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A30241 CXLV expository sermons upon the whole 17th chapter of the Gospel according to St. John, or, Christs prayer before his passion explicated, and both practically and polemically improved by Anthony Burgess ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing B5651; ESTC R13734 964,431 860

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these things Hence when Israel did see her vanity by false confidences in the creatures see what God saith of her Hos 13.4 Thou shalt know no God but me for there is no Saviour beside me and Hos 8.2 Israel shall cry unto me My God we know thee Though therefore knowledge be better then the greatest duties performed out of ignorant devotion the same Hosea 6 6. God there desireth knowledge more then burnt offerings yet this is but a lame imperfect knowledge if it breed not dependance on God as on our heavenly and gracious Father The other branch of dependance is on Christ for Justification and Salvation that is the beleeving on him which our Saviour so often promiseth eternall life to Oh when our knowledge of Christ and the fulnesse and sufficiency of a Mediator makes us to cast all our burden on him and to have free accesse to the Throne of Grace by his bloud this is precious knowledge This is that excellency of knowledge Paul Phil. 3. counted all things dung unto comparatively See then what trust and dependance doth the knowledge of God cause in thee for all thy knowledge art thou not as full of cares distractions and diffidence as if God did not rule as if Christ were not the Mediatour as if there were no promises in Gods Word 6. Then is our knowledge saving when it makes us glorifie God as God giving the praise of all things to him Rom. 1. This the Apostle taxeth the Gentiles withall that though they had a knowledge of God by the creatures yet they did not glorifie him according to this knowledge but they made sensible Images of him and worshipped wood and stone the work of mens hands They did not glorifie him as God there is a great deal in that To glorifie God as God is so to honour him as to give him the best and the supremacy in all things When our hearts are as much upon the creature as God or when we would serve God and Mamon this is not to glorifie God as God When we do any thing not principally and chiefly for God we do not honour him as a God These are the inward effects of knowledge Now there are outward effects which will necessarily follow true and saving knowledge even as the beams of the Sunne do the Sunne though they are not called externall as opposite to internall no they both go together for they that know God know him to be a Spirit and that he must be worshipped in Spirit and truth that all outward duties done without the heart are but a meer hypocrisie so that these outward effects are to be taken as streams coming from a full and precious fountain within and they are such as these 1. The true knowledge of God doth make a man effectually purge himself from all filthy and noisome lusts To say we know God and yet give our selves to sin is a lye and it argueth no truth in us 1· John 3.6 He that commits sin hath not known or seen God which is the reason why the Prophets attribute all the ungodlinesse in a Land to the not knowing of God So our Saviour tels the Pharisees that all their wickednesse was because they did not know him and his Father and in this Chapter Christ saith The world hath not known thee but these have known thee Ephes 4. If ye have been taught as the truth is in Jesus and ye have not so learned Christ What is this when we have so learned Christ as to put off the old man with the lusts thereof Never then boast of thy knowledge and thy parts what mortification of sinne what cleansing from thy filth doth it cause in thee if thy Christian knowledge doth not work a Christian life but thou art bruitish and dissolute in thy life tremble at thy estate for thou art out of the way to heaven 1 Pet. 2.20 some are said to have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of God yet these did it externally only They were swine though washed not sheep but thou dost not come thus farre though thou hast the knowledge of God yet thou wallowest in thy mire and lickest up thy vomit Thy condemnation will be the greater because thou knowest thy Masters will and dost it not What sentence then shall we passe upon all the carnall and wicked waies of most men they know well enough they understand well enough but because this knowledge hath no efficacy upon their lives therefore they go in the broad way to hell 2. Saving knowledge as it causeth an avoiding of sinne so a ready and willing obedience unto the commands of God And for this sake all disobedient and rebellious sinners are said in the Scripture not to know God They are excellently put together 1 Thess 1.8 in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God nor obey the Gospel of Jesus Christ What obedience then and conformity to Gods Law doth thy knowledge work in thee this God looketh at he careth not for thy head or thy tongue if he have not thy heart thy hands and thy whole life If so be the Apostle say that he which doubteth whether such a thing be sinne he is damned if he do it Rom. 14. how damnable is that mans condition who knoweth and is assured that he sinneth and yet wilfully persists in it So that our knowledge is not to be carried only to truths to what is to be beleeved and there to sit down No but Rom. 12.2 we are to be transformed in our minde that we may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God We are to consider what is that which is acceptable and well-pleasing to God and when we know it we must readily fullfill it Oh that men of knowledge and parts would think of these things Dost thou that which is well-pleasing to God Doth God accept of such a life as thine Is there not a plain contrariety and opposition between Gods will and thy lusts A man of great knowledge and also great impiety were he not puffed up with self-flattery would easily see the opposition between his life and Gods Word the one is strict his life is dissolute the one calleth to avoid not only sinne but the appearance of it but thy life plungeth thee both into sinne and the occasions of it Oh consider all thy knowledge and understanding helps thee no more then the devils knowledge doth them they are not able to love or delight in God and his will 3. The knowledge of God will make a man keep a good conscience in all things it will make him take heed of sinne in secret as well as publique it will make him do duties in secret as well as openly for whosoever is not afraid to sinne in secret whosoever neglects private duties and holinesse this man knoweth not God he doth not understand that he is omnipresent that his eye is every where beholding all things that
they be indeed the devils fools What is this but to renounce God and to renounce your baptisme If you have lost your goods you will go and lose your souls to We reade of Ahaziah 2 King 1.6 when his childe was sick he would go to Baal to know whether his childe should recover or no but with what a dreadfull message doth Gods Prophet entertain him telling him his childe should die withall saying Is it because there is not a God in Israel that thou doest so May not we say so when you go to the devils instruments witches wise men and sorcerers Is it because there is not a true God in heaven Some have questioned whether such as compact with the devil and use familiar spirits can possibly repent and be saved they doubt whether they are in a capacity of ever having eternall life but that is too rigid for we reade of Manasses a great sinner in this kinde one that was given to witchcraft and used a familiar spirit yet he prayed and humbled himself and God accepted of him So we reade of some converted by the Apostles preaching that brought in all their conjuring books and burnt them Act. 19.19 Though therefore no doubt is to be made but upon their repentance God will forgive yet it is a great and a grievous sinne it 's a renouncing of God and your Baptism Take heed then of ever doing so and if thy heart hath been so gracelesse and wicked heretofore oh abhorre thy self let thy conscience cry out I have committed a great and abominable sinne thou art the chiefest sinner of many thousands We ought to have no communion with the devil though he had power to foretell and so do good to thee as he hath not any further then God may reveal to him When the devils confessed Christ was the true Son of God he rebuked them and would not own such a confession So Paul also Act. 16.16 would not own a confession though true because by one possessed by the devil Be ashamed of the name of a Christian and renounce thy baptism if thou shouldst over do such sins again SERMON XVIII The Necessity of the Knowledge of Christ Jesus as well as of God the Father JOH 17.3 And Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent WE now come to the second Object of this knowledge necessary to salvation and that is Christ This latter Object is added because of the Jews and some Heretiques who though they acknowledge the only true God yet because they are eirher ignorant of or deny Christ therefore they are not in the way to salvation The object to be known is described 1. By his proper Name 2. By his appellative or name of office 3. From the Original and Cause of it His proper name is Jesus Though some learned men have affected to go out of the ordinary way in giving the true root of this word yet certainly the most common derivation of it is most true viz. that it comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to save as the Angell plainly interprets it his Name shall be called Jesus because he shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 1.21 It 's the same with Joshua who was so called because he delivered the people out of their temporal miseries and brought them into Canaan being herein a Type of Christ 2. His Name of office Christ as much as anointed I shall not say much of this word now Though the word be attributed to others yet Jesus is properly called the Messias he is the Vnctus unctorum the anointed of the anointed and this doth especially demonstrate the Priestly and the Kingly office of Christ 3. There is the Original or Fountain of this office It 's from God the Father Now when the Father is said to send him it is not to be understood as if it were against Christs will no but he voluntarily and readily undertook this Office likewise so that if we did know and acknowledge such a person as was called Jesus yet if we did not also acknowledge him to be the Christ the Mediatour appointed by God our knowledge would be insufficient Obs That the knowledge of one true God is not enough to salvatian without the knowledge of Christ also They are both put together and none may separate them Hence it 's so often in Scripture commanded that we should beleeve in Christ That be who beleeveth shall not enter into judgement and our Saviour makes the knowlege of him and the Father inseparably joyned together Ioh. 8.19 To open the Doctrine Consider 1. That we cannot have any knowledge about Christ either that there is such an one or what he is but only by Revelation We told you about God there was a threefold Knowledge by nature by the Creatures by the Scriptures And therefore whereas it might be and is easily granted by all that none can be saved without the knowledge of the true God yet both of old and of late there have been those who have held that the Nations that know not Christ may be saved It 's true they are divided among themselves for some say the Gentiles have some implied or confused knowledge of Christ or else God revealeth it to them extraordinarily but others positively say the knowledge we have by nature and meer light of reason is enough to conduct to heaven As for Cornelius the Centurion whom they instance in the first Heathen converted and baptized under the New Testament it is plain that he had a knowledge of Christ though imperfect Neither is that expression of Peter upon Cornelius his admission Act. 10.35 where he saith God is no accepter of persons but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse shall be saved any waies favouring salvation without Christ For now the partition wall being broken down and the Gospel to be preached to all Nations which was represented in the vision of a sheet full of clean and unclean beasts the Knowledge of Christ was likewise therewith to be propagated It 's true the Apostle saith they that sinne without the Law shall be judged without the Law Rom. 2. God will not judge them by that they knew not and so they that sinne without the knowledge of the Gospel they shall not be judged for not beleeving in Christ and not receiving of him to whom he was never tendred but then they have a law of conscience within them by which they shall be condemned so that by the Scripture we cannot say there is any other way of salvation but by the Name of Christ and Faith in his Name yea that Text Act. 4.12 is plainly excluding any other way of salvation There is no other Name under Heaven whereby we must be saved Howsoever men may tropically explain and say how can we think so merciful a God can suffer so many thousands and thousands who never heard of Christ to perish yea their poor Infants who committed no actual sinne We must submit to the
Graece This distinction is greatly to be marked for a Christian through bodily distempers and old Age may decay in parts not have the memory nor the activity or the hot affections he had once and yet be a more mortified and solid Christian for Grace will not cure a man of bodily Diseases or of Old Age and because the Soul doth work dependantly upon the body as the body it 's Instrument doth decay so are the Souls Operations impaired thereby But be not discouraged this is not a decay in Grace it 's only in parts and gifts or a bodily constitution which though comfortable mercies yet are not Essentials to grace On the other side there are too many that encrease in Knowledge that are enlarged in parts but decay in grace yea their corruptions and lusts grow with them 4. Distinguish between a further Sanctification in respect of the solidity of it and the affectionatenesse of it Every decay in affection is not presently an abating in grace for godlinesse lyeth chiefly in the minde and will If these be solidly established and really bent for God Though affections be not passionately and sensiby put forth yet thou maist grow a more sound and firm Christian 5. There is difference between a further Sanctification and the certainty and evidence of it Many a Christian groweth in holinesse yet he is not sensible of his growth as in nature a man groweth yet doth not perceive it What our Saviour spake of the spreading and growing of the Gospel is true also in respect of Sanctification Mar. 4.27 It 's as if a man should cast Seed in the ground and should sleep and rise night and day and the Seed spring up and grow he knoweth not how Thus the godly they shoot out in grace when yet they do not perceive it yea sometimes they are tempted to the clean contrary 6. Grant it be true that thou art lesse sanctified then before thou hast decaied sadly Let this then quicken thee up to make the more haste for the future Let this stumbling make thee get ground Sometimes a David a Peter are left to fall that they may rise and go the faster After some diseases the childe groweth more then ever The Traveller that hath overslept himself doubles his pace Thus let thy very decaies do good to thee In the third place Let us Consider the Reasons why that it 's not enough to be sanctified but we must be more and more holy every day And 1. We are not sanctified to stand still there We are yet in the way we are not yet come to our journeys end Hence our Christianity whilst in this Life is compared to running in a Race We are not come to the term and end of our Sanctification when we are first converted We are but put into the right way to happinesse we are but beginners We have much work to doe ere we shall receive a Crown of Glory You see that glorious Saint Paul who laboured more then they all yet Phil. 3.14 I presse towards the mark forgetting the things that are behinde 2. We are further to be Sanctified because there remain Reliques of corruption still to be subdued Sanctifying grace doth expell sinne but by degrees Even as the heat by degrees doth expell the cold Now the Apostle tels us Gal. 6. what is in the hearts of all the godly There are lusts rebelling against the Spirit and there is a law of sinne in our members If then Sanctifying grace do not encrease sin will encrease If we be not further sanctified we shall be further corrupted The heart of a man is immediatly susceptible of one of these either grace or sin If then there be not more grace there will be more sin you cannot stand at a stay If you swim not against the stream the stream will bear thee down 3. This is the end of all those afflictions and chastisements which God laieth upon us that we should be more sanctified John 15. Every branch is purged that it may bring forth more fruit These are like the compost laid on the ground these are the plowing and the harrowing of the ground to make it more fruitful The fire is to make the gold more pure from drosse The winnowing is to separate the Chaff from the Wheat and thus are all Gods Dispensations which come in Severity to thee They are to sanctifie thee more to make thee more Heavenly-minded 4. This is one great end of the Word and the Preaching thereof Sanctifie them by thy Word and Eph 4. We are to be edified to a full stature in Christ by the Officers in his Church So that as the Sun and the Clouds help to make the Ground fruitful as the Winde filling the Sails of the Ship makes it go more swiftly So should the Ministry and Ordinances Oh what knowledge and grace shouldest thou have attained to by this time Let thy profiting appear to all as Paul said to Timothy 5. The sweetnesse and excellency of grace if once tasted of should make thee insatiable to have more Shall the hydropical man the more he drinketh the more desire it and the earthly man the more wealth he hath be the more covetous of it What a shame then is it if the more gostlinesse thou hast thou art not the more desirous still to have more 6. It 's Gods promise that such who are godly shall grow more holy Isa 40.29 30 51. They shall renew they shall mount up like Eagles So Hos 14.6 7. That as it is a curse upon the wicked to grow worse and worse so it 's a blessing to the godly to grow better If God will blesse their outward store make their oyl encrease much more their graces Vse of Exhortation to stir up your selves in holinesse Endeavour after more grace then thou hast yet oh bewail thy leannesse thy barrennesse In how many things maist thou be bettered still Thou dost greatly deceive thy self if thou thinkest now I may sit down I have gone far enough Vse 2. to confute corrupt Opinion of most men that do not like this forwardnesse and strictnesse in the way to Heaven Can a man be too godly then he may be too happy as well and have too much of Heaven Doth not our Saviour pray here for his Disciples sanctified already yet to be more sanctified Do we not daily pray that Gods grace may come more into our hearts why then are we displeased to see it doth encrease SERMON XCI Of the Causes of Sanctification and in particular of Gods Word as the Instrumentall Cause JOHN 17.17 Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is Truth WE are now come to the Manner or rather the Instrumentall Cause of our Sanctification and that is Truth Sanctifie them by thy truth Some understand this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly sincerely and so those that limit this Sanctification to their Ministerial Separation for to preach the Word of God
is that they might be sanctified of which more hereafter From Christ thus Sanctifying himself to be a Sacrifice for us Observe That Christ set himself apart to be a Sacrifice for us or he sanctified himself to become a Sacrifice for us This is the Summe of all Divinity All the Types in the Old Testament did look to this The Apostle desired to know nothing but this This is the Foundation of the Efficacy both of Christs Prayers and of ours Had Christ onely praied for us and not thus sanctified himself to be a Sacrifice for us it would not have been effectuall for our Salvation Let us Open this Point though I shall not insist long on it because I have otherwhere shewed That Christ suffered by way of an atoning Sacrifice I shall now speak the more briefly of it And first This Sanctification of himself to be a Sacrifice for us doth imply the exceeding Purity and Holinesse that was in him and therefore Peter cals him the undefiled and spotlesse Lamb 1 Peter 1.9 In the Old Testament The Lamb that was to be offered was to be without blemish not to be defective in any parts and to be without spot There was to be no various colour upon it This was to signifie the absolute Purity of Christ in respect of outward and inward sinne And therefore the Apostle presseth the preheminency of Christ our High-Priest above those of the Law because they had sinnes of their own and they were compassed about with their own Infirmities and so offered for themselves first Hebr. 7.26 He is there called holy harmlesse undefiled and separate from Sinners And this Purity and Holinesse was not only to qualifie his Person to be our Mediatour but it was part of that Righteousnesse which is communicated to us Therefore he saith I sanctifie my self for them And as he was made man for Beleevers So also holy and undefiled for them It 's true some Divines distinguish in Christ his Justitia personae and his Justitia meriti but the Righteousnesse of Christ was part of his merit and so they cannot be opposed to one another This is the Wedding Garment This is our Elder Brothers Clothes This is the fine Linnen of the Saints Therefore thou that complainest of thy want of Holinesse Thou art not sanctified in such a degree and measure as thou desirest remember Christ hath sanctified himself for thee Secondly This doth imply the ready and willing offering up of himself to this work And certainly this is the great Mystery at which Heaven and Earth may be astonished This the Angels wonder at and still desire to search into it more and more That Christ should come from the bosome of the Father and lay aside the manifestation of all Heavenly Majesty and Glory to be debased in so low a way making himself of no reputation This can never be considered of enough no not by all the Angels and Saints to all Eternity Philip. 2.6 The Apostle doth there enlarge himself in this Meditation and in another place how he became poor that we might make us rich Two things are admirable in this willing Oblation of himself 1. That he should put himself in such a suffering condition as to be for a while without the sense and enjoyment of his Fathers love to him He that was in the Bosome of the Father an Expression to shew the intimate close and secret delight and love he had from the Father How unspeakable is it that he should deprive himself of the sense of it To put himself as it were out of Heaven into an Hell this is deeper love then ever we can imagine or conceive No wonder the Apostle cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the unsearc●●ble Riches of Grace We are never able to go to the bottome of it but still there is more love and grace behinde Did the Queen of Sheba faint to see the temporall Statelinesse and magnificence of Solomon How should the Believer at the sight of this Heavenly Glory be even ravished with Admiration No wonder if the Church cry out She is sick of Love for this may do it It was more for Christ to be one moment without the feeling of his Fathers Love then to endure all those bodily Torments he did endure My God My God why hast thou forsaken me In the Originall it is My strong One He giveth unto God that peculiar and proper Title because he was then so weak and infirm and dejected in himself 2. That he should not thus only put himself out of comfort but also from the enjoyment of that manifested glory and honour he might have retained to himself This also was very wonderfull In this Chapter he prayeth for that Glory which yet he had with the Father from the beginning of the world he had it in right but not in possession He voluntarily divested himself of that that so he might accomplish our Redemption Job bewailed once the bitter change that was upon him He that sate among Princes to sit upon the Dunghill scraping his soars this was a great Change but this Change that Christ took upon himself was infinitely farre transcending it Thirdly In that Christ is said to sanctifie himself herein is implied the universall fitnesse that was in him for that work To sanctifie and to be prepared or made fit is the same thing in the Scripture and this is also a Treasure of exceeding great Comfort for if Christ had not been every waies a full and fit Redeemer we had certainly miscarried His fitnesse is seen in regard 1. Of his Person 2. His Offices And 3. The Benefits thereof with the accomplishment of them The fitnesse in his Person is that he was both God and man whatsoever some Schoolmen have thought or imagined yet no meer man though qualified to the highest with all manner of grace could have satisfied for mans sinnes It was necessary he should be God for by this means there was an infinite value worth and excellency put upon his Doings and Sufferings So that the worth and merit of Christs Actions did as farre exceed our demerits as his Person did ours as God doth man It was necessary also he should be man for in that Nature only could he suffer in that only could he die Thus there is one Mediatour of God and man the man Christ Jesus He then that must reconcile God and man must necessarily be both God and man He must be medius that he may be a Mediatour and therefore we may truly say he was sanctified thereunto that is he was appointed and prepared for it 2. He is fitted in respect of his Offices which are to be a Prophet Priest and King He is the Trismegist if you do regard the threefold Cord that did binde us Sinners which we could never loose then we shall see how fit a Saviour he was There was in us horrible blindenesse and darknesse of
Scripture otherwise we may take up Origens opinion and say how doth it stand with the goodnesse of God and his pity to let so many Angels and men be damned and not save them all at last But when the Word of God speaks man must be silent and hold his tongue 2. A right knowledge about one true God is not enough without the knowledge of Christ partly on Gods part and partly on our part On Gods part for so he is absolutely considered as a righteous and just God hating all sinne and punishing it where he findes it Now in this consideration he is a consuming fire there is a great gulf between him and us The devils and damned in hell may as well hope for mercy as we if there were no Christ The heathens therefore who hoped for pardon they ignorantly thought to satisfie God as if he could be satisfied by any finite thing as Luther said It 's not Deus absolutus but relativus not God considered absolutely but relatively as a Father in Covenant through Christ that is the ground of all our hope and comfort This knowledge would only terrifie and drive to despair as you see in Adam till he was comforted with the promise 2. On our part It 's necessary to know Christ as well as God because without Christ there is no foundation for any duty We cannot pray we cannot approach near to him As he is a consuming fire so we are combustible stubble Whatsoever ye shall ask in my Name saith Christ shall be given you It must be through that Name our duties are accepted Can two walk together unlesse they be agreed What concord or agreement can there be between a righteous God and a corrupted sinner For this cause it is that the most holy men have praied that God would not enter into strict judgement with them Psa 143.2 If men sanctified dare not appear at the Tribunal of God in their own persons much lesse may sinners It 's necessary then because of that contrariety between God and sinful man there should be a Mediatour an advocate one that should stand between justice and us the condemning power of the Law and us Who is not afraid of justice Who hath so much purity that the Law cannot finde any fault with him So that if we consider of these two particulars we shall see great reason that we have to know Christ and God also Thirdly Take notice That a Knowledge or belief that there is a Messias is not enough unlesse we beleeve that person called Iesus to be Christ For he doth not say This is Eternal Life to beleeve a Christ but that Jesus is Christ The Jews to this day beleeve there will be a Messias all their hope and expectation is for such an one but yet the Apostle saith they are cast off by God for the present that they are branches broken off from the Olive Rom. 11. and why because they erre in two particulars 1. They deny that Jesus born of the Virgin Mary to be the Messiah Therefore they will not beleeve the promises to be fullfilled in him And 2. They look for a temporall Messiah who shall restore them from bodily captivity not for a Saviour in a spiritual sence Indeed before Christ came into the flesh then a belief and expectation of a Messiah was enough as appears by Simeons Song Luk. 2.34 who was one of the expectants for Christ and when he saw him then desired to depart in peace but now since he is come it 's necessary to salvation to beleeve that Person born of the Virgin Mary and crucified by the Jews under Pilate was the true and promised Messias Therefore a great part of the Apostles Ministry was to prove that Jesus was the Christ Fourthly In that Christ makes Eternall Life to lie in these two necessary things therefore the Papists are horribly presumptuous who adde a third thing necessary to Eternal Life which is Subesse Romano Pontifici To acknowledge the Pope to be head of the Church and to submit to him This is de necessitate salutis saith Bellarmine But they have never yet been able to make this out that there is such an universal visible and infallible head of the Church Yea Gregory one of the Popes said Whosoever should arrogate to himself the Title of Vniversal Bishop he was the Forerunner of Antichrist For the great Antichristianism described by the Apostles lieth not so much in doctrines Though they be Antichrists also that deny Christ to be come in the flesh 1 Joh. 2.16 yet the great Antichrist is described by the Church-power and universal dominion he shall take to himself in the Church exalting himself above every thing that is called God 2 Thes 2.4 Therefore howsoever they pronounce such dreadful sentences upon all the Reformed Churches that have cast off the Popes power as if they were not in a way to Eternal Life yet this Scripture may abundantly encourage where there is a true knowledge of God and Christ there is a possibility of Eternal Life Fifthly To know Jesus Christ whom the Father hath sent implieth the knowledge of these particulars 1. That he is really and truly God for how can he be a spiritual Saviour if he be not God Is it not God only that can raise from the dead Could meer man satisfie the justice of God destroy the works of the devil It 's not my purpose here to confirm that main Article of Religion I only inform you that he who truly knoweth Christ must know him to be God the only begotten of the Father else he cannot know him as a Jesus as a Saviour Therefore howsoever Arians and Socinians talk much of Christ dispute much of him yea mention him in their praiers and Petitions yet they do not truly know Christ if the Apostle makes it so great a sinne to deny Christ to be come in the flesh to be man that he saith he is Antichrist that doth so 1 Joh. 2.18 then it must needs be a greater sinne to deny him to be God for as he doth a man a greater wrong that denieth him a rationall soul then that denieth a mortal body to him so he doth in a greater manner dishonour Christ that denieth him to be God then to be man Shall Christ himself Phil. 2. think it no robbery to be equal with God and will they make Christ guilty of such robbery for he assumed to himself both the Title and reality of God 2. To know Jesus Christ is to acknowledge him man as well as God for this was his name given him by the Angel when he was born so that he only knoweth Christ who acknowledgeth him both God and man as the Scripture sometimes cals him the only begotten Son of God so sometimes the Son of man and many places in Scripture speak of both his natures Rom. 9.5 who concerning the flesh was of the Seed of Abraham and yet he is God for evermore concerning the flesh that is
spoken oppositely to his divine nature so that to deny the humane nature of Christ though we should affirm he was God yet this is not to know Christ Therefore the Marcionists and some Anabaptists who said he had not a true reall body that he was only in the appearance of a man They do not know Christ 3. To know Jesus Christ implieth also that we have some understanding of his Offices Of his anointing with all sufficiency and fulnesse to be a Mediatour for us He that saith he knows Christ and doth not acknowledge him anointed by God with all fulnesse to be a Mediatour for us saith he knoweth not what Now the ignorance of Christs Office and his fulnesse therein doth wonderfully abound in Popery The devil in former times opposed the natures of Christ when he could no longer succeed that way then he opposeth the Offices of Christ all those doctrines of merits indulgencies and satisfactions do oppose the Offices of Christ for if Christ be the Messiah if he be the full Mediatour to what purpose are all these Although therefore in Popery there is the true doctrine retained about Christs Natures he is acknowledged to be God and man yet in respect of his Offices there is a total burying of him in silence Angels and Saints merits and indulgencies have even almost put out the very Name of Christ amongst them so then all acknowledging that Christ is not enough it must be a Scripture-confessing of him We must give him his full due not make him half a Mediatour half a Saviour and joyn ' our selves or others in this great work 4. To know Christ implieth also that we acknowledge the great love of the Father in sending his only Son thus to mediate for us Therefore it 's added whom thou hast sent and for this reason it 's said he that knoweth and honoureth the Son must know and honour the Father also Joh. 5.23 For from the Father comes the Spring of all this love He so loved the world that he gave his only Son Joh. 3. and certainly this is of great consequence to know the Father sent Christ into the world for hereby we may be assured that all the obedience and sufferings of Christ shall be accepted of by the Father We need not fear it or doubt of it for the Father did make the first motion as it were to the Sonne Though the Sonne also did readily and voluntarily undertake it Now how great a matter was this for God the Father to do Was not Christ the only begotten and beloved of the Father Did he not come out of his Fathers bosome to the Crosse and shall not this make us return all thankfulnesse and obedience unto him Lastly This must necessarily imply a knowledge of our misery and damnable condition by sinne For if we were not lost what need had we of a Saviour If we were not sinners what need of a Mediatour So that the acknowledging of a Christ sent into the world to be a Mediatour is the beleeving also of man by nature to be the childe of wrath the Enemy of God one who may not come into his presence or expect the least hope of mercy till an Advocate and Intercessour come and pleade his cause so that this Knowledge of a Christ should be accompanied with great affections and workings of heart it should breed shame fear and confusion in us it should breed an hungring and thirsting after Christ an esteem of him as the only Remedy In Christ only is our fulnesse our sins would undo us were it not for his righteousnesse our iniquities would overthrow us Did not be intercede blessed art thou then when this Knowledge is like fire in thy bosome kindling holy flames within thee Now here may be some Questions made 1. Doth not this exclude all that lived under the Old Testament dispensation from Salvation For howsoever they might know the true God yet was there any discovery or Knowledge of Christ in those daies This is so great a matter that some have looked upon all the Jews as knowing only temporall promises That they knew nothing of heaven but an earthly Canaan was their heaven That they had no Knowledge of Christ but thought by the bloud of Sacrifices to appease God But to answer this 1. No doubt but the common and ordinary sort of them was greatly ignorant of Christ and therefore rested in their Sacrifices and the knowledge of the Law as the only thing that made them acceptable This is plain by the Apostles Arguments in his Epistle to the Galatians and we see by the Prophets they so relied upon these externall services that they thought themselves beloved of God though abounding in all wickednesse And no wonder they did so for under the Gospel how many rest on their duties and have no faith in Christ But 2. Those that were holy and godly they looked upon all their bodily Sacrifices as Types of Christ It was Christs bloud they put confidence in The Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrews shews that God intended Christ by those Sacrifices and that the bloud of Rams and Goats could never clense away sinne as this was Gods meaning so the Priests and Prophets they explained the meaning thereof to the people and sometimes they have clear promises of a Saviour a Messias to come to them who shall be a Prince of Peace and shall bear their sinnes for them as Isaiah speaks like an Evangelist to this purpose which made the Apostle say that the Prophets did bear witnesse of Christ Abraham he saw Christs day and rejoyced Act. 10.43 Now all the godly have the same faith Abraham had therefore he is made the Father of the Faithfull so that what was covered in the Old Testament is revealed in the New Christ they had and Mediation they had though the Knowledge of it was more obscure Hence the Gospel is said to rise like the Light of the Sun 2. It may be demanded why the Knowledge of the holy Ghost is not there said to be Eternal Life as well as of the Father and the Son for without the Spirit of God efficiently enabling us we cannot do any holy duty as well as without Christs merits we cannot be accepted Christ is the meritorious cause and the Spirit of God the applying cause To this we may say that the Knowledge of the Spirit is necessarily implied in the Knowledge of Christ For he was in respect of his humane nature conceived by the holy Ghost when he was to leave his Apostles bodily he promiseth his Spirit to supply his presence So that none can know Christ as a Mediatour that doth not also know the holy Ghost Hence be is called the Spirit of Christ And in the 2d place we may say it 's not necessary that this Text should speak of all things necessary to Salvation It 's enough that other places doe sufficiently testifie it Now that the knowledge of the holy
very considerable for the Pharisee at the close of his life may strive to say Lord I have fasted twice a week I washed my hands my house my pots c. thus I have glorified thee but what saith Christ In vain do ye worship me Mat. 16.9 and who hath required these things at your hands Thus the Papist if he say I have gone a Pilgrimage I have made such penall satisfactions I have said so many Ave Maries I have done penance I have received extream unction Now because this is not required or commanded work therefore it will have no reward So then it 's not enough to see thy work be not contrary to Gods will but look that it be according that it have Gods superscription and the stamp of his command upon it Though it be not malum yet it is aliud though it be not contra yet it is preter and indeed what is preter because not secundum must needs be contra It 's contrary to Gods will whatsoever is not commanded 3. They cannot have the texts comfort at all who are slothfull and negligent though they do not contrary or different yet they are sluggish and so will not work at all in Gods Vineyard This is represented by the Parable of him who had but one Talent yet because he did not improve it he is cast into utter darknesse Cast that unprofitable servant Mat. 25.30 He did not spend the Talent he brought it sure and safe to his Master but he is unprofitable and must be cast into utter darknesse So the tree that brings forth no fruit though it did not bad fruit must be cut down and cast into the fire Oh how greatly is this to be considered for whose life doth not appear to him as Bernards did aut peccatum aut sterilitas either the boggy mire of sinne or the parched wildernesse of barrennesse and if that be so great a sinne Christ be so ready to curse it no wonder if the most holy have sad thoughts about their death and the day of their accounts It 's not then a negative Religion that will truly comfort thee but a positive fruitfull one It will be no solid joy of conscience to say and no more Lord I have been no drunkard no adulterer no prophane person for God looketh for a zealous active fruitfull way in all holinesse yet how doth the meer negation of sinne make many have strong confidence of their excellent condition whereas if they did consider the positive fruitfull part of godlinesse and see how farre they are off it horrour would overwhelm them Consider then how fruitfull are thy duties are thy hours for God maiest thou not cry out many times hodie diem perdidi doest thou put that of the Apostle in practice to redeem the time Ephes 5.16 Heaven would not be heaven if it were only a negation of torment not a positive affluence of all happinesse so neither is that godlinesse which is a bare absence of sinne not a fruitfull abounding in the waies of holinesse 4. There cannot be any solid comfort at the time of account where there is a prevailing lukewarmnesse and formality though the work God requireth be done outwardly Eli cannot give a good account of reproving his sonnes though he did reprove them because there was remisnesse and coldnesse in it a partiall coldnesse and dulnesse is in the best service we do Paul having found the reliques of corruption rebelling against grace and contra vitia pugnamus non ut vincamus sed ne vincamus Jebusites will abide in the land but we speak of a totall plenary lukewarmnesse such which Christ condemneth Revel 2. when he wisheth she were either hot or cold but being lukewarm God would spew her out of his mouth That expression is to shew how noisom and intollerable such persons and such duties are to God Never then think a meer formall and customary way of Religious duties will ever be any comfort to thee no God will say Thy heart was not in these thou didst not serve me as the world as thy lusts and hereupon thou wilt wish Oh that my duties had been more spirituall more fervent more heavenly These very duties thou puttest thy trust in will run like sharp points into thy very heart Thus you have heard what persons cannot have any comfort at all Now we shall shew you What things even to the godly though they may have comfort for the main yet will greatly dishearten and diminish their joy then There will be fears against hope doubts against faith agonies against joy That even as nature and death will in a terrible manner conflict together so will their hopes and fears Yet this is not to be understood but that even a Christian walking most tenderly and circumspectly may at his death have no joy and assurance God for many just and wise ends doth sometimes dispense it so that he who lived very holily may yet die very uncomfortably It was so with Christ though there was a peculiar reason and why not with his members only when God dealeth so they are meer exercises to increase their Crown of glory they are not so properly afflictions for sinne as Job had those extraordinary trials not for sinne though he was not without sinne but triall and thereby to make him more glorious But I shall speak of such particulars as in their own nature tend to make our end very sad and heavy and therefore let him who would look on death as Jacob did on his sonne Josephs Chariot not with grief but with joy as a convoy to eternall happinesse take heed of these things as so many dangerous works And 1. Immoderate affections to lawfull things they do so dead the heart and clog the soul that when a man comes to die these earthly things lye upon the heart as too much undigested meat upon the stomack making thee extream sick and full of pain The Apostle then 1 Cor. 7. prescribeth a comfortable way to dye joyfully where he saith those that buy must be as if they bought not they that marry as if they married not The greener the wood is the harder to be consumed the more lively and active thy worldly affections are there must be the greater opposition to leave all and be with God The ripe aple falleth from the tree very easily the godly man dying is compared to ripe corn so that if these earthy and worldly affections be not dried up in thee it will much hinder thy joy this green wood will make a great smoak Hezekiah though he had this comfortable evidence yet saith the Text He wept soar some attribute that to the Old Testament dispensation where earthly and worldly happinesse was more generally promised then under the New and therefore death being a privation of that did more affect them howsoever this is sure an heart not weaned from the world and yet must be parted from is like a tooth not cut from
yea there is no man but his failings are more then his duties there is more corruption then grace so that if there be sincerity though imperfection we may say Lord we have finished the work thou gavest us to do Indeed humility is required because of our imperfections but not diffidence To doubt and to refuse the comfort God offers is not humility but disobedience like that of Peters who would not let Christ wash his feet 2. Another mistake may be about the nature of true faith and hope as if we were to divide between Christ and our selves and so from both conjoyned together gather our assurance even as the Papists define spes hope to be partim à gratiâ partim à meritis nostris proveniens but those that go thus to divide must needs divide themselves from comfort for the object of our faith and trust must be Christ only We may joyfully take those evidences of grace we see in our selves but to put confidence in them would be to make our selves our own saviours 3. This mistake may breed much disconsolatenesse when we limit our assurance and evidence to the time of our death that if God give us it not then we give up our case as desperate Indeed it 's a most blessed thing and a mercy much to be prayed for that as Simeon so we having seen Christ in our hearts and lives may then depart in peace It 's the haven after all the tempests we have had here but yet God may deny us this cordiall even the best of Gods children have found that God hath not kept the best wine for the last but God doth sometime to his as they did to Christ give him gall and vinegar to drink For as the wicked ungodly man who the next moment is to drop into eternall flames may yet die with great carnal presumption that God is his God that Christ is his Mediator in whom he will trust and so feareth not quakes not at the dolefull judgement coming upon him so the godly man though ready to be crowned with Immortall Glory and there is but a moment between him and everlasting happinesse yet may think his case doubtfull if not desperate may seem to have no hopes no joy yea be so tempted that he shall think all he did was but in hypocrisie and falsehood that there was no truth in him this may be Therefore let the godly not limit God to that time of death Vse of Admonition to awaken your selves at this truth Think how nearly it concerns you Dost thou live in such a way as that thou art able to make this glorious profession Is not God is not his word is not thy own conscience against thee How speechlesse and confounded wilt thou be when God shall bid thee give an account of all thy talents Oh that men should not lay this later end no more to heart that none saith O my soul now all is well now thou takest thy mirth but what a change will the hour of death make With what comfort wilt thou look upon the devils work and sins work which thou hast been doing all thy life time especially take heed of unprofitablenesse and decayings in the way of godlinesse thou that hast looked towards heaven but art turned out of the way be sure thy end will be miserable It had been better for thee saith the Apostle never to have known the way of righteousnesse You may have desires may have breakings of heart and yet return to sinne again oh think with what a violent flood these thoughts will come upon thee Oh me wretched and undone sinner I have no refuge no hope many resolutions I had but they vanished away and now I must live no longer my time is expired my course is finished Oh that God would adde as to Hezekiah some years to my life Oh that I could bid the Sun stand still or time go no further till I were at peace with God but these are vain wishes Let not then this truth go before it hath left a sting in thy very heart O Lord nothing troubleth me but that I did not think or minde these things sooner Meditate on these things your night is coming upon you Will you alwaies delay or else be secure and not matter these things many have done foolishly and dropt in a moment into hell do not thou be so overtaken May we not conclude that the auditor with whom this truth will not avail may fear he is delivered up to an impenitent heart SERMON XXI Of Gods being Glorified by Mans Salvation That Christs chief end in what he did for man was the Glory of God which bespeaks both our Imitation and unspeakable Consolation JOH 17.4 I have glorified thee on earth THe cirumstance of this holy profession which Christ made being considered Let us proceed to the Profession it self and that is He had glorified God on earth Christ in the state of humiliation was inferiour to God and so he did referre all things to his Fathers glory so that in this profession we may consider 1. What is the matter or object whereby God is glorified 2. The end or final cause that moved Christ therein The matter is our salvation and that redemption Christ purchased for us The end which Christ looked at in all this was chiefly the glory of God Indeed he looked also at his own glory and our glory but the ultimate and chiefest of all was Gods glory So that from hence we may observe That our redemption and salvation obtained by Christ is a glorifying of God and Christ did thereby chiefly aim at Gods glory We put both the matter of Gods glory and Christs end together and certainly this Truth discovered will be like that sweet box of perfume which opened caused such a fragrant smell And 1. Let us see how or wherein God was thus glorified by Christs Mediation for us It being of infinite comfort to know this for how many times are we apt to be cast down What are we that God should regard our salvation who are we that God should crown us with glory God doth not need us he is happy without us Now this may exceedingly encourage Though we be not worthy to be saved God is worthy to be glorified If there were nothing but our good and happinesse involved in Christs death who would think it probable Christ should suffer meerly and ultimately for us but there is also the glory of God deeply concerned which is more worth then all the world yea then all our souls for though one soul be more worth then a world yet Gods glory is more worth then all our souls and their salvation So that a Christian fixing his faith and meditation here may be in a transfiguration and say It is good to be here God doth not lose by thy Salvation If Gods honour were to be impaired if his truth broken if his justice violated then who dare open his mouth for salvation but God is
the Covenant of grace and this consideration laieth a firm and sure foundation for our peace and comfort For our salvation is not grounded upon our works but Christs works it 's not upon any perfection or fulnesse in us but on Christ Though therefore our sinnes and frailties may humble us yet they may not drive us from our anchor of hope in Christ 5. This work Christ was to do it was in it self very heavy and grievous though his readinesse made it easie If we consider the particulars of his work viz. to obey the Law of God and to suffer all the wrath that was due for our sins we may easily then conclude that Christ had a bitter cup to drink off And those praiers and agonies which he poured out saying If it be possible let this cup passe away Matth. 26.39 abundantly shew that to the humane nature it was a very hard and difficult task yet for all this his love and desire of our salvation was so great that at another time he saith I have a baptism to be baptized with and how am I streightned till I come and when Peter advised him to save himself with what indignation doth he refuse it Matth. 16.23 so that we should with serious and affectionate hearts hear of this work of Christ oh how full of agonies and conflicts was he insomuch that an Angell from heaven came to comfort him yet all this was his meat his refreshment in respect of our good Do not thou then say of any duty he commands if it be to pull out thy right eye to cut off thy right hand to part with thy dearest lusts and comforts for his sake This is hard work who can do it for did not Christ willingly and joyfully do harder for thee 6. This work he finished and compleated as you hear in the text it 's the end that Crowned this great work Now his finishing of this work was in these particulars 1. He did it wholly and universally there was not one Iota or tittle of the Law which he did not accomplish though all our obedience be imperfect and we fail in many things this we omit and that we omit yet Christ left nothing undone Oh what blessed and comfortable doctrine is this to the loaded and burdened soul that sits mourning like deflowred Tamar and I whither shall I go if the Lord enquire about this duty and about that command thou canst not answer thy omissions are too palpable thou canst not hide them from thy own eyes yet remember Christ failed in nothing Cursed is he that abideth not in all things so the Law runneth if thou wert able to do all the Law requireth and yet fail but in one word in one thought that matters not all thy other duties for this one thing it will condemn thee and therefore the Law brings every man under condemnation it makes the most holy of men see their damnable condition but Christ answereth the Law to the utmost As Christ said to his enemies Which of you can charge me with sinne so he may say to greater then they even to the Law even to the justice of God wherein can you finde any spot in me demand to the utmost farthing abate nothing I am ready to discharge all 2. He finished it universally for parts and not only so but fully for degrees He did not only do every duty the Law required but every duty in every degrees he did not only love God but he loved him as much as the Law required The Law was possible to him though to us it be impossible all that he did was so fully done that there wanted not the least degree of grace in any duty As he had not the Spirit in measure so neither was his obedience in measure thus farre as is with us to whom God giveth not such a measure of grace as to be able perfectly to conform to the Law in this life and here again the godly heart may lift up it self and be comforted for what though thou come short many degrees of what the Law requireth yet Christ did not What though all thou dost may be better yet Christ did all things so that they could not be better Perfectum est cui nihil deest Now nothing was wanting to Christs obedience otherwise Christ himself would have needed a Mediator as well as we if he had failed in his trust he had been guilty of sinne and so needing of pardon now it were blasphemy to say so of Christ for the Apostle Heb. 7.27 aggravateth and preferreth Christ our Highpriest above the legall Highpriest in this because such an one was to offer for his own sinnes as well as the sinnes of the people Oh then it 's no wonder if Paul be thus affected with Christ and his righteousnesse seeing all fulnesse and perfection is in it 3. Christ finished his work because he had not only an objective perfection in parts and degrees but also a subjective perfection all within him was throughly and perfectly holy so that whereas we are both originally and actually polluted he was originally and actually holy so that the Law had no fault to finde with him for his originall and native holinesse it 's plain because he was not born of man in an ordinary way but the holy Ghost overshadowed the Virgin Mary and therefore he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that holy thing which was to be born of her Luke 1.35 and thus the Apostle It behoved us to have an Highpriest holy and separated from sinners Heb. 7.26 and indeed this is the foundation and root of all for the tree must be good before the fruit can the fountain must be clean ere the streams and so the nature must be holy ere the actions are Christ then had an holy and pure nature wherein was not the least spot or wrincle of sinne and then his actuall holinesse did fill up the faculties of his soul as he had a soul and the naturall properties thereof an understanding and a will so these were sanctified to the highest we speak not of the holinesse of his Divine nature as he was God for so it was infinite even as God himself but of his humane nature habitually and actually Hence the Apostle He knew no sinne 1 Cor. 5. and he was made like unto us sinne only excepted Heb. 4.15 Now here also the godly may rejoyce for those reliques and remainders of sinne are such as prove thorns in the side of the godly The experimentall sense of this made Paul cry out Oh miserable man that I am Well though in thee there be the stubs of sinne yet in Christ there are none and now God dealeth not with us in our persons but as in Christ being found in him saith the Apostle as the malefactour was in the City of refuge Phil. 3. 4. Christ finished his work in respect of duration for even the Law required continuance though there were perfection of parts and
degrees and subjective perfection also yet Cursed is he that doth not continue therein Gal. 3.10 as you see Adam did not but Christ from the beginning to the end of his daies held it out yea his love did most appear at the later end for then was the greatest and hardest parts of his work to undergo but though in all that reproach contempt and scorn yet he was not weary he did not give over his work he did not fail or faint in the later end Thus Christ was our David fighting against Goliah and in his conquest we did overcome Lastly He so finished it that he hath left nothing to be done either by Angels or men in that way and kinde as he did Therefore all these doctrines that maintain free-will that hold the mediation and intercession of Saints in heaven that maintain merits and satisfactions all these blaspheam the sufficiency of Christ and say Christ hath not finished his work for either Christ was a totall and perfect Mediator or else a partiall if a totall and perfect then there needeth no more one Sun is sufficient all things added are superfluous if a partiall Mediatour then he did not finish his work then he did it by halves and so Angels and Men are to share with him in his glory It 's true they have many distinctions to mince the matter but these fig-leaves cannot cover Adams nakednesse and it 's made the sinful property of man fallen to seek out many inventions God made man upright but they have sought ●ut many inventions Eccl. 7.29 They have many colours and pretences many distinctions and excuses to cover their sins with But you will say If Christ hath done all and we are to doe nothing then what need we be diligent and zealous in the waies of godlinesse Sin or not sin it will be all one Christ hath done all therefore we may eat and drink and rise up to all excesse of riot No that is a Non sequitur For our duties are not required to that end which Christs was but yet they are necessarily commanded for other ends Though Christ did work and finish his work yet thou must work and endeavour to finish thy work too But how It 's good to understand this for here Popery and the true Religion part here they oppose one another We pleade the necessity the presence the command of good and holy works as well as they only we differ in the end They presse them for such an end as Christ did his work for us for merit for justification for our salvation This we say is to derogate from Christ This is to make Christ of no effect whosoever repents beleeveth doth any holy duty for this end is guilty of spiritual Idolatry he maketh another Christ to himself besides the true Christ but then there are other ends for which we do these duties partly because God hath commanded them as the way to walk in if ever we will be saved so that though our holy life deserve not heaven yet our wicked and ungodly life deserveth hell and then partly to glorifie God and to testifie our thankfulnesse and love to him yea there is an inseparable connexion between a man interested in Christ and a holy life as there is in the fire with heat and light In the next place Consider the properties of this work Christ ●●●nished And 1. It was a work of infinite value and worth whatsoever Christ did it had a transcendent excellency because he was God as well as man so that we are not to consider those works he did as of a meer man though never so holy but as one of a divine nature 2. They were Mediatory works all that he did and suffered tended to a propitiation and reconciliation with God so that as the nature of them was infinite so the end of them was precious and admirable what should man have done if Christ had not done thus 3. It was not only his work but our work Alas Christ was not obliged to these duties for his own sake but it was for our sake so that the godly with great affection may consider of these works of Christ for they concern thee They are our works both impetrativè they merit for us they procure good for us and imputativè we are made the righteousnesse of God as our sins were accounted his 4. The necessity of this working and working so perfectly and that doth appear from the justice of God and purity of the Law and partly from our impotency from the justice of God for that being infinite nothing could satisfie him but what was of infinite worth It would have been injustice in God to have given us heaven otherwise and then partly from the holinesse of the Law that admits of no works but perfect pure and holy Therefore to say God accepts of imperfect holinesse and accounts that as compleat which is not so is to attribute false judgement unto God and lastly our own impotency proclaimeth the necessity of Christs perfection for take us as we are in our selves so we are nothing but sin and a curse In stead of working Gods work we do the devils and take us as regenerated then though we be partakers of Gods grace yet the remnant of corruption within us doth staine and infect all that we do Lastly Here is the glorious visibility of Christs perfect working in his resurrection ascension and now sitting at the right hand of God in glory which could not have been had not Christ perfected his work for what is the reason the devils and damned in hell are detained to Eternity in those prisons of darknesse Is it not because of their insufficiency to perfect their sufferings to make them adequate to Gods justice to bring as great glory to God as ever sin did evil or dishonour In that therefore Christ hath overcome the grave and the bonds of death we have an infallible evidence of his perfect working Vse of Instruction how dangerous all those doctrines are which proclaim free-will merit under any notion whatsoever As they give that to man which belongs not to him so they take that from Christ which is due yet this is a most natural sin in all either in whole or in part to take off from Christ not to be beholding to him only God hath commanded us to come out of our sins by repentance and our own works by faith and the Apostle doth not only exclude sins but even working also from Abrahams Justification Rom. 4. There is a danger of being a Pharisee when thou ceasest being a Publican Vse 2. of great Consolation to the broken-hearted sinner This is the glad tidings of the Gospel to those who sit under the sentence of eternal death Christs works will abundantly answer all the temptations about thy own works Two things lie like two Mountains upon the godly The weakness of their graces and the strength of their corruptions If
of it is so great that be cannot let it go as Psa 51. a Praier made by David when overwhelmed in his Spirit by the guilt of sinne How often doth he repeat though in different words a Petition for pardon That God would have mercy on him That he would wash him purge him and blot out his sinnes This he nameth twice for till he had obtained this pardon there was no living for him He could take no pleasure in houses friends yea in his kingdom and all outward prosperity so that the necessity of it makes him again and again repeat his praier for it and thus our Saviour when he was upon those agonies and extremities he praieth Father if it be possible let this cup passe away and the Text saith he went thrice and said the same words Mat. 26.44 Here the necessity of that Praier he praied for made him say the same words for as the same earth or the same Sun we are not weary of because of the necessity of it Thus neither is it to be accounted a vain tautology when again and again we pray for that without which we cannot be 2. When the matter is excellent then it may be repeated again because by often striking the same stroak at last the Instrument enters sometimes a sudden transient passage doth not touch the heart and so the excellency of it is not discerned but when once or twice it is spoken then it may affect It 's a Rule Pulchrasunt his dicenda we cannot see the worth of a Jewell at the first sight and hence it is that there are some sentences of choice and excellent vertue that our Saviour himself would use more then once Such as that Many are called but few are chosen and some Parables also are twice spoken to by our Saviour yea that Psalm which describeth the grievous pollution of every man by nature The Apostle Rom. 3. doth repeat at large it being such an excellent choice Truth that every one is to be affected with and till that foundation be laid there cannot be any esteem or prizing of Christ 3. When the affections are very fervent and zealous then it cannot but they will expresse the same thing again It 's not want of matter but height of affection and zeal that makes the tongue utter the same thing twice as Gal. 4.6 it 's said The Spirit of God is sent into our hearts whereby we cry Abba Father Here is an Ingemination we cry Father Father and why so the Spirit of God doth so kindle and inflame the heart that it 's so sweetly and passionately affected that as he said pro dulcedine vix labris expedire possit he is unwilling to let this hony out of his mouth As Peter when he was in the Transfiguration said It 's good to be here So the heart of a godly man thus filialized by the holy Ghost cannot but utter the same dear relation over and over It 's usuall with the Hebrews when they would expresse their earnest affection and desire to a thing to double it and when Esau was in that great extremity and desired Jacobs pottage he crieth out Give me of thy red pottage as it 's in the Original The heart that is strongly affected and zealously drawn out is not contented with once naming of that which he so much desireth so that commonly cold and customary praiers have no ingeminations 4. Repetition of the same matter may be when he would by faith perswade our heart of the certainty of the thing we pray for Thus that crying Abba Father did not only argue zeal but assurance and certainty They were so fully perswaded that they were bold to speak it again and again and so also it 's a Rule among the Hebrews to expresse the certainty of a thing by the ingemination of it Thus dying thou shalt die So when it 's said Amen and Amen that repetition is to shew their affection that they would have it so or that it is so and thus indeed those Petitions which God sets home with certainty upon the heart they are again and again mentioned The Lord will do them yea he hath done them Lastly There may be a repetition of some Petitions especially in publique Praier when the matter doth greatly concern us and so it 's such as we ought to be deeply affected with for as it is with Preaching that matter which doth greatly concern the hearer it 's lawful to mention it over and over again as the Apostle Peter did think fit to write the very same things which he had formerly delivered as also the Apostle Jude in his Epistle did So it is in publique praier such sinnes as we would have the Congregation sensible of in their confessions such duties as we would have them diligently perform it 's useful in praier to mention these more then once for how dull and distracted are our thoughts how hard and sencelesse are they So that like Moses his rock till we be stricken over and over again water cannot come forth like the Shunamites dead childe Till we be often rubbed over there cannot come any spiritual heat into us Do not then alwaies look for new matter but rather desire thy heart may be affected with that which is old sometimes It 's a great sinne in all that they endeavour not to have their hearts affected in publique praier in our Congregations we should all be like so many Jacobs wrastling with God We should be like so many Hezekiahs or Jonahs crying out of the Whales belly but oh how few when God takes notice doth he finde that have spiritual mourning hearts some sleeping some roving some weary and wishing it over But you will say though this indeed prove that sometimes a doubling of the same Petition may be usefull yet may there not be idle bablings and sinfull repetitions in the same Praier May there not be such Tautologies as may be offensive and distastful to a godly heart Yes certainly And this is expresly forbidden Mat. 6.7 a notable place Vse not vain repetitious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some derive it from that foolish man the Poet speaks of a Shepherd called Battus sub illis montibus inquit erant erant sub montibus illis Others more probably from the Hebrew word baetta that signifies to pour out froth a blatero and so Hesychius expounds it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 empty words of any sence or matter when there are many words and no true grave matter Therefore our Saviour cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much speaking not that he condemneth long praiers but to make many words without sence or the affection of the heart Hesychius expounds it also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unseasonable and unbeseeming So that then are Repetitions forbidden by our Saviour 1. When they arise either from want of judgement to prepare good matter or a dry sencelesse heart For Praier is a stream and if there be not fulnesse in
But you see it is a most pleasing thing to God for which he commends his disciples as much as their obedience that they did thus receive him In the next place consider the circumstance of time when this is affirmed of them Now they have known c. What is the sence of that Did they not know and beleeve in Christ before Yes but he speaks here of their proficiciency and growth Now they have known and beleeved more assuredly then ever So that it 's not simply their faith but their growth and encrease in faith that our Sauiour takes notice of From whence observe That it 's not enough for the people of God to have grace but they are to thrive and grow in it To be as the Disciples more assuredly beleeving so as if they did not at all beleeve before Thou art so farre to exceed thy self over what thou wast once that thou maist say my faith my heavenly-mindednesse my love to God was none at all comparatively to what it is now This is a necessary Subject to preach on when you see so many withered Trees so many sick of a consumption in grace Alas of how many may you say the contrary They did once beleeve they were once zealous but now you may say they have none of these respectively to what they had God is not satisfied with the truth of grace unlesse there be also growth in grace If thou have received a Talent and canst not say Thy five hath gained a ten there is a fearful curse against thee as an unprofitable Servant Joh. 15.2 See what quick work God makes and how it is growth he looks at Every branch in him that bringeth not forth fruit he taketh away God loves not slothfulnesse and unprofitablenesse no more then prophanesse He doth not say If it bring forth poisonous fruit or wilde grapes but if it bring forth no good fruit and if any doth fructifie then he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit See here the Husbandmans care is still for more fruit If thou art no better then thou wast if thy faith thy love have not an encrease Gods expectations are not answered Hence Heb 6. those that are babes in Christ are severely reproved and they are to be carried on to perfection Not to grow is a kinde of barrennesse yea it 's a degree to Apostatize Therefore the Apostle in that place threatens such Non proficients with that dreadful sinne of Apostacy 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us perfect holinesse in the fear of God It 's not enough to have holinesse but we are to perfect it and he that hath any fear of God will thus endeavour and certainly if the rich man would have more wealth the great man more greatnesse how much rather the godly man more godlinesse To open this let us consider how many waies the graces of Gods people are to grow and thrive And first In respect of their degrees and measure The weak faith is to grow a strong faith their strong faith a stronger and thus of their love of God Therefore love is required with all the soul and all the might Mat. 22. The duty of growth in grace is required of the highest Gyant as well as the lowest dwarf in grace Phil 3. See how Paul stretcheth out himself to run as if he were but a new beginner There is not in the growth of grace as in nature a term or stint then they go no further No but as they say of the Crocodile he groweth as long as he liveth and when he ceaseth to grow he ceaseth to live Thus it is in the work of grace There is a necessity of growing while any Christian life is in thee Thy grace may be made better and more confirmed grace That man knoweth not what godlinesse is that can say Soul take thy ease thou hast godlinesse enough No they cry out Their leannesse their poverty they are climbing up the hill but cannot get to the top Let then the man that feareth God study the improvement of his graces Oh say There is a greater measure and further degrees yet to be had I am ashamed to see how short I come of what ●ought to be I stagger and reel through doubts and unbelief My heart is divided between God and the creature Oh how often is my heart even as cold as a stone There are no burning affections 〈◊〉 hot zeal I see a better way Oh that I could attain unto it Secondly Their growth ought to be in depth and rooting of their graces As the Apostle speaks of the dimensions of Gods love it hath a depth and a breath Eph. 1. Thus the love of the godly and all their graces have their spirituall dimensions and as before we spake of their growth in height so now of growth downwards in a better setl●ng and deeper radicating of their holinesse within them Our Saviour speaks of a foolish builder who did not dig deep enough nor build on a rock Mat. 7.26 and the three sort of hearers did all miscarry upon this Point There was not root rnough What makes the backsliding Demas the apostate Judas but neglect of rooting Oh then look every day that thy Repentance root it self more in the heart That thy faith be more deeply implanted in thee otherwise when a temptation or storm ariseth thou wilt be plucked up by the roots and certainly we may see this is the root of all evil to professors They measure their graces by the boughs and branches thereof not by the rooting whereas we see in all trees the deeper the rooting is the better they are enabled to spread abroad sear then lest thy graces be not got to the bottome of thy heart fear lest something lie closer and deeper in thy heart then grace doth Thirdly They may grow in the extension and kindes of all graces It 's the Apostle bids them adde vertue to temperance and so chains graces together 1 Pet. 1. The people of God they sometimes are careful to avoid such and such sins but then there are others either that they are not convinced of or do not attend unto and there they sail frequently but the god●y man is to grow in extension he is to avoid one sinne as well as another He is to perform one duty as well as another Oh then remember the work of grace is an exact and circumspect thing There go many things to make a man godly we may leave out many necessary ingredients and then marre the whole box of ointment David praied to be cleansed from secret sins Psa 19.13 such as he did not understand to be sins Oh it 's happy when the godly are thus growing that they leave off many foolish customes they once practised That they set upon many duties they once wholly omitted These disciples how hardly were they drawn off from many doctrines that they had been brought up in Fourthly They are to grow not only in their
graces but in the means and instrument of their graces Thus praier hearing the Word these are the means of growing in grace Receive the ingrafted Word of God that ye may grow thereby They are to pray better to hear better to sanctifie the Sabbaths more spiritually never think of growing in grace if thou art not more carefull in the use of them for upon these depend thy spirituall encrease as upon good digestion bodily growth Wonder not then at thy leannesse and barrennesse if thou art not better in performing of duties Here begins the consumption Hence are thy languishings and decays Heb. 10. The Apostle speaking of those who willingly sin by a ●otal Apostacy laieth the foundation of this in that they forsook the Assemblies The way then to keep up the life and encrease of grace is to keep up duties in their power and vigour formality and customarinesse in them will make thee quickly like a withered branch but oh the deep wounds and blows that even the godly get in their consciences hereby They pray no more fervently They hear no more affectionately and accordingly in their lives they are so many dry bones Fifthly The people of God may grow by exciting and stirring up others to grow And indeed it 's a special means to quicken our selves by quickning up others 2 Thes 1.3 They are commended in that their faith did grow exceedingly which was not only true in the parts of their faith but that also it did diffuse it self to others They brought on many others also to beleeve Eph. 2.21 The godly are said to grow up to an holy Temple that implieth they do not only grow singly in themselves but in an united manner As live coals laid together grow hotter by one another so that this growth of grace respects the Church of God as a community as a Society grace groweth by heavenly and holy communion As the members of the body grow by a mutual assistance and a member separated from the body cannot grow so it 's here There is no such admirable speedy way of growth as when the people of God speak often and exhort one another when they provoke one another and certainly herein lieth a great fault The sheep of God are scattered from one another what by difference of opinions and what by carnall suspicions that thereby they cannot say I have been an helper to such a mans faith to such a mans repentance Thy tongue hath not been a Tree of life as it should be Thy light did not so shine that others might glorifie God for thee Oh then let the people of God put themselves on this way of growth Sixthly The people of God are to grow in the solidity and fortitude of their graces That thereby they may overcome such temptations which the babes of Christ cannot This solidity is seen in two things 1. The soundnesse of their Judgement 2. The fortitude and heavenly hardship of their hearts The soundnesse of judgement This is a special matter for we see Rom. 14. and Act. 15. what sad rents and dissentions the weak judgements of some brethren made in the Church insomuch that the Apostle giveth many directions therein Those that are new Converts and have felt the power and guilt of sin and the sweetnesse of Gods favour have many times strong affections but weak judgemens and upon such the devil with his heretical instruments doth commonly prevail A● at first he began with Eve to beguil her and by her to seduce her husband Oh then let the Children of God look to themselves in the day of their espousals to Christ when all is honey and ravishment It 's hard for them to consolidate and settle their judgements Hence the Apostle blameth those that were children and had not their sences exercised to discern between good and evil Heb 5.14 Oh then account it an especial matter in Religion to grow in a sound minde to be more solid in judgement This will make thee discern between good and evil between what is of God and what is of the devil 2. In fortitude of spirit The Apostle 2 Tim. 2.3 bids Timothy endure hardship as a Souldier of Christ and in the Revelation c. 3. The promise is made to him that overcometh and our Saviour saith Blessed is he that endureth to the end Mat. 26. many begin in the Spirit and end in the flesh Oh it 's an admirable matter to grow hardy in Religion to be able to endure scoffs reproaches and the losse of all dear comforts as the Apostle said You have not yet resisted to bloud Heb. 12.4 The people of God are to account all conflicts and encounters light till they come to bloud it self and even then to remember that he who would have his life shall lose it Our Saviour did train up his Disciples at the very beginning in this hard service Hence it is that Christianity is compared to a warfare to running in a race to fighting not only with flesh and bloud but even Prinoipalities in high places so that thou art not to expect a Bed of Roses in the way to heaven Now the grounds and motives why the people of God are not to be contented with the foundation and principles of grace but still to proceed in it 1. Because God accounts non-improvement an unprofitablenesse He that hid his talent though he did not imbezill it yet is called an unprofitable servant Mat. 25.30 and he is to be cast into utter darknesse Oh this is terrible to consider that God is not only angry with thy sins with thy prophaness but thy barrennesse thy impotent graces That thou art not got to a higher form Is not the Father angry with his childe though he diligently go to School if he thrive not and be alwaies in the same Lesson Shall he be at all that cost for no more and thus shall God so patiently bear with thee give thee all opportunities and means of grace and yet thou move on the same hinge Oh ye that are the Children of God you would fain have comfort you would have assurance How can it be when there is no growth Is not God angry for those weak graces that still thou art a babe Did he not tell the Church Rev. 2. he had something against her because her works were not perfect were not filled up Oh here were many empty holes oh what godly man may not tremble at this who hath not much emptinesse that needs to be filled up 2. The end of the Ministry to the godly is for their growth and encrease Eph. 4.15 1 Pet. 2.2 Alas we preach not to thee for thy conversion we come not to perswade thee to come out of Egipt that is done already Now then consider why hath God appointed a Ministry and daily preaching and that even to the godly as well as others Is it not to encrease thy spiritual life and heat Is it not to be a goad in thy side to prick thee
yea if a godly man were to desire a way for to put him out of all doubts between God and his soul what better way could he require then this 4. In beleeving there is a receiving and a participation of all that Christ hath and hence receiving and beleeving is put for one another It 's also metaphorically expressed by eating and drinking Joh 6. That as by those actions we receive meat and it becometh our very substance so it is here by beleeving in him Christ is made ours even all that he hath is ours Thus by Faith we are said to be branches partaking of the fatnesse of the Olive Rom. 11. Oh then how excellent is this act of Faith which is the hand to put on all the glorious robes of Christ upon our soul It being not enough to know there is a Christ so qualified unlesse he become ours 5. This beleeving works an holy confidence and boldnesse at the Throne of grace It makes our praiers and duties full of fervency and alacrity Eph. 3.12 We come with boldnesse through Faith We see the Scepter is held out and so we may readily enter in and Heb. 4.16 Let us come with boldnesse to the Throne of grace Oh how much should the broken hearted sinner live in the Meditation of these things God opens the way by his grace and thou shuttest it by thy unbelief Through Christ the way to heaven is made a broad way and thy doubtings make it narrow When Christ cals Peter to come to him though upon the waters it 's not presumption but disobedience if Peter refuse 6. This is accompanied with large and vast thoughts of Christ This file their hearts and mouths with Christ as you see the Apostle Paul in every verse almost affectionately mentioning him Phil. 3. with what disdain doth he renounce and throw away all things in comparison of Christ The excellency of the knowledge of Christ and at another time He would know nothing but Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 He that doth thus beleeve in Christ so manifested cannot but have his soul and all within him taken up this way Though there be many speak of Christ and talk of Christ yet none hath him indeed and none do truely esteem him but such persons as these Is then Christ dearer and closer to thy heart then all earthly comforts and delights Canst thou say the thoughts of Christ are sweet the meditations about him are my meat and drink all the day long this is precious Lastly This purifieth the heart and makes us an holy heavenly people If we be risen with Christ we set our affections on things above Col. 3.1 2. and he that hath this hope purifieth himself as God is pure 1 Joh. 3.3 Act. 15 9. As the Sun brings heat and light where it is so where faith is it makes the heat active and operative as Heb. 11. This is the beholding of God as in a glasse whereby we are transformed into his Image from grace to grace Beleeving gets spirituall strength even as eating and drinking doth bodily Therefore while thou abatest in thy faith thou dost not only lose thy comfort but thy spiritual strength If thou cease to beleeve not only doubts and fears but even lusts and sinnes will prevail over thee Thus you see what it is to beleeve in Christ thus manifested Now the grounds why it 's the duty of Gods people thus to know and beleeve are 1. Because Christ would otherwise be in vain he would not be of that use and improvement God hath appointed him for If the childe will not suck the breasts are filled in vain If the Prodigal will not eat the fatted Calf is in vain provided The Fountain runneth in vain if none will drink of it Oh then consider this if I do not by faith thus receive Christ I do as much as lieth in me make Christ of none effect I do as much as lieth in me make as if there had never been such a person as Christ If then the Apostle makes those false Teachers in such a dangerous estate that by corrupt opinions did make Christ to die in vain and his Crosse of none effect no lesse provoking must thy sin of unbelief be It takes Christ out of the world R. 2 2. We are thus to beleeve in Christ because in and through him God doth magnifie his glory His attributes of grace mercy and unspeakable bounty are exalted through Christ If then we do not thus receive Christ we deprive God of all this intended glory The Creation of the world and all the mercifull wondrous works God hath done for his Church were not intended to exalt God as Christ in all his benefits and therefore if it be so great a sin not to give God the glory in them how inexcusable will it be to fail in this R. 3 3. The insufficiency of all other things to satisfie the broken and troubled heart may justly make the godly fly to this So the disciples being to acknowledge Christ as the Mediatour they say Whither should we go thou hast the words of Eternal life If they run to their duties to their graces these are too weak to lean upon They are as Noahs Dove that findes the waters covering all the Mountains and highest Trees Seeing then we must have something to fix all our hopes and affections upon and all other things will fail how unwise are the godly if they keep a moment from Christ R. 4 4. Our necessity may enforce us And this floweth from the forenamed insufficiency in all other things Doth not thy own heart disquiet thee Doth not the perfect Law trouble thee Doth not the devil accuse thee and shall not all this make thee seek out for that which will answer all Paul tried all other things but he found nothing like Christ and thou art the rather to improve this to the full because there is not the least ability or priviledge in Christ that thou canst spare Christ is all over bread and food There is nothing in Christ but is of special use Oh then what folly is it that thou shouldst bour to know the fulnesse of any creature for thy wants and not of Christ He is an Ocean and not one drop in him but is of admirable efficacy He is a Pearl and so the least of that must be very precious if thou continuest in fears and lusts it 's because thou dost not improve all of Chrsst It 's not enough to touch the hemme of his garment but thou must receive whole Christ Vse of Instruction That all those sinners who love their sins and will not depart from them are wholly barred from all this comfort stand aloof off and bewail thy Leprosie Christ received not that fulnesse from his Father for thee abiding and continuing in thy sins Oh miserable and wretched though they live in ease and pleasures having all things their carnal appetites desire one thing is necessary and that
God draweth him out to hate it and in duties good because it 's good doth move him Now the least sinne is sinne and we kill young Serpents as well as old ones and the least good is acceptable to God and he will reward it Reasons 4 Lastly In respect of the privative part of the punishment of sinne all are equall which is the losse of God and Heaven The least sinne depriveth of the happy Vision of God as well as the greatest so that in this sence we may say there is no little sinne no more then there is a little God and so likewise for the good of any duty The least shall have heaven as well as the greatest though not such degrees Even a cup of cold water doth not lose its reward Mat. 10.42 Vse To discover that Hypocrisie and falshood in many men some sins they avoid others again they embrace Is not all sinne poison Is there any good sinne Were thy heart sound those beloved and customary sins of thine could have no more welcome in thy heart then toads in thy bosome SERMON XXXVII Sheweth That Gods People are ready and willing in Obedience Whence it is that they are so Tending to rouse men up from dulnesse and Formality in Gods service JOH 17.8 For I have given them the words which thou gavest me and they have received them THere remaineth two things more considerable in the description of the Disciples Obedience The next thing to be considered is their readinesse and willingnesse implied in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They did not cavill or dispute They did not draw back or maliciously oppose but they were like melted wax ready to receive any impression like white paper whereon Gods Will and Law might be immediatly written and indeed if you observe the Disciples all along from their first call to this present time there appeared much readinesse in them Christ did no sooner speak the word commanding them to follow him but immediatly they leave all and obey though it was so much to their outward disadvantage though it was to fall in the Whales mouth yet they readily resign themselves and although sometimes they shewed dulnesse to beleeve and unwillingnesse in his service yet our Saviour excuseth it saying The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak and certainly had there not been a ready free spirit in the Disciples to take Christ above all and to cleave to him only they could never have devoured these troubles with so much patience as they did Obs That it 's a sure character and property of the children of God to be a willing ready people in obedience They are not as hypocrites kept from sinne by constraint meerly from a principle of fear within but Psa 110. They are willingnesses in the day of Gods power To explain this a little First There may be the presence of dulnesse and unwillingnesse sometimes in the Children of God but this is not reigning nor is it habitually consented to but resisted and with much agony praied against There is no garden but hath some of this weed in it No gold but some of this drosse No godly man but now and then hath wearisomnesse and unwillingnesse to holy duties seizing upon him Thus we reade the Church when Christ knocked at the door though he had stood all night and his locks were wet with the dew yet the Church out of a dull sluggish humour doth refuse to open to him Cant. 5.2 3. So Rev. 2. There the Church is reproved for suffering her graces to decay and that her duties were not filled up with fervency and solidity yea we may reade of the Church complaining of this slothfulnesse and coldnesse when she said Draw us and we will run after thee Cant. 1.4 And at another time Why hast thou hardened our hearts from thy fear Isa 63.17 So that it 's too manifest the people of God have much coldnesse and negligence in them What is that which fils their hearts with so many complaints but this what makes them so full of fears and doubts about their spiritual condition Is it not want of life vigour and willingnesse Oh they finde their hearts can take delight and be willingly drawn out in earthly affairs but they are like so many lumps of earth in heavenly things when yet there is farre more excellency worth and dignity in holy things then in all the whole world to draw out the heart so then let the godly for their comfort distinguish between the presence of unwillingnesse and the power of it Between unwillingnesse in the command and power over the soul and the reluctancy and striving against it The Apostle speaketh generally of sinne Let it not reign in your mortal bodies Rom. 7. Non dixit non sit sed ne regret This stumbling-block removed let us consider why the people of God must needs be so willing and ready in their obedience And first The sence of their guilt and all the misery sinne hath brought upon them puts them into a melting yeelding frame while mens hearts are hardened and they are not apprehensive of the damnable estate they are in while they are not in the fire of Gods displeasure they are stubborn and untractable but when they are kindely humbled for sin then they will do anything Thus Paul He that was mad in his oppositions against Christ no sooner did the Lord touch his heart with the sense of his sins but he crieth out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Thus David when the Lord had humbled him and used afflictions for his sinne see how humbly and obediently he speaks If he say he hath no delight in me behold here I am let him do what he pleaseth 2 Sam. 15.26 and the Church Mic. 7. I will hear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him Nothing then will so humble and mollifie the heart to make a man do and be any thing as a deep sence of sinne Thus the cold hard Iron is put into the fire and it may be beaten into any shape Secondly As the sence of sinne so the sence of Gods goodnesse and grace in being reconciled notwithstanding all our provocations doth much more enlarge the heart to thankefulnesse and obedience The love of Christ saith Paul constraineth us We cannot hold we cannot keep in as you may see David upon the apprehension of Gods goodnesse to him resolving to take the cup of salvation and to praise God in the great Congregation Psa 116.13 Gospel grace doth not in a filiall spirit harden and make wanton but doth more soften and enflame to an active obedience This made Paul run like the Sunne in the Firmament You see it 's the grace of God which lieth kindling and warming of him This is like the Spirit in Ezechiels wheels the dejected unbeleeving soul is not so readily obedient An Evangelical frame of heart assured of Gods love carrieth out to filiall fruitful
obedience Nothing is too much too great too dear to part with for so gracious a God This breedeth love and we know love is an active fire it cannot lie still but kindleth all that it cometh near Thirdly They are active and willing because of that sanctified renewed nature which they are partakers of They are said to have the divine Nature 1 Pet. 1.4 The Seed of God is said to abide in them 1 Joh. 1.3 And by this means they are carried out voluntarily to divine actions Thus in nature saith Aristotle which is the inward principle of motion or rest How readily do sparks fly upward The stones descend downward And thus it is here Those inward principles of Sanctification they do so new mold a man that now the will of God is his delight the Law of God is written in the inward man Nothing is so connatural and sutable to him as those things that are also pleasing to God Indeed for the unregenerated man it 's no wonder he must be haled and constrained to what he doth That he like the Mill cannot move any longer then the waters of affliction fall upon him for there wants a principle within but it is otherwise with those that are born again Their proper food their proper delight their all in all is to be doing the will of God as Christ professed Joh. 4. and David doth often acknowledge those indeared affections he had to the Word of God above Kingdomes and all other earthly advantages Fourthly They are a willing people because in their former time of unregeneracy they were so willing and ready to serve sin and Satan and were constantly obedient thereunto Now saith the Apostle As they had given themselves servants to sinne so now to righteousnesse Rom. 6.19 They readily set themselves as the word signifieth whensoever lust bad them go they did go Whatsoever was commanded there was ready obedience This by way of an holy revenge and to make a godly satisfaction They are the more serviceable to God They grudge the devil had so much time that so much of their choicest and best affections were lessened in time They therefore strive to redeem the time to recover all for God They shame themselves saying What was I willing and glad to doe the works of the devil and shall I not doe the Will of God Fifthly They are willing because they know no Obedience is accepted of with God unlesse it be willing It 's not thy faith thy humiliation thy zeal unlesse there be willingnesse and delight in it that God accepts of Isa 1.29 If ye be willing and obedient so God accepts of a willing minde Wo be to me saith Paul if I preach the Gospel and not willingly but of constraint 1 Cor. 9.6 Though he did preach it yet if not willingly there is a Woe to him Oh then it 's no wonder if the people of God are so glad and chearfull within them in the work of the Lord otherwise their work would lose their reward and they the Crown of Glory Think of this then when you finde the wheels of your Chariots move heavily Thou art happily thinking how to put off truth or duty or thou wishest it over say this unwillingnesse marreth all God will not aceept of a Sacrifice unlesse offered in fire Say upon all thy dead and formal duties these are not duties God looks not upon them as so Non operari non esse are all one before God in some respects Sixthly They must needs be a willing obedient people because of that eternall glorious reward which is promised to every holy duty What will put Wings to the soul if not this To think that God will assuredly put upon thee Robes of Immortality and glory for a duty though never so little for a cup of cold water who may not admire the vast disproportion that is between our work and Gods reward If the Apostle spake of the most extreme sufferings that could be in this life they were not worthy to be compared to that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4 17. How much more is it true of those good works we do which are but little in quantity and defiled in quality Well therefore may they rejoyce and work righteousnesse Well may the godly labour even in the heat of the day with much gladnesse of heart for the recompence of thy reward doth exceed all proportion If the Kingdomes of the world should be given to a man for lifting up a straw it would not be so great a matter as when God and Heaven became thy reward for every holy duty No wonder if they are best when they are thus doing for how can they be better There is no such profitable and comfortable wotk as to be doing that of the Lords Lastly Even in the very duty it self though there were no heaven hereafter yet there is so much present comfort and joy attending it that it 's both work and meat and drink also Therefore we see how David was joyfully affected herein Who are we that we should be able to offer thus willingly He that doth Gods service willingly and fervently he hath present pay in hand The very sence and feeling that he doth it so readily doth afford great comfort to him Virtus est sibi ipsi praemium A godly duty is accompanied with honey and manna he would not do otherwise for all the world Oh then that wicked men who though they have some pleasure in sinne yet finde many wounds and torments within them would make an exchange in stead of drunkennesse put on temperance in stead of riot and wantonnesse live in all chastity Thou wouldest finde an heaven for a hell immediately Oh how wouldest thou bewail thy time that thou didst not leave these husks no sooner Oh what an enemy was I to my own soul when I lived in such lusts and neglected such holinesse Taste and see the difference while you have this sinful distempered palate upon you it 's no wonder if you love the Egyptian garlick above the heavenly Manna Vse of Instruction How lothsome and unacceptable all that Obedience is to God which comes from any other principle then a renewed spirit It 's the free and principal spirit David praied for Psa 51. he saw all obedience if constrained if forced by the judgements of God was condemned as hypocrisie Thus the Prophets complained of the Jews that in the time of their distresse and calamity they would pray to God They would fast and humble themselves but saith God Oh that there were such a heart within them Deut. 5.29 And hence it is that Repentance and contrition extorted by the fear of death and the judgements of God are not acceptable Whatsoever is done is by force and this m●y be even death to many that hear it for when art thou for any good duty When is thy heart or mouth for it but when some great judgements of God are abroads or
peculiar To have praied for the Reprobate and such who did not nor ever would give themselves up to Obedience had been either to pray that God would alter his eternal purpose or else the course of his justice but seeing they were both given to him by the Father and did really discover the Fruits of this gift in their lives Therefore they were fit to be recommended in Praier So that the Text doth describe the Subjects of Christs Praier And again For whom he will not pray It 's like that terrible Separation of the Sheep on the right hand and the Goats on the left It 's horrenda Sententia as one Divine cals it What not pray for the world said another I pray God none of the world hear me Though this Text hath some thorns of Controversie especially about Universal Grace and Christs death for all men yet it likewise beareth excellent practicall matter· In the words let us Consider 1. The Description of those Christ praieth for 2. The opposition for whom he will not pray Those that he doth not pray for are the world who they are and the controversal matter therein is in time to be dispatched Those he praieth for are described 1. By that relative particle Them I pray for them 2. They are described by their Original descent Those thou gavest me for they are thine For the first part the Relative particle them viz They that have thus obeyed thus beleeved From whence in the general observe First That it 's very hopeful and a good encouragement to pray for those that are godly We may learn it from the example of Christ They are such and such persons therefore I pray for them Observ 2. That the people of God are under the fruit and benefit of Christs Praier Of the First It 's good and comfortable praying for those that discover the signs of Grace in them Thus Paul Pray for us for we trust we have a good Conscience Heb. 13.18 That he makes an Argument They should pray for him in his Apostolical work and emploiment because he did with all Truth and Faithfulnesse of Conscience labour therein and on the contrary when people were come to an high degree of wickednesse The Prophet is forbid to pray for that People Jeremy 7.16 17. To open this Point Consider this particular It 's not only our duty to pray for our selves but for others also Some are said to Question Whether it be lawfull to pray for any one man in particular because say they He that praieth in the due qualifications of speeding praier doth as effectually succeed in tbat Duty as if he had been praying for any particular But this can no waies hold It 's a Duty sometimes to pray in particular for some persons as the Disciples did for Peter when he was in prison And Paul many times desireth the praiers of the Church for his own particular A Praier poured out for some particular person may have more love fervency and faith in it then when for the general especially their particular necessities are then commended to God which would not be in the general This being cleared we go on to assert that fore-mentioned Position It 's the duty of godly men to pray for others Our Saviour doth suppose that in his Form of Praier Our Father and he extends this Mat. 5. even to our very Enemies that are Enemies for our godlinesse sake persecuting and reviling us and that though continuing in their wickednesse Thus Paul is thought to be converted by Stevens Praier while he was consenting to the stoning of that first Martyr Stephen was praying that God would remove the stone from Pauls heart yea the Apostle 1 Tim. 2.1 exhorts that supplications and praiers be put up for all men That is for all sorts of men as the distribution doth evidence yet this is no contrariety to Christs Example who would not pray for the world for certainly he would not so neither may we in that sence Therefore Secondly Though it be our duties to pray for others yet we may not in generall pray for those that are reprobated formalitè as they say For that praier could not be in Faith There is a twofold Faith required in our Praier 1. That it be according to Gods will a dogmatical Faith 2. A fiducial Faith that it be with confidence in Gods Promise and Power Now he that should pray for Reprobates as Reprobates could not pray in a dogmatical Faith for he did in effect desire that God would be mutable and changeable It 's as if we should pray that God would not create the world whenas he hath done it already yet this must be very warily understood For 1. We are to pray for any particular man though never so wicked unlesse sinning a sinne unto death because we cannot tell who is given by the Father to Christ and who not So that although to pray for all men that they might be saved is against dogmatical faith in Divinity yet there is no particular man that we may exclude 2. The Apostle 1 Joh. 5.16 speaketh of a sinne unto death that we are not to pray for one guilty of that This hath much troubled the Learned The Ancients they thought it was not an absolute prohibition of all to pray for such but only that eminent men might do it They thought for an ordinary Christian to pray for such sinners it would be high presumption As it 's not for every one in the Court to speak for some hainous offender but a special Favourite When God said Though Noah Job and Daniel Eze. 14.14 should pray for that people he would not hear them This implied that they were nearer to Gods ear and might prevail sooner then others Though this Exposition be old yet the Text seemeth to be absolutely prohibitive And so Austin said that if we knew who had sinned that unpardonable sinne against the holy Ghost we were no more to pray for him then for one damned in hell Now whether such a sinne as is unto death be ordinarily committed and what it is and whether we may know when such do commit it is worth the enquiring into but is greatly extravagant unto my matter 3. To speak exactly Gods Decree about Events is not the Rule of our Praier but his Word is And therefore though it should be revealed that God would not do such or such things yet it may be our duty to pray for them As Austin instanceth If it should be revealed that my Father must die of such a disease yet I might lawfully though with submission pray for his life because it 's my duty to use all means for my Fathers Life Thus though Nathan the Prophet had told David His Childe should die yet David humbleth himself and by fasting seeketh to God for his Childes life So it 's lawfull to pray that God would wholly mortifie sinne in us yet God will not do it in this life Thus
the Mother of Austin by her daily praiers was a means of converting Austin So that we may say of the ungodly as Samuel concerning the people of Israel though a stubborn and wicked Nation God forbid I should cease to pray for you And indeed if it be our duty to admonish and exhort others and with much patience to endure if it be possible to bring them out of the snares of sinne no doubt we are to pray that God would blesse such Reproofs That he would prepare the heart to receive them And again the very miserable and wretched estate they are in through sinne makes them fit Objects of praier There is never a prophane man that walloweth in his lusts blessing himself in his hearts desire but he is an Object of great pity Even as mad men that think themselves Great Persons when they are bound up in chains Seeing therefore they lie under such great misery and they feel not this They pity not nor pray for themselves This should make us that can pray to commend their estate to God And the rather because as Preaching of the Word so Praier is appointed as a means of Conversion but by the Word Ask and ye shall receive So that if I ask for Conversion If I pray for the Reformation of another my praier may be the Execution of Gods Election It 's by praier that God will make good this promise Oh how comfortable will it be to see thee a Father answered in praier for the conversion of thy Children That they are the Fruit of thy Praiers So likewise what rejoycing is it to a Minister when not onely his preaching but his praying for his people is answered That it is not all our duty to preach to you but pray for you as Christ did And what a joy is it if we see God answering our praiers in the conversion and reforming of one man It 's true there are some wicked men so highly prophane and so wilfully wicked that they greatly cool the heart of a godly man in Praier It 's said the Church shut Julian out of her praiers and there could not a greater and more sorer judgement befall him for that was futuri judicii prejudicium Vse 1. Is Praier thus hopefull in the behalf of the godly then this should teach the godly to be more fervent and constant in this duty for one another Paul though so eminent in office and graces yet again and again desireth the Churches praiers and he promiseth his praiers for them He informeth Philemon in particular that he makes mention of him in his praiers alwaies Thus you see what the godly have been used to do If David Psal 119.4 when his Enemies reviled him and reproached him yet he gave himself to Praier and humbled himself in Sackcloth for them what then would he do for those that were godly Psal 72. It 's made a great blessing unto Solomon that praier shall be made for him and the fervent Praier of a righteous man prevaileth much Jam. 5.16 If so why do we not stir up our selves more to this duty The Apostle James biddeth us confesse our sinnes and pray for one another in the same place Shall Christ pray for all his and wilt not thou Do not say It 's enough to pray in the general for Gods Church but thou art in particular to pray for others as their conditions and necessities require be moved hereunto First From the common body and fellowship that ye are in The Scripture delights to resemble the Communion of the Church under the similitude of a body to shew how near and conjoyned they are together If one member suffer shall not the Tongue pray for it If any part of thy own body be pained and grieved how much doth it affect thee thou shouldst have the same affections to those that are of the body of Christ Secondly Praiers are an instituted help and means to procure the good of others so that it 's a duty you owe Phil. 1.19 Paul trusted that all the opposition he had would turn to good by their praiers So then the afflictions the mercies that others are under prove good by Praier Oh how apt is one to consume another They are proud under such mercies They are impatient under such afflictions but thou that art thus apt to finde fault dost thou or hast thou praied for them It may be they are no better because thou hast not done thy duty Thou little thinkest how near their sinnes may come to thee Not that we are bound to mention by Name every godly man for that is infinite but as occasion draweth thee out and thou art desired making as much Conscience of praier for others as a debt thou owest or as a pledge thou art to restore Thirdly Fervent Praier for one another will take away all differences all jealousies and suspicions it will make the Godly of one heart and one minde Oh who can bewail the divisions of Jacob Not the garments but the body of Christ is now rent In former times it was said Behold how they love one another how they call one another Brethren but now what differences in opinion and other carnal contentions There is no Love and communion and there is no greater cause then neglect of this duty and it 's also an excellent remedy against all discontents Art thou apt to receive unkindnesses To think this or that hard dealing Go and pray for that man Oh how immediatly will it quiet those windes and waves Vse of Admonition To wicked men to avoid all impiety if not for other Reasons yet for this it makes other mens praiers the lesse effectuall It may be though thou art so vile and naught thou hast a godly Father or a godly Friend praying for thee Though thou art so ungodly thou hast a godly Minister praying for thee Oh do not raise so great a gulf between Heaven and their praiers as thy sinnes are When Lazarus was dead and buried in the grave Mary giveth it over as a desperate case If thou hadst been here he had not died saith she So are we apt to say Lord Praier for such before they come to be thus obstinate before they bave rebelled so much against the Light might have been hopeful But now what hope is there Take heed thou go not so far in sinning that God saith Pray no more for this man SERMON XLII The Excellency and Efficacy of Christs Mediatory Prayer Set forth in many Aggravations of it for the Consolation of the Godly JOH 17.9 I pray for them I pray not for the world THE Subject of Christs Praier is here described First By the Relative particle them and although he speak strictly of his Disciples yet in the end of this Chapter he joyneth all Beleevers unto them So that the 2d Observation is That all the Children of God are under Christs Mediatory Praier Now the Children of God which are also called his Sheep are of two sorts 1. Those
it self and the effectuall application of it For all do acknowledge that Christs death in it self is of value enough to redeem thousands of worlds if there were so many It cannot be otherwise because it 's the obedience to death of that person who is God as well as man and by reason of his Deity there is such a merit and satisfaction upon his death that all the sins of men and devils are not able to counterpoise it Therefore it 's great Unbelief to be cast down as if the greatnesse of thy sins exceeded the greatnesse of Christs Sufferings As the Heavens exceed the earth in magnitude so do Christs merits our transgressions but then if we speak of the Intention and purpose of Christ in laying down his life that is onely for his Sheep Joh. 10. I lay down my life for my Sheep And if that be true which Truth it self speaks Greater love then this can no man shew then to lay down his life for another Our Saviour if he had died for others besides the Elect had vouchsafed the greatest love that could be to them and certainly to become a Surety for another to die in anothers stead must needs be an high expression The Scripture useth two words when it speaks of Christs death for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now although they may be used promiscuously yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a great deal more then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is vice alterius in stead of another So that what generally he was to undergo the Surety did it in his room but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is for the good of another though not in his stead as Paul said he suffered his afflictions for the bodies sake or the Churches sake Col. 1.24 that was not in their stead but for procuring of some good It cannot be denied but that all mankinde even reprobates themselves do obtain a world of Mercies through Christs Death yet to say that Christ died for them viz. in their stead to suffer all that anger of God which was due to them is to say the highest mercy that can be If we say that such are justified such are glorified it 's not so much as to say Christ died for them as Rom. 8. Christs death is made the foundation of all other mercies and the Apostle argueth from the greater to the lesse If he hath given us Christ how shall he not with him give us all things else Therefore to say Christ died for all is in effect to say Christ will actually save and glorifie all We may as well say Universal Salvation as Universal Redemption For Christs death is by the Scripture made the highest and greatest expression of love as also the cause of all other priviledges 4. The special and particular love of Christ in his death and Intercession to some rather then others is no ground of despair Nor no just cause for any troubled conscience to be perplexed about his estate but if a man will act according to reason it 's more hopeful then for a man to be left to such an universal uncertain benefit of Christs death which yet they confesse none may be actually saved for all that for this is acknowledged by some that hold universal grace and redemption That Christ by his death did obtain a sufficiency of Salvation for all but through mans corruptions it may fall out that they refuse this fruit of Christs death and so have no actuall application of it at all Now then Is it not more desirable to have such a special love whereby to be sure some will be saved then such a general one by which no man may receive salvation at all But especially this is no ground of despair for we can give as large encouragements and comforts to any humbled sinner as the adversaries can For these Universalists do not so hold Christ died for all that whether all repented or not beleeved or not that still they should be saved No they hold these conditions necessary unlesse men repent and believe they cannot have any benefit by Christs death Now so all the Orthodox say If thou art a Believer If thou repentest question not but that Christs death extends to thee It 's for such as hunger and thirst and therefore whatsoever soul lieth under any burthen of sinne and doth desire the grace of God through Christ let him not stagger but confidently goe unto him Therefore we can administer comfort to all those that are in a Gospel-manner qualified and the Vniversalists can do no more So that here is no dreadfulnesse nor terrour in this Point but rather much comfort and encouragement to all those who finde sinne a burthen and as for others that love and delight in their sinnes that doctrine cannot be of God which would speak any comfort or peace to them 5. In this Point of Religion as in all others we must not go according to our carnal affections and desires but the direction and revelation that is in the Scripture For the way of Salvation being wholly depending upon Gods Will None are able to judge of it but so farre as he discovers his will therein Therefore the Gospel is said to be Light come into the world The world had not this Light of it self We cannot say of the things of the Gospel as the Apostle doth of the things of the Law that they do them by nature and know them by nature No it 's necessary these things should be revealed from heaven therefore when thou goest to study this Point do as in all other Mysteries lay aside thy own thoughts thy own imaginations become an abrasa tabula have none of thy philosophical or natural principles within thee This dust or humour in the Eye will hinder thee from beholding perfectly this Object It 's true it 's a very specious and taking doctrine that Christ died for all that grace is universal but if a man would therefore embrace it because it 's so pleasing to flesh and bloud then there is that of Origens which goeth further and is much more pleasing That all even devils and all shall be actually saved Therefore to hold universal grace or redemption is nothing so pleasing as to hold universal Salvation Alas though men hold Christ died for all yet they grant the most of them are damned Therefore that doctrine is nothing so desirable as that which maintains the salvation of all If then you say that is too broad a way the Scripture gainsays that Thus it followeth also If the Scripture gainsay the other we are to attend to what that saith and not to what our own hearts would have Therefore throw away the head of the Sacrifice as God commanded all thy own thoughts and natural Imaginations in this matter 6. It cannot be denied but that the Scripture when it mentioneth the Subject for whom Christ died speaks indefinitely of all As all died
Scripture that cals these torments everlasting torments a fire that cannot be quenched a worm that cannot die That if this be all thy hope thou maist roar out in horrour and wish thou hadst never been born so that if wicked men would set judgement on work they would see nothing abides them but a fearfull expectation of the vengeance of God all Opinions all Doctrines shut them out If there could one come and bid thee Go on merrily in thy sins be as prophane as thou hast been never think of cries and tears for thy sins because Christ hath died to save thee howsoever This man indeed might make thee run into excesse of all riot and to say Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die and so be saved But the Scripture is so plain against this that all may be perswaded of it without any difficulty Shall we sin that grace may abound saith Paul God forbid Rom. 6.1 And he makes the damnation just of those men who gather such consequences Think then with thy self that in what sence soever Christ died yet thy sinnes make a great gulf between thee and Heaven God hath set a flaming Sword to keep thee out of Paradise therefore cry out I have no hope as yet Oh my condition hath no comfort I cannot meet with any sound Doctor that dares give me any comfort while I love and live in my sinnes Why then wilt thou embrace those lusts that are such a present poison and ruine to thee Hereafter thou wilt be perswaded when too late That sinne hath been thy only Enemy when God shall bid thee Depart ye Cursed then wilt thou bid thy cursed lusts Depart but then it will be too late Vse 2. of Instruction To teach the godly what a sad aggravation there is in every sinne they commit That it 's against the special love of Christ in dying for thee This bloudy circumstance is in thy sinnes which cannot be in the sins either of wicked men or devils Excellent is that Meditation of Eusebius Emissenus Though aith he the devils should be damned for many sinnes and I but for one yet that would exceed the devils Impiety for the devils never sinned against a God that became an Angel for them They never sinned against God that died and was crucified for them but miserable and wretched I pro animâ meâ cur non liquefio cum haec cogito have sinned against a God made man for me Against a God dying an ignominious death for me Against a God leaving me such an example of love and holinesse Indignior sum Lucifero indignior sum daemonibus I am more unworthy then the devils more unworthy then Beelzebub Oh that we could all both think and speak so that not only our tongues may utter it but our hearts be inwardly affected that we might as Bernard said linguam in sanguine cordis tingere Oh then let this special love of Christ to thee more then many thousands wotk in thee more special love and thankfulnesse then others have Take heed of sinne for thy sinnes have this special aggravation in them which wicked men have not Christ hath shewed thee so great love that he himself could not shew a greater and therefore who shall excuse thee if thou sinne for all this Here is then no doctrine of carnal Security in this Point Here is no door set open for Licentiousnesse but as Christ said from a Parable She loved much for much was forgiven her The same should be in all the godly much hath been given and forgiven them therefore they ought to love much and this was set upon Pauls heart even Christs peculiar and special love Gal. 2. Who loved me and gave himself for me Vse 2 Vse 2. Had Christ a peculiar and special love in his praier and death for some only then here we see what is the Thesaurus Ecclesiae not any Popish Indulgences or imagined heaps of superfluous merits but even the death of Christ that and that only doth inrich comfort and make happy all the people of God If therefore thou art one who canst upon true grounds gather thou hast a propriety in Christs death thou art not to be afraid neither living or dying what man or devils shall do unto thee Rom 8. The Foundation of all justification sanctification and glorification is upon this Christ died Who shall condemn It is Christ that died Therefore there cannot be any accusation or condemnation because Christ died Therefore the main Question is What Evidences thou hast for an Interest in Christs Death for if that be once granted unspeakable and innumerable are the priviledges that belong to thee Therefore encourage and strengthen thy heart with the comfortable fruits of Christs Death Let us consider whether thou hast the qualifications of such to whom Christs death is made profitable and advantagious And 1. They that have an Interest in Christs Death they are dead to sin Christs Death and sinnes death go together So the Apostle As Christ died once so should we to sinne and live to Righteousnesse Rom. 6.10 11. and Gal 5. He that is Christs hath crucified the flesh with the lusts thereof If Christ be crucified for thee the lusts of sinne are crucified in thee For the end of Christs Death was not only salvation and happinesse but to kill all the spiritual Enemies we have of this happinesse and sinne is the main for Death had no sting no neither could hell be hell or the devil a devil to thee did not sinne put power into all these Be not then presumptuous but fear and examine thy self Thou speakest much of Christs Death This is in thy month I trust in Christ that died for me But is Christs Death the death of thy sinnes Canst thou see those lusts which like Pharaoh and the Egyptians did once rule over and oppresse thee now drowned in the Red Sea of Christs bloud This is necessary if thou wilt have any comfort because Christ is dead see whether thou art dead to sinne or no Art thou as a dead man who in respect of all pleasures and delights findes no Inclination thus it ought to be with thee The Scripture speaks often concerning this that the godly are dead to sinne sinne hath not that dominion and power once it had Oh but how many as the Scripture distinguisheth are dead in sinne not to sinne Though they have mountains of sinnes lie upon them Though the vengeance of God belong to them all the day long That whether they are eating drinking or sleeping they are an accursed people by the Law which is Gods own Sentence and doom yet for all that they are not afraid neither do they tremble Oh then examine thy self faithfully in this If Christ died for me how comes this sinne to live in me for Christ like Sampson when he died wrought the death of his Enemies When he died it was that those lively active lusts should die also 2. If thou
Election that supposeth mans fall and that we are all in a corrupt lump and masse and hereby the grace and free favour of God is made more illustrious Hence the Apostle to the Ephesians is large to shew what they are by nature and how corrupt of themselves that so the grace of God may be made more manifest Such thorns as we are cannot bear any grapes Such polluted Fountains as we are cannot send forth sweet streams Reasons 4 4. Our Election must needs be free and gracious because all the good we are able to do and all the holinesse we have is the fruit and effect of Election He hath chosen us to be holy and unblameable Eph. 1.4 So some beleeved because they were ordained to Eternal Life to be holy not because we were holy They were not ordained to Eternal life because they beleeved but they beleeved because they were ordained to Eternal life Thus you see that godlinesse being the effect of our Election it cannot be the cause and therefore the godly have cause to cry out oh the depths and unsearchable riches of grace Lastly If we consider Election comparatively so it must be wholly of Gods meer gift That is why God chooseth some and not others yea why sometimes the vilest and worst of sinners are taken and others more civill and better moraliz'd are left The Apostle 1 Cor. 2. aggravateth this Not many wise not many noble hath God chosen but the foolish things of the world to confound the wise And thus our Saviour Mat. 11. Thou hast hidden them from the wise and prudent and revealed them to babes And it must needs be thus amongst men for so it was with the Angels The Scripture speaks of Elect Angels Now why did some Angels fall and others are confirmed in their eternall happy abode it cannot be any other cause but their Election Therefore when all things are duely considered we must say with the Apostle Eph. 1. That we are predestinated before the foundation of the world that we should be to the praise of his glorious grace The second step of that Ladder whereby the grace of God descends upon us is Vocation and Regeneration That whereby the Lord doth graciously repair his lost image in us and of dead in sinne makes us live a spiritual life Now that this also is wholly of grace appeareth Reasons 1 1. From that original sin defiling the whole man with all the cursed effects thereof for we are not meerly deprived of all good but positively inclined to all evil and filled with a cursed opposition to what is holy The Scripture is very plentiful and emphatical in describing this sinful misery of ours We are brambles and briars in the Wildernesse till he plant us goodly plants in his Garden We are compared to all manner of beasts for the sinful qualities in us till he make us Sons of God so that we would wonder to see the presumption and arrogancy of those Doctrines that would make man free to do good Whereas our Saviour said Then are we free when the Son hath made us free Joh. 8.36 Tunc arbitrium est liberum quando liberatum Reasons 2 2. It 's all of grace because the Scripture attributeth this work solely to God That famous promise I will take away an heart of stone Eze. 11.19 I will give an heart of flesh I will write my Law in their hearts do argue he must be wilfully blinde that will not acknowledge this to be Gods work alone Now then if it be Gods work it cannot be ours also unlesse subjectively not causally Hence it 's called the New Creature because God immediatly gives us such a being and indeed the experience of the godly soul doth evidently witnesse this How long should I have wallowed in my lusts how unwillng to leave them till God changed my heart If God had staied for my consent and cooperation I had still been in the gall of bitternesse It 's God then and not man who laieth the first stone in this spiritual building Doth not the heart of a godly man inform him of more Orthodoxy in this Point then most Books will do Didst thou not keep thy lusts with all might Didst thou not wage open war against God Didst thou yield thy self by agreement or not rather by full conquest Lastly That our vocation and conversion is wholly of grace appeareth if we consider many persons who are thus called as many prophane and wicked persons Men in league with divers temptations to sin such as Paul Mary Magdalene Matthew the Publican What condignity or congruity which the Papists speak of so much could be in these men And therefore observe how Paul upon all occasions doth willingly enlarge himself to speak of the grace of God to him the chiefest of all sinners Austin in his Confessions do●● excellently acknowledge the unwillingnesse in himself to be turned from his lusts till God had overpowerd him and therefore he cals grace verticordis very emphatically The third step of these eminent gifts God giveth his people is Justification from their sinnes This is so great a matter that the Apostle makes our blessednesse to consist in it And David Psa 32. out of the sense of this mercy overlooks all temporal comforts though never so great and admireth this Now this is wholly of grace Rom. 3.24 Being justified freely by his grace The Apostle puts two words to shew that it is altogether from the meer grace of God that we partake of such a priviledge Now the Grounds why Justification and pardon of sinne must needs be of Grace is 1. Because the Justice of God is like himself infinite and so all the tears and grievances we may put our selves upon are not able to recompense God We see the damned in hell are therefore detained in those chains of darknesse to all Eternity because they are not able to satisfie the justice of God if they could pay to the last farthing then they would be set at liberty Every sin then even the least hath an infinite guilt in it in respect of Gods infinite Majesty against whom it is committed so that neither one man no nor all men or Angels are able to expunge the least blot Oh then tremble under the least sinne rhou art guilty of Little dost thou consider how insupportable the guilt of it is how impotent thy self and all the world is to cancell and wipe out this debt 2. It must needs be of grace because Christ made himself an expiatory atonement and sacrifico for our sinnes God made our iniquities to meet upon him Isa 53. yea he was made a curse for our sakes so that the doing away of our iniquities is wholly of grace to us for that was Christs work he undertook this load which would have crushed us into the lowest hell If he that was God as well as man did yet sweat drops of bloud under this Agony and cried out My God My God why hast
24.46 It must be so else the Justice of God could not be satisfied else mans Redemption could not be obtained This our Saviour implieth I come to thee but how Even as the Israelites to Canaan through a Sea of bloud That then which our Saviour quickly spake was with great pain and agony undergone I come to thee through fire and bloud The Father doth this to demonstrate the bloudy nature of sinne the unspeakable love of Christ and the order God hath appointed for all beleevers ere they come to glory 1. the bloudy nature of sinne for it was this and nothing else that put Christ to be a Sacrifice for us had not Adam and we in him all apostatized from God There had been no need of his death but now by this transgression and ours superadded without the shedding of his bloud there could be no remission of sinne Yet oh the prophanesse and blindenesse of the world what a little matter do they make of sinne how easily do they think a pardon may be had for it Oh remember the least vain thought or idle word cannot in this world or in the world to come be expiated but by Christs bloud only had there been no other sinne in the world but a vain thought Christ must have undergone all that wrath of God and man ere it could be blotted out Oh think of this you who like Leviathan laugh at the Spear and sport your selves with those sinnes which put Christ to all that Agony Lastly This sheweth the order God hath appointed we must first be on Mount Calvary before we can be on the Mount of Transfiguration As Christ had first a Crown of Thorns here before he had a Crown of glory so it must be with us Rom. 8. We shall be glorified with him if we suffer with him Let this then sweeten all thy afflictions and miseries Though the beginnings of God with thee like those of Joseph to his brethren are harsh and rough yet the endings will be full of sweetnesse and comfort If thou grudest at thy Tribulations say this is to grudge at the Crown of Glory This is to repine at the way to everlasting happinesse In the second general place Consider That when Christ saith he goeth to his Father herein is implied that state of glory and honour he shall have in heaven as if he had said I shall be no more in the state and habit of a Servant no more in a despised and contemned condition but I am going to receive that Majesty and glory which is due unto me Although we told you Christ ascended into Heaven for our good and to pleade our cause yet it was also for his glory and honour This our Saviour excellently presseth Joh. 14.28 If ye loved me ye would rejoyce because I go to my Father The Disciples were troubled and full of fears because they were to lose his corporal presence but saith our Saviour true love to me would make you do otherwise you would regard my honour more then your benefit It is for your good that I abide with you It is for my glory that I go to the Father Now love that is unfeigned lieth in our affections to another not because of the good we have by him but for his own good Thus the Disciples they were to rejoyce because Christ was to be honoured and exalted though they should lose the comfort of his presence See here then who are they that do spiritually love Christ even such as rejoyce in that he is exalted and glorified though it be to their ruine and undoing O Lord Let me have this comfort and that comfort no longer if Christ may be more honoured As Mephibosheth said Let Ziba take all so that King David was returned safe so that the honour and kingdom of Christ may be promoted let good Name wealth and life it self go unlesse we be the true genuine Sons of God we are never able to abide this touchstone Doe not the most holy depend on Christ more for the benefit they receive by him then to honor and glorifie him Hence they bemoan their want of assurance and evidence which is their comfort more then recumbency on Christ which is his glory So then in that Christ went to his Father it 's implied that now there was a period to be put to all sufferings Now he was no more to be like a Servant but to be made the Prince of Glory Therefore observe the reason why he goeth to the Father because the Father is greater then he Not as the Arians would have it essentially but in outward dispensation because Christ here was in the fashion and form of the meanest and most despised of men Thirdly Though this phrase imply Christs Exaltation yet we must know also that in this is the whole Treasury of a Christian The Fountain of all our Comfort is in this that Christ is gone to the Father Therefore let the beleever diligently improve it for the effects are admirable of this his departure 1. Hereby his holy Spirit is given in the more plentifully and abundantly It is said The holy Ghost was not yet given because Christ was not yet glorified Joh. 7.39 The large administration of the gifts of Gods Spirit were reserved till Christ in triumph went up to heaven Ioh. 16.7 If I depart I will send him to you You see the sending of the holy Ghost depends upon Christs departure The Spirit comes to make a spiritual supply of Christs bodily presence There cannot be two Suns together in the Firmament O then let all those who have Gods Spirit dwelling in them enlightening sanctifying and comforting of them acknowledge this the blessed fruit of Christs going to his Father but men are so prophane and sensual that they know not what the Spirits working upon the Soul is no more then a beast knoweth the operations of a rational Soul 2. A second benefit by Christs going to the Father is the enabling of us with all holy and heavenly gifts either in a sanctifying way or a ministerial Thus Eph. 4. Christ when he ascended into heaven gave gifts to men That you have a Ministry and Ordinances with the spiritual effects thereof it 's wholly from this Yea Ioh. 14 12. all miraculous Gifts do descend from this Our Saviour there saith That he who beleeveth on him shall do greater works then he doth that is as some say greater Miracles in themselves for we reade that by Peters handkerchief and his very shadow wonderful things were done which we reade not of Christ or greater in quantity and extension They did them in more places For whereas Christ wrought no Miracles at Ierusalem the Apostles did or greater as others say in regard of the successe because farre more were converted to the faith by the Apostles preaching then by Christs Well let this be how it will Consider the ground why they shall be enabled to do these great things because saith Christ I go to the
and this is to be done by the holy Ghost The matter is so great that unless the Spirit of God inable us besides all our study and learning we are not able to keep it yea a Deacon must not be ordained unless he hold fast the mystery of faith in a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 Oh then let none have low thoughts about that which God hath appointed an Office for and therefore given them the titles of the light and salt and nihil est sole sale utilius Fourthly It 's of special consequence to be preserved in the pure faith because the more godly and endeared any are to God this priviledge they shall have to be kept in the truth at least so as not damnably to erre Insomuch that a sound judgement in Religion will distinguish a godly man as well as an unblameable life Mat. 24. Our Saviour speaking of false prophets with what powerfull pretences they should prevail saith If it were possible they should deceive the very elect If it were possible You see by this that there are such false waies in Religion that are inconsistent with salvation and therefore the elect man shall not fall into them no more than into grosse and abominable sins viz. so as totally to lose Heaven and salvation Yea John 10. our Saviour describes his sheep and goats not by their lives but by their attending to the true Doctrine My sheep hear my voice and a stranger they will not hear yea they will flee from him vers 5. So that a godly man doth hang his godliness about his intellectuals as well as morals He is not onely to consider Am I diligent in prayer Do I walk conscionably in my wayes But am I also a lover and prizer of the true Doctrine of Christ Fifthly It 's of great moment to be preserved in the pure Doctrine because that is the foundation and necessary pre-requisite to holinesse The will can never apprehend that which is bonum if the understanding do not first show what is the true good The apprehensive faculty must guide the appetitive If the eye be dark the whole body is as our Saviour afterwards prayeth Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth Gods truth is only instrumental to holiness Errours can no more nourish spiritual life then chaff or stubble yea or poison can nourish a man bodily For as false Sacraments such as the Popish cannot increase grace because they have neither institution or promise so is it also for errours and therefore the same persons that had thrust away a good conscience they could not endure or abide it the same made shipwrack of their faith they put it away 1 Tim. 1.19 They had some good conscience once though not truly sanctified but this they repell they do not love it any more it 's against their interests their worldly advantages their lusts and carnal affections Can we then have too precious thoughts of Gods truths seeing they onely are blessed to a mans true godliness Sixthly It 's a mercy to be kept in the truth because of the proueness and readiness that is in men to be lead aside by errours Gal. 2. I wonder you are so soon carried away so soon Let there come a false teacher and he can quickly do more hurt and pervert mens mindes then the Apostle Paul could do good Wonder not if you see some seducer come to a Town and in a moment corrupt mens mindes and make them his Disciples and so overthrow that building which a faithfull Minister hath been many years building up you see it was of old so Paul though an Apostle neither by man nor of man yet found it so and at another time he complaineth how ready they were to become even slaves to false-teachers they might abuse and domineer over them you suffer if a man buffet you c. onely the true Apostles they could not bear them We see then why it is that a goodly field may suddenly be overrunne with tares a hopefull Church the body of Christ be all over with a Gangrene and made deformed There is a proneness in a man to erre in his judgement as well as in his life Happy then is he whom God keeps Seventhly Errours of judgement are damnable as well as sinfull practises It 's true some errours are fundamental some superstructive onely and so one kinde is not as damnable as another but thus it is in Saints also some are compared to a gnat some to a Camel but as we say of the least sinne it deserveth hell so of the least errour for as no sinne is in it self little because God is not a little but infinite God so no errour is in it self little because it 's against the same glorious God Hence Gal. 5. Heresies are reckoned as the fruit of the flesh among other grosse sinnes and can there be more terrible words spoken against any sort of wicked men then the Apostle Peter doth 2 Pet. 2.1 thunder out against some false Teachers that should privily bring in damnable heresies whose damnation sleepeth not Oh then tremble to lose thy soul among errours as well as sinnes For the Apostle 2 Pet. 3. saith Ignorant men wrest the Scriptures to their destruction Damnation is in perverting of Scripture yea 1 Cor. 3. we see there that even hay and stubble errours of a lighter nature make the salvation of a man difficult he shall be saved yet so as by fire Austin and Syrinensis distinguish between the Haeretici and Credentes haereticis the seducers and seduced The former are in a condition more exposed to vengeance then the latter howsoever errors in Religion as well as corrupt practises tend to hell Austin questioned who was worse a Christian believing truly but living wickedly or an heretick living unblameably but believing unsoundly Non audeo dicere I dare not determine it But Salvian a pious ancient Writer inveighs more against the prophane Christian and as for the unblameable heretick Errant saith he sed piè errant haeretici sunt sed tibi non sibi and thus Bernard reckoning up the three little ages of the Church the first under persecutions the second under heresies the third under corrupt manners makes this latter the more bitter But we cannot absolutely pronounce which of these two is the worse in some respects one exceeding the other Eighthly It 's a blessed thing to be kept in the truth because of that heavy censure the Scripture inflicts upon heretical persons to avoid them to turn from them not to bid them Godspeed John 2. They must not receive such into their house or have any familiarity with them and they are to avoid an heretick yea the Apostle would have us hold such accursed though they were Angels or Apostles themselves and Gal. 1. The same reason viz. a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump which is brought as a ground to cast out the incestuous person is also applied to a corrupt doctrine
these things named in the Text and further the Apostle chargeth these persons to whom he attributeth these priviledges that they were dull and slow that they needed to be taught the first principles By all which it appeareth that the godly ought to have better things then those mentioned Do not therefore gather the Apostasie of those that are truly godly because sometimes you see men of eminent parts and professions in Religion become degenerate and unsound for possibly these never had the Truth of grace and such also were those named by Peter 2 Pet. 2.20 where some are said to have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of Christ and yet were again entangled in their former lusts We grant that the Faith of Christ had so farre a powerfull operation upon them that they left off those pollutions they lived in whilst Heathens but yet that they were never changed at the very root and heart appearrth in that the Apostle cals them but washed Swine they had not changed their Swinish nature they were not made Sheep though they had an outward Reformation Now that all such though never so wonderfull for parts and duties if falling off never were truly principled with the work of grace in their souls appeareth by that eminent place 1 Joh. 2.19 They went from us because they were not of us If they had been of us they would have continued with us Here it is plain that whosoever is truly of the Church of God he will alwaies abide so Indeed when we see the fall of such who seemed such glorious Starres and such tall Cedars we ought in an holy manner to fear and tremble We that stand are to take heed lest we fall but this doth not prove the total Apostasie of those that do truely belong to God Mat. 13. He that did beleeve and receive the Word with joy did yet at last wither because he had not a good and honest heart Now when we say all these mentioned had not true Grace we do not mean they were grosse Hypocrites as if they did outwardly professe they beleeved but inwardly were the clean contrary No only we take an hypocrite in a large sence for one who hath some imperfect and inchoate works of Gods Spirit upon him which are like dispositions in a tendency unto true Grace as the Embryo to a Childe but yet they fall farre short of Sanctification They in their thoughts and hearts are reall and serious others apprehend them to be in the state of Grace but still though Virgins they are but Foolish Virgins They have not that Oyle which will serve when the Bridegroom cometh Terrible it is to hear this and oh what sharp goads should they be in our sides lest we never as yet have gone further then such persons Say it again unto thy self Am I not gone further then such and such persons 3. It is good to observe That even the Adversaries to this Truth do grant that God is able to confirm a man in grace so that he shall never fall They grant God doth establish the Angels in that happy condition that they shall never fall from it yea they will not contend but that de facto God did confirm some as the Apostles that they should never be separated from Christ Now if this be granted it will overthrow all those reasons that they bring to prove the perishing estate sometimes of the godly For thus they argue If a Godly man shall certainly be preserved to what purpose then are all Counsels and exhortations Why are they commanded to fear and to take heed lest they fall Do not all these Admonitions seem vain and absurd As if we should bid a man take heed he do not fly up into the air if he do he will fall Now if there be any absurdity in this will not all this hold as well in those Apostles whom they grant to be infallibly preserved to Eternal Life Though Christ told them Their Names were written in heaven That he went te prepare a place for them yet for all that he exhorts them to take heed of the least motions of sinne and abide in him though he promiseth they shall continue in him 4. Consider That of those who pleade for an Apostasie of the godly there is a destinction to be made Some go further then others some hold one way and not another As first Some hold that though men be Elected to Salvation yet they may perish because their Elect on is not absolute but conditionall supposing their perseverance and thus the Arminians but some Papists and the Lutherans they hold that no Elect man can ever perish for then God might be frustrated in his Councels which were absurd to think Others they say That men may have true grace for the present but yet not Elected They do not make true Faith proper to the Elect only but say many besides such have for the present true lively grace now with them The Elect man he cannot fall from his grace but the other may The Learned V●ssius doth at large endeavour to make this the Op●nion of Austin as we told you Though some deny it and bring places that seem to evince the contrary whose Opinion soever it be it cannot be justified by the Scripture Lastly Others hold that a Godly man though Elected may for the present totally lose all his grace and not so much as any Sparks remain but then they say he will not alwaies abide thus he shall at last recover So that he shall not finally perish Now we cannot joyn with any of these Opinions but affirm the truly godly though never so weak yet shall certainly be preserved to happinesse so that though he may fall grievously yet the Spirit of God doth not wholly and finally forsake him 5. When we say that such as are given to Christ shall never perish this is to be understood of all and every one of them Not only such who have an high degree of Grace but even those that are babes such as are like the smoaking flax and bruised reed Where there is true grace though but like a grain of Mustard-seed yet that shall be so qu●ckened and enlivened that it shall never goe out and this is of great Consolation to the godly who are apt to think that though some eminent Beleevers be carried on to happinesse yet such weak and frail things as they are shall never hold they cannot withstand any temptation they presently are ready to fall as soon as ever they are set on their feet but they are to know that the same divine protection and power is to all because they are Christs It is not because one hath more godlinesse then another but because all are in Christs hands A Childe in the Ark was as safe as any strong man so that our protection is not founded upon the measure of our grace but the truth of our grace That which is true grace will persevere Perseverance
have been horrible impiety to have broken out against all the Apostles and Christ himself saying look what they are It 's as the Pharisees said a company of Impostors and Deceivers They are all for their own ends they are all covetous and though they pretend Religion yet they are bypocrites and though they condemn the grosse sinnes of the world yet in secret they can be as bad as any would not such a tongue shew that it was set on fire from hell that should belch out such things It 's then of special consequence to know that we are not to love the strictnesse of Religion the lesse nor are we to prejudice our selves against the way and persons of Godly men if sometimes amongst them there be such who made the pretence of holinesse a disguise to act their wickednesse in Think not the worse of the Apostles because a Judas was amongst them To bring this Truth home to your hearts Consider these things 1. There was never any such pure Society and company of holy men upon the Earth but there were also some Hypocrites and insincere men mingled amongst them Either wilfull convinced Hypocrites or else unsound men in the bottome and therefore when a Temptation came they discovered what they were It 's in vain to look for such a Church wherein all the members of it shall be perfect and pure In the Old Testament we reade of many eminent at least for a while in the Church of God but yet rotten at the Coar Saul was in a remarkable manner chosen by God to temporal government he pretends much zeal for Gods people and heartily himself to destroy the enemies of Israel yea the Spirit of prophesie came upon him but it became a Proverb Is Saul among the Prophets We were not to condemn the Prophets because a deceitfull bloudy Saul was amongst them Among the good Kings in the Old Testament David Hezekiah and Josiah We reade also of Jehu who for outward appearance did many glorious things of Reformation The Text saith He did all things that were in Gods heart yet for all that he was not with David a man after Gods own heart He was a Meteor not a fixed Starre he was a picture not a living man in Religion he was moved up and down as his carnal Interests did leade him Again as there were the good Prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah with many others so there were also the bad Prophets who came not in Gods Name who prophesied peace and sowed pillows under wicked mens elbows that they might sinne the more securely Should a man therefore have cried out against all the Prophets that they were a deceitfull self-seeking generation and that it was no matter what they said for they drave on their own designs to be Lords over all to obtain great things Thus it was of old and in the New-Testament-dispensation though their outward profession of the Truth was subject to many dangers insomuch that there was little encouragement to hypocrites we might justly think that if ever in those primitive daies all should have been upright but there were even then Foxes amongst the Sheep John 2. Our Saviour would not trust many that yet are said to beleeve Hence are these comparisons of the Church to the Floor wherein is chuff as well as wheat To the Field wherein are Tares as well as Wheat To the Drag net wherein are bad Fish as well as good Now will ye condemn a Field of Corn because of some Weeds in it Did not Paul complain that he was in danger of false Brethren and that many came creeping in to spy out their liberty to have an occasion to accuse them Did not Hymeneus and Philetus make shipwrack of all Did not Alexander the Copper-Smith withstand Paul and do him much hurt 2 Tim. 4.12 yet judicious Divines think that it was that Alexander mentioned in the Acts who had almost lost his life in his forward appearance for the Gospel make account then of that which our Saviour saith Mat. 18 7. It 's impossible but that offences must come there will be wofull scandals even in the Church of God but let not this make thee revolt 2. As there have been such unsound hypocrites alwaies in the Church so it is the great endeavour of the devil to tempt and to set on those that are most eminent to throw them in the mire for hereby he will promote his own kingdome The scandals and stumbling-blocks of men reputed of in the Church are the greatest advantage to the devil Luk. 22. Satan hath desired to winnow you As Goliah challenged the stoutest Israelite thinking by vanquishing of him to dismay all the rest Thus the devil if he can overcome an Apostle a Disciple then all the rest will easily yeeld The devil desired to winnow them more then all others Not only the high places in temporal respects but even in the Church are slippery and dangerous Those that are lifted above others in Religion in parts in esteem they are more in danger then ten thousand of other Christians for if they fall they draw more with them If a tall Tree fall it beats down all the shrubs under it If a pillar of the house fall it endangers all the buildings It is noted of the devil that he used the Serpent at first to entice Eve because that was more subtle then any other Creature of the Field and the devil still takes the same way The subtlelest and most notable Instruments he striveth to pervert them Men of the best parts the greatest learning the hottest zeal It is such as he looked after Thus in Antiquity many of the Heretiques were of great Learning plausible Eloquence subtle Insinuations specious Piety and thereby they did the more hurt Therefore the more reputed thou art in the Church of God know thy Condition to be the more dangerous The devil will never give over till one way or other he make thee a Scandall Let him that standeth take heed lest he fall 3. Men may through their corruptions actively take an occasion to speak against the waies of Religion or else there may be a passive occasion administred to them and we are greatly to distinguish between these two Divines call it Scandalum acceptum and Scandalum datum There are a generation of men so devilish and malicious that they will take an occasion to condemn the way of Religion even for good things for necessary duties or at least when they have no just occasion Thus our Saviour himself though never so holy so humble so godly in his doctrine and life yet the Pharisees took all occasion to calumniate him They say he wrought by the devil and called him a Friend to Publicans and Sinners There are some wretched men that do what you can they will be prejudiced against the Truth and Godlinesse They will look upon all the waies of Christ as so many deceits and impostures and this offence is called Scandalum Phariseorum by the
Casuists But then there is a Scandal given or scandalum Pusillorum when those who appear for Religion do such things as are indeed inconsistent with holinesse that can never be made good by the Scripture and of such it is that our Saviour saith Wo be to him by whom offences come Mat. 18.7 Whosoever shall offend one of these little ones it had been better a Millstone were hung about his neck and he thrown into the sea For although it be also a sinne in any man to be prejudiced and alienated from Godlinesse because of the sinnes of those that professe it neither will that be an excuse to them yet because such put a stumbling block in the way therefore is the transgression great Distinguish then between such as through their wilfull obstinacy will be offended and from such who are so through weaknesse and a reall occasion given 4. Such is the enmity of man to what is good that he is glad to have any occasion to blame the Truth with whenas indeed they should mourn and grieve to see any failings amongst those that are religious they rather rejoyce in the discovery of such and they think this is a good reason for their Impiety Why should they come out from the common waies of the world Do not many of those that are so forward do thus and thus And therefore they hope they shall do as well as any other The Apostle seeing this wicked disposition in the world speaks notably to the godly 1 Pet. 3.16 To walk with such a good Conscience that whereas the world will speak against them as evil doers they may be ashamed So 1 Pet. 2.12 These things premised Let us consider the unreasonablenesse and sinfullnesse of condemning Religion for some hypocrites therein For 1. Dost thou not as well see many are sincere and walk unblameably Doth not thy own heart tell thee that thou hast no just cause to speak against them Dost thou not sometimes wish thy Soul might do as well as theirs Dost thou not with Balaam wish thou mightst die the Death of such Righteous persons Shall not the Graces and holinesse of Eleven Apostles more confirm thee then the wickednesse of one Judas offend thee Consider then how unreasonable thou art that dost only minde the weak places of the Wall not ●he strong Thou speakest of many that for gain and secret lusts have fallen off from God but how many thousands of godly sincere men can we tell thee of who because they feared God were neither terrified by threats nor yet seduced by allurements to deny Christ Though a Judas did betray him yet ●here are Millions of Martyrs who have valiantly died in the Confession of him 2. We are not to live by Examples but by Precepts It 's an Old Rule We are to consider what the Scripture requires and commands If that enjoyn a life separated and singular to the wickednesse of the world If that bid thee run not into the same excesse of Riot with them such a strict way and profession thou art bound to follow Though all that go before thee be hypocrites and that go with thee Though all the Apostles had been like Judas yet Christs Truth had still been to be embraced Therefore not mens lives but the Scripture is to be ou● Rule If all men prove Hypocrites or Apostates yet we are bound to keep close to the Word Let God be true and every man a Lyar It 's true the life and conversation of others in sincerity and uprightnesse may be a great inducement to holiness therfore the Scripture often cals for a life of light and holinesse that others may be won thereby but yet every one ought to have such an inward assurance both of the Truth of God and his Grace upon his heart that what Peter said presumptuously they are to acknowledge as a duty Though all men should forsake Christ yet he would not It 's not upon men that we are to build either our faith or our godlinesse but though all men should prove devils and there were none in the world but one man that would own Christ thou wert to joyn with him 3. If we should condemn Religion for the falshood of some we were to condemn all the waies of Religion and all parties in the world and so to turn direct Athiests for look upon all the severall waies and parties that are in the world Are there not some that are a reproach to them that the wiser and more sober persons in that way will not own Wonder not then if the Apostle say of some that they are spots in their Feasts Jude 12. And Rom. 2. that they are such by whom the Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles This hath and will be It is impossible saith our Saviour but there will be offences viz considering the corruptions and sinfull inclinations of men but if you will own no Religion wherein an Hypocrite may come in you must do as Constantine bad the Novatian erect a Ladder and go himself only into heaven Even in heaven it self there were as we may say Judasses for what were those Apostate Angels that did not abide in the Truth but left their first habitation but betraiers of all that glory and honour that was due to God Know then that to throw away Religion because of the hypocrisie of some few is to run the broad way into Athiesm 5. It is not only sinful but very dangerous to thy own soul when thou art prejudiced or leavest the true way upon such grounds Thou dost not hurt them but thou wrongest thy own soul Those Disciples Joh. 6. that took offence at Christs Preaching they did not despise Christ so much as they damned their souls for saith Peter then whither shall we go for thou hast Eternal Life So then for thee to take up prejudices and objections against Christs way because of some mens miscarriages is to be a self-murderer wilt thou destroy thy own soul and throw thy self into one extremity because others may in another way undo themselves Oh know it is an heavy judgement upon thee when thou meetest with stumbling-blocks Those whom God loveth he giveth a better heart unto them Christ himself Luk. 1. 1 Pet. 2.7 To those that beleeve is indeed precious but a stone of stumbling and a Rock of offence unto those that do not beleeve Oh then be afraid lest this be the beginning of Gods judgement upon thee to be so prejudiced and offended by mis representations that thou shalt never have an heart to love God and his way Think not to do them a despight thou art the greatest Enemy to thy own soul 6. If any under the pretence of Religion do act their iniquities quarrell not at Religion it self for that condemneth such waies Neither do those that fear God own such for their members yea where Gods Order is put in practise they cast such from them as a dishonour to God and a reproach to that holy calling
they be thus damnable yet many shall follow their pernicious waies There is no Heresie so deformed but many people will follow it and by this means the way of Truth shall be evil spoken of See this in our daies How greatly do the Papists blaspheme that holy Truth of God by which we are saved because of the many Sects and errours which sprung up amongst us They think this Argument enough if there were no other when they can say how violent is one Protestant against another condemning one another for Heretiques They all pleade the Spirit and yet are opposite to each other and certainly did not the Scripture forewarn us of such things it were enough to make the stoutest beleever sometimes at a stand but 1 Cor. 11. The Scripture saith there again There must be Heresies That necessity ariseth both in respect of mens corruptions and also in respect of Gods wise permission that so the approved and sound may be made manifest It 's no little part of a Christians wisedom in the overflowing of Heresies when men of several waies speciously pretend to Truth and Piety to know how to deport our selves and so to walk that we do not fall from our stedfastnesse Now there is not a surer Buckler to keep off these poisonous arrows from our breasts then to strengthen our selves with powerful Considerations out of the Scripture Thus it must be Thus it will be The Scripture again and again tels us of it men of great Eminency and repute may make shipwrack of their Faith and through deceivablenesse and subtle insinuations will draw many after them Wonder not at this when it comes to passe That is notable to this purpose Act. 20.29 30. Though Paul himself had instructed those Churches yet he tels them after his departure that Wolves would venture in amongst them what a sad change would this be But from whence should they come Even out of your selves will arise men Thus these Toads and Serpents would breed in Gods own Garden As the Leprosie of Heresie is thus a Scandall in Gods Church So the Apostacy and revolt of such as were once forward for the Truth To have them degenerate yea sometimes to become malicious Enemies against what they professed this is very hard Heb. 6. and 2 Pet. 2. mention is made of some who were endowed with eminent gifts and much outward Reformation yet they are supposed to fall away and so to fall as never to recover again Let it not then stumble thee if there be such who will for earthly advantages betray Christ after much love pretended to him That will sell Christ for silver Do not thou loath Religion for this Do not thou begin to say Are there any Religious even in this world Do not thou follow them thinking I may do as they do But rather tremble at such Instances considering how terrible their latter end will be 3. When for the profession of the Truth and Piety we finde our nearest friends and such as ought most to encourage us to set against us yea to betray us and to work our Deaths if it were possible though this be very hard to bear yet say as in the Text This is done that the Scripture may be fullfilled If Christ himself complain it was not an open enemy but thou my familiar friend we took sweet counsell together that did lift up his heel against him that is proudly contemptuously and bloudily set against me Do not thou expect a better condition then Christ thy Master especially attend to that place Mat. 10.34 35. Luk. 11.52 where the consequent of the Gospel preached is to set the nearest relation one against another so that for thy Godlinesse sake neither Father or Friend may own thee yea the wife of thy bosome will betray thee such things have fallen out in times of persecution and therefore be not offended at that which the Scripture hath foretold 4. That Antichrist should prosper and prevail even to the shedding of the bloud of so many thousand Martyrs and yet meet with no remarkable judgement would be an unanswerable Temptation had not the Scripture foretold it The Scripture informeth of a twofold Antichrist a doctrinall one such as John speaks of that denieth Christ to be come in the flesh and a politicall Antichrist or one that is chiefly so in respect of Church-Government who yet also shall be doctrinally Antichrist of whom Paul speaketh that he shall exalt himself above every thing that is called God and of which the Revelation makes often mention for although this Antichrist shall prevail and the greater part of the earth shall receive the mark of the beast yet at last the time will come when those joyfull Songs shall be sung that Babylon is fallen and the judgements of God are just who hath avenged himself upon the Beast Let not then Bellarmine glory in his temporal felicity as a mark of the Church Let him not say in such a daring manner If the Pope be Antichrist and the man of sinne aimed at in the Scripture Why have not horrible judgements from heaven overtaken him All this is easily answered The Scripture foretels he shall have a time and he must for a while make his garments red with the bloud of the Saints But as certainly as he doth this so also shall his perdition come as certainly Wonder not at this or be offended for the Scripture must be fulfilled 5. The manifold exercises and conflicts that Gods own Children have sometimes about the guilt of sinne and sometimes about the power of sinne makes them think there was none so in the world before Oh how shall they bear it there is no mans condition like theirs you cannot hear one reade of the like say they But do not all these troubles arise from ignorance in the Scripture Do ye not reade of David though sometimes on the Mount of Transfiguration yet at other times on the Mount of Calvary Is he not sometimes lifted up with the light of Gods Countenance and at other times so dejected and disquieted he knoweth not what to do And as for the power of Corruption abiding in us Doth not Paul Rom 7. cry out O miserable man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of Death and the Apostle Jam. 4.5 doth the Scripture speak in vain The spirit that is in us lusteth to envy Even in the Godly there is a strong provocation to envy one of the vilest sins and most contrary to the Spirit of Christ Seeing then the Scripture doth thus admonish us Let not the Children of God walk disconsolately Let them not say God hath forsaken them Let them still remember that the Scripture hath forewarned them of such things That the devil is a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devour 1 Pet. 5.6 Vse of Instruction Hath the Scripture by it's prediction forewarned against all possible offences that fall out then 1. See the truth and faithfulnes of Christ that hideth not the worst
called to controle sin and stop the current of it as publike Officers are Therefore let all such as intend to be godly in discharge of their trust not matter the hatred of wicked men Lay that down for a foundation for as the shadow will accompany the Sun so will malice and backbiting the godly actions of holy men yet some are more hated then others Obadiah could live in Ahabs Court for all Jezabels malice when Elisha's Life was greedily sought for Therefore 3. In the hatred of the world God hath a special regard to his Children he laieth no more on them then they can bear The strong Christian God calleth to more dangerous combats All had not such oppositions as Paul had Some are like Vriah put in the forefront of the battel The devil shall cast some of you into prison Rev. 2.10 It 's but some of them Thus James was beheaded and Peter was imprisoned when the other Apostles were not touched God doth wisely order the affairs of this world even wicked mens tongues and hands are bound up and they are let loose as God pleaseth 4. Even amongst wicked men there is much difference Some are farre more bitter and cruell then others Some have more Conviction Some have better Natures Some are of a more noble disposition for although that Seed of Enmity be in all wicked men yet in some it 's more stifled or diverted then in others when Herodias sought the death of John Baptist Herod for a long time preserved him Thus as all weeds have not the like noxiousnesse so neither is every wicked man like to another Every one is not a Cain an Absalom a Nero or a bloudy Bonner But then Lastly Take heed that if thou hast not so much hatred of the world as other godly men have that it be not for want of godlinesse because thou art not so zealous against sin Thou art more complying with or conniving at the wickednesse of others This is to buy the worlds good word at a dear rate Thou hadst better all the world speak against thee then to have God and thy conscience accuse thee for not doing thy duty Vse of Exhortation to the godly Be not discouraged or weakened in thy duty for the malice of the world Let them rage and rave but do thou continue in thy service to God This fear of men and their malicious outrage hath made many a man wound his conscience and grievously dishonour God Oh but consider Am I afraid of a mans tongue that is mortall and shall I not much more tremble at Gods condemnation Can a man damn thee how many have had sad trouble at their Death They did not their duty for fear of displeasing men SERMON LXXXIII The Application of the fore-going Observation both to the Godly and the Wicked tending to Encourage and Rejoyce the one under all their Sufferings and Deterre and Reclaim the other from all their Oppositions JOHN 17.14 And the World hath hated them because they are not of the World THe Worlds hatred you have heard to be the godly mans Portion The one are Sheep the other Wolves I now proceed to shew What is the Duty of Christs Disciples under the worlds hatred For it 's no mean skill to take the poyson from these enemies and to make wholsom medicines of it as Physicians do about Vipers yea it 's one of the great miracles that Christ hath enabled all believers to perform For we reade when an Heathen suprized a Christian and beat him with much cruelty and with great scorn asking him What great wonder his Master Christ ever did The believer replies even this great miracle That though you use me thus cruelly I can heartily forgive you What then was spoken to the Disciples in an external temporal manner may be verified in a spiritual sense That they shall tread upon Serpents and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them And first Do the ungodly men of the world shoot their arrows against thee Let this make thee examine thy self Whether there be not some sinne thou art guilty of that hereby God would humble thee for The Hebrews call an enemy an observer because his malice puts him upon a diligent observing of all thy wayes and therefore if there be any wickednesse any failing to be sure he will reminde thee of it which made the Heathen say That he who would be good needeth either a faithfull friend or a better enemy It may be then those sins those failings that no friends no Sermons meet with thy enemy may inform thee of So that thou mayest say thy enemy hath been the best friend in the world yea his railing words have done thee more good then many Sermons Not that they intend good no more then the horse-leech but to satisfie their own lusts only thou by heavenly wisdome dost turn their evil into good but if so be that upon examination thou findest thy self free Yet Secondly Consider whether it be not for some other sinnes that such men are made adversaries against thee For you must know God hath a wise ordering of all mens hearts and tongues even in reference to thee and as David when Shimei railed on him said 2 Sam. 16. The Lord hath bid him So whatsoever wicked men do concerning thee thou must say The Lord hath bid him Now though David was not guilty of those sins Shimei reviled him with neither did the Lord bring him in distresse for his quarrel with Saul as Shimei thought yet David had other sins and other transgressions for which he might be afflicted and so looked upon Shimei as a scourge to humble him for them Therefore say Though the things laid to my charge be false yet there are other failings other infirmities that the world knoweth not of which God strikes at by this mans tongue or rather the devil in that man Thirdly Do wicked men hate thee Take our Saviours rule so contrary to flesh and blood Mat. 5.44 Love them that hate you pray for them that persecute you and in other places Be not overcome of evil but overcome evil with good Rom. 12.21 This is that peculiar lesson which the Christian Religion only teacheth Neither Aristotle or Tully thought it a duty but rather a simplicity not to be avenged upon enemies But the Scripture is much in pressing this duty and that as a special sign of grace wherein we shall as children of God represent our heavenly Father who makes the Sunne to shine upon the ungodly as well as the godly All the wicked men of the world they hate God as well as thee and it 's in his power to destroy them all immediately in a moment to send them to hell yet with what patience and loving kindness doth he bear such adversaries he gives them food raiment and manifold preservations so Christ even when we were enemies died for us which the Scripture makes a forcible argument for us to forgive others This is a
our head he hath taken the sting out of all They are not judgements they are not to destroy the nature of them is wholly altered through Christ for as Christ would be baptized to sanctifie that Ordinance for us so he would be afflicted and troubled to sanctifie them to us Thus we may argue if no troubles or afflictions could overcome him neither can they us 3. Here is matter of comfort because hereby Christ is fitted to help us and pity us He himself knoweth what the worlds reproaches are and therefore will the more compassionate us This the Apostle urgeth Heb. 5. We have a High-Priest that is tempted like us in all things sin only excepted Vse of Instruction What cause the people of God have to triumph in all their hard usages from the world Say not were ever any thus contemned and abused as I am yea a better then thou even Christ the only Son of God Do thou rather look on it as an honour to be made like unto him he blessed when he was reviled Be like Christ in his graces as thou art in his tribulations thus shalt thou be hereafter like him in glory SERMON LXXXV Sheweth Why God continueth his Children in this world of Sinne and Sorrow and doth not take them immediately to Heaven And also How farre it is lawfull for a man to pray for or desire to be taken out of this world JOHN 17.15 I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world but that thou shouldst keep them from the evil IN the former verses our Saviour having prayed for the preservation of his Disciples he doth in this verse in a particular manner expresse the Manner of that preservation he prayeth for Not that God the Father needed any such instruction but this is spoken for the edification of his Disciples and the building them up who happily did not yet understand how they were to be preserved Now this preservation is set down two wayes 1. Negatively then Positively 1. Negatively I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world 2. Positively but that thou wouldst keep them from the evil In the negative part we may consider the thing denied in his prayer That God should take them out of the world for so God might take them either by a miraculous and sudden translation as he did Henoch and Eliah or by a violent death through the hands of their persecutors or in a natural ordinary course but saith our Saviour I pray not for this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is for the most part used of an interrogation to question about any thing but sometimes simply for rogation or a meer bare asking and petitioning as often by this Evangelist From this Negative part we may observe First That though God love his people yet that doth not necessarily inferre he must keep them from all misery in this world and place them immediately in happinesse with himself This is good to be taken notice of for we are ready to think that if God love his children he should presently do that for them which will be their chiefest happinesse especially this being in his power to do it when he will to suffer his children to be grapling and conflicting with troubles in this world when it 's but his word speaking and crowns of glory may be set upon their heads seemeth inconsistent with Gods love as she argued to Sampson How canst thou love me and hide any thing from me So saith humane reason How can God love me when yet he keepeth Heaven and eternal glory from me But Gods love and his childrens calamities in this world may well agree together You see our Saviour when he intended the greatest good for his Disciples in his Petition yet corrects and moderateth his prayer not as if he would have them mediately translated to glory he is content they should be awhile in the fire to have their drosse purged away God could do many things for his people which yet he will not he could immediately upon their conversion crown them with eternal glory or else give them perfect and throughly sanctified hearts that they should not complain and groan under any distemper of soul he could make the world to be a Paradise to them so that the way to Heaven should be no longer straight and narrow but broad and easie Thus God could do but it pleaseth his wisdome to take another course and to appoint a Wildernesse to go through ere we can enter in Canaan Now let us consider Why Gods love doth not immediately take the godly out of this world for seeing God loveth them and they love God we should think that love would not rest till it had the nearest conjunction that could be In this matter we may give several Reasons First Because there is a necessity of the presence of godly men in the world that they may promote the Kingdom of God and bring others to the knowledge of God This is especially true of the Apostles as Apostles and so of all those that have any Office and Ministry in the Church of God These are as necessary as the Sunne to the world as the Starres in a dark night as salt to season and preserve from putrefaction and even all believers in a private way are to use their gifts for the reducing of others and by their examples to give such a glorious light that others may glorifie God in the day of their visitation but this doth principally relate to them as Apostles had they been immediately carried up to Heaven where would have been the leaven put into the three pecks of meal Where the mustard-seed sown that would grow up into a great Tree If the Apostles were the Planters and Founders of the Church it was necessary that they should continue for some time in the world The world was a wildernesse that could not immediately be made a garden It was the Devils habitation he could not suddenly be dispossest So that God having service for his people to do no wonder if they must continue in this valley of misery Paul speaks fully to this Phil. 1.14 To abide in the flesh is necessary for you but for him it was better to be dissolved and to be with Christ and between these two he was in a great straight So certainly it were better for the people of God especially for the Ministers of the Gospel who are like Vriah in the fore-front of the battel and exposed to more hatred to be with Christ in Heaven there they shall be free from all this virulence and oppositions of the ungodly but yet if we regard the world and the people with whom they live then their life and presence is very necessary This then is the first reason Gods people have work to do a course to finish and so they must not look to have wages before they have laboured in the Vineyard Secondly God will not presently take them out of this
be kept from sinne and all evil in our Afflictions and Troubles then from the afflictions themselves This is a speciall Truth for whose heart is not troubled about the Affliction more then the Sinne Whose heart is not more upon the passive evil he suffers then the active evil he doth Whose soul is made so spiritual that no vexation or pain and losse in body or Estate doth affect him so greatly as the sinful distempers and troubles of his soul doth But to open this Consider 1. That it's Gods special Gift and his power only that keeps his people from sinne in their afflictions For did not God sanctifie Did not God teach as well as chasten the Evil of Sinne and the Evil of Punishment would alwaies go together the time of our trouble and the time of our transgressions would never be separated When David could say That out of very Faithfulnesse God had afflicted him that before he was afflicted he went astray This was wholly from the Grace of God for how many in their distresse are like Ahaz that then did worse then ever before for certainly Afflictions to wicked men are like the fire or pouncings to ill and unsavoury Herbs the more they are med●ed with the more they stink As the damned in hell their Torments make them rage and blaspheme against God Thus it is with the wicked on the Earth their present troubles draw out their corruptions They are more impatient more discontented and never more evil then when they have the greatest cause to be exceeding good But to the Godly it is otherwise that light which burneth the wicked enliveneth the Godly as the fire in Nebuchadnezzars Furnace did lose the bonds that the Worthies were bound in and made them at Liberty when it consumed the ungodly Thus Afflictions many times set the Godly at Liberty from their sinnes loose their hearts more from the world but how comes this about it 's the meer Gift of God Did not God support as Christ did Peter in these waves we would presently be over-whelmed Oh then reflect on thy self Hath any trouble Have any Afflictions made thee more humble and more upright Hath Beleeving outed thee from the world and earthly things know that it's God that hath kept thee from the evil Secondly The Scripture speaks of it as a special favour when God will be with us in our Afflictions so that we shall not be left to Temptations Therefore we are constantly to pray Mat. 6.13 that God would deliver us from Temptation Now although prosperity and outward mercies are a Temptation yet the Scripture doth for the most part call Afflictions only Temptations because we are so hardly able to keep our Integrity and holinesse in them We can hardly overcome flesh and bloud or conquer our selfish Inclinations so as to lie humbly and with deep Resignation into Gods hand Oh then what great thoughts of heart should there be that such a Condition such a streight such an Affliction be not a Temptation to thee that God do not leave thee in it It 's a special mercy to be kept from a Temptation but a greater in it This is miraculous like those that were in the fire and yet not burnt There is not a more comfortable evidence of Gods love when thou shal●be bruised and broken with many afflictions and yet they are not able to stir up corruptions in thy heart Never forget to pray That as Temptations and Afflictions shall come on thee so Gods sutable Grace and tender Preservation may accompany thee Though Christ prayed thus for the Apostles to be kept from the evil yet Peter gradually though not totally or finally was left by God in his Temptation when he was surprised with fear how grievously doth he deny Christ with bitter curses and swearings Here Peter was not quite from evil though so farre as Christ prai'd for him he was preserved viz. that his faith might not fail Oh by this sad instance we see if God withdraw his Arm from us how dreadful our Estate would be That thou hast not blasphemed God and his Providence and charged God foolishly in thy streights blesse and praise God for it and remember that self confidence is the great sinne to provoke God to leave thee to the evil of temptations as we see in Peter and Hezekiah Take heed of going out of Gods arms of letting go his hand or provoking him any way Thirdly Afflictions and Tribulations do not of themselves make us holy but they work according to the subject exercised with them Indeed naturally to every man unregenerate they draw out corruption and sinne and Physick to an incurable disease doth but hasten Death and fire to wood and such like Combustibles doth not refine but consume The more a muddied Pool is stirred the more noisome it is and thus it would work even in a godly man did not grace live within him as well as sinne Yet even to a godly man it 's a very difficult thing not to have the waves of his heart rise high when these windes and tempests have blown upon them and for this reason it is that the more troubles are upon us the greater assistance and discoveries of grace we need and therefore there is more comfort in this praier of Christ then the heart can conceive Here is a provision made for thee in that which thou dost most want for if the least temptation the least Evil fall on thee if that fall upon thy heart it will presse thee to hell should not God support and sanctifie it a gnat will choak thee as well as a Camel God only moveth on these deeps and makes them fruitful In the next place Let us consider the Grounds and Reasons why it 's more blessed to have preservation from sin the evil of an affliction then from the affliction And First Because an Affliction is but a particular temporall Evil but Sinne is an infinite universall Evil Sicknesse depriveth of Health Poverty of Wealth and thus every Streight doth but oppose some temporall particular Good that is the Creatures Good But Sinne is an Universall Evil it depriveth of God and it divesteth of all Glory and Happinesse so that as Anselme said It ought to be our Resolution That if Hell were on one side and Sinne on the other we ought rather to choose Hell-Torments then Sinne and the Reason is because Sinne is an Offence and a Dishonour against God God is infinitely more then the Creature and his Glory and Honour is more worthy then all we are It 's better the whole World should be annihilated and destroyed and come to nothing in all its Comforts then that the least glimpse of the Glory of God should be Eclipsed Oh then whosoever had rather sinne then be afflicted he preferreth himself above God he preferreth himself above Christ and he sets up his own particular Safety and Security above Gods Glory Oh then that we could be more afraid of Sinne then we
Art thou not guilty of many omissions of duties Thou hast not reproved mourned prayed for others Thou hast not done that spirituall and temporall good thou shouldst Paul excused the Philippians that they would have done good but they wanted an opportunity Phil. 4.16 But how many times have we an opportunity and we want hearts John could write to that pious Gaius his Host 3 John vers 2. to wish that his body may be in health even as his soul prospered What a glorious commendation was this It was better with his soule then his outward man Now wee cannot say thus of our selves because we are not diligent and industrious to doe more then we doe Certainly every godly man may be astonished when he shall consider how broad the Commandements of God are and how narrow his heart is growne in doing more then thou hast done 2. Thou mayest be sanctified extensively by the Relations that thou doest take upon thee when made an Husband a Wife a Minister a Magistrate here thy holinesse is to extend further God requireth more of thee and that godlinesse which would have served thee before will not now While the Apostles were private men they needed not that Sanctification which they were to have as Apostles Hence we see the Apostle diligently in his Epistles informing Husbands Wives Children and Servants of what they have to doe And certainly the grace of our Relations is an excellent evidence of our holinesse in the main If the Heathen could say He was not Bonus vir that was not Bonus civis not a good man that was not a good Citizen So may we say He is not a good Christian that is not a good Minister a good Magistrate a good Husband a good Servant The Apostle bids Archippus fulfill his Ministry And thus Ministers are exhorted to look to the flock over which God hath set them Oh then see if thou mayest not be greatly sanctified in thy Relations if they may not be filled with more Wisdome Patience and exemplarity of Conversation Alexander wept because there was no more Worlds he wanted work But to be sure thou hast more then ever thou canst turn unto Every Relation requires a new grace or a new exercise of grace So that here is no time for thee to sit down or to be still as if all thy enemies were conquered Thirdly We may be more sanctified in the deeper radication of Grace in our hearts It 's a Philosophicall Dispute Whether accidents are intensed by addition of degrees or a deeper radication of them in the subject We may conclude That grace in the heart is both wayes improved and for the rooting of it in the soul This is so great a matter that the temporary believer is in this respect as well as others mainly differenced from the true believer Though they had some root yet they had not root enough and the unwise builder did not dig deep enough for this therefore the Apostle prayeth even in reference to such as were already rooted in Christ that they may be more rooted Colos 2.7 Rooted and built up in him And to this purpose are all those Exhortations of being stedfast and immoveable of being strengthened stablished settled 1 Pet. 5 10. as there the Apostle prayeth remrkably There is no man hath laid so sure a foundatinn but he may make it more sure No man is so established but he may be more established Is it not a terrible thing to see the fall of many Cedars in Lebanon of many Starres from Heaven And why is all this They were never established deep enough they never took more root downwards like unwise builders they attended to make a glorious upper-room and stairs in the house but mattered not the foundation and certainly though the childe of God even of the lowest form be so farre rooted that he shall never fall away yet this establishment and stedfastness of his is not by his own power and strength it 's God that keeps him neither is it continued but in the constant daily exercise of holy means Oh then every day be indeavouring after this Lord grace is not rooted in me enough it 's too superficiall Oh that I could say I no longer live but Christ within me Oh that it were like leaven diffusing it's power over me the Promise is Jer. 31. I will write my Law in thine inwards parts in the midst of them So that grace shall be habituated in thee and sink as deep as ever original sin did in thee Fourthly We may be more sanctified Subjectively that is every part of the soul may be more throughly sanctified every day as in that place 1 Thess 5.23 Hence to the converted Ephesians the Apostle exhorts as you heard both a further renovation of the minde and of the will and affections Ephes 4.23 24. In the mind How greatly may we be more sanctified have more illumination more heavenly knowledge of God and Christ Thou art to grow in knowledge more and more Paul was once like a childe but he became a man The Apostle Heb. 6. doth severely reprove those that continued babes and were not carried on to further perfection It 's both a shame and a sinne that thou hast yet no more knowledge and heavenly understanding by the Ministry thou hast enjoyed so many years Again the minde is to be more sanctified by a more firm and solid faith the Apostle then directs That they should be stedfast and sound in the faith not tossed up and down with every winde of doctrine Their increase of faith may be both in the Objects believed though for the things necessary to salvation the knowledge of them by the Spirit of God is promised to every believer yet there the superstructions in Religion which according to the means we enjoy we are to believe Therefore the Apostle 1 Thess 3.10 sheweth his earnest prayer to come to the Thessalonians that he might perfect what was lacking in their faith which could not be meant in regard of foundations but superstructures not essentials but additionals Thus they are to grow in the doctrine of believing but then in the manner of believing that is the proper way for all to grow To believe more certainly more firmly more practically Therefore though the fundamentals of Religion cannot be augmented No necessary truth to salvation can be revealed which was not known before yet it may be more strongly and clearly believed And this is the end of all Authors that write against Heretiques of all sorts not to bring a new Religion into the world or new Articles of Faith but to cause a more clear and firm assent to those things which the subtilty of Heretiques had obscured Further Their mindes are to be more sanctified by holy thoughts heavenly-Meditation For what godly man doth not perceive vain thoughts creeping into his soul as the Froggs did into Pharaoh's Chamber whether he will or no and as for a fixed heavenly-Meditation it 's an
unknown duty amongst Christians Thus as the minde is to be more sanctified so we might shew all other parts of soul and body The will of a man is to be more bowed and made more vehement and powerfull in the things of God To overcome those velleities and incompleat wishings which are so apt to undo us To go beyond Paul as Paul himself desires to overcome himself Rom. 7. What I would not that I doe To have this no longer but what I would that I do And for the Affections who is not sensible what further Sanctification they need Sanctified anger sanctified desires How beautifull and comfortable would they be Who doth not finde them overrunning and going beyond all bounds so that nothing can order them within their limits The Body likewise though that be the bruitish part yet the Apostle prayeth for the sanctification of it which is then done when it 's no more instrumental to sinne the eyes the hands the tongue have an holy watch over them and are imployed for God Thus you see that every part of the whole man admits of further Sanctification A man cannot look over all that he hath and doth as God did on his works and see all exceeding good so as to rest thereupon and worke no more We may see every day more to be done and so never come to a full Rest till we are in Heaven Fifthly We are to be more sanctified Objectively that is Those objects revealed in the Scripture we are to partake more of to receive more sweetness and fulness from Doth not the Apostle pray for the Ephesians of whom he affirmeth the glorious priviledges of the Gospel Yet Chap. 1.17 18 19. That their eyes may be inlightned to know what is the exceeding power of God to them that believe And again Ephes 3.17 18 19. That Christ may dwell in your hearts that ye may be able to comprehend what is the breadth and depth and length of Gods love And lest it should be thought that we are able to do this to the full he addeth And to know the love of God which passeth all knowledge Yea the very glorious things of the Gospel even in this life are such 1 Cor. 2.9 That eyes have not seen neither hath it entred into the heart of a man to understand There is as much in God in Christ in Faith in every Scripture-truth that thou mayest make it new to thee every day Christ may be a new Christ Heaven a new Heaven for every divine Truth is like some stately and magnificent Palace wherein every room affords thee some new wonder and delight and this is the reason why John 4. Christ saith He that drinketh of that water which is Christ shall never thirst more Oh then this is our great sinne and our hindrance also that such dainties are in the Gospel and we do not suck them out There is no heavenly promise or comfort but if thou didst go to draw out of it thou wouldst finde it a deep Well which can never be drawn dry Oh then know if Christ and holy things do not ravish thy soul it 's because thy heart is narrow How can a vessel with a narrow mouth receive all the water of the Sea into it SERMON XC The Contraries to Growth in Grace A Comfortable Advertisement to such as mourn under their Sence of not Growing With Reasons of the Necessity of Growing in Grace JOH 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth THose that are already sanctified may yet be further sanctified and that in several particulars as you have heard There remain some other Instances to be added wherein this encrease of Sanctification may appear And the first which is also very remarkable is That our Sanctification is to grow efficienter by way of inviting exhorting and bringing home others to it For thus we are more sanctified when we are enlarged to sanctifie others instrumentally This some take to be the meaning Joh. 15.8 where Christ tels his Disciples that herein his Father is glorified if they bring forth much fruit And vers 16. I have ordained you that you should go and bring forth much fruit which is in respect of their ministerial emploiment So then if thou askest how may I be more and more sanctified The Answer is ready Be sanctifying others actively and instrumentally Think it the greatest honour in the world if thou art a means to make others holy for though God would use no means or Instruments in the Creation of the world yet he will in the Creation of the New Creature Now Ministers they are by Office appointed to sanctifie others The word or Truth which is the Instrument of Sanctification is published by them Therefore a sanctified Minister doth desire nothing more then to have a sanctified people he desireth that it may be a Vineyard a Garden not a Wildernesse that he is to till and look to he crieth out with Rachel in a spirituall sence Give me Children else I die All his Study and Sermons tend to this that his Hearers may be sanctified and certainly if Christ himself endured all that reproach and shame for Souls he desireth to have the same minde that was in Christ That as Christ is promised to see his Seed after the Travell of his Soul So doth he pray that after all his pains and endeavours he may see an holy Seed So that your Sanctification is that for which we pray and preach yea private Christians in their way are to encrease in their Sanctification by promoting it in others Psalm 51. when David had recovered out of his sinne then would he teach transgressors their waies When one Disciple was converted presently he goeth and calleth his Brother Oh the admirable Zeal that Paul shewed to his Kinsmen after the Flesh that he could wish to be an Anathema for them You that are Parents grow in this active Sanctification Let not God alone by Praier untill your Children be sanctified What a Comfort would it be unto you to be both the Natural and the Spirituall Fathers of your Children Thus ye that are Masters grow also in Sanctification by Sanctifying Servants by having a Sanctified Family Oh it 's to be be feared thou knowest not the Worth and the Excellency of a sanctified Estate or the danger of an unsanctified one that art no more diligent to call others out of it if rightly apprehensive herein Thou wouldst do as the Angel did to Lot while he lingered and tarried in Sodome pull him out by violence as it were that he might not perish Philosophers say There is this difference between those Creatures that are generated of putrid matter and such as come of their kinde that the former though they live and move yet cannot generate the like or propagate individuals because they come of putrid matter and certainly it 's thus here Those that are indeed born of God and have that Divine Seed in them all their Care and Delight is to
be thought too much above Reason if they be thought too strict or precise to contrary to flesh and bloud blame not us It 's not our truth we did not make the Bible It 's not our Scripture Thirdly Truth is necessary to them if you do regard the Effects of the Ministry or the Ends why God hath appointed it and certainly the Sunne may as well be without Light and Heat as the Ministers of the Gospel be without Truth One main effect is Conversion and Regeneration to make men reform their lives upon just and holy Grounds This can never be without Truth James cap. 1. He hath begotten us by the Word of Truth Lyes and false Doctrines can no more convert then dirt can make clean then darknesse can give Light An erroneous or heretical Minister may pervert many but not convert he may subvert the Souls of thousands he may glory in this and rejoyce in the multitude of Disciples but all this while they are sent of the devil and they do his work destroy souls The Ministers of God are like publique Springs if they be performed instead of refreshing they kill instead of giving the bread of life they give stones and serpents 2. Another Effect of the Ministry is to promote the work of grace begun It 's to water where any Seed is sown as Ephes 4.11 to bring us to a full stature in Christ Now a Minister without Truth can no more help forward the growth of the Godly then a dead Mother can nurse her Childe We encrease in grace by the same way we are converted and therefore they who think by an erroneous Ministry to advance their Heavenly Life do as if an hungry man should get up to an high Hill and think by swallowing down the winde to live and grow stronger A Third Effect of the Ministry is to direct and guide the tempted and troubled Soul to speak a word in season to him But now a Minister without Truth is like a Physician without skill Come to the diseased wounded Soul that lieth under this doubt and that Case of Conscience he knoweth not how to direct him yea such do more trouble the godly as God complaineth of the False Prophets Eze. 13.22 they made sad the heart of the Righteous whom God would not have made sad 4. A great Effect of the Ministry is to prevent Errors and false Doctrines at appeareth Eph. 4. That we henceforth be not led aside with every winde of doctrine Men destitute of solid grace are as apt to be carried away with errours as chaff with the winde A sound Ministry is appointed to reprove these as the Sun is to dispell darknesse but if the Minister be seduced himself by errour how can he leade others into the Truth Will not our Saviours Proverb be made good the blinde leade the blinde and both fall into the ditch Thus you see the necessity of Truth In the next place there must be Thummim as well as the Vrim There must be burning as well as a shining light as John Baptist was and holinesse of life is required of the Minister 1. For his own sake his condemnation will be the greater for he sinneth against greater light and knowledge he knoweth his masters will he sinneth against a peculiar engagement because he is bound to draw nigh to God Oh the confusion that will be when he hath preached to others he himself to become a Castaway Attend to thy self and to thy doctrine to life 1 Tim. 4.16 as well as studies Suth are like the water in baptism that after it hath been in a Sacramentall way is thrown into the kennel No condemnation like theirs they are from the pinacle of the Temple thrown headlong into hell 2. In respect of others For a godly life is a Testimony to confirm the Truth we preach when we preach there is a God there is a day of judgement and live accordingly this confirmeth to all that we our selves beleeve it to be a Truth an holy life is like a miracle to confirm our doctrine As the Apostles were endowed with Miracles to establish the Truth they preached they could cast out devils tread upon Serpents and take no hurt if they did eat any deadly thing Thus it is a wonderfull thing to confirm the Truths we preach when though we live in the temptations of sinne and tread upon Serpents yet acquire no spiritual hurt to our souls 3 Our holy life will awe and keep in fear the Consciences of wicked men Not only powerful and sound preaching but consciencious and unblamable living will awe mens Consciences Why did Herod fear and reverence John Baptist though he was a King but because he was a just and a holy man Mark 6.20 Thy godly mouth will stop their mouths and convince their consciences Lastly The necessity of it doth appear by the devils polecy who hath alwaies stirred up Instruments to traduce their lives to lay such things to their charges as they were never guilty of and why because if that be once received that they are wicked hypocrites they can never do any good Christs life was traduced that he was a friend to sinners that he kept company with Publicans You see they quarrelled even at his life Athanasius was traduced for an Adulterer by the Arians and this hath alwaies been the custome of the devil and his Instruments to throw so much dirt and mire upon the godly Ministers of Christ that men have not known what they are I could tell you what the Papists say about Luther and Calvin that you might think they were the vilest Monsters that lived and this is because a godly life is a great conviction in the world and aweth even the Enemies Conscience Vse of Instruction What is the duty of people even to follow Christ In this Praier he being to send out his Apostles this he desireth as a chief thing Truth and Godlinesse a sound minde and a godly heart and the Apostles thought this to be of so great a consequence that when Ministers were ordained and set apart to the work They spent that day in fasting and praiers You cannot discover wicked and ungodly men better then in this they care not what a Ministry they live under or whether they have any at all The more erroneous the more prophane and loose he is they like him the better Is this to pray as Christ did for thy Sanctification God makes it a great judgement when he removeth faithful and wise Pastors and sendeth foolish and wicked men in their rooms 2. Where God doth settle a Ministry rightly qualified prize it for the works sake See whether the Ministry hath been a converting instructing and edifying Ministry to thee Fear lest thou lie under a spiritual Curse or some Soul-judgements that so no preaching can do thee any good A second doctrine observable from the Coherence of the Apostles mission with Christs Petition is That Christ hath a peculiar love and special care
are equal in Nature and Dignity they are all God and infinitely blessed for evermore yet the Scripture doth represent unto us an order in their operations ad extra to us-ward especially in the work of our Redemption one operation is appropriated to the Father another to the Son and another to the holy Ghost To the Father is constantly applied the sending of Christ his Sonne into the world as at the second verse of this Chapter Gal. 4.4 In the fulness of time God sent forth his Son and 1 John 4.9 it 's the Father that sends him So that the original of all our peace and salvation is the love of the Father 2. That which is appropriated to the Sonne is to be sent To be the Person that shall procure our Redemption And 3. To the holy Ghost that he is sent both by the Father and the Son for the application of those benefits which he shall procure for us Therefore the Father is said to send him Joh. 14.16 and Christ saith He will send him Joh. 16 7. Thus he is called The Spirit of Christ as well as the spirit of God because now he is sent by Christ as a Mediator The holiness in Adam was wrought by the Spirit of God as the third Person in the Trinity absolutely considered but now it causeth holiness in believers relatively as the Spirit of Christ So that in Gods dispensations about mans salvation there is an appropriated order in the operations of the three Persons Secondly The mission or sending of Christ here spoken of doth not relate to him as the second Person but as he is Mediator for so as he is the Son of God he is not sent but begotten And thus the Scripture when it speaks of him in that respect calleth him The only begotten Son of God but this mission is in time and of a voluntary dispensation whereas the other was natural and of eternity Christ was alwayes the Sonne of God but not alwayes sent to be the Mediatour of his Church unless in the purpose and decree of God So that this sending of Christ respects him as God and man and denoteth that incarnation of his with the discharge of all those duties that thereby he undertook Thirdly Gods sending of him doth signifie the authoritative Mission and calling of him to that work The Apostle diligently presseth this Heb. 5.5 that Christ glorified not himself but was called by God to his Priesthood called of God to be ● Priest after the order of Melohisedech yea Ch. 7.21 the Apostle presseth this that he was made an High-priest by an oath The Lord sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever And certainly this must needs be of great comfort to us when we shall reade that Christ was so solemnly invested with this power to forgive sins to sanctifie our natures to procure our salvation Things that are done by those that have not a Call are said to be null and invalid they have not powerful efficacy and success but Christ was authorized by God to be thy Saviour he had his Commission to do it he would not take this work in hand till he was called unto it Fourthly The Father did not only call him thus to this wonderfull imployment but he did qualifie and fit him with all abilities for that work he poured out his Spirit upon his humane nature without measure So that as those in the Old Testament when called to any Office were anointed Thus Christ had not a temporal but a spiritual Unction Psal 45.7 there God is said to anoint him with the oyl of gladness Therefore Joh. 6.27 the Father is said to have sealed him to this work Thus Christ acknowledgeth when he saith a body thou hast prepared for me the meaning is he had an universal fitness for the work and this also is of great comfort that Christ is not only called to be our Saviour but he is qualified with all sufficiency thereunto there is nothing that a poor humbled sinner could desire in a Saviour but there is a treasury of it in him Col. 1. It pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Oh then why do not the people of God believe more firmly and walk more comfortably What do they want which is not in this Christ Shall Christ send his Officers to work and endue them with proportionable power and shall not the Father send him with all fitness and fulness to that work Fifthly In that Christ is said to be sent there is implied that the fountain from which our salvation doth arise is the meer good-will and pleasure of God the Father So that although our Justification Sanctification and Glorification be to be attributed to the merits of Christ and it 's for Christs sake that we enjoy them yet the sending of Christ into the world and giving him to become our Mediator is wholly from the absolute good pleasure of God Christ did not merit his Incarnation he did not merit that he should be sent into the world No this is said to be Gods love Not that hereby we are to make comparisons as if the second Person loved us lesse then the first as the Socinian would divide but to admire the great love of either in their distinct operations That conceit also is vain of some that say God upon the fore sight of the will of Christs humane nature to become our Saviour and presupposing this determinate choice did therefore appoint him to be our Mediator This they think will reconcile Christs necessary Obedience and his free-will together but then the Scripture would not have attributed it to Gods love and to the Fathers love but Christs love as a man which yet it doth not Sixthly In that Christ is said to be sent there is implied that he is under an Office and Obligation of faithfulness and trust So that as it lay upon the Apostles faithfully and diligently to accomplish their Office thus also it did upon Christ and therefore he doth so often call it the command that he had from the Father implying that if he did not accomplish all that for which he was sent he should be guilty of unfaithfulness and disobedience and here also is contained much consolation for why should the believer doubt of Christs willingness and readiness to pardon sanctifie or heal him seeing that Christ is under a command to do this he is betrusted with this work he would be found blame-worthy if he did not accomplish all that he was call'd unto As it 's thy duty to believe in him so he hath voluntaily submitted to make it his duty to give thee rest and ease Seventhly Though Christ be sent and be thus under command yet we are not to think that this is done against his will as if the Father did compell him to this work against his desire No how readily doth he profess his coming into the world Loe I come to do thy will O Lord thy Law is
necessary because then he may expect Gods blessing and protection When Christ saith I will be with you to the end of the world and he that despiseth you despiseth me this is to be understood of such as are in Christs office Joh. 10. Doth not our Saviour severely reprove such as come not in by the door calling them Theeves and Robbers Gods protection and defence will go along with his Ministers only 2. On the Auditors part for when they are convinced that such are the Ministers of Christ They will 1. Hear with the more reverence and respect even as Christ himself saith A stranger Christs Sheep will not hear 2. They may justly expect spiritual successe in their Labours that God will blesse the Ministry with such spirituall issues God hath promised That it may be a Ministry of Life to them and they may feel an experiment of Christ speaking in them 5. They will account of them as Paul saith as the Stewards of God They will have them in high account for their office and works sake Lastly They will tremble at their unthankfulnesse and unfruitfulnesse under their Ministry for certainly if those officers whom Christ himself hath appointed for thy conversion and reformation can do no good on thee never think that otherwise will help thee No though men should arise from the dead to preach to thee what greater symptome can there be of thy eternal damnation then to be unprofitable and unreformed under Christs own officers such ground is nigh to cursing If their Gospel be hid it is hid to such as perish and Joh. 8. therefore ye are not of God because ye hear not his Word SERMON XCVII That the Scripture appoints a Distinct Office of the Ministry Sheweth wherein the Call to the Ministry consists And that none may enter into that Office without an Authoritative Mission Also what the Ministry of Preaching is and whether Reading be Preaching JOHN 17.18 Even so have I sent them into the World THere remain some further Distinctions to be propounded before we proceed to the proof of the Doctrine And First The word Preaching may be taken either largely or strictly largely for any declaration of the truths of God as occasion and opportunity shall serve or strictly for a Ministerial Preaching by way of Office The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it be most commonly used of such who preach by way of Office and among the Heathens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an Officer yet in the Scripture it is sometimes taken more largely as Revel 5.2 An Angel is there described 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 crying with a great voice but more particularly I observe it once and but once used of a private Christian manifesting Christ and his actions Luk. 8.39 The man out of whom Christ had cast devils is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to publish throughout the whole City what Christ had done for him It was a great controversie not long since Whether reading was preaching Many to excuse their ignorance and laziness did maintain reading of the Scripture was preaching Now to this it is answered That if Preaching be taken largely for any declaration or publishing of the Word of God no doubt but it is preaching but yet it is not that ministerial preaching which is enjoyned the Officers of the Church To preach in season and out of season to divide the word of God and that with such faithfulness and ability that the Apostle crieth out Who is sufficient for these things This was more then to reade the Scripture If therefore preaching be taken largely for a publishing of Christ occasionally to others no doubt many ought to preach in that sense Thus the woman of Samaria published Christ to her neighbours and Andrew called his brother Philip before they were put into the Apostolical Office So many private men have writ learned Tractates for the defence of the Christian Religion and some of great learning have made Annotations upon the Scriptures though some of them have delivered much corruption Yea amongst those that are private not invested with the publick Office we are to make a great distinction Some are meerly private some are by education and abilities in order to the publique Now such may publickly preach either by way of trial or else by the approbation of those that can judge and ought so to do Act. 13.15 we reade there The Rulers of the Synagogue called unto Paul if they had a word of Exhortation to speak to them Suppose they did not look upon Paul and his company as Officers yet this proveth no more then that private men by the approbation of those that rule in the Church may occasionally preach And this we reade in Antiquity That Pantenus and Origen did catechetically preach the Doctrine of our Christian faith before ordained into the Office of the Ministry The Question is not about such no nor of private men if doctrinally and practically qualified by Church Officers would submit themselves to trial and so be authorized to do what they do That is another matter to the Question in hand 2. That which we call the Vocation or Authorizing of one to the Office of the Ministry consists in these things 1. An inward Qualification of the person with such gifts as God requireth and they are reduced by Paul to two heads they are Doctrinal for his learning that he be apt to teach that he can divide the word of God aright c. as a workman that needeth not to be ashamed that he be able to convince gain-sayers These gifts require Learning and Knowledge So that a gift to pray well or to speak about plain doctrinal things in Religion though with much affection and zeal is not the whole Ministerial gift for the Apostle requireth more viz. such sound knowledge in matters controverted that he may be able to convince gain-sayers And The second Qualification is for his life that it be holy and unblameable Therefore the sinne of a Minister is greater then another mans by reason of his Office Hence the same Sacrifice was appointed for the Priests sinne as was for the sinne of the whole Congregation Levit. 4. To this qualification some had an inward promptitude and readiness of heart with an holy zeal being moved by God to this work Now although this may be granted in some yet the Apostle requireth it not as a necessary qualification yea it 's the duty of some to be called to the Ministry who through their modesty or fear flie from it as much as they can Thus Moses refused the Office he was called unto insomuch that the anger of God is said to be kindled against him Exod. 4.14 And Jeremy out of the sensible apprehension of his weaknesse Jer. 1.6 did refuse that prophetical Office till God did encourage him and in Antiquity there was a Canon made against those that should any wayes mutilate themselves by deforming their noses or ears that
be full of blemishes yet when we present Christ by Faith then there is no fault to be found Lastly The vertue of this Sacrifice is to make us like Christ himself he thinketh it not enough to be King and Priest himself but he maketh us also Kings and Priests for ever We offer up Praiers and Praises to him and by him we conquer all our spiritual Enemies The devil and our lusts are subdued Such glory have all they that are partakers of this Sacrifice Vse of Terrour to all wicked and ungodly men who by their Unbelief and Prophanesse reject this Sacrifice The Apostle Heb. 10. cals it trampling upon the bloud of Christ and accounting it a prophane thing Oh how many thousand live that have no esteem and make no account of this Sacrifice Oh remember that this is the last and ultimate Sacrifice He that rejects this hath no more hope There remaineth no more oblation for sinne There is not another Christ or another Sacrifice if thou refuse this Vse 2. Of Encouragement to the Godly Come to this Fountain that is set open for Judah and Jerusalem to cleanse in Doe not say because Christ crucified is a stumbling block and foolishnesse to wicked men that therefore thou wilt disesteem him also There is no sore but this blood will heal and cure Oh let the blood of thy soul be stanched with this blood of Christ This blood speaks good and comfortable things better then that of Abel SERMON CI. Of Sanctification as the Effect of Christs Death Shewing That no man truly believeth in Christ for Justification that doth not also for Sanctification JOH 17.19 And for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also may be sanctified through the Truth WE are now come to the end of Christs Sanctification which is two-fold the finis cui and cujus We shall put them both together for so they are conjoyned in the following clause That they might be sanctified through the Truth Wherein you have 1. The final Cause 2. The Manner of accomplishing it The final Cause That they might be sanctified and from this the Socinian would argue That Sanctification in the former clause was not meant of an oblation by way of Sacrifice because the same word is applied to the Apostles in the Text and they were not to be sacrificed for us To answer this First Some Expositours do expound it of their offering up of themselves by Martyrdom to confirm the truth for Paul professeth his willingnesse herein using the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 2.15 which was used of some kinde of their Sacrifices but we need not runne to that it 's no new thing in Scripture to use the same word in one verse in different significations and it 's a Rule Talia sunt praedicata qualia permittuntur à subjectis The Apostles then needing not such a Sanctification as Christ applied to himself but that for which he prayed in the former verse We must understand it in the same sense as there It 's true by Sanctification some also will have Justification comprehended and so speak of an imputed Sanctification but we need not stretch the word violently but understand it first Of making inwardly holy and then consequently A setting apart and dedicating our selves wholly unto God by living unto him and thence observe That Christ died not only for our Justification but Sanctification also He made himself a Sacrifice not onely to remove the guilt of sinne but to remove and subdue the power of it not onely to make us happy but also holy Let us consider What is implied in this That Sanctification comes by Christs death And First We are to know that Christ is the Cause of our Sanctification several wayes partly efficiently for not only the Father and the Spirit but Christ himself also is the cause of all the holinesse we have and therefore he is called the life because he gives all supernatural life unto his and is compared to the vine Joh. 15. because as the branch separated from the Vine can bring forth no fruit so neither is a man able without Christ to do the least holy action he is also called the Head and John 1. Of his fulnesse we are all said to receive Thus as God in the course of nature is the authour of every natural gift therefore it 's said In him we live and move and have our being Act. 17.28 So in the way of grace Christ is the authour and finisher as of our faith so of every holy work in us The Author Heb. 12.2 and therefore we cannot so much as begin or meet Christ he must prevent us and the finisher for although we have begun yet we have not the same manutenency and powerfull preservation what we have begun to build would immediately fall to the ground Thus Christ is the Alpha and Omega of our spiritual life 2. Christ is the meritorious cause of our Sanctification and therefore not only remission of sin but holinesse and zeal is made the consequent of Christs death And the Apostle doth not only Rom. 7.8 shew that we are justified by Christ but also that the body of sinne is mortified thereby Thus Heb. 10. what Sanctification that Apostate had is attributed to the blood of Christ Christ then hath as efficaciously merited holinesse as happinesse He died to destroy the workes of the devil now our captivity to him was not onely in respect of guilt but that bondage and slavery we were in to all lusts and therefore those two benefits are like Castor and Pollux one cannot be without the other 3. Christ is in some large and improper sense called the formal cause of the good in us an assistant form not informing that is Christ received and applied by faith doth in a most inward and intimate manner live in us and thereby strengtheneth us so the Apostle Gal. 2.20 I no longer live but Christ in me Here you see Christ liveth in a godly man for by faith we are united unto him and thus Christ becomes our Head from whom we have all spiritual influx Now an head is a conjoyned and united cause made one with the body and thus is Christ and his Church and therefore is that similitude of an Head and the Body so often used 4 Christ is the final cause of our Sanctification that is we are made holy to this end both that we might shew forth the praises and glory of Christ as our Redeemer as also that we should live to him and set all our affections and desires upon him desiring with Paul To know nothing but Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2.1 Secondly In that by Christs death we are sanctified there is implied That we of our selves are very impure and unclean that we are like so many noisome dunghils For our being unsanctified doth imply 1. Our filthiness or uncleanness this is the state of every man till sanctified by Christ he is like an unclean leper his
appeareth evidently Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God yea vers 14. there is a chain of faith and hearing and preaching inviolably put together We may bring a second witnesse to confirm this 1 Cor. 3.5 Who is Paul or Apollo but Ministers by whom you beleeve Where you see to be instruments of faith is not only limited to Paul the Apostle but is extended to other ordinary Officers in the Church even all that water as well as plant The Apostles planted the ordinary Ministers they water I shall not at this time prove a distinct calling of Ministers from people that hath been done already I shall only shew the perpetual usefulness and necessity of a Ministry for spiritual ends as long as there will be a Church upon the earth and the rather because Socinians and Seekers though they grant There was once an extraordinary Ministry in the planting of the Church yet they say it was only temporal for a season even as miracles were and that where the Scripture is made common there needeth no Ministry Therefore to inform herein consider these Propositions First That God hath appointed a Ministry in his Church not from necessity but a voluntary liberty condescending herein to our capacity God did once govern his Church as in the Patriarchs time by immediate revelations and apparitions and thus he could still do if he pleased It 's not therefore from necessity but meer bounty that he hath appointed such a way of spiritualizing people God doth not need the parts or gifts or piety of any men in the world and certainly if God hath appointed second causes in nature which work from a necessary principle within not necessarily but freely much lesse did he in these things which are of a supernatural constitution Secondly It 's to be affirmed That in the first plantation of Christs Church there were some things extraordinary but that doth not inferre every thing thus appointed was extraordinary The Office of the Apostles who had a Commission to go over the world and had an universal Authority being furnished to that end with infallible assistance was extraordinary Christ seedeth his Church spiritually as he did once the bodies of men miraculously first he took bread himself then he gave bread to his Disciples and they gave it to the people Thus Christ he preached the word of life and then he commanded the Apostles to preach who instituted others in their room The Office then of Apostles and Prophets with the gift of miracles were extraordinary in the first constituting of the Church but then ordinary Officers were afterwards required As with the people of Israel while in the wilderness God made miraculous provision for them but when once setled in Canaan then their Manna and other miraculous provision failed them And if you say How shall we know what is an extraordinary Office and what is an ordinary Office seeing the Apostle Eph. 4.11 12. reckons them up altogether I answer It 's true the Apostle there mentioneth extraordinary and ordinary Officers because he is to speak of the whole fruit of Christs Ascension to his Church and so because Apostles were a great and principal part of Christs gift to his Church and the influence of their labours upon the Church to the end of the world and therefore they are called the foundation Rev. 21.14 Hence they are mentioned as well as the ordinary only the difference between these two may appear in the qualifications of either for to an Apostle was required gifts of miracles an universal Commission and Authority infallibility of assistance c. but to the ordinary Elders there is no such thing required but what may be in an ordinary manner attained unto Thirdly When we say A Ministry is appointed for spiritual ends it 's good to know in particular what they are And 1. You see it 's in the Text To work Faith And therefore faith is said to come by hearing The ear that is the organ of learning and knowledge as also of faith It 's observed by a learned man That though we reade of godly persons that could not see or speak yet of none that could not hear because that was the instrument of faith yet this is not so to be urged as if a godly man might not be made deaf only it 's a sad affliction because by hearing faith is begotten and increased What enemies then are such to their souls who care not for hearing who give over hearing come now and then it may be for sinful ends whereas by hearing the Word preached God hath appointed to give thee faith Art thou not then such an atheistical or prophane man because thou doest no more regard this hearing of Gods word preached Be swift to hear said the Apostle James 1.19 2. The Ministry is appointed for the conversion and regeneration of men who naturally are dead in sinne and averse to God It was a subject the Prophets often preached upon to return every one from his evil way to God and John Baptist yea Christ himself also preached repentance as well as faith Hence Jam. 1. God is said Of his own will to beget us by his Word and so it s called the washing of regeneration through the word Tit. 3.5 That as the Spirit of God at first by moving on the waters prepared and produced living creatures Thus God by the Ordinances cals those who are like Lazarus dead in their sins to come out of the grave and live There is a resurrection of souls by the Prophets when they lift up their voice like a trumpet as well as there will be of bodies by the trump of an Archangel and indeed this is the proper effect of the Ministry No moral Philosophy hath attained to the inward change of mens hearts As Eliah when he threw his mantle on Elisha he left his Oxen and followed him Thus when God by the Word preached doth lay hold on the heart of a man he is a new creature minde new heart new affections new all is made new Thus while Peter was preaching there were three thousand converted So that to take the preaching of the Word away is worse then to take the Sun out of the heavens that is but an instrument of heat and life bodily this spiritually 3. The Ministry is for edification as Eph. 4.14 For the perfecting of the Saints and till we come to a full stature in Christ So that the Ministry and Ordinances shall not be abolished till we come into heaven the Sacrament is till he come and he will be with the Ministers till the end of the world and certainly the godly man findes much need of a Ministry to quicken comfort and direct his soul craveth and calleth for this as much as his body doth for food and raiment So that those who argue against a Ministry demonstrate they finde no experimental benefit of it upon their own souls 4. God hath appointed it to propagate
admonition reject So that it is very clear That Church-power and Church-censures are to be inflicted on such as obstinately offend therein and certainly a boundless Toleration of all kinde of heresies seemeth to be so harsh and unsavoury a thing that even the Remonstrants who yet cried up a liberty of prophesying as their great Diana did disavow this professing their approbation of that known Rule It 's better living ubi nulla licent then where omnia and that with this liberty of opinions there ought to be wayes used for the extirpation of heresies This licentiousnes then doth not beget unity but increaseth breaches for it gives way to mens corruptions to vent themselves and is like the warm Summer to snakes and serpents which makes them come abroad when the cold winter kept them in These remedies then being laid aside Let us consider what are truly and properly so what is the fit oil to be poured into the Churches wounds seeing it is so often like that man of Jericho whereas then this breach of unity may be made three wayes Of the true Doctrine by heresie Of godly Order by schism and Of Christian love by wrath and contentions in outward matters Let us see what are the peculiar Remedies for what is proper to one is not to another and as for the way of unity in Doctrine these are uniting and closing principles 1. So farre as there is an agreement in judgement to close heartily and imbrace one another in that It 's a mercy that the difference is not in the very fundamentals and vitals of Religion seeing therefore there are common opinions and doctrines wherein the godly do agree let that unity be nourished this will be a means to produce further union This Rule the Apostle giveth Phil. 3.15 16. Whither we have attained let us walk by the same Rule and if any man be otherwise minded God shall reveal this to them It 's a great frowardness in the rigid Lutherans that they will not own the Calvinists as brethren though there may be a reconciliation in fundamentals as Pareus pleadeth So farre then as men do retain Christ and fundamental truth with an humble godly disposition desiring to be further informed Let not the want of what they should have make thee despise the good things they have 2. Let private Christians highly esteem and submit to those godly and faithfull Pastors God hath set over them For commonly there begins the breach when they begin to be offended at them It was some mistake about what Christ preached that made so many Disciples quite forsake him it was durus Sermo an hard speech they said and would not seek to be further informed when men will not own that publick office God hath appointed then they wander into by-paths Therefore Eph. 4.12 13 You see a two-fold end of the Ministers of Christ the one is To keep them from being carried about with every winde of Doctrine The other for a spiritual edification till we all come in the unity of faith So that a due and fit obedience and acknowledgement of them would in a special manner prevent divisions 3. Get a pitifull and compassionate spirit to those that go astray We are indeed to have zeal and an holy impatience in the things of God yet this is to be accompanied with pity Of some have compassion making a difference saith the Apostle Jude Certainly when we shall consider how prone it is for men to receive errour for truth How naturally blinde and opposite the minde of a man is to the revealed truths of God and how that it 's the Spirit of God that leads thee into truth That it's God only who keeps thee from the heresies and errours that others are carried aside with These things will greatly move thee to tender bowels SERMON CXVI Of Christian Vnity Setting forth some Rules for Vnity in Doctrine Church-Order and Affection for the preventing of Errour Schisme and Wrath. JOH 17.21 That they also may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee c. TO prevent or heal any breach that may be made in doctrine by errour we have given some Remedies and there are more remaining As first Candidly and truly to lay down or report the opinions of others that do dissent from us There is nothing hath made the gap wider and more raked into the sores of the Church then such a malevolent and ill disposition to pervert the opinions of others to make them hold such monstrous things as they do with all their hearts detest It was thought that the Apostle James therefore was moved to write that Epistle for works as well as faith because some did misunderstand Pauls writings as if he had taught Faith onely was enough to save though it was not accompanied with an holy life How often was Christ and the Apostles traduced for preaching such things that they never taught and all this was done by their malicious enemies to make them more odious and to bring greater danger upon them And do not the Papists to this day represent the Protestants as if they were the most damnable and blasphemous heret●ques that ever were But if it be not lawful in civil matters to bear false witnesse against another much less in Religious and doctrinal matters whether therefore it be by writing preaching report or any other way Gods Word and Conscience requireth of us that we are to represent the Opinions of others truly and really not put a sence of our own upon them and then fight with that this is not the way to bring the straying Sheep back again this will never reduce to unity for the party dissenting will presently see that truth is not sought for but victory That the end of dissenters is not to bring him to the knowledge of truth but to disgrace and defame him and this will never convert Therefore that is necessary in all disputations to state the controversie aright for that is like the first concoction which if it miscarry is not mended afterwards men may write voluminous books and bring multitude of arguments to no purpose if the true state of the controversie be not laid down To know therefore the true and proper distance is the only way at last to unite as the best way to recover out of a disease is to be truly informed what it is A second Remedy uniting in matters of doctrine is not to impose such Conclusions and inferences upon the doctrine maintained by dissentients that are not the proper and genuine effect thereof To cast that upon them as their doctrine which is but our inference that we may make through ignorance or any other distemper is not fair especially when they do with their whole soul abhor such Conclusions There were some Spiders that would suck poison from those sweet herbs the Apostle had planted because he shewed that where sin had abounded grace did much more Therefore some forced this consequence upon the
Apostles doctrine Let us sin that grace may abound Rom. 6.1 And thus the Papists deal with us and Lutherans also how often do they charge this hideous calumny and consequence upon the Protestants doctrine as if we made God the authour of sin whereas we use but the Scripture words and such expressions no nor such harsh ones neither as some of their own Popish Writers do only it's truth in them but blasphemy in us Indeed what is the evident and plain Consequence of a Doctrine that is to be accounted of as the doctrine it self As whatsoever is a clear genuine consequence from Scripture is Scripture but not every consequence We are apt to deduce Thus it is here what is evidently a consequence from any Doctrine we may charge it upon the doctrine but then we must be sure it 's the proper and natural childe not a bastard that it is the true issue not suppositions 3. Whatsoever truth God may have indeed made known to us or if in our perswasion only we are to be very careful how we publish it This hath been constant fire in the Church of God when men either have or in perswasion only some doctrine different from the current way of the Church at that time Now it 's a very hard thing thus to be with childe as it were and not to be full of pain till we have delivered it to the world Why is an obstinate broacher of damnable doctrines called an heretitk but because he chooseth his own way He invents and excogitates a doctrine of his own therefore compared to theeves and robbers that go not in by the door but climbe up some other way Now such qualifications as these are necessary 1. To question and examine thy own spirit not presently to believe thy own heart This is a firebrand in the Church when men have no modest doubtings and questionings of their own ignorance and pronesse to erre even in that thing they are so confident of how modestly doth the Apostle Paul speak 1 Cor. 7. when he determined the case about marriage I think also I have the Spirit of God and he distinguisheth between that which he had as an expresse command from the Lord and what he was inwardly directed unto wheresoever the Spirit of God leadeth into all truth there he doth likewise into all humility Thus Luthers Tunè solus sapis es is famously known though the Papists charge him falsly with contempt of all others 2. Before we publish it to the world to communicate our thoughts to those that are able wise and learned in the Church of God who have the Spirit of God and his Vnction as well as we Paul though called immediately by Christ yet went up to Jerusalem to confer with the chief pillars there and though he was thus miraculously converted yet he must go to Ananias to be further directed 1 Cor. 14.14 those that had extraordinary gifts yet were to submit themselves to others The Spirit of the Prophets is subject to the Prophets which is interpreted two waies and both pertinently to my matter 1. If the meaning be The spirit of the Prophets is subject to other Prophets they have power to judge the doctrine we publish then it will much more follow that what we have in an ordinary way is exposed to the examen of others 2. If by it we understand it thus there is no Prophet having the Spirit of God moving in them that is so extraordinarily wrought upon but he may retain those motions and vent them in an orderly way not to speak while others are speaking which seemeth to be the scope of the Apostle in that place This is very pertinent to my matter that no man can have such revelations and impulses from Gods Spirit but that he is in a divine method and good order to declare them for the unseasonable publishing of some things is like good Physick but not administred in its fit season Lastly To keep up the unity of faith this is a special means when we do highly prize and delight in the known plain truths of Christ Paul that was snatched up in the third Heavens yet desired to know nothing but Christ crucified Peter thought it not inconvenient to write the same things they knew already Certainly nothing hath more rent and torn the Church of God then affectation of singular high things To bring in some unheard and unknown Truths Oh this is the pride of mens hearts to have it said Such a man was the first that brought that nation into the world as the Jesuite of his scientia media Ego primus inveni But to be weary of the known truth is in effect to be weary of the same God the same Christ Why do we not desire a new Sun a new Earth a new world as well In the second place What will keep up unity in the Churches order and prevent Schism there For although the Scripture use the word schism in a large sence yet Ecclesiastically it is restrained to the breach of order in the Church and that hath often been when they have kept the unity of the Doctrine They did not divide from the doctrine but communion in Church-ordinances Now to keep up an intire body in this Consider 1. That if such be the corruption of the Church that thou canst not keep fellowship with her but by partaking of her sins Then before thou leavest that place take the way the Scripture commands Be sure that it be not for some lesse corruption but that which doth eat up the very vitals of Religion Do not thou leave it till God leaveth it Do not thou unchurch it till God doth 2. Let thy endeavours be in thy place to inform and heal before thou dost depart Pleade and strive with thy mother as Hos 2. because she hath committed whoredomes And then Lastly Let thy secession be unwillingly Thou art compelled to make this departure because the Enemies of all godlinesse will not suffer thee or endure thee under their power These things observed then thou art not guilty of any schism or breach but those that gave the occasion to it When those of the people of Israel would not joyn with Jeroboam in his Idolatry but separated themselves and went to Jerusalem where the pure worship was They did not make a schism but Jeroboam 2 Chro. 11.13 14 15. Thus it is with the reformed Churches The Papist cals the Protestant a thousand times over a Schismatick because he withdraweth himself from Obedience to the Pope as Head of the Church but we say ours was not a schism but a secession They were Schismaticks in falling from the primitive order and institutions in the Church insomuch that the Pope is the grandest Schismatick that ever was in the Church and further we departed not from Rome because of petty corruptions no she was a Babylon ere we left her and then we left her unwillingly They drave us out persecuting with fire and fagot so
became man and was thus furnished with all fitnesse to be a Mediatour because we could not be without him It behoved us saith the Apostle Heb 7.26 to have such a High-Priest that was holy and unspotted separated from sinners that needed not to offer for his own sins 5. We reade that not only habitual grace was given him in respect of his humane nature but also the spirit of God was bestowed on him and though this be thought by the Socinians a pregnant Argument because he that is God cannot have the Spirit of God given him Now to this we readily grant that not only the graces and gifts of Gods Spirit but the Spirit it self also was bestowed on him So the Prophet Isa 11.2 The spirit of the Lord is said to rest on him the spirit of wisedom and counsell Thus Act. 1.2 he is said through the holy Ghost to give Commandments unto the Apostles whom he had chosen but yet this doth not take off from his God head for first the assistance and operation of the holy Ghost was only in respect of his humane nature for as by the holy Ghost his humane body was prepared and fitted So also his rationall soul by the same holy spirit was sanctified and made the holy One It was not therefore in respect of his divine nature but his humane that he had the holy Ghost working in him and if you say What necessity was there of the holy Ghost Seeing his divine nature was able to assist and sanctifie his humane nature It 's answered that the holy spirit being the third person cannot be separate from the Father and the Sonne though therefore Christ as the second person was able to do all things yet because where the Father and Son is there also is the holy Ghost therefore that works also as the other not that the other persons need it but because of the inseparability Even as the Father did at first create all things by the Son not that he was insufficient or impotent without him but because of their intimate Union 6. That which we do so eminently reade of in the Scripture is the glory power and honour that the Father gave him upon fullfilling the work of Redemption for us Act. 2.36 God hath made Jesus both Lord and Christ he was made Lord Now that dominion is not his essentiall dominion which he had as God for so he could not be made any more Lord then God but his Mediatory Dominion whereby he is exalted above all and rules all things for the good of his people So Phil. 2.9 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him giving him a Name above all Names c. In these and many other places we reade of wonderfull Majesty and glory bestowed upon him and that upon his humiliation and voluntary obedience in reference to us but although the Scripture doth evidently speak of this glory and power given him yet this doth not take off from his God-head For 1. It is one thing to speak of the giving of the right and property to a thing another thing to speak of the possession of it It 's true indeed Christ upon his Resurrection had the possession of all that glory and honour which the Word mentioneth but yet he had right to it farre before and therefore we reade of divine wotship given to him before his Resurrection as also of a Kingdom he had and that he could work what Miracles he pleased and so he believing God had a right to all that glory which could any waies be superadded to him 2. This dominion and glory given to him is so farre from evacuating his Godhead that it doth rather necessarily presuppose it for who can be made the Judge of the whole world who can be exalted to be the King of Saints and the Nations but he who hath infinite wisedom power and greatness Vse 1. Doth Christ receive all that he hath not for himself but for his members then what great encouragements and hopes have all the people of God for though they have not enough yet Christ hath Though the starre hath not light enough to dispell the day yet the Sun hath Though the stream cannot refresh yet the Fountain hath water enough Oh therefore that beleevers would more enlarge and quicken themselves up with hopes in Christ That they would live on his fulnesse That they would depend on his fulness God gives thee grace and many gifts but what he hath given Christ that must be thy only support Vse 2. How wofull the condition of all wicked men is who are separated from Christ for if all fulnesse come by him then none of this can be derived to thee The devil will give of the torments he hath to thee not Christ of his glory SERMON CXXV Vnity among Christians is part of that Glory Christ hath purchased for them JOH 17.22 That they may be one even as we are one THough this Unity of believers so earnestly prayed for hath been at large treated of yet because here again repeated I shall consider it relatively as it stands with respect to the fore-going words Christ giveth his glory he received from the Father to those that believe in him That they may be one Now the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here as in other places may be taken either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the end of this glory or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as specifying what is part of that glory which he giveth to them for so some understand this as describing and determining what that glory is he would give them viz. the glory of unity and agreement which as Chrysostom observeth was more admirable then that of signes and doctrines which they abounded in Their unity did more glorifie them then their miracles Others they understand it as the end and fruit of that glory they received by Glory understanding all the heavenly benefits and priviledges vouchsafed unto them From these Interpretations conjoyned and the relative capacity the words stand in I observe That Vnity among Believers is part of that Glory which Christ as Mediatour hath obtained for them For Christ speaks here as Mediatour in whom and by whom only the spiritual unity of believers can be obtained In this Doctrinal Proposition three particulars are observable 1. That Unity among believers is part of that spiritual glory Christ purchased for them 2. That Christ as Mediatour purchased Unity as well as other priviledges 3. That Believers cannot have Unity but from Christ till he command these dry bones to come together and be united they lie scattered up and down Let us consider First That Vnity is part of the Churches glory It 's their Glory both actively and passively Their glory actively they may in an humble and holy manner rejoyce in it Not indeed as the Papists who confidently and falsly triumph in their Unity but in a godly and sober manner for if schisms and divisions in the Church did so greatly divide and
rend Pauls heart no doubt but their Unity and accord did as much rejoyce him Therefore how emphatically doth he speak Phil. 2.1 2. If any consolation if any bowels fulfill ye my joy that ye may be like minded c. It 's then the Ministers glory and the Churches glory to walk in lovely accord when in the Church as in Solomons Temple the voice of the hammer is not heard whenas God promised in respect of temporal peace The sword should be turned into plow-shares so the controversal and polemical part of Divinity shall be changed into the practical and affectionate part Again It 's the glory of the Church passively in this sense that for it we are exceedingly to glorifie and praise God We should look upon the spiritual peace of the Church as a greater mercy then all external mercies What an heavy thing is it when Jerusalem shall be made a Babel when the Church shall be like the chaos and confusion that was made at first when God shall bring such a spiritual judgement on the Church as sometimes he did a temporal one upon the enemies thereof Every mans weapon against his neighbour till they had destroyed one another When therefore we see God forming the hearts of believers to uniting terms this we ought to praise God for as being a special means to promote Christs Kingdom Now it 's the glory of believers to be at Unity 1. Because this will exalt them in the very hearts and thoughts of their greatest enemies What is glory but the clara notitia the famous acknowledging of the excellency of such a thing Now nothing will sooner divulge the fame and like the heavens make the noise thereof to go through the Land then unity and agreement As Solomons wisdom spread it self over the world Insomuch that many came from afar to see and admire it Thus it will be also for the Churches accord therefore the Psalmist put an Ecce upon it Behold how good and comely it is for brethren to be of one accord Psal 133.1 2. Thus you heard The Heathens admired the love of primitive Christians Ecce quam se mu●uo diligenti fratres vocant whereas now we may say Behold how they hate and oppose one another calling one another by all uncharitable names It 's unity then that makes the Churches fame to be over the world 2. Vnity is the glory of the Church because it ariseth from the beauty and pulchritude of it The beauty of a thing is the glory of it now beauty doth arise from the sweet harmony and proportion of all the parts and this is the unity of the Church when every member thereof is harmoniously joyned unto another when there is no dissonancy or difference Certainly It 's a better wish to see the Church in this glory then that of Austins to see Rome in all her temporal glory If any member be deformed or unproportionable to the other parts How unlovely and uncomely doth it make that body So it is here if any make a rent be proud froward or opposite the glory thereof is departed 3. It 's part of their glory because the happinesse and blessednesse of a Church is in their Communion-graces A Church denoteth some society and company Now the advantage of such improvements is by union if one part of the body be divided from the other there is no suppeditation of mutual help therefore there are nerves and ligaments in the body to unite each part to other You see in a civil society if there be not union the glory of it presently dieth divisions like moths rise from within and do immediately consume If then the happinesse of believers lie in their communion-graces and duties What can be more glorious then unity which is the only means to procure subserviency to one another as if several Cities were supplied by pipes of water one to another if those pipes be stopt or cut it brings a necessary destruction The second main particular is That Christ purchased as Mediatour this priviledge as well as others He did not onely die to justifie them to sanctifie them but to unite them also And this should teach us several things As 1. It should not be accounted a slight and little sinne to make any breaches or divisions in Gods Church to do any thing through strife and vain-glory Why because Christ died against this he as Mediatour intended not onely to save his people but to bring them into one Why then dost thou by thy contentions by thy heretical opinions thus sinne against Christs death his intercession and his prayer are for the same effects Now you see in this Chapter that his prayer for unity is ingeminated over and over again and therefore Christ had this even in his thoughts in his very death hence it was that also at his death he appointed the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which though chiefly to seal Gods grace to us yet it did also signifie the love we ought to have to one another as the Apostle urgeth 1 Cor. 10. that as the several corns make up one bread thus do the godly make up one mystical body Divisions then in the Church are against Christs death and against the Sacrament of his death Shall we therefore runne into such sinnes that have such an hainous aggravation 2. That the people of God where they see these divisions are to improve this Argument for Vnity Even as when they groan under any corruption and would gladly have the mastery of it they runne to the blood of Christ praying O Lord Did not Christ die that these sinnes might die Was not Christ crucified to crucifie these lusts So it ought to be in matter of unity Oh Lord make all thy people of one heart of one minde and spirit because Christ died for this also let not his death be in vain Thou wouldst not suffer his bones to be broken nor his garment divided why then shall his Church be torn and divided Do not think humane policies and invented syncretisms will be able to soder together It must be this blood of Christ that obtaineth this 3. Christ did not onely meritoriously purchase this Vnity by his death but in him exemplarily and formally we are made one So that Christ is both the moral cause of this unity and the exemplar also for he by being both God and man in one Person made God and man one when there was such an infinite distance before there is made the most intimate union that can be even an hypostatical union between God and man Now though we cannot attain to such an union yet by reason of this all believers are made one with God and amongst themselves Hence is that often expression of our being in him of ingraffing in him of living in him all which do denote our intimate union with him so that as Christ is not divided in himself The Divine Nature doth not will one thing and the humane Nature the contrary
make it uselesse for there needeth not any more two meritorious causes of salvation then two Suns in the firmament or else if Christ merited as the remote cause and we as the proxime cause then salvation is to be attributed more formally to our grace then Christs sufferings So that as if the Sunne should inlighten the starres that they could make the day this would take off from the immediate glory of the Sun though that was remotely the cause of it Thus though Christ be the cause of our grace yet because our grace is in it self made the meer meritorious cause therefore it would obscure the glory of Christ Oh then let the gracious man take heed of any proud risings or stirrings of heart of any proud opinions or doctrins which may secretly fermentate him herein Fourthly Neither is the connexion between grace and glory causal in a physical and natural way as the fire burneth or as the acorn will naturally grow into a great Oak It 's ordinarily said That grace is the seed of glory or grace is glory begun and glory is grace consummated but all this is not so to be understood as if grace by any intrinsecal natural vertue did grow up to glory as a childe doth to a man No God might if he had pleased when we had done the highest acts of grace yet have annihilated us Though we had fought the good fight of faith yet he might not have given us a crown of glory for this heavenly glory accompanieth grace only by vertue of a promise Had not God promised and mercifully annexed such glorious priviledges our graces of themselves could not have procured them Fifthly Therefore is grace and glory connexed partly from the promise of God He is willing out of his free bounty to bestow heaven upon our gracious walking so that we cannot plead our graces but Gods promise onely neither is he a debtor unto us but unto himself and this is the righteousness mentioned by the Scripture when it speaks of God rewarding us as when it 's said If we confess and forsake our sins he is righteous to forgive them 1 Joh. 1.9 and so it 's just with God to remember our sufferings 2 Thess 1.6 and Paul saith It 's the righteous Judge 2 Tim. 4.6 which will give him the crown of glory Here justice and righteousness is not mentioned for strict commutative righteousness but the righteousness of Gods promise and fidelity So that God looketh upon the promise as on the rainbow which is a sure evidence that he will never destroy the world more and then grace is an antecedent to glory because Grace is an ordinable means to glory Without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 Sin cannot in it's nature be appointed the way to happiness Therefore the ancient saying is that it is via not causa regni so that by Gods commanding and appointing the way it 's as indispensably necessary as if it were a cause And then Lastly It makes for the honour and glory of God to make grace a necessary forerunner of glory For if every prophane and ungodly person might be saved this would redound greatly to Gods dishonour this would invert and contradict those places of Scripture which speak of Gods purity and holiness so that his eyes cannot behold the wicked that he will in no wise acquit the ungodly Exod. 34.7 That he is angry with the wicked all the day long Psal 7.11 Thus you see that there is an inviolable chain between sanctification and happiness and that it is gross and foul presumption for a man to separate these two to think he shall ever partak of one without exercising the other and therefore this Vse 1 In the first place doth thunder out unspeakable woe unto all wretched and ungodly men What hopes what expectations have ye of happiness Deceive not your selves any longer with such false surmises look over all the Bible and you shall see nothing but hell fire and eternal torments to such who are workers of iniquity What do you think God will alter the course of grace when he will not the course of nature Will God turn the day into night or the night into day Will he make the Sun stand still or the waters of the Sea part asunder to please the creature Yea these miracles he may and hath done but to save a wicked man living and dying in his wickednesse would be the greatest miracle that could be yea we may say such is the holiness and justice of God that he cannot do it What is it then that doth thus befot and bewitch wicked men What keepeth you from gnashing the teeth tearing the hair and crying out Oh this life those sins will as surely damn me as if I were in hell already without repentance And Vse 2 2. It speaks infinite comfort to those who have true grace though in the least degree For seeing that grace doth not as a natural cause produce glory but by the Covenant and Promise of God then the weakest grace may plead this as well as the strongest The lowest believer may say I have as good and as faithfull a promise as the stronger even a cup of cold water given to a Prophet upon right grounds shall have an everlasting Kingdom and therefore that cannot be for any worth or dignity in the good duty performed What is lesse then a cup of water and that cold yet for this there is promised an everlasting Kingdom And certainly if Paul thought 2 Cor. 4.17 these afflictions though in themselves never so great yet nothing comparable to that eternal weight of glory much lesse then are those lesse afflictions comparable to it And so I proceed to the second Doctrine Christ prayeth That believers though thus sanctified and perfected in one may be made glorious Now this plainly supposeth That Glory is a gift That it doth not follow upon our highest degree of Sanctification and therefore when the Apostle had said The wages of sin is death Rom. 6.23 he doth not also say the wages of grace is eternal life but he cals it The gift of God So that here is a difference between hell and heaven The wicked mans life deserveth hell it 's the proper reward of every ungodly action yea some say that hell is lesse then the sin God doth not punish according to the desert of it but it 's otherwise with glory and happiness for after we have done to the utmost yet it 's wholly in Gods good pleasure whether he will give a Kingdom or no. Now the Reasons Why eternal glory must be a gift even to the most godly men is 1. Because that all our best actions have some sinfulness cleaving to them insomuch that if God should deal strictly according to those adhering defects we might be damned notwithstanding the graces we have Therefore the Psalmist prayeth Psal 143.2 That God would not enter into judgement with his servant because in his sight no flesh
is not the devil still suggesting this unto thee if thou be the Sonne of God then it would be thus and thus with thee Gods children never do as thou doest Now this temptation hath so farre prevailed by Satans instigation upon some of Gods people that they have wholly given over to pray that they dared not to presume to pray And why because God is not their Father they may no more pray then the damned in hell So that the godly man is left in a wofull desolate estate all the while this truth doth not reign in his heart that God is his Father 3. This perswasion of God being our Father is of so great consequence that the Spirit of God is sent on purpose into our hearts for this very work Gal. 4.6 Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Father So that as we remain blind and darkned in mind till the Spirit lead us into all truth that as we remain unholy and cleaving to our lusts till the Spirit sanctifie us so we do also remain in a doubting unbelieving and dejected disposition till God send this Spirit into our hearts so that when a man is humbled for sinne and feels the load of his transgressions it must be more then humane power yea or all the counsels and directions of the ablest Ministers that can inable such an one to call him Father Oh how often doth such a tempted soul say Oh that I could call him Father Oh that I could delight in him as a Father But now when this Spirit of Adoption cometh into our hearts see with what efficacy and power it cometh it maketh us to cry that denoteth earnestness vehemency and also confidence undauntedness notwithstanding the roaring cries of the devil and conscience to the contrary and thus it enableth us to cry Abba Father by way of ingemination implying that it is not once but twice yea often for indeed if the Spirit of God did not constantly thus keep up a filial frame every new failing would cast us back into a meer darknesse and confusion Therefore the Spirit of God hath this office of being a Comforter because we of our selves cannot sow that seed in our own souls 4. This is necessary because this only raiseth sweet comfortable and delightfull thoughts of God The relation of a Father is sweet and what a great difference is there between a childe praying to a tender father and a malefactor to a severe Judge David once said He remembred God and was troubled Certainly the more we think of God and his Attributes Omnipotent Wise Holy Righteous if not a Father the more terrible and dreadfull is the apprehension of him It 's necessary to have good endeared thoughts of God therefore the devils and the damned who are of the farthest distance from God they have hard and raging thoughts against him It being therefore necessary to keep up such thoughts in the soul as these Let God afflict smite destroy yet he is just and righteous yea and to be loved now this cannot be unless this faith is strongly carried out unto him as a Father 5. Perswasion of God as a Father is necessary because this only will produce faith and confidence in those that pray with such an assurance Now faith is the very soul and life of prayer He that prayeth believing shall receive and James exhorts Let him ask in faith nothing doubting Chap. 1. Our Saviour told the woman It should be according to her faith So that unbelief makes our prayers like a messenger without hands or feet and if so How shall we get our prayers animated with this grace Nothing conduceth more to this then the Meditation of God as a Father when this is assented to then it easily believeth God will do all necessary good for it such a Father will not give a stone to his childe when he asketh bread Thus Mat. 5. our Saviour maketh this an argument against all distracting fears and cares Your heavenly Father knoweth what you have need of Why is it that after prayer thy heart is as much troubled and disquieted as if the request had never been made known to God but only because faith did not reign and predominate in thy heart concerning Gods fatherly relation to thee 6. Perswasion of God as a Father is necessary because hereby the heart will be quickned to all those holy and filial dispositi●ns which ought to be in children If ye call him Father 1 Pet. 1.17 c. Passe your sojourning here with an holy fear The Scripture apprehension of a Father will not beget security and a licentious life but rather it will cause an holy reverence and a diligent attendance to avoid all those sins that may offend and provoke The Spirit of adoption is also a Spirit of Sanctification being born of God he doth not he cannot sin for how abominable and uneffectual would our prayers be if we should joyn prophaneness to those duties In stead of obtaining mercy we may justly expect that God would pour out greater wrath whereas a due and right apprehension of God as a Father will make a gracious and humble disposition in the soul Vse of Exhortation to the people of God that they strengthen and confirm this relation to them as much as may be Pray for that Spirit of Adoption which will inable thee to cry Abba Father Oh know that all the cause of thy disquietness distractions and diffidence of Spirit in thee ariseth from unbelief in this point If thou believe God is thy Father then sin is forgiven then no good thing will be denied thee This Father will treasure up for thee yea the properties of this Father are wonderfully quickning he is an omnipotent Father and so can do all things he is a compassionate Father and so will do all things he takes upon him both the bowels of Father and Mother also Parents have been hardned to their children as the Prophet observeth but God cannot be He is a wise Father and so ordereth every thing for the best This if duly considered would free thee from all distrustfull cares and thou wouldst learn from thy own childe to walk depending upon God casting all thy burden upon him because thou seest it taking no care what it shall eat or what it shall put on but resteth it self wholly upon it's Fathers care The second thing observable in the Text is The manner of Christs expression his Petition I will Father I will Some think this an expression not of prayer but of Christs just demand of his right to that which he had as God and therefore they think that whereas before he prayed as a man here he interposeth himself as God as thus Austin of old Omnipotenti patri se velle dixit omnipotens filius Others they make it an expression of prayer because in the former part the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used and thus Mark 10.35 when James and John
even as man there should be revealed unto him all the thoughts actions and circumstances thereof concerning every man in the world that so he might fulfill the office of a Judge 4. Christ as Mediator God and man is the author and fountain of all the light which is communicated to the Church Hence it is that one of his Offices is to be the Prophet of the Church He is called the chief shepherd of our souls 1 Pet. 5 4. and being our high-Priest he was to offer up himself for us so also instruct and teach us Therefore you heard the whole world is commanded to hear him and therefore it is that he cals himself the truth and the way Joh. 14.16 So that in all matters of Religion we are still to enquire what Christ hath revealed and what he hath manifested now he doth not only reveal the truth to be believed but the duties also that are to be performed and therefore the Apostle makes it so hainous a sinne to refuse Christ speaking above Moses Heb. 12.25 Tremble then all ye wicked men who do constantly refuse Christ still speaking from heaven by his Word and Ministers to leave your sins and impieties 5. The Scripture doth often as in all actions ad extra attribute the same work of teaching and enlightning both to the Father and to the Son and to the holy Spirit So that this great work of saving knowledge is attributed indifferently to all Thus the Father James 1. is called the Father of lights from whom cometh every good and perfect gift So our Saviour alledgeth that promise They shall be all taught of God Joh. 6.45 So the holy Spirit is said to guide and lead into all truth Illumination being frequently ascribed to the Spirit and 1 Cor. 2.10 God is said there to reveal things unto us by his Spirit And lastly Christ himself is said to be the great teacher of his people as Mat. 23.10 For one is your Master even Christ Hence the Apostle magnifieth the Gospel Heb. 1. that whereas formerly God had spoken by the Prophets in these later dayes he spake by his Sonne So that the geeat sinne against the Gospel and the aggravation of all wickednesse is from hence that though this light be come into the world yet men love darknesse rather then light 6. The Lord Christ doth teach several wayes either immediately when he was upon the earth or mediately by the Apostles and the Ministers that he hath appointed in his Church Therefore he is said still to speak from heaven viz. by the Word and the Ministry so that we are not to conceive as if we had nothing of Christ now because he is ascended to heaven for what the Ministers guided by the Word of God do that is as if Christ himself spake it and you are to receive it with the like faith and obedience Hence our Saviour speaking to his Apostles saith Luke 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me he that despiseth an Embassadour contemneth him from whom he is sent Oh that this truth may be as a two-edged Sword in thy heart What darest thou who livest in thy prophaneness if Christ himself were here upon the earth commanding thee to leave thy sins yet to persevere in them if not How is it that you refuse those who come in his name 7. Though Christ hath appointed a Ministry to teach and instruct people yet the whole efficacy and power cometh from Christ alone It 's God and Christ by the Word that can only open the understanding and give a spiritual knowledge so that conversion is so called the teaching of God John 6.45 Therefore a man must hear and learn of the Father before he can come to Christ onely Christ there addeth that this hearing and knowing of the Father comes by him So Joh. 3.26 27. when Johns Disciples said That all men come to Christ he answered A man can receive nothing except it be given him of heaven attributing it to the power of God that any come to Christ Therefore this Sun exceedeth the bodily one which giveth indeed external light but cannot give an eye to see the blinde remain blinde for all that Lastly Though Christ only do effectually give a knowing heart so that although we had the best Ministry of men and Angels yet it would do no good without his secret power and energie yet we must not from thence inferre the uselesness of the Ministry as some foolishly have done opposing the principal and subordinate For in our natural life although it be not the bread we eat but the word of blessing from Gods mouth that makes it to nourish us yet none casts away his food resolving to depend on God immediately Thus though Christ alone give the seeing eye and the understanding heart yet it 's by and in the use of the Ministry though it was God alone that did give the healing vertue to the pool of Bethesda yet the Angel must move it and every lame man must come into it else he could not be healed Hence although Jeremy prophesie of such abundance of knowledge that they shall not teach one another but be all taught of God which may seem and is brought by some to overthrow the Ministry yet the same Prophet Jer. 3.15 declareth it as a special blessing that he would give them Pastors according to his own heart which would feed them with knowledge and understanding So that Gods teaching and the Pastors teaching do not oppose one another It 's said also of Lydia that God opened her heart Act. 16.14 but to what end To attend to the words of Paul So that you must never oppose Gods work and the Ministry together In the next place Let us consider the Properties of Christs knowledge whereby he makes us also to know As 1. The Authoritative and potestative Nature of it he taught as one having authority not as the Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 7.29 Hence Mat. 5. when he had related the corrupt opinions of their Doctors in the Interpretation of the Law he addeth But I say unto you opposing his Authority to them all It 's true he saith he speaks not of himself but referreth his Doctrine wholly to his Father but withall saith He and his Father are one he doth not speak of receiving his Doctrine in the same manner as Paul and other Apostles did of him by revelation 2. There is the freeness of this he teacheth whom he pleaseth There are none so froward and so contumacious but he can open their hearts and others that are of high and eminent understandings for want of him do remain blind owls Mat. 11.26 27. where our Saviour giving God thanks for manifesting the things of the Gospel to some and not to others resolving all into Gods good pleasure Even so Father for so it pleaseth thee he addeth No man knoweth the Father but the Sonne and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him So that where
time reveal even this truth unto them also SERMON CXLIV Of the powerful sense and feeling of the love of God How it 's attained And what a great advantage it is to him that hath it both in reference to duty and comfort JOHN 17.26 That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them IN these words we have the necessary Consequent or Effect of believing in Christ and resting on him as Mediatour and that is the love of God towards them So that we have here the description of Gods love to Beleevers and that in the highest degree which is imaginable the love wherewith thou lovest me Criticks note a Graecism in the relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Mar. 4.41 2 Tim. 4.7 which Austin also on the place takes notice of though Maldonate call it a light Observation The Truth it self is of infinite comfort that God loves believers with that love wherewith he loveth Christ himself But this hath been discoursed of already 2. You have the subject of this love with the manner of participation of it That this love may be in them that is in true believers and in them only Some by love understand the holy Ghost but we may take it for the gracious favour of God and as Zanchy well observeth he doth not say that this love may be towards them though that also be true but in them Gods love was to his people by way of purpose and decree from all Eternity but it was not in them Now when Gods love is said to be in them that is to be understood of the Effects of his love and more especially of the sence and assurance of his love Lastly There is the cause of all this expressed in these words And I in them where Christs mystical Union with and indwelling in us is made the cause of all the love of God to believers but of this also we have already treated So that there remaineth no new thing but the manner of participation of this love of God to them and that is said to be in them which although as was said may be true of the several gracious effects of Gods love yet I shall pitch on that which is the most obvious viz. Gods love in a beleever by way of sence and assurance for God not only loveth them but they may feel this and be perswaded thereof Obs That it is not enough for the people of God to be loved by him but they are to endeavovr after the sence and apprehension of this in their own hearts This is the Emphasis the Selah as it were in this expression that Gods love may be in them our Faith in Christ is not only to produce those direct acts whereby we are perswaded of Gods love in the generall but also those reflex acts whereby we know and feel that his love is in us As a man under the Sun-beams feeleth and enjoyeth the comfortable influence thereof So that herein lieth the compleat happinesse of a Christian to be loved of God and to perceive and feel this To open this you must Consider 1. That the love of God is taken in Scripture two waies either actively for that whereby we love him or passively for that whereby we are loved of him and so some Texts do receive different Interpretations because of the different application of that love of God Now it 's true our love to God is inherent in us and we may perceive and feel it as fire sometime working in us for his glory and honour but the love of God whereby he loveth us we cannot feel in us but by the Spirit of God manifesting and evidencing this unto our souls We have a notable Text Rom. 5.5 where the love of God is said to be shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given us which although some expound of that love inherent in us whereby we love God yet it seemeth more consonant to the words preceding that it is to be understood of that love of God whereby he loveth us for this being diffused in our hearts and we thereby affected with it do rejoyce in tribulations and have such hope that will never make ashamed This then is said to be a special mercy vouchsafed to Gods Children that his love is plentifully powred upon them as Aarons Oyle upon his head and so descending to other parts So that by this Love of God they can triumph and be confident in all tribulations and exercises whatsoever This is an heaven upon the Earth to live in such discoveries and evidences of Gods love 2. Gods love may be greatly towards us yea and the effects of it in us yet for all this we discern and feel them not As it was with the Lord Christ our Head though dearly beloved of his Father yet in respect of any sense and perceivance of Gods love at that time he was destitute of it David doth often bewail his condition in respect of this spirituall desertion and indeed there cannot be an heavier temptation upon the godly heart then the clean contrary in the Text That the wrath and anger of God whereby he is drawn out against the wicked they should apprehend to be upon them They who esteem the light of his countenance above all things to finde the frowns and wrath of God to apprehend his displeasure towards them this is a burthen greater then they can bear So that although this be made the connex to their believing in Christ yet it is a separable Consequent it is that which may be divided from it sometimes At that very time when the godly do believe on Christ in a dependent way they may walk in sad apprehensions knowing nothing of the love of God towards them yea in a very dreadful manner questioning of it 3. Although the love of God towards believers may not be perceived by them yet they are to press forward they are to pray and wrestle with God that they may not continue in darknesse but be brought to this comfortable light The Apostle Peter presseth it as a necessary duty 2 Pet. 1.10 Give all diligence to make your Calling and Election sure and the Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether ye be in the Faith or no So that this happy priviledge is possible and many of the people of God without any immediate revelation have attained unto it Insomuch that it is for the most part our sin that we walk not in the sence of it It is true indeed God sometimes out of his Soveraignty and for wise ends of his own doth withdraw this sense and evidence of his favour but for the most part it is from our selves that such black clouds arise which keep the light of the Sun from us 4. The sence and perceiving of Gods love may be either in an immediate manner or mediate Immediately and thus Christ discovered his love to
everlasting glory laid up for them 129 God gives them a large opportunity of Working ib. Put no confidence in your Workes ibid. World The World was not from Eternity 155 Proved by Scripture and four Reasons 156 That God made the World in time is usefull seven wayes 157 159 Gods people are in the World but not of it 170 The several significations of the World in Scripture 171 231 The people of God are called out of the World 172 Seven Demonstrations of it 173 c. Three Reasons of it 175 Worlds great enmity against those that be godly 283 What it is to be of the World 434 How Christ is said not to be of the World 435 The not being of the World is that which makes wicked men hate the godly 435 What it is not to be of the World The World is ignorant of God in a saving manner 678 Demonstrations of the Point ib. FINIS A CATALOGUE OF THE Chiefest of such BOOKS as are Printed FOR THOMAS VNDERHILL By Col. Edw. Leigh Esquire A Treatise of the Divine Promises in Five Books The Saints Encouragement in Evil Times Critica Sacra or Observations on all the Radices or Primitive Hebrew words of the Old Testament in order Alphabetical Critica Sacra or Philological and Theological Observations upon all Greek words of the New-Testament in order Alphabetical By Samuel Gott Esquire Novae Solymae Librisex Sive Institutio Christiani 1. De Pueritia 2. De Creatione Mundi 3. De Jnventute 4. De Peccato 5. De Virili Aetate 6. De Redemptione Hominis Essayes concerning Mans true Happiness Parabola Evangelicae Latinè redditae Carmine Paraphrastico varii generis Morton His Touch stone of Conversion Mr Hezekiah Woodward Of Education of Youth or The Child● Patrimony The Lives and Acts of the good and bad Kings of Judah A Treatise of Fear A Thank-offering Mr Samuel Fisher A Love-Token for Mourners being two Funeral Sermons and Meditatitions preparatory to his own expected Death in a time and place of great Mortality Mr Herbert Palmer and Mr Daniel Cawdrey A Treatise of the Sabbath in four parts Memorials of Godliness and Christianity in seven Treatises 1. Of making Religion ones Business With an Appendix applied to the Calling of a Minister 2. The Character of a Christian in Paradoxes 3. The Character of visible Godlinesse 4. Considerations to excite to Watchfulness and to shake off spiritual Drowsiness 5. Remedies against Carefulnesse 6. The Soul of Fasting 7. Brief Rules for daily Conversation and particular Directions for the Lords-day His Sermon entituled The Glass of Gods Providence toward his faithfull ones His Sermon entituled The Duty and Honour of Church-Rest Mr William Barton His Psalms His Catalogue of Sins and Duties implied in each Commandment in Verse Mr Vicars Chronicle in four parts Mr Samuel Clark A General Martyrology or A History of all the great Persecutions that have been in the world to this time Together with the Lives of many eminent Modern Divines His Sermon at the Warwickshire mens Feast entituled Christian Good-fellowship Mr Kings Marriage of the Lamb. Mr Shorts Theological Poems The French Alphabet Jus Divinum Ministerii by the Provincial-Assembly of London Mr Thomas Blake His Answer to Blackwood of Baptism Birth-Priviledge Mr Cook His Font uncovered Dr John Wallis His Explanation of the Assemblies Catechism Mr Langley's Catechism Mr Austin's Catechism Mr Vicars's Catechism Mr Pagit's Defence of Church-Government by Presbyterial Classical and Synodal Assemblies Mr Tho. Paget A Demonstration of Family-Duties Mr Anthony Burgess Vindiciae Legis or A Vindication of the Law and Covenants from the Errors of Papists Socinians and Antinomians A Treatise of Justification in two Parts Spiritual Refining Part 1. or A Treatise of Grace and Assurance Handling the Doctrine of Assurance the Use of Signs in Self-examination how true Graces may be distinguished from counterfeit several true Signs of Grace and many false ones The Nature of Grace under divers Scripture notions viz. Regeneration the New-Creature the Heart of Flesh Vocation Sanctification c. Spiritual Refining the Second Part or A Treatise of Sinne with its Causes Differences Mitigations and Aggravations specially of the Deceitfulnesse of the Heart of Presumptuous and Raigning Sinnes and of Hypocrisie and Formality in Religion All tending to unmask Counterfeit Christians Terrifie the ungodly Comfort doubting Saints Humble man and Exalt the Grace of God His CXLV Sermons upon the whole 17th Chapter of St John being Christs Prayer before his Passion The Difficulty of and Encouragements to Reformation a Sermon upon Mark 1. vers 2 3. before the House of Commons A Sermon before the Court-Marshal Psal 106.30 31. The Magistrates Commission upon Rom. 13.4 at the Election of a Lord Maior Romes Cruelty and Apostasie upon Revel 19.2 preached before the House of Commons on the 5th of November The Reformation of the Church to be endeavoured more then the Commonwealth upon Judges 6.27 28 29. preached before the House of Lords Publique Affections pressed upon Numb 11.12 before the House of Commons Mr Richard Baxter Plain Scripture-proof of Infant-Baptism The Right Method for getting and keeping Spiritual Peace and Comfort The Unreasonableness of Infidelity in four Parts 1. The Spirits Intrinsick witnesse to the truth of Christianity with a Determination of this Question Whether the Miracles of Christ and his Apostles do oblige those to believe who never saw them 2. The Spirits Internal witness of the truth of Christianity 3. A Treatise of the Sin against the holy Ghost 4. The Arrogancy of Reason against Divine Revelation repressed The Christian-Concord or The Agreement of the Associated Ministers of Worcestershire with Mr Baxters Explication of it A Defence of the Worcestershire Petition for the Ministry and Maintenance The Quakers Catechism An Apology against Mr Blake Dr Kendal Mr Lodovicus Molineus Mr Aires and Mr Crandon His Confession of Faith The Saints everlasting Rest The TEXTS Explained and Vindicated in this TREATISE Genesis Chap. Vers Pag. 49 6 609 Deuteronomy 3 8 362 25 2 363 1 Samuel 20 31 363 2 Samuel 2 7 362 1 Kings 8 27 7 2 Chronicles 33 13 85 Psalms 10 17 139 17 89 301 19 1 159 68 20 451 69 11 176 103 14 528 119 6 201 Proverbs 28 9 141 28 14 358 Ecclesiastes 5 2 132 7 17 449 8 11 369 Isaiah 4 5 6 395 8 6 490 33 14 70 40 6 383 57 1 450 61 3 414 65 9 20 357 Jeremiah 32 39 358 50 27 451 Ezekiel 37 16 22 566 Hosea 9 4 413 Zechariah 14 9 56● Malachi 1 7 657 Matthew 5 48 263 6 20 64 6 7 135 11 27 38 13 37 182 16 18 360 21 32 545 23 9 257 24 36 363 26 14 375 Mark 9 50 321 9 24 530 13 22 357 Luke 1 70 322 12 29 554 22 13 284 John 1 16 40 1 3 150 1 10 606 6 29 211 6 39 349 7 7 435 8 55 151 10 28 349 14 6 37 14 12 291 15 2 375 15 11 400
to beleeve though it might be matter of comfort and priviledge yet it was not of duty But O how graciously hath God taught thee otherwise Now thou ar● as much afraid not to lay hold on Christ as to commit any other sin Thou art as consciencious in believing every promise as in conforming to every command Thou darest no longer listen to doubts and fears to Satans Temptations in this matter then thou darest to the lusts and pleasures of sin 2. The Spirit of God doth instruct us in this That thus to beleeve and rest on Christ is to perform or to do that to which Justification is promised He that believeth is passed from death to life and still Remission of sins is said to be received by Faith and we are justified by Faith Rom. 5. So that when the Soul doth rest on Christ he performeth that to which Christ with all his benefits are promised Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have eternnl Life So that the humbled sinner having his eyes thus opened he seeth it the greatest madnesse and folly that can be not to receive Christ and to rest on him Why thus he argueth I cannot he justified I cannot partake of Christ till I do believe so that to believe is as necessary in an instrumental way as Christ in a meritorious way Shall the diseased Patient question whether he shall take that medicine which will certainly heal him Shall the hungry man doubt whether he may receive that alms which will preserve his Life Thus the humbled sinner is convinced that as he must not murther his own body wilfully by refusing to eat meat so he must not his own soul by a wilful rejecting of the promise 3. The Spirit of God instructs him in this also That by beleeving he doth not only bring comfort and salvation to his soul but in a most eminent manner doth also glorifie God As Abraham by that remarkable act of Faith is said to give Glory to God Rom. 4.20 The tempted Soul is apt to think Why should I believe this is but to seek my self This is because I would have comfort whatever becometh of Gods Glory Oh but saith the believer when thus awakened if I could perform all the Commandments of God if I could love God so as to give my body to be burnt for his Name yet I could not glorifie God so much as by believing for this acknowledgeth God in Christ wherein God is more to be admired then in the creation and government of the world Lastly He is enabled to see the folly and unprofitablenesse of Vnbelief If he go not to Christ where can Salvation be had he is sure to be damned by keeping from Christ Therefore with those Lepers he is resolved not to perish but to go to God though he seem an Enemy to him And then 2. God worketh faith in us effectively as you heard by strengthening the heart of a man fiducially to repose on Christ if other graces as love and patience do not grow of themselves in mans heart much lesse doth Faith which is so supernatural every way SERMON CIX Of Justifying Faith JOHN 17.20 But for them also who shall believe in me through their word WE are treating upon the Doctrine of Justifying Faith and certainly we may say It 's good to be on this Mount of Transfiguration and having declared that method Gods Spirit leads an humbled soul into when it 's enabled to believe We proceed to further particulars instructive in this business The ultimate and last act of justifying faith was a fiducial resting upon Christ for all spiritual benefits But to understand this further Consider that the Scripture expression of it is very emphatical and denoteth several notions in it as when it expresseth it by receiving 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a word often applied to faith in this act it receiveth Christ Joh. 1.12 it receiveth the promise it receiveth forgivenesse of sins Act. 26.18 so that in this justifying act of faith we are to conceive a precious treasure offered by the grace of God even Christ himself and faith as the hand receiving of it and this expression is full of excellent matter for it teacheth 1. That we in this act of Justification or laying hold on Christ have nothing of our own All our righteousness is without us we are to receive it offered we have nothing inherent This Paul knew experimentally Phil. 3. when he would be found not in his own righteousness but that which is by faith His own mark that Any thing we may call our own we must not be found in and that is our own which is not only so effectivé by our own procuring and labour or merit but subjectivé which is inherent in us though it be wrought by the grace of God as the Just is said to live by his faith Hab. 2.4 It 's his faith subjectively though Gods effectively This word then receiving doth carry every man humbled Evangelically wholly out of himself and as was said to the woman looking into the Sepulchre Why look you for him he is not here he is risen So it may be said Why art thou searching and digging into thine own heart Thy works or graces these are not the object of faith It 's above thee It 's without thee though by faith applied to thee Even as the poor cripple that desired to be healed looked upon Christ expecting help from him he knew he had nothing in himself or as the indigent beggar looks without him and stretcheth out his hand to receive food or money So is it with the humbled sinner Oh then be directed here why doth God make thy own heart thy own wayes so bitter to thee Is it not because thou shouldst seek out for a Christ and look for a righteousnesse without thee 2. This word receiving implieth That we are wholly passive in our Justification That we are not justified by doing any thing or offering any thing to God but receiving from him Even as some Philosophers say Intelligere and sentire are passions Though we express them actively yet the soul therein is passive So when by believing a man is justified we are not to consider what he brings to God or doth for God but what he receiveth from him This is a fundamental principle to be grounded in it 's a mercy of mercies to be directed in the agonies of thy soul to the right way of believing to know the way to this City of refuge If a manslayer pursued by the avenger had not known the way to the City of refuge what danger had he been in It 's like the childe not coming the right way in it's birth now naturally we all think by doing to partake of Christ not receiving which made the Apostle so industriously assert this That it 's not to him that worketh but to him that believeth
that grace is vouchsafed So then be instructed in this Is thy heart groaning under sin all thy desires and inclinations are to Christ Know this is done intra recipiendo not extra mittendo This is done by receiving grace from God not doing any work for or to him yet how apt are we all to cry out with those What shall we do I till Christ inform us that the great work God approveth of is beleeving or receiving It 's the looking upon this brazen Serpent that healeth thee 3. This therefore implieth That believing on Christ doth not justifie for any dignity or intrinsecal worth it hath Not because it 's a more excellent and noble grace but meerly because that alone is receiving and applicative of Christ. We receive only by faith as we do corporally only by the hands yet the hands are not more noble then the eyes or the head Hence the Scripture never saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not for faith but through faith and it 's never said actively saith justifieth but by faith we are justified passively So that as it would be absurd to say That the beggars hand hath made him rich in receiving large alms so it would be as absurd to attribute it to the dignity of faith when by it we are justified Therefore fourthly In that believing is expressed by receiving of Christ is implyed That faith it self is excluded as it 's a work So that not onely all other graces but faith if considered as it 's a work doth not justifie us The eye in looking on the brazen Serpent did not heal as it was a work but from the vertue of the Serpent exalted by Gods appointment When the woman touched Christs hem of his garment and healing was thereby conveyed It was not the touching as it was a labour and work but the vertue of Christ Thus it is in this case And hence lastly we see Why faith and no other grace doth thus justifie because this alone doth receive Other graces are active this is receptive Not that faith is separated from other graces they are existent together though they retain their distinct properties He that believeth on Christ is cleansed and sanctified he loveth God and is patient in tribulation but yet not by this is he justified As the Sun-beams have heat as well as light but it shineth by the light only not the heat so the earth hath driness as well as gravity but it fals downward not because dry but because heavy Secondly This receiving is not a bare receiving but such as is with imbracement As Heb. 11.2 These imbraced the promises Even as Simeon took Christ with joy in his arms So that there is great delight and cordial joy in laying hold on Christ Even as the Church said after she had lost her Beloved yet finding him at last she would lay hold on him and not let him go as Ruth to Naomi thus she cleaveth to Christ So that as a man receiveth with dearest imbracements some choice and precious friend he longed to see Thus it is with the humbled sinner Oh this is the beloved of many thousands whom my soul hath long prayed for long sought for What have I found thee Oh thou chiefest of many thousands Hence it is that Christ compareth himself to a Bridegroom and Husband and his Church to a wife to shew what real affections are in the heart of an humbled sinner for to lay hold on him Hence it 's called Believing with the whole heart and with joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1.8 There was great feasting and joy for the finding of a lost son But oh the unspeakable joy for discovering a Christ that we thought was for ever lost as to us What meltings what ravishments are there at the meeting of him Oh how often saith the humbled soul did I think I should never finde thee How many times did I conclude that I should perish in my lusts and fears but Christ at last appeareth as he did to those women after his death who thought there was no hope Thirdly In this act of faith there is contained resting relying or fiducial reposing of the soul upon Christ. You heard the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did enforce this so that the soul before it believeth is to be conceived as a stone falling downwards which cannot stay till it meet with its center and then it enclineth no further In the Old Testament it 's called trusting in the Lord which in other synonymous expressions is sometimes called staying and leaning and so is a metaphor taken from those who have some great and heavy burden upon their back and thereby are crushed to the ground unless they have something to rest upon Thus it is with the afflicted penitent he cryeth out I finde such a load of sins that my back would break and heart would break yea every thing would fail within me had not I Christ to throw my self upon hence Christ is called the Foundation stone because all the building is established upon that Now that which in the Old Testament is called trusting in God in the New is called believing Illyricus thinketh this is the reason of the different expression because the God of Israel was known to the Jews therefore there was required only a fiducial adhesion unto him but in the New Testament Christ as Mediator was not known therefore another word is used viz. to believe which comprehends both an assenting knowledge and also a fiducial application So then by this act of beleeving the soul which was ready to sink under it's burden doth lean upon Christ and as a drowning man doth catch hold on the next branch to save him so doth a humbled sinner finding himself even falling into hell catch hold on Christ and therefore it 's called him· Fourthly In this act of believing there is an appropriation or application of Christ to be my Christ That whereas the promise runneth in the general Whosoever shall believe to him Christ is a Saviour This justifying faith doth in particular rest on Christ as a Saviour to him Thus Paul Gal. 2. Who loved me and gave himself for me and Thomas My God my Lord Joh 20. So that as when any threatning is denounced against a sinner the true convert will apply it to himself when guilty of such a sin I am the sinner this threatning meaneth So Christ being offered as a Saviour to every humbled sinner from this general he concludeth his particular Thus Paul Christ came to save sinners of whom I am chief Hence it is that our Divines against Papists do well maintain That the object of justifying faith is the special mercy of God It 's not enough to believe that Christ is a Saviour but to rest on him to be my Saviour Hence faith is called eating and drinking Joh. 6. which is more then the meer seeing meat upon the Table only when we say special mercy is the