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A29515 The easiness and difficulty of the Christian religion in a sermon preach'd before the Lord Mayor, and court of Aldermen of the city of London, at Guild-Hall chappel, on Sunday May 26. 1689 / by Isaac Bringhurst ... Bringhurst, Isaac, d. 1697. 1689 (1689) Wing B4695; ESTC R14226 21,221 40

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well as St. Paul's is evident by many places of Scripture I shall name two or three 2 Cor. 3.6 The Gospel is called the Ministration of the Spirit in opposition to the Law which was but the Ministration of the Letter which signifies that by the Law of Moses there was no inward Assistance of the Spirit of God for our Assistance in Religion as there is under the Gospel for the Performance of all the Duties it requires of us and that every Christian as well as St. Paul is to know experimentally the Power of our Saviour's Resurrection or is assisted with that Power which raised Christ from the dead He himself tells us in Rom. 8.9 11. where he makes it an essential Character of our Christianity to have the Spirit that raised Jesus Christ from the dead in us And Col. 2.12 he attributes our being buried with him in Baptism and raised again to Newness of Life which contains all that the Gospel requires of us to the Faith of the Operation of God who raised our Saviour from the dead Philosophy tells us that Sublunary Bodies are influenced by the Heavens as Celestial Bodies Is it not as reasonable to believe that our Souls are influenced and enlivened by God Cannot the Father of Spirits as easily and naturally assist our Spirits as the Celestial Bodies these below If so then what Yoke can possibly be uneasy to us or what Burden heavy or troublesome I do not say insupportable when in all our religious Actions we act in Conjunction with our Creator 3. The Greatness of the Reward proposed in the most emphatical but intelligible Expressions of Felicity As Crowns of Glory Inheritances incorruptible and that fade not away Immortality Eternal Life and for these light Afflictions which last but for a Moment a far more exceeding and Eternal weight of Glory 2 Cor. 4.17 And whatever we lose here we are promised for it an hundred fold hereafter If we venture and lose into the bargain our Lives in the dispute for our Saviour and his Religion we lose but crasy heavy painful Bodies for Bodies spiritual healthful and incorruptible Sin and Sickness and Putrifaction for Holiness and Health and Incorruption these Tabernacles of Clay daily declining and dissolving into the Earth of which they were at first made and subject to be broken by many accidental Violences and Knocks they are like to meet with in the hurry of this World for a Building of God a House not made with Hands Eternal in the Heavens 2 Cor. 4.1 Who would not chuse to be thus unclothed to be clothed upon with those everlasting Robes of Light and Glory A full Perswasion of this Reward hath made Fire and Faggot Swords and wild Beasts and all the cruellest Instruments of Death not only eligible Heb. 11.35 but easy to many hundreds of Christians that they might obtain a better Resurrection And we have reason to believe it from common Experience of humane Affairs for we daily see that neither Seas nor Rocks nor Storms nor Tempests will discourage Men from making very desperate Adventures when they have but probable Expectations of a great Reward but here is all the Assurance God that cannot lye can give us And whilest we are here in the consciencious and sincere Practice of our Religion we have that Peace of God which passeth all Understanding and is able to make every Yoke easy and every Burden light our Saviour hath any where in his Religion layed upon us 4. It affords us the most powerful Examples God himself Matth. 5.45 to the end where our Saviour commands us to love our Enemies c. that we may be the Children of our Heavenly Father and in the last verse perfect as our Heavenly Father is perfect Now who would stick at any thing that may advance him not only to the Similitude but Perfection of God himself The Duty is something difficult but the Example is a sufficient Reward to make any labour or pains delightful and easy to us The Son of God took upon him our Nature to be an Example to us and here we have an Example of our own Nature in the Practice of the hardest Duties in the midst of Opposition and the worst of times and of more than he requires of us namely laying down his Life for his Enemies and all for our sakes that we might be encouraged in our Duty Complanatur itur vestigiis Domini said Tertullian To this Example the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrews directs us chap. 12. ver 2 3 4. lest we be weary and faint in our Minds In chap. 11. he proposes the Examples of very great and wise Men Noah Abraham Moses and divers others and both what great things they did and suffered and in chap. 12. ver 1. he doth as it were sum up the Evidence that this so great a Cloud of Witnesses in storms of Persecution assist us with to make it easy to lay aside the Sin that so easily besets us and then reinforceth the whole Argument with the Example of our Saviour in the following verses before mentioned In chap. 6.12 Be not slothful saith the same Apostle but Followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises He is certainly strangely degenerated and sunk into the Ground of which he was at first made that finds it an uneasy thing not to be slothful And the Apostle plainly here tells us that any body else will follow those great Examples our Religion affords us and by Faith and Patience inherit the Promises Examples all Men acknowledg and all Experience demonstrates are a most effectual way of perswading and in these Examples we have all the advantage the Reverence of Persons or the Reason of the Thing can assist us with 5. It supplies us with the most pregnant and efficacious Principle of doing or suffering any thing it requires of us This the serious Consideration of our Religion must necessarily beget in us if we really believe the Truth of it for it is nothing else but God's so loving the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting Life Joh. 3.16 And this his only begotten Son so loving it as to be crucified for it These two Articles contain the substance of the Revelation given us in the Gospel of our Religion Now if Love begets Love can we believe and think of this Religion without being constrain'd to live no longer to our selves but to him that dy'd for us to live to him and die for him when he requires it of us And the Constraints of Love are the Extasies and Triumphs of it which make every thing easy and delightful Thus our Christianity without us impresseth its own Characters within us and becomes the Gospel of Christ written in our Hearts and our Faith removeth Mountains and makes all ways plain and overcometh the World and crucifieth the Flesh with its Affections and Lusts working by the Love
they have published the Fruits of their Industry the Truths they have discovered to the World abundantly demonstrate I cannot particularize these things at this time Silence and Solitude Recess and Separation from the World and Sense are the Opportunities for God and Truth and nothing so prevents the discoveries of Truth as the clamorous importunities of Riches and Honour or the gross and foul Suffusions of Sensuality The first anticipate our Time which is absolutely necessary for Truth the Philosopher rightly tells us lies in the bottom of a deep Well The second thicken and obstruct the Mind and indispose it as foggy Steems and Mists our bodily Organs that the pure Light and Spirit of Truth cannot be sensible to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that pious Man that exquisite Philosopher Therefore the Philosophers tell us Vertue is absolutely necessary for the acquiring of Truth because that regulates all the inferiour Faculties and Inclinations quiets and retrenches all the Exorbitancy of the Passions and Affections 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 said Antoninus the Soul is tinctured and dy'd with the Objects it most converseth with Now how doth our Religion dispose us for this the Apostle tells us 1 Thess 5.22 Abstain from all appearance of Evil How doth it caution us against it 1 Cor. 7.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 species forma the Shew or Form or Beauty of this World passeth away as if the World were nothing but a great piece of Pageantry or a Dream or a Fancy of something that is not or an Apparition without any Substance passing by us and seen no more Many places more to this purpose I might produce And for Sensuality 1 Pet. 2.11 Fleshly Lusts are said to war against the Soul therefore the Apostle beseeches the Christians as Strangers and Pilgrims to abstain from them And how many severe Threatnings do we read of in the Scriptures against all that do not crucify the Flesh with the Lusts of it 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Ephes 5.3 to ver 8. and many other to keep our Minds even and pure and then they are fit and ready both for the search after and Contemplation of Truth The second thing I mention'd for which our Souls are created was the Enjoyment of God in this World and that which is to come Omnis intellectus tendit in Deum saith the Philosopher and it cannot be otherwise for all this World is too little for their Satisfaction as infinite Experience demonstrates The Eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the Ear with hearing Men run from one thing to another and never pleased always mistaken knock at the wrong door for Happiness as drunken Men mistake another Man's House for their own Antoninus one of the greatest and happiest Emperors not only that Rome but the World ever enjoyed thus expresseth the Insufficiency of this World for our Happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What do I care to live in a World void of God and void of Providence Yet no Man ever enjoyed more of the World's Glory and Happiness than he did which demonstrates that only God is the natural Felicity of our Souls How carefully then is our Nature restor'd and perfected by our Religion The two great Obstacles to our Enjoyment of God it endeavours to set at the greatest distance from us imaginable These are love of the World and excess of bodily Pleasures James 4.4 Ye Adulterers and Adulteresses know ye not that the Friendship of this World is Enmity with God whosoever therefore will be a Friend of the World is the Enemy of God. How smartly doth the Apostle assert the great Inconsistency of God and the World together in our Hearts and repeats it twice in the same Verse and when he speaks never so mildly he still tells us the same thing 1 Joh. 2.15 And for Sensuality The very Character of a Christian is to crucify the Flesh with the Affections and Lusts of it Gal. 5.24 And Purity of Heart is made absolutely necessary to our seeing of God by our Saviour Mat. 5.8 Very many places more out of the Scriptures might be produced to this purpose All which demonstrate our Religion must be natural to our Souls because if we would observe it it would make our Souls free and open to receive the comfortable Emanations of the Divine Goodness as a clear Air the Light and Influences of the Sun and so in this respect our Saviour's Yoke must be easy and his Burden light Besides what admirable matter of our Contemplation doth it afford us 2 Cor. 4.6 The Light of the Knowledg of the Glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ and when by the exceeding great and precious Promises of the Gospel we apprehend what Interest we may have in this Glory Heaven it self is anticipated our Souls are in Conjunction with their Center our Consciences are easy and chearful and we are filled with all Joy in believing For it doth not yet appear what we shall be 1 Joh. 3.2 But we know when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Thus in respect of our Souls the Text is demonstrated because our Religion fits us for the Enjoyment of God here and hereafter the Complement and Perfection of our Natures 2. In respect of our Bodies Intemperance is the worst Disease we are capable of The most searching Pains and accutest Torments are the Effects of it it is a Womb a Mine of all the Diseases of the Body so that to indulge our Lusts makes them their own Executioners as well as ours for when Nature is overborn all Pleasure and Delight is extinguish'd Now our Religion gives us the plainest Precepts imaginable for Sobriety and Temperance and Purity I should be too tedious to name the places they are almost every-where in the New Testament and written with the Beams of the Sun of Righteousness Those I mention'd under the last two Heads are sufficient where it utterly excludes from the Kingdom of Heaven all irregular and intemperate Prosecutions of the Lusts of the Flesh the Lusts of the Eye and the Pride of Life as St. John tells us 1 Joh. 2.15 16. And by doing thus our Bodies have no more reason to complain than our Souls as if our Religion denied or envied them their proper Diversions or Satisfactions for all this is nothing but the restoring of us to our natural Health and Strength for it requires of us only to recover and maintain our Original Frame and Constitution the Consent and Harmony of our Carnal and Inferiour Faculties and Inclinations to those within us which are more Noble and Spiritual And being of this Nature and for these Ends even in this case also this Yoke must be easy and this Burden light Thus we have seen that if we consider Man in his private Capacity our Saviour's Yoke is easy and his Burden light In the second place II. I now come to consider him in his Politick or Publick Capacity and here at first sight