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A80611 Christ the fountaine of life: or, Sundry choyce sermons on part of the fift chapter of the first Epistle of St. John. Preached by that learned judicious divine, and faithfull minister of Jesus Christ, Mr. John Cotton B.D. now preacher at Boston in New-England. Published according to Order. Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1651 (1651) Wing C6418; Thomason E630_1; ESTC R206444 209,049 264

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propounds a third motive in these words taken from the benefit which by beleeving on Christ we shall in some measure be enabled and made capable of bestowing the like blessing upon our brethren and that by our prayers If such a man should see his Brother sin a sinne which is not unto death he shall aske and he shall give him life As an instrument God at his request shall give him life God will make him an instrument of conveying speciall favour to such a man First the words containe three parts First a promise of obtaining life for such of our brethren as we shall see sinne not unto death and shall aske life for him Secondly an acception from this generall promise he would have it understood of some speciall transgression of them that sinne not unto death he would be so understood and would not inlarge this promise so farre as that a faithful man by his prayers shal obtaine pardon of sinne for such as sin unto death but not for that that is the onely caution that he gives least this promise be taken to extend too far Thirdly A prevention of an objection or doubt that might hence arise For might some man say All unrighteousnesse is sinne and every sinne is a sinne to death and the wages of every sinne is death Rom. 6. ult And therefore if the promise extend only thus farre to procure peace and pardon for such as sinne not unto death then either you must grant some veniall sins or else this promise is of none effect for if every sin be mortall and you onely promise pardon of sin to such as is not unto death and no man sins but it is unto death this promise is of none effect Iohn Answers to this Objection vers 17. and saith though all unrighteousnosse be sin yet there is a sin that is not unto death It is true the deserved wages of al unrighteousnes is unto death but there is a sin that is not unto death not that there is any sin which doth not deserve death but not that which doth undoubtedly cut off a man from all hopes of life but notwithstanding that sin he may be converted As sometimes our Saviour said of the sicknesse of Lazarus he is sick but not irrecoverable Iohn 11.4 So that the meaning of the Holy ghost is that there is a finne unto death which doth not onely kil the soule but irrecoverably out of which there is no hope of recovery or salvation and that sin they must forbear to pray for This promise thus opened will afford us three notes First That a faithfull Christian or which is all one a beleever on the name of Christ is not to hide his eyes from observing and discerning the sinnes and slips of their brethren If any man see his brother sinne a sin which is not unto death which he cannot see if he neglect to observe them Secondly A faithfull Christian discerning the sinne of his brother is to pray for him Let him aske when he sees him sin not unto death Thirdly A faithfull man praying unto Christ for the sinne of his brother shall obtaine life at Gods hand for him pardon and peace and grace for him For the first of these Doct. A faithfull beleever is not to hide his eyes from observing the sinnes and failings of his brethren If any man see his brother sinne a sinne he must observe him else he cannot see him Gal. 2.14 When I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth of the Gospel c. he observed them and discerned their course hee turned not his eyes from beholding it but he did take notice of it Heb. 3.12 13. Take heed least there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeleefe in departing from the living God take heed hee doth not speak of himselfe onely though that principally but least there be in any of you an evil heart of unbeleefe that is not only for every man to take heed to himselfe but to his brethren also as appears by the following verse implying that a man should not only take heed to himself but as much as in him lyes take heed to his brethren And if you should aske how should I prevent another man from having an evill heart of unbeleefe he tells you how By exhorting one another daily while it is called to day looke to your selves and also to your brethren and shew your care of them by stirring them up daily And this is that the Apostle speakes of in Hebr. 10.24 Let us consider one another and provoke one another to love and good workes see therefore and observe one another and see where any thing is amisse and stir up one another to every holy performance Reas 1. It is first taken from the love we owe them Secondly from the love we owe our selves First The love we owe to our brethren God requires our love to our brethren yea towards our enemies Oxe or Asse we should not see one of them fall under their burden or goe astray and hide our face from them Deut. 22.24 If you should see the beast of your enemy to sink down you shall not passe by him and let him alone but you shall raise him up from under his burthen Now if God require so much love to our beasts and that to the beasts of our enemy how much more doth God require this love to our brethren that if we see them going out of the way we should call them back againe if we see them to sinke under the burthen of sinne not there to let them lye but though we could finde in our hearts there to let them lye yet we ought not so to satisfie our selves but to looke unto our brethren in such a case and doe the best we can to recover them from going astray And in respect of our selves this benefit we our selves shall have we shall learne a more holy feare of the Lord and have a more just jealousie over our selves we shall keep the better watch over our selves when we see our brethren fall before us Rom. 11.12 Be not high minded but feare to shew you that when we see other men through unbeleefe and corruption fall into any sinne we ought to benefit our selves thereby not to be high minded upon this occasion to blesse our selves and we thanke God it is not with us as it is with other men we are not such and such as these Publicans are wont to be but feare we in such a case the faylings of others should be the feares of Gods people the more they see others fall the more should they suspect their owne aptnesse to faile in the like kinde If such things doe befall the greene tree such as are full of the Oyntment of the Holy one how easily may the dry stubble kindle so that what out of respect to learne the more to watch our selves and out of compassion to our Brethren to restore them what by seasonable admonition Levit.
of his hands upon any Tongues might have been given and Sicknesses healed he might have grown mighty in the world by that trade Act 8.18 19. And Balaam he was somewhat more upright in his desire then Simon Magus was one would thinke that he had sought after Christ for he wished not for any temporall thing in this world only that he might have a comfortable end he would feather his nest with Immortality and invest himselfe with the Robes of incorruption and such kinde of other glory as the Saints in light doe partake of but it was no more his desire then the other to desire Christ for himselfe but only a blessed end that he might be translated into immortality and glory and so might be kept from fellowship with those Devils and evil Spirits he had been acquainted with all his life long that he might not have fellowship with them when he departed hence but did not desire Christ for himselfe and therefore whatever gift he had as he had a notable spirit of Prophesie as the Spirit then came upon him speaking of the marvellous blessings reserved for Gods people yet notwithstanding he never sought Christ in any of them and therefore though he might have some glimpse of the Vision of God yet of Christ he had none whereas there is no true Christian that doth most esteeme the having of Christ but doth not only seeke Christ without respect of Loaves or Money or of a quiet Conscience in time of death but even in the very time of this life when he seekes after the Ordinances of God in this life there to live according to God and to finde pardon of sinne and peace of conscience and subduing of his lusts and strength of grace and power of godlinesse yet even in seeking the very Ordinances of God out of which these are not to be found yet in seeking of these he doth not so much seeke these or any blessing they doe afford as the finding Christ in them the story is notable and famous in 2 Sam. 15.25 26 27. When David fled from Jerusalem the Priests and Levites carried the Arke after him and when David saw them overtake him with the Arke of Gods presence in the enjoyment whereof stood the life of his life the assurance of the pardon of his sinne the assurance and presence of Gods favour strengthening of his spirit in grace and subduing his lusts yet saith he Carry it back againe to Jerusalem if I shall finde favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me backe againe and shew me both it and his habitation but if he thus say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him doe to me as seemeth good to him He would not wrong himselfe nor doe the Church of God so much prejudice as to wrong God and his Sacrifice they were not to offer sacrifice elsewhere nor could they finde any solemne presence of God any where but there there were they all to meet and it was the place where God had put his name and he considering that he could not have the Arke with him but Gods Name should be dishonoured and the Church of God would finde much prejudice with the losse of Gods Arke and therefore rather then God should be dishonoured and the people discouraged and prejudiced by the want of it he would send it back againe and is content to loose outward blessings his care was not so much about outward things his chiefest care was if he might have had his wish that he might all his time dwell in the house of the Lord Psal 23.4 and oh that he might be but a doore-keeper in this house rather then to rest in the tabernacle of wickednesse but yet when he could not have this great blessing but with dishonour to God and prejudice to the Church of God he rather layes downe the comfort that he might have from Gods Ordinances and the help he might have from them and those helps were very great as pardon of sinne and peace of conscience growth in grace subduing of lusts and establishment of his heart in assurance of his election and vocation yet he is content to let them all goe that he might have what he hath without sinne to himselfe and dishonour to God or wrong to the Church and this is a notable sign of a mans integrity and uprightnesse of heart he would not have any thing whereby God might have dishonour he would not have the Ordinances with the Churches losse but rather sit out and shift for himselfe as wel as he could and would adventure the losse of them all rather then he wil stand to contend for them with the losse of Christ himselfe And this kinde of frame of spirit was in Moses he intreates God that he would not destroy the Israelites in the Wildernesse least his name should be dishonoured but rather blot his name out of the Booke of Life then cut them all off Exod. 32.32 Such is the uprightnesse of the frame of the heart of a Childe of God that he desires not Spirituall blessings singly for himselfe not for the peace of his owne Conscience nor for the subduing of his lusts nor for the strengthening of his grace further then may stand with the glory of God and above all things else he seekes the honour of God the comming of his Kingdome and the doing of his will and if these concur not in his way he would rather loose them then dishonour Christ by having of them he hath a singlenesse of heart in seeking spirituall blessings he seekes them not for his owne ends as you see in Davids desire Psal 63.1 2 3. My soule thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee to see thy power and thy glory as I have seene thee in the Sanctuary because thy loving kindnesse is better then life therefore my lips shall praise thee He desires not there the injoyment of the presence of God or the subduing of his lusts that he might live at more ease and have more comfort though that be a lawfull end but he would see the power of Christ more magnified in him he would see a mighty increase of the grace of God in him not that he might be more excellent then his neighbours more eminent in gifts and so be better then others or so esteemed but he desires that all his lusts may be swallowed up and that the life of Christ might more mightily over-rule and over-sway him and dwell mightily in him that he might not live after his owne wil nor to himselfe nor would he live by the graces of the Spirit in him but the life that he would live is by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 that Christ and his life in him might worke all his workes in him and for him and in that at any time he desires death it is not that he might be freed from evil and misery but that hee might be dissolved and be with Christ
a spirit of liberty to have the heart set free from all feares it is the summe of all security he hath redeemed us That we might serve him without feare all the dayes of our lives Luk. 1.74 75.78 We are free from feare of Death and Hell and of the World and we doe not feare what flesh can doe unto us Psal 3.5 6. his meaning is That the feares of men should not breake his sleep but he would walke in a child-like confidence before God and man and he would lye him downe quietly and sleepe securely though ten thousand had compassed him round about and the like you read Psal 56.3 What time I am afraid I will trust in thee And vers 11. In God will I put my trust I will not be afraid what man can doe unto me It is an usuall phrase with David and the usuall frame of the spirits of Gods people and this kinde of holy tranquillity of heart and liberty to walk with even nesse and comfort of soule against all the feares of this and another world this kinde of inward liberty from all feare Naturall property of a son is the naturall property of a Sonne a sonne never greatly feares ill measures from his Father all his care is to approve himselfe to his Fathers will and then he knowes his Fathers care is more for his owne provision and protection then his owne can be and if at any time he fall short of doing his Fathers will he makes his peace with his father upon as good termes as he can and there he rests but this is his fathers will and you need not possesse him of that and if he be a sonne he will looke for protection from his father A childe of God knowes his heavenly Father will support him and he feares not what sinne and Hell and the Grave and Death can doe unto him he feares not persecution nor sword nor famine the Lord is with him and he feares none of them I am perswaded saith Paul that in all these we are more then conquerours Rom. 8.37 38. this is the liberty of the spirit of a sonne Now as there is by the Spirit in the heart of the Childe of God liberty from all feare of sinne Liberty from power of sin so he hath liberty from all the power and dominion of sinne he is not subject to the dominion and bondage of sinne sinne hath not that power over him as to carry him captive to it but he walkes at liberty Psal 119. and therefore at liberty because he is not under the law but under grace Rom. 6.14 And notable is that speech in Chap. 8.2 The law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death The spirit of life viz. That spirit of life which hath a legall power in it a power like a law and hath a ruling power over me as the law hath and in both these respects called A Law of God A kinde of spirituall life because there is a lively spirit in him And this law of the Spirituall life of Grace hath freed me set me at liberty from the law and trade of sinne and of death sinne and death set him a course and trade which this Law of the Spirit of life hath set him free from so as that he is but a bungler in sin now not now learned in the law of sinne as sometimes he hath been but the Law of the Spirit of life hath freed him from the skill of sinne and from the command of sinne the law of sinne hath had a soveraigne power over him but now he is freed from the act and trade of sinne and now he walkes at liberty even from the dominion and usurpation of sinne time hath been when nothing would withhold him and he could have followed evil company and unlawfull games they were as lawfull to him as to any and he had no power to resist them but now the Law of the Spirit of life hath helped him against them all this is another part of the spirit of liberty a liberty from the bondage and dominion of sinne and it is a marvellous comfortable liberty indeed many a vallourous spirited man hath so little feare of death that he rushes upon the Pikes as the Horse into the Battell as if it were their meat and drinke but yet he wants this liberty he is not at liberty from feare of danger by the redemption of the Lord Jesus Christ but as Aristotle saith valiant because ignorant of the danger And besides such a naturall man though he be of a magnanimous spirit in respect of fear of danger yet such a man is often captivated of many base lusts and sinfull courses and is not able to resist ill counsell nor ill company whereas a godly man is free from all these free from the bondage and dominion of sinne and all the law of sinne he looks at it as a cobweb-law which hee may easily breake through and accordingly doth so and overcomes all his former sinfull lusts Freedome from sins Service Thirdly There is another frame of this spirit of liberty as it is the Spirit of the Sonne it frees us from the service of men 1 Cor. 7.23 Not that it forbids civill subjection not so to make men free but if God have called you a servant live as a servant 1 Cor. 7.12 to 20. but use your liberty the rather if you can but if you must needs be a servant then know that he that is a servant is the Lords free man but be not ye the servants of men that is though you owe and doe your bodily service to men yet towards God walk at liberty and if thy labour be great and thy reward little yet doe thy service and looke for more wages at the hand of Christ Col. 3.23 then from men in serving men serve Christ and therefore goe about your Masters service not with eye service but in singlenesse of heart serving the Lord and not men in serving of men they do faithfull and diligent service to the Lord and therefore they do it willingly and not grudgingly but in much quietnesse of spirit and are more free for Christian duties and have more quiet time for seeking God then ever after 1 Cor. 7.22 He that is married careth for the things of the world And it is true he that is most free is but a servant to Christ but a free servant though But he that is a servant is the Lords free-man the meaning is not only to doe the worke of his owne service with a free spirit but he is not onely a free man when he is most bound but then hee goes about the service of God with much more liberty of spirit then when he is his own man It is oft times wonder to see servants being called what care they will have of Christian dutyes what time they will steal to call upon God and to examin
Arts and Sciences whence is their knowledge but from their observation of many experiences Phisitians know it and they therefore set it downe in their bookes they know it is so Things that we gather from sence and experience we are said to have the knowledge of now this experience doth not only give us confidence but knowledge for by the unction that we have received we doe know the love of God that passeth knowledge Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith we come to know the love of God towards us Eph. 3.17.19 There is not any thing that concernes the love of God towards us but the Spirit of God dwelling in our hearts by faith it comes to passe that we are able to comprehend the height and depth length and breadth of the love of God towards us This Spirit of God in our hearts gives us sensible experience and knowledge of Gods love to us of his attonement and grace to us our Consciences that had hels in them before all such darksome evils are now vanisht and scattered and we know that sensibly we had power given us to pray and to beleeve that our prayers are granted and can wait upon God and feare God and make conscience of obeying his will Now this Spirit of prayer that discovers these things plainly to our inward man the sence and experience of it makes a Christian able to know what God hath done for him and makes him able to beleeve what God hath promised him and thus now when we aske any thing according to Gods will he doth not only say It is well said but he takes a course to answer our requests we have certaine grounds to move us in what we aske and the ends of our requests are right Now God considers not alwaies so much the letter of our prayers as the grounds and ends of them the scope we ayme at and God will so accordingly answer us Vse 1. Let it be first a ground of encouragement to every Christian soule that beleeves in the name of Jesus Christ trust not in your owne good parts and good gifts if any such things increase set not your hearts upon them trust not in any worldly blessing but beleeve on the name of Christ And therefore that you may beleeve humble your soules before him in regard of your sins and pray heartily in the faith of Christ And why so The ground is in the text you shall not only be confident and assured of your salvation which is a great mercy of God to my soule and a greater then all the whole Church of Rome would grant they may goe to Rome and from thence to Jerusalem and from one place to another to have sought for pardon of sin and yet not so much comfort promised them that after all this they shall finde it but in the end to Purgatory they must goe and that is as ill as Hell fire say they save only in durance and this is all the helpe they have they might whip and scourge themselves and give all their goods away to the poore and themselves goe in sackcloth and ashes all their dayes and when all comes to all they must not be sure of any mercy or favour from God which to beleeve would be Hereticall presumption but they must notwithstanding all this rest in Hell fire till the day of Judgement unlesse they will be at cost to purchase freedome from it and which is strange though they would not suffer them to beleeve a release by Christs pardon yet upon the Popes pardon they might have hope and so they take more pains for an uncertainty then we for certainty and knowledge but you shall not only attaine certainty of salvation but certainty of the granting of all your requests no peace to the peace of a Beleever and therefore lay aside all your confidence in the world but be confident in the name of the Lord Jesus and be certaine of Gods favour and goodnesse to you in him and then here is such blessings as will keep a mans heart warme in the worst houres Vse 2. To teach such as beleeve on the name of the Lord Jesus how you may come to be confident and certaine of the hearing and granting your petitions How may wee come to that Hast thou good evidence to thy soule of thy Adoption that God is thy Father then meditate well upon this point that Christ is thy Advocate to make intercession and Attonement for thee in case thou hast displeased thy heavenly Father These two things will much prevaile they be strong helps to a weake faith and then consider what unction thou hast received and look up to God that he would give thee a spirit of prayer to pray feelingly and fervently and humbly before him and then labour for a spirit of faith which if God give thee so much faith as to perswade thee thy requests are heard and to wrastle against discouragements and that the spirit of faith doth worke in thee grace to hope and waite upon God and withall an holy feare of his name and obedience to walke obediently in doing his will and patiently to suffer his will under his hand and observe how the Spirit speakes evidently in this and that kinde and it will be a notable means to helpe thee to grow confident and certaine that all thy prayers are heard Now many a Christian soule falls short of this he considers not the Attonement of Christ in his prayer but many times thus stands the case with them there is much desolutenesse in their lives and loosenesse and fearlesnesse in their hearts before God rejoyce not with trembling God sees his Servants loose in their obedience and when disobedient they seek not to Christ for Attonement whence it is that many times they are so full of doubts Vse 3. Of much consolation to all those that beleeve on the name of the Lord Jesus and make use of these blessed meanes this is our confidence that whatsoever petitions we aske he heareth us and we know it See how comfortable a Christians estate is he growes certaine not only of his owne salvation but he is certaine of the hearing and granting of all his petitions if he can but pray well he makes account all is well let his distresses be what they will be SERMON XVI 1 JOHN 5.16 17. If any man see his brother sinne a sinne which is not unto death he shall aske and he shall give him life for them that sinne not unto death There is a sinne unto death I doe not say that he shall pray for it THese words containe a third motive to encourage us unto that duty which is the maine scope of this Epistle to wit to beleeve on the name of the Sonne of God whereto the Apostle exhorts us vers 13. and propounds first this motive to wit A blessed confidence of the hearing of all our petitions Secondly a certaine knowledge verified that he not only heares but grants our desires Now he
his Son to whom this eternall life is communicated and that is to all such as to whom the Son is communicated amplified by the contrary He that hath not the Son hath not life Doctrine According to or upon our having or not having of Christ depends our having or not having of life The note is of speciall weight in our Christian experience and therefore let us take so much the more care in opening of it He that findeth me which is all one with hee that hath me he hath life Prov. 8.34 but he that is estranged from me he loveth death ver 36. So that finde Christ and finde life Finde him not but be estranged from him and finde death So Eph. 2.12 In times past ye were without Christ being aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel strangers from the Covenant of promise having no hope and without God in the world and Eph. 4.18.19 There he speakes of some that were alienated from the life of God but in ver 20. Ye have not so learned Christ if so be you have been taught by him as the truth is in Jesus For further clearing of this point let me shew you first the Reasons upon which it depends and then the uses of it Creatures broken Sisterns without Christ Reason 1. For the first The first reason arises from the insufficiency of all the body of the creature to give us life without Christ Heb. 10.1.4 It is not possible that the blood of bulls and goats should cleanse the conscience from sinne They are not a valuable recompence to God for the transgressions we have done by our transgressions we had deserved death for which the death of the beasts cannot make recompence Men cannot redeem themselves And besides should we dye for our sinnes our selves our death would not free us from the punishment for we are not able to overcome death but should for ever sinke under it If there had been a Law that could have given us life then wee might have lived by it but there is no such Law as can give us spirituall life David speakes in the name of Christ Psal 22.29 It is the speech of our Saviour or of David in his name No Man can keepe alive his owne soule It is beyond the power of the creature to keep alive his own soule no not so much as naturall life Psal 49.7.9 No man can give a ransome for the soule of his brother no man is able to ransome or redeem his owne life or anothers yea which is much Adam in innocency was taught to looke for the preservation of his inocent nature out of himself for to that end did God give him the tree of life Gen. 2.9 the tree of life grows not in Adam but in the Garden Now he that was to eat of the tree called the tree of life he was taught from thence that the maintenance and continuance of that life which he then lived a life of grace and glory was not to be expected from his owne strength but from something without himselfe The tree of life was a type of the Lord Jesus Christ the second person in Trinity 1 Joh. 3.4 Now if Adam could not keep alive his own soule but by that tree how much lesse Adam falne and corrupted being now become unable to keep that Law which in innocency he might have kept But more clearly see the grounds of this insufficiency in the creature to helpe it selfe The first is taken from the preciousnesse of the price of our redemption The costlinesse of it the matter of our justification is the price of our redemption and without justification no spirituall life at all Now the price of our redemption is our justification the forme of that justification is Gods accepting of it and imputing it to us but the matter of it is the price of our redemption and that is the root of all our spirituall life the price of our redemption given to God is accepted of him and by him given to us Psal 49.8 Precious is the redemption of soules it is farre beyond the power of the creature that which may be fit matter to give to God by way of satisfaction for a soule that is very precious and this was onely the obedience of Christ to the death he by suffering death for us and rising from the dead declared himselfe mightily to be the Son of God and he by his obedience to the death offered to God the price of our redemption He gave himselfe a ransome for many And this shews that it had beene impossible for any under the Sonne of God to have given a sufficient price for our redemption neither man nor Angels could doe it but he in giving a sufficient price for us did thereby mightily declare himselfe to be the Sonne of God he onely by his death is the matter of our justification and his rising is our life the Father himselfe it could not stand with his justice to give a price for our redemption he being the person offended but the Sonne taking upon him our nature that nature which had offended God he by this meanes made atonement betweene the Father and us and in making atonement declared himselfe mightily to be the Sonne of God none but he alone was able to tender to God such a recompence as might be a satisfaction for our sins 2. And as this is ground why there is no sufficiency in the creature to give us the life of our justification so it is also taken from the root of our sanctification and consolation for they spring both from one fountaine and that is the Spirit of Gods grace John 16.7 he is the comforter that is our sanctifier and this springs in us to everlasting life Joh. 4.14 Now he that can give a spirit of sanctification and consolation is onely the Lord Jesus Christ unlesse he goe away and send the Comforter to us he never comes If you would know who it is that can give this water of life you shal read Joh. 4.10 that it is only the Lord Jesus he it is only that goes to the Father and sends his Spirit of grace into our hearts unlesse he go to heaven and send it downe from heaven to us it is not given So that he being the root of the Spirit of consolation of sanctification all this life of consolation sanctification springing from the Spirit as from a fountain and Christ being he that sets open this fountain Zac. 1.13 Therefore it is that there is an insufficiency in the creature to shed abroad such a thing as this into our hearts Act. 2 33. when he was to give a reason of the spirit of Tongues he fetches it fom the resurrection of Christ that he by his ascending into heaven did shed abroad this word which you now see and heare so that by his death he gave to God not onely the price of our redemption but prevailed with the Father to bestow upon him the Spirit to
comparison of Christ he thinkes himselfe unworthy to loose his shooe latchet No mortall man but hee may bee worthy to loose any mans shooe latchet if he be but worthy to live but this is the honour and worship of Christ that when thy soule looks upon Christ he is so highly to be preferred before him as that he thinkes himselfe not worthy to untie his shooe Now when a man is framed to these thoughts in his minde as that he looks at Christ as the chiefest of all the blessings of God as the greatest mercy that ever could befall a poor soule and in respect of Christ he looks at himselfe as an unworthy creature most unworthy of Christ most unworthy to come in his presence and much more unworthy to be made partaker of so glorious a match as the Lord Jesus is or to have his part in his body and blood the very worship of Christ in truth the having of Christ if we have such a singular esteem of him we may be sure we could never have thus prized him but that he first prized us Christians worship Christ in their minds For further opening this worship of Christ in our minds because it is of singular importance and may helpe and stay a poore Christian when his heart may be most dead and all other things fail him yet this high esteem of Christ in his mind is never wanting to an honest hearted Christian but he ever hath occasion to looke at Christ as most glorious and at himselfe in comparison of Christ as unworthy to loose his shooe latchet Moses honors the reproaches of Christ Let us therefore consider a little further of it you may the read the like gracious disposition in Moses he so prizes Christ that every thing belonging to Christ seems honourable to him he esteemed the very reproaches of Christ above all the treasures of Egypt and those are lesse then a shooe latchet Hebr. 11.26 in untying a shooe latchet there is neither shame nor pain but for a man to be reproached for Christ if any thing be base and dishonourable sure it is that For a man that was taken to be the sonne of Pharoahs daughter and for him not to be ashamed of the people of God nor of being reproached with them yea so far from being ashamed as to think it greater riches then the treasures of Egypt he was sure gone far in his esteem of Christ that man truly worships Christ that honors the reproaches of Christ above al other things But yet there is something more in it then this in this worship of Christ in our minds We honour or worship Christ in our minds when we make him the cheifest and esteem nothing more worthy to be knowne then to know the Lord Jesus Christ John 17.3 This is life eternall to know thee the onely true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent Now when the soul esteemes nothing more worth the knowing then Jesus Christ this is an honouring of him 1 Cor. 2.2 I determined not to know any thing among you save Christ and him crucified and Phil. 3 7 8 9 10. He lookes at all things as losse and drosse and dung that he might be found in Christ not having his owne righteousnesse but might know the power and vertue of his resurrection This is that which the Apostle did prize in his Judgment as more honourable and comfortable then any thing under the Sun and this was an evident signe that Paul had Christ for this is an ordinary experiment in nature no man hath any blessing Naturally men desire to know the worth of blessings but he would know the worth of it if a man have a Farme or a yoak of Oxen he will prove them Luke 14.19 a man will know aforehand if he can but when he hath it then he will prove it and truely so is it with every one that hath the Lord Jesus he is desirous to prove Christ he would know by experience what the vertue and power of his death is how it pardons his sin and mortifies his corruptions and he would know the power of his resurrection strengthening and quickning grace in him and the power of Christs ascension He that hath Christ is inquisitive to know all the vertue that is in Christ assending into the presence of his Father and sitting at the right hand of God to rule all Creatures in heaven and in earth for the Churches good and subduing our enemies and bringing us to glory in the end A man that hath Jesus Christ he is inquisitive to know all the vertue that is in Christ he thinks in his mind there is nothing better worth the knowings then to know and feel the vertue and power of Christ Jesus in his heart And this is the first part of the worship of Christ though we be yet doubtfull whether we have Christ or no Yet it is an evidence to the soul that thou hast him because thou dost worship him and so highly prize him in thy minde and if thou couldest but know him and thy part in him this is the chiefest comfort thou canst pitch thy minde upon certainly he is thy beloved since he is to thee the chiefest of ten thousand Secondly a man worships Christ Two parts of the worship of Christ is in the wil affections not only by an act of his mind but a man hath Christ likewise when he hath him in the deep affection of his heart when he deeply affects him in his heart as his chiefest good The former was an act of the Judgment and understanding this belongs to the heart will and affections Plal. 73.25 Whom have I in heaven but thee or in earth in comparison of thee and Psal 42 1● my soul pants or breathes after thee my God He was then a banished man from the congregation and it was a weary sad time to him his soul panted like a chased Deare for the rivers of water his soul was athirst for God! Oh when shall I come and appeare before him this is such a longing desire when a man wants Christ As that it is called hunger and thirst Matth. 5. such a desire as cannot be satisfied but with meeting with that which the soul doth hunger and thirst for give an hungry man a house full of gold and he is hungry still but give him meate and then you satisfy him So in this case the soul that hungers after Christ give him profit and pleasure and you give him nothing but his soul is fit to perish for want of Christ Deep measure of worshiping of Christ this is a deep worship we put upon Christ and in so affecting of him we have him when the soul hath the Lord Jesus the highest and chiefest cause of rejoycing it hath is only its having of Christ Gal. 6.14 if he have his part in Christ that is his Crown and his Portion he counts it a goodly portion his lot is falne into
forth himself to be the Son of God even then when in mans sight hee was separated from God banished from the Church so as that al men cried away with him crucifie him and al his own Disciples forsook him and not a soul acknowledged him but one poor theefe upon the crosse with him yet even then was he so gloriously magnified as that well might the Apostle say he triumphed openly upon the crosse having therein made a spoyle of Principallities and Powers Col. 2.15 Now this very estate is the estate of every child of God and so farre as hee hath the Sonne so far doth he expresse this estate in his whole conversation for an estate of humiliation great and many be the afflictions of the righteous Psalm 34.18 19. there is their debasement in the world but the Lord delivereth them out of all there is their exaltation mixed together many wayes humbled and exalted deliverances Psalm 149.4,5 The Lord will beautifie the meeke with salvation that is hee will beautifie them by their manifold deliverances Nay besides deliverances you shall finde this to be the beautifull frame of the spirits of Gods people in their estates Take it in their outward condition in the World an estate of means and affliction if he be a man of a faire outward estate and of good means in the world yet you shall see a marvellous spirit of selfe-deniall in him so as that in the middest of many worldly comforts he fits loose from them and lives besides them these are not the things that he hath set his heart upon as our Savior said to his disciples concerning the stones of the Temple so as that though God had don much for them and given them many comforts yet there is a more hidden matter in their hearts better then these things can reach unto they are not a Christians crowne and glory but he is crucified to them and they unto him Gal. 6.14 And if so be that God give him any great or eminent gifts of Spirituall grace it is strange to see how they are clad in him with a garment of Christ crucified over shadowed in selfe deniall as they said of Paul meane in outward view and speech of little or no value 2 Cor. 13.3 and yet even in this very meanness which any of them labour under in regard of want of outward things and all their meanness and lownesse of carriage and selfe-deniall of all the outward blessings and contentments they have received yet you shall see a mighty power of Christ triumphing in the basenesse and mortifiednesse of a Christian soule so as that the Apostle fitly and sutably expresses their estate Though he was crucified through weaknesse yet he liveth by the power of God for we also are weak in him but we shall also live with him by the power of God So that as it was with Christ in his estate so it is with us in our estate weake in him meaning that as Christ in his outward Man seemed to be weake and contemptible so we as it is in the Originall are weake with him but we shall live with him by the power of God so that suppose Christ be indeed weake in outward view so as he that lookes once would not looke twice at him yet when he seemes to be most weake and base then is he most powerfull and glorious and so the very death of Christ wherein he is most exposed to such infirmities as follow mans nature yet then he performes the greatest worke of our Redemption satisfies the Fathers wrath for us procures us pardon of sinne and redeemes us from the bondage of Hel and purchases for us a spirit of grace and power and truly there is a certaine kinde of conformity even in this very point between the Lord Jesus and every servant of Christ as he is weake so are we as he dyes so doe we as he is in his greatest debasements and advancements so it is with us And hence it is that ye read these Phrases in Scripture We are dead with Christ Col. 2.20 and risen with Christ Col. 3.1 and crucified with Christ Rom. 6.6 Now these be strange Phrases that Christ who is dead one thousand six hundred yeares agoe and risen againe so long since what is this which the Apostle saith we are thus dead and crucified and risen with Christ What is the intendment of his discourse The true meaning is that by the same spirit of Christ which was shed abroad into his heart above measure we are so knit unto Christ as that we are not only of the like nature with him but of like estate with Christ that as he was in this world so are we while we are in the world weake as he yea glorious as he and as he rose againe out of all contempt and reproach and persecution so doe we rise againe out of all our many and great afflictions mightily by the same power of the same Spirit of the Lord Jesus so that this is a point that inwardly flowes from this having of Christ he that hath the Sonne hath the spirit of the Sonne whereby he is made one with Christ in Nature in Offices and in his estate and this is evident in the experience of Gods servants and by testimony of the Holy Ghost in Scripture And therefore examine we our selves in this particular if we have the Son we have the spirit of the Son The second worke of the Spirit is that it is not only a spirit of union but it is also a spirit of liberty The second work of the Spirits liberty for of all the kindes of temper in a Sonne there is nothing more expresses the frame of a Sonne next to his likenesse and union with the Father then liberty doth Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 And if the Sonne have made you free then are you free indeed Joh. 8.36 It is a reall liberty if the Sonne shall give you liberty and he speakes of such a liberty as appertaines to Sons and not to Servants that may be turned out of doores but the Sonne abides in the house for ever And it is a strange kind of liberty which the children of God are advanced to by the spirit of the Son it is a phrase of much importance A spirit of liberty First liberty from the feare of sinne Liberty from feare of sinne and the feare of Hell from feare of the Grave and of all the enemies of our Salvation a freedome from feare of any of them A Servant if he offend is afraid of extremity from his Master but the Sonne walkes with more liberty Rom. 8.15 Wee have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father We looke at God as a Father and we walke before him not in feare but in liberty and therefore we are free from the feare of death to which some are all their life time subject to bondage Heb. 2.14 15. Now this is
doing and this is a great measure of liberty that a Childe of God can tell how to make an advantage of all the afflictions he meets with in this world these things doe but serve his turne and afterward he wil say he could have missed none of them so that this is a second worke of the spirit of the Sonne it is a spirit of liberty Onely take this word for a Conclusion And that is thus much Examine now and try whether you have the Son or no which you may know by your having or not having the spirit of the Son Say then have you the spirit of the Son viz. have you that spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ that makes you to be of one and the same nature with him of the same Offices and same Estate with him can you find this in truth and that with comfort and honesty you may reason this is the frame of my spirit such is the Spirit of Christ And such is the spirit of the godly and if in any thing you faile your spirit is against it do you find that you are in some measure invested with a royall spirit that you can over-come your selves and the temptations of this world and are you able to offer up spirituall sacrifice to God of prayer and praises And doe you finde a spirit of Prophesie shed abroad into you that makes you sensible of and privie to the secret paths of God Doe you finde that Christ was most glorious when he was most humbled and so are you and when you enjoy outward blessings your hearts are not puffed up with them these are not the goodly stones that your hearts and eyes are set upon but you have greater matters then these to minde then I say it is the very Spirit of Christ that makes you to dye with Christ as well as Christ to dye for you he may dye for many men but he only dyes with those that are brought on to the fellowship of his grace if a Spirit of Christ so knit you together that he is yours and you are his then you have the Sonne because you have the spirit of the Sonne because you are sonnes God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts but now if there be no proportion no conformity to Christ in holinesse and righteousnesse not patient and meek as he is And though we be not such yet we allow our selves in not being such and are ever and anon starting aside from him And if we have not his Offices nor rule over our lusts nor over the world and we can neither pray nor prophesie and shew forth no spirituall life in our lives cannot deny our selves that wee may shew forth the hidden man of the heart then consider that for the present we have not yet Christ because we have not the spirit of Christ And also if we be not yet free from the fear of death And take no care to be free from the dominion and power of sinne but sinne hath still a power over us like a law and are not yet free from the service of men but as our Masters and Governours say so it must be if we yet know not how to rule men for our own advantage we have not yet received the spirit of Christ wee cannot tell how to serve our Masters with liberty of spirit we know not how to make advantage of them SERMON VI. 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life IT now remaines that we come to shew what it is to have the Sonne by a spirit of prayer but of this we shal have further occasion to speak in the 14 15 and 16 verses and therefore we shall leave it now and speak to it then You may remember we said there was three notes to discern whether we had the Son no. The first was if we desired not Christ for his benefits but cheifly for himselfe The second was If we have received the spirit of the Sonne We now come to speake of a third signe a point more easie to be gathered then the former but though most common yet not to be neglected but being well applyed will bee of speciall use to the edification and salvation of the hearers for every truth in his place is divine and precious The third signe He that hath the Sonne hath him for his Prince And therefore the next note is this He that hath the Son he hath him not only for a Saviour but for his Lord and the Prince A point which upon sundry occasions hath been touched but now to speake of it more fully There is no man that hath the Son but as he hath him for his Saviour so he hath him for his Prince Acts 3 3● Him hath God exalted with his right hand whom they slew a Prince and a Saviour so that he that hath Christ hath him not only as a Saviour but as a Prince to whomsoever he is a Saviour to them he is also become a Prince it were a wonderfull dishonour to him to save them whom he doth not rule to save them from the power of the grave and to leave them still in their sinnes and unbroken off from their evill wayes it were much dishonor to him It is a dishonour to parents to have children and to have them untaught and unmannerly And God hath given the life blood of his owne Son to purchase us unto himselfe and therefore he would not onely save us but rule us or else we shall never have him for our Saviour So that here is two points to be opened Point 1 First Hee that hath the Sonne hath him for his Saviour Point 2 Secondly Hee that hath the Sonne hath him also for his Lord. It is an usuall saying every man would have Christ for a Saviour but rare are those that will have him for their Ruler and Governour But though the saying be true in respect of the common conceit of men yet in truth I say they are but rare Christians that wil have him for a Saviour so far off are they from desiring him as their Lord. For two things there be that goe to the having of Christ for a Saviour To have Christ for a Savior requires two things First He that will have Christ for a Saviour must look up to him for salvation in all his wayes and distresses we have other Saviours but not him if we looke for salvation else-where Esa 40.22 Look unto me all ye ends of the earth and be ye saved there is no God nor Saviour besides me therefore look to me and be ye saved So that if a man wil have God for his Savior he must look to him from one end of the earth to the other we are at the utmost corner of the earth and if we will be saved we must looke up to the Lord Jesus Christ for salvation as David looked towards the Temple at Jerusalem for salvation
thinke a dead man is able to feed upon Christ you know what God said of the Idolatrous people in old time Esa 44.11 12. Esa 44.11 explained The same saith 〈◊〉 to every naturall man He feedeth upon what upon Christ No no upon ashes why upon ashes ashes is farre from feeding upon the living God and yet truly a man feeds upon ashes every soule that feeds not upon Christ hath some Idol for his God and so falls downe to worship it some god of profit or pleasure and this is the estate of all wicked men they feed upon ashes upon ashes it seemes to me to be a borrowed speech or similitude taken from children or some women with childe that being sometimes taken with some ill humour and distemper of stomach they have an eager desire to feed upon ashes and such like dry unsavoury meat Children will be eating coales and ashes and so will sometimes women with childe so truly it is with every naturall man he is a naturall Idolater he worships something besides Gods he feeds upon ashes some dry and unsavoury and unwholsome meat which cannot profit him in the day of wrath which gives not his soule any nourishment for the soule of man is an immortall spirit and we only feed it with profit and pleasure and credit and these be but ashes bodily food The good things of this life are no more suitable to a mans soule then ashes be to a mans body and therefore Solomon so compares the estate of all the sonnes of Nature Eccles 3.21 Who knowes the spirit of a man that goes upward and the spirit of the beast that goes downeward to the earth his meaning is this he complaining of the vanity that lyes upon the sonnes of nature he speakes not in the person of an Epicure as some conceive but his meaning is Who knowes which of all the sonnes of men considers or takes it to heart that his soule goes up to any better place then the soule of a beast which of all the sons of Nature feeds his soule upon better food then the soule of a beast is fed upon Doe they not all feed as if they all went to one place and therefore upon the dust of the earth they feed turne me out the man that is in an estate of nature considers that his soule is to live for ever and therefore takes care to feed his soule to immortality this is the wofull distemper of all the sonnes of nature that we feed not upon Christ but upon the blessings of this world so long as we are without Christ all our food is upon earthly things here below there is not any power in a man by nature not any wisedome or strength in us to deliver our soules and then is not this a false course A lying vanity is not my heart deceived with this and that he is not able to aske his heart such a question am I such a foole to forget all good to my soule thus long it would deliver his soul if hee did but consider that there was a lye in the other way and he flatters himselfe in his good estate before God and considers not the truth of the thing he thinkes hee is as faire a dealing man as any of them all but his heart deceitfull and desperately wicked and so cannot see the falsehood of his way And for growing which is a third act of spiritual life a man is dead to any growth never comes to any growth in grace but he is apt to grow in evil and sin evill men and deceivers shall wax worse and worse 2 Tim. 3.13 take you any natural man and he is ever growing worse and worse ever growing of the worse hand he growes more and more unprofitable and more loose from God and estranged from the wayes of his grace and settled in the wayes of sin And this is that which the Prophet Jeremiah complaines of chap. 9.3 they proceeded from evill to worse and this is the estate of us all without Christ we grow from prodigality to covetousnesse and from wantonnes to voluptuousnes and so goe on til we come to take pleasure in all sinne though it be but for a season This is al the growth and progresse that such men make And in the fourth place for cleansing our selves from al superfluous and noysome lusts that we doe not neither can we be freed from them O Jerusalem wash thy heart from thy wickednesse how long shall thy vaine thoughts lodge within thee Jer. 4.14 Purge out all those sinful lusts God knowes the thoughts of the hearts of men are but vaine 1 Cor. 3.18 and they being vain God would have us to wash our hearts how long shal it be that we suffer these lusts to lodge within us we never cleanse our selves from these but such woful cleansing it is that if we goe about to purge them out by the motions of the spirit of grace that he casts into our hearts we think its a troublesome worke and doth crosse the tranquility and peace of our estates we thinke they are noysome and therefore if any good motion be darted into the heart in the Ministery of the Word or in the Counsell of Christian friends we are sick of it till we have cast out all those good motions againe and what ever good affection God hath been pleased to cast into us wee are not wel til we be shut of it as was the case of Ahab he comes sadly and mourning from Eliahs sharpe reproofe 1 King 21. two last verses but he could not be well at ease til he had cast it all off with putting Naboth to death and put it off with calling a Councel about going to War and so damped all the sorrow that was in his heart Let Caine have any good motion come in his heart and he wil put it off with building of Cities His sin and punishment is great Gen. 4.13 and would he not now seek to God for mercy that his soule might live no he goes out from the presence of God and from all good company and good councel and whither goes he then Into the land of Nod and there he builds Cities and calls them by such and such names and so takes off his thoughts from any good motion and extinguishes all the motions of grace And truly so stood the case with Foelix Act. 24.25 when he trembled at Pauls Sermon he would not indure to hear him any further but when he had convenient leasure he would hear him again but he never sent for him And so you shall ever find this frame in a naturall mans heart those motions which the spirit of God casts into his heart that might induce him and lead him on by the hand to better courses we are not wel til we have cast them all off Just as Paul complaines of the Jewes Act. 13.46 since you have put it away from you loe we turne to the Gentiles we purge and cast out the
motions of Gods spirit and cannot indure that any Ordinance should bring us nearer to Christ Act. 7.51 Yee have always resisted the holy ghost expelled the blessed of God that if the holy ghost but dart any good councel into their hearts they cannot indure to hear it nor entertain any motion of it but grieve and vex the holy Spirit of God and they are not well till they quench it 1 Thess 5.19 Esa 5.3 we are alive to nothing but to run away from God alive to sinne alive to doe evill but to doe well we have no understanding Jer. 4.22 Apt to purge and cleanse our selves from all good things but wholly undisposed to doe any thing that is well this is the true estate of us all Look at us as we are by nature all of us without Christ cannot put forth one act of spirituall life not one good motion to be found in such a condition And in the first place for begetting any unto grace we rather doe the quite contrary we addict our selves to beget men to become the children of Hell worse then our selves Matth. 23.15 two-fold more the children of Hell and because that may be more proper to corrupt teachers Jeremy speakes it of all the sonnes of nature and those especially that had lived a while under the meanes and were not thereby brought on to an estate of grace those whom God had kindled some fire in their hearts and whom he would have brought on to grace even these They are all grievously revolted walking with slanders they are brasse and Iron they are all corrupters Jer. 6.28 He doth not say they are all corrupted but all corrupters that is such as are not only naught themselves but they corrupt others also they make others worse for their sakes No man that sets his face to God-ward but if he come among them he is the worse for them every man is kept off the more from goodnesse by their meanes they doe not love that men should be too forward or too precise nor to keep such a puleing nor such a praying we are all by nature corrupters Gen. 6.11 All flesh had corrupted their way even every man had done it every one is the worse for us that hath to doe with us if we see but any good disposition in them to be comming on in the waies of grace we doe as much as in us lyes to quench and damp and smother them and never rest by our good wills till we make them as ill as our selves and harden their hearts from Gods feare this is the true carriage of all those who are out of Christ He that hath not the Son he hath no life no motion of spirituall life no growing up in Christ no purging out of sinfull uncleannesse and therefore now to apply this conceive thus much First It applyes it selfe against the Church of Rome Application first who maintaine that men in the state of nature have free will to lay hold upon Christ and they conceive it is upon very faire termes but I would only demand of you this question Whether when they doe lay hold on Christ as they conceive whether they have him or they have him not they will say They have not Christ till they have received him for what hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4.7 And till they have received him how shall they lay hold upon him and if not receive him they are dead men and when a man is dead what can he have by any benefit that is offered him Offer him never so largely and he can receive no benefit by it and if that any doe lay hold upon Christ were they not living when they so layed hold upon him so that when they doe lay hold upon Christ whether is it an action of life or no If not how shall they lay hold on Christ and without Christ no life A man in the state of nature neither doth good nor can he doe any good nor is he willing to doe good and therefore well doth the Apostle say It is God that workes in you both the will and the deed Phil. 2.12 13. Any thing that we doe that is good is wholly from the grace of Christ and this is just against the Papists Secondly It serves to teach us all to bemoane our owne estates or the estates of any of ours that we yet see in the gall of bitternesse lying in an estate of nature is it thy selfe or thy father or mother or thy children or servants whatever he be be he never so good a natured man if he be yet without Christ there is no life in him I say looke upon him as thy dead friend If thou didst look upon thy father and mother or children and see them lye dead before thee thou wouldest mourne bitterly for them you know what is said Zach. 12.10 As a man mournes for his first borne if our first borne or any that is neare to us dye we mourne bitterly for them and refuse to be comforted as was the case of Rachels mourning for her children and would not be comforted because they were not Matth. 2.18 they were all dead and therefore caused a bitter mourning it was the wounding and rending of her soule And may not this be the case of many a fruitfull mother many children and yet all of them dead in Gods sight not a soule living in the sight of God And is it not a farre more bitter death to be dead in sinne then to be dead in the body when it is a living soule in Gods sight then blessed are the dead that dye in the Lord for even so saith the Spirit that never spake words of falshood Revel 14.13 I say therefore if that our children live to God and have the life of grace in their hearts there is no danger of their death then thy children shall come againe to thy hearing at the resurrection of the just and thou shalt imbrace them with comfort and fill thy soule with unspeakable joy and fulnesse of glory if they dye in the favour and grace of God they shall rise to glory but if they be spiritually dead no goodnesse in the world in them no spirituall life at all no life of righteousnesse or holinesse which are the first fruits of the Spirit and of glory in this world then weep for these children and those friends that husband or wife or brother or sister weep for every soule that is in an estate of sinne and death they are as so many dead Corps you may sometimes see a whole house-full of dead creatures not one of them living to God not one of thy acquaintance not one of all thy brothers and sisters weep and mourne bitterly for them that are thus wounded with sinne and bleed deadly and gaspe for their last breath and it may be shall never finde grace from God in this world their present condition is fearefull and mourne thou for them in a godly manner that
upon them day and night and taken times to chew and digest them If thou hadst done thus then thou wouldest have beleeved more assuredly but if we be negligent in any of these kinds then wonder not if we take away bodily food we take away bodily heat take away the fuell that nourishes faith and then it must needs grow weake and infirme And therefore as you desire to grow in beleeving be diligent in these duties that you may beleeve on the name of Christ and in beleeving may beleeve much more And for you that doe not beleeve savingly whose faith will not put you in possession of eternall life though this Scripture was not so much written for your use and benefit Note this as for them that already beleeve yet since there is no meanes to come to faith but by the Word be not you wanting as ever you desire to come to that faith which accompanies salvation be not wanting diligently to heare the Word of God and conferre about it with those that beleeve already Faith comes by hearing Rom. 10.17 and it is the mighty power of God to salvation Be glad of any opportunity to heare the Word and waite at the posts of wisdomes gates Prov. 8.34 35. He that findeth me findeth life the promise is very plaine waiting daily at my gates Implying that in hearing we shall finde him and in finding Christ we shall finde life be diligent therefore to heare and when you have heard it goe home and search whether it be true or no and if you have liberty be doing this often be conferring about it as you can have any opportunity God hath sanctified these Ordinances to this end Be diligent in inquiring after wisdome after Christ in the Scripture there is a treasure lyes digge for it and you shall have it especially if with all these you joyne humble and hearty prayer to God for a blessing upon all these Ordinances for 1 Tim. 4.5 they are all sanctified by the Word and Prayer and Prov. 2.2 3. God would have you to use Prayer intreat him to open your eyes and hearts that you may beleeve and obey and that no Ordinance might be in vaine to you but might profit by them all and might grow up in beleeving SERMON XIV 1 JOHN 5.14 15. And this is the Confidence that we have in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth us And if we know that he heareth us whatsoever we aske we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him IN the former Verse the Apostle described to us the maine scope of his writing this Epistle which was partly that Beleevers might know that they did beleeve and partly that they might beleeve on the name of the Sonne of God Now in this latter end Iohn aymes at in writing this Epistle he exhorts Beleevers to imbrace it by three severall Motives in the verses following the 14 15 16. verses Motive 1 The first Motive is taken from the confidence of such as beleeve on him for salvation for the obtaining of their Petitions This is the confidence that we have in him meaning we that beleeve on his name that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth us Motive 2 Secondly Another motive or benefit that flowes from this is this That if we know he heareth us we know we have the things that we asked of him Motive 3 Thirdly here is likewise added another motive taken from the prevalency of his Prayers with God in such a point as wherein of all others we may finde this comfort and that is look as by beleeving on the name of Christ we shall finde comfort in respect of our everlasting estate so we shall finde this further benefit that if we see any Brother which hath sinned a sinne that is not unto death not a deadly sin that is not the sin against the Holy Ghost so mighty and prevalent shall our prayers be with God that in case we beleeve on the name of Christ and aske pardon of sinne for our brothers offence God will give him life so that if we beleeve on his name our prayers shall be heard and they have a prevailing power with God to obtaine at his hands the pardon of all our brothers sinnes that have not sinned unto death The Doctrines hence are these Doct. 1. First That a prayer that is made well never speeds ill Or thus A prayer that is made according to Gods will is ever granted according to our will or as the Apostle saith according to our desire vers 15. Doct. 2. Secondly Such as beleeve on the name of Christ for salvation may be confident and certaine of the hearing and granting their petitions Doct. 1. A prayer made according to Gods will shall be granted according to our will For so saith the words of the Text If we aske any thing according to his will he heareth us We praying according to Gods will shall finde acceptance according to our will Notable is that speech of encouragement and acceptance of our Saviour to the woman of Syrophenitia Matth. 15.28 O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee even as thou wilt She had prayed as Christ would according to Gods will and shee received answer according to her desire As if a man that did beleeve and had a spirit of Prayer and had learning to pray according to Gods will he might be able to carve for himselfe in the treasures of Gods goodnesse as if God would let him into the chamber of his presence of his grace and favour and bid him take what he will take for himselfe and his friends and for his brethren as he will For opening of this point observe thus much First let us see what it is to pray according to Gods will and then secondly what is the ground of the point For the first to pray according to Gods will To pray according to Gods will in two things are contained in that Phrase and yet divers things besides those are comprehended in it First when he saith according to his wil it implyes first That we pray for such things as God wills such things as are not according to his secret will for so we cannot guide our actions for secret things belong to the Lord our God but of things revealed it is according to his revealed will and it implyes that we should aske him nothing but what hee gives us Commandement to aske all that he commands us to doe as to aske that we may aske and for that we are to pray for expresly As for the glory of his Name the comming of his Kingdome and the building up of his grace in any the doing of Gods will for our daily bread c. These are the things he hath given us warrant to pray for Secondly According to Gods will this is evident That whatsoever we aske we should aske it with submission to the will of God so our Saviour