vaine conversation may be discerned 1. By our putting off the deceiveable lusts of the inward man even by our throwing of them out of service denying the old vanities of our thoughts and desires Eph. 4.22 1 Pet. 1.12 13. Psal. 24.4 2. By our vexation at the vaine and wicked conversation of other men 1 Pet. 2.7 8. Psal. 31 7. 26.4 3. By our contempt of the world and desire after a better life Phil. 3. 18 20. 4. By our sorting our selves with such as fight against the corruptions of the world Phil. 1.27 5. By our desire in all things to live honestly Heb. 13.18 6. By our good works either of piety or mercy Iam. 3.13 7. By our meeknesse of wisdome in the best things wee doe La● 3.13 1 Pet. 3.16 Seeing the freedome of a vaine conversation is one chiefe past and end of our redemption there may be divers Uses made of it 1. It should quicken us to a care of a sober conversation since this 〈◊〉 what manner of persons ought we to be in all godlinesse and holy conversation yea we should strive to be examples to others in conversation 1 T●● 4.12 especially we should labour to live without rebuke 1 〈◊〉 12. 2. If shewes the misery of all such as yet abide under the power of a vaine conversation for thereby it is apparant they have as yet no part in the vertue of the death and resurrection of Christ Eph. 2.3 especially of such as draw iniquity with cords of vanity Esay 5.18 3. It should in speciall awaken the godly to watch over their waies for the suppressing of vanities it is a foule sight to see men professing the love of God and hope of a better life to grow va●●● and be taken up again with the delights in foolish vanities such as are strange apparell deliciousnesse of fare abundance of pleasures lightnesse of carriage c. Iob 31.5 4. For singular comfort if we feele the delights in foolish vanities to be gone and the power of our former 〈◊〉 to be beaten downe for hereby we may know infallibly that we are in Christ and redeemed by him Thus of the quality of our conversation the cause followeth Received by the tradition of the father● There are amongst the rest sixe waies by which sin comes into the life of man and is charged upon him 1. By imputation and so we are guilty of Adams sin in paradise 2. By propagation and so we receive the ori●inall corruption of our natures Psal. 51. 3. By imitation of the sins of others 4. By consenting to the sins of others 5. By inventing sin our selves Eccles. 7 ult 6. By tradition that is by direction and 〈…〉 by word of mo●th This is the way 〈◊〉 meant 〈…〉 By fathers here he meaneth their very fathers of their flesh their naturall Parents both those that were next unto them and those more removed from them as auncestors and other kinred in the flesh The 〈◊〉 is that one great cause by which the life of man is infected is the corrupt counsell direction and tradition of Parents according to the flesh Ezech. 20.4 18. Amos 2.4 Zach. 1.4 Esay 14.21 Ier. 9.14 Gal 1.13 14. Two things would be here explicated 1. what corruption men receive by tradition from their Parents 2. how it comes to passe they should be so bad by such traditions For the first Divers sorts of evils have broken into the life of man by the tradition of fathers as 1. Grosse errors in opinion 2. Divers superstitions in their life as were the traditions of the Pharises Mat. 15. and so for the Papists as the observation of divers fasts c. 3. Children learn divers sins onely or chiefly from their Parents as these sins should be put off Eph. 4.22 to the end viz. lying frowardnesse corrupt communication bitternesse c. from whence have children them but from the tradition of Parents Doe not Parents first traine them to revenge pride cursing swearing c Hence also come divers vaine words either in the use of Gods titles or in nicknames and reproches of others Whence are the sins in every calling but from imitation of Parents 4. What is the reason why many will not be drawn into any other care of a religious life either in respect of the service of God or other reformation but onely because they saw their fathers take another course Whence are all those objections cast in the way of all the parts of sincerity and rege 〈◊〉 of life but from the tradition of their parents Whence comes negl●ct of the service of God at Church or in the family but from this fountaine in many For the second If any aske why the tradition of Parents should be so infectious I answer 1. Because they are cast into the natures of the children in the yongest yeares and so are the more infection because they were first seasoned with them 2. Because of the affection children beare to their Parents and their opinion of their sufficiency A childe naturally thinks his Parents are the best creatures in the world at least for them to be guided by 3. Because they are continually conversant with them and so see no other or no better precepts or examples 4. Because most Parents are not carefull enough to bring them up in the nurture and in●tr●ction of the Lord. The Use may be for Instruction both to Parents and children 1. Parents should be humbled under the consideration of the misery they bring upon their children both by propagation and tradition especially they should be carefull by all meanes to prevent this hurt in their children and to this 〈◊〉 1. They should for over abhorre the teaching of
was shed willingly Ioh. 10. 2. Because it was the blood of an innocent man but especially because of the dignity of his person it was the blood of him that was God as well as man Acts 20.28 and therefore must needs be of infinite merit and vertue Is the blood of Christ so precious 1. Then let us for ever exalt that riches of grace in God that spared not the blood of his owne Sonne that hee might not destroy us Ephes. 1.7 Revel 1.5 2. Then let us for ever detest merits of our owne workes seeing the price is of such infinite value and sufficiency Rom. 3.25 Coherence 3. ●t should then augment the confirmation of our faith in our redemption against all the temptations of Sathan or rebellion of our owne hearts or oppositions of the world Rom. 5.9 4. If shewes how carefull we should be of our selves that were bought at so precious a rate Mat. ●6 5. Let 〈◊〉 all then take heed of sinning against the blood of Christ for if it be thus precious it must needs diffuse a horrible guilt upon such as offend against it if Abels blood cryed so what will Christs blood doe c. as they doe 1. That sweare by it 2. That commit the sinne against the Holy Ghost 3. That trust to their owne merits 4. That receive the Sacrament unworthily 1 Cor. 11. As a lambe without blemish and spot Hitherto of his passion Now followes his obedience or innocency both of na●●re and action and both as they commend the excellency of him that suffered for us His innocency is set out by comparison of a spotlesse lambe in which words it is Gods purpose to lift up our hearts to an apprehension of a wonderfull purity in Christ as he is our surety and Saviour The maine observation is that God would have us to know affectionatly the wonderfull holinesse of Christ as he is our Mediator and Redeemer it is one chiefe thing we should be informed in Hence the sacrifices still shadowed him out by the similitude of a spotlesse lambe and therefore hee is called the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Rev. 13.8 and the Apostles for urging this point may well be called the Apostles of the Lambe Rev. 21.24 Iohn calls him the Lambe of God Ioh. 1.29 36. Christ may be called a Lambe 1. For harmelesnesse 2. For patience and silence in affliction Esay 53.7 Ier. 11.19 3. For price and value for rarenesse and high account it seemes lambes were of speciall account Gen. 33.19 21.28 30. 4. For infirmities he tooke the infirmities were miserable but not those were damnable 5. For meeknesse and humility 6. For sacrifice He was the substance of all that was signified by the typicall lambes he was the substance of the paschall lambe of the lambe for daily sacrifice for the peace-offrings for the trespasse-offrings for the purification of women and of the lepers and the lambe for the first fruits and for the trespasse-off●ing of the Nazarites and for the free will offrings or vowes and the lambe for the sabbaths and new moones and the feast of trumpets and the lambe for the day of humiliation and for the feast of tabernacles the lambe for the Priests and the Princes and the people It is by the sprinkling of his blood we scape the destroying Angels It is for his sake that God is every day pleased in his propitiation for our sinnes He is our daily sacrifice that we must still offer to God for our selves It is he we must offer to God for our trespasses and no gifts wee can bring to God will be acceptable without him In him we are freed from the corruption of our natures and from the leprosie of actuall transgressions In him we have the confirmation of all our outward blessings The Priests and Princes as well as the people must ascribe all their reconciliation to him There are no persons so devoted to religion but they must acknowledge their needs of Christ nor can our best actions or times be accepted without him Whereas it is said he was without spot or blemish the Holy Ghost meanes to avouch that he was most holy both in nature and life there could not be a spot found in his actions nor any the least blemish in his disposition And it was needfull Christ should be so pure 1. Because else his passion could not be accepted 2. Because he must become a righteousnesse to many If any aske how he could be so seeing he came of Adam and had his infirmities both of body and mind I answer that he came of Adam but not by Adam that is not by carnall propagation but was conceived by the holy Ghost and so originall sin stopped and for his infirmities I said before he received such infirmities as the Fathers call miserable that is such as were punishments not sins but not such as were damnable as all sinfull infirmities are The Uses follow 1. We should informe our selves by often meditation of this wonderfull righteousnesse in Christ beholding by our medication the lambe of God that taketh away the sins of the world 2. For instruction many things may be urged 1. We should give honour to the lambe that sitteth upon the throne whose praises fill both heaven and earth Rev. 5.7 c. 2. We should daily send this lambe to the ruler of the earth daily present him to God for us Esay 16.1 3. These praises of Christ should convert us to his image this very doctrine converted the Eunuch Act. 8.31 we should imitate the praises of Christ hereby imported as these places shew Rev. 14.1 to 6. 4. Let us for his testimony resist the gates of hell by beleeving in him and love not our lives unto the death for his sake Rev. 12.11 3. For consolation Shall we not sing the song of Moses and the song of the lambe Rev. 15.3 Oh how happy are his servants Revel 22. What should dismay us if we know we are contracted to this lambe of God and shall enjoy eternall fellowship with him and in the meane while to be clothed with the white linnen of ●● righteousnesse Rev. 19.7 8. 4. Woe unto them that will not rest upon him for righteousnesse the smoke of their torment shall ascend for evermore Rev. 14.10 11. Verse 20 21. 20. Which was ordained before the foundation of the world but was declared in the last times for your sakes 21. Which by his meanes doe beleeve in God that raised him from the dead and gave him glory that your faith and hope might be in God HItherto of the meanes by which we were redeemed The antiquity of the project concerning our redemption followes Who verily was fore-ordained before the foundation of the world The drift is to shew that we have reason to be wonderfully affected with the manner of our redemption because it was from all eternity projected by God Two things may be here noted in the words 1.
cast us out of their companies yet we must persist in our intention to sacrifice still to God Fourteenthly in the Sacrifices God had a great respect of mercy that cruelty were not shewed as Levit. 22.27 When he enjoined that the creature must be seven daies under the damme and that no damme with the young one was to be slaine the same day Certainly God abhorreth that cruelty should bee exercised under pretence of piety Cursed be those long praiers that will devoure widdowes houses Matth. 23. In one thing we differ from the sacrifices For the sacrifices were dead or consisted of things without life but we must be living sacrifices we must doe what we will doe while we are alive and must do it lively with the affections that belong to the duties to be done Vse The use may be briefly twofold for partly it should humble us for our neglect of praiers thanksgiving almes contrition We omit the maine duties of our general calling when we omit these It was the abomination of desolation when the temple was without sacrifices how can it but be exceeding uncomely with Gods spirituall house that hath not sacrifices in it We are Christians but in name when pietie and mercy is neglected But especially we should be instructed from hence to mind our work to strive to answer our high calling by a continual care day night to exercise our selves herein the smoak of our incense should daily ascend unto God The Apostle Pa●l beseecheth the Romans by the mercies of God to looke to their sanctifying Rom. 12.1 Which shewes it is of wonderfull necessity and would make us in some measure walk worthy of the Lord. And to the●Hebrewes he bids them take heed of forgetting these sacrifices importing that usually our deficiency in these services are from forgetfulnes we forget to pray and forget to shew mercy even after we have purposed both And thus much of the worke of a Christian. Now his honour followes Acceptable to God by Iesus Christ. VVherein three things may be noted First That howsoever piety and mercy and well-doing finde little acceptation in the world yet it shall never want honour and great esteeme with God Pions and mercifull Christians shall never faile of the love and favour of God Their works are accepted It is true that God may change his minde concerning the Ceremoniall Sacrifices but the acceptation of Christian Sacrifices is a thing established with God Heb. 10.9 These offerings shall be pleasant unto the Lord Malach. 3.4 Th●y are well-pleasing in his sight Heb. 13.16 They are a sweet savour unto the Lord Phil. 4.18 God hath a booke of remembrance Mal. 3.17 And our fruit shall certainly remaine Ioh. 15.16 And thus Cornelius his prayers and almes came up before the Lord Acts 10. Secondly That it is not enough to doe good duties but we must strive so to doe them that God may accept them Heb. 12.28 Esay 1.11 12.13.14 Thirdly That now our best works are made acceptable to God onely by Iesus Christ Revel 8.3 4. It is from the presenting of Christ that wee are found holy and without blame in Gods sight Col. 1.22 Therefore we must doe all in the name of the Lord Iesus Col. 3.17 Vs● The use of all should be to teach us with all care to devote our selves unto godlinesse that thereby we may prove what this good and acceptable will of God is Let us try Gods acceptation and we shall certainly finde it shall goe well with the just Rom. 12.1 2. Yea wee should from he●ce gather much encouragement to imploy our selves in piety and mercy It is enough if God accept of us Quest. But what should wee doe that wee may be sure our sacrifices be accepted of God How shall we know when God doth accept our service in any holy duty Ans. That a mans conscience may be soundly established in this point of God's acceptation we must looke to three things First that the person be sanctified None but Priests must approach to offer sacrifice to God They that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8.8 The sonnes of Levi must be purified and refined as the silver is refined before their offering will be pleasing Mal. 3.3 4. When the Lord rejected with so much disdaine the sacrifices of the Iewes he shewes what they should have done to please him they should have washed themselves by true repentance and put away the evill of their works Esay 1.11 16. Onely the works of the penitent cannot be accepted if the person be not in favour the works are hated For they are sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Secondly That the manner of performing our service be right there are divers things in the manner are hatefull and divers things pleasing The things specially hatefull are first beloved sinnes secondly hypocrisie thirdly malice and fourthly luke-warmnesse The sacrifice is lothsome if it be blinde or lame or blemished that is if men bring to Gods service the love of any soule sinne the service is lothsome Malach. 1. So if mens hearts be carried away with continuall distractions that service is lost this is To come neere to God with our lips when our hearts are farre from him Hypocrisie is leaven as beloved sinne is bony both forbidden Againe when a man comes to God's works and hath not forgiven his brother hee keepes the Feast with some leaven his Passeover is defiled nor can his owne sinnes be forgiven b●c●use he forgives not Math. 6. 1 Cor. 5.8 Finally luke-warmnesse is like a vomit to God when we are neither hot nor cold They are lothed like the Laodiceans Revel 3. There are other things wonderfull pleasing to God● as First When a man doth whatsoever he doth in the Name of Christ this is the Altar that sanctifieth the gift and the sacrifices are here acceptable through Iesus Christ Heb. 13.15 Col. 3.17 Secondly When our works are soundly powdered with salt that is when we soundly confesse our owne unworthinesse and give all glory to God in Iesus Christ. Thirdly When wee love mercy and piety accounting it our delight to doe God s will and thinking our selves gr●atly honoured to be admitted to doe this service Mich. 6.8 2 Cor. 8.5 Fourthly When wee can bring faith that is a heart well perswaded of God so as we can beleeve all good of him and his mercy Without faith no man can please God Heb. 11.6 and God takes no delight in him that withdraweth himselfe through unbeliefe Heb. 10.36 37. Fifthly When it is our every-dayes worke Sacrifice will please God if it be continuall Heb. 13.15 Thus of the second thing Thirdly We may know that our sacrifice is accepted if the Lord burne it to ashes with fire from heaven Thus God did put a difference betweene the sacrifice of Cain and Abel by some visible signe and though wee may not limit God and expect hee should answer us by visible signes yet God hath not left us
one truth will not sinke yet into our heads Wee are told that this is a point unsearchable Rom. 11.32 33. and the rather because weake Christians are not tied to eate strong meat they may safely let this doctrine alone Thirdly that no man can know his owne reprobation nor ought to beleeve so of himselfe but is called upon to use the meanes by which he may be saved Fourthly we have this oath of God for it That he desires not the death of the sinner but would have all men to repent and be saved Fifthly that whereas Divines make two parts of the decree of reprobation Preterition and Predamnation all Divines are agreed for the latter that God did never determine to damne any man for his owne pleasure but the cause of his perdition was his owne sinne And here is reason for it for God may to shew his soveraignty annihilate his creature but to appoint a reasonable creature to an estate of endlesse paine without respect of his desert cannot agree to the unspotted justice of God And for the other part of passing over and forsaking a great part of men for the glory of his justice the exactest Divines doe not attribute that to the mere will of God but hold that God did first looke upon those men as sinners at least in the generall corruption brought in by the fall For all men have sinned in Adam and are guilty of high treason against God Sixthly that sinne is no effect of reprobation but onely a consequent Gods decree doth not force any man to sinne c. Seventhly that whatsoever God hath decreed yet all grant that God is no way any authour of sinne hee doth not cause sinne in any but onely permits it and endureth it and whereas the most that can be objected is that God hardneth whom he will Rom. 9. it is agreed upon in the answer of all sound Divines that God doth not infuse any wickednesse from without in mens hearts but whereas their hearts are in themselves by custome in sinne hardned as a just Judge he gives them over to Sathan and his power who is as it were the Jayler but doth never restraine them from good and the meanes of it Eighthly now may men say that sinne came upon men by reason of the rigour of Gods Law for it was impossible to be kept For this there is a cleere answer When God gave his Law at first man was able to keepe it and it came by his owne default that hee was not able to keepe it afterwards A man that sends his servant to the market and gives him charge to doe such and such businesse for him if that servant make himselfe drunken and so bee unfit to doe his masters businesse he is worthy to be punished because hee was fit to doe it when hee was first sent about it Ninthly it is plaine in this verse that those men of whom he here speakes are indited of grievous sinne against Christ and the Gospell Tenthly that things may be just though the reasons of them do not appear unto us if it bee true of some cases of justice among men much more in this case of God's justice Lastly it should much satisfie us that in the day of Jesus Christ those mysteries of Religion shall be broken open and all then shall bee made cleer unto us as cleer as the shining of the Sun at noon-day Thus of the punishment of unbeleevers and so also of the first argument taken from testimony of Scripture Verses 9 and 10. But yee are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar people that ye should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy THese words containe the second argument to perswade Christians to make their constant recourse unto Christ and from him to procure vertue to enable them for holinesse of conversation and it is taken from the consideration of the excellency of that estate unto which they were brought by Christ. For the description whereof the Apostle singles out two places of Scripture with which he makes up a compleat narration of their great prerogatives above all other people and above that they themselves were in former times The places of Scripture he makes use of are Exod. 9. and Hos. 1. But before I open the words two things may be here noted First the Apostles care to prove what he saith from the Scripture whether it bee against wicked men or for godly men which shewes that wee should much more take heed to Gods Word being lesse than Apostles especially such an Apostle Secondly wee may hence note that the promises or prayses given to the godly in the old Testament are not envied to Christians in the new Testament God is no respecter of persons but wee have free liberty to search the bookes of God and to chuse out of all the examples of the suites of godly men or the preferments what we will and if we make a suite of it to God he will not deny it but shew us their mercy Now for the particular opening of these words we must observe that it is the purpose of the Apostle to shew briefly the priviledges of the godly above all others or what themselves were before their conversion And the priviledge of their estate may be considered either positively in it self or comparatively It is described positively vers 9. comparatively vers 10. In the ninth verse there he reckons up a number of prerogatives belonging to the godly and withall shewes the use they should make of them or the end why they were conferred upon them The godly excell in divers respects if we consider First their election they are chosen of God Secondly their alliance or kinred they are a chosen kinred Thirdly their dignity above other men they are royall Kings Fourthly their function or private imployment before God Priests Fifthly their behaviour or outward conversation they are holy Sixthly their number they are a Nation Seventhly their acceptation with God they are a peculiar people First for Election The Apostle looking upon the words in Exodus 19.5 6 and seeing that they described the happinesse of Christians in this life doth in the Fore-front put to this priviledge of their election as the foundation of all the rest and would have Christians much affected with the consideration of this prerogative It is one of the chiefe and prime comforts of a Christian to consider that he is elect of God Psal. 106.4 5. 2 Pet. 1.9 elect I say both before time and in time Before time in Gods decree and in time when the godly are singled and called out of the word and picked out one of a city and two of a tribe in all the ages of the world and distinguished from other men by beleeving in Jesus
as he is the efficient cause It is true that some have imagined that the soule of man was made of the substance of God because it is said God breathed into man the breath of life Gen. 2.7 as if he infused into him somewhat from himselfe as a part of his divine substance And the Apostle Paul saith Act. 17.18 We are the Progeny of God and Saint Peter saith We partake of the divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Now this opinion cannot be true and was worthily condemned by the Fathers as hereticall for Then man should be God For whatsoever God begets from himselfe is God and therefore we say Christ is God Then some part of Gods nature should be infected with sin and ignorance and be damned in hell too which is wonderfull blasphemous to beleeve Now for the places alledged That in Gen. 2. must be understood figuratively for God hath not properly breath but he meaneth that God after a wonderfull manner did infuse the soule into the body And for the place in the Acts we are said to be the progenie of God● not in regard of substance but in respect of resemblance in gifts with which mans nature is adorned And for the place in Peter we are said to partake of the divine nature in the same sense namely as we are qualified with gifts as wisdome goodnesse holinesse in some kinde of likenesse of God It remaines then that we are of God effectually because God hath created our soules and formed them in us This then is the truth that God doth create the particular soule of every man and inhere it to the body when it is formed and distinguished in the parts thereof This may be proved diversly First it is cleare it was so done with the soule of Adam for his body was already framed and then his soule breathed into him Now if the soule of Eve and of all others had another manner of beginning than the creation of God it would have beene mentioned in the Scriptures but that is no where mentioned Secondly Moses calls God the God of the spirits of all flesh Num. 16.22 and 27 16. Thirdly David saith the Lord fashioneth the hearts of all men alike Psal. 33.15 It is Gods worke then to create the heart Fourthly Solomon saith Eccles. 12.7 The body returnes to the dust and the soule to God that gave it in the dissolution of all things they returne to the first causes and matter As the body may be proved originally to be of the earth because it returnes to dust so must the soule be of God because it returnes to God which is said to have given it Fifthly the Prophet Esay useth this phrase concerning God and in his name The soules which I have made Esa. 57.16 Do you aske how the soule comes into the body The Lord answers I made it Sixthly the Prophet Ezekiel shewing how man becomes a living creature speakes thus Thus saith the Lord to these bones I will cause a spirit to enter into them and they shall live Ezek. 37.5 Seventhly the words of the Prophet Zecharie are yet more cleere Thus saith the Lord the Lord which spreads out the heavens and foundeth the earth and formeth the spirit of man in him Out of these words it may be proved that God created the soule of every man and that it is his onely worke For first he saith expresly God formed the spirit in man Secondly this worke of God is compared to two other workes viz. the spreading out of the heaven and the laying of the foundation of the earth Now it is evident that those two things he did of himselfe of nothing without any meanes Lastly that place in Heb. 12.9 is most cleere The words are these Wee have had the fathers of our flesh which chastised us and we reverenced them how much more should we bee subject to the Father of our spirits and live Where is a manifest antithesis betweene the flesh and the spirit and the fathers of our flesh and God the Father of our spirit we had our flesh from our parents and our spirit from God I might adde the reason taken from the manner of giving of the soule of Christ for he was made in all things like to us sinne onely excepted Now it is evident that Christs soule was not begot by carnall propagation and therefore it was created of God Ob. 1. Now against this is strongly objected that if the soule be created immediately of God then it is created either pure or sinfull if pure then how is it that the soule is guilty of originall sinne if impure then how can it be avoided but that God must be the author of sinne Answ. This reason drave divers of the Fathers in the time of Hierom●● especially the Westerne Fathers to beleeve that the soule was propagated from the Parents and Saint Augustine is doubtfull which opinion to take to the inconveniences of each opinion seemed so great But other Divines answer this objection in this manner First that the soule is created of God pure but joyned to a body conceived in sinne which is no injustice in God because he delivers the soule but into such an estate as man had cast himselfe into by his owne wilfull sinne bringing this corruption not onely upon himselfe but upon all his posterity who fell in him Hee by agreement with God being as the common sort of mankind was with him to stand or fall in that generall respect Nor may it be doubted but that the body may worke upon the soule as we see by experience when the body is full of cholericke humours it inclines the soule to anger and so when the body is burdened with melancholy humours it evidently makes sadnesse even in the very minde c. Another answer may be this God creates the soule pure but yet that soule is guilty of owing though not of doing debendi though not agend● it is charged with the debt of Adam as children may be charged with their fathers debts Now this is one part of originall sinne As for the other of corrupt inclination it is to answer modestly if we say we understand not being assured of two things the one that God is the Father of spirits and the other that all men are infected with sinne from the wombe Both are to be beleeved though in this life we cannot explicate it And what hurt is it if wee be ignorant how sinne entred into our natures seeing it concernes us to know it is there and to learne how to get our natures recovered Ob. 2. Other living creatures beget the like to themselves both in body and in soule too and therefore by this doctrine men should be more unable and unperfect than any living creature For if he do beget but onely the body he doth not beget one in specie like to himselfe Answ. Though God create the soule yet it followes not but that it may be truly laid that man begets a man and that
witnesse if we doe that which conscience thinks well to comfort us and if we doe that which conscience thinks ill to discourage us Rom. 2.15 and 9.1 Yea conscience is the guide of our lives We are here pilgrims and strangers farre from our home and in journey continually now God hath set consciences in us to be our guides that in all things we are to doe we may be directed and incouraged by conscience taking the direction and warrant of conscience as a speciall ground of our actions so as to doe cont●ary to what conscience bids us is a sin for it doth not only witnesse about what is past but it directs us about what is to come as now to be done But the principall worke of conscience whether we respect God or man is to keepe court in the heart of man There is in man Forum Conscientia a Court of Conscience a secret Tribunall is set up in the heart of man and therein fits conscience and arraigneth accuseth bringeth witnes sentenceth and doth execution Now concerning the judgement of conscience keeping an Assise in the heart of man two things are to bee considered first the law by which conscience judgeth secondly the manner of the proceeding in judgement For the first Conscience judgeth of the actions of men by vertue of certaine principles as I said before which it findeth in the understanding gathered either from the law of nature or from experience of Gods providence or from the Scriptures Now the manner how it proceeds in judgement is in forme of reasoning as I said before for in the minde the conscience findes as it were a booke of law written which is in the keeping of the faculty they call it in schooles Synt●resis from hence the conscience takes the ground of reasoning and from the memory it takes evidence of the fact or state of the man that is arraigned and then by it selfe it judiciously concludes and passeth sentence and so it proceeds whether it condemne or absolve In the judgement of condemnation it proceeds thus First it cites or calls for the soule to be tried then it accuseth in this forme out of the body of the law kept in the minde it takes the conclusion it meanes to workes upon and then useth the memory to testifie of the fact as for instance Every murderer is an offender thou art a murderer therefore thou art proved to be an offender Then comes the sentence in the same order Hee that commits murder without repentance shall be damned thou committest murder without repentance and therefore art a damned creature So likewise it proceeds in absolving For evidence it proceeds thus He that hath such and such marks as godly sorrow the love or feare of God c. he is a childe of God but thou hast these marks therefore thou art a childe of God and then it goeth to sentence He that is the childe of God shall bee saved but thou art proved to be the childe of God therefore thou shalt be saved Nor doth it rest in the sentence but immediatly doth it selfe begin the execution for laying hold upon the guilty person it presently buffets him and terrifies him and pricks him at the very heart and gnawes him many times with unspeakable torments and tortures And so contrariwise in the sentence of absolution it proceeds with comfort settleth and quieteth the heart of the absolved and many times makes it able with joy to stand undaunted against all the powers of hell and the world of which more afterwards when I come to intreat of the sorts of conscience Observe by the way the difference between the court of conscience within us and mens courts of Justice without us For in mens courts they proceed secundum allegatae probata according to allegation and proofes but God hath appointed another judgement in the heart of man there God judgeth not according to allegation and proofes but according to conscience and hath associated to every man a notary of his owne and a witnesse of his owne which he produceth out of his very bosome so as man shall bee made to confesse what he hath done though all the world excuse him and shall have comfortable testimony in himselfe though all the world beside accuse him The glory of the power of conscience appeares by the third point and that is the prerogatives and properties of conscience in a man for 1. It keeps court in the heart of a man without limitation of time it will call a man to answere and heare judgement at any time it is not limited to any terms nor can the sentence be delaied it hath power to examine testifie and give sentence at any time of the yeere at pleasure nor will it admit any appeal to any creature 2. It is subject properly only to God no earthly Prince can command the conscience of a man as will more appeare afterwards 3. It keeps continuall residence in the heart of man it is alwaies with him at home and abroad it observeth and watcheth him in all places in the Church at his table in his bed day and night it never leaves him 4. God hath subjected man to the obedience of conscience if it command erroneously if it be in things indifferent as in the case of meats and daies in the Apostles time if the conscience doubted or forbade the use of them which yet in themselves might be used the man was bound to follow his conscience though the conscience erred and so sinned in doubting or forbidding Rom. 14.14.23 5. Yea so much honour doth God give unto the conscience that he suffers his owne most holy Spirit to bring in evidence in the court of conscience for so we read that the Spirit of Adoption doth beare witnesse before our spirits that is before the conscience that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.15 6. It is a great prerogative that God hath granted immortality unto conscience Conscience never dies no not when we die Every mans conscience shall bee found no lier at the day of Judgement in so great request with Christ as that dreadfull Judgement shall be guided according to the evidence and verdict of conscience Rom. 2.15 16. For the fourth point Conscience is not all of a sort in all men some have good consciences and some have ill consciences and both these kindes of consciences must be considered of Conscience considered as good comes to be so either by creation or by renovation By creation Adam had his conscience good but by the first sinne conscience became evill in him and all his posterity so as all men naturally have evill consciences and no men have their consciences good but as they are renewed The difference between a good conscience by creation and renovation is this that by creation conscience was perfectly good from the first moment it was infused till the fall and did discover it self by excusing and comforting alwaies for Adams conscience till his fall could accuse
him of nothing But by renovation conscience is good for the time of this life but imperfectly and increaseth in good men by degrees and so because man is renewed but in part it is a part of the goodnesse of the conscience to accuse for sinne especially if it be presumptuous after calling as well as to excuse from faults while the man keeps his uprightnesse That a good conscience should only excuse is true in this world onely of conscience as it was good by creation Now concerning the goodnesse or badnesse of conscience these seven things are to be considered of First that all mens consciences by nature are evill Secondly the difference of evill in mens consciences Thirdly the signes of an evill conscience Fourthly the hurt of an evill conscience Fiftly the meanes how evill consciences may be made good Sixtly the signes of a good conscience Seventhly the great happinesse of the man that hath a good conscience For the first that all mens consciences are by nature evill is manifest because all have sinned in Adam and lost their originall righteousnesse in all the faculties of the soule and so every man in his naturall condition is in every point uncleane and to the impure all things are impure even their consciences are polluted saith the Apostle Tit. 1.15 For the second evill is not in the same degree in all mens consciences but after a different manner in divers men for First in most men wee see that conscience is so feeble and works so little that it seemes to be but a small sparke or like a bubble which riseth now and then and presently vanisheth Now the reason why conscience stirs so little in the most men is not to be taken from the nature of conscience for that can worke all workes mentioned before but from divers things in man For first Adams sinne as it deprived all mens consciences of originall righteousnesse which was the life of the conscience so it brought such a depravation and evill disease upon the conscience that it was never healed nor cured in the naturall man to this day but the weaknesse arising from the infection holds him downe still Secondly the generall ignorance and darknesse which is in the world is one great cause why conscience lieth so miserably weake and neglected For it cannot worke for want of light For in the mind it findes only a few naturall principles or some generall truths of religion which are altogether insufficient to direct in the particular occasions of mens lives Thirdly besides the law of nature is corrupted in man and so those principles are very muddy and uncertaine and the generals of Religion are poysoned with secret objections gathered from the controversies of so many false religions Fourthly further it is manifest that the cares and pleasures of life oppresse conscience in many and in them conscience stirs not not because it cannot stir but because there is no leasure to heare what it saith men are so violently carried to the pleasures and busines of this world As a man that runs in a race many times runs with such violence that he cannot heare what is said unto him by some that he passeth by though it were counsell that might direct him in the right way of the race so is it with men that haste to be rich conscience often cals to them to take heed of going out of the way by deceit or lying or oppression or the like but they pursue riches so violently that they cannot heare the voice of conscience And so is it with the voluptuous person and with the most men that live in any habituall gainfull sinne Fiftly yea this weaknes comes upon the conscience of some by custome of sinnes that are not sinnes of gaine or pleasure as the sinnes of negligence sloathfulnesse passion or the like in which men are wilfully confirmed and will not regard the checks of their owne conscience Finally one great reason why the most of us feele so little of conscience is the evill hearing of the Word of God for the Word of God powerfully preached would awake the conscience but that most men set themselves to neglect it by a willing wilfull entertainment of distractions and in voluntary forgetting of what they have heard and so hood-winking themselves it is no wonder they cannot see Secondly some mens conscience is starke dead it stirs not at all The conscience is compared to a part of the body that is not only without sense and rotten but is feared with an hot iron and this is the case only of some notorious either Hereticks or malefactors that have lived a long time wilfully in some monstrous wickednesse either knowne or secret 1 Tim. 4.2 This seared conscience is either joyned with a greedinesse to commit speciall wickednesse or with a reprobate minde that is so horrible stupid that it judgeth evill to be good or at the best not dangerously hurtfull Ephes. 4.18 Rom. 1.28 Thirdly in some men the evill of conscience lyeth in this that it is over busie and sinnes too much and so in two sorts of men first the superstitious or secondly the desperate The superstitious person is many times disquieted by his conscience in doing well or when he doth that which is not unlawfull as the Popish Priest is troubled for comming to our Churches or the Christian that is carried with preposterous zeale is troubled for obeying the Magistrate in using his liberty in things indifferent in the desperate the evill of Conscience is the horrible tormenting of them beyond the bounds of the offence of Conscience and that in two things First in that it presents the wrath of God to them without the hope of mercy in Christ as did the Conscience of Cain Secondly in that it drives them to doe that against themselves which is desperately wicked as to make away themselves as the desperate Conscience of Iudas and Achitophel did Fourthly in some men there was a temporary goodnesse in the Conscience of which they made shipwracke and so utterly lost the goodnesse they had for a time And thus many hypocrites doe that for a time get the forme of Religion even into their Consciences but afterward falling into the immoderate love of the world or the lust of some particular sinne fall cleane away from Religion and so lose the goodnesse which they had 1 Tim. 1.19 Thus of the differences of evill in the Consciences of divers men the signes of an evill Conscience follow But before I give the signes wee must take notice of a distinction and that is that the Conscience may have evill in it and not be an evill Conscience Conscience in this life in men regenerate is renewed and restored but in part and so may erre sometimes and in some cases and yet be no evill Conscience As for instance in certaine weake Christians in the Primitive Church who yet were godly men the Apostle shewes Rom. 14. that some Christians for Conscience sake did
and preached hee received the Sacrament in a private chamber at night and gave it onely to Clergy-men and used unleavened bread c. Quest. But what rules are then left to ground our practice upon and how far are our consciences bound by examples and so by the example of Christ Answ. Examples and so the example of Christ binde us in the things hee did which were required by the morall Law or the Word of God For an example is but the illustration of a precept it is but like the seale to a blank if there be no precept Secondly in other things which Christ did not required by the Law we are so farre forth tied to follow his practice as hee hath for those specialties given himselfe a precept as here we are bound to suffer from others and for others if need require by the force of Christs example but so as it is specified that his example bindes in this and other things But where the Scripture doth not make use of his example there we are not bo●nd in things indifferent i● their owne nature to follow any example out of necessity Verse 22.23 Who did no sinne neither was there guile found in his mouth Who when he was reviled reviled not againe when be suffered bee threatned not but committed it to him that judgeth righteously HItherto of the end of Christs suffering the manner followes set down both negatively and affirmatively Negatively Hee suffered without sinne in this verse and without reviling in the next verse Affirmatively He committed himselfe and his cause to him that judgeth righteously He did no sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words of this verse doe commend the innocency of this our Saviour which doth much increase the price and value of his sufferings He suffered for the sinnes of others that never committed any sinne himself in thought word or deed and as he was innocent in all the course of his life so did hee beare his sufferings without fault and carried himselfe so as no man could finde any just occasion against him The first thing affirmed of Christ to shew his innocency is that hee did no sinne In the Originall it is expressed by a word of great force which signifies to make or frame or fashion with art or to make sinne and it may be rend●ed as I conceive more fitly He 〈◊〉 sinne To make sinne being a phrase somewhat unusuall the sense is to be 〈◊〉 red into Now a man may be said to make sinne many waies First when a man 〈◊〉 and commits a sinne never heard of before Thus Onan made that sin of filthinesse Thus the Sodomites and Gentilish men and women made sinnes of lust Thus drunkards make strange kindes of drinkings Thus the 〈…〉 of our times 〈◊〉 the sinnes of strange apparell And thus the Papists make that horrible sin of murthering of 〈…〉 And thus swearers now make their monstruous oaths Secondly when a man sinnes having not so much as temptation to sinne in himselfe or pronenesse of nature to sinne and so he sinnes that sinnes wilfully and not by infirmitie or weaknesse of nature Thus Adam made the first sinne for he had no corruption of nature to intice him or incline him nor could any temptation from without compell him but he sinned wilfully Thus those men of bloud make sin that kill their brethren in cold bloud And so many whoremongers and drunkards make sinne when they are not inticed but intice themselves and strive by all meanes to fire and force themselves to wickednesse And thus swearers and usurers and such like make sinne Thirdly when a man commits such a sinne as other men condemne by the very light of nature though he doe it by corrupt inclination or though it bee sinne which others commit so to make sinne is to be a malefactor or one that is guilty of any grosse sinne Fourthly when a man studies mischiefe and sinnes not suddenly but imagines and deviseth and forecasts and plots how to compasse his sinne and thus all wicked men make sinne because they sinne not suddenly or by meere frailty but doe study iniquitie every wicked man is a great student Psal. 36.4 Fiftly when a man causeth others to sinne by evill counsell or example or compulsion Thus Tyrants made sinne that forced men to deny the faith and thus they make sinne that make their neighbours drunke and thus Stage-plaiers and Minstrels make sinne that call and provoke others to licentiousnesse and wantonnesse and thus superiours make sinne when by their evill example or negligence in not punishing offences they tempt others to sinne Sixtly when a man makes a trade of sinning and thus men are said in Scripture to bee workers of iniquity which is a Periphrasis of wicked men Now he that is said to make a trade of sinne or to bee a worker of iniquity first is one that makes it his daily custome to follow his sinfull course of life or that followes sinne as the trades-man doth his trade Secondly that cannot live without his sinne that accounts his sinne the life of his life that had as liefe be dead as restrained of his sinne as the trades-man accounts himselfe undone if his trade be destroyed Seventhly when a man calls good evill and evill good when a man makes that to bee a sinne which is no sinne Thus they make sinne that call those things sinne which God by his Law never called sinne and thus men make sinne both out of superstition on the left hand and out of rash zeale on the right hand thus also profane persons make godlinesse and a body conversation to be Schismes and truth to be Heresie thus the Jewes called Pauls religious course Heresie when he by that way which they called Heresie worshipped the God of his fathers and the Professors of Christian Religion they called a Sect Acts. 2● Isa. 5.20 Thus Lawyers many times make sinnes when they make a good cause bad and a bad cause good Eightly when a man by slander casts foule aspersions upon other men that are innocent speaking evill with any manner of evill report of such as live religiously And this art of making sinne the slanderer learned of the divell that accuser of the brethren Thus many godly persons are many 〈◊〉 by wicked reports made grosse offenders in the common acceptation of the world and in the rumours speed abroad of them in many places Thus they made Christ and the Apostles grievous sinners and a spectacle to men and Angels Ninthly when a man in adversity deviseth 〈…〉 to get out of trouble or deliver himselfe from the crosse is laid upon him And this sense may in some sort be applyed to the case of our Saviour who never used ill meanes to deliver himselfe though he suffered extreme things Lastly in a generall sense every man that is guilty of sinne may be said to make sinne And so it is commonly by way of removall said of Christ that he made no sinne that is
that he was never guilty of any offence against God or man Thus of the sense of the words Divers Doctrines may be gathered out of these words but because one is principall I will but touch the rest Doct. 1. Mens sinnes are of mens making man made sinne God made none Doct. 2. It is a hatefull thing to be a maker of sinne As it was most glorious for God to make a world of creatures so it is most ignominious for man to make a world of sinnes Doct. 3. Christ made no sinne This is the chiefe Doctrine and plaine in the Text He was not only free from the first and worst kinds of making of sinne mentioned before but he was free from all sinne in all estates of his life he knew no sinne he did none iniquity he was that just One by an excellency Quest. But how came it to passe that the man Jesus had no sinne seeing all other men bring sinne with them into the world and daily sinne Answ. He was sanctified from the wombe being conceived by the holy Ghost which no other are so as both originall sinne was stopped from flowing in upon him in his conception and besides hee was qualified with perfect holinesse from the wombe and therefore is called that holy thing borne of the Virgin Luke 1.35 And it was necessary his humane nature should bee so holy and that hee should doe no sin because his humane nature was to be a tabernacle for the Deity to dwel in Col. 2.9 and besides from his very humane nature as well as from his Deity must flow unto us life and all good things and therefore he must needs be undefiled The man-hood of Christ is as the conduit and the God-head as the spring of grace unto us Besides his sufferings could not be availeable if he were not innocent himselfe The Uses follow and so Uses First we see the difference between the two Adams the first made sinne and infected all the world with it the other made no sinne but redeemed all the world from it The first Adam as he had power not to sinne so he had power to sinne but the second Adam had not only a power not to sinne but also no power to sinne not only as they say in Schooles Posse non peccare but also Non posse peccare Secondly we may hence see in what a wofull damnity against goodnesse the world stands when this most innocent Man that never did any sinne that never offended God or man in all his life when he I say comes into the world how is he despised and rejected of men Who looked after him unlesse it were for his miracles few honoured him for his holinesse How is the world set on wickednesse that it should account him without forme or handsomenesse that shone before God and Angels in such a spotlesse innocency Oh what wit had the rulers of this world that condemned him as a malefactor that had no spot in him from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot that never did man wrong or sinned against God Isa. 49.7 and 53.2 3 4. Thirdly we may hence see cause to wonder at the love of Christ to us Oh how is it 〈…〉 of such a world of sinnes that yet himselfe never knew sinne What heart of man can sufficiently admire his love unto us that can abase himselfe to be made sinne for us that never did sinne himselfe Fourthly is it not hence also most manifest that impenitent sinners shall not be spared or pitied of God Did not God spare his owne Son that never offended in all his life and shall he spare them that never left offending of him Oh what madnesse hath besotted men so as with stubborne wilfulnesse still to trust upon an unknowne mercy in God yea such a mercy as God could never conceive in the case of his Sonne that was not to him as they are in any respect Were these men but throughly beaten from this sinfull plea of mercy in God they would repent of their sins in time and seeke true mercy from God which never is with-held from penitent sinners Lastly Did our Saviour Christ suffer so patiently such extreme things that never deserved any evill in himselfe What a shame is it for us to be so unquiet and dejected or so froward or so unsettled when any crosses or afflictions fall upon us who yet have deserved at Gods hands to suffer a thousand times more and worse things than those that doe befall us In his mouth was found no guile We reade in the Scripture of guile in the spirit when we have false hearts and guile in the hands by false weights and ballances and guile in the mouth in deceitfull words Guile in words is committed many wayes First by lying when men speake what they thinke not Secondly by flattering when men praise others after a corrupt maner or for corrupt ends Thirdly by backbiting when men censure others behind their backs of malice or whisper evill against others Psal. 41.7 Fourthly by wresting the words of others to their hurt Psal. 56.11 and 52.1 2. Fiftly by with-holding the just praises of others or Apologie Sixtly by fearefulnesse in evill times when men will not stand for the truth or speake against their Consciences Seventhly by disgracefull jests Ephes. 5.4 Eighthly by telling the truth of malice 1 Sam. 22.9 10. Ninthly by boasting of a false gift Pro. 27.1 Tenthly by hypocrisie and dissimulation and that divers wayes as 1. When men speake faire to mens faces but reproach them behinde their backs or flatter them meerely to catch them and intangle them in their talke as the Pharisees often tempted Christ. 2. That reproveth sinne in others and yet commits it himselfe Rom. 2.19 3. That colours sin under pretence of Religion Marke 12.40 4. That professeth Religion in words and yet denieth it in his heart 5. That hideth his sin by deniall or excuses to avoyd shame and punishment 6. That gives good words to men in affliction but relieves them not 1 Iohn 3.17 18. None of these nor any other wayes of guile were found in Christ though they called him a deceiver and sought all occasions against him Thus of the sense the doctrines follow Doct. 1. Guile in words is a vice that wonderfully dishonours a man it was a fault would give great advantage to the enemies of the truth As it is a sinne which is in a speciall manner hatefull to God Psal. 5.7 so it is shamefull amongst men and therefore as any man would enjoy good dayes let him refraine his tongue from evill and his lips that they speake no guile Psal. 34.13 Doct. 2. When he saith that they found no guile in his mouth it imports that they sought it And so we learne that the godly are so hated of the wicked that they seeke occasion against them when they see not or heare not of any faults in them they search and inquire and lie in waite
3.9 Phil. 2.2 3. 5. Men miserably neglect thankfulnesse to God for the good they receive daily from his mercies Col. 3.17 6. Many faile publikely and shamefully in want of care to come time enough to Gods service Zech. 8.21 Esay 60.8 In these things Christians should be admonished to mind their wayes and their workes and to strive to walke as becommeth the Gospel and the death of Christ that they may hold fast the light of the truth and shew out better the glory of a Christian life And thus of living to righteousnesse Now followes the third forme of speech By whose stripes we are healed The healing of our sicknesses is reckoned as another fruit of the Passion of Christ or else it is the same with the former exprest in other words These words then are borrowed from the Prophet Esay ch 53.5 who doth chiefely understand the spirituall healing of our soules of our sins as the coherence shewes in the Prophet but yet the Evangelist saith Mat. 8.17 and understands of the healing of our bodies also And therefore I consider of the death of Christ both in respect of soule and body And first as this healing is referred to the soule divers Doctrines may be observed Doct. 1. The soules of all men are diseased by nature even the very soules of the Elect are so till they be healed by Christ. The soule is diseased divers wayes especially by sorrowes and sins it is the disease by sin is here meant Quest. It would be inquired how the soule comes to be sick of these diseases and why sin is called sicknesse in the soule Ans. This spirituall sicknesse comes into the soule by propagation Adam hath infected all his posterity and every man hath increased the diseases of his nature by his owne wilfull transgressions Now sin is called sicknesse because it doth worke that upon the soule which sicknesse doth upon the body for sin hath weakned the strength of the soule in all the faculties of it which all men may discerne and observe in themselves by nature Besides it causeth spottednesse and deformity in the soule as sicknesse doth in the body and therefore sin was likened to the leprosie in the Law Further it often causeth pain and torment in the soule as wounds and diseases do in the body for there is no peace to the wicked especially when God fighteth against them with his terrours Besides it will cause the death of the soule as sicknesse will of the body if it be not helped and so men are said to be dead in sins Use. The Use may be to shew the fearfull negligence of worlds of people that are exceeding carefull to help their bodies to health but never think of the poore soule that lieth lamentably full of diseases And withall it shewes that all wicked men are men of ill natures because their dispositions are all diseased though there be degrees of ill nature or of this evill in men natures as there is difference of sicknesses in mens bodies And godly men should be compassionate when they see the grievous diseases in the natures and lives of other men remembering that they also were by nature subject to the same diseases as well as they Doct. 2. The diseases in the soules of men by nature are very grievous which is here also implied in that God was faine to send his owne Son to help and heale us Now that the diseases of mens soules are so grievous may appeare many wayes First because such a multitude of men are infected not some one person in the whole world in the body of mankind not on some part but from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot all full of sores and diseases There is no man that sinneth not and so no man that is not sick and that is the reason why men feare the pestilence because it makes so many sicke Secondly because the soule of man by nature is sicke of a multitude of diseases at once for even sin is a sicknesse and so our sicknesses are innumerable because our sins are so And hence it is that in Scripture so many metaphors are used to expresse the sicknesse of the soule as leprosie wounds plagues poyson gall c. Thirdly because the disease lieth in the soule it selfe Of diseases those are most mortall that get into the spirits and doe most enfeeble man how much more when it is in the soule Fourthly because in respect of our selves our sins or our diseases are incurable we can give our selves no remedy that can help us Ier. 30. Fiftly because in the Colledge of spirituall Physicians there is scarce one of a thousand that can help the poore soule out of these diseases Iob 33. Sixtly because there be but certaine seasons onely in which men can be healed as it was with the lame man at the poole of Bethesda and if men misse these seasons they are in danger to dye of these sicknesses There be seasons of grace and dayes of salvation and men must not harden their hearts while it is called To day Use. The Use should be to awaken wicked men to a serious consideration of their danger and at length to thinke of helpe for their soules being thus diseased as they would doe for their bodies if they were desperately sicke Ob. We feele no such diseases in our soules Sol. First wicked men have a kinde of spirituall lethargie upon them and so are in grievous danger but by reason of their spirituall sleepinesse they feele it not Secondly though they feele not their diseases now they shall doe hereafter and then thinke what a paine it will be unto them when God awakens them whether they will or no. It may be it will be in this life as it was with Cain and Iudas and then a wounded spirit will ake so who can beare it Thirdly the matter is not altogether so easie with wicked men as they pretend f●r they doe feele so much as may shew they are very sicke Sometimes they feele their consciences galling and paining them at the very heart for the time and what are the passions and perturbations of their soules but as so many fits of●a Feaver And that they are grievously sicke may appeare by the want of their spirituall senses they can hardly see or heare any thing Besides they may know they are sicke by the potions of afflictions which God gives them who doth nothing in vaine Doct. 3. That in Christ the diseases of our soules may be healed Esay 53.5 Mal. 4.2 Luke 4.18 He is a sure Physician for our soules God hath undertaken it that he will cure and heale us he challengeth it as a glory to himselfe which he executes by Christ Iob 5.17 18. Deut. 32.39 Now in as much as our diseases may be healed by Christ and that he is our Physician appointed by God we may gather many arguments of great comfort even from hence that he is the Physician First because
then we shall see God by direct vision Moses that saw as much of God as a mortall man then could saw but his backe parts he saw God as we see a man going from us but then we shall see him face to face as he is comming to us yea as he is possessed by us Wee shall not need helpe to shew God to us as we doe now for God himselfe shall be our everlasting light as was shewed before There is a foure-fold vision of God the one is natu●all as when wee see him in the creatures the other is speculous or Symbolicall when we see God in certaine signes of his presence as in the burning fire in the Bush or in the Cloud or Pillar of fire at the Tabernacle The third is the vision of Faith when we know how good God is by the promises of his word to us in Christ. The last is the vision of ●lory which differs from all the former in a way of seeing unknowne to us Thirdly our knowledge will differ in the measure Now wee know b●t in part there are many things wee know not and what wee doe know wee know but obscurely and darkly then wee shall know perfectly even as wee are now knowne perfectly of God 1 Cor. 13.10 11. c. and so wee shall know both God and the Creat●res There is a world of most delightfull and rare knowledge of the Creatures which wee attaine not to in this life but the chiefe glory of our knowledge then shall bee in the perfect vision of God and those unspeakable beauties of his nature when wee shall behold perfectly the glory of every propertie or attribute in God which will be sufficient to breed everlasting wonder and delight In a word the knowledge of the meanest Christian in heaven shall be above the knowledge of Prophets or Apostles on earth The first difference is in the effect of our knowledge for from our knowledge and this celestiall light flowes righteousnesse peace and joy in the holy Ghost which the Apostle Paul makes to be the parts of the Kingdome of God and so both in this life and in heaven Rom. 14.17 And unto these three heads may bee referred all things that concerne the glory of eternall life and all these are held with great difference in each degree of eternall life For though we have righteousnesse and peace and joy now in the truth of them yet wee have ●hem not as we shall have them in heaven as will appeare if we consider of them distinctly First for righteousnesse Here it is the greatest burthen of life unto the godly that they are not able to serve God as they desire the imperfections of their gifts the corruption of their natures the daily infirmities that discover themselves in their conversations make life many times more bitter than death would be to them as appeareth by St. Paul Rom. 7. But there all that is imperfect shall be done away there shall be no danger of displeasing God for we shall be made perfect in all parts and degrees of holinesse our nature shall be perfect like the nature of God our members shall never more be servants unto unrighteousnesse and our soules shall exactly resemble God in all perfection of goodnesse and gifts Here the glory of mans inheritance lieth in the goodnesse of things without them there it shall consist principally in an everlasting goodnesse confirmed upon themselves We shall be without spot and wrinkle Eph 5.27 We shall be as he is in holinesse 1 Iohn 3.2 Here is our griefe that our hearts cannot be so filled with the love of God and the godly as they should be there our hearts shall burne with an eternall inflammation of affections towards God and the blessed ones without any interruption or decay we shall never mor● be troubled with hardnesse of heart discouragement feare distractions inordinate desires and perturbations Yea our holinesse shall be better than Adams in Paradise for he had a power not to sin but we shall have no power at all to sin Yea in relation to Christ it shall be better with us then than it is now for now we are reckoned just men only by the benefit of Christs righteousnesse imputed to us but then we shall be made so perfectly holy by inherent righteousnesse that we shall stand everlastingly righteous before God by the righteousnesse that is in us Imputation shall there cease for ever when Christ hath delivered up the kingdome to God the Father and when faith shall be done away Lastly the difference in this point may further appeare in the freedome of our wills In this life many times our wills are not free to desire to doe the good we should doe and most an end want power to execute what we desire but there shall be all libertie so as we shall never want either desire or power to accomplish what may be for Gods everlasting glory or our owne felicity Secondly for peace there is great difference for first in this life we have but little peace in respect of the miseries of life Sometimes we have but little inward peace our hearts being unquiet with feare or griefe or discouragement or passions or else our consciences are unquiet either because God fights against us to trie us or to humble us or we fight against our selves through ignorance and unbeliefe or distresse for sin Sometimes when our spirits are quiet and there is a truce from inward war we then want out vard peace either men are unreasonable and molest us without cause in our estates or names or else God afflicts us in body with paine and weaknesse or in estate sometimes with easie crosses like small rain sometimes with greater crosses like some fierce storms Now in heaven there shall be an eternall cessation of all miserie there shall be no curse and affliction shall be cast into the Sea Rev. 22.23 Secondly our Sabbaths or dayes of rest which G●d hath consecrated and blessed to us as the chiefe joy of our lives prove many times daies of sorrow affliction because either our bodies are molested with pain or our soules distressed for want of powerfull meanes or for want of abilitie to keepe a Sabbath unto God or for want of joy in our soules but in heaven we shall have an eternall Sabbath not one day in seven but all our dayes rest without labour and solace of heart without any difficultie in our selves or interruption without us God and the Lamb will be an eternall Temple to make our rest for ever glorious Wee shall be freed from all the labours of life and from all paine and difficultie in serving God and our works shall be all easie and full of delight even the praising of God for ever Rev. 14.12 Heb 4.9 Thirdly for joy There is great difference both in the causes and in the measure and in the continuance of it The causes of our joy shall be the highest can befall a