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B22909 The continuation of Christ's alarm to drowsie saints by the reverend and faithfull minister of Jesus Christ, Mr. William Fenner ... Fenner, William, 1600-1640. 1657 (1657) Wing F683A 480,531 330

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He may lose his zeal 2 He may lose all his affections 10 3 He may grow to be senseless of sin and grace 11 4 He may gr●w notoriously vain worldly and guilty 5 The service of God may be a burthen to him 12 6 He may be so dead that nothing can quicken him Quest If a Saint be thus dead where is grace all the while Ans It cannot he taken away because 1 The seed of God remains still in him 13 2 Supernatural habits remain 3 He ever hath an anointing 4 He hath remaining some little strength Use 1 To stir us up to labour against sin 14 2 Let the best of Sains stand on their guard 3 Comfort for those who are dejected with dead hearts 7 A child of God may fall into foul sins 15 1 Into Idolatry 2 Aposta●y 3 Persecution of Saints 8 A child of God may be hardned in sin 16 9 He may be long in sin Reas 1 In regard of Satan 2 Of themselves 17 3 Of God himselfe who leaves them to themselves that 1 they may be patterns to others 18 2 to punish their carelesness 3 that so they may see they stand meerly by grace 4 that they may be sensible towards their brethren 19 5 to humble them 20 Use 1 How to order our speeches concerning grace which though it be sufficient 1 to bring a man home to God 2 to keep him from falling away finally 3 from falling away totally 21 Yet Gods people are to stand upon their guard because 22 1 Grace looks for this 2 Promises are conditionall 23 3 Experience in all ages proves the falling of Saints upon Gods withdrawing 24 Qu. Is grace then indifferent in particular passages Aus No. For 1 Grace sets up in the soul an universall principle to serve God in every particular 2 It sets up a watch in the soul Use 2 To work out our salvation with fear and trembling 25 Use 3 Not to stumble at this doctrine Use 4 Not to raise false comfort to our selves from this doctrine 26 Causes of deadnesse The cause in Generall is giving way to sin which is 1 A soul-killirg thing 2 It grieves the holy spirit 27 3 It puls a hard task on the soul to goe through 4 It defiles the conscience 28 5 It weakens all assurance of welcome with God 29 Causes in particular 1 The nigardliness of people in Gods service 2 Their unwatchfulness 30 3 Contenting themselves with a low kind of religion 31 4 The vanity of mens minds 32 5 Mutuall example 6 Covetousness and worldinesse 7 Spirituall sloth 33 8 Neglect of secret duties 34 9 Neglect of inward duties 35 10 Contenting themselves with what they have attained unto 36 Means of quickning 1 Believing and looking up to Christ 37 2 Learning of the word preached 38 3 Shunning all causes of deadnesse 4 Being earnest with God to quicken us 39 5 Diligent in all Christian duties and worship 40 6 Exercising that grace we have 7 Considering former and present examples 41 Motives to shake off deadnesse 40 1 Consider the ingredients of this sin of deadness 42 As 1 Dulness and blockishness of mind to good 2 Awkness and averness of heart to the waies of Jesus Christ 43 3 Senselesness of conscience 4 Coldness of affections 5 Faintness of endeavours 6 Drowsiness of the whole man Mot. 2 Consider that while we are dead we cannot pray nor hear c. Mot. 3 We can have no true sign of true grace 44 Mot. 4 We cannot grow in grace 45 Mot. 5 We shall grow deader and deader Mot. 6 This sin of deadness worse then other sins in these respects 46 1 Deadness is in all the whole man 2 It is against all Gods Commandments 3 It is deeper in the soul then other sins 47 4 It is an estate of sin 5 It is a second death 6 More special threatnings against deadness Considerations to quicken us 1 Consider that we owe to God our life and affections 48 2 All the world is alive in their owe courses let Christians be alive in theirs 3 Consider the worth of what is l●st by deadness 49 4 If we be quickned nothing will be hard 5 We shall have much joy and comfort 6 All Heaven will rejoice at our quickning 7 We shall be enabled thereby to doe good to others 50 Remedies against deadnesse 1 Be watchfull 51 Observ It is an excellent and soveraign thing for a Christian to watch 52 Reas 1 In regard of our selves our selves are false to our selves 1 We should watch our hearts 2 Our thoughts 53 3 Our affections 4 Our consciences 5 Our tongues 2 In regard of the world lest it get into us ibid. 3 In regard of Sathan 54 Because he is 1 A subtle enemy 2 Diligent 3 Strong 4 Malitious 5 Hath nothing else to doe p. 55 4 In regard of the wicked 5 In regard of good things 55 1 Our graces that we may preserve encrease and exercise them 56 2 All good duties before in after duty ibid 3 In regard of God For 1 Sometimes he comes neerer us then at other times 2 Sometimes doth extraordinarily help us 3 Doth sometimes afflict us 57 Use 1 Lament the neglect of this duty ib. 2 Be exhorted to take up this duty ib. 1 Consider the misery of them that do not watch ibid. 2 The good of watchfulness 3 That men doe watch in outward callings 4 We have examples of the Saints Remedie 2 Strengthen the things that remain 58 Mot. 1 Because they are remainders 2 Because those remanders are ready to die 3 Because thy works are not perfect Doctrine It is a Christians duty to labour to be strengthned especial●y if he hath formerly had more grace 58 2 Weakness 1 Of people unconverted 2 Of Children of God which is double 1 In beginning 2 In declining Reas 1 We can have no other comfortable argument of true grace 60 2 Else we can doe no act of new obedience 3 Nor overcome temptations 61 4 Nor recover after a fall 62 5 Nor obey God with ease Use 1 To condemn 1 Those that have no strength at all 2 Those that doe not strengthen the good things they have 63 Use 2 To direct us what to doe that we may strengthen c. Direction 1 Labour to have strong minds and understandings 64 2 Strong wills 66 3 Sound affections 67 Dir. 2 Labour to believe 3 Fly all occasions of evill 4 Maintain a constant purpose to please God 68 5 Frequent the Ordinances of God 6 Put forth your selves to the utmost in good duties 69 7 Remember we alway need new supply of strength 8 Take heed of sinning against knowledge 70 9 Make conscience of useing and improving Sacraments 1 Baptisme 2 Lords Supper which is of great use to strengthen believers For 1 It is the nature of the Sacraments 2 It is a seal of Gods covenant 71 3 It is Communion with Jesus Christ 4 A Sacrament of Communion with the members of Christ
disparage the Kings Authority and cause the people to scorn him he began to see that Saul spake with sense honour me before the people and he did stay then now he was not less affected but more judicious Fourthly Presumption may make a man seem to be more affected and 4. Presumption quickned a great deal then indeed he is as Peter he seemed to be so mightily transported and enlarged towards Christ and so full of zeal for him though all men forsake thee yet will not I he thought he was so affected that he could compare with all the Apostles and Disciples of Jesus Christ and go beyond them all but afterwards when Christ asked him Peter lovest thou me see his answer Joh. 21. 15. his answer was nakedly Lord thou knowest that I love thee he would make no more comparisons though Christ put him upon it there yet he would not be brought to compare any more Now was he less affected towards Christ no but he was less presumptuous Fifthly Activeness of natural disposition may make a man seem to be 5. Activeness of natural disposition more affected then indeed he is for a man the more active his nature is and the more spirits he hath the more stirring he hath a man that hath such a disposition will go further then another of a slower spirit there is a great deal more grace required to make an heavy dull natured man to speak a word for God then to make a cholerick man strike a blow for God mens natures differ some men are more active naturally may be one man is full of activity and stirring another man is of a dull dispostion will you say this man is deader then he no this man may have more life of grace then he it is as if one man should swim with the stream and another against the stream he that swims with the stream will more easily swim a mile then he that swims against the stream will swim half a mile will you say that this man cannot swim so well as the other no he may be a better swimmer of the twain for this is the thing we are not to judge of the life of our grace by what we do but by what labour we take in doing as the Apostle saith remembring without ceasing your work of faith and labour of love 1 Thes 1. 3. may be another man is of a more loving nature then this man but the man that is more unkinde naturally and harsh-natured he labours a thousand times more abundantly then the other who hath most grace of love now the other hath most natural love but this man hath more grace of love as Paul proves he had the life of grace in him because he laboured more abundantly then they all it is not what thou doest but what thou laborest to do he that swims down the stream doth not labour if he should do nothing but stir his hands and feet without any labour the stream will carry him so when a man hath nature to help him he need not labour much but when a man must fetch all out of the hard flint how is he fain to labour there thou mayst try the life of thy affections not by what thou prayest but by what thou labourest in prayer not by what thou remembrest at a Sermon but though thou hast a blockish memory how dost thou labour to remember so it is not the not doing of sin but the labouring against sin hereby thou mayst know whither they zeal and affection be abated in thee So again for a mans self may be he was more active heretofore had a more nimble spirit and temper of body now he is grown more sad and melaneholy his head is distempered and grown more weak his memory fails and his understanding decayes that quick disposition of his body is taken down and he cannot do as he did before is the man therefore not so quickned as he was before is he grown more dead may be the man complains certainly he hath cause to suspect himself and he doth not think he is right formerly he could remember a Sermon be fixed in meditation be attentive at the word be fervent in prayer and put forth himself in this fashion now he cannot he was so lively before now he hath not the same activity and therefore begins to call all into question certainly all is not right I answer this doth not follow it is true in many a man it is the deadness of his heart and the decayedness of his spiritual estate that causeth this but it doth not follow that it is so with thee but the cause is this may be thou hast worn out thy tools therefore no marvel thou canst not work so well as formerly take a skilful Musitian whose instrument is crackt and marred he cannot make so good musick upon this instrument as he could when it was sound doth it follow he hath lost his skill no give this man ● sound instrument as he had before and he will play as well as ever all our operations not only external but also internal do much depend upon the disposition of the body as for meditation may be when the body was lively and active a man could fix his meditations upon a thing now it is weakned he cannot may be he hath the same desire and delight as he had before but he cannot do it so may be he hath as great a desire as ever to remember the word but his memory is gone so may be he hath as great a desire to put forth himself in any ordinance of God as ever in all his life but his body will not bear it I say the spirits depend much upon the body you may see this in natural operations let a mans eyes fail will any man say that the soul of that man is less able to see then it was no the soul is as able to see in a blind man as in a seeing man in an old man whose eyes fail him as in a young man that hath the quickest sight if this man had an excellent eye given him he would see as well as any body else the soul is able to do it but it wants a tool so many Saints of God cannot do many duties as they were wont not for want of love and zeal and affections but for want of tools it is said 2 Sam. 21. 16. that when David waxed old they would not let him go out into the field did they look upon David now as less worthy then before no they looked upon him as more worthy then before the text saith they looked upon him as the very light of Israel though he could not fight for Israel so well as he did before so you shall see many a godly man and reverend father upon his death bed shews no great matter in his dying what because he is dead and is not the man he was no but because he hath worn out his tools he is not
37. Turn away mine e●es from beholding vanity and quicken me O Lord. Again We must take heed of covetousness for we shall never have any gracious work upon us if we give way to it Again We should take heed of slacking and abating private duties we should carefully call upon God every day in secret when there is no body by but God and our own souls if we finde backwardness to this duty know it comes from the Devil that would drown us in perdition if he could therefore we must resist him and goe about it for certatnly otherwise we cannot be quickned Again We should take heed of slighting inward duties the holy ordinances of God in our bosoms holy meditations gracious strivings against corruptions when they arise setting the Lord before us seeking Gods presence in all places we must have a care we have gracious purposes and endeavours and strivings inwardly in our bosomes Lastly Let us take heed of contenting our selves with any pitch we have attained but still labour to grow in grace lest we fall short and never enter into Gods rest The next meanes is to be earnest with God to quicken our hearts to pray The fourth meanes to God for his grace that God would be pleased to put life into us we should make Elijahs prayer that prayed to heaven for fire to come downe upon the sacrifice so pray earnestly to God to send down his celestial fire into thy heart to warm thee and heat thee and stir thee up to that which is good as the Church doth Psal 80. 18. Quicken us and we will call c. Of all Petitions under heaven we should pray most of all for life next unto the glory of God and the salvation of our souls nay indeed as the very means for both we should pray that God would quicken us into all our prayers let us put in this Petition that God would quicken us evermore to have it as the standing desire of our souls and the daily request and suit we have at the throne of grace that God would quicken us there is no grace we have more need of then this and indeed it is that which sets all other Graces awork if we did know how ready God would be to welcome such a suit we would be more ready to pray to God for it there is no man so tenderly welcome to God as he that prayes for quickning the more he is weary of deadness and common professing of God the more welcome to God he would fain fear God indeed and please God indeed when a man is possessed with deep studies how to attain to this this man is a welcome man to the throne of grace therefore let us stir up our selves to this there is no mercy better then this that God should quicken us Psalm 119. 156. Great are thy tender mercies quicken me O Lord He takes here quickning for all Gods gracious mercies and tender compassions he takes the quickning of his heart as a gracious effect of Gods infinite mercy to his soul if we had but this how welcome would good duties and opportunities of doing and receiving good be unto us The fifth meanes is to be diligent and to take earnest and effectual pains 5. Meanes in this work and in all Christian duties in all the worship of God there is a secret blessing of God upon those that take pains even in the meanest calling you shall have poor Widows that have four or five small children to keep yet being painful it is a wonderful thing what a blessing of God is upon them that they make a shift to live and never come to trouble the Parish such a blessing of God there is upon the diligent as Solomon saith The hand of the diligent maketh rich Prov. 10. 4. So it is in regard of spiritual life there is a secret blessing of God upon the men and women that labour and are diligent about the meanes of grace and are careful to take paines to have them made profitable to their souls upon those that are diligent in prayer and striving against sin diligent in hearing of the Word diligent in partaking of the Sacrament when it comes and diligent about the Sabbath that they may not lose the benefit of it it is a wonderful blessing that shall accompany such men they shall thrive in grace when as others shall be like Pharaohs lean kine that devoured all their fellows and yet were lean and ill-favoured still it is not the greatness of a mans comings in that makes a man rich but the well-managing of it there is many a rich Heir comes to poverty when as another that was never born to a foot of Land yet with pains and labour and industry is well able to live and give more to any good use then twenty base idle fellows let a man hold but a little ground twenty acres he may grow more rich upon it being a good husband then another man that holds twenty times as much and is a spendthrift and lazy and careless and never looks how business goes forward there is a blessing of God upon labour and industry as Solomon saith Prov. 13. 11. He that gathers by labour shall increase So it is here it is not he that lives under the best Ministery that is most quickned but he that lives under a poor Ministery and is diligent he is better then hundreds that live under the powerfull Preaching of the Word and never are carefull to improve it It is noted of Johns hearers that many of them had more life then they that sate under Christs Ministery It is noted of Job though he dwelt in Midian where was no meanes of grace yet he had more grace and life in his heart then almost all the Church of God that dwelt in Zion there was hardly a man in all Israel like Job Paul though he came into the Vineyard after all the Apostles yet by his labour and diligence he gat before most of them all so a man that sits under the Ministery and takes pains with his heart that the Sermons he heares may do him good that he may be the better for them if a man labours to get good by the Sacrament to get good by conference if he labour to have every Ordinance of God made profitable to him this man with a little grace shall grow more then thousands that goe on idly and yet have more helps then he therefore if we desire to be quickned let us be diligent and take pains and not go with our hands in our bosomes like Solomons sluggard Sixthly Another means is to exercise that grace we have there is never 6. Means a man in this Congregation hath so little grace but if he did exercise it so far as it would goe who knows how much quickning he might quickly have which of you do not know that there is a God and that there is a Heaven and an Hell and the Principles of Religion
how dead and fruitless were they whereunto shall I liken this generation c. Mat. 11. 16. c. the meaning is this John the Baptist he came mourning and in a doleful manner fasting and afflicting himself and crying out Repent he mourned but none would relent Christ he came piping he came in another manner he came eating and drinking and he preached gracious things the Kingdom of God and the acceptable year of our Lord now saith he you have not daunced all these things have not affected your hearts a jot you are as blockish as if you had no Ministry at all as Christ saith Mat. 8. 22. let the dead bury their dead what doth he mean by that he means those that are dead in their souls those that are dead in their spirits and souls they are fit for dead imployments and nothing else the coherence was this there was a man came to Christ and was willing it seems to be the Disciple of Christ but oh sai●h he first I pray thee let me go and bury my father bury thy father saith he any man may serve for that let the dead bury their dead those that are fit for nothing else may do that but if thy heart be alive thou art fit for me thou art fit for spiritual employments but when a man hath a dead heart he is sit for nothing as Christ he gave the bag to Judas he was the fittest man for that so let a man be in office if he be dead he hath no heart to punish sin no not so much as to use his faithful endeavour to root it out nay he will pull down the guilt of the sins of the parish upon his own soul rather then he will stickle a little for God Judg. 4. 8. how backward was Barak to go against the enemies of the Lord if you will go I will go saith he to Deborah otherwise he had no heart to go so Esther how dull was she to stand for the Church of God she would let the Church be ruinated rather then she would go and speak to the King in the behalf thereof but that Mordecai stirred her up soundly now is not this a sufficient motive to stir us up to labour for quickning how can we do the things God calls for from day today we should stand for him and call upon him and set up his worship in our families we should fear his name and set him before our eyes and fight against sin and labour to please him in all our wayes now without being quickned we are sit for none of these things now what a woful thing is it when we shall not be furnished to every good work as we should and fitted to do that which God requires of us therefore let us shake off this dulness and blockishness of spirit Thirdly Another motive is this we can have no true sign at all to our 3. Motive souls that we have any true grace at all as long as we are dead when Christ is said to give a man grace he is said to quicken a man Joh. 5. 21. conversion is called the life of the dead a mans repentance is no better then the repentance of a reprobate unless it be repentance from dead works and repentance unto life if a man hath faith it is not the faith of Gods elect if it doth not quicken him I live by faith saith Paul Gal. 2. 20. justification is communicated only to a man that is quickned God together with justification doth quicken a man he doth revive him and make him alive towards God nay we have no argument that we have our sins forgiven us unlesse God hath quickned us Col. 2. 13. he hath quickned them having forgiven them all trespasses when God forgives the trespasses of his people he doth quicken them h● takes away the dulness of their hearts and the blockishness of the●r minds and the senselesness of their consciences and their awkness and untowardness to that which is good he doth quicken them up ● every man hath life for we see how lively men are in seeking after their profits and pleasures people have life enough but it is upon things here below and they have affections enough love enough and hope enough and joy and delight enough in the world but they are set upon carnal things but if grace comes into the heart it is the vigour of the heart now as long as we are dead and dull what sign of grace can we have if we have grace ye● we cannot have any proof and comfort of it as long as we are drowzy and dull 't is true no man can have any grace but he hath some life but if he doth not quicken up himself he hinders himself of the peace and comfort that otherwise he might have hence it is that the conscience is troubled and people are unsetled and are so full of fears to dye hence i● is that people are so like to the sea the waves whereof cannot rest their minds are unquiet and unsetled it is for want of quickning if we were quickned we should have great peace come into our souls Fourthly We cannot grow in grace unless we are quickned as long as 4. Motive we are thus dull and heavy and lumpish to the things that are good we cannot grow in grace Hos 14. 7. they shall revive as the corn and grow as the vine first they shall revive and then grow first God quickens a man and then he makes him grow the Philippians love was dead to Paul afterwards it quickned again now saith he your love flourish●th Phil. 4. 10. now their hearts were quickned it began to grow but when a man hath a dead heart how can he grow as he said Joh. 15. 4. can the branch bear fruit without the vine so may I say can a mans heart grow in goodness without life it is only a living creature that can grow if a plant be once dead it withers away and cannot grow if a man have a dead heart though he should hear lectures and sermons every day he would never grow he would be never the more holy never the more godly if he should have family prayer closet prayer yet if he should be dead he should have never the more ability against his temptations though the ordinances of God be admirable helps to growing yet if a man be dead and dull they will never help him to grow in grace though grace be of a growing nature yet a dead heart starves all the graces that a man hath Fifthly Another motive is this as long as we are dead we shall be so 5. Motive far from growing that we shall be hardly able to keep our own Rev. 3. 2. strengthen the things that remain that are ready to dye as who should say thou art so far from growing that the good things that are in thee are even ready to dye thou wilt lose that very good that is in thee if thou dost
not sha●● off this d●●dness and careleseness and heartleseness to that which is good as it is with a man that hath a consumption upon his body he is so far from growing that he rather pines away he waxeth more and more faint and groweth d●ader and waxeth neerer to his end he pines away so when a man is dead though not quite dead his heart is deaded he doth pine away as the Prophet saith Ezek. 33. 10. if we pine away how shall we do o● yet thus it is 〈◊〉 man hath a dead heart he doth pine away I and again how is it possible for a man whose heart is dead to prayer and he hath no affections to 〈◊〉 which is good if there be any opportunity to that which is good he hangs off how can this man doe otherwise but wax worse and worse for he wants that which should work out sin if it be a springing water it will work out the mud but if it be a standing water it will grow thicker and thicker and will be noysome so if the body be alive though it be never so full of ill humours if it be lively nature will work them out but if the pangs of death be upon a man every disease and distemper gets the victory his nature cannot work it out now so it is with a man that hath a dead heart he cannot work out the corruption that daily bubbles up in his heart as Eli though he had never so many corruptions he had no heart to root them out 't is true he reproved his sons but it was to no purpose as good never a whit as never the better so when Solomon was grown dead and had lost his former life of grace afterwards when corruption grew in his heart he could not work it out for when God had chosen Jeroboam to be put in his room though Solomon knew that it was of God and he set him up to be King yet he could not work out this corruption but his heart to his dying day rose up against Jeroboam and he sought to kill him he wanted the life of grace he had before and sin got up and he could not work it out soundly to his dying day Now is not this a most grievous thing the very consideration of this how should it provoke us to shake off this deadness Can that body do well that hath lost his expulsive faculty when distempers arise it cannot expell them it must needs be the destruction of the body so when the life of the soul is either in part or wholly taken away how can he work out his corruptions and distempers that daily arise in him we have need of grace and life and quickning we are tempted every day and the corruptions that dwell in us are ever boyling up Now if we have not the expulsive faculty to purge them out the heart must needs be in a woful condition Sixthly This sin of deadness in some sense is worse then any other sin 6. Motive and that in six respects First Other sins for the most part are in one part of a man as drunkenness is in the appetite and covetousness is in the concupiscible faculty and pride and ostentation is in the heart and ignorance is in the minde but deadness is in all the whole man as it is with a languishing disease other diseases one may be in the head another in the neck another in the back but a Consumption runs over all the whole man So it is with deadness as it was with the Church of L●odicea when they were grown dead and careless he chargeth them that they were dead all over Thou art poor and blind and miserable and naked this heaps all miseries upon a man Rev. 3. such a man is like unto Judah From the crown of the head to the sole of the foot there was no sound part Isa 1. 6. It is a general disease it is like the deluge that drowned the whole world it drowns the whole man I confesse drunkenness and adultery and such particular sinnes may kill and damn a man but I say by accident deadness is worse then they 't is true drunkennesse and adultery and prophanesse are worse but why are they worse but because they have this deadnesse too but if they could be taken alone and a man might have a living heart towards God otherwise they should not be worse then deadness Secondly Other sins are against one commandement of God or two or so but this deadnesse is against all the commandements of God it is a sin against prayer for we should pray with life it is a sin against hearing for we should hear with life it is a sin against the Sabbath for we should keep it with delight it is a sin against all the Ordinances of God for we should come to them all with life and affection Suppose a servant his Master should bid him do a thing he bids him goe to one place he goes to another he goes drinks and swills another servant he goes about that his Mr. bids him but whatsoever his Mr. bids him do he goes about it slothfully and by halfs this servant is a worse servant then the other why because thi● servant offends in all the business he hath to do whatsoever his Mr. sets him about he marrs it and doth it to halfs So deadness of heart it disables a man to every duty to whatsoever God requires of a man and this is one of the reasons why he that breaks one of the commandements of God is said to break them all Iam. 2. 10 11. Why because he deads his heart a man that gives way to sin against any one commandement deads his heart to all and so by reason of that deadness he becoms guitlty of all Thirdly Other sins are not so deep in the soul but this deadness is deeper then all a man will be willinger to lay down any sin then deadness and to take up any duty then quickning a man had rather do any thing if he may do it without life if the bare hearing praying and profession will serve turn may be he will do that but to do all with life this the heart is loth to come to when it comes to lay out all the strength and vigour of the whole man upon God the heart cannot abide this Judah was content to turn to God but to do it with life this they would not do Jer. 3. 10. Treacherous Judah hath not turned to me with the whole heart c. He doth not deny but they turned unto him but they would not do it with their whole heart with life with all their power and strength thus they did not turn unto him As it was with the Ruler in the Gospel he was content to observe the commandements of God not to murther not to commit adultery not to steal not to swear All these have I observed from Matth. 19. my youth saith he but when Christ came
sin therefore though when we resist occasions and temptations of sin we are able to abstain and contain our selves yet because we are not perfectly weaned if we give way to occasions we lose all when we will rashly venture upon the occasions of evil we lose our strength therefore saith David Psal 101. 3. I will set no evil thing before mine eyes as he would not do it so he would not have it in his sight every man is privy to himself and may know what thoughts what desires what appearances what customs what speeches are occasions of evil to him he might know what doth occasion him to sin may be he had not committed sin but for this or that now when a man shall give way to these occasions and not stand upon his guard this loseth all a mans strength as Saul he was privy to himself how testy and furious he was and if he had any instrument of fury in his hand he had no power over himself yet he would ever be with his javelin in his hand when he was in the field or in the house still he had his javelin in his hand now you may see what mischief he exposed himself unto he flung it twice at David and a third time at his own son Jonathan if he had been careful not to have given way to the occasions of sin knowing how weak he was and that he had not command over himself he might have escaped this a man that is furious had not need alwayes to have a sword about him a man had need shun all the occasions of evil Joseph was a strong man how can I do this wickedness c. all the temptations of his Mistriss could not allure him what was the cause of this he would not hearken to his Mistris nor be with her Gen. 39. What made Achan to be so weak he must needs take the Babylonish garment and the wedge of gold he gave way to the occasion I looked upon it saith he he being privy to his own covetous heart should have been shy of giving any occasion to the flesh but he giving way to the Josh 7. 21. occasion was weak and not able to stand Fourthly We should never go up and down without a constant continual purpose to please God when we first rise in the morning we should think with our selves well I purpose to take heed of sin this day so when I am at dinner I will take heed that I let not the remembrance of God go out of my mind I will have fresh thoughts of him while I am at board as it is said of Daniel he purposed not to defile himself with the Kings meat So when we go into the fields we should think with our selves I purpose God Dan. 1. 8. willing to beware that I may not come home with a guilty conscience do things that may be to my shame and wounding another day when we are to come among wicked people we should resolve before we come I will let fall nothing to dishonour God thus if we would go armed up and down we should go strongly if we would make serious resolutions to cleave to God and not to do evil this would strengthen us now when temptations meet us unresolved we are not able to put them off Fifthly We should frequent the Ordinances of God First We should be careful of hearing the word of God in a godly manner Strength and beauty are in his Sanctuary Psal 96. 6. there is strength to be had in Gods house in Gods courts his Word and Ordinances are the food of the soul that as bread strengthens a mans body so this spiritual bread of life strengthens a mans soul So again For prayer to go to God in prayer that would strengthen us Prov. 18. 10. So the Sacraments they are a means to strengthen us to go to the Lords Table with hunger and thirst and serious consideration of our own unworthiness and of our need and with true faith unto it the Lords Supper is a means to strengthen as it is noted in the primitive Church Acts 2. 42. so again for meditations if we would meditate of the things we hear of Gods word and his blessings and judgement and warning we have from day to day if we would digest these things and chew them from day to day they would yield a great deal of nourishment unto us as David saith Blessed is the man whose meditations are in Gods Law he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers side and his leafe shall not wither Psal 1. 2 3. that man shall flourish like a green bay tree So for holy conference that is a great means to strengthen all good things as those good people when the times were bad mark how they strengthned themselves that they might not be infected with evil they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Mal. 3. 16. Sixthly We should put forth our selves to the utmost in good duties it is our lazinesse and idleness that we are not more able to do good and that we are so frail and infirm to do any thing that is of God if we would take pains and put forth our selves we should be strong and indeed what is strength but taking of pains when a man puts forth himself as Eccles 10. 10. that is a man must take the more pains the more pains a man takes the more strength he puts forth there is no creature that God hath made besides man but doth act to its utmost strength the fire burns as much as ever it can and the light shines as much as ever it can and the stone goes down as low as ever it can every creature works as far as it can but now man he can limit his strength because he hath reason and will and according as he sees a thing more or less necessary according as he sees it easier or harder to be attained accordingly he lessens or puts forth his strength and it is great reason that God should give man power to limit his strength for he is to deal with the creature as well as with the Creator and if he should love and seek the creature as much as ever he can this were Idolatry therefore the Lord hath given a man power to limit his strength not to let out all his love or fear upon any thing here below but yet God doth not give a man that power to limit his strength and the exercise of it towards his Maker but he should let out all towards God as David saith let all that is within wee praise the Lord he opens his floodgates wide and le ts out all towards Psal 103. God Seventhly Consider that all received strength is worth nothing unlesse God give us new supply wherefore are true Christians weak at any time but because they think thus I had true grace in the morning and an hour ago I had the fear of God and the hatred of sin and
the consideration of this makes him that he is not so careful to keep close to Christ and to take heed of falling he thinks I had power the other day and I was able to resist temptations then this makes a man weak he thinks he had grace a while a go and so trusts to that for if a man do not still look up to Christ and cleave unto him as if he had no strength the man is presently a weak man as weak as another man and cannot stand a man cannot be strong in the grace that is in himself but in the grace that is in God Eph. 6. 10. Brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might And as Paul speaks to Timothy though Timothy were a man that was as strong as any man upon the face of the earth almost yet he bids him not count himself strong in the grace that was in him but in the grace that is in Christ Jesus 2 Tim. 2. 1. As it is with the air which is not strong with the light that is in it self but with the light that is in the Sun therefore we are careful not to shut the windows for if we shut the light of the Sun out the air though it be light now will be dark again in a moment therefore though the room be light yet we keep the windows open for the light of the air is strong in the light of the Sun so a Christian should keep his windows ever open towards Christ if a man ever turn his back again upon Christ and neglect Christ if he do not cleave to Christ and take heed he do not provoke Christ against him he is gone he is as weak as can be as Ezra speaks Ezr. 7. 28. I was strengthned as the hand of the Lord was upon me no otherwise if the Lord should take away his hand he were gone though he had never so much strength wisedom and parts he were no body without God Eighthly Lastly Take heed of striving against knowledge or willingly that weakens us horribly and in particular take heed of pride no man so weak as a proud man nor so strong as an humble man as a Divine speaks a man that is sensible of his own weakness of his own being no body of his own folly and that he is able to do nothing of himself he that is sensible of this is strong as Paul saith 2 Cor. 12. 10. when we are weak then are we strong that is when we are humble and weak in our own apprehension and consideration when we lay this to heart that we are weak then are we strong for this makes a man lay about him to cleave unto God I have laid down divers directions for the strengthning of those good things that are in us and I will now adde one more because it is seasonable for the time Direct Make conscience of using and improving the Sacraments for they are excellent Ordinances to strengthen a man First The Sacrament of Baptism I do not mean the meer receiving outward baptism that is a weak thing but when a man hath a care to improve his baptism It is noted of Abraham that he had faith before his circumcision but he received circumcision the seal of the righteousness of faith for this that he might be the father of the faithful Rom. 4. 19. Now he could believe incredible wonderful strange things that would have staggered him before So when David was to fight against Goliah he was a great warrier and a mighty souldier and David a weak stripling now see how he strengthned himself against Goliah he useth three argument and one is taken from the Sacrament of Gods covenant he was an uncircumcised man but David was circumcised and within the covenant What is this 1 Sam. 17. uncircumcised Philistin to one that is circumcised and in covenant with God and he hath given me the Sacrament of it that he will help me and be with me and stand by me in all estates and conditions So it was with the Gaoler before when the Magistrates bid him put Paul and his fellows in the worst prison he durst do no other and when he saw the prison doors Acts 16. open he would have killed himself he was not able to have any power over himself but when he had faith and was baptized now he was able to take them out of the prison and carry them to his own house and give them the best entertainment though the Magistrates counted them Roagues and vagabonds he had gotten strength now Secondly The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is of great force being used with faith and due preparation according to Gods Ordinance it is a Sacrament for the very nonce to help a mans faith and strengthen him in every good thing First Because this is the very nature of the Sacrament it is the Sacrament of growth and increasing in grace the other Sacrament puts a man into the estate of grace and this strengthens a man in the estate of grace therefore when Christ administred the Sacrament he tells us we may receive Matth 26. it as our very bread now Psal 104. 15. bread strengthens a mans heart He tells us if we come to the Sacrament aright as our bodies receive bread and it strengthens them so we may receive that which will nourish our souls take eat this is my body will not this bread nourish you directly my body is such a thing that do but take it by faith it shall strengthen you just as this bread strengthens the body as Eliah went in the strength of that 1 Kings 19. meat he eat forty dayes and forty nights so if we come to this Sacrament understandingly and preparedly it is most certain we shall have strength may be not that we would have our selves may be we would have more grace and more assistance but we shall have that strength whereby we shall be able to go on in the service of God doing good and shunning evil from day to day My flesh is meat indeed c. And indeed it will nourish a man as it is said of Jonathan he was weak and faint and his eyes grew John 6. 55. 1 Sam. 14. dim but when he tasted a little honey his strength came to him again So the Sacrament received by a true Communicant that sets himself to prepare his soule to partake of it he shall have his eyes enlightned and his heart quickened he shall have some succour and relief from it to goe about every good word and work Secondly It is a seal of Gods Covenant and therefore must needs strengthen a man that is in Covenant with God if he come to it as it ought to become unto for what is the Covenant a true believer is in I will make an everlasting Covenant never to turn away from them to doe them good and I will put my fear into their hearts c. Jer. 32. 40. It is an
so leave it when they have no hope to go on they grow remiss and loose and carelesse in this kinde it makes a man desperate when this hope is gone therefore when the Lord hath a minde to do good to a man and encourage him to go on in the wayes of holinesse he puts some hope into the soul and when a man sees some hope then he will pray and fast and humble himself the Lord lets in this hope and so prepares a man for himself Thirdly because he will not do all at once but work upon a man by degrees 3. Because God will not do all at once the Lord could put faith into the soul at first but the Lord will first make a man a probationer of faith the Lord will first have the seed sowen and then quicken in the ground and then have a blade and then an eare and then harvest Again the Lord will so do it that he may be sought to for every mercy 4. That he may be sought to for every mercy and therefore first the Lord gives a man natural parts that he may come to Church and hear the Word and then the Lord knocks him down that he may be abased and then he shatters him all to pieces that he may look out for hope and then when he hath gotten hope the Lord makes him seek out for faith and when he hath gotten faith to seek out for other graces and when he hath them to seek for the accomplishment of them the Lord will be sought to for every thing and it is fit we should seek to him though the parent doth not engender the reasonable soul in the babe but God doth create it immediately yet none of us do count marriage superstuous so though God doth give this grace of faith only yet we are not to account the using of means in vain the Lord doth not power in humane wit into stocks and stones but into a body sitted and ordered for a reasonable soul so it is in respect of faith and grace the creature shall be first ordered and sitted for grace there must be preparation and a foregoing work it is his manner of working he will so work as he will still be sought unto of all his people though they have not faith if they have hope they shall seek to him for faith as it is with a Scholar if he will be a Scholar or Fellow of a Colledge he must sit for it so the Lord will have a man sit for it he will have a man sit at the pool of grace and seek to him for it before he shall have it This shews us the graciousness of our good God that when he takes us to Use 1. To shew the graciousnes of God do for our sins He remembers us when we are in our low estate for his mercy endures for ever Psal 136. 53. when we are at the brink of hell at the very bottome of destruction and in the belly of damnation when we know not which way to turne our selves then he remembers us for his mercy endures for ever thus the Lord deals with his people for their good as he opens the casement that his justice may look out upon us so he sets his mercy in the window that we may see it through the glasse that we may not be overwhelmed this is the goodness of God and were it not for this no man should be able to abide his look nor bear his displeasure when he breakes out upon a man this is the infinite goodness of our gracious God to deal thus favourably with his people therefore you that have gotten this hope know that the Lord night have held you down to this day and he had justly served you if he had done so therefore whosoever of you are in the briars do not repine and grumble because you are not refreshed as others are if you have but the least cranny of hope to hang upon make much of it it is more then God owes you how easily might the Lord teare the soul all in pieces when he comes to deal with a man when he shews a man his sins and abominations he might make them as heavy as rocks and mountaines unto him and break him all to powder it were just if he did so now when the Lord puts in this hope what a wonderful mercy is this When God told Hezekiah Behold thou shalt die he presently bade him take a lump of Figgs and healed the disease so what a mercy is this that God saith Th●● shalt die thou art a damned creature and bids him presently take a plaiste● and so recovers him For comfort to all those that are the Lords though it be a poor faith a poor Use 2. Comfort for believers hope that flowes from possibility only yet I tell you that even believers may have need sometimes to have resort unto it for how often hath the Devil been let loose upon poor souls even those that are of God as sometimes he doth tempt them to presumption that so they may neglect their watch over themselves so it is his practice to drive us from one extreame to another and hurry us to despair and urge upon us that we have no faith we have no grace and are as sure to be damned as if we were in hell already David Psal 31. 22. seems to be out of all hope to be saved as if he were utterly undone the servants of light many of them have found this too too true how fearfully they have been perplexed and galled in minde seeking release but could finde none and pronouncing against themselves bitter things as if they had nothing of God in them the devil dazling their eyes that they cannot see and putting out of their minds all the sweet passages of the Gospel and preaching nothing but the terrible passages of the Law he that doubts is damned and he that wavers is like a wave of the sea and he urgeth them with every vain thought with every omission with every failing and every sin they have committed it is strange to see how some of Gods own people have reasoned against themselves as if all the devils logick were in them and all mercy were gone thus the devil sometimes deals with Gods people that they cannot tell where to hold they can see nothing to give any comfort or stay they are ready to let go all and give over all hope now what an excellent thing is this if a man have this hope that he may be never driven from God that there is eternal life and forgivenesse in him and all these things are attainable I tell you it is a great help to a man when he can say with the Church Joel 2. 13. Who can tell whether th● Lord will turn and leave a blessing behind him a man that hath but this hope in him it will never let him go off from God and be quite overcome by Satan so that though it
propounds the Word to the soul holds it before the eyes and conscience and sanctifies it and puts a power into it to enter deep into the soul that it may Conceive in the soul Secondly The Lord doth it by an unspeakable working There is a Divine work which the Lord worketh The spirit comes into the soul after the By a secret and supernatural power manner of water as Christ saith Joh. 3. Except a man be born again of water and the holy Ghost c. that is unless he be born of the Spirit which worketh in the spirit of a man as water doth in working upon a ●oul thing Now what this working is we cannot tell but we can tell you the effects of it whereas the soul was rotten and naught before and impotent to all good now it begins to have a better disposition and a new power And whereas it did savour of the things of this life before now it savours of the things that are above but this is a secret kind of working in the soul therefore it is called the washing and the la●er of it And the Apostle speaking of the Corinthians what miserable creatures they were before Regeneration he nameth Drunkards Idolaters Adulterers c. and all manner of filthy persons Such were some of you saith he before your Regeneration but now you are washed and justified and sanctified in the Name of Christ 1 Cor. 6. 11. That same washing there he means by that you are Regenerated so that Regeneration it is a supernatural an unspeakable kind of washing of the soul by the holy Ghost whereby the soul hath its Corruption washed from it in part and made clean in pa●● and way made for all the Graces of Gods Spirit to come in now and all the fruits of the spirit to be brought forth Thus the Spirit of God works this work he works it in an ineffable manner by the word of Life and by a secret kind of washing I come now to the Application of this Point And first of all If the Spirit of God be the Regenerater of Gods people then we may here see Vse 1. Of Confutation of Pelagians c. the errour of the Papists Pelagians and others That set up the Will of man and put any activity in the Reason and Judgement and Wisdom and Election of man This Doctrine of theirs is un●ound and contrary to the working of Gods holy spirit If it be such a work as God sends his own Spirit to do it What man can do it It is called Regeneration and this shews it is not of man who is able to beget himself and shape himself in the womb and dispose of his own body in the belly Nay more Can any man beget himself again The very name of Again shews that it is a work only of God none but he can do it and we see it plainly it is wrought no where but where God himself doth it and they that have it are able to speak it that they did not chuse God but God chose them I was found of them that sought me not all the souls of his people will subscribe That it was not in them that willed or in them that ran but in God that shewed mercy It is God only that is the Author of this thing and none but he Secondly Again This should teach us to consider that we have alwayes Informaton Of our continual need of the Spirit need of the Spirit of God If the Spirit of God hath begotten us again then we have alwayes need of him it is not in this as in the first Birth when the Child is born though the Father be gone the Child may subsist but it is not so here but the Spirit of God as he begets a man so he is fain alwayes to stand by him and bear him up and give him supplies of Grace from day to day As it is with the Air the Sun doth not only enlighten it but it doth every moment give light to it for suppose the Sun should shine four or five hours in the day yet if the Sun should with-hold its light the Air would be dark presently it is not as it is with Fire let a man heat the water though he take away the Fire the water will keep its heat a while after but do but with-hold the light of the Sun and all is gone in the same moment so it is with this new Creature and the Spirit of God he doth dwell in the soul as the Sun in the Air his presence warms the soul and quickens the soul and inables a man to good and gives a principle of life and enables to all actions that are good therefore how should all Gods people carry themselves towards this Spirit They should have a care that they quench him not nor go against him in any particular The Third Vse is for all Gods people in whom God hath wrought this Exhortation 1. Not to grieve the Spirit blessed work the Spirit of God hath regenerated and begotten them again I say to all such persons Let them endear this Spirit of God let them not grieve or offend or displease him seeing he is such a gracious worker in them Ephes 1. 13. The Apostle makes this very Inference in whom after ye believed ye were sealed by the holy Spirit of Promise that is whereby you were Regenerated Regeneration is the first seal of the Spirit whereby he seals Gods good will to a man Now hath the Spirit of God sealed you Then do not grieve him nor cause him to take any indignation against you for though he will never depart from them whom he hath made new Creatures yet notwithstanding he may hide his face for a time if we displease him Yea Consider Will any natural Child willingly displease his loving Father The Spirit of God is our Father therefore we should have respect to him Again This should be a Motive to Gods people to be willing to do any 2. To do any thing for God thing for God because he hath made them as David saith Psal 100. 3. This very Consideration That God hath made us and re-made us he hath done that for us that all our own wits could never have done that the whole world hath not the like the Lord gener-ally lets the whole World sink in ruine and damnation should be a Motive to you to be willing to serve him gladly and to call upon his Name to be ready prest to execute any of his Commands to enter into his presence upon all occasions seeing it is he that hath made us and not we ourselves To them that are Vnregenerated Here we see where to have Regeneration 3. To the Unregenerate to pray for the Spirit it is only in God and in the Spirit of God to renew a man and make a man up again As David prayed when he had the Spirit Lord take not thy holy Spirit from me Psal 51. 11. So when
grape he had planted and delighted in it but presently the Devil hooked him in which he might have prevented if he had been watchful the Devil is that Nimrod that greedy hunter that goeth up and down and makes pits and layes snares to catch souls and if we doe not watch we fall into them 1 Cor. 2. 13. Paul saith I was among you with much feare he knew what danger he was in therefore he was in much fear if we did love our own quickning and the cherishing of whatsoever grace we have received we would watch over our selves but where is this generally all the world is fast asleep even good men and all the Devil may sow what tares he will there is no watching in prayer and in hearing of the Word and doing good duties no watching in observing the Sabbath no watching in company no watching alone what may not the Devil doe when we are all as sleepy dogs and love to snoar and dulnesse and deadnesse and blockishnesse and worldlinesse and unsetlednesse grows upon us to the utmost there is no body watching against temptations they may come flowing in like violent waters there is no withstanding of them people are like to Saul that was marvellous finely quickned at one time he would not goe on in his envy against David he should not die by any meanes no his heart was so enlarged that he bound his soul by a covenant that he would be as good as his word As the Lord lives he shall not die Jonathan had used many arguments and they so wrought upon him that he could give the right hand to David and all his malice was out and David was a great man at Court again 1 Sam. 19. 6 7 8. But for want of watchfulnesse within a little while the evil spirit came into him and he would have murthered him again so Jonah when he had run from God and God had humbled him now he would never follow lying vanities any more now he would goe to Niniveh and preach let what danger would come but by and by not looking to himselfe he is as much out of tune again as ever he was as if he had never had these shinings he was overgrown with passions I doe well to be angry even Jonah 4. to the death I cannot tell which was the fouler distemper A third Cause of our general deadness is the lowness of Religion which men generally content themselves withal a low kinde of Religion that will never reach half way to Heaven that will never attain to any quickning Religion it is a very high thing Prov. 15. 24. it is a thing alone a man must raise himself aloft when he means to come into the way of eternal life it is an high calling Phil. 3. 14. It is said of Jehosaphat that his heart was lifted up in the wayes of God Jerusalem that is above all 2 Chron. 17 godly souls that have true Religion indeed are men above Now people generally content themselves with a low kinde of serving of God that doth not come out of the suburbs of Hell and condemnation the suburbs of hell Gal. 4. reach a great way a man may goe even to heaven gates and yet be in the suburbs of hell but to get into heaven and escape hell beneath is an high pitch but men seek out a low way by the valleys they think to come to heaven this way it would choak most people to say that their conversation Phil. ● is in heaven as the Apostles was that they are strangers upon earth as the Patriarchs were that they hate every sinne as all godly men doe that they go mourning all the day long under their corruptions and failings and that it is the greatest grief of their hearts that they walk not according to Gods goodness and that they use all means to get rid of their sins that they delight in every ordinance that they delight in Gods Sabbaths and hunger and thirst after righteousness it is the greatest desire of their souls and hearts to do thus it would choak them to say thus no they never attain it this is the way of life that is above but it is too high for fooles therefore no wonder that men never come to quickning for they are not in the way of life for the way of life is above and Pro. 15. they grope after the things below and have not their conversation above now how can we look for quickning when we do not go in the way of life which is above Fourthly Another reason is the vanity of mens minds this is the cause of horrible deadness Psal 119. 37. vanity when a man gives way to it it doth horribly dead the heart vain thoughts vain speeches vain expences of time vain meetings together without benefit these are deaders they lock up mens hearts and exhaust all the good and all the sap of any goodness in them 't is true the children of God may talk how things go in a far country in the Church of God and other places and they may talk of their business in the world and this may be like bottle-beer when it is first poured out into the cup it seems to be all froth but by and by it turns to good liquor again so though these discourses about worldly affairs and how things go are froth if they go no further yet if they turn to good substance and are sanctified and brought home to the heart to edifie and awaken and bring a man nearer to God now they are good where there is a good use made of them but otherwise they are horrible instruments of death and soul-murther among men Fifthly Mutual example we do even dead one another for people are apt to look upon one another Ministers upon people and people upon Ministers and Ministers one upon another and if we be not much cast behind one another we hope all is well with us this is that which deads peoples hearts whereas people should follow Gods light Gods dealing with them and not look upon others and if we look upon others we should look upon those that are quickned Luke 7. 44. seest thou this woman c. there was a woman was quickned indeed her bowels melted her eyes were fountains of tears her very soul was affected she was quickned indeed seest thou this woman so if we will look upon others upon the Saints of God seest thou this woman look upon those that are most quickned but when we look upon others and say such a one doth so and so and why may not I I may do as well as he when we do thus this is apt to dead our hearts The sixth cause of deadness is covetousness and worldliness Christians that have been weaned from the world so long as they keep their minds off from the world and set them upon better things they are full of life and quickning and are able to pray and confer sweetly but when as once
they come to let in the world again this doth mightily dead and damp their hearts this doth wonderfully lay bolts and fetters upon their soul that it cannot go on as formerly as the Apostle shews 1 Tim. 6. 10. as soon as ever a man gives way to look after the world presently if he had any faith he erres from it if he had any quickning before he is now deaded this deaded Demas his heart for a time he was so full of life that he was able to hold company with St. Paul but when this came once to take possession of him Demas hath forsaken me he was gone he was able to hold 2 Tim. 4. company with Paul no longer worldliness will quickly take off all the affections and all the quickning that was in the soul it will presently fail and die and decay therefore you shall see when the Lord would set down how dull Ezekiels hearers were and how heartless he sets down this as a reason o● it their heart is gone after their covetousness Ezek. 33. no marvel then they went not after Ezekiels Sermons for their hearts could not go after both at once so long as their hearts were after the world and profits they must needs be dead and untoward to the word of God therefore the Apostle saith Eph. 5. 3. let not covetousness be named among you as becometh Saints as who should say it will utterly dead and kill all your Saint-qualities and dispositions that are in you if you suffer your hearts to grow earthly the dames of the earth as one saith doth not more quench a candle and put it out then the love of the world doth damp grace and put it out presently and this is the cause of that deadness that is grown among us we are grown worldly and the world carries us away we are all for the world so that all our words thoughts affections carriages they are all little else but worldly most people have many businesses abroad in the world riding abroad into the world but who takes that short journey into his own heart people can tend businesse with every body else but themselves they know what is done beyond sea and the countries round about and yet hardly any one marks how things go in his own soul whither he goes backward or forward whither he gets or loseth every body can ask how others do but no man looks how his own soul doth people are grown at great distance from themselves I speak not of drunkards or prophane persons such as are absolutely dead in sins and trespasses but I speak of Christians in whom we should look for life we are grown strangers to our selves we are out of our own reach we are grown to a mighty distance from looking to our own estates and conditions as we ought to do our minds are scattered up and down about other things therefore no marvel we are so heartlesse towards God Seventhly The next cause is idleness and spiritual sloth when men let their minds go as a boat without a guide the boat goeth uncertainly when it hath no body to guide and steer it so people let their thoughts and hearts and minds run at all adventures people do not take pains with their own hearts and hold them to that which is good we let our hearts be like the field of the sluggard any thing may grow in them for all us we do not look to our hearts that we may have good things grow in them and that we may fence our hearts from those things which may make us untoward in the wayes of God if we have any stirrings at any time we are like idle huswives when the liquor hath done working they forget to stop up the bunghole so when men have any stirrings then they are in motion and action but when they are gone they let their hearts get a vent and they are deaded again as if they had nothing at all as Solomon shews Prov. 19. 15. though a man hath enough for the present yet if he grow idle when that is spent he will samish and starve and die the idle soul shall suffer hunger may be he hath something now but if he be idle and sluggish that may be all spent and then for want of supply he may famish so it is with the soul though it hath something for the present yet if it be idle and sluggish and slothful and take not pains from day to day it must needs go to wrack when God gives us knowledge of sin we should improve that knowledge to root out sin when God gives us insight into graces we should employ it that we may get those graces if God give us his ordinances if he give us a Sermon at any time we should presently work with it As it is with a graft that a man cuts off to plant and set if he lets it lie till it be dead it will never grow but if he presently plant it it will take in the ground and prosper so if a man would presently take a good motion when it comes if he would presently take hold of a reproof or counsel given him out of the word of God while it hath life in it and works upon his heart the heart might receive much benefit but when people are blockish and dull they are not willing to take any pains no wonder though they go down as they do Eccles 10. 18. by much slothfulness the building decayeth c. it is so in the spiritual building if people be slothful all gracious things must needs vanish away and go out more and more and this is a most grievous thing it is generally among all people nay among the better sort for wicked men that live palpably in sin they are struck dead in ●●n and never had any colour of life but I speak of those that have had some kind of quickning yet notwithstanding suffer themselves to be deaded through idleness when we go to prayer we do not put forth our selves in prayer our prayers are dead when we go to the word we do not put forth our minds and therefore our hearing is dead our hearts are like to a sieve when it is in the water it is full but when it is once taken out again not a jot remains so it is while people are at a Sermon may be they seem to drink in something and their hearts are affected yet these people are rare too but when they are gone all is gone all leaks out again for want of stopping for want of observing the things they have heard this is the reason there is no more life among Christians because they are so idle and sluggish thou evil and slothful servant saith Christ when a man is a Matth. 25. slothful servant he must needs be an evil servant Christians will confer may be now and then of grace but with such loose thoughts that there is no edification or quickning nay their hearts grow dull and
there is no man is dead but he that hath no care to look after Christ and desire him if we would have Christ if our hearts be open to him if we doe but desire him and long for him if we have but these groanes and outgoings in our souls oh that I had but Christ shed abroad in my heart if I had him I should have life and quickning if I had him I should have right and title to all Gods heavenly comforts if our hearts did but goe up and down longing after Christ this is the way to attain to quickning Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters c. Come and ye shall have waters that shall never be dried up the want of faith is the cause of hardness of heart and of deadnesse as our Saviour Christ when he saw they were dead Matth. 16. he did upbraid them with unbeliefe if a man did but once believe if a man did but truly cast his soul upon God if he had but once his eyes opened to see the vanity of all other things to see the danger of sinne and iniquity the misery of all unregenerate people and to see the worth of Christ and the infinite goodnesse of God in Christ what an admirable pearl it is to enjoy him how it is better then life it selfe better then the whole world yea then thousands of worlds if a man did but see this and had his heart affected with this to be drawn to Christ and to have his heart and minde run after him to be possessed of him this is faith you that would know whether you have faith or no if you had all the faiths in the world you are infidels without this faith but if you have this faith you have true faith if you have a heart running after Christ minding him and longing for him and casting your soules upon him for all good accounting this your principal and total and main good and accordingly affecting this these are the works of faith and if you have these works you may be quickned believe in the Lord Jesus Christ set your hearts upon him and seek after him and you shall have all manner of good even life it self The second meanes is a careful learning of the Word of God preached Second means When the Corin●hians were marvellously blocked u● in their minds and hearts and were straightned in good things 2 C●r 6 12. mark what the Apostle saith v. 11. Our m●uth is ●pen to you c. as who should say in our Ministery there is abundance of grace abundance of life and largenesse of heart abundance of gracious things all manner of good things we bring with us in our Ministery peace and comfort and hope and all the promises of God and all the rich treasu●es of Jesus Christ we come with our armes full you are not straightned here but you are straightned in your 〈◊〉 bowels as who should say you may be enlarged sweetly by our Ministry w● deliver unto you abundance of grace and mercy and abundance of supply all those deadnesses and lockings up of heart in you would be healed by the Ministery of the Word so may I say if your hearts are locked up certainly it is for not taking what the Word offers if you would come hungerly and greedily to the Word of God with an heart desirous to be edified and instructed and to apply what the Word speaks to your souls certainly you shall here meet with abundance of grace and life for the Word is the Word of life and the Ministery of the Word is the Ministery of the Spirit of God and life so that the deadness of all people is meerly from their own bowels you are not straightned in us saith the Apostle no in th● Ministery of the Word is abundance of life The third meanes is A careful shunning of all those causes of deadness which we named formerly we must take heed of sin for if we give way to sinne it will dead the heart it will make a make a man shy of God and put a man to woful tasks and bre●d lo●hness to goe about duties it will make a man to have a guilty conscience and dead a man that way it will grieve the spirit of God and quench all the operations and sweet influences and gracious motions of the Spirit that the sweet livelinesse of his workings will be gone away if a man give way to sinne if he give way to the world or slackning in a godly course if a man give way to pride or vanity or any sin this will dead the heart a mans heart will presently be deaded if he give way to the Devil and to his temptations In particular you must take heed of niggardlinesse in Religion they that love quickning must labour for a frank and free spirit that will rather overdoe in Gods service then underdoe as long as a man hath a free heart he shall have a quickened heart therefore labour to preserve it doe as Philemon I kn●w thou wil● d●e more than I say Paul knew he had a free spirit that if be commanded him a little he would doe more he would rather overdoe then underdoe our Saviour Christ calls for this free spirit I● a man take thy coat give him thy cloak also rather overdoe then underdoe in any good thing have a free heart if God bid thee pray pray thr●e times five times a day rather then not often enough there be m●n● duties that God doth not set down how often and how frequent and ho● long now labour for a free spirit rather do twice as much then underdo Again Take heed of lownesse of Religion of taking up a low and base and mean kinde of Religion that will not reach the Kingdome of God there is a low kinde of Christianity that wil not be able to attain to salvation a low faith that doth not make a man to have his conversation in heaven a low repentance that reacheth not to mortification a low profession of Religion that comes not to the power of Godliness Prov. 15. 24. The way of life is above it is an high thing therefore take heed of low Religion for people think that any kinde of righteousness will serve turn if they have but a little Reformation and Religion they presently think this is godliness but let us take heed of this low Religion that will never do the deed Again We must take heed of want of Watchfulnesse we must set up a gracious and Christian watch in our hearts from day to day when the Lord had found fault with the Church of Sardis for being dead in the next words he bids them be watchful as who should say the want of this watchfulness and looking to your selves and having a care over your thoughts and a●fections lest you should be drawn aside the neglect of this is the cause of all deadness Again We must take heed of vanity as David saith Psal 119.
it is not only to make him go but to quicken him up to go we are all dull and careless and blockish now Motives serve to stir us up Eccles 12. the words of the wise are as go●ds to provoke and stir up people Well then The first motive shall be this to consider the woful ingredients 1. Motive of this sin of deadness the horrible sins that are contained in it what a compound of spiritual diseases are in this sin First There is a dulnesse and blockishnesse of mind dull and heavy to learn any thing that is good as it is said of the Jews Acts 28. 27. when a man hath an unteachable mind though he be never so long under the word of God it cannot strike into his heart and enter into his understanding his mind cannot ●eel the weight of divine truths take outward truths of profit and pleasure a man may lead him up and down with these truths he feels weight in these but for the word of God he hath no understanding in that may be he can tell what the Ministers say and talk of it but for the weight of divine reason the mind is blockish to this men are like to a blockish scholler that hath gone seven years to school and yet is not beyond the primmer so when a man shall sit so long under the Ministry of the word and yet be a stranger to it as if he had never heard of it he hears discourses of faith and can speak of it and talk of it of the letter of it as well as the best believer and yet is as blockish to go about it as can be what an horrible thing is this that the truth should come to a mans mind and a man should be dull to conceive it Secondly Another evil is awkness and averseness of heart listleseness to the wayes of Jesus Christ as Christ saith of the Jews Mat. 15. 8. their hearts cannot be pulled to that which is good their hearts are untoward and have no list or disposition that way even as if a man should go about a thing that he hath no heart to so people go about prayer and the hearing of the word as if they had no heart to it they have no heart to prayer they have no heart to think soundly of God and of their latter end they come to duties but their hearts are a thousand miles off Thirdly There is senselesness of conscience it is not tender of little sins it feels them not at all and as for great sins it feels them but a little may be peoples consciences find fault with them from day to day for doing what they do and tells them they ought not to do it but yet they will not leave their sins it tells them thus and thus they ought to do but it hath no power to make them do it may be it accuseth them but they are never the better peoples consciences are dull and blunt and have no force at all Fourthly For coldness and lukewarmness of affections the affections of a man are not set upon God they pray without affections and hear without affections the doctrine of eternal life doth not affect their hearts hatred of evil is cold and love of God and goodness is cold as Christ saith the love of many shall waxe cold and so their desires are cold and Matth. 24. languish and come to nothing we can find tears for other matters but not for our sins we can have our affections soon stirred when our selves and our own wills are crossed but God may be dishonoured a thousand wayes and we never grieved or moved at it so when we hear a fine story and carnal news this delights but when we hear the word of God the truth of God that concerns our eternal well doing we are not moved or affected at all with that Fifthly Another ingredient of this sin is the weakness and faintness of endeavours if people have any endeavours any kinde of putting themselves forth to that which is good it is with faintness as if they cared not whither they went about it yea or no as Solomon saith Prov. 13. 4. people desire mercy and pardon and would have hope and salvation and the Kingdom of God but will not be at the cost and charges they ought to be at for these things this is nothing but the deadnesse of our hearts Lastly That same dulness and drowsiness of the whole man though men be careful enough of outward things yet how careless are they of their souls were our hearts broken and contrite under these things we should be soon quickned as the Lord saith Isa 57. 15. I rev●ve the spirit of the contrite one so God would revive us if we were sensible of these distempers of ours if we would humble our selves before God and plead to him for help he would help us but when we do not lay these distempers to heart and seek out to God for redress no marvel though we are dead and dull still well then is it so that there are so many horrible ingredients in this sin of deadness then how should we labour to fling it away and use all means to be quickned the Apostle being to disswade from following the will of the Gentiles he useth this very argument the abundance of the vile ingredients that is in the will of the Gentiles 1 Pet. 43. so you may see how the wise man disswades Prov. 26. 25. when he speaketh fair believe him not for there are seven abominations in his heart so let us think there is seven abominations yea seventy times seven abominations in this sin of deadness therefore let us look out that God may help us and quicken us and revive us in all our wayes The second motive is to consider that as long as we are dead we cannot 2. Motive pray Psal 80. 18. Lord quicken us and we will call upon thy name as who should say Lord we are not fit to pray and call upon thy name except thou quicken us therefore quicken us that we may call upon thee So Ministers cannot preach unless they be quickned as Dr. Ames tells a story of a godly man of France there was such cold preaching that he was fain to go out of the Town to s●t under a powerful Ministry therefore we cannot preach if we be dead the Scribes and Pharisees preached without Authority and life they were dead and therefore had no authority in their preaching but Christ preached with Authority if we were quickned we should be the better able to preach So again you are not able to hear unless you be quickned a dead heart may hear a thousand Sermons but what doth it work upon them even as good as nothing if Paul or Apollos or an Angel from heaven should preach to us unless God quicken us all is nothing nay Christ tells us that his own Ministry and Johns Ministry there were not two such in all the world again yet
for bables how earnest should we be for these precious jewels Thirdly Consider the worth of these things the worth of the Kingdome of Heaven the worth of eternal life the worth of the Gospel the worth of prayer and all Gods holy Ordinances are they such poor beggarly trifles that we follow them with such a slender pursuit are they such beggarly commodities that they are not worth the looking after Certainly Heaven may justly challenge our best desires our best affections our best pains and endeavours and the best and flower of all our parts and learning as the Church saith Cant. 7. 9. My beloved is sweet so our beloved is sweet sweet things goe down pleasantly so how should the word be and prayer be how sweet should all the things of our beloved be they should goe sweetly down nothing should delight us more When Solomon set up his Throne it is said that he laid out the best gold upon it so if we would have the crown of life we must lay out our best parts and affections and endeavours upon it how sweet should the calling upon God and the going to Gods house be what a shame is it that when such heavenly things such precious jewels are to be had people will not come to them whereas these things should be the sweetest things in the world if we were carefull of the good of our soules and were affected with Heaven and heavenly things as we ought to be we should be tender of this how should we take heed of pride and covetousness and any thing that should hinder us of so great salvation Fourthly Consider if we be quickned nothing will be hard all the difficulty of Religion is over if a man be quickned for nothing is hard to a willing minde when a mans heart and soule is set upon it nothing is hard as the Apostle saith to him that loves God His commandements are 1 John ● not grievous all the difficulty that we cannot pray and hold our hearts to the Word and overcome our corruptions all lieth in the deadnesse of our hearts if we would have mastery over our corruptions if our hearts be dead we must look for the more toyle as Solomon saith If the iron be blunt if a man doth not sharpen the edge he had need put the more strength to it Eccles 10. 10. So when a mans h●art is dull and dead there is the more difficulty in the overcoming of any lust in the doing of any good duty every thing comes hardly off Now when a mans heart is quickned it is like oyle to the wheele it makes it goe easie when a mans heart is quickned up towards God what is it but that man can do Fifthly Consider If we be quickned we shall hae a great deale of peace and joy and comfort I may say as the Church in another case Revive us again O Lord and we shall rejoyce in thee Psal 85. 6. So I say if we were revived if God did quicken our hearts if we were earnest with him to do it and we could once attain unto it we should rejoyce in God those that follow God with an earnest heart they have those joyes which no other can intermeddle with God gives them unknown comfort unknown peace and unknown support the more a man followes after God the more he shall partake of God a man shall have joy unspeakable and glorious Sixthly We should make all heaven to rejoyce when the Father had his prodigal Son come to him that was before dead and was now alive saith he It is meet we should be glad Luke 15. 32. So when any poor creature that was dead before to all goodness is now made alive and is quickned up in all the wayes of God it is even meet that there should be mirth in Heaven that the Angels in Heaven should rejoyce whereas if a man go on in Gods service dully and blockishly it is as vinegar to the teeth and smoak to the eys and the heavens are sad over us Seventhly If we were quickned we should not only do our selves good but we should do others good too we should be earnest to do it there is an excellent place for this in the story of David David being marvellously quickned just as he came from Gath there met him 400 poor destitute and afflicted men and presently he made the 34 Psalm wherein he saith O come and taste and see how good the Lord is blessed are they that trust in the Lord presently he calls upon them to be quickned also So Paul when he was quickned up himself though he were before the Judge and went upon life and death yet he regarded not that but he laboured to quicken Agrippa too insomuch that he made him to cry out Thou perswadest me almost to become a Christian and he would not leave him there but saith he I would not that thou only but that all that do hear me this day were not only almost but altogether Acts 26. such as I am excepting these bonds O thought he that all this company were but acquainted with that I feel and finde a quickned heart will labour and strive to do good unto others REV. 3. 2. Watch therefore and strengthen the things that remain that are ready to die c. WE told you this Epistle contained three things First a Reproof of the most of them in that Church for their grievous sins Secondly Remedy to cure them of those sins Thirdly A Commendation of certain vertues in those persons that were not carried away with the iniquities of those times The Reproof we have spoken of already and now we are come to the second part and that is the Remedy for when Christ doth reprove them he doth it not for ill will but for their good and therefore he gives them good directions The Remedies he gives this Church are five The first is Be w 〈…〉 full as who should say This is the reason you goe Five Remedies given the Church down the wind and want life and are dead and dull in Religion because you are not watchful The second Direction is Strengthen the things that remain as who should say if you would be careful to fortifie those good things that are in you you may stand out against these temptations a little grace will go a great way if it be well managed Now he doth urge this direction three wayes First because these things they have are but remainders they had a great deal more once Strengthen the things that do remain as who should say all is even almost quite gone you had a great deal more zeal and forwardnesse but what you have now is but the remainders and the leavings therefore it is high time to look about you Secondly Because even those remainders were almost gone too Stengthen th● thing● that remain that are ready to die as who should say they will be gone too if you bestir not your selves and look well
to your estates and conditions Thirdly Because thy works are not perfect they are nothing else almost but hypocriticall and unsound I have not found thy works perfect before God The third Remedy is Remember how thou hast received and heard c. Verse 3. as who should say consider how thou hast been formerly consider how the Word hath been delivered and how thou hast received it The fourth Remedy is Hold fast as who should say labour to get up again and hold fast that the Devil and the world and the temptations to sin may not get away the good things that are in thee that they may not spoil thee of the good things of God and of the hope of eternal life The fifth Remedy is Repent that is bewail thy selfe and lament thy unfruitfulnesse and unwatchfulnesse and carelesnesse this way and humble thy selfe before Almighty God thou mayst yet have mercy when a man doth confes 〈…〉 s sins God is just to forgive them and is ready to vouchsafe mercy 1 John 1. 9. and quickning and comfort therefore repent saith he Well then the first remedy is to be watchful to watch is to be attentive to be considerative to look what may doe a man good and what may doe a man hurt that he may thereafter carry himselfe it is for a man to have his eyes in his head to have his wits about him for spiritual things This is the subject of it it is properly in the minde and in the heart it is a Metaphor taken from the body for the body when it is asleep the senses are lockt up the eye cannot see the eare cannot hear they are all wrapt up they are not lively and operative but when the body is awake the senses are all open the eye can see and the eare hear and the senses are ready for every Object from hence it is derived to the soules of men they may be said to sleep or watch for when the soul is careless and negligent towards a thing may be dangers are towards a man and he doth not fear them nor study to prevent them may be there is a great deal of good coming towards the soule and he goes drowsily about it the soule now is said to be asleep but when the soule lo●ks seriously and consideratively about things then it is said to watch so that there is a sleep of the soule and a watch of the soule as the Apostle speaks 1 Th●s 5 6. So that this watchfulnesse is nothing else but the active prudence of the soule whereby it stirs up all the faculties to look about that if any good be towards it it may get it if any danger be towards it it may abhor it this is the watchfulness here spoken of for this drowsinesse and sleepinesse is a part of the corruption of our natures whereby we are marvellous careless of God and eternal life that though we be in the gall of bitterness and by nature the children of wrath yet this is the corruption of our nature to look sleepily upon this that danger may be upon us and we never observe it and though there be eternal life to be had yet we are as it were asleep we doe not study how to attain it though there be misery insupportable and unspeakable and sure and certain to fall upon us unlesse we be delivered yet we doe not think of these things we have no fear at all or else our hearts are drowsie and are content to make any thing serve the turn Now when the soule is rowzed up and made to have a due consideration of these things now is is awakened now it is watchful The Point we observe from hence it this That it is an excellent soveraign Observation thing for a Christian to watch and therefore Christ commends it to his disciples and commends it to all people to the end of the world Mark 13. 37. ●at which I say unto you I say unto all watch Now it is good to watch in five respects First In regard of our selves for our own selves are false unto our selves 1. Reason if we be godly men and women we are two selves we have a bad selfe whereby we are apt to be proud and carnal and ungodly in all our wayes and to forget God and we have a good selfe that is better minded Now it is an excellent thing when this good selfe shall watch over this bad sel●e and have an eye to it as if a man had a pilfering servant in his family would he not watch him and eye him would he not watch him what money he had in his house and observe what is in his house from day to day So we having such a deceitful selfe about us we had need to watch continually as the Apostle speaks 2 John 8. Look to these that we lose not those things c. As who should say you will lose the benefit of all the good things that are in you if you doe not look to them there is a thief in thy bosome a deceiver that will steale and cosen thee of all if thou look not to it And here first we should watch our own hearts for our own hearts are deceitful as the Prophet speaks The heart is deceitful above all things Jerem. 17. 9. It is very sly and how easily doth it deceive us and carry us aside therefore we had need watch over it as the wise man saith Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence If a man were to ride upon a wilde horse would he not have a care to keep the bridle would he let the bridle goe then he would run away and he should hardly catch him again his business will be hindered and his time spent so it is here a mans heart is like a wild Colt like an untamed Hei●er if a man let it go a man had need alwayes to have the bridle in his hand if a man do not watch it and observe it and hold it in it will r●n away and a man cannot catch it again as a man that is ringing a bell if he let the rope go he cannot readily get hold of it again so a mans heart is slippery therefore a man had need ever to be watching of it Secondly We had need watch our thoughts what slippery things are our thoughts if they be upon that which is good will they be long there they are now there now gone again therefore how careful should we be to hold our thoughts to that which is good the thoughts are so loose and fickle and unconstant and uncertain that though they be on good things for a minute of an hour they will be ten times as long upon vain things there is no trusting of our thoughts we need not say as David of the men of Keilah will they deliver me to Saul will the lusts of my heart 1 Sam. 23. 11 deliver me to Satan nay they will deliver us if we watch not
everlasting Covenant I will never let them goe I will put a strong fear into their hearts that they shall not doe as the wicked doe they shall stand in awe of God it is a strong light others shall be deluded they shall not be deluded it is a strong apprehension of the Word and Will of God this is the Covenant of God Now when a man shall come to have this sealed when God shall give this Sacrament to make this good and he takes the Sacrament upon it that he will walk according to this Covenant according to the grace that God hath given him this man hath all the witnesses in heaven and earth why should he be weak in faith then There be but three witnesses in 1 John 5. heaven he hath these that hath faith there be but three on earth the spirit water and blood by spirit is meant the same spirit that works true faith and obedience in the hearts of his people then water that is the water of Baptism and blood that is the blood of the Lords Supper the Lord doth witnesse eternal life to this mans heart therefore what can this man want Thirdly This Sacrament is Communion with Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 10. 16. The cup of blessing which we bless is it not the Communion of the blood of Christ c. So that when a man comes to the Sacrament aright he hath communion with Jesus Christ therefore he must needs be strengthened though he were never so weak before as Solomon saith of the Contes they are a feeble folke and yet they make their houses in the Rocks Prov. 30. 26. So true Christians are a feeble folk yet they make their houses in the Rock where they eat this spiritual meat and drink this spiritual drink they drink of that Rock Jesus Christ when they draw neer to this Table they draw neer to Christ and therefore must needs gather strength they come to this Rock to be rooted and established in this Rock and therefore must needs get strength Fourthly Because this Sacrament is a Sacrament of communion with the members of Christ a man that rightly receives it doth increase the Communion of Saints over all the world though he never saw them yet he is loved more and more of all the Saints therefore he must needs grow stronger Take a man that is woven into every man there is hardly any man of any power but loves him he hath friends everywhere this man is a strong man as it is said of Absolom he grew strong for the people increas'd continually with him 2 Sam. 21. 15. So a Christian must needs grow strong that truly hears the Word and receives the Sacrament for people still come flocking more and more unto him for still as the Church comes to grow or any soul comes to believe in Christ he strengthens himselfe as Paul was strong in every Town where he went in regard of the Communion of Saints such a man is strong in regard of his infirmities he hath many to help him to bear them he is strong also in regard of advice and counsel he shall have the counsel of the Saints Job 4. 3. If a man be doubtful what course to take when instruction comes it strengthens a man much Now when a man hath communion with all the Saints what abundance of counsel hath he you may see how weak David was he was not able to 1 Sam. 25. beat down his wrath and impatience Now when Abigail came with her good counsel he blessed God for it Let us have a care to come so to the Sacrament that we may be strengthened in all good things that we may be more quickned up to every good word Vse 1 and work for it is a strengthening Ordinance it is appointed of God for the very nonce to strengthen Gods people in all business and employments they have to doe from day to day When Moses and all Israel received the Passeover God smote the first borne of all Egypt Psal 105. 30. This was a seal that God smote all the strength of the Egyptians but there was not one weak person among the Israelites So if we did receive the Sacrament aright there should not be a weak Christian among us God would smite the Egyptians and weaken the strength of all their lusts and corruptions is therefore any among us weak and he cannot do this and that his lusts are like the sons of Zerviah to David too hard for him Though I be anointed King I am weak c. 2 Sam. 3. 39. So dost thou say I am very weak this day and though God hath anointed me King over my lusts and I am a Christian that should have power over my lusts yet these base lusts and cursed corruptions are too hard for me I say if we did but wisely and carefully as we ought to do goe to the Word and Sacrament and the rest of Gods Ordinances we should have marvellous supply and help to carry us on in our Christian Combate It is a very remarkable thing that when God would have Joshua and all Israel goe about that same hard work to goe and encounter with 31 Kings of Canaan at one clap and they were now newly come into the Land of Canaan and were hemmed in the waters of Jordan came back and they could not goe back again it is to be noted that before God would have them strike a blow he would have them take the Sacrament of Circumcision you know the Canaanites might have come and cut their throats when they were sore nay when they were circumcised God would not Josh 5. have them goe fight yet but they must take the Sacrament of the Passeover which would cost them seven dayes one would think this was not the way to be strong but this was indeed the way to be strong to go in the strength of heaven this made the spirits of their enemies melt for they were now within the Covenant of God therefore how should we help our own souls if we would but go in the strength of Gods Covenant to prayer and every business we have to do and if we would but rightly partake of this Sacrament as a seal of the Covenant nothing would make it so strong as this This may seem to condemn the most of us all generally How do Christians misse of the partaking of the Sacrament what a deal of weakness is Vse 2 there among us where is there a strong Christian they can hardly doe any thing or suffer any thing whence is all this this comes from not receiving the Sacrament as they ought to doe as the Apostle saith of bodily weakness 1 Cor. 11. 30. For this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep He speaks there of their unworthy receiving the Sacrament this is the cause that your bodies are weak So this is as true of the weakness of the soule for this cause many are weak among you and many have such
receive strength as it is said of Moses Heb. 11. 28. By faith he received the Passeover so if by faith we would receive the Lords Supper and beat down all doubts and fears of flesh and blood and resolve to cast our selves upon Christ and his promises and let him have the disposing of us if we would truly cast our selves upon Christ and believe in his name and so come to the Sacrament we should have strength how can we get strength without this Eph. 3. 17. When we come to the Sacrament we come to partake of Christ and receive Christ that we may dwell in Christ and he in us Now he will not doe thus without faith faith is the wedding garment if we come without it we shall be bound hand and foot and cast into utter darkness may be thou wert fettered before but now thou shalt be more bound even bound hand and foot that thou canst not stir as the Apostle saith Above all things take the shield of faith so I may say if you will come to the Sacrament to your Eph. 6. own peace and comfort above all things take the shield of faith When men come to the Sacrament only with bodily eyes and bodily hands what do they get nothing but a piece of bread and a drop of wine but if they had faith they should have the evidence of things not seen Christ and heaven and the covenant of grace are not seen with bodily eyes faith would help them to the evidence of these things not seen as St. Austin speaks of a worthy Martyr when he was to suffer Martyrdome he took the Sacrament to strengthen him to suffer Martyrdom and the Martyrs in the Primitive Church every day expecting Martyrdom they every day received the Sacrament to help them with strength but when we come to the Sacrament without faith we deprive our selves of this benefit Now as long as we give way to our sins doubting will reign and faith cannot be in our soules Fourthly Because they do not seek earnestly to God to blesse the Sacrament to them they do not make themselves strong in heaven before they come they do not go with strong cries and groans to the Throne of grace that God would quicken them that they may get the good they ought to do at it If we would come to the Sacrament of Lords Supper as we ought to do we should be earnest with God and wrestle with him that he would make us sensible of our wants and that he would pluck up our hearts to come with faith that he would strengthen us that we may behave our selves well when we are there and when we come away every Ordinance of God is sanctified by the word and prayer 1 Tim. 4. 5. Now because either people do not pray at all or if they do they are not earnest with God therefore it is that they return home little the better Fifthly Because they do not behave themselves ●ell when they are at it they are not well occupied when they sit at the Lords Table they know not how to employ themselves as the duty requires this is that would help us to true strength by the Sacrament if we were well employed when we were at it Cant. 1. 12. While the King sitteth at his table c. saith the Church that is while the King was enjoying communion with me and I with him I was just at the same time very well employed I laboured in some measure to stir up all the graces that were in me that my Spikenard might send up a sweet perfume into his nostrils that my faith might work and my love might work so while we are sitting at the Lords Table and the King sitteth down to bid us welcome we should labour to be well employed to keep vanities out of our minds and employ them well that we may have a good meal before we go Sixthly Because people when they have been at the Sacrament they do not examine themselves diligently whither they have got any good by the Sacrament I have received the Sacrament have I got any good by it is my faith strengthned am I yet backward to Gods will untoward in his worship dead in his service am I still hovering and doubting in my conscience have I no care of God have I got no good by the Sacrament if people would but call themselves to account whither they have got any good by the Sacrament this would do them a great deal of good it would make them bewail and lament and cry out if they got no good people let things r●n on at six and sevens if they get good so it is if they get none so it is but lay it not to heart whereas a godly heart when he hath been at an Ordinance calls himself to account and takes it marvellous heavily if he see he hath got no good as the Church when she prayed and saw her prayers did not prevail it was a bitter thing to her Thou hast covered thy self with a cloud that our prayer should not pass thorow Lam. 3. 44. when she saw she prayed and strived and tugged with God and there was no comfort O how she took it to heart she made it the burthen of her complaint so if Christians would do thus The Sacrament doth not take the Lord covers himself with clouds and hides himself from me he will not own me we should go crying and yelling up and down to see that we do not get good by the Sacrament if we would do thus we might get good by it Seventhly If people do get good by the Sacrament afterwards yet they do not interpret this to be by the goodness of God in the Sacrament may be they meet with some comfort and assistance now and then which might do them a world of good and strengthen their hearts wonderfully if they did look to it when they have gotten many good blessings now they do not construe this to be by reason of Gods Sacrament and Covenant if they did look upon it O this came by vertue of Gods Covenant and the seal of his Covenant to my soul this would make them strong in Gods Covenant and help them exceedingly thus David did if he got any mercy at any time still he laid it upon going to Gods Ordinances this I had because I kept thy precepts This I had because I prayed unto thee and sought thee Psal 119. earnestly I followed God earnestly and now I see his infinite goodnesse and mercy towards me how he hath rewarded me I confess it was a poor thing I did God might even have slung it as dung in my face but see how he hath rewarded me So if Christians would say this I had because I was careful though I had formerly neglected Gods Ordinances yet at last I came to seek him earnestly with my whole heart and to come more preparedly and diligently to the Lords Supper and now this I find I had by it
which is that he may not sin against God but that he is borne down with sin Psal 119. 112. I have inclined my heart to keep thy statutes alwayes even to the end He had a study and composure in his soule to keep Gods statutes and to keep them alwayes even to the end therefore whensoever David sinned it was not with his whole will for he sinned against the study and composure of his heart Thirdly A childe of God never sins but there is something or other that breaks the fulnesse of the voluntariness of it as for example if a childe of God sins sometimes it is out of ignorance he doth not know that he offends God if he did he would not doe it for a world Now ignorance doth lessen the voluntarinesse of a thing a man in ignorance may doe a thing which he would not have done if he had known it therefore when a childe of God sinnes in ignorance his will is not with it Again If he sin against knowldge at any time then it is through inconsideratenesse it is in his haste you know inconsideratenesse doth lessen the will mightily a man may in haste doe a thing which when he comes to think of he would rather have cut off his right arm then have done it therefore this is an argument that all his will was not in the committing of the sin because he did not consider of it he did not doe it deliberately Psal 116. 11. In my haste I said all men are lyars in my haste I said I am cut off from thy presence Again If he he doe it with more deliberation yet there is something still that doth lessen the will there be grievous and violent passions Now violent passions doe exceedingly take away the will a man in passion will doe things that his will is absolutely against a man will stab his dearest friend in f●r● and ●a●lion as when David murdered Vriah it was meerly out of passion th● p●●ion of shame lest his sin should come out to the dishonour of God and the shame of his Kingdome and Crown he was overwhelmed with shame and fear of the disgrace of his sins and in fear he did doe it So Peter was in fear when he denied his Master in fear that he should be put to death when at the same time I dare say many qualms came over his heart O that I were not here O that I were not put to this So when Jon●● ran away from God it was in a passion Again Suppose that passion be down yet something or other there will be still that will lessen the will as violent temptations and impulsions to sin when a man himself at the same time hath a great act of his will to resist these temptations and impulsions to sin when a man at the same time hath a great act of his will to resist these temptations but the temptations are greater and so he is born down but here is not all the will for he would not do it a wicked man may have reluctancy and resistance against sin in his conscience but a godly man his will is against it Fourthly A child of God can never be brought so low as to make a trade of sin He that committeth sin is of the Divel 1 Joh. 3. 8. that is he that committeth sin by way of trade now this cannot be in a child of God he is of the Divel that makes a trade of sin a child of God his course is to the contrary it is his trade to cleanse himself and purifie his heart by faith from day to day if he be impatient he cannot make a practice of it a child of God cannot sin for he is sanctified Psal 119. 1. 2. they do no wicked thing c. This is by way of trade and occupation a child of God doth never sin in that fashion therefore it is certain his full will is not to sin for if his whole will were after sin he would go on in it and live in it and make a practice of it but he dares not nor will not make a practice of it Fifthly A child of God doth never so sin but he hath an aptness in him to rise again a child of God hath a greater aptness to rise again and repent and love God again he hath a gracious heavenly aptness above all other men in the world let him sin never so much let his fall be never so great there will be this aptness left and it shall remain in him continually and this is an evident sign he never sinned with his whole will for if he did sin with his whole will he would be as unapt to repent as if he had never been converted as Solomon saith Prov. 9. 8. As who should say a wise man is apt to take a rebuke he is apt to take it in good part he will take it humbly and obediently if he be a wise man and this is a sign his will is not absolutely set upon folly but if you tell him you have played the fool and dealt unadvisedly why would you be overtaken with such a corruption you have provoked God c. he will love you for it he hath an aptness so to do and this aptness shall ever remain and this is another good thing remaining in the children of God that is a lusting against sinne Thirdly Another thing is for ever to have a tender disposition to look after God and to have an eye to God this shall never be taken away quit● and clean as you may see in Jonah though he had run away from God in that lamentable manner yet saith he I will look towards thy Temple his thoughts were there his mind was to have Gods love his goodness and countenance to shine upon him he must have an eye to that above all things in the world but you will say affliction made him do that he was now in the Whales belly but you may see he looked upon God before he was in the Whales belly for when the Mariners asked him what he was saith he I am an Hebrew that fears God and as a proof of this fear you may see how he submitted to God I have run away from God saith he he confessed his sin and took shame to himself and submitted himself to be flung into the Sea that God might have glory by his drowning if he would So that all was not drowned in him now that this disposition remaines appears by five things First Though a child of God should grow to never so sluggish a pace in Religion that all his vigour in prayer is gone he hath not the affection and heart in good duties that once he had he is lumpish and untoward yet in the midst of all these distempers he cannot lie down to this but he hath abundance of heaves to God to quicken him again as David saith Psalm 119. 25. My soule cleaveth unto the dust O quicken thou me according to thy word
His wings were off and his chariot-wheels were knockt aside he could not goe on in good duties with any pace he was lumpish and untoward his soule cleaved to the dust and yet you see what heaves he gives he would be quickned he would not be at this passe Oh that God would quicken him this was his disease and the burthen of his soule O quicken me O the lamentable throwes and secret yernings that are in a poor soule that is dead and dull he cannot pray nor finde the Word work upon his soule he can receive no fruit and benefit by the Word of God O the moanes and yernings and lookings up to God that God would quicken him though he hath no heart almost but is marvellously borne down yet he is not able to lie down under this it is a disease to him O quicken me Again Let him be never so much hardened as a childe of God may be fearfully hardened yet in the midst of all he hath a feeling of this hardning whereupon he makes out after God and will never give him over till he hath freed him from it Isa 63. 17. Again Though a childe of God be never so secure as he may be secure and grow careless of God yet in the midst of all he can never be quite overcome by security so as quite and clean to forget God no he must listen after God and will hearken after God and hear the voice of God in some measure when the word reproves him and finds fault with his courses he doth hearken to it he is not quite asleep as the Church saith I sleep but my heart waketh Cant. 5. 2. She did take notice of God in the midst of all her security it is the voyce of my Beloved saith she Fourthly A childe of God can never so far goe down the wind but he shall for ever love the Image of God and love mercy and love holinesse and goodness and love the Ordinances of God and the Image of God wheresoever he sees it nay he doth love the children of God and this is a signe unto him that he is passed from death to life when he hardly hath any other signe 't is true when sin a●● corruption hath exceedingly defiled Gods childe it may make him shy of Gods children and make him winde out of their company but yet grace makes him love them they are the amiab lest persons in the world in that mans eye he blesseth the very ground they goe upon he hath this ever left in him and by this a childe of God may know that he is passed from death to life because he loves the Brethren 1 John 3. 14. Fifthly A childe of God shall never be brought so low but in the midst of all he shall chide and check and finde fault with his own soule not as wicked men doe by reason of the terrours of conscience but in a gracious manner why have I done thus is this the thanks for the redemption of the world by Jesus Christ is this the thanks for the Gospel are these the fruits I bring forth under Gods Ordinances why am I thus dull to good duties why am I thus dastardly and cowardly for God there will be these gracious chidings though sin and corruption makes him full of legal terrours yet there be some gracious checkings and expostulations as David saith Why art thou so heavy O my soule O be quickned O be awakened hear better and pray better He doth check and condemn himselfe in a gracious manner and he can never like of these courses this will be for ever Lastly Another thing that shall be in Gods children for ever is the habits of grace they shall ever have these though the acts of grace may be asleep and cease working yet the habits of grace shall ever remain as a man though through violent sickness he may run mad and frantick and lose the act of reason and be like a mad man yet the habit of reason is in him still because he hath a reasonable soule and let the distemper be gone and he will put forth the acts of reason So a childe of God though for the present he be horribly distempered and all the acts of grace are asleep yet he hath the spirit of God in him and therefore hath the habits of grace although no grace were shining in Davids heart in the act of them when he fell in to the sins of murder and adultery yet he had all graces in the habit of them in the root of them as a tree though it seem to be quite dead yet life is in the root so a childe of God will have the habit and life of grace ever remaining in him and this appeares by two things First A childe of God in the midst of all his carelesness and negligence there is a miraculous preserving of that man that though that man hath been very ●areless and wonderful unwatchful and exposing himself to the temptations of Satan yet he shall be strangely kept that he shall not fall in a wonderful manner though it be no thank to himselfe 1 Sam. 2. 9. This is an evident sign of Gods spirit in him that though he let him get abundance of knocks yet he will not let him get that fatal knock but he carrieth him along from day to day Secondly It appeares by this that this man shall never be to be converted again but he shall for ever be a new creature though the spirit of God hide himselfe and withhold his former operations yet he will not goe quite away because a childe of God shall never need to be converted again 'T is true the rising up of a childe of God out of sin into which he is fallen is called conversion sometimes as our Saviour Christ saith to Peter When thou art converted strengthen thy brethren Nay a childe of God may think he hath need of new conversion and that he must begin all anew again as David said Create in me O Lord a clean heart and renew a right spirit within me Psal 51. 10. as though he were to begin anew again But a childe of God is never to begin anew no regeneration is an incorruptible thing 1 Pet. 2. 23. Psalm 112. 5. His righteousness remaineth for ever he shall never have quite lost it so as that he shall be to seek again as if he had never had it for if regeneration were to be renewed a man should be reprobated again but there is but one Faith one Baptism one Lord Eph. 4. Therefore if there be but one Baptism there is but one Regeneration The faith is but once delivered to the Saints Jude 3. God delivers his vertues and graces but once to the soul and is never to deliver them again indeed they may be smothered and choaked sometimes and lie under the ashes as coals under the embers but they shall never be quite extinguished there needs nothing but a stirring up and provoking of the
there is rebellion in the understandings of men carnal reasons and strong holds and haughty and proud principles of reasoning if they are convinced of a sin they will not leave it they have reasonings for that ●n and if they have never such convictions for a duty there is rebellion in the understanding to put off this but an upright heart his understanding is good in some measure he is unfeignedly willing to be instructed of God whatsoever course he takes tell him out of the word of God that it is not good though his life depends upon it it shall goe he dares not stand out against God but a wicked heart hath not a teachable understanding it is still under its stubbornness and stoutness and reasoning against God and things he doth not like he will not see when there is any sin he would not leave or any duty he would not doe as Christ saith Mat. 13. 15. he thus his eyes and will not see What wicked man that lives under the Gospel of God but may see his courses are naught but he will not see it how many sins do ungodly men keep there is light enough and reason enough against their sinnes but they have sturdy mindes and will not be convinced of it Again An upright man his heart is converted and made godly his will is made pliable to be led by God and guided by Gods blessed spirit the stone is taken out of it there may be much hardness but the stone is gone the heart of stone is gone and he hath an heart of flesh given unto him to be sensible of God and sensible of his word and sensible of the light that shines in his face and his heart being converted he is moved by an inward principle and so moves the more willingly and the more freely as David saith 1 Chron. 28. 9. He hath a willing heart But now a carnal heart and a heart that is not turned to God the stone is not taken out a man rebels to this day if he be moved to goodnesse it is not by an inward principle but by education or goodnesse of nature or by the stings of conscience that over-power his heart or by reason of a great light that breaks in and over-awes his heart Therefore a naughty heart be he never so good and fair-carriaged may be his conscience sometimes makes him forbear more then he would and makes him doe more good then he would but a godly heart is willing to doe what good he can nay he would doe more good then he can doe nay he never can doe so much as he would he is ashamed of all his works look what he doth ●he doth it with a willing heart Again A godly heart is good in his memory as David saith Psalm 119. 16. I will never forget thy precepts His memory is turned to good things and made to remember good things he hideth the word of God in his heart that he may not sin against him But a carnal heart forgets to be good and zealous and please God and obey God his memory is not washed and sanctified in any measure Again A good man is good in his thoughts he doth not onely purge the outside of the platter but the inside also he labours to have his thoughts set upon things above he labours that vain thoughts may not lodge in him nay his main care is within doors in his own bosome to have his thoughts upright towards God So again he is good in his affections he doth hunger and thirst after righteousness he doth desire the things that are most excellent he doth delight in God and his presence he mourns for his sins and mourns that he can mourn no more he hath all his affections in some measure rightly seated and qualified he is good all over as the Apostle Paul saith 1 Thes 5. 23. The God of peace sanctifie you throughout As who should say This is sincerity and I pray God give it you that you may not deceive your own souls but that your whole spirit and body and soule and whole man may be true in the eyes of the Lord But now a carnal heart is not thus though he be like a whited Sepulchre he doth seem outwardly to be a good man and a man cannot check him if a man should say such a one is rotten he should be th●ught to be censorious and uncharitable yet in his inward parts he is naught if a man be not upright he doth not look to his thoughts but can let them be vaine and unfruitfull and can let his affections run at randome he is not affected with God he doth not mourn for his sins he doth not delight in good things his affections are not set upon things that are above Sixthly An upright man is universal in regard of cases and conditions if he be under any kinde of temptation whatsoever as we may see James 1. 12. It is nothing for a man to be godly and meek and patient and vertuous when he is not tempted the Devil himselfe is good when he is pleased as we say This is godlinesse and uprightnesse when a man resists temptations when a man doth watch and pray and is careful that he may not enter into temptations when a man is careful of all the objects and beginnings and occasions of sin when a man fights against the temptations of the flesh and warres against the suggestions of Satan and puts on all the armour of God to withstand the fiery darts of the Devil though he be tempted to be proud and wrathful and impatient yet he will not 't is true now and then he may be overcome against his principles and care and labour but that is as a dagger to his heart This is his course and practise to fight against temptations nay take him in the desperatest cases yet a godly man is sincere take him when he is most afraid that he is not sincere when he cries out how dastardly am I for God how dead in good duties how full of unbelief what a vile heart have I how filthy and untoward take him in these desperate lifts he is not without sincerity and in this case he doth one of these two things either he walks according to the measure of grace given unto him or else according to the condition wherein he is 't is true the conditions Gods people are in are sometimes better and sometimes worse sometimes horrible distempers are up and sometimes they are down but when they are never so up he doth as a man in that case may doe as a man when he is bound hand and foot what can he doe if he rowle himselfe upon the ground that is all he can doe and this he will doe as you may see what David saith Psalm 119. 40. It seems he felt himself marvellously dead and dull and wonderfully inobedient and he could not get hold of Gods commandements to doe them as he ought yet he rowls himselfe and
should have it in the end though as yet he had it not and this stayed his soul to go on in all his wayes as David when he was cast down and had much ado to keep his hold and had no assurance at that time Why art thou cast down O my soul why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my countenance and my God Psal 42. 11. though he were cast down and dejected this was his stay I shall yet praise him c. he did verily believe he should rejoyce in his holy name and overcome those distresses and have the Lords mercy sealed to his soule and have his mouth filled with his praises Why art thou cast down O my soul I shall yet rejoyce in his holy name I shall yet shew forth his prayses I shall yet be able to apply his promises and be able to say he is my God and my Redeemer Againe the children of God that are effectually called though they doubt Faith contrary to doubting never so much yet their faith is of a contrary nature to their doubting and excludes doubting Mat. 21. If you believe and have faith and doubt not saith the text not as though faith cannot have doubtings stand with it but faith is of that nature as excludes and expells doubtings and fights against it as fire against water and such a man fights against doubtings as he would ●ight against temptations to murther adultery he knows that infidelity is the mother of all sinne and therefore faith fights against doubting and goeth to the throne of grace to be established Lastly Though a child of God doubt of his condition yet this is certaine that Christ is the power of God to that man though he know not whether he A child of God may doubt of his condition be effectually called by Christ yet Christ is the power of ●od to his soul as 1 Cor 1. 24. Vnto them which are called Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God He is powerful to his soul for the humbling awakening quickenning of him for strengthening of him against sinne for the making him hold out in the waies of God he is of power to him in all his ordinances in prayer in hearing the Word and in all his wayes But it is not so with others that question the effectual calling Christ is not the power of God to them Christ is of no effect to them he may be of some effect for enlightnings and stirrings and outward reformation but to bring them to goodness and holiness indeed and to hatred against sinne Christ is not the power of God to those persons but he is foolishness to them Now the next thing that I will shew you is a point that hath been a little touched but I will passe over what hath been spoken and will speak more at large of it I desire to speak more particularly and punctually of this same effectual calling And the first point we will take out of it is this that effectual calling is the Effectual calling is the first gathering of men unto Christ first gathering of men unto Christ the first making of men to come to Christ the first putting of a man into the estate of grace it is the very portall ●o religion the very entry into eternal life it is the first bringing of a man to pertake of the Lord Jesus Christ and to have fellowship with him so it is called in Scripture the gathering of the elect home Isa 56. 8. I will gather saith the Lord the out casts of Israel he prophesieth there of the effectual calling of the Gentiles and God saith here this is the first thing that I will do I will gather them to my people I will make them come home to the Lord Jesus Christ● this is set forth unto us by our Saviour Christ in two principal parables one of the Net Mat. 13. 47 48. againe the Kingdom of Heaven is like unto a N●t c. So that here speaking of the effectual calling of people this is said to be the first act of God in it namely the gathering of them for the Kingdom of heaven by the preaching of the Word and this net is the Gospel that is preached the sea is this world the fishes are men and the good and bad are elect and reprobate not as though the elect were good before they are effectually called but they are called good because of Gods designation and decree to make them good and he looks upon them as such as shall be good and such as he hath purposed to make good in his time Now the Gospel doth draw out of the world Gods elect by a general call it calls both elect and reprobate but effectual calling is the gathering of good fishes that in the end of the world shall be put into vessels by themselves so that effectual calling the first act of it is the gathering of men home to God the other parable is Luk. 15. 4 5. What man having lost an hundred sheep c. all the lost sheep of Israel and of Gods election that are in their lost estate as well as other people before God takes them in hand here you see the first act God doth towards them before which they were altogether lost and are now found againe is the fetching of them home the taking of them upon Christ his shoulders and bringing them home unto him I say effectual calling it is Gods first making of a man to come to Christ you may see it 1 Pet. 2. 4. To whom coming as to a living stone ye also are built up c. he alludes unto their first effectual calling when God did first deale with them he made them to come to him to be put into this building the children of God after that they are effectually called are said to be in this building but this first act of God is the putting of them into this building the bringing of them to be laid into this excellent edifice for there is no such building in the world is it a building whose foundation is Christ and all the Saints of God are built upon it it is the most admirable building in the world now effectual calling brings a man and layes him into this building before a man is effectually called he is as a stray sheep as a sheep scattered abroad and roaming and ranging up and down the waies of sin and of death whom the devil hath po●nded as a stray he is departed from God and is roaming up and down in the world he is in a lost estate till God come with this effectual calling and bring him home 1 Pet. 2. 25. For ye were as sheep going astray but are now returned to your shepheard that is ever since your effectual calling you are come home to God that was your returning time before you were as chickens subject to the kite till this ●hen
prayers makes them depend upon him in all their needs and necessities he makes them deny themselves and works the grace of humiliation more and more and a trade of godlinesse and a course of holiness and piety now not one of these works are till a man is called all things work together for the best to those that are called Rom. 8. 28. this is a lea●ing work now all works come in now the word works and prayer works and the Sacrament works and afflictions work and sinne works when a man is effectually called this is the great wheele of motion now all things work together for the good of him that is called according to Gods purpose this is the first ground work the first breaking of the ice the first setting of a man forth towards heaven therefore we shall see when the Apostle is to write to any man or Churches commonly before ever he bids them do this or that the first thing he speaks to them about is this he tells them they are effectually called as Rom. 1. 7. afterwards he bids them yield their members as weapons to righteousness and adviseth them to walk in the Spirit and give up their bodies and souls as a living sacrifice to God not to be conformed to the world but to be transformed in the spirit of their minds and to walk in love and redeem● the time and abundance of other works he sets them about but first of all he names their effectual calling as who should say I take it for granted that ●o●●re called it is a folly for me to bid you do this or that if you were not effectually called else I should alwaies be beating what damned and ●iserable creatures you are shall I bid you pray and professe Religion and you not effectually called you can never do this therefore this is the first thing 〈◊〉 called of God So when he writes to the Corinths 1 Cor. 1. 2. called ●●e Saints it is the fore front of all his Epistles as who should say I shall speak abundance of things to you but you are called of God therefore he bids them do this and that and the other all works come after this effectual calling as it is in other particular callings suppose a man be called to be an Apostle all the acts and performances that an Apostle doth they come after he is called else they are not the acts of an Apostle but a medler therefore in all the Apostles writings when he doth the acts of an Apostle to exhort them and rebuke them in the Lord he shews his calling Paul called to be an Apostle as who should say do not judge amiss of me you may think what have I to do with you we have a Minister already what have you to do in Corinth meddle with your own places where you live mistake me not I am called to be an Apostle so that his calling to be an Apostle is before all other actions first he is called and then exhorts instructs reproves c. Several names given to effectual calling Fourthly Another reason is taken from the names that are given unto effectual calling first it is called a mans gathering unto Christ as Joh. 11. 50 51 52. it is the prophecy of Caiphas though he spake he knew not what yet he spake right as the place doth imply it is expedient saith he that one man should dye for the people and gather together the children of God that were scattered as who should say this is the first act that the Lord Jesus doth upon those that are his they were scattered till then and now when he comes effectually to call them he puts his first act upon them and gathered them to himself so also it is called a drawing unto God Joh 12. 32. When I am lifted up I will draw all men unto me that is when he was lifted up upon the crosse he would call the Gentiles all his elect people unto him he doth not speak of all men but he speaks of the elect he will draw all them to him he will call them home So againe it is called in Scripture the entring of a man into Christ as a Scholar that is admitted into a Colledge his name is first entred so effectual calling is a mans first entring into the Schoole of Christ into the family of Christ when a man is first entred into that blessed society as Joh. 10. 9. I am the doore if any man will enter by me he shall be saved and go in and out and finde pasture he speaks here of the first act of a mans coming before that he was quite out of doors this is the first act his first entring into Christ to be of his sheepfold and flock to feed upon his pastures and to have the benefit of his Scepter and be governed and guided by him as the true shepheard effectual calling enters a man into Christ Againe it is called a mans coming in Rom. 11. 25. untill the fulness of the Gentiles is come in that is until the elect Gentiles be effectually called now because he would expresse what effectual calling is he calls it the coming of a man in he was without before as other dogs were that had no part in the tree of life no interest in the salvation purchased as far off as those that were reprobates but now is his coming in and so I might instance in other names Lastly Because it is the first extract of election and predestination unto eternal life as Rom. 8. 30. Whom he did predestinate them also he called there was the first impression of the seale upon the wax there was the first image that he made whom he did predestinate them he called afterwards he justified them c therefore you shall finde in Scripture that election calling are put together because this is the first blush of it as Rev. 17. 14. The King of Kings Lord of Lords and they that are with him are called and chosen he puts them both together what a marvelous comfort is this to those that know they are effectually called of God! election and vocation are individual companions and cannot be separated one from the other that man that is elected it is certaine he shall be called this is that which makes a man actually elected my meaning is this though a man were elected before all worlds though now living in the estate of sinne and death and damnation a vile wretched sinner he was elected it may be but not actually elected in himself there was nothing of election in him there was no image nor seale of election stamped upon him nothing of it put forth in him therefore this is the reason why in Scripture vocation is called election 1 Cor. 1. 26 27. You see your calling brethren not many wisemen after the flesh not many mighty c. are called but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise the one is the image and the
and his blindness and nakedness and captivity if the Lord do mean any mercy to a man here comes in his effectual calling 2 THES 2. 14. Whereunto he called you by our Gospel to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ I Have spoken already of the prepatory work that goes before Effectual Calling the next thing I am to speake of is the parts of Effectual Calling and they are Two parts of effectual calling 1. Offering of Christ two First the offering of Christ and his merits the objective propounding of Christ and his benefits when Christ comes and offers himself to a man in the Gospel he came to his own John 1. 11. but his own received him not he came and offered himself to them I am the way the truth and the light I am the Messias and the Saviour of the world and I have eternal life and here I am take me and all with me this is the first thing in Effectual Calling the objective propounding of Christ to a man The second thing is the receiving of Christ not only the offering of Christ 2. The receiving of Christ to a man for so he offers himself to those that are not of God even to all but in Effectual Calling as there is an offer on Gods side so there is a reflection on Gods side as many as received him c. John 1. 12. they received him these two now make up Effectual Calling the offering of Christ and the receiving of him when Christ calls a man to him and he answers to his call thus you see the parts of Effectual Calling First to speak of the first the objective propounding of Christ and all the things of Christ to a man and this hath two degrees like the morning light that hath two parts the dawning of the day and the Sunnes arising so there Two parts o● degrees of offering Christ 1. General are two parts in this objective propounding of Christ to the soul the first is that general propounding of him to every creature now the soul thinks what to every creature then it is propounded to me as well as to any body else but the effectualness of this call is that it breeds the seeds of grace in a man it breeds saving desires and saving longings and saving and kindly mournings for the want of this sweet good when it sees such an excellent good and a possibility of it and that it is propounded to every creature then the soule thinks I may be one as well as any body else and so the soul longs after it The second thing is the personal propounding of this to those that have these 2. Personal seeds of Grace the first was general to one as well as to another but now this is to this mans person rather then to any body else and now the soul begins to think seriously this proposition is to me this tender is to me I hunger and thirst and long and therefore this belongs to me and the effectualnesse of this call is to make the soul come to Christ and cast himselfe upon him by faith these are the parts of propounding of Christ and both these are twofold 2. Both 1. External 2. Internal the first is the external part of it by the Word the other the internal part of it by the Spirit Now we are to speak of the first of these how the Word works this general call and for this I have chosen this text Whereunto he hath called you by our Gospel c. For the coherence of these words in the former verses the Apostle had told the Thessalonians of a woful falling away that should he among all visible Churches in the whole world almost that there should be a general defection unlesse of Gods Elect and they should have fearful declinings and he sheweth that the power of the Devil and ●●s instruments should be the cause of this falling away he should come with strong delusions and then the just cause why God doth suffer the Devil and his imps to bring this about that all they might be damned that had phas 〈…〉 in unrighteousnesse the Lord would have them damned and this made the Lord suffer the Devil to work Apostacy and declining to them Now this is a fearful thing and therefore in the next place he comes to comfort the Th●s●●lonians for they for their part the godly amongst them need not to be dismayed for fear of falling away as if they should not hold out but he would have them encouraged that they shall stand out for ever and he comforts them by two Arguments First by Gods predestination of them to life from all eternity God hath chosen you to Salvation from the beginning and then ●e laies down the meanes God had appointed for the attaining this salvation and that was through Sanctification in the Spirit as who should say 't is true there shall be such a falling away but you that are godly need not be dejected for God hath chosen you from all eternity and therefore will sanctifie you and keep you through his mighty power unto salvation that you shall not fall away The second Argument is their Effectual Calling that is in the text Whereunto he hath called you by our Gospel c. as who should say the Lord hath given you a pledge that you shall never fall away finally for it is plaine that God hath chosen you and he hath given a pledge of hi● Election for he hath called you therefore be of good cheare Well then in the words of the text you may consider these four things First Effectual Calling he called you Secondly the meanes whereby he hath wrought this in you namely the Gospel Thirdly the tearme whereunto he called them noted in this word hereunto which if you look into the former verse was unto 〈…〉 tion Fourthly what this salvation is it is a most admirable incomparable thing no tongue is able to speak it Oh saith he It is to the attaining of the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ the very same glory that the Lord Jesus Christ was advanced to you have part and communion therein Now three of these points I lay aside the point that serves our turn is the second he called you by our Gospell That the thing that calls Gods people home it is the General tender of Doct. The Gospel or general tender of grace is that by which God calls men home grace indifferently to any man without exception whosoever will have it that is the Gospel When Christ should call Nicodemus after he had convinced him of his blindnesse and cursed estate and made him see he was a fool in all the things of God now he gives him a call and how doth he call him it was even this general tender John 3. 14 15. As Moses lifted up the Serpent i● the Wildernesse so must the Son of man be lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish
there is a possibility for him to finde mercy or any hope of pardon it cannot be attained to without the work of God a weak shelfe is able to hold when a man lays but a book upon it but if a man lay a great weight upon a weak shelf it will break under it so it is with the faith of men when there is no weight laid upon it the burthen of the Lord is not laid upon them then they may think it is an easie matter to have salvation and their sinnes pardoned but if this weight should be laid upon them their faith would burst unlesse the Lord should be pleased to put in a better faith then this it is not in a mans power to look beyond the power of justice for a man to beleeve that there is mercy in God contrary to the sentence of his own Law and contrary to the sense and feeling of a mans own soul and therefore when the Lord is pleased effectually to call a man though he lay a bleeding bleeding before in the sight and sense of his misery he opens a door of hope to the soul he lets in a light of possibility that he may yet come to be quickened and be a new creature and obtaine mercy at the hands of the Lord as the Lord dealt with his people Hos 2. 14. there saith the text I will give them the valley of Achor for the door of hope so when the Lord doth cast a man into the valley of Achor of stoning and astonishment then he opens a door of hope that he may look in and see at a crevis some hope for him to speed though yet I have an hard heart yet such a thing may be if I come to Christ I see God may afford mercy to whom he will and hath propounded it to every man that will have it therefore I may have mercy the Lord begins to stir and move the heart and now the soul begins to have a door of hope you see then what this hope is it is such a thing as flowes from the faith of possibility I do not say that it is a justifying faith but it is the forerunner of it to make way for it The second thing is how this hope agrees with that which proceeds 2. How it agrees with that which followes justifying faith 1. Both are of God from a justifying faith I answer it agrees in five things First both are of God all the hope a creature hath if it be a true hope it is of God therefore the Apostle saith the God of all hope c. Rom. 15. 13. God is the God of all hope I do not say that all hope absolutely is of God for the vaine hope of wicked men is of the Devil and is not of God but I speak of a true hope and courage that the soul gets to seek God in his wayes and fear him Secondly they are both wrought by the Gospel Rom. 15. 4. All things 2. Both are wrought by the Gospel were written for our learning saith the Apostle that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Thus it is with a believer though he hath nothing in present possession though he be persecuted and afflicted and forsaken in the world though he hath never so many miseries here below yet when he looks into the Scriptures and sees what promises God hath made he comes to have some hope it is thus with a man that is not yet a believer but is in the way to be a believer the Lord works with him this way though he see himself a miserable and wretched sinner and undone man cast off and there is no hope in himself yet when he looks into the Scriptures and sees what a gracious tender of mercy there is to any man that will have mercy it is not the wretchednesse of a mans heart that casts him off but the not coming to Christ and receiving of him that damnes him for the fountaine of mercy is open for every one that will receive Christ thus the Scripture gives hope Thirdly both set a man on work as suppose a man hath an hope that proceeds 3. Both set a man on work from justifying faith as he believes in Christ so this sets him a work 1 John 3. 3. He that hath this hope purifies himself as Christ is pure it makes him labour to be humble and meek and to be made partaker of the Spirit of Grace it makes him labour after the things that are above and to be sitted and disposed to every good work and to purge himself and cleanse his conscience more and more and so a man that hath not this justifying faith but hath only this branch of effectual calling begun in him he that hath this hope I now speak of it sets him a work to seek after Christ and to labour hard for the enjoying of him and to seek him in all his Ordinances in his manner though he cannot pray and performe duties as others do yet he will do it in that manner he is able Fourthly both are the anchor of the soul as it is with a believer though he 4. Both are the anchor of the soul Heb. 6. 19. be a godly believer and hath interest in Christ yet what with temptations from hell and his own heart he will be tossed to and fro were it not for this hope which is as an anchor to the soul so it is with a man that is not come thus far but is only under the same first branch though his tossings be fierce and his temptations be violent and his case be doubtful and full of hazard yet notwithstanding when this hope comes into the soul it doth marvelously stay the heart though it see nothing but hell and damnation and misery and his conscience is not purged and his life renewed and his soul sanctified and wrought upon in Jesus Christ though he sees there is no way but hell and damnation yet when this hope comes into the soul though he can see neither star-light nor Moon-light nor nothing it doth stay him much and prop him up much and doth encourage him to go on without dismay Neither of these two hopes shall make a man ashamed if a man hath 5. Neither of them shall make a man ashamed this true hope he shall never be ashamed Rom. 5. 4. Hope maketh not ashamed so it is with a man that is truly wrought upon the Lord never deceives him there is a working of grace for grace before grace it self comes into the soul which carries a man beyond a reprobate and this hope the soul hath will never let him be in this case that he shall need to be ashamed The third thing is this how this hope differs from that hope which proceeds 3. How this hope differs from that which followes justification 1 This ariseth out of the seeds of grace the other out of grace it self from justifying faith and
creature in the eyes of the world yet he hopes for great matters he hopes for a glorious resurrection and for an excellent triumph over sinne and death and hell and to have his body and soul for ever in the Kingdome of Christ Jesus you will say he seeth none of these things he hopes that God will blesse him in all his wayes and be with him in sicknesse and in health in misery and prosperity and in all estates and that he will do him good while he lives and when he dyes he seeth none of these things No saith the Apostle Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen though many think there is no substance in these things yet faith doth deliver the substance of them unto him and it is an evidence that he shall certainly have them and it is as it were a Sacrament therefore the Fathers call it the Sacrament of faith and the Sacrament of hopes and the Sacrament of repentance because they are certaine and sure tokens and pledges of those things that a Christian looks for Secondly the Apostle commends faith by a long Catalogue of believers of Holy Fathers and Patriarchs and Prophets and Judges and Worthies from the beginning of the world and he shewes there was no worth in them but it did proceed from faith and this he doth First generally in the second verse By it the Elders obtained a good report he speaks of them all ingeneral he calls them Elders a reverend grave company and he amplifies this by giving a general ground and reason why faith can build upon nothing as it were to see to and yet is able to gather great matters though it see little or nothing ●●rse 3. You may see this saith he by Historical faith For through saith we understand that the worlds were made by the Word of God so that things which are seen were not made of things which do appeare though nothing was before a mans eyes yet through this faith he might see an whole world out of nothing so though the world and flesh and blood see nothing yet he that believes in God he is able to raise a world out of nothing he may look for these things at the hands of God though for the present he sees nothing Secondly he doth divide these believers into foure several rankes The first is the Holy Fathers before the Flood and he instanceth onely in three for all the rest as Ab●l En●ch N●ah Verse 4 5 6 7. Secondly the Holy Patriarchs from the Flood to the time of Moses and he instanceth in five not as though there were no more but he contents himself with these Abraham Sarah Isaac Jacob Joseph from ver 8. to the 22. And then in the third place he takes all those Worthies from Moses to the time of the entrance into the Land of C●naan and he doth instance in Moses's Parents and then in Moses then in the children of Israel then in Rahab from Ver. 23. to 31. In the fourth place he reckons up all those Heroes from that time to the time of the Maccabees and Names Gideon and Barach and Samps●n and Jophtah and David and Samuel and then he reckons them up only in generall the Prophets and Martyrs and Confessors under the persecutions of cursed Anticchus Now in all this Catalogue he shewes the admirable effects of true justifying faith what faith is able to do when a man is a true believer in God what great matters he is able to atchieve it gives a man the testimony of a good conscience and makes him able to do the things acceptable to God it makes a man believe things incredible to sense and reason it makes a man forsake all and follow God it makes a man do or suffer any thing for Christ it makes a man so precious that the world is not worthy that he should dwell among them that there should be any such person in such a base place as the world is it is an excellent thing and it is set out most admirably what glorious things faith doth enable a man in the strength of God to do and his scope in all this is to exhort them to abound in faith and they that have it not to use all meanes for the obtaining of it and come by it and lye at God and to be trading in the meanes of Grace and never be at quiet till they have it and when they have it to endeare it and labour to abound in it and persevere in it to their dying day now among all this grave and venerable and rev●rend society of believers that he here reckons and summes up he calls out Abraham in this text to speak of him and that he speaks of him in this place is this that when God called him to leave his Countrey and Kindred and Fathers house to leave his inheritance and all his friends and acquaintance by faith he was able to obey this call By saith saith he Abraham being called out to go into a place which he should afterwards receive for an inheritance obeyed and he went out not knowing whether he went Doct. So that the Doctrine which I observe from hence is this that Doct. It is saith that makes a man obey the call of God it is faith that makes a man obey the call of God the command of God whether it be the first call and command for the coming out of sinne or all after commands whatsoever it is faith that makes a man obey them if a man have faith though he had never so stubborne and perverse an heart before though he were never so set upon his lusts and sinfull courses before faith is that which will make a man lay it downe and disavow it and oppose himself against it and he shall no longer live in it as soone as ever faith comes into the soul it makes a man obey God it brings a man home to God to do his will and to walk according to his directions and to be at his dispose and to commit and commend and resigne himself wholly to God in all his wayes this is the onely thing that heales a mans backslidings this is the onely thing that drawes a man home to God this is the onely instrument whereby a man is tyed to God himself whereby a man doth fetch downe all the graces from above so long as a man is stubborne and perverse and walks after the flesh and goeth on in any evil way he hath no faith as the Psalmist speaks Psal 78. 32. For all this they sinned yet still and believed not his wendrous works that is they were disobedient therefore certainly they had no faith for if faith once looked into their hearts it would have made them to discard their sinnes and it would have made them obedient to God it would have pared them from the flesh and weaned them from their owne desires and would have made them to give up themselves to
were nothing to be damned and as if they would try whether they can bear hell nay such is the impudency of mens faces that notwithstanding they have heard they are unconverted and their hearts are not subject to God yet they hope they have true faith in God and their sins are infirmities whereas you see it cannot be true faith unlesse it make a man to be obedient to God in all his wayes and binde a man in a perpetual bond to God for ever never to depart from him Thirdly it may be an Use of examination to see whether we obey God Use 3 For examination or no for if our saith be the faith we hope it is it will make us obedient Evidences of true obedience First then true obedience is a willing affectionate hearty obedience 1. Willing and hearty Prov. 3. 1. My son let thy heart keep my Commandments the Lrod will have such obedience as proceeds from the bottome of the heart not when a 〈◊〉 heart is dull and dead and hangs off but when the heart pour●s forth it self in his wayes and performing his gracious pleasures from day to day this the Lord requires that it be done with the affection of the heart as well as the thing be done in the thing done the wicked may go as far nay further then the sincere they may multiply duties as well as the other for the things done but here is the thing a wicked man doth duties hear●lesly unaffectionately but a child of God doth them sincerely and willingly and le ts out his heart and affections upon them all God lo●●s a chearful giver 2 Cor 9. 10. He loves a giver that gives with all his affections so he loves a chearful comer to Church that is glad to hear a Sermon and his heart leapes to hear the Word of God and he is affected with it he loves a chearful praying one that in prayer poures out his soul before him he loves a chearful comer to the Sacrament that delights to shew forth the Lords death till he comes God doth not love a man unlesse ●e doth this with all his affections as it is said it is good to be zealous in a good matter the worship and Commandments of God are good matters now it is good to be zealous in these matters nay to have the creame and flower and chief of our affections set upon these things we are acquainted with the wayes and histories of grace and we can speak thereof but it doth not sink down into our hearts it doth not warme us nor put any heat into our souls we are not quickened and moved by these things we know Gods attribute his power and wisdome and mercy and justice c. But none sink down into our hearts they affect us not as they ought to do where are our affections in prayer We pray and come to Church and to the Lords Table but where are our affections in all these things The Lord cares not for these services that have not affections to spice them and sweeten them and beautifie them the Lord loves when a man serves him with all his heart when the will hangs off it is base service and the Lord regards it not as the Lord loves that we that are Ministers should preach with a ready mind● 1 Pet. 5. 2. That we should preach with gracious affections and be affected in the Pulpit and desire from the bottome of our souls to do good to the people and yearne over the people the Lord loves these things when we do them willingly and heartily so he delights in people when they heare and call upon his Name with affection when we go about Gods Commandments as a Bear to the stake God abhors it may be God commands a man to do such a thing he doth it but it is hard saith he when money is to be fetched out of his purse for good duties it is hard saith he and when he must go against the wicked and pull the ill will of the Countrey upon him may be he doth it but it is hard the Lord distasts this the Lord loves a chearful giver and a chearful worker a chearful Minister and chearfull people now if faith comes into the soul it will not only work obedience but chearful obedience and from the bottome of the heart Secondly true obedience makes a man resigne himself to God it makes a man to be altogether at Gods dispose I am thine saith David he looked 2. Works resignation to God upon himself as if he were altogether at Gods dispose as if he were his and not his own You are not your own saith the Apostle you are bought with a pri●● 1 Cor. 2 6. So that is true obedience when a man gives up himself to God many will do things that God commands but they know not how to do them with resignation to be altogether at Gods dispose they love to be called Gods servants but they will be only retainers as many will get to be servants to some Gentleman but it is only for their own advantage to save their purses to have the Gentlemans countenance these will not dwell with the Gentleman but in their own houses and when he hath some great strangers at a Feast or when he rides abroad in state then they will attend upon him but yet they will live at home and be their own men so most people are but the Lords retainers this is no obedience at all it is none of faiths obedience Thirdly true obedience puts forth all a mans strength to God Thou shalt 3. It puts forth all a mans strength to God love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul and all thy strengh Praise the Lord O my soul and all that is within me praise his Holy Name Psal 103. True obedience lets forth all that is in a man to Christ Mat. 4. 20 When Christ called Simon and Andrew they flung away their nets and followed him it was all the living they had and yet they flung away all to follow him so when he spake to Matthew a Publican faith came no sooner into his soul but he followed him presently Mat. 9. 9 Though it was a rich office he was a Knight by his place as Cicero speaks it was worth five hundred pounds a yeare of our money yet as soone as ever Christ called him he le●t his place and went after Christ so when a man will part with purse and friends and all he hath and fling all at Gods foot and give up all to him this is true obedience now if we have not this we have not faithful obedience THE KILLING POVVER OF THE LAVV. Rom. 7. 9. For I was once alive without the Law but when the Commandment came Sin revived and I died IN these words the Apostle shewes Two things First The Division of the Text. What a jolly man he thought himself to be whilst he was a Pharisee
Soul into this privation is done by the Law and if the Lord means to convert there the Gospel begins Luk. 4. 18. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me that I should preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted to preach deliverance to the Captives and recovering of sight to the blind that I should set at liberty them that are bruised When the Law hath humbled a man and thus brought down his will then begins the work of the Gospel As we use to say of Natural Philosophy where Natural Philosophy ends there Physick begins So where the Law ends the Gospel begins Thus we see the first Effect of this deadnesse 2. Secondly When the Law hath done this when the deadnesse the Law hath wrought hath produced this Effect then the next Effect is this the Law holds the heart there when a man is dead the effect of death is to hold a man there There is no redresse no return without the Almighty power of God there is no return to his former life So when the Law hath deaded a man it holds a man there though a man would never so fain get out he cannot he will be snatching at a Christ and looking at the promises and be presuming that there is mercy for him he would fain be brisk again But if the Law hath killed him and made him a dead man he cannot get out Rom. 7. 6. the Apostle saith We are delivered from the Law being dead unto that wherein we were holden St. Paul could not get out to his livelynesse again but the Law held him So it is with the Law when the Law of God hath humbled a man and made him a dead man it holds him there let the Divel come with all the comforts he can there is no evasion let his vain neighbors bring what Scriptures they can to cheer him there is nothing can lift that soul up let all profits and pleasures come they cannot take off his heart they cannot make him alive again unlesse it please the Lord to quicken and revive him 2. The next Effect of this deadnesse is that it makes the heart stiff when the body is dead all the members are stiff the beatings of the pulses cease and all are stiff So when a man is killed by the Law it makes his head stiff it breaks off all his arguing and reasoning and disputing against the Law of God That is against my profit and that is against my pleasure and that is against my credit thus the heart is full of life end activity before But when the Law comes and shews him he is a dead man now he is not able to stir now he can say what if it be against my profit and pleasure what if it be against my credit what if men make a mock at me I am a dead man if I live not in this course Psal 36. 12. There saith the Text They are fallen that work iniquity they are cast d●w● 〈◊〉 shall not be able to rise So when the Law of God comes and preacheth righteousnesse to a man and shews him against whom he hath sinned it makes him a dead man he cannot stir any more if the Divel bids him reason for his lusts he dares not do it if his old company perswade him to his former life and conversation he dares not do it Isa● 41. 21. Stand to your cause saith the Lord bring forth your strong reasons saith the God of Jacob. You could be reasoning and pleading for your lusts let us now hear your strong reasons and arguments Now this man is a dead man and a damned man he hath no reason no plea to alledge to go on in his former course this man is killed now 4. Fourthly This deadnesse makes the ●eart yield before the Law comes the heart is marvellous obstinate but now when the stiffnesse of it is gone and the Law hath made him a dead man now he will yield 2 Chron. 30. 8. As H●zekiah speaks Be not now stiff-●ecked as your fath●rs but give the hand to the Lord and come into his Sanctuary So when the Lord hath broken the neck of a mans stiffnesse and hath broken his back-bone that he cannot stand stiffly out and hath taken away his livelynesse which was his whale-bone as it were to uphold him in his strength and courage and in his sins Now his heart is made to yield to God he cannot now but yield to the Lord. Thus it is with a poor creature when the law works upon him he cannot stand out any longer It is m●st true before the Lord converts a man he doth take away his stiffnesse and make a man a dead man But you will say when a man is dead all his joynts are stiff his body is cold and grows stiff but when a man is alive his joynts are lithe and lively I Answer It is true the law of God cannot take away a mans natural stiffnesse but his voluntary stiffness is taken a way The voluntary stiffnesse is taken away when he is dead when a man was alive he could shut his hand and hold it so he could stretch out his arm and hold it so but when a man is dead he cannot do so So it is in this case although the stiffnesse of nature remain still yet the voluntary stiffnesse is taken away the will and heart of a man is out of life It cannot be stiff towards God I confesse the Lord doth not take a way all stiffnesse no not out of his Saints but he takes so much stiffnesse out of the heart as to make it a patient he shall not be voluntarily stiff he shall not be overcomingly resisting Divines use to say that in the first conversion of a sinner he is meerly a Patient first the Lord makes him a patient and then converts him Jer. 31. 19. After I was converted I repented after I was instructed I smote upon the thigh c. ●●st God made him a patient and instructed him and afterwards converted him The Use of the Points is this Is it so that the law of God doth make a man a dead man Then here we may observe the wonderful p●wer of the law a man hath so much livelinesse in him so much ●se and activity and so many strong conceits that it is wonderful hard to make him dead therefore the word of God is mighty It is said of ●p●●● that he did mightily convince the Jewes Act. 18. 28. for he was mighty in the Scriptures there had need be might in the Scriptures to do this What strong reasons had they in regard of flesh and blood that Jesus was not the Christ What he the Christ that was born in a manger and hath none but a beggerly company to his kindred Are not his brethren and kinsfolk 〈◊〉 None but th● tag-rag and refuse of the Country follow him What he that had no form or beauty in him the Saviour of
as white from black this is that which doth alienate them from the courses of the world this is that which doth make them to be singular and odde fellows as if they were of another world this makes them lead a different kind of life and follow a different kind of way from all their neighbors because the Spirit of God works in them as Ishmael and Isaac though Ishmael was born after the flesh yet Isaac was born after the Spirit as the Apostle alludes Gal. 4. 23. that is one took one kind of course the other another one was born one way the other another way the Spirit begat one the Flesh the other and this made Ishmael to persecute Isaac because Isaac could not abide his courses they were of different Natures and Dispositions one was born after the Spirit the other after the Flesh Now here be Six Things I would shew unto you First What Regeneration is Secondly Why it is so called Thirdly Wherein it consists Fourthly The Reasons why the Spirit of God only works this work Fifthly How he works it And Lastly The Vses First What Regeneration is And it is thus much namely The renewing What Regeneration is of the whole man and by degrees completed after the Image of God in Jesus Christ This is Regeneration and there be Five Things to be opened in it First That it is the renewing of a man It is not every change there A Renewing may be abundance of changes and alterations and yet a man for the main may be the same man he is a man may be changed from a Drunkard to be sober from an Adulterer to be chaste yet still he was the same man he was before though there be changes wrought in him but Regeneration is the renewing of a man the making of a man another man as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 5. 17. Old things are passed away and all things are become new The Lord doth take away the old frame and the old affections and the old inclinations the old acquaintance the old course and conversation all these things passe away and the Lord puts in new things in the room thereof till all things become new thus it is in this work as the Apostle speaks Tit. 3. 5. According to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost the Lord removeth the old rubbish and puts a new fabrick in the room as a Goldsmith he takes a vessel of dishonour and melts it and makes it a vessel of honour God doth undo the old workmanship and makes a new as David saith Create in me O Lord a clean heart c. Psal 51. 10. David thought he had lost all therefore he prayeth to God that he may be new cast that he may be taken all to pieces as a VVatch-maker takes a VVatch that is out of order he takes it all to pieces and sets it together anew again so he prayes God to deal with him he had lost all in sense and feeling and would have God make him a new workmanship it is called the renewing of a man Ezek 11. 19. there is an excellent place I will give them a new heart c. The Lord puts out and he puts in even just as a Suister doth when she works cut-works she puts out the old heart and puts in a new heart he takes out that which was stark naught and puts in that which is good and agreeable to his mind the old heart is corrupt and the old man is stark naught there is nothing good in it these the Lord takes out and puts in all new A man is altogether naught and reprobate before what poor creatures are all people that are not Regenerate they are all proud and vain and foolish and wordly and earthly and harden their hearts and are carelesse of Gods wayes they have no fear of God before their eyes they are altogether rotten how ill-favouredly do they pray How worldly do they go on in their callings How unfruitfully do they come to Church They are all rotten and refractory they do nothing that right is now when the Spirit of God doth make them up he puts out all old things and makes them new This is the First thing Regeneration is the renewing of a man Secondly As it is the renewing of a man so it is the renewing of the whole A Renewing of the whole man man It is not only in some things for Saul was another man in some sense but Regeneration is the renewing of the whole man as the Apostle saith The God of peace sanctifie you throughout in body soul and Spirit 1 Thess 5. 23. it is a work upon the whole man our Saviour Christ compares it to leaven which a woman took and leavened the whole Lump It is like unto Original sin as Original sin infects the whole man so Regeneration doth repair and renew the whole man it is as general and universal as original sin the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse Ephes 5. 9. It is in all goodnesse in the goodnesse of a mans mind and in the goodnesse of a mans affections in the goodnesse of the inclination and d●sposition in the goodnesse of the whole man the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness indeed it begins in the goodnesse of the mind as the Apostle speaks Ephes 4. 23. Be renewed in the Spirit of your minds Where he calls upon them for this new work Put off the old man saith he and be renewed in the Spirit of your minds that is the First thing when a man hath a new mind given unto him a new knowledge put into his understanding a man is renewed in knowledge Col. 3. 10. This is the first thing when God reneweth a mans knowledge and apprehension of things when a man begins to know the plagues of his own heart and the evils of all his own wayes now a man begins to see through these things and now he begins to see the wayes of God and to dive deep beneath the irksomnesse of them to know the amiablenesse of them the sweetnesse of them the delights of them are hidden from a man so long as he is unregenerate but when God doth begin to regenerate a man now he begins to discover them to him that a man seeth what they are he could say before that the wayes of God were good but he could never taste and find them so but when a man is renewed now he seeth the lustre and amiablenesse of them so also he seeth the uglinesse of sin this was covered before sin deceived the heart and carried him after it but now sin begins to be laid stark naked and a man seeth the deformity of it here begins Regeneration in the mind for the understanding is the key of the Soul the key of all the Faculties of the Soul it is like a sluce or flood gate pull up that and the water goes out and runs all abroad
help from or can do no good to others Therefore the Apostle prayeth God in the behalf of the Corinthians That the Members of Christ may be of one minde and live in peace 2 Cor. 13. 11. Thirdly Here we may see how to try our acquaintance and whether To try our acquaintance hereby the company we joyn our selves unto be good or no If our company be right the Spirit of God tyeth the knot therefore the Apostle will tell you whether you have the right communion and fellowship or no try the spirits whether they be of God or no saith he If the fellowship we have one with another be not of God if the Spirit of God do not knit us together our fellowship is not right 1. Joh. 1. 3. there is an excellent place That they may have fellowship with us saith he and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ As who should say We would fain have you have fellowship with us and I tell you what kind of fellowship you must have if you be acquainted with us you must have fellowship with the father and with the Lord Jesus Christ for our fellowship is with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ so that we may see whether our Company be right or no by this The Last Vse is this Is it so that the Spirit of God joyns all the Saints To stir up a sympathy amongst the Saints of God together in one Body Then we should have a fellow-feeling with all the Members of Christ Do not say thou art a Member of the Church of England and not of France or Germany do not say thou art a Member of this Parish but not of another do not say so for if thou art a Member of Christ there is one Body and one Spirit Eph. 4. 4. If there be one Body there must be one Spirit and therefore we should have a fellow-feeling But how shall we have a fellow-feeling with the Members of Christ How to work maintain and express this sympathy By informing our selves concerning one another I say First We must inform our selves as much as we can concerning one another As when the Ark of God was among the Philistims old Eli though he gave way too far to his Sons wickednesse yet was he very careful of the Ark and people of God and therefore 1 Sam. 4. 13 14. he went out and sate in the high-way that so he might hear in the first place what was the news and you know how his heart trembled when he heard that the Ark of God was taken So it was with David when any came out of the Camp of Israel he saith to them What is done I pray thee 2 Sam. 1. 4. So we should enquire concerning one another Secondly We should visit our fellow-members As it is said of Moses By visiting our fellow-Members though he were a great Courtier in Pharaoh's Court yet he went out to look upon his Brethrens burthens Exod. 2. 11. he would be ever and anon steping out to see how his brethren fared and how did this affect his heart with their trouble Thirdly We should lay to heart their Afflictions It is a strange thing By laying to heart their afflictions how the people of God in all ages have been affected with the Afflictions of the Church nay though they have not seen it but only fore-saw what would be afterwards As Elisha wept when he fore-saw what cruelty Hazael would use towards the People of Israel 2 King 8. 11 12. So Daniel Dan. 8. 27. when God revealed the Afflictions of the Church to him two hundered years before it should come to pass yet when he heard of the Affliction that should fall out the text saith that Daniel fainted and how can we think that the Spirit of Christ hath united us into one Body when we have not this disposition in our souls OF THE SABBATH Exod. 20. 8. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it Holy THAT which I intend to speak concerning the Sabbath at this time I will cast into these Propositions The First is this That there must be some set time Proposit 1. A set time for worship for the Worship and immediate Service of God Now the Reason why there must be some set time for Gods immediate Worship is First Because all Actions cannot be done at once Reas 1 but by succession first one and then another for a man to perform the duties of Gods Worship in an instant and to get down the knees of body and soul before his Maker in an instant this cannot be Eccles 3. 1. There is an appointed time for every Action under the Sun Then if there be a time for all actions surely there must be a time for the Worship of God Secondly There must be a set time Because such is our dulness in the Reas 2 duties of Gods Worship that we had need to have times set apart for Gods Worship there is a great deal of ado required to fix a mans Thoughts upon heaven to have a fixed apprehension of the Presence of God these do not only require time but a great deal of time Secondly The Second Proposition is this That as there must be some Propos 2. Some set time for worship every day time for Gods immediate Worship and Service so there must be some set time every day all the dayes of our lives there must be some defined and determinate time for Worship of God every day at the least morning and evening David though he were employed in great affairs yet he had three times a day to glorifie God in in his holy Ordinances Three times in the day will I praise thee Psal 55. 17. The Reason of this is Because men live like Beasts without daily invocation upon God 2 Chron. 13. 10 11. Abijah there speaking against Je●choam the King of Israel though himself had no great goodness in him he saith The Lord is our God and we offer sacrifices and burn sweet incense every day Every day they did it as who should say it were a sign that God were not amongst us if we did not this he takes it as a principle written in the conscience though he were a natural man yet he doth reason thus that where there is not every day some time for Gods Worship God is not amongst them Another Reason is Because every morning God reneweth his Mercies Reas 2 and every evening they are continued to us as the Church saith in the Lamentations ch 3. 23. Every morning his mercies are renewed to us and in the evening his compassions sail not therefore every morning we are to set our selves before God to ask of him the forgivenesse of our sins every morning and evening we are to do this Psal 92. 1 2. David saith It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord to sing praises to thy Name O thou most High To sh●w forth thy loving kindness
Lust or Uncleannesse some prick in the flesh that the Lord sent upon him and let him be encountered withal then Paul sought God in a solemn manner more then ever he did at other times 2 Cor. 12. 8. For this I besought God thrice 4. Fourthly In case a man is to do some notable service he is to enter into some new Calling or if the Lord doth put him upon some new service that doth require some more then ordinary help now a man is to seek God by Fasting and Prayer as you may see it was with Barnabas and Paul when they entred into the Ministery Acts 13 3. Now the reason why I name these things is to shew you that sometimes God will have an extraordinary set day for his immediate worship and service when we are to lay aside all other businesse and set out selves apart to call upon his Name and seek him The thing I gather from hence is this If there be an extraordinary set day then there must be an ordinary set day for Gods immediate Service Another Argument is taken from the Equity of it and that stands Two wayes 1. First It is very equal when as we have six dayes to provide for our Reas 4 selves and for the maintenance of our bodies God gives us divers dayes for that now Equity doth require that we should give one day to him we having several dayes it is equity that he should have at least one for himself Therefore this doth aggravate our sins exceedingly if we give not this day to God Did not this aggravate the sin of Adam in eating of the forbidden fruit in that God gave him liberty to eat freely of all other trees in the garden and forbad him only the eating of that one Now what excuse could Adam have for not abstaining from that one So here God having given us divers dayes for the good of our bodies and for means and maintenance of the things of this life duty requires that we should not touch Gods day nor set our foot upon it nor turn our eyes away from it we ought to remember it as Joseph said in regard of his Mistris when she enticed him to folly mark how he answers the temptation My Master hath put all things into my hands that are in the house he hath with-held nothing from me but only thee his Wife and that is equal and reasonable how therefore shall I do this great wickedness and sin against God Gen. 39. 9. So should we say when we are tempted to break the Lords day we should say The Lord hath not imposed any day besides the Lord hath given us all the six daies for our use how therefore shall I do this great wickednesse and sin against God with worldly thoughts and speeches and actions upon that day It stands with very good equity that it should be so 2. Secondly It stands with equity in regard of our Souls if our bodies which are the worser part have several dayes for their use then how much more should the soul have one day which is a thousand times more worth then the body You know what Christ saith W●●t will it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul Matth. 16. 26. Our souls are more worth then our bodies and we have more need to seek out for Holinesse and Grace for them and to be well provided for in regard of them then for any thing in this present world if we want meat we can but starve if we want cloaths we can but famish if we want outward things we can but temporally perish but if we want Grace and the Favour of God we perish for ever Now if there be six dayes allowed for the good of our bodies how much more should we be willing to have one day for the good of our souls specially considering what need we have thereof This Argument our Saviour Christ useth to prove the Sabbath Mark ● 27. The Sabbath was made for man not man for the Sabbath The Sabbath was made for man as meat was made for the body and a man cannot be without food no more can the soul be without the Sabbath so that we see there must be a solemn day set a part for Gods Worship and Service The Fifth Proposition is this That as there must be a set day for Gods Propos 5. One day of Seven to be set apart for Gods worship Worship and Service so this day must be one of seven not one of eight or nine or five or four but one of seven and this though it be not naturally moral yet it is positively moral though it be not natural written in the heart of man as a man if he had no teaching his conscience would find out that he should not be idle and steal and commit murther the Conscience will grope out these Ordinances and Statutes of God and the Conscience will find out that there must be a set day for Gods Worship and Service the light of nature will find out that but that it must be one day of seven that it cannot find out but I say that it is the positive law of God that it must be one of seven Now Because it is not written in the heart of man but in the Commandment Reas 1 of God positively delivered to us and required of us I can give no other Reason for it but only the reason taken out of the Scripture there can be no reason taken from the judgment of man as other Lawes the very law of Reason will enforce them but there can be no other reason for this but only out of the Word of God The Lord hath commanded six dayes thou shalt labour and being his Will it must be performed for God might require six dayes for himself and leave us but one day God might have ordained it so but God intending we should live by the sweat of our brows the Lord was pleased to allow us six dayes now he giving us six dayes doth reserve unto himself one of seven Secondly Another Reason is this As the Lord hath commanded this seventh Reas 2 day so he saith it is his day The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God Now then if the seventh day be the Sabbath of the Lord our God then we must not divert any of the hours or any part of the day away when our minds run into the world we must curbe them and remember that the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord our God Thirdly Another Reason is That our Cattel and Servants and Children Reas 3 may rest as well as our selves they are to labour six dayes and one of seven they are to rest Another Reason is Because he hath sanctified it therefore the Lord blessed Reas 4 the seventh day and hallowed it Now then if the Lord hath sanctified the seventh day and appointed it if he hath set it apart for that purpose for spiritual employments and not