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A86695 A dry rod blooming and fruit-bearing. Or, A treatise of the pain, gain, and use of chastenings. Preached partly in severall sermons, but now compiled more orderly and fully for the direction and support of all Gods chastened that suffer either in Christ, or for Christ in these dayes. By G. Hughes, B.D. pastor of the church in Plymouth. Hughes, George, 1603-1667. 1644 (1644) Wing H3308; Thomason E48_9; ESTC R14529 125,445 138

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it then seek it ye afflicted of the Lord. 2. Other evils there are not onely perverting but indeed subverting the soul and separating from God unto which the second dutie carrieth a vertue contrary and soveraigne to destroy them The evils so incident to halting and so efficient to Apostasie are such as these unbeleef inordinate affection and uneven walking whereof we may note the malignitie in themselves and the remedie in the duty 1. Vnbeleefe is the strong inducement of a perpetuall backsliding from God It was therfore but a reasonable Item of the Apostle Hebr. 3.12 Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you and evill heart of unbeleef in departing from the living God Vnbeleef will make Apostates if it prevail but now conscience in making right paths for our feet must needs drive us from haltings in faith and if we secure our souls from them we are safe from falling This is evidently provided for in the dutie pressed for if care be to make all tracks to Heaven right then that of faith without which there is no having God or life must needs be rectified set right upon its object God in Christ and right upon its work to make evident the unseen excellencies of Heaven and to give subsistence to and present comfort from our hoped glorie Where this care is exercised lamenesse of faith will be relieved and an utter Apostasie sweetly prevented 2. Inordinate affection is as dangerous a furtherance to finall defection from God when affections break their bounds transgresse their rule and grow turbulent in the soul pressing their own way they expose the soul to all dangerous consequences As when fear is more of man then of God and love more of the creature then of the Creator and joy more in vanity then in reall good that soul must be hurried to forsake God as it fared with Demas and other false named Christians in whom affections were inordinate and out of place But now by this rectifying work affections are set in their right places and to their right imployment to honour God onely so fear brings home to God and love closeth with him and joy is perfectly upon him where these so work great securitie is given against Apostasie The Lord Christ therefore gives charge for right ordering affections Matth. 10.28 1 Ioh. 2.18 Fear not them that can kill the body c. And his beloved disciple followeth his steps Love not the world c. the Fathers love is not consistent with it this is reason strong enough The right state of these keep us right with God for ever 3. Vneven walking with God is the usuall means of bringing him in contempt with creatures and then of turning the heart farre from him one crooked step allowed stirs up the heart to quarrell with the upirght God because his way is too streight for us and we willing to approve our own wayes rather then his and if sin be suffered to proceed it will shake off from God for ever One stragling step put Peter at a great distance from Christ and had he not been recalled how pernitious might his slip have been Right paths and right disposition of feet in them is the onely way to cure this evill and to keep from utter backsliding It is a sweet expression of Davids I will walk in mine integritie Psal 26.11.12 but what course takes he for that My foot saith he standeth in an even place right and streight with God to that posture he holds it and what the issue In the Congregation I will blesse the Lord and he that blesseth shall never leave him Ezekiels cunsell shall close up this Ezek. 18.30 Repent and turn your selves from all your transgressions set right and keep right hearts and wayes to God so shall not iniquitie be your ruine but crooked wayes lead surely to perdition SECT X. Second Motive THe second Motive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But let it rather be healed It this the word of Gods own Spirit Surely then God had rather that poore souls lame and halting under affliction should be healed than be hurt more maimed and utterly turn'd off as unusefull for him And as his mind is so is the means he useth inclined to work the health and not the death of his chastened ones His rod therefore is intended and not onely so but effectually commanded to produce comfort and correction which will cure any hurt occasioned by its smart If health then yea saving health be in it self desirable reviving and reforming under the rods dispensation must be the mark to which the soul must reach no health to be hoped for without them The moving Consideration then to Conscience in former duties from the present word may be thus proposed Note Gods choice is to have his rod prove rather healthfull then hurtfull to his chastened children healing not killing is the prime intention of the rod which must presse them to use the rod for incouragement and amendment who ever desire life and not death Two Queres must be satisfied to open the strength of this Motive 1. What is this health or healing 2. What vertue is in former duties with respect unto the rod for healing the lame and halting soul These being apparent may put on to more circumspection in dutie Sa●itas corporis in duobus sita est in deb●ta humorum symmeiria secundum quant●tatem qualitatem in spongioso quodam habitu nu●lis obstructionibus impedito us spi●●●us sanguis liberum per omnes pa●s●s habeat dis●ursum ●es de Val. com c. 5. To the firs I shall shortly reply healing here is a borrowed expression fitted to that lamenesse or halting mentioned before both termes fetting out the evill and good estate of the body but here appiled to a spirituall use that nothing the bad this the good condition of the soul Health is the effect of healing and in the naturall acception thus conceived It is the good or prosperous state of life consisting in a due proportioned temper within as in the right disposition of parts without and in a free communion of blood and spirits through the whole subject whereby a man is said to live well or be well life above disturbance or life in peace is truly health Let this be spiritualized and it may fit here spirituall life of which here is the result of the union of the soul with Christ the health intended is the good and prosperous state of this life which inwardly consists in its duely proportioned union with Christ and free communion of spirit from him without fatall obstructions of sin and outwardly in the light of Gods countenance and favour expressed in externall blessings which make this life sweetly comfortable Vpon interruption of either this life is weakned by inward obstructions Cant. 5.8 as it was with her that cried I am sick of Love and by outward obstructions also is it something impaired whereupon in case of any
outward affliction on the Church a seeming eclipse of Gods countenance Hos 5 13. Jer. 8.22 It is said to be sick and the health of it out gone up nor recovered This state of health then must needs be very sweet therefore evey desirable unto which the rod by its comforting and reforming influence being duely received doth very much advantage The view of the severall healing vertues in the duties urged will clear this and more forcibly presse to a due and conscionable observance of them which shall now be laboured 1. The healing vertue of true comfort soveraigne over all sicknesse lamenesse or halting of spirit to God-ward caused either by sinfull obstructions or dangerous stumblings will be evident in these speciall saving properties of it 1. The closing or uniting vertue of it in case of any breach or separation made by obstructive sin between the soul and Christ its life oyl and balme are therefore sweet expressions of comfort they close the breaches of the flesh and so heal no lesse the consolations of God These reviving influences arising from God do both give forth God unto the soul and draw the spirit back again to God Christs name that is his sweetnesse are comforts manifested is as ointment powred forth Cant. 1.8 which is attractive upon the sense of standers by therefore the virgins love him pure souls separate from uncleannesse by love cleave to him and are closed with him O that broken and afflicted hearts who refuse comfort would but consider every touch of comfort is a close of the soul with Christ they would catch for this that they might close with him 2. There is a gladding influence from this comfort it chears the spirit and makes life lightsome and pleasant this is health grief makes the heart sick but joy restores it The healing medicine of Christ his comfort is therefore stiled the oyl of gladnesse it makes glad the heavie spirit Psal 35.7 and by chearing heals the sad distempers of it no cure to be hoped for him whose spirit is overwhelmed and will take no gladding cordiall Consider thou sad heart not comforted joy revives and grief must kill take heed of self-destroying by rejecting gladnesse that will heal 3. There is an heart inlarging vertue in this comfort of Christ and the more open the heart is to God the more saving health there Oblessed healthy soul where all influences of Christs Spirit have roome and passage to diffuse themselves through the man he must needs be well Grief draws up the heart like a purse and shortens the spirit therefore it must make sick but Comfort opens it wide and gives God full scope Life may expatiate here and delight it self this is health indeed O that the contracted heart that cries out of its straitnesse unto God would think to be comforted is to be inlarged every drop of this oyl opens the heart and gives way to the Spirit of Christ to run to and fro freely this is the savingly healthfull man Psal 27.4.5 Psal 119.32 No man more hunting after comfort then David and none more inlarged to God then he he cals for this and for that also De we the same 4. There is a soul-quickning power in these consolations joy inlivens and makes man active not onely to live but to be lively this is health This very sight of comfort made the Spouse run to her beloved and hasten him with her cries unto her Cant. 1.4 and 8.14 Draw and we will run is her expression and Haste my beloved is her call The active soul for God must needs be healthfull sad heart lie not still complaining thou art dead and dull it is thy sicknesse drink in the consolations of Christ these will restore and quicken why refusest thou to be comforted The God of comfort by the Son of comfort Isa 57.18 through the Spirit of comfort out of the promise of comfort supplies all this to his lame and halt because he will have their healing not their perishing and perpetuates them hereby in a good state of health that it may abide with them for ever Weigh thia inducement to obedience SECT XI The healing vertue of the second duty 2. THe force of healing in the second duty which is equally pressed with the former that we may no lesse urge it from this motive is there considerable The duty is rectifying wayes or reformation which God urgeth from his Rod not to hurt but to heal God would certainly have healing of soules rather then festering or destroying therefore his counsell is to make streight paths that we may be healed rather then subverted The healing vertue then in this duty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 9.10 would be discovered to incourage more earnestly to lay hold upon it and this will appeare in the effects of this rectifying our paths or of reformation if it be that thorow righting of the soule as is intended by it these are a three-fold rectitude left upon the man 1. Recta disposit to part●●m A right disposition of the parts considerable in this living creature which is the new creature or Christian now exercised under Gods Rod. As it is in man or any other living creature it is not well unlesse soule and body have a fit harmonicall union and consent nerver can health be expected there where life was never well seated so unlesse there be a right cementing as I may call it or disposition of the soule with Christ the fundamentall life of it it cannot live and therefore not live well or be in health These conditions are requisite hereunto 1. Mons sana in corpore sano That the parts so disposed for union between themselves be true the truth of Christ to the truth of men to phansie or make an imaginary Christ to be coupled with man or an imaginary man to be united to Christ is but to erre not to rectifie A monstrous imperfect or a crasie body joyned with the most excellent soule can never make an healthy man both true and sound make the man found indeed In this businesse wary we must be not to mistake Christ in respect of our selves Jo●h 25.1 2. nor our selves in respect to Christ He the true Vine and we the true branches are like to make a noble plant to God Heart to heart spirit to spirit must be suted 2. That the disposition of these each to other be reall imaginary unions are as uselesse here as imaginary parts a reall habitude or respect of each other must be here health is not in imagination but reall fruition 3. That this disposition be immediate between Christ and the soule without any intervening sodering Christ for the soule and the soule for Christ without other mediating causes These may prove obstructions and dest oy our life in Christ not save it 4. That this placing of these parts be orderly Christ in Supremacy the soule in subordination That body is not well whose members are
else to steere himselfe by nothing more cleare then this that God laieth himself a rule to his creatures in his Attributes and workes As in that t Levit. 11.44 Be ye holy as I am holy so in this u Luk. 6.36 Be ye mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull otherwise vaine creatures are apt to call heavie light and bitter sweet and put off thereupon all bowells towards the Lords chastened God saith chastenings are heavie yet we might know it and say so too and subscribe unto it and expresse sutable indulgent affections to our afflicted brethren 2 More speciall for his chastened ones and that is to bee a standing comfort to them at every crosse when lovers and friends may stand fa●re off and none regard their sad condition though creatures thinke our burdens nothing and shew no pity to the afflicted it is no small refreshing that God knowes our sorrows and judgeth them grievous sit for his compassions David was often put to the use of this and sound no little comfort when an exil'd pilgrim hee wanders heavily driven from house and home and sprinkles his steps with teares and yet no man pitying or taking him in then he is comforted with this thought v Psal 56.8 Lord thou tellest my wanderings and bo●llest up my teares Againe when his spirit is overwhelmed with grief and hee lookes on the right hand and beheld and no man would know him no man cared for his soule then he can see and say x Psal 142.3.4.5 O Lord thou art my portion and my refuge thou carest for me and countest my burthen heavie Thus therefore God sheweth his certaine judgement of his peoples chastenings that in case of creature comfort failing to shew himselfe to be above all that it might be a standing cordiall to the afflicted soule SECT VI. Some Corollaries or inferences for instruction VVIthin the bosome of this sentence past by God lyeth this usefull truth Vse 1. Inst 1. God indulgeth yet grieves his children As God that chastens his owne judgeth their sufferings grievous so he himselfe spares not to put his holy ones to griefe He knowes the rod is smart and yet he laies it on though he pity hee will not spare to grieve his children Hee that knowes its griefe himselfe inflicts it Hee chastens yet pitieth them for their paine he pities and yet he chastens and sets on sorrow It doth not gainesay Gods gratious indulgence to afflict his people Three things God eyes Their sinne Their profit His owne Covenant all which inforce the unin of Gods indulgence and correction 1. God indulgeth yet scourgeth sons with an eye unto their sin not for satisfaction this were a detraction from Christ who alone can make it And what can the pain of the body recompence for the sin of the soul but for correction having marked former errors and miscarriages in them It is no lesse then Atheisme to deny God such a sight of sin in his children testified by his chastenings and intended not so much to afflict the soul as sin as may appeare in these aims of God therein 1. Every chastening respects sin To render sin more evident to the creature which perhaps before lay hid and unobserved or mistaken to be better then it is but when the deserved rod comes and grieves the flesh this discovery is presently made All the grief is sin which either hath provoked this painfull chastisement or at least made a way for it that the glory of God may appeare in the manifestation of sins bitternesse by it None knowes the fire better then he that hath been scorched nor can any better tell what cold is then he that hath been frozen and benummed by it and no man can speak of sin so well as he that knowes it in the smart It is a truth unquestionable y Lam. 3.39 Man suffers for his sin sin then is his suffering and its malignity in the smart of this z Compare Gen. 34.30 and Gen. 35.1 Jacob never so smelt the stench of his sin in the neglect of his vow at Bethel as when it made him stink amongst the inhabitants of the land a 2 Chron. 33.11.12 Manasseh never thought sin so burdensome as he found it by the iron chains in Babylon b Psal 38.3 So David seeth his sin to be the racker of his bones And c Rom. 7.24 Paul acknowledgeth it his death Thus sometime God teacheth men the knowledge of sin by its bitter evils d Iudg. 3.16 as Gideon taught the Elders of Succoth with thorns 2. To render sin more odious to his people doth God put them to grief He that loves wine its likely he doth not love poyson and if one cannot be had without the other if reason be left in the man the loathsomnesse of this will marre the pleasantnesse of that and make both equally odious It is usuall with God to put gall and wormwood upon sins desired Teat to wean his peoples affections from it that they might feel it the bitternesse of their soules and hate it e Hos 2.6.7 When thornes and adulterating seducing lovers are bound together the Church forsakes both these and them when Idols have no better companions but f Isai 30.20.22 bread of adversity and water of affliction they shall have a quick dispatch from the chastened souls with indignation they shall say Get ye hence 3. To render sin lesse pernitious or destructive and to give the speedier and the surer death unto it God grieves the soule which he so much tenders Flesh and sin are so neerly related and united that one cannot be but the other must be also neither can that lie weakned or afflicted but the other likewise suffers when the chastening hand of God laieth on the corrosive upon the Flesh when this weakens flesh it weakens sin and when it kills flesh it kills sin that it may save the soul from sins malignity in reigning and in killing It is the Apostles sure word g 1 Cor. 11.32 We are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world The life and power of sin brings condemnation in the world Gods chastening kills that life and prevents that condemnation in his own afflicted See then indulgence and severitie in Gods rod towards his own in respect to sinne it is great mercie to lance that he may not kill With these purposes did God intimate his care of correcting the promised seed h Psal 89.30 31 32 33. If his children forsake my Law c. then will I visit their transgressions with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes yet I will love them too though I make it smart See chastening and yet indulgence love and yet the rod laid on 2. God puts his children to grief though he count it grievous Chastening looks to childrens profit with an eye to their further profit the full successe is given in that expression
Gods chastening Again there is besides this another life and strength of sin in the flesh where it lives naturally As a man is said to be living in or by the Law when it acquits him and condemnes him not to take away his life yet he is naturally alive also by the principles of life within him so sin is alive by the Law when it is made strong thereby to condemne and kill the man yet it 's naturall rooted life whence all the motions and stirrings come are in the flesh Rom. 7.23 24 of which no lesse is the Apostles complaint in bemoaning that Law that wars in his members and counting himself a wretched man untill he be freed from that body wherein raigne only sin and death Now this double strength of sin must be spoyled to kill the sin and the sting must be pulled out to give the soule ease to labour in the midst of the fires But how then may this be done Quest The great charmer of this Serpents sting is Christ Answ 1 Cor. 15.57 it is so acknowledged in that doxologie Thanks be to God who hath given us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ Yet this victory over the sting of afflictions and death is gained from some speciall piece of Christ and that his death the only powerfull Antidote against sin to take away all the life and strength of it effectuall for justification and so to kill sin in the Law and no lesse for mortification and so to kill sin in the flesh This is Gospel doctrine in plain assertions Rom. 9.5 Hebr. 9.14 Wee are justified by his blood and again The blood of Christ shall purge our consciences from dead works which is nothing else but his death and the vertue of it both wayes asserted The true vertue of this remedy against this sting and it's strength and the right application of it are two things needfull to be known by them who desire to finde this help by it in the day of their affliction to be so quieted as then to sit close to their appointed exercise 1. The death of Christ hath a force predominant over the Law to take away all the strength it gives to sin that it can no longer accuse nor make guilty nor terrifie the conscience nor lay on the tormenting curse which shakes the soule out of all abilities of performing duty to God this power is seen in these effects 1. In that it is the full payment of mans debt to the law beyond which nothing more could be desired for satisfaction which the second Adam that heavenly one hath paid for all his seed hence is the mouth of Law stopt from laying any thing to their charge for the Law being just can demand nothing but that which is right and due all that is here discharged 2. In that it purchaseth forgivenesse or the gift of righteousnesse from the Law-giver to his seed so that now sin is no sin debts are no debts all hand-writings being cancell'd by this purchased pardon neither is the Law in this respect a Law or in force to burthen the soule with feares and drive it from it's work 2. The same death of Christ hath an over-ruling power quelling the motions weakning the strength and wasting the life of sin in the flesh for from thence is the heart of man no lesse indisposed to duty than from the Law sin by the Law frights a man from his work by scaring feares but in the flesh by a direct opposition to the Will of God warring against all light and power that should help one to this exercise it doth so hinder put back and thrust off from the work that a man cannot set to it unlesse the force be quelled now admirably efficacious for this is the death of Christ To give a right understanding of this how the death of Christ wounds and weakens and kils sin in our flesh is a work of great skill such a Mysterie that I almost despair of a fit and compleat expression to make it plain and easie for every minde to conceive yet because it is a thing so profitable and so desirable by Christians to be acquainted with that one only way of baining of killing their corruptions trusting on the guidance of the Spirit of truth I shall indeavour to give some help for this To present therefore this singular way of sins mortifying by Christs death conceiveable to a believer I shall labour in these propositions to set down the state of it 1. As the fundamentall ground for framing our thoughts aright about the precedent Mysterie we must lay this truth That the Lord Christ in this as in all other instances of giving out and communicating grace is to be considered as the second Adam Thus is he set forth as the Truth Rom. 5.14 or Auti●ype of the first Adam who should have conveyed life but indeed gave out nothing but death to his poore seed 1 Cor. 15.45.47 and so is he expresly stiled the last Adam and the second man with his characterising excellencies to specifie him to the Church Now the true significa●e of this notion first or second Adam is a Man by way of eminency in some notable and speciall respect a Root-man one made as a Fountain of Nature to convey it with it's advantages or disadvantages to the derived seed such was the first man made after Gods Image which had he kept he should have propagated to his succeeding issue but having given it to the spoil nought else could he derive to his Posterity but the miserable effects of his own wilfull ruine sin and shame so he begat a Son in his own likenesse Gen. 5.3 and such like must be all the generations of men that arise from him Rom. 5.12 It is the plain assertion of Gods spirit in this matter By one man sin entred into the world and death by sin yea and death passed upon all men for that all have sinned That one being the fountain of humane nature and having in the fountain corrupted it by sin could not convey this nature any further but with the deadly attendants of it guilt imputed enmity against God and an universall depravation insued upon with those bitter consequents of death and hell following after it This is the line of our misery which God● spirit hath drawne It is not my purpose to stay upon the proud cavils which flesh and blood make against this that charge God foolishly for so ordering and curse such parents for their natures thus derived I shall only suggest this thought to such a Disputer Hadst thou been the first Root-man to have raised mans seed that nature which was so treacherous in him would have been no better in thee and thou wouldst have transgressed even as hee in the very same particular Let not pride vain man deceive thee humbly seek by the second Adam to be healed and be not foolish to deny or cover the wound which otherwise will prove
incurable by self-conceit and confidence My digression shall be no longer The reason of mentioning the first Adam here was for the sake of the second that as it may appeare not only possible but reasonable the way of conveyance of sin and death from him upon his seed so no lesse the probability of receiving sins death and deaths plague from the second Adam may be apparent For suppose this man also as wee must to be a Root-man a fountain of Nature ●um●ne spirituall heavenl● to give out to his seed no more difficulty can there be of conceiving the way of communicating what is communicable from him to his seed than of the first to his nay more easie to be convine do● influence coming from the second if we take up but these additions This is the quickning-spirit man that by spirit can mightily work upon his members to conforme them to himself and every piece of himself death resurrection c. This is the Lord-man that hath all dominion and soveraignty committed to him by God to work what hee will to work upon his own for the perfecting of his Kingdome yea this is the heavenly-man set against and above the sin and corruption of creatures to destroy them in his seed Sermon Embalming of dead Saints of which I more largely dealt elsewhere All which considered facilitates the way of our conceiving ver●ue flowing from Christ to his 2. This truth is next to be suggested As Christ in whole and intirely considered carryeth in himself the compleat work of our salvation to give out unto his seed so the severall states and conditions of Christ have some speciall and proper pieces of that salvation depending on them Rom. 6.5 Col. 3.1 Joh 14.19 as death of sin upon his death resurrection to grace upon his resurrection and life of God on us upon his life these necessary dependances of our graces on his severall works the Scriptures fully declare which revelation may help on to conceive the speciall vertue of the death of Christ in the present case 3. More neerly to the point in hand this is a main truth The death of Christ as it was intended of God so indeed it carryeth in it a direct contrariety to all that withstands his seed in the way of their salvation and not only that it weakens but a soveraign contrariety able to quell and over-power every thing that opposeth the salvation of his people These opposites are sin in the first place by the guilt and poyson of it then the Law with it's dreadfull curse wherunto are joyned the Devill that hath the power of death the bitternes of death it self and the terrors of hel with all the powers of darknesse all these conspire to destroy poore soules and against all these hath the death of Christ a ver●ue opposite and predominant as hot medicines to overcome cold diseases and cold to quel the hot therefore very reasonable that it should eate out the very heart of sin the sting of our afflictions Rom. 6.2 3. Ephes 2.16 The frequent oppositions of the death blood and crosse of Christ against sin curse enmity in flesh toward God c. and the victory of that averred over all these adversaries are evidence without exception sufficient to conclude this truth 4. Adde wee this The death of Christ is not only contrary unto sin but in the mysterie hath actually killed and destroyed the enmity which is in the flesh of his members against him as well as all other adversaries of our life without us Col. 2.14 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 2.14 The Act past is plainly recorded He blotted out the hand-writing which was contrary to us not only that of Ordinances which peculiarly concerned the Jews but that of his Law that was against every man and tooke it out of the way nayling it to his Crosse and spoyled Principalities and Powers c. that is those of hell that constantly opposed the salvation of Christs seed which elsewhere is thus expressed By death heed'd destroy him that had the power of death which is the Devill The world also a grand enemy is crucified to believers by Christs Crosse Gal. 6.14 Here are blotting out taking quite out of sight and nayling to the Crosse for dead law and curse that were against Christs people to note their utter abolition so is there a destroying or making void and uselesse all the power of the Devill to kill so againe crucifying the world making it as a thing hang'd out of the way which every one abhorreth and no lesse by the same death or crosse a killing of all enmity in the creatures against God not only by pardoning but by abolishing it in the flesh insomuch Rom. 6.2 that the Apostle concludes for himselfe and fellow-believers an impossibility of their abiding under the life of sin being actually dead to sin by the death of Christ Now all this as is said was done by Christ in the mysterie and that expression teacheth us that what-Christ so doth is done by him as head of his body and therefore in reference to it and with influence of all those secret mysticall acts on it the plain effect of this Mysterie is most fitly and pithily expressed in those termes of conjunction which couple the soules with Christ as being together within all his works and travells for their salvation So we reade that his members are crucified together with him Gal. 2 20. and their old man crucified with him and they again buried with him and risen with him So the mysterie is discovered to the Gentiles Rom. 6.4 Col. 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they should be fellow-heirs and of the same body and partakers of his promise all which are expressed by wit hs cons and together and knitting particles which can import no lesse but the sharing of these joyned soules with Christ in all the vertue of those works sufferings or priviledges wherein by God himselfe they are joyned with him so that if they be planted together with him in his dying Ephes 3.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though they cannot die for sin as he did yet a likenesse to that death they must have in effect even a death to sin in themselves therefore they are joyned with him in that suffering of his Rom. 6.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they do hold out a sutable effect to that his death issuing from it in their own flesh and the same reason is of their conjunction with him in his other works tending to their salvation sutable effects are wrought in them from all This is actually done by Christ as for the time of the actuall manifestation of this sin in his united members more wil be declared in the application of this vertue of Christ hereafter but for present some help is given from hence to conceive of the efficacie and necessity of sins fall by the death of Christ 5. Yet the difficulty is
Spirit to bring in the severall vertues of Christ for perfecting our salvation in these speciall wayes 1. In answering the Spirit to his worke of union for as that from Christ takes hold of us so faith in us moved by the Spirit takes hold of him whereby the soule is actually united to him and by this union made partaker of all saving vertue in him therfore of the power of his death Rom. 11.20 Hence it is said that we are ingrafted into Christ by faith and no lesse that Christ dwels in our be arts by faith Ephes 3.17 Now the work whereunto faith moves us in this matter is to yeeld to the Spirits offer and to close with Christ as members whom he reveales as sent of God to be our head and so with him to become one Christ mysticall thus our minds by faith are moved to close with him by apprehending knowing and acknowledging him to be our head our wills by choosing him and yeelding to him as head and our hearts by faith also cleaving to him as head in loving fearing and delighting in him thus by consent of faith are we brought to union with Christ and thereby to communion in all his fulnesse whence we draw from his death that fruit which his death doth yeeld and from his resurrection that good which it carrieth for us and in a word from him thus we have grace for grace as the graft sucks out the juice and fatnesse of the good Olive 2. In answering to the Spirits worke of revelation faith is serviceable which faith doth and indeed onely can doe by making evident and reall to the soule what the Spirit by the word reveals Now indeed the greatest works of the Gospel on mens hearts are effected by revelation the Gospels light hath a mighty influence upon all saving effects Nothing of grace is wrought in a soule but by light this works life and all to men To the present case the Spirit reveales Jesus Christ the compleat salvation to his people his death the plague of their sin his resurrection the cause of their life to God and therefore a necessity of dying and living with him this revelation being made evident reall by faith unto a soule becomes not a Platonicall Idea or vaine speculation but an over-powering truth working it selfe into the heart and moulding it into its owne likenesse of death or life The power of such revelation is eminently averred by a mighty Apostle that was once a bitter enemy to the Gospel yet thus he speaketh Gal. 1.15 When it pleased God to reveale his Sonue in me immediately I conferred not with flesh and bloud It was so powerfull being evidenced by faith that it presently takes him from all carnall considerations knits him so fast to Christ that flesh bloud can never take him off somewhat like that fiery charret that separated Elijah from Elisha and took him unto God indeed such fire there is as well as light in these revelations realized by faith And that this is faiths serviceable worke to the Spirit so to evidence is cleare enough when it is styled the Evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 faith will convince when no light els can move The Spirit of revelation therefore meeting with faith Eph. 1.17.19 leaves great and mighty works upon that soule no lesse than the might of the power of God revealed to them can effect Such is that in the present instance when the Spirit revealing and faith evidencing the death of Christ to be sinnes destruction the soule is hereby lest dead unto sin Let faith therefore worke upon this revelation to evidence it that the minde may discerne it and heart rest upon it the life of sin will surely fall as the hearts of Israel at the sight of Goliah or as the man dyes at the piercing of the Cockatrices eye 3. Faith serves the Spirit to bring in the vertnes of Christ upon the soule in answering its application and direction concerning this matter by receiving one and obeying the other which being fitted for this instrument none but faith can answer It hath been declared before that the maine worke of bringing christ and his excellencies into the soule is upon the hand of Gods mighty Spirit This unites to him and reveales the force of him and by its spirituall energie gives or applies him intirely for life and every piece of him for the severall effects of grace with command so to receive him and expect the revealed force or vertue from him Now nothing but faith can sute the answer this onely receives what the Spirit gives and obeyes what the Spirit commands and so doing makes the soule have actuall experience of all that good of Christ ministred by his Spirit So that the obedientiall act of faith in receiving Christ as he is given in eying of him and depending on him as the onely salvation of his people is the onely way of faith to draw salvation from him So the like work of faith upon his death to evidence it the onely baine of sin in our flesh so to receive it in mind and will and heart and rest on it onely for this effect is the way to find the desired issue even the death of sin in our flesh To them therfore who are puzzeld with that question How faith should draw vertue out of Christ or his death I should onely reply premising that union with him and evidence of him forespoken it is by an obedientiall receiving the truth of him and resting on it to be made good by the Spirit of promise upon which reception all the benefits of person death and life are conferred by the arme of God upon that soule If God send this word to Naaman 2 Kings 5.10 Goe wash in Jordan seven times and be cleane though the water in it selfe had no more vertue to heale his leprosi● than anothers yet upon his obedience He that commanded did effect it Or a little more neer the case God commands Moses when the people were bitten with the fiery Serpents Num. 21.8 9. to make a brazen Serpent and set it upon a Pole with expresse word that if any bitten should look up unto it he should be healed and live If any now shall aske how did their looking to the brasse draw vertue for their recovery No satisfaction can be given but this their obedience being therein testified God fell not short of his word he healed while they were looking Our Lord himselfe applieth this to our present case Joh 3 14 15. As Moses lift up the Serpent in the Wildernesse so must the Son of Man be lifted up that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life As eying the brazen Serpent healed the fiery bite so looking upon Christ lifted up crucified and dying heales the poysonous bite of that old Serpent and the sting of sin that the soule shall not perish by it but live Some difference there is
out of place it must be deficient in beauty if not in health and indeed an uneven and unfit disposition of members ●s reformation puts all right this way and makes a good foundation for saving health when body and soule stand in a right aspect to Christ all must be well to God-ward there 2. A right disposition of faculties and inward affections Rectad sp●●tio 〈◊〉 when judgement will and affections stand right with God in that Euange●●call rectitude promised to and wrought in the true members of Christ which is a true conformity to the minde of God though not in present reaching in degrees yet to be perfected in Gods appointed time This is quite contrary to all crooked and perverse dispositions and therfore must be the healing of them if distempers be best cured by contraries a cleane heart and a right spirit is that which David calls for to recover his hurt that befell him by his fall Psal 51.10 When minds stand right with Gods mind and will with Gods will and love where God would have it 1 Pet. 3.21 and feare where God appoints it and zeale where God calls for it so that answer of conscience is directly to Gods call Psal 27.8 according to that when God saith Seek yee my face the heart answers in very termes Thy face Lord will I seeke this is a sound spirit in good state of health rectifying therefore must be healing 3. R●ctad●posio 〈◊〉 A right disposition of acts and conversation exercise as it is a token and effect of health of body so no lesse a preservative of it rightly ordered Surely in the present case it is very true right wayes with God are the effect of an healing reformation and do also perfect it right hands and right feet pitching upon right works and right wayes argue an healthy soule indeed and so keep it in that good condition from over-powering distempers by sin such do no iniquity here security from satall sickensse or halting Psal 119.3 but whence this They walke in his wayes This right disposall of wayes and godly exercise p●●vents spirituall diseases and I keeps the soule in health Thus far we see the sweet healing vertue of these duties such a benefit of them as may make them truly desireable by Christian soules Heaving therefore thus touched the goodnesse of these motives which is their drawing force for a close of all as God directs I shall only labour to move by them to the practice of those duties which concernes the chastened in the right use of their afflictions Heare now yee afflicted of the Lord Doth God so pity the halt and the lame that are any way maimed by the Rod that he chooseth healing for them not greater ruptures or subversions Be then of Gods minde and cloose your own life not your death for this purpose reason will guide you to take hold on comfort and perfect reformation These are the binding hearling wayes for the sicke and broken if health yea saving health in God be so good so desirable catch at comfort in Christ cheere up lift up hanging hands and palsie knees pursue a through righting of the soule a full reformation these will be health to the navell and marrow to the bones The duties have been stated already looke there what is to be done The rules of right prosecution I shall only adde here that wee may walk by line and not swerve they are such as these 1. Prosecute these really true comfort and true reformation must be truly pursued with reall care purpose of heart and affection of soule to prosper 2. Pursue them equally as much strenght and vertue are in one as other seek after reviving or consolation of Christ as much as after rectifying or amendment sweetnesse of life health and strength are equally promoted by both 3. Follow them orderly it may be needfull sometimes first to comfort and strengthen hands and feet before we exercise them to works or wayes but then the inseparable issue of comfort must be amendment and right walking be not shie of the consolations of God upon pretence of unworthinesse these must make us worthy at least as they are unseparably united let them be joyned in the prosecution take one to dispose more sweetly to the other 4. Pursue them earnestly as a man would strive for life and health yea and with that constancy as is sutable to that desire of living ever such preservatives of health make a blessed life while they are in use health is maintain'd and life perfected as yee desire to live then labour to be comforted and rectisied in Christ Cheerefulnesse and rectitude will establish you for ever Be eager be constant in their pursuite conscience in duty will signe you the true members of Christ and servants of the great God Neither will your Lord forget his promises or covenant of his truth In your duties he will meet you Hos 14.4 Zeph. 3.19 He will heale your back-slidings and love you freely hee will save the soule that halteth though the Rod smart a while your pain shall be your gain it is your Father that chastiseth he seekes not your fainting but reviving not your evill in hardening but your good in reforming not your subversion but conversion to him not your sicknesse nor your death but your life and everlasting health seek yee also and yee shall finde The chastening Father the mediating Sonne the comforting and quickening Spirit are all ingaged to give in the sweet and full fruit of chastening providence to your soules strainten not your own bowels but open to them and labour with them By that Spirit of joy and love through the Prince of peace and Son of love give glory to that tender Father who is God-Love blessed for ever from him this one God in three are all things to him be glory in the Churches for ever and for ever Amen FINIS