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A70945 Christ all and in all. Or, several significant similitudes by which the Lord Jesus Christ is described in the holy Scriptures Being the substance of many sermons preached by that faithful and useful servant of Christ Mr. Ralph Robinson, late pastor at Mary Wolnoth London. Which were appointed by the reverend author on his death-bed (if his brethren should think fit) to be published. Robinson, Ralph, 1614-1655. 1656 (1656) Wing R1705; ESTC R223720 320,677 592

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communication of the Divine nature to them cause them to become the servants of righteousnesse Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 6. 18. Being made free from sinne ye became the servants of righteousnesse This is the work of Sanctification Of this the Apostle speaks Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himselfe for us that he might purifie us unto himselfe c. Christ takes off the yoke of sinne and puts on the neck the yoke of grace This the Apostle fully expresses Rom. 8. 2. The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death 3 The condemnation of sinne The wages of sinne is damnation Rom. 6. ult Jesus Christ is a horne of salvation to his 〈…〉 for he hath 〈◊〉 the wine 〈…〉 anger and suffered the 〈…〉 their sinnes for them Of 〈…〉 speaks in 1 Pet. ● 2● Who his 〈…〉 sinnes in his body c. And the 〈…〉 affirms Rom. 8. 1. That there i● 〈…〉 to them that are in Christ Jesus Thus in respect of sinne Christ is a horne of salvation 2. In respect of Satan Satan is a sworne adversary to the Elect. He goeth about continually like a roaring lion seeking how he may devoure them 1 Pet. 5. 8. There are three things in respect whereof Christ is salvation to them from Satan 1. The Dominion of Satan The Elect are by nature as well as others the bondslaves of Satan Eph. 2. 2. they are his servants by nature and by their own voluntary sinfulnesse they have enslaved themselves to his bondage more Of this the Apostle speaks 2 Tim. 2. 26. Now Jesus Christ is salvation to the Elect from this estate He doth at the conversion of the Elect cut the cords and unloose the chaines by which the devil holds them fast in bondage Of this our Saviour speaks Luke 11. 21. By his death he did triumph over him Col. 2. 15. and at the moment of our conversion he doth actually put us into the possession of this victory Acts 26. 18. He doth then turn us from the power of Satan unto God 2. The temptations of Satan Satan as he tempted Christ the Head of which we reade Mat. 4. 1 2 3. so doth he not cease to assault and tempt all his members The more visible Christs image is in any person the more violently doth the devil assault him The Apostle speaks of this as in many other places so fully in Eph. 6. 12. Now in this respect Christ is salvation to them He stands by them that these temptations may not prevaile over them He interposeth himself between them and the teeth of this roaring lion that he may not have his will on them Of this our Saviour speaks Luk. 22. 31 32. 3. The accusations of Satan The devil is called in Scripture The accuser of the brethren Rev. 12. 10. and he is a diligent creature at this work for he accuseth them day and night before the Lord. There are many imperfections and weaknesses in the children of God they do too often step aside out of Gods way we have too many sad instances of the truth of this in Scripture which I need not name The Devil takes occasion from these to accuse us not onely to men but to God He that turnes every stone to hurry us into sinne doth when he hath overcome us represent all to God against us in the ugliest shape he can that he may hinder mercy from us Yes he is so malicious that when he can have nothing visibly to lay to our charge he will pretend something as we see in the case of Job Chap. 1. 9 c. Ch. 2. 4 c. Christ now is a horne of salvation to us in this respect He stands continually pleading for us at Gods right hand as soone as Satan puts in a Bill Christ puts in an answer and so doth cast out and nullifie all his Accusations Thus is he salvation to them in respect of Satan 3. In respect of ●●n 〈…〉 by men both in the●● 〈…〉 spiritual estate 1. In their outward 〈◊〉 Men 〈…〉 against them they 〈…〉 because they 〈…〉 image they have so much of the 〈…〉 Because I have chosen you out of the 〈◊〉 therefore doth the world hate you John 15. 19. The great ones of the world they rise up often against them and vex them c. Now Christ is salvation to them in this regard Sometimes breaking the hornes that devoure them Sometimes melting the hearts of their devourers making their enemies their friends Sometimes removing them from them that would break them alwayes delivering them from the evil and hurt of the attempts made against them turning them for their greater and best good He makes their vinegar better then their wine Of this the Apostle was confident in his own case Phil. 1. 19. This shall turne to my salvation through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Christ is a horne even of temporal salvation to the Elect in this regard He makes your troubles as good friends to you as your comforts He makes your worst conditions work together for your best good 2. In your spiritual estate Christ is salvation to you from men in two respects First In regard of the corruptions of the world Wicked men give wicked examples and by the example of one wicked man others are corrupted Now albeit the Godly are sometimes infected in regard of some particular acts yet are they saved from the general corruptions of wicked men amongst whom they live Jesus Christ keeps them from soyling themselves as others do This is that which is recorded of the Angel of the Church of Pergamus Rev. 2. 1● and of those few in Sardis chap. 3. 4. Th●s was Noah saved in that corrupt age in which he lived Gen. 7. 1. Secondly ●n regard of the evil counsels of men Wicked men are of the same minde with the devil their father They are daily tempting inticing alluring and perswading the godly to walk with them in their wayes Joseph was tempted by his Mistresse Gen. 39. 7. This is put in amongst the Catalogue of the sufferings of the old Martyrs that they were tempted Heb. 11. 37. Christ the great Counsellor of his Church saved all these from yielding to such temptations Though they are sometimes ensnared yet they are againe brought off by Christ from those ensnarements and Christ gives them power afterward the more to resist them and to abhor them II. Positively Christ is salvation 1. In respect of grace 2. In respect of glory Jesus Christ is eternal salvation unto the Elect. All that salvation which hath been mentioned before is in reference to this which is the upshot of all He therefore saves them from sinne from the devil from men that he may bring them to this eternal happinesse He is called in Scripture eternal life 1 John 5. 20. The Authour of eternal salvation Heb. 5. 9. The salvation of Israel Psal 53. 6. The Captaine of our salvation Heb.
Law do not convert yet it helps forward conversion in as much as it works that preparatory work without which conversion ordinarily is not as the needle makes way for the threed so the Law makes way for conversion The spirit of bondage makes way for the Spirit of Adoption and that is wrought by the preaching of the Law 3. The mistake of those who are against all kinde of preparations to conversion They would have mercy held out to sinners as sinners not as sinners so and so qualified Surely the Scripture hath laid down qualifications for sinners to whom the Gospel is tendred They must be humbled sinners burdened sinners c. The mercy of the Gospel is not to be prostituted to sinners as sinners but to broken-hearted sinners to heart-wounded sinners to sinners that see themselves lost in themselves to hungring and thirsting sinners The brazen Serpent was onely for such to look upon as were stung with Serpents Such as are in some measure sensible of the stinging nature of sin are to be invited to lay hold on Christ As it is an undoing to wounded sinners to keep them from Christ so 't is an undoing to such sinners as are not in some measure pressed with sinne to apply the promises of the Gospel This was prefigured in the Leper The L●per must cry uncleane c. every sinner is this Leper sight of sinne must go before healing of sinne 4. Let Ministers take the same way which Christ takes for the curing of sinners Jesus Christ is both an able and faithful Physician 'T is no disparagement to use his method yea 't is the greatest wisdome to prescribe the same receits which Jesus Christ prescribes he uses to take men off from the opinion they have of their own way His manner is to let men see they are sick to convince them of sinne befo●● 〈◊〉 apply healing medicines All those Minis●●● that desire to have their endeavours successeful must do so likewise People must be contente● to suffer their condition to be known to suffer themselves to be made sick that so they may be cured This is Christs way this is a safe way this must be our way Though such kinde of preaching put you to some present trouble yet it will be to your eternal advantage Your sores cannot be healed comfortably till you see them to be sores and festred sores You must be contented to suffer the ploughings of the Law that you may be prepared for the comforts of the Gospel You must be contented to be cast down that you may be prepared for raising up You must be contented to be led to the gates of hell that you may be brought to the Kingdome of Heaven Better a great deale to go to Heaven through Hel then to saile through an imaginary Heaven and land at the dark staires of Hell in the end Doct. 5. Those that finde themselves to be spiritually sick shall finde Jesus Christ a Physician ready to heale them No Physician was ever so ready to heale a sick brother as Jesus Christ will be to cure a sin-sick sinner We finde in the Gospel that Christ was very willing to heal those that came to him sick of bodily infirmities We do not that I remember read of any one that was sent away uncured that earnestly begg'd his help either for themselves or any of theirs The Leprous the Paralytick the Demoniack the Lame the Blinde those that were sick of Feavers those that had bloody issnes Whatever sicknesses men had they obtained favour Matth. 4. 23. Christ ever valued the soule above the body therefore he will be much more ready to heale the sicknesses thereof He healed many of the sick Publicans when they saw their diseases As Zacheus Matthew c. And he will be to the end of the world ready to afford the same mercy to any that are or shall be in their condition Three things are here to be unfolded by way of Explication 1. What it is to be spiritually sick of sinne 2. That Christ will be ready to heale such 3. What are the reasons of this readinesse 1. To be sick of sin comprehends these six particulars First A true sight of our sinful condition That man who never yet had the sight of his sinful estate was never yet truly sick of sinne the soule must be convinced that it is in a sinful estate Thus it was with the Publican Luke 18 13. He acknowledged himselfe to be a sinner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nor is all sight of sinne sufficient but that sight of sinne which is an ingredient of spiritual sicknesse must have these two properties 1. It must arise from the Word of God This was the foundation of the Apostles sight of sinne Rom. 7. 9. When the Commandment 〈…〉 sinne re●ived and I died Thus 〈…〉 th●usand Acts 2. 37. 〈…〉 ●●●ked in their hearts The sense of sinne did arise from ●ou●● thing which was delivered to them out of the Word of God No other light besides this divine light will discover sinne so as to make the soul sick of it 2. It must extend to sinne in the root as well as to sinne in the branches I mean original birth-sinne as well as actual sinne Possibly the sight of sinne may arise first from some actual transgression So it was with those Converts Acts 2. 37. that bloody act of theirs against Jesus Christ was the first sinne they saw Actual sinnes are more obvious to the eye then original sinne This is a sinne lying under ground more remote at a greater distance from the cognizance of a sinner therefore peradventure some actual offence first is set upon the conscience but sooner or later doth this actual sin bring to the sinners conscience the sight of that sinne which is the root both of this and of all other actual sinnes namely that body of death that law of the members as the Apostle calls it Rom. 7. 23. Which continually warreth against the Law of the minde Secondly A serious apprehension of the misery and danger the soule is in by reason of sinne discovered No man is sick of sinne till he see the danger which sinne hath and which it is likely further to plunge him into Thus it was with those Converts Acts 2. 37. The question they propound What shall we do to be saved doth inply clearly enough that they looked upon themselves as men in a state of damnation in their present condition And indeed the same Word of God which discovers sinne doth discover wrath also as the wages of sinne so that the sick sinner is one that lies under the apprehension of wrath which he expects suddenly to fall upon him Thirdly Compunction and contrition is wrought in the soule by reason of sinne The heart throbs and akes by reason of that miserable state which by sinne he is brought into Thus it was with those Converts Act. 2. 37. They were pricked in their hearts their spirits were full of grief and vexation
that long sickness how unlike himself was he he had no actual repentance till Nathan came to him with a message from God and quickned him Sinne quencheth the Spirit in Godly men as the water quencheth the fire Sinne takes off the edge of the soul deads the appetite and affection to the things of God It locks up the heart that it cannot act as it was wont to do 2 Sicknesse begets torment and anguish in the body When sicknesse is in extremity in the body how doth a man cry out of paine head and heart and every part is under torment What restlesse tossings are men under when diseases are violent heare how Job complaines Chap. 30. 16 17 18 Sinne is a Creator of torment and painfulnesse in the soule Felix his sinne made him tremble Acts 24. 25. Cains sinne put his spirit into such anguish that he cries out My punishment is greater then I can beare Gen. 4. 13 14. Judas his sinne did bring such despairing torment upon his soule that he takes away his life to end his misery Matth. 27. init And even Gods own people when they fall into this spiritual disease they are pained at the very heart till by pardon and remission they have obtained a healing from God How full of paine was Davids spirit by reason of his sinne He was as a man upon the rack for a long time if he did ever recover his former serenity Vid. Psalme 6. per totum Psalme 38. per tot Many of the deare children of God do by sinne fill their hearts with such anguish that they are never without much smart to the day of their death 3 Sicknesse doth bring uncomelinesse The most beautiful body in the world if pining sicknesses continue long upon it becomes like a garment that is moth-eaten the eyes sink the colour is lost the skin is shriveld the bones stick out c. Job observes this Chap. 16. 8. Thou hast filled me with wrinkles which is a witnesse against me and my lea●nesse rising up in me beareth witnesse to my face Sicknesse makes streight bodies how down beautiful faces look ghastly well-coloured cheeks look pale and oftentimes the more beautiful sicknesse findes us the more uncomely doth it leave us Sicknesse turnes youth into old age vid. Lam. 3. 4. My flesh and my skin hath he made old Sickness dries up the spirits Prov. 17. 22. A merry heart doth good like a medicine a broken spirit dries up the bones Sin takes away the comelinesse of the soule The first sinful sicknesse that ever entered into the world hath turned the soules and bodies of all mankinde into deformity and uglinesse Could we see the picture of Adams soule in the state of innocency and compare it with the soules that are diseased with sinne we would wonder at the sad change Sinne is a very deformed thing it turned Angels of light into ugly devils Those who were never healed by regeneration and remission of the disease of sin what deformed souls have they they have not one spot of beauty upon them Psal 14. 3. They are altogether become stinking A dead carrion a putrefied carcasse is as beautiful and as sweet an obj●ct as a sinfully-diseased soul Yea even Gods own children by falling into sinne though but in one or two particular acts do lose much of their beauty They do not look with that grace they did before Every act of sin casts a dark thick shadow upon the soul As deep wounds leave skars upon the body so sinful acts leave some skarres of infamy upon the soul A Saint doth not look like the same man he was before he fell into sin 4 Sicknesse brings death Dorcas was sick and died Act. 9. 37. Long sicknesses if they be not removed will bring the strongest body to the dust of death Sicknesse is indeed Anteambulo mortis the forerunner of death The sick-bed is the direct way to the dark bed the grave Sinne doth bring death to the soule One disease of sinne if it be not healed by Christs bloud will certainly bring the soule to eternal death Rom. 6. 23. it hath brought many to hell and it will certainly bring all others to the same condition that live and die in it unhealed He that dies in his sinne shall die for ever II. For the nature of this sicknesse 'T is a more dreadfull sicknesse then any other sicknesse I shall set it out in a few particulars 1. It seizeth upon the most noble part of man All other sicknesses do infest the body onely but sinne is a disease in the soul Those sicknesses are most painful and most mortal which seize upon the vitals and inward parts A disease that feeds upon the spirits doth soone drink up the natural moisture and is not so easily cured Sinne is a disease that doth immediately reach the spirits 'T is the sicknesse of the heart O Jerusalem wash thy heart from wickednesse that thou mayest be saved Jer. 4. 14. The Apostle it 's true speaks of the filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. Some sins are onely acted by the brutish fleshly and sensitive part others rest in the spirit as pride vain-glory envy c. yet notwithstanding even those filthinesses of the flesh have their chief seat and residence in the heart according to that of our Saviour Matth. 15. 19. Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts c. All sinne is spiritual wickednesse in regard of the fountaine and root of it As grace is seated in the heart so also is sin Ier. 4. 18. This is thy wickednesse because it is bitter because it reacheth unto thine heart 2. Sinne is a sicknesse which God never made All bodily diseases are the handy work of God He created Plagues Feavers Consumptions c. Amos 3. 6. But sinne is a sicknesse of which God never was the Author 'T is true God sometimes punisheth sinne by sinne not by creating sinne but by suffering a sinful creature to fill up his sinne by withdrawing denying his grace which onely can preserve from sin 3. Sinne is a sicknesse which separates between God and men No other disease can divide between God and the soule Hezekiahs plague Asa's gout Iobs sores none of all these did make any division between God and them Some sicknesses do separate between the husband and the wife the father and the childe at least in regard of actual communion though not in regard of affection but no bodily sicknesse divides between God and men But sinne doth separate between God and the soule Esay 59. 2. It makes God stand at a distance from his own children to hide his face from them and to deale with them as with enemies 4. Sinne is the cause of all other sicknesses All bodily diseases come from this disease Hast thou not procured this thy unto self Thine own doings shall correct thee c. Jer. 2. 19. A distempered soul is the true cause of a distempered body Sinne was the first
's very like the Pharisee spake no more then what was true for they were generally men very inoffensive as to all such things For the discovering of this false foundation I shall lay down foure things viz. 1. 'T is a very great mercy to be freed from these scandalous sinnes If God have preserved you from these visible diseases that you have none of these botches of Egypt upon you it is to be acknowledged as a very great blessing The Pharisee did not amisse in blessing God that he was no Extortioner if he had done it upon a right ground if he had not gone on to censure the Publican he had not been blamed but commended for it David blesses God for preserving him from the sinne of murther upon Abigails perswasion Vid. 1 Samuel 25. 32 33. And there is very great reason for it For 1 Hereby we are delivered from much anguish and torment of conscience These scandalous sinnes as they do in an extraordinary manner waste the conscience so they do lay a foundation of much horrour and trouble in the soul every sinne creates much torment but these great abominations create exceeding much What horrour did Davids Adultery and Murther cast into his spirit Though God pardoned them both to him yet he was filled with anguish a long time after vid. Ps 6. Ps 38. Ps 50. 1. Now t is a great mercy when God prevents any anguish 2. Hereby we are delivered from being hurtful examples to other men Grosse scandalous offences are very prejudicial to others The hearts of those that are good are grieved and such as are wicked are caused to stumble oftentimes to their eternal ruine Davids sin gave great occasion of sin to others Now it 's a great mercy when God keeps a person from being an instrument of hurt to others especially of hurt to their soules 2. Such as expect salvation must keep themselves from such wickednesses Vid. 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. Heaven is not a place of common receipt for good and bad 'T is not like your ordinary Innes which lodge all kinde of passengers without difference such Lepers so living and dying must expect to go to another place Rev. 22. 15. Without shall be dogs c. 3. 'T is possible for a person to be free from these abominations and yet to be mortally sick of spiritual diseases Every sick man hath not the plague A man may die of a consumption as well as of a Fever A person may be in a damnable state that never committed murther or uncleannesse 1. The Pharisee was free from all these impieties and yet deadly sick in his soule Luke 18. 11. Paul when he was a Pharisee saith that he was blamelesse concerning all such enormities Phil. 3. 6. and yet at that time sick even unto death so he in Mat. 32. 11. so the five Virgins Mat. 25. 1. Those in 2 Pet. 2. 18 20. A natural conscience may keep men from such enormities The penalty of humane Lawes may preser●● 〈…〉 these great wickednesses Civil education may preserve a man from falling into these wickednesses A desire to keep our reputation in the world with men with whom we converse may keep us from these high impieties Meer restraint may do this 2. If freedome from these offences were enough to proclaime men to be spiritually whole then no hypocrite should be sick A man must be free from all these sinnes before he be advanced into the hypocrites forme Now we know that every hypocrite is spiritually and mortally sick Yea the Scripture tells us that hell is prepared for the hypocrites other sinners are said to have their portion with the hypocrites Mat. 2● 51. The hypocrite is of all sinners the special proprietor of Hell and yet he is free from all these offences 3. It 's possible for one that hath no saving grace in his heart to be free from these offences Though every one that hath grace will abandon these sins yet every one that is free from these sins hath not grace The instances mentioned before will prove this But every one that wants saving grace is under the rage of spiritual sicknesses Yea he that is without true grace is not onely sick in sinne but dead in sin Eph. 2. 1. and yet those that are dead in sin may be free from these wickednesses 4. Although many be free from the actual commission of these sinnes yet they have the roots of these sinnes in their hearts Every sinne is in that bundle of sinne which we call original There is pride and murther and theft c Now the pollution of nature if it be not healed by justifying grace and pardoning mercy and sanctifying grace is enough to make the soule sick and that unto death Yea indeed the great sicknesse of the soul lies there There lies the strength of sinne and the heat of sinne David when he bewailes his murther goes to that as the root of it Psalme 51. 5. All a mans actual sinnes be they never so grosse might soone be healed if that were but healed This is the fountaine of blood This is the law of sin here is the devils magazine 5. Though thou art free from th●se foule sins yet thou mayest have some secret idol or other set up in thy heart Now the least sin a vaine thought is a mortal sicknesse in it selfe and if it be not healed will prove a soul-destroying sicknesse The Papists have devised a distinction of sinnes venial and sinnes mortal That there are some sinnes that in their own nature do not make a man liable to eternal death but onely to temporal chastisement so Bellarmine teaches The Scripture knows no such distinction nor can we allow it All sinnes are venial to true repentance except that one sinne against the holy Ghost He that commits that shall never be forgiven But there is no sin venial in its own nature the least is a mortal sicknesse and deserves eternal death So saith the Scripture Gal. 3. 10. Rom. 6. ult the Apostle speaks of all sinne that is opposed to legal righteousnesse and there is no sinne so small but it is a breach of the Law of God For of every idle word that a man shall speak he shall give an account at the day of judgement Mat. 12. 36. What is lesse then an idle word and yet that doth in its own nature deserve wrath By all these things it appeares that a man may be spiritually 〈…〉 thief nor drunkard c. 4. Yet may a person gather evideners of grace from his acting against sinne in some cases David argues so Ps 18. 23. And therefore for the winding up of this point I shall lay down some Rules whereby a person may know whether his acting against sinne be from a principle of saving grace or meerly from common restraint 1. He that forbears sinne from a principle of true grace doth act from the Authority and declaration of anaked truth When the immediate declaration of Gods Will in his Word
communion with God The heart is made more active in all holinesse whereas carnal security deads the heart It s a heart-ruling peace Col. 3. 15. A heart-keeping peace Phil. 4. 7. 3. True peace continues even in outward trouble Outward troubles dash carnal security not true peace unless God hide his face in trouble Joh. 16. 33. This is the sixth Rule 7. The seventh false Rule Comparing a mans selfe with others Very many do build much upon this foundation They judge 〈…〉 be in a healthful estate because they 〈…〉 sick as other men They see abundance 〈…〉 then they are and therefore they conclude all is well with themselves This was the Pharisees case God I thank thee that I am not as other men are Luke 18. 11. This is a general common case I have two things to say about this Head First 'T is a great mercy that thou doest in any degree or measure exceed any of the sonnes of men As we are bound to blesse God that others do go beyond us so 't is our duty heartily to blesse God that he hath made us in any degree better then the vilest of men And we have great reason so to do in foure respects 1. Because our nature is as bad as the nature of the worst man Original corruption as it doth abide in all so it is equal in all No man is better then another by nature The image of the old Adam is by nature as deep and as black and broad in every one of our soules as it was in the soule of Judas Cain Saul or any of those that are at this day in the place of torment Psal 14. 3. They are all gone aside they are altogether become filthy The Apostle citing this place Rom. 3. 9 10 c. refers it to the natural estate of all the sonnes of Adam both Jewes and Gentiles And therefore it is that he pronounceth the Elect and regenerate as well as others to be by nature the children of wrath Eph. 2. 3. This being true it appears to be a mercy that we are in any thing better then the vilest of men Though we be not so good as many yet 't is some happinesse that we be not as vile as any 2. In a● much as a person is lesse evil thin others his p●nishment will ●e lesse then the punishment of others There are certainly degrees of torment in hell Though extensive in regard of duration there is no difference the torment of every damned creature is an eternal torment yet intensivè in regard of degree and quantity there is lesser and greater Those that question whether there be degrees of glory in heaven do hold without question that there are degrees of punishment in Hell The justice of God distributes punishment for sinne as the wages of it and therefore according to the quantity of sinne shall be the measure of punishment And the Scripture is expresse to this purpose Matth. 11. 22 24. Tyre and Sidon shall not undergo so much torment as Chorazin and Bethsaida Sodom and Gomorrah shall be inferiour in punishment to Capernaum Capernaum out-sinn'd Sodom and Gomorrah and therfore shal exceed them in degrees of punishment Now ' t●s a mercy to have any abatement of torments Though a man be shut out of Heaven yet if he have a milder punishment in hell then others it is a great mercy 3. He that is lesse evil then others dishonours God lesse then others The great evil of sin consists in this that it casts dishonour and contempt upon God Sinne is worse as it is a God-provoking thing then as it is a creature-damning thing Every act of sinne greatly dishonours God and the more acts of sin a man commits the more doth he dishonour God Now 't is a great mercy that we do not dishonour God so much as others Though it be a great unhappinesse that we do not glorifie God as much as any yet it is some happin●●●● 〈…〉 dishonour him as much as any 〈…〉 from dishonouring God by any one sinful action is in it self a greater mercy then to enjoy the greatest outward advantage in the world the dishonouring of God though it be but by one act the least that is imaginable is a greater misery then to lose all the world because the Name of God is better then all the world so to be delivered from dishonouring though but in one act is a far greater happinesse then to acquire the best outward advantage which the world hath to bestow 4. He that is lesse evill then others is delivered from some filthinesse Sinne is a great defiler 'T is the onely soul-defiler in the world The Scripture resembles it to the most filthy things To the vomit of a dog to a miry puddle You have both these in one place 2 Pet. 2. 22. To a menstruous cloth Esay 64. 6. 'T is often called filthinesse in the abstract Lam. 3. 9. Now 't is a mercy though a man be not cleane yet 't is some mercy that he is not altogether so filthy as he might be To be preserved from any one spot of this filthinesse is a very great kindnesse a kindnesse to be acknowledged with the greatest thankfulnesse This is the first conclusion Secondly It 's possible for a man to be better then others and yet to be in a very bad condition A man may be sick unto death and yet not so far spent in his body as some others are A man may have a greater estate then many hundreds and yet be no very rich man for all that So 't is for spirituals Thou mayst peradventure be neerer heaven then many hundreds are and yet ●e ●● the high-way to Hell and destruction That young man in the Gospel that came to Christ had out-stript thousands of his Neighbours When Christ told him Thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not kill thou shalt not beare false witnesse honour thy father and thy mother Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self What answer did he make All these things have I kept from my youth up Mat. 19. 20. There were millions in the world at that time that were inferiour to him and yet he was under the power of mortal diseases The greatest part of the world are in a very bad estate Our Saviour tells us that many are called but few are chosen Mat. 22. 14. The greatest part of men in the world walk in the broad way Judas Saul Jehu were better in many respects then multitudes that then lived in the world and yet every one of them sick unto death God hath no where in Scripture said that that man is in a good condition that is better then others unless those others whom he excels be in a saving regenerate condition 8. The eighth false Rule Knowledge of spiritual things Many men think themselves in a saving condition because they have attained to a good measure of knowledge in the things of God They understand the Doctrine of the Bible they are
He was one of the Wise men of his time and ye● how vilifying doth he speak of himself So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a beast before thee Agur a very intelligent good man and yet how humble is he Prov. 30. 2 3. The reason of this humbling property of knowledge is because it helps men to see their own vilenesse as their knowledge increaseth so the knowledge and sense of their own unworthinesse increaseth 2 Saving sanctified knowledge doth not abide in the head onely but in the heart Notional knowledg lies onely in the head and in the brain it hath no influence upon the heart to purifie it and purge it onely it swims in the braine But saving knowledge it doth distill and descend upon the heart it hath its chief residence in the inward man it purifies and cleanseth the soul makes it more holy then ever it was The Apostle makes purification one effect of true wisdome James 3. 17. The wisdome that is from above is first pure Notional knowledge is often a heart-corrupting knowledge but saving knowledge is ever a heart-purifying knowledge 3. Saving knowledge is a life-reforming knowledge Notional knowledge is often a life-disordering knowledge it makes men loose licentious we have two much experience of this but saving knowledge regulates the conversation He that knows spiritual things savingly desires as well to practise as to know H●s knowledge doth not please him unlesse his practise be conformable to his knowledge Very excellent is that prayer of David Psal 25. 4 5. Saving knowledge would not onely see Gods wayes but would be led in Gods wayes It 's ever practical You have such another prayer of David Psal 143. 10. Teach me to do thy will lead me into the land of uprightnesse He that can finde these properties may from his knowledge whether it be much or little argue grace otherwise meer knowledge though it be never so exact will not infallibly argue a good condition The Uses of this Point 1. How necessary is it for the Ministers of the Gospel to be frequent in the Doctrine of conviction They are under Jesus Christ spiritual Physicians whose office it is ministerially to cure the spiritual maladies of the soule One effectual meanes to do this is to endeavour to set sinne upon the conscience To discover mens spiritual estate unto their consciences that so they may be delivered from those grosse mistakes about their condition under which they are held 'T is a very hard thing to perswade men that they are sick Men are naturally apt to run away with a conceit that all is well with them therefore 't is needful to bring sinne to sight The cure is as good as done when this is done Conviction of sinne is the first work of the Spirit of God Iohn 16. 8. He is a convincing Spirit before he be a comforting Spirit You must give the Ministers of Christ leave to set sinne upon the conscience The fallow ground must be broken up before the seed of comfort be cast in A sin-convincing Ministery is most likely to be a soul-converting Ministery They 〈◊〉 discover to men their righteousnesse 〈…〉 until they have convinced them of their unrighteousnesse 2. Do not wonder that spiritual Physick is so generally contemned 'T is at first sight a very great wonder that the offers of grace and salvation should be so despised That the Word of salvation should do so little good in the world Christ is tendred life is held out in the preaching of the Gospel from day to day Wisdom cryeth without and lifts up her voice in the concourse of the City and yet men do not come in Ministers may complaine as the Prophet Esay 49. 4. What is the reason 'T is because men runne away with an opinion that they are well that their condition is good and therefore are the precious tenders of salvation so generally sleighted 3. See the reason why there is so little complaining of sinne Never more sinne never lesse spiritual complaining of sinne 'T is a great rarity to heare any soule crying out What shall I do to be saved You may heare in every corner complainings of bodily diseases one of his Gout a second of his Head a third of his Stone but very few crying out of sinne How comes this about It is because men think they have no sin they see not their diseases They think they are sound men and therefore they are quiet and make no complaints either to God or men 4. 'T is a marvellous great mercy to have a true discovery of our spiritual diseases 'T is not a happinesse to be spiritually diseased no no sinne is a misery but 't is a mercy that those that are diseased are convinced of their condition Many ●●en think they are well when they are indeed going down to the chambers of death if therefore God have so farre opened your eyes as to let you see your disease you have cause to blesse his Name Such conviction though it be not the cure of sinne yet it is the ready way to the cure of sinne It may be your sorrow after conviction is greater then it was before you are now full of fea●s and horrors which before you were free from but certainly your condition is farre safer Blesse God for the work of conviction and he will bring it on to the work of conversion Doct. 4. Jesus Christ is not a Physician to any Mat 9. 12. that think themselves spiritually whole It was the misery of the Pharisees that they dreamed themselves to be in a very healthful estate They looked upon all others as men mortally sick and upon themselves as sound men Our Saviour therefore declines them as Patients unfit for him to meddle with and applies himselfe to the poore Publicans and sinners who did see and acknowledge themselves to be sick of sinne and ready to perish Jesus Christ doth not immediately heale sinners as they are sinners but his constant general method is first to take them off that conceit that is naturally in their hearts that they are in a good estate and when he hath shewed them their sicknesse then he goes in hand with the cure The making of the heart sensible of sinne is the work of Christ as well as the healing of sinne Did not Christ give the sinner a sight of his misery he would never be able to see his misery Conviction of sinne is as truly the work of Christ ●s 〈…〉 sinne John 16. 8. Nature is a● 〈…〉 sinne as it is to heal sinne when it i● d●●●vered All that is meant in the doctrine is 〈◊〉 that Jesus Christ doth not ordinarily heale any soul til he have first delivered from the misc●no●●t of their condition and given them eys to see that it is otherwise with them then they did before imagine This is the full scope of this Doctrine and of this Text as is clear from v. 13. where our Saviour doth in plaine and expresse
Vine I shall present you with four clusters by which you may judge of the rest First the fruits of his death There are many particulars in this cluster I name but six 1. The satisfaction of Divine Justice The appeasing of Gods anger towards the Elect Esay 53. 6. Christ by his death did as perfectly satisfie the demands of justice as though God had never been offended he made full payment 2. The reconciliation of beleevers to God He hath not onely paid what justice required but he hath perfectly made agreement between God and the sin●er that now thorough Christ God is as well appeased and is become as perfect a friend to the beleever as he was to Adam i● Paradise God hath not in his heart the least gr●dge towards his person Of this the Apostle speaks Eph. 2. 14 15. and Col. 1. 21 22. 3. The working out of a compleat righteousness for the sinner Such a righteousnesse as that the sinner may with a holy boldnesse chalenge the Law of God to finde fault with it Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 5. 17 18 19. This is called in divers respects righteousnesse of God Rom. 1. 17. The righteousnesse of faith Phil. 3. 9. Rom. 4. 13. The righteousnesse of Christ Rom. 5. 18. 4. The destroying of him that had the power of death Of this you may ●eade Col. 2. 15. and Heb. 2. 14. Sa●ans supremacy over the soule is abolished and the captived soul made the Lords freeman 5. The sweetning and per●uming of the grave and the freedome of the sinner from the fear of death This fruit is mentioned by the Apostle Heb. 2. 15. 6. The killing of the power of sinne Christ by dying for sinne slew sinne so as that it can never damne any of the Elect. Of this you m●y read Rom. 6. 4 6. Secondly the ●ruits of his resurrection These are many I shall set a few before you these foure 1. Spiritual vivifi●ntion The soule of a beleever is raised up and empowred to walk in ●●●●nesse of life This the Apostle applieth principally to the resu●●● 〈…〉 2. 12 13. You being de●● i● 〈…〉 He ●ath quick●ed together 〈…〉 2. An assured evidence 〈…〉 from sinne This the Apostle 〈…〉 resurrection of Christ Rom. 4. 25. He was 〈◊〉 again for our justification The resurrection of Christ from the grave is a full proof that all the debt is paid the discharge of the prisoner is a cleare testimony of the discharge of the debt The Prophet puts them together Esay 53. 8. He was taken from prison and from judgement And hence the Apostle argues against those that deny the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 17. If Christ be not raised we are yet in our sinnes 3. An Argument of the resurrection of our bodies at the last day If the Head be raised the body shall not lie for ever in the grave the Resurrection of Christ is a pledge of ours as the first fruits were unto the Jewes a pledge of the ensuing harvest The Apostle alludes to that 1 Cor. 15. 20. And therefore the Apostle saith that Beleevers are raised up together with Christ Ephes 2. 6. They did rise in their representative when Christ was raised 4. The Confirmation of our hope of heaven This fruit of Christs Resurrection the Apostle sets down 1 Pet. 1. 3. We are begotten againe to a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead The Doctrine of Christs Resurrection is the nourishment of the grace of Hope Thirdly The fruits of his Ascension This is a very rich cluster I shall name a few these five 1. Leading captivity captive The Apostle mentions this Eph. 4. 8. By ●eturning to he●ven from whence he came he did publickly ●ar●y his spoile with him he did declare that ●ll the enemies of our salvation were perfectly brought under As great Conquerours when they have subdued their enemies do lead captive those whom they have overcome so Christ the great Captaine of our salvation did by his Ascension let his people see that their spiritual enemies were all eternally vanquished 2. The conferring of M●nisterial gifts yea of the office of Ministery on his Church Of this the Apostle speaks Eph. 4 8. The Ministery of the Church is a fruit of Christs Ascension And t is as possible to pull him out of Heaven as to destroy that which he so solemnly settled at his Ascension 3. The more ple●tiful effusion of his Spirit upon his Church Of this fruit of his Ascension our Saviour speaks John 16 7. If I go not away the Comforter will not come but if I go away I will send him Christ when he departed powred forth his Spirit in greater plenty then ever it was before to supply the want of his bodily presence And then 4. Preparations of Mansions for his members This fruit is mentioned John 14. 3. As a man when he hath espoused a wife provides a house for her abode against the day of marriage so Christ having espoused the Church goes to heaven before-hand to make all things ready for their entertainment against the marriage day 5. An assured evidence of their corporal As●ension Christ ascended and 〈…〉 as the fore-runner of his Chur●● 〈…〉 The Apostle tells us that Christ 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not onely for ou● 〈…〉 our stead to give us an undoubted 〈…〉 that we● also shall personally entertaine the ascension of the head is the praeludium of the glorification of the members Fourthly The fruits of his Intercession These are very many I shall name these four 1. Assurance of the Application of all his benefits Whatsoever Christ purchased by his death ●e doth actually apply to the Elect by his intercession The Prophet puts them together Esay 53. ult This is one fruit of Christs intercession beleevers are sure to be put into full possession of all that which Christ hath merited for them by his blood-shed This some make to be the meaning of that Scripture John 14 3. They refer it to his intercession Christ by his satisfaction obtained for the Elect a right to heaven and by his intercession he doth actually apply it to them 2. The superseding and stopping of all Accusations made against them The Law accuseth Satan pleads the Law against beleevers and hence accuseth them Christ is interceding continually at Gods right hand to invalidate all these accusations There can no sooner come in any complaint but Christ throws it out Of this fruit of his intercession the Apostle speaks Rom. 8. 33 34. 3. Manuduction into the presence of the Father with boldnesse Christ is at Gods right hand for this very purpose that when ever a beleever hath any request to pre●er to God he may take them by the hand and bring the● to the Father with confidence This fruit of his inter●ession is set down by the Apostle Heb. 4. 14. 16. 4. Assurance of the acceptance of our weakest services This fruit of his intercession is mentioned Rev. 8. 3 4. The ascending
2. 10. To shew that this eternal 〈…〉 from him 1. He hath merited this salvation for the Elect 'T is his purchase 2. He keeps it for them and them 〈…〉 1 John 5. 11. 3. He will actually put them into full possession of it when he returnes from heaven in the latter end of the world of which he speaks John 14. 3. Thus much for the first particular namely the extent of that salvation of which Christ is said to be an Horn. He is the salvation of the Elect Privatively from all evil Positively to all good till he have brought them to heaven the place of eternal salvation 2. Why Christ is called an Horn of salvation That we may come to the full understanding of this let us consider how the word is used in Scripture Now we finde that this word doth Metaphorically denote two things especially 1. Glory and dignity So we finde it used Lam. 2. 3. where the Church complaining of the misery which had befallen her hath these expressions The Lord hath cut off in his fierce anger all the Horn of Israel That is whatsoever was glorious or excellent in Israel God hath now removed So we may see cleerly if we reade the first verse The Lord hath cast down from heaven unto earth the beauty of Israel he hath covered the daughter of Sion with a cloud c. and then it follows He hath cut off all the Horne of Israel The glory of God manifested in his appearings when he brought Israel out of Egypt is expressed by this Metaphor Hab. 3. 3 4. His glory covered the heavens c. His brightnesse was as the light He had hornes coming out of his hand c. So Psal 9● 10. My Horn saith the Psalmist shalt thou exalt like the horn of an Vnicorn that is thou shalt encrease my glory and dignity 2. Serength and Power So 't is used Lam. 2. 17. He hath set up the horn of thine Adversaries saith the Church that is he hath encreased the power and strength of thine Adversaries So when God threatens to weaken the power of Moab he doth it by this Metaphor Jerem. 48. 25. The Horn of Moab is cut off and his arme is broken The breaking of the arme doth fully expound the cutting off of the Horn. And when God promiseth to give his people power to subdue their enemies he useth this expression Micah 4. 13. Arise and thresh c. for I will make thine horne Iron Now then when Christ is called an Horn of salvation the meaning of the Holy Ghost is 1. The glory of his salvation 2. The strength of his salvation First The glory of his salvation Jesus Christ is a glorious Saviour and the salvation which he brings to his people is a glorious salvation in three respects 1. Consider the person of Christ. God raised up many hornes of salvation for his people when they were in distresse The History mentions them Neh. 9. 27. According to thy manifold mercy thou gavest them Saviours which saved them Gideon and Jepthah and Sampson c. they are called Saviours because they saved instrumentally the people of God from their enemies But they were but mean Saviours in respect of Christ his person 〈…〉 They were but men He God 〈…〉 person Though his glory was 〈…〉 eyes of carnal men yet they that had spiritual eyes did behold it John ● 14. We 〈…〉 glory the glory as of the 〈◊〉 begotten of the Father If the person of Christ be compared with the persons of other saviours it will appeare that he is a glorious Saviour All other horns of salvation were but wooden horns Christ is a golden Horn of salvation 2. Consider the nature of the salvation it self 'T is spiritual salvation 't is eternal salvation All those hornes of salvation which were raised up in sundry ages for the defence of the Church were but horns of outward salvation and of temporary salvation They saved onely the outward man and that neither but for a time The Church was in as much peril after they had wrought salvation for them as ever they were before When Gideon was dead the children of Israel fell into as great danger as they were in before So after the death of Jepthah and after the death of Sampson they were overwhelmed with as great hazards as before as you may reade in the story in the book of Judges But now Christ is a Horn of salvation to their soules as well as to their bodies He saves them from their spiritual enemies Sinne Satan as well as from men He saves them from the wrath to come 1 Thes 1. 10. And then he saves them for ever The Church never can be never will be in that danger again as they were before this Horn of salvation was raised He hath for ever perfected them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. 3. Consider the glorious manner of the working of this salvation Never any salvation so glorious at this There are three things in it 1 He saved the Elect by his own power The power by which all other hornes of salvation delivered the Church was by a power one of themselves the strength they had was none of their own but the power by which Christ saved and still saves his Church is from himselfe the Divinity impowered the Humanity Psal 98. 1. His own right hand and his own holy Arme hath gotten him the victory 2 He saved the Elect solely Other horns of salvation had the concurrence of many besides themselves Gideon and Jepthah and Sampson c. They blew the trumpet and gathered multitudes to assist them in the battels which they fought for the salvation of the Church All Israel came after them But this Horn of salvation wrought the Churches deliverance alone Esay 63. 3 5. I have troden the wine-presse alone c. He had no other Horne to help him He entred the field and fought the battel alone and by himself obtained the victory 3. He saved the Church by his own death Other hornes of salvation delivered the Church by the death of the enemy Ehud slew Eglon but he himself did not die Iudges 3. 21 22. Gideon shew Zeha and Zalmunna the enemies of Israel Judges 8. 21. but he himself was not slain But now this Horn of salvation got the victory by dying his Crosse was his Conquest He triumphed over principalities and powers on the Crosse as the Apostle speaks Col. 2. 15. He subdued all the horne of the 〈…〉 of his blood 〈…〉 life his grave is our victory 〈…〉 do fully prove that Jesus 〈…〉 salvation that is a gloriou●●●lvation 〈…〉 first Secondly The strength of his 〈…〉 Christ is a strong Saviour the salvation 〈…〉 he works for his people hath strength in it He hath raised up a mighty salvation for us so some translations render this text To this agrees that of the Prophet Psal 89. 19. I have laid help upon one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the
any Saint should perish eternally God himselfe would be robbed for every Saint i● his inheritance Ephes 1. 1● The Lord Christ 5. will not suffer the Spirits Temple to fall into the eternal possession of the Devil Now the Elect are the Temple of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor 6 19. 6 Christ will not empty Heaven to fill Hell Every Saint helps to fill heaven 7 Christ will not bear a Name in vaine He will neither mock himselfe nor mock his Father nor his people Now if he should be called an Horn of salvation and not actually his Elect of salvation he would be the greatest mock that ever was in the world 2. Vse Reprehension Those are to be blamed that erect other hornes of salvation 1. The Papists they do set up their own works as a horne of salvation at least they joyne works and Christ together as con-causes of salvation the Scripture layes the whole merit on Christ they lay a part of it on works Greater dishonour then this cannot be done to Christ If he be of himselfe sufficient what needs the addition of other things but he is sufficient Heb. 1. 3. chap. 7. 25. Hear what the Scripture saith concerning those that look for salvation by works Gal. 5. 4. As many as seek to be justified by the Law are fallen from grace How did it fall out with Israel that followed after the Law of works the Apostle will tell you Rom. 9. 30 31 32. Yea I shall adde this Jesus Christ will be a horne of destruction to those who will not make him the sole horn of Salvation 2. Much like to these are many ignorant Protestants who think to be saved by their duties by their prayers and by their repentan●● 〈◊〉 men should consider that Christ must 〈◊〉 them from the guilt of all their duties as well as from the guilt of their sinnes Our holiest services have a mixture of unholinesse in them Domine lava lachrymas was Austins prayer And it must be ours The filth of our holy things must be expiated by Christ 't is thorough him that they are accepted You may read this Gospel in the Ceremonial Law Exod. 28. 36 37. The holy services we do are not accepted because of any worth that is in us or them but because of the engraved plate which is upon the forehead of Christ 3. Vse Exhortation 1. This should provoke all sinners to close with Christ The great work of the Ministery is to bring Christ and the soule together They are the friends of the Bridgroome and it 's their office to woo sinners to come in to Christ Here is encouragement enough in this text He is a horn of salvation a horn of Gods raising flie to him for salvation salvation is to be had in Christ salvation is to be had no where else Acts 4. 12. Under the Law offenders did flie to the hornes of the Altar 1 Kings 2. 28. He that flies to the hornes of this Altar shall be sure to be safe Onely two things must be observed 1 All sinne must be cast away The wicked man must forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts Esay 55. 7. Jesus Christ will not be a horn of salvation to an impenitent sinner He came not to save men in their sinnes but to save them from their sins Mat. 1. 21. 2 Christs own termes must be embraced Christ came not to save men upon any termes but upon his own termes Now the termes of the Gospel are A voluntary resignation of our solvet to be at Christs disposing To do his Will to submit to his Scepter The soul must say as Saul did to Christ Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9. 6. That soul that doth cast away sinne by repentance and surrenders himself to Christ to be in all things ruled by him shall whatever his condition hath been before finde Christ an horn of salvation to him Do not say my sinnes are great c. The greatest sinne thou didst ever commit is thy so long standing out against Christ John 3. 19. Murther Adultery are great sins but the souls refusal to come in to Christ is a greater sinne those are sinnes onely against the Law this is a sinne against the Gospel this is a sin against the Remedy this is a sinne that bindes and continues the guilt of all thy other sinnes upon the conscience He that doth not close with Christ saith one of these things either that he hath no need of Christ or else that Christ is not able to save him 2. This teacheth Gods people whither to go when their salvation is endangered Sometimes Satan by hot temptations sometimes corruption by its violent out-breakings do so exceedingly prevaile upon the servants of God as that in their apprehension their salvation is in a great hazard they feare the Crown will be pluckt away from them God lets them come into such jeopardy that they may exercise all their graces and thrive the faster They pray they watch yet Satan gets ground sinne overpowereth them so that the● 〈…〉 to conclude that the hope of 〈…〉 In such case your onely refuge must be to 〈◊〉 is horn of salvation David when sinne was 〈◊〉 hard for him goes to God Psal 65. 3. We must flie to this horn and by his strength defend our selves and vanquish our enemies There are several branches of this Horn which must be improved at such a time His Death his Resurrection his Ascension his Intercession All his Attributes all his Promises these are several little hornes growing out of this great Horne This Horn will give you strength to overcome this Horne will keep what he hath purchased for you He hath pushed down Satan sinne the world already and if they get head againe he can easily subdue them He is not onely the Horn of your salvation but the Captain of your salvation Heb. 2. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It was his free-will at first to undertake it but having undertaken it 't is his office to perfect it When salvation is at a hazard go to him fight in his Name and he will give you victory 3. Blesse the Father for Jesus Christ This holy man that pend this song he begins it with praises Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for he hath visited and redeemed his people and hath raised up an horne of salvation Never think of a horn of salvation but have in your hearts and mouths a Benedictus Dominus If every thought of heart were a rapture we could never sufficiently extol the love of God in raising up Christ for us Especially if he have made Christ an horn of salvation to us in particular What storms did Christ go thorough what deeps did he wade over that he might be to us an Horne of salvation He that is not thankful for Christ can be truly thankful for nothing When God gave Christ he gave all Naturallists speak much of the Unicorns horn Christ is the true Unicorn 4. Do
both thee and them How unable is that to expiate sin which doth it selfe stand in need of expiation 3. The Popish purgatory is also a direct despising of this fountaine it reproaches Christs purgatory as if it were not sufficient contrary to Heb. 1. 3. 3. The Socinians despise this fountaine in that they deny Christ to be a price for sinne They say Christ did not suffer vice nost●â in our stead but onely commodo nostro for our profit to be as an example to us We deny not but that Christ by his sufferings hath left us an example of patient sufferings The Apostle is expresse for this 1 Pet. 2. 21. but this was but an inferior and lesse principal end of his sufferings We have benefit by Pauls death and all other Saints but the principal end was to be a propitiation for sinne Therefore he is called a ransome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 2. 6. A counterprize because the end of his sufferings was to satisfie the justice of God for our sins The Apostle saith That he himself bare our sinnes in his body on the crosse and by his stripes we are healed 1 Pet. 2. 24. If Christ did not suffer in our stead as well as in our nature we must suffer and satisfie for our selves God will have satisfaction but the Scripture saith and let us for our comfort beleeve it That he was wounded for our sinnes he was br●●●sed for our offences the chastisemen● of our peace was on him and that God hath laid on him the iniquity of us ●ll Esay 53. 5 6. 4. All unbleevers that make no use of this f●untain are guilty of despising it Though men do not with the Jews wash in the blood of bulls or with Papists make other expiatories either of the Masse or Purgatory nor with Socinians deny the satisfaction of his blood yet if we reject the ●enders of grace in and through his blood made in the Gospel we do despise it as much as they The Prophet makes not beleeving in Christ and despising of Christ equivalent Esay 53. 1 3. There is no medium between not beleeving and despising I have two things to say to all that despise this fountain First It is a great sinne 'T is a despising of the richest love the deepest wisdom the gloriousest grace that ever God did or could manifest to the s●nnes of men The washing away of sinne by Christs blood is the deepest plot of infinite wisdome the richest piece of unsearchable grace that ever was manifested to the sons of men 'T is that which the Angels do and shall study for ever Secondly The danger is great He that despiseth Christ despiseth cleansing All that hate me love death Prov. 8. 38. 'T is a question disputed by Divines whether God could have forgiven sinne without satisfaction Most conclude God by his absolute power might but now he hath declared himself that he will not expiate sinne any other way nor by any other meanes but by Christ whom he hath set forth to be a propitiation for sinne Rom. 3. 25. Therefore he that refuseth to wash in this fountain must of necessi●y perish in his own filthinesse Behold ye despisers saith the Apostle and wonder and perish Acts 13. 41. God himself cannot now save him that rejects Christs blood 2. Let the opening of this fountaine occasion the opening of other fountain● in all our hearts Deep calleth unto deep Psal 42. 7. There are five fountains which the consideration of the opening of this fountaine should open in the heart of every beleever 1 A fountain of love We should set this fountaine wide open both to God and Christ It was love that set open this fountain Rev. 1. 7. and it should work love in us towards him again we are commanded to love Christ We are threatned with a curse if we love him not in 1 Cor. 16. 22. The streams of this fountaine if any thing will cause the springs of love to overflow in our hearts 2. A fountain of thankfulnesse The Apostle speaking of the redemption we have by Christs blood begins with Benedictus Deus Ephes 1. 3. We are unworthy to wash in this fountaine if we do not daily render praises to God and Christ for it Ordinary thankfulnesse will not serve for such an extraordinary fountain We owe much thankfulnesse to God for the fountains of common water and much more for this fountain of Grace in the blood of Christ Sing Davids song of praise Psal 103. init Blesse the Lord O my soul and all that is within me blesse his holy Name Our hearts if it were possible and our lips too should be as full of praises as this fountain is of grace 3. A fountaine of sorrow This fountain shews our guilt We should not have wanted a fountain for sin if we had not fallen into sin We should never think on this fountaine for sinne but we should break forth into sorrow because of sin 4. A fountain of faith We can neither wash in this fountain nor go to it without faith Christ will be to us still as a fountaine sealed if we do not beleeve in him In his Name through faith in his Name whosoever beleeveth in him shall have remission of sins Acts 10. 43. This is the testimony both of Prophets and Apostles And then 5. A fountain of humility and self denyal By nature we have proud thoughts of our selves All the good which is wrought in us we arrogate to our selves This should teach us to ascribe all our purification to Christ 'T is this fountaine that hath cleansed us if we be cleansed The fountain is opened to our hands We could neither open the fountain nor come to the fountain God hath done both This is the second branch of Exhortation 3. Make daily use of this fountain Bathe your selves in it continually Though once washing be enough to purge away sin as to the maine work yet there will be need of daily purging Though we need no new sacrifice for sinne yet we need daily applications of the merit of that one sacrifice upon every miscarriage 4. When ever you see a fountaine of water think on Jesus Christ Had we spiritual hearts we might think on Christ all the day long few creatures but have some memorial of him He bears the names of his people upon his breast Should not we bear him in our heart by holy thoughts and mediations on him The more we think on him the more shall we love him and the more will he communicate his love to us This is the second Use 3. For Consolation This Doctrine is the foundation of all comfort to beleevers 1. Against that bitter fountaine which is in our hearts We have a bloody fountain in our nature which is alwayes running The droppings of this fountain def●le us defile our services Well oppose this fountain to that fountain Gods fountain is more able to cleanse then this fountain is to defile This fountain can drown thy fountain Christ is a greater cleanser then sin is a defiler Micah 7. 19. The sea of Christs blood is deep enough to drown all thy sins Though thy fountain defile thee daily yet Christs fountain can cleanse thee daily 2. Against their inability to make use of this fountain They are discouraged because of the obstructions which lie in their way This text tells you they are all done away the fountain is not ●ealed it stands wide open day and night FINIS