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A61776 The certainty of heavenly and the uncertainty of earthly treasures together with a discovery where the treasure and heart is placed / as it was delivered in severall sermons by that eminently faithfull servant of Christ, Mr. William Strong ... Strong, William, d. 1654. 1654 (1654) Wing S5998 58,281 207

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much for God thinks no pains too much that he layes out for God so Haman loves his revenge and he will give the King much for the ruine of the Jews David when he came to build the Temple thought he could never spend enough about the Temple It is a large heart that makes an hand therefore where your love is there 's your bounty 4. 4 Love is laborious Love is laborious it grudgeth no pains Heb. 6.10 It is called the labour of love a mans labour is sutable to his love he that labors most loves most If a man loves riches he labours for them Hab. 2.13 Labouring in vain is called labouring in the fire you shall know where your love is by your labour Eccle. 4.8 There 's a man hath no end of all his labour why so There 's his love His eye is not satisfied with Riches The Lord Jesus Christ his love to his Father made him labour in the worke of his Father till he had spent his strength and dryed up his radicall humours Isai 49.4 For a man that 's sloathful there 's no love in him lazy love is pretended love where love is according to the degree of it such a mans labour will be O you that are dead and dull in holy duties strengthen your love and you will mend your pace It s an observation of one of the Ancients That love that doth not put forth it selfe to its utmost endeavour is unsound love that which goes to its strength and no more that 's true love but weake love strong love bends to impossibilities it will labour in those things which 't is impossible to obtain It 's observed of Mary her love out-bid her strength therefore examine where the great labour of your lives hath been how much have I laboured for the things of this world and how little have I laboured for the things of another world for God Christ 5. 5 Love is venturous Would you know where your love is love is venturous it will hazard any thing for the thing beloved our Saviour Christ gives you an evidence of it he doth not onely venture his life but lay down his life Greater love hath no man then this that a man lay down his life for his friend Ioh. 15.13 and Psal 69.9 The reproach of them that reproached thee hath fallen upon me It was a gracious speech of an Ancient If the Lord make use of me to keepe off reproach from himselfe I shall looke upon it as a great priviledge as a great honour Where is the man that for the truths of God and Christ will hazard the losse of friends the losse of his estate the losse of his blood True love turns cowardize into courage the Hen though but a feeble Creature yet will hazard her selfe against the most ravenous Birds that come to devour her Chickens so will the mother if her child be in danger Take a man whose love is set on lust and what will not the man hazard for it he will lose his friends he will spend his estate he will blast his reputation he will hazard his soule and all for the love he beares to sin and indeed what 's that which makes men despise the judgements of God it's their love to sin then enquire and examine your selves where your adventures are there is your love 6. 6 Love is zealous Love is zealous I doe not mean by zeale a zeale of suspition of evill in the party beloved which we call jealousy for love thinks no evill 1 Cor. 13.4 But when I say love is zealous I meane it is full of solicitude fearing that any injurie or wrong should be offered to the person or thing beloved Moses the meekest man upon earth yet Moses's meeknesse is turned into anger when wrong is done to the God of his life and the God of his love and he breaks the Tables The Lord Jesus Christ out of love to his Father saith The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up Iob. 2.17 Zeal in the heart is like boiling water that wasts in the seething it makes a man over-look all interests considering himselfe in the world to be wholly intended to carry on the interests of the party belove So it is with godly men for zeale is a mixt affection 't is nothing else but love provoked therfore Hoster speaks the language of love How should I endure to see the evil that should come upon me and upon my people Est 8.6 Tel me what are you zealous for where 's your zeale Touch a man in his Reputation and you may quickly see where his love and zeal is touch God in his name Christ in his truth then saith Paul To whom we gave place no not for an houre that the truth of the Gospel might continue with you Gal. 2.5 Love is provoked with any thing and comes contrary to Christ and his truth I would have zeale to be turned into fire and so it will be where love is for God and his glory Examine therefore what it is that makes you hot on every occasion where thy zeal is there is thy love for love is zealous 7. 7 Love i● fearful of separation Love is very fearful of separation from the thing beloved it desires nothing more then union it fears nothing more then separation it s the Spouses expression Cant. 3.4 When I sound him I held him and would not let him go Austin gives that as the difference between true and uncleane love between the love of a Wife and the love of a Harlot both fear the husband but the one fears lest the husband should come the other fears lest the husband should depart the affections of the soule in this way are seen very much Death is called the King of terror because its a separation of the soule from the body love it loves union and he that loves dyes himselfe to live in the thing beloved for this cause the great consolation of the Saints lies in this who shall separate us from the love of God c Rom. 8.30 31. For in the absence of the love of the thing beloved the heart languishes ●n union with the thing loved the heart rejoyces and in separation from the thing loved the heart dyes and perishes for this cause is this the great cordial to the Saints that there is no separation between their love and their beloved The unhappinesse of wicked men lies in this that they love that which shall be separated from them Riches make to themselves wings flie away P o. 23.5 And thou fool this night shall thy soul be taken away from thee and then whose shall these things be Luk. 12.20 So Amos 4.2 I will take away thy posterity with fish-hooks As easily as the fish is drawn out of the water with a hooke so will I take them away with Fish-hooks Therefore when an ungodly man dies his love dies because his beloved ceaseth when he dies A godly man
with him but not in subordination to him God is to be beloved for himself and Christ is to be received for himself and therefore 't is said Luke 14.26 He that hates not Father and Mother c. cannot be my Disciple how hates them a man is bound to love them all The Command is not absolute that he should hate them absolutely but comparatively to hate them is to soe an excellency in Christ above them Christ is to be beloved for himself and God for himself That Rule of Austin is true we are to love friends in God and Enemies for God But how shall I know that I love God for himself for a man may love Christ and God from a principle of self-love I shall give you two tryalls First then a man loves God for himselfe when hee is willing to part with all things for him that man that is willing to part with all things for God must needs love God above all things But how shall I know that I am willing to part with all for Gods sake there are two seasons when men are tryed in this life at the time of Conversion and the time of dissolution First At the time of Conversion Philipi 3.8 Paul counts all things but drosse and and dung that he may win Christ so 〈◊〉 14.33 he that forsakes not all cannot be my Disciple The second is the time of Dissolution without this I cannot attain to my chiefest good will the Lord have an Isaac the soul will give him an Isaac he will sacrifice his parts with all that ever he hath and give them up to God 1 Cor. 6.23 you are not your own you are bought with a price saith the Apostle A gracious soule hath experience of this at the time of dissolution when hee sets all things here below aside for God when his friends his Estate his glory and his portion take their leaves of him A godly man when he comes to die he can look on all these dying things rejoycingly he can say I have no need of them Phil. 1.23 Lord I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is far better Phil 1.23 as a Martyr said when hee came to die my friends are dear my Children are dear my Wife is dear but my Christ is dearer 2. The second triall that a man loves God for himselfe when a man doth abstract God and Christ the good that is in them and the good that comes by them and the soule is carried to them for the good that is in them There are two seasons when all the good that comes by Religion and godliness seemes to be abstracted from it at the time of Affliction and at the time of desertion First At the time of affliction Is there any outward benefit comes by Religion in the time of persecution and affliction Secondly All the time of desertion that deprives a man of all comfort now when a man shall be able to fay as Job though be kill me yet I will trust in him I will love him for the excellency that hee hath in him though I receive none of that excellency from him For the good that comes by him many love him but for the good that is in him a gratious soule loves him Take a man that makes riches his Treasure hee will part with a good Conscience the best friends he hath nay though hee act to the griefe of his friends and to the reproach of his Enemies yet if the man doe but obtaine that which he desires he matters not this is a clear argument that a man loves it for it selfe An ambitious man will break all bonds Naturall Civill and Religious yea let him be accounted an ambitious self-seeking man yea let credit and Conscience lie at the stake yet hee will despise Counsell tread upon friends trample upon Lawes and all that hee may be great in the world 3. 3 Unto which he refers all things That which is a mans Treasure or his chiefe good he referrs all things unto it and seekes all things from it for a mans chief good and utmost end is that which works in all the rest I shall give you two rules for this First he that seeks all things in subordination to his chiefest good hee seeks nothing that shall fall crosse unto it this is the signe of a godly man what ever is crosse to his chief good hee counts life not dear for the removall of it I count not my life dear unto me saith Paul so I may finish my course with joy Acts 20.24 Bodily ease carnall delight worldly contentments are not dear unto thee if God be thy chief good if thy Estate honour thy relations yea thy life it selfe come in competition between thy God and thee thou wilt say as the Martyr sarwell Wife farwell Children farwell Estate yea farwell life and give me my Christ 'T is with many men as it was with Demas Demas hath forsaken us and embraced the present world he professes godlinesse no more So it is with men they neglect known duties for temporall advantages take heed that nothing crosse thee in thy treasure but let all things be subordinated unto it Then secondly as it must not crosse it so it must serve it every thing must be subordinate to his chiefest good thus it was with Jehu 2 Kings 2.9 The Kingdom was in his eye that was his chiefe good Now Jehu's reformation of Religion tended onely to this end to set Jehu in his Kingdome yet hee did the worke that God intended hee executed Gods judgements upon the house of Ahab hee thought to have had his ends upon God and God had his ends upon him But take a godly man whose chiefe good is God and godlinesse hee loves an Estate not for it selfe but that hee might honour God with it gifts what doth he value them for for the Edification of the body of Christs wisdome saith Solomon is good with an inheritance Ecles 7.11 that is when grace teacheth a man to make use of it 4. 4 After which his soul goes out Tryall by which you may find out your treasure A mans soul goes out towards it with continuall and earnest breathings and endlesse gaspings so you shall find it is with naturall men who have their treasure in this life and and whose bellies are fed with the providences of God onely and who make a God of their belly their hearts are only carried out with breathings after this treasure But on the other side David saith my soul is lifted up to God Psal 27.4 to lift up the soule in scripture is to desire a thing earnestly Take a man whose treasure is in Heaven whose chief good is God the continuall gaspings of his soul are after God Ps 25.1 he desires God earnestly 2 Cor 5.1 in this wee groane earnestly c. hee is under continuall groanings and gaspings after God though it is true the soule finds an impossibility of
thoughts there is the meditations and consultations of the heart in these all the thoughts and contrivances of the soule are now where a man's treasure is there are these 2 Kings 5.26 Did not my heart go along with thee How did the Prophets heart goe with him his thoughts went with him So Iob 17.11 the thoughts of the heart are there called the heart in the Hebrew it is the possessions of the heart for as what ever you do possesse in the body the body can see a glory and cast a sweetnesse in all things here below so the soul can tast a a sweetnesse and see a glory in all things above 2. 4. Love affections By heart is meant a mans love and affection his desires and longings for in these the soule goes out towards its object Gen. 34.8 As it is said of Shechem his house clave to Dinah Now where your treasure is ther 's your love there your desires are the longings of your Soules are after it 3. 5. Ioy and delight By the heart is meant a man's delight the joy of his heart that whereby the great Comfort of his life comes in Psal 62.16 If riches increase set not your heart on him that is do not place the comfort of your lives in them let not your hearts be swallowed up by them Now where a man's treasure is there his thoughts are there his love is there the joy and delight of his soul is The Second Proposition is this Mans chief is without himself that the soul of man goes out of it self for happinesse for its treasure is without it self It 's Gods honour his Prerogative onely to have his blessednesse to be himself hee is unto himselfe the chief good he hath nothing without himself to augment his happiness Gods blessednesse is in himself The Lord Jesus Christ as Mediator in all his obedience added nothing to the blessednesse of God My goodnesse extends not to thee Psal 16.2 But this is Gods Prerogative onely to have his happinesse in himself as for creatures that are capable of a chiefe good their happinesse is not in themselves but in their treasure which is good and therefore their heart is to go out after their treasure And here take notice of two great depths in Divinity 1. 1 Depth Man hath not the chiefest good in himself his happinesse comes not from himself and hence it is that in reference to all things hee is a dependant Creature And therefore the soul is continually restlesse because it seeks to joyne it selfe to its chiefest good which is without it self you have a saying Prov. 14.14 a good man shall be satisfied from himself It is not from himself as separated from God but from himself is united to God wherein his blessednesse lies not selfe in opposition to God but self in-subordination to God and so a man is satisfied from himself that is hee goes not out of himselfe when hee goes into God because he is made one with God 2. 2 Depth Depth in Divinity is this that it is the nature and constitution of the reasonable soul to make out to a chiefe good without it selfe this is the nature of it in its Creation it doth not onely seek its own preservation but it seeks its owne perfection This is that which is the working of every Greature much more of the reasonable Greature because it hath not a Fountain at home it must go abroad to draw and because it hath not food at home it must go out to gather Therefore Austin doth observe very wel that man is a midle Creature wel there is some thing above him and some thing below him That soul that hath its chief good below it selfe is a miserable soul That soul that hath its chief good above it self The good of the soul is above it self is a happy soul here is the happinesse of the Saints that their happinesse is above themselves saith Christ Iohn 6.27 Labour not for the meate which perisheth but for the meate which endureth unto everlasting life which the Son of man shall give unto you the soul goes out to eat and to drink Now the soule that feeds upon something below it self is miserable but that soul that feeds on somthing above it self is blessed Isa 44.20 the Prophet speaks of some that feed upon ashes a deceived heart hath turned them aside that they cannot say is there not a lie in my right hand And thus doth every man feed whose chief food is below himself he feeds on Ashes not on spirituall food he feeds of the Earth as hee lives in the Earth Psal 62.10 If Riches encrease set not your heart upon them hee sets his heart on Riches and therefore his heart cannot be set on God and his heart is set so upon riches as to suck something from them for his preservation and for his perfection so a godly mans heart is set upon God doth suck out of the sweetnesse of God for his preservation and for his perfection Isai 66.11 They shall suck and be satisfied with the breasts of his Consolation Now give me leave to shew you the misery of them that set their happinesse in things below themselves here 's their misery in three things The misery of those that set their happiness in things below themselves 1. You draw where there is no water the Creature is but vanity all things below are so you suck where there is no milk all these things are empty that you think to find a fulnesse in 2. The more your souls go out to these things for their Treasure the more the Appetite is increased but the lesse 't is satisfied for I told you that all the Creatures the more a man hath to doe with them the more his appetite is to them 3. Consider what is there to be had in these Creature-comforts when your souls goe forth after them what do you leave for them You have forsaken me the fountain of living waters and have hewen to your selves Cisterns broken Cisterns that will hold no water Jer. 2.13 Observe foure Particulars from hence 1. All the good you have in a Creature Creature comforts compared to a Cistern is but a Cistern they have no good in themselves no more then is put into them 2. A Cistern is but of a small compasse it will hold but a little a man can see an end of its perfection but of a Fountain thou canst see no end thereof 3. It s water that will die and perish therefore opposed to living water it will be a withering comfort 4. They will all leak out of the bottom therefore they are said to be broken Cisterns But what is the water of the Fountaine what is the comfort that is in God There five things in it 1. The comforts of God compared to a fountain The water in the Fountaine is originally in it selfe 2. It s there continually 3. Its is there
treasure Then this shews to every unregenerate man that there is an absolute necessity of Regeneration Many a carnall man will complain and fay I cannot bow my thoughts God-ward what commands my thoughts Thy treasure commands them If thy treasure be in God the meditation of thy heart will be towards God What is Conversion 'T is a change of a mans chief good Thy treasure and thy heart will be changed together change thy treasure and thy heart will change The misery of that man whose treasure is on earth The misery of that man whose heart is on earth is unspeakable because then his treasure is on earth Consider these things 1. Let thy Actions be what they will if thy treasure be below thy heart will be below A temporary man may and will goe forth in temporary actions more then a spirituall man can do But in a Temporary man there 's no change of heart Act 8.21 Simon Magus he washed his hands but kept his heart in the same blacknesse of covetousness that it was before Till thou change thy treasure thy heart will never change The misery of an ungodly man is in this he may change his love when he will but his heart is not changed unlesse his treasure be changed 2. This is the ground of the greatest bondage to an ungodly man in the world because his treasure is below therefore his heart cannot be above for where his Treasure is there will the heart be This is that which keeps all unregenerate men in bondage there is therfore an absolute necessity for the change of a mans treasure or otherwise thou canst not be assured that thy heart is changed Use 3. Use 3. Learn then the blessed condition of a godly man To discover the blessed condition of a godly man whose treasure is in heaven he is every where blessed his body is on earth but his heart is in heaven There 's a twofold blessing upon this account First Let this man at any time go astray for a godly man is apt to wander this will reduce and bring him home againe the heart will be to the Treasure A godly man can never fall from God why because the heart and the treasure are inseparable As the misery of an ungodly man is let him professe what he will yet his treasure will bring him back so a godly man let him wander whither he will yet his treasure will reduce him Secondly He is a happy man that hath his treasure alwaies in Heaven he is a happy man because he is a heavenly man his heart is in heaven There are four Reasons why he that hath his Treasure alwaies in Heaven is a happie man 1. 1 Here by he is evidenced to be an heavenly man Because hereby he is evidenced to be a heavenly man 1 Cor. 15.48 As is the earthly such are they that are earthly and as is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly Because thy heart is in heaven therefore thou art a heavenly man As that wisdome that is conversant about earth is said to be earthly so that wisdome that is conversant about heaven is said to be heavenly An earthly mind is a plague an heavenly mind is a glory 2. 2 His heart doth not change with his condition He that hath his treasure in heaven is a blessed man in this that his heart is not subject to those impressions of changes that other means are It a mans condition doth change yet if his heart doth not change it s no great matter as Tertullian observes though he was under great afflictions on earth yet his heart was out of danger because it was in heaven therefore Rev. 13.6 Saints are said to dwell in heaven the heart changes not for any evil because it s bound up in an unchangeable good 3. 3 His conversation will be in heaven He is a happy man who hath his Treasure alwaies in Heaven because where his treasure is there will his heart and conversation bee Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in Heaven from whence also wee looke for our Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ. Saith the wise man Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Prov. 4.23 The way of his life comes out of his heart Now this man taking up of his heart with God must have his life taken up with God also he is taken up with God as his Father with Christ as his husband with the Saints and blessed Spirits as his companions 4. 4 His soul shall shortly be there A mans heart being in heaven his soule shall shortly be there too And this also is an argument that bodies shall be there shortly for though body and soule be parted by death yet it will not be long before they are united again and what a comfortable thing is this then for a man to lay up his Treasure in Heaven seeing it is such an argument that he himselfe shall be taken up into Heaven FINIS