Selected quad for the lemma: soul_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
soul_n world_n worship_n wrong_v 52 3 12.3583 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A30241 CXLV expository sermons upon the whole 17th chapter of the Gospel according to St. John, or, Christs prayer before his passion explicated, and both practically and polemically improved by Anthony Burgess ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing B5651; ESTC R13734 964,431 860

There are 53 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

worship Thus all is done in a corporal manner and whereas of old it was sursum corda now it is deorsum corda None are more devoid of spirituall Understanding then those that are thus busied in a visible carnal way of Religion 3. The corrupt Opinions about Sacramenes as if they did conveigh Grace and Christ by the very work done This is also to know Christ after a carnall manner for it 's not the Ordinances but the Spirit of God in and by them that doth us any good Joh. 6. The flesh profiteth little but the Spirit yet this hath been the universal disease of Gods Church in all Ages In the Old Testament there they rested upon the Sacrifices upon the Temple upon their external Rites Oh how often do the Prophets labour to convince them of this errour Hence Paul speaks of a Jew in the flesh and in the Letter and a Iew in the Spirit Rom 2. and all the Jewish rites are called carnal Ordinances and beggarly They bring no real good to them that are exercised therein without the Spirit and may we not say that almost all Christianity is but a religious carnality a resting and relying upon Ordinances so farre as they are bodily and visibly performed When the Apostle 1 Pet. 3. had said Baptism serveth to prevent all mistakes he addeth Not the washing of the body but the answer of a good conscience When a man upon good examination of himself can say O Lord thou knowest that I do in truth and uprightness keep to those duties I am solemnly by Baptism engaged unto Thus for the Lords Supper is not it the very receiving of it judged the very saving of men Do not commonly people take it as if in the very bread and wine there were some Sacrifical vertue as when they take Physick they judge some Physical inherent vertue in that to help them Oh what Ieremy hath his head full enough of water to bewail this carnall grosse and ignorant Christianity that is in the world which judgeth the very Sacraments or any bodily worship in praiers or singing of Psalmes though they be but as Parrats in these things to be great evidences for heaven But as the body without the soul is dead and a lothsome Carkasse thus is all thy Religion worship and Ordinances a dead lothsome thing in the presence of God without the Spirit This the Apostle cals serving of God in the oldnesse of the letter not the newnesse of the Spirit Rom. 7.6 And in this sence we may say the Letter killeth and damneth but the Spirit giveth life Oh then be afraid thou art not one of those that split their souls at this Rock This is the common poison that devoureth most Even as the Scripture speaks contemptibly of the Egyptian Army Isa 31.3 They are flesh and not spirit The same may be said of all that Religion and devotion which most put confidence in But yet take heed of another extream errour that crieth down the Ordinances and under pretence of a spirituall high attainment which they think they have wholly lay aside these visible Ordinances and performances which Christ hath appointed in his Church till the end of the world 4. Then men would have Christ after a visible manner when they pretend Revelations and Miracles For what is this but to leave the Word and the promises as if that were not sufficient God indeed hath condescended to support sence as when he vouchsafed Miracles in the Infancy of the Church yea the Sacraments he hath appointed are a kinde of relief to our sence he considered our weaknesse in appointing such visible Signs but when we are not contented with Gods Institutions but desired such sensible supports which he will not afford This proceeds from a carnal disposition in us This is the cause in Popery why they tell us of such miraculous apparitions they will tell you of Crucifixes bleeding of Christs visible appearing of such great wonders done upon the Invocation of such and such Saints and all this is to humour the carnal part of a man for spiritual things are supernatural and very hard and difficult to flesh and bloud 5. This is to know Christ after a corporal manner when we professe his Truth and acknowledge his waies only for earthly advantages as he said Fac me Episcopum Romanum ere Christianus Thus they did of whom Paul made mention with weeping that they were enemies to the Crosse of Christ that their God was their belly that they minded earthly things Phil. 3.19 Such Disciples were those that followed Christ because of the Loaves Now the Lord Christ he cals to such duties that are opposite to flesh and bloud that are against the incilination of our nature To pull out the right eye To deny our selves To take up the Cross We are not to be of those that love Christs Crown of gold but not his Crown of Thorns How greatly did Mahumetan Religion prevail by such Doctrines as were pleasing to the corrupt inclinations and sinful pleasures of men and because Christs Doctrine was accompanied with so much difficulty Lastly There is in the godly sometimes an inordinate desire after Christ in a sensible manner and that is when they cannot rest upon the promises beleeve on Gods Word barely unlesse they have also evident and sensible Consolations Bare acts of depending faith and constant waitings on God in the way of his promise argue thee to be more spiritual in thy Christian warfare Vse of Instruction how much it becometh all Christians to be a spirituall people for all things in Christ are spiritual and all benefits to be received by him are in a spiritual manner How comes Christs Death Christs Resurrection effectual to thee but in a spirituall manner You cannot now do so much as the Woman in the History touch the hem of his garment You cannot with Thomas put your fingers in the print of nails No here is the Eye of Faith required to behold Christ Christ bid the Woman touch him not for he was not yet ascended but we may say Because he is ascended do not thou have carnal imaginations about him It is for want of a spiritual heart that so many titular Christians have no real vertue or efficacy from him He is not an Head he is not a Vine he is not Wisedom Righteousnesse and all things to thee because thou art not a spiritual Subject to entertain him SERMON LXIII Of the Saints Lord-Keeper Shewing how safe the Godly are kept to Salvation by Christ as a Trust committed to him JOH 17.12 While I was with them in the world I kept them in thy Nam● c. HAving dispatched the Circumstances of time and place we proceed to the Benefit it self which is expressed with the efficient cause of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the manner how In thy Name Because something hath already been spoken to this I shall be the briefer in both the particulars First The Benefit with the cause
necessary companion to the minding of heavenly things There is no externall duty of praying or hearing that will make the heart moderate and regular in the use of all comforts unlesse it be accompanied with mortification Let not then the waters overflow the banks Do not over-love over-desire over-grieve about these earthly comforts It 's an argument thou lovest them for their own sakes or thy own sake and not for God who art thus over-sollicitous about them so then to say I desire no temporall mercy but to honour God thereby requireth an heart mortified and crucified if we would speak the truth and not deceive our own souls Till therefore we be thus divinely qualified within You may as soon gather grapes of thorns and figs of thistles as the honour of God from such men In the next place take notice of the Reasons why we are to pray for all our comforts in reference to Gods glory And 1. Because God himself doth all things for his own glory His own actions are for it and therefore much more ought ours to be God made the world God saveth his people and all this is for his own glory and indeed as Gods wisedom is only able to comprehend himself so his own love is able to love him in quantum est amabilis yet we are commanded to be holy as he is holy Now as his holinesse is in willing of his own glory and all things in reference thereunto So our godlinesse consists in willing and procuring Gods glory and improving all we have for that purpose If God made the world for his glory do thou use it for his glory If God give thee parts and gifts to glorifie him oh do not abuse these against their good and lawfull end 2. From the nature of Gods glory and all these earthly comforts respectively that is the ultimus finis and these are the media and morall Philosophy teacheth us that media movent bonitate finis it 's not absolute goodnesse in the means but the relative goodnesse of the end in the means that excite and provoke the appetite It 's not Physick for Physicks sake though never so sweet but for healths sake that we take it Lay this as an undeniable argument upon thy own soul These good things are but the means they are not the end Now they are desired not in an unlimited but commensurated manner If a man would quench his thirst he doth not desire all the water in the Sea but as much as will quench his thirst If a man desire a garment to cover his nakednesse he would not have all the cloth in the world but what is proportioned for his body So it 's here Thou art not to will as much wealth as much honour and greatnesse as may be had but what will be serviceable to that great end the glory of God otherwise thou art in thy abundance as David in Sauls armour It was too great for him and in stead of being serviceable was cumbersome and truly hence ariseth the inordinate sinfulnesse of our sences in all earthly comforts we desire them for their own sake and so are infinite and never satisfied still saying Give whereas this regulated desire would much moderate us Appetitus non est regula concoctionis the appetite is not the rule of our concoction is in Divinity true as well as in Philosophy 3. Consider the greatnesse of Gods glory It 's more worth then all the world all thy wealth estate and greatnesse is nothing to this glory of God neither thy soul or body no nor all mens souls and bodies are to be compared to this Better we all perish then that God should lose his glory Oh then how should this make us whatsoever we do to do all to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 because the Sun is far above one Star the Ocean above one drop 4. If we desire not all things in reference to him we are guilty of spirituall Idolatry we set up another God besides him or we attribute that supreme dominion to another which belongs only to him unlesse we were God himself we might not do so how severe was God against that Jewish Idolatry in worshiping Idols his glory he would not have given to another Now this is not the lesse Idolatry because it 's not so bodily The more secret and hidden it is the more abominable Herod was eaten up with lice because he was not displeased when others said The voice of God and not of man Act. 12.23 He was tickled with it and received it well enough I tell thee such sins as this are committed when thou takest thy wealth thy honours and exaltest thy self thereby and not God Vse of Instruction How few then take notice of this doctrine who desire mercies only to serve God thereby riches and greatnesse to promote God therewith If this were so there could not be those immoderate and unsatisfied affections in thee Thou wouldst be more solliciuous bow to improve all for God Thy heart would tremble lest God receive not more glory by giving thee more mercies We give thee of thy own said David 1 Chro. 29 14. and certainly if we have any thing to glorifie God by both the gift and the good use of it is wholly of Gods grace What wilt thou do who takest the good mercies of God and usest them as weapons against him Thou servest thy own lusts and the devils Will the patience of God alwaies bear this SERMON VII The Text Vindicated from Arians Vbiquitarians and Papists And the power and dominion of Christ observ'd and applied to the comfort of his Disciples and terrour of his Enemies JOH 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him THe Verse before spake of the mutual glorification which is between the Sonne and the Father Now this second verse is specificative or declarative of that wherein or whereby the Sonne may and doth glorifie the Father viz. by the power that he hath in the whole world more especially in the Church of God giving eternal life to them that do beleeve So that this Text containeth one principall way or manner how the Sonne doth glorifie the Father All the wondrous works that are done in the world bring not so much glory to God as the spiritual works which are wrought by Christ in the Church In the words we may take notice of Christs power and the use or exercise of it The power is mentioned in the former part The exercise in the latter Concerning the former observe 1. The power expressed in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which say some doth not signifie a meer power but a power with right and so difference it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if that signified any power this only is just and lawfull As among the Latines potentia and potestas are diversified but this is not universally true for 〈◊〉
and enlightning mens understandings so farre as to see their sinful and damnable estate as also the absolute necessity of a remedy through Christ Thus Christ doth exceed the Sunne for though the Sunne give light to the world yet it doth not give eyes or ability to see but Christ doth not only make the bodily blinde to see and deaf to hear but those that are spiritually darkened in their understandings he makes them to know Christ he doth so teach that the soul cannot but learn it cannot refuse or gainsay O Lord I feel such light in my heart such evidence upon my conscience that I cannot hide this light any way But as those glorious apparitious of light which Paul had and others came with great amazement filled them with trembling and astonishment so doth Christs power upon the hearts of Beleevers Oh then enquire who are they where are they that have found Christs power thus upon their mindes and consciences How weak are books yea the best Book the Bible it self t●ll Christ take such a threatning or such a promise and set it home with power on thee This heavenly teaching and perswading Christ speaks of as to be wrought by his Spirit Joh. ●4 And it was wonderfull in the beginning of the Gospel yea in the first beginnings of Reformation out of Popery the glorious workings of Christ were admirable to this purpose Then Christ and the Ministry went along together No sooner did the Trumpet blow but the wals of Jericho fell down When Christ thus powerfully taught them they were quickly perswaded to leave their Idols and their lusts to follow him The first Reformers were so many divine Orpheus's that made the very beasts and trees to move the illiterate and stupid people to seek out for wisedom and heavenly understanding You may say then Why doth not Christ still come with the same power Why are not our Churches Christs Schools wherein every day he teacheth some or other many learn by the Minister but few are taught by Christ They do not know the truths as they are in Jesus There are many go to false causes But those impediments which indeed resist this Point are 1. The atheism and unbelief reigning every where so that we may take up that old complaint Lord Who will beleeue our report It 's said of some Christ could do no miracles there because of their unbelief Mar. 6.5 6. Not but that he had power but to shew what an obstacle unbelief was When they insulted over Christ at the Crosse Let him come down and save himself if he be the Sonne of God let him deliver him Heb. 4.2 Christ did not these things not because he wanted power but they were wicked so Christs power is not shortned It 's not because there is no Ministry but because the unbelief of man is great 2. Christ demonstrates not his power it may be because Customarinesse under the Word breeds contempt and negligence At the first mens affections are quick but when accustomed to the world all the excellency and livelinesse of it is taken away A blinde man upon the first recovery of sight would admire the Sunne but those that are used to it regard it not though so glorious a creature 3. The unthankefulnesse and unfruitfulnesse under the means of grace makes Christ deny his power When the people of Israel murmured at their Manna then God was provoked against them He punished the Heathens because they did not glorifie God according to their knowledge neither were thankfull how much more Christians for abusing the Light of the Gospel 4. Though there are not so many yet there are some few in most places that have found this mighty power of Christ on their souls Though there were not many raised out of the grave by Christ yet one Lazarus is enough to demonstrate the glorious power of Christ One in a Family one in a Town yea one in a whole Nation is enough to prove that Christ though now in heaven hath this power over men in the earth Let such then who have been thus taught so as no man no book could teach them give glory to Christ blesse Christ for good Sermons good Books especially the Word of God but above all that vertue cometh from Christ by these to heal thee Though the woman had touched the hem of Christs garments a thousand times yet if Christ had not caused vertue to come out of him she had not been cured so it is here SERMON VIII The Effects and Appearances of the Kingly Power and Dominion of Christ JOH 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh WE are treating upon that main and necessary point in Religion Christs Power and Kingdom We have mentioned some effects or acts of this power We shall proceed to discover more And first Herein is his power over all flesh especially his Church seen that he is the authour and fountain of all the grace the godly have And this is a glorious demonstration of his power that not we our selves or any Angel in heaven can inspire one good thought mollifie and convert the heart adorn the soul with all kinde of graces but Christ only Joh. 1.16 Of his fulnesse we all receive grace for grace that is as some expound abundance and heaps of grace as it were or grace that is sutable and proportionable to that in Christ As the childe receiveth from the Father limb for limb Of his Fulnesse Christ then hath Fulnesse not only for himself but for us as the Sunne hath fulnesse of light for the whole world The Ocean Fulnesse of water for all the streams The Angels and Saints glorified in Heaven yea Adam in the state of integrity he had a Fulnesse of grace but it was limited and stinted in him only Christ received it without measure In Christ there is plenitudo fontis in Angels or Adam there was only plenitudo vasis as Divines expresse it Now this Fulnesse of Christ is for communication and our participation of ●t Therefore in other places he is compared to the Olive Tree from which the godly receive all their fatnesse Rom. 9. To the Vine Joh. 15. so that unlesse we are branches in him we can do nothing If than we should say Where is the power of Christ how is it manifested I answer look upon all the godly Are they able to mourn for sinne with a godly sorrow Are they able to beleeve in the promise Can they mortifie their lusts Herein is Christs glorious power seen I know this doth not so much affect us as outward extraordinary instances of Christs power in temporall things but certainly this is greater for as Moses and Joshua's deliverance of the people of Israel out of Egipt is nothing to that spiritual deliverance which Christ as Jesus vouchsafeth to his people in saving them from sin and hell yet no doubt an Israelite or Jew after the flesh would farre prize the former before the latter though the
Jew after the Spirit would farre esteem the latter Thus it is here No power or works are judged great but what are temporall visible and in civill outward things we are apt more to look upon Alexander the great or Constantine the great because of their civill power then Christ who is the King of Kings and Lords transcending all these but in a spirituall way 1 Tim. 6.15 Christ hath this magnificent Title King of Kings and Lord of Lords It 's observed by Drusius a Learned man that those Titles were usually given to the great Kings of Persia then which there were none assumed more to themselves then they did yet the Apostle attributeth this to Christ to inform us that as God hath exalted Christ above all earthly power so we should magnifie and glorifie him accordingly certainly if we Christians did put forth our faith and meditations about the greatnesse of this power it would work great joy and confidence in us It would work an holy fear and trembling The Apostle Eph. 1. Phil 2. Col. 1. is even transported with the expressions about it Now this power of Christ is no where more glorious then in sanctifying and preparing an holy people for himself To give them of the same Spirit with him They that were dead and noisome in sinne to make them live in holinesse and to adorn them with all the graces of his Spirit Oh then let not the people of God be dismai●d or discouraged with the apprehension of their own weaknesse and impotency how can they love God bear afflictions die in hope and comfort Alas thou thinkest on thy own weaknesse and not Christs power Remember Of his Fulnesse thou art to receive A thirsty man need not doubt whether the whole Ocean hath water enough to revive him Christ we reade gave wonderful power to his Disciples and other beleevers to work miracles This amazed and astonished all the world but certainly this power of changing mens hearts and reforming their lives is farre above this To open the eyes of the minde is more then to give bodily sight to say Ephatha to the heart is more then to say so to the ear To raise from the death of sin is more then to command out of the grave Austin said To make a man holy is more then to create a world Conversion is not usually called a Miracle yet it 's a greater wonder then a Miracle Let that soul then which hath found Christ thus powerfull upon him admire the unsearchable greatnesse of his Christ wonder at it as the most admirable expression of Gods power to thee Secondly Christs power is seen in that he doth not only give grace but he is able to bestow all that glory and happinesse the Scripture promiseth Now the reward or fruit of grace is either that inward peace and joy of heart here or eternal happinesse hereafter both which are in Christs power and munificence It was alwaies a flower in the chiefest power to be able to remunerate those that did great service and this is part of Christs Jus Regale For the first the peace of conscience and joy which accompanieth well-doing is exceeding great insomuch that if there were no heaven hereafter yet godlinesse brings a present sweetnesse and delight with it It hath present pay Now all this peace and comfort especially between God and the soul is wrought by Christ only who is called the King of Peace Isa 9. yea our peace Eph. 2.14 because he reconcileth God and man If those Peace-makers be blessed that make man and man to agree how much more is he that brings God and man to agreement But this Christ worketh Alas the heart troubled for sinne rageth and is like an hell till Christ bids it be quiet and still Hence he promiseth to send the Comforter and it 's his Spirit which is sent into our hearts making us to cry Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Oh then let the grieved and perplexed soul through the guilt of sin that can finde no rest no ease go to him that hath power indeed to command these waves to be still See with what love and power Mat. 11.28 this is expressed Come to me ye that are heavy laden and I will ease you Christ will give ease See how imperiously he speaks Let your sinne be never so terrifying your conscience never so disquieted The devils never so much troubling and tempting of you yet I will give you ease You shall finde rest for your souls No earthly power in the world can say thus truly Therefore this is to direct the godly in their black temptations They cry out It cannot be I should have peace I should have joy There may as soon come fire out of water as peace and quietnesse out of my heart Oh remember this Text The power Christ hath over all flesh Is thine excepted Christ can ease and quiet every mans heart but thine Be ashamed to think thy weaknesse more then Christs power Thy guilt more then his consolations The other fruit of a godly life is Eternal happinesse and this Christ doth also bestow upon those that are his At the day of judgement we reade of him putting them into possession Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you Mat. 25. Heb. 5.9 he is called The authour of eternal salvation he cals himself the bread of life he that eateth on him shall never die more so that all that happinesse and blessednesse which is in the life to come is attributed unto Christ both the purchase and authour of it It 's he that will say Well done good and faithfull Servant enter thou into thy Masters joy For those Parables that speak of a great King employing his Servants in such work and then so abundantly rewarding of them is Christ This should be a great encouragement in Christs service What a glorious and powerful Master do ye serve one who is able to requite thee with eternal glory and everlasting happinesse If we suffer with him we shall reign with him Rom. 8.17 The greatnesse and bounty of the Master doth quicken the Servant Haman was glad of Ahashuerus his emploiment because he could put such honour upon him But oh how should our hearts be enflamed to work for Christ what cannot such a Master do for us Ask any thing in earth or heaven he can bestow it on thee How unworthy is it when we grudge at the work Christ requireth when we repine at the Crosse he would have us take up This is not to attend whom we serve how great our Master is what Treasuries he hath out of which he can bountifully reward us Thirdly Christs power is seen in that he can forgive and pardon sinne Which is acknowledged by all that God only can do it Mar. 2.7 You have this power of Christ particularly opposed by his enemies but vindicated by him and that he hath power to forgive sinnes he proveth by his power to work Miracles Not that
be so wellcome Had the Prodigall not met with husks and extream hardship he would not have resolved to go back to his Father again Think and practise these things so wilt thou be greatly affected with eternity And to encourage thee herein consider the blessed effects which a lively meditation of eternity accompanied with a firm faith will put thee upon For first Who so hath this eternity set upon his heart he will not be immoderatly and inordinatly desirous after these things below As the beams of the sunne will put out the fire so will the thoughts and affections about eternall things overcome temporall The Apostle 1 Cor. 7. presseth all upon an hard duty To marry as if we married not to buy as if we bought not Why so because the time here is short eternity is coming upon us And thus those holy Patriarchs mentioned Heb. 11. they accounted themselves pilgrims and strangers and they sought a City to come not built with hands Thou complainest thy heart is so full of deadnesse dulnesse so full of the world the cares and distractions thereof devour thee up there is nothing will help thee against this temptation then often thoughts and affections about eternity 2. As the thoughts of eternall life will thus moderate our affections so it will work in us 〈◊〉 longing for and hasting of the coming of Christ who then will bestow this eternall life upon us We wonder how Paul should be lifted up above all these earthly comforts as to desire to depart and to be with Christ Phil. 1. It seemeth very difficult to us that any hasten in their praiers and desires Christs coming but all this is because our hearts are not as full of hope and expectation of eternall life as theirs were Alas many of us know no better and so cannot desire any better then what may be had in this world and therefore the thoughts of death and the coming of Christ are unwelcome to us Whereas to The godly it 's the coming of the bridegroom and they are to lift up their heads with joy when that approaches Matth. 26. Let then that godly soul which doth so complain that it loveth life too dearly and feareth death too immoderately let that be strengthened and comforted with the sure hopes of this eternall life If an heavenly frame of heart were powerfull in us this very world would be a wildernesse it would be tedious to us to be kept so long from that home we have in heaven The Saints have a rest provided for them and who doth not desire to be at his rest Oh blame your selves more that you have not Davids exclamation and now Lord what long I for truly my soul waiteth for thee As the heart panteth after the water brooks so doth my soul after thee O God Psal 42.1 David spake this but of enjoying God in the Ordinances in this life Oh but how greatly must the soul be inflamed for the life to come 3. Powerful thoughts of Eternity will quiet and wonderfully calm the soul under any afflictions and troubles No such antidote as this Paul abundantly witnesseth that we account not the light afflictions of this life comparable to that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4. so this Eternity made him not value or regard any temporary affliction It was this that made the Martyrs joyfully take the spoiling of their goods and the losse of their lives Thus in every affliction and exercise if sanctified to thee how sweetly and joyfully maist thou dwell in heaven while thou art on earth Thou maist be in heaven every day even while thy condition is beset with many troubles It 's thy sinne and unbelief if thou makest thy house a prison Thy self a torment to thy self if thou set faith on work about this Eternity it will put thee into heaven before thou comest to possesse it Eternal Life will give thee a better body a better house a better heart oh this Eternal life it 's the health of our bones the light of our countenance a continual Feast and a perpetual cordial Hence the godly even in this life are said to have Eternal life because of the right they have to it and partly because they have the beginnings and first fruits of it upon their souls Vse of Admonition Take this Subject more into your thoughts how many roving thoughts hast thou but if placed on Eternity it would be great profit How many thoughts hast thou unbeleeving disquieting and troubling if fixed on Eternity they would all vanish especially let the wicked man turn from all sinne saying There is an Eternity If it were only death that would not so much trouble thee but it 's Eternity after Death SERMON XIV The Necessity of Divine Knowledge And Arraignment of Ignorance JOH 17.3 And this is life eternall that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent IN the Verse before we had the great priviledge vouchsafed viz. eternall Life and the Subject to whom viz. Those that are given to Christ In this Verse our Saviour informeth of the manner or way how we may come to it For to speak of eternal life and not direct to the enjoying of it is to see Canaan but to want a pillar of fire to guide to it and although our Saviour had described such as should inherit eternal life yet because it 's a secret written in Gods Book which no man can reade who are given by the Father to Christ and who not Therefore it 's necessary we should be told the way and that is done in the Text. In the words you have then affirmed the way to this happinesse This is eternal life this will make you have eternal life None can ever attain it that take not this course for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may either relate to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or else after the manner of the Hebrews be put absolutely for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This phrase is like John 12.58 Now therein Consider 1. The way or duty enjoyned 2. The object of it The duty is To know Among other distinctions this is very obvious in Scripture to speak of a twofold knowledge 1. That which is meerly speculative and apprehensive If ye know these things happy are you if ye do them Joh. 13.17 2. Which is practicall and operative for it 's a known Rule that among the Hebrews Words of Knowledge are put for all the affections and effects that use to follow such Knowledge Thus God is said to know the way of the righteous Psa 1. That is so to know as to approve and preserve the righteous and in this sence To know the true God is taken so to know as to do all those things that are commanded by him and the reason why the Scripture comprehends all under knowledge is because this is the Introduction and gate to all practicall piety Although to know here is more particularly taken for beleeving for
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quiet easie death without pangs and torment but this is the easiest the comfortablest the best dying Oh that we should preferre any thing before that Oh that thou shouldst not cry out of every sin This will trouble me when I am dying 4. It 's a blessed thing to go out of the world having done Gods work because we are immediatly to appear before him No sooner is thy soul gone out of the body but it appeareth before God he either for thy sinne adjudgeth it to hell or because thou art a member of Christ appoints thee to eternall glory oh then when there is but such distance between God and thy soul how comfortable is it to have been all thy life time glorifying God Thou hast been glorifying God and God comes now to glorifie thee Thou hast been doing his work and now he is giving thee the good things promised Oh Beloved how should this prevail with you there is but a step between my soul and God how will God look on me who can endure his frowns and displeasures Doth not the Apostle say It 's a fearfull thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10.3 And now I am falling into Gods hands either the hands of a merciful Father or provoked enemy Well then while thou art in these conflicts and agonies what support is it to have this sure evidence O Lord in my life time I lived for thee and to thee now I come to live with thee O Lord In my life time I knew thee I did thy work but I was at a vast distance now I come to the immediate injoying of thee Reas 5 5. It s a blessed thing to have this evidence because it 's of that good which will be eternall Canst thou truly say thus then it 's an immortall Crown of Glory that is laid up for thee no more deaths no more changes no more fears or tears thou art made for ever But of this heretofore Vse of Admonition Let every one attend and give all diligence to get this evidence Oh the terrour and horrour that must take hold on thee if thou hast been dishonouring of God all thy life long if thou hast been doing the work that sinne and Satan tempted thee to why art thou so devoid of all understanding will thy health and strength alwaies hold Art thou exempted from the stroke of death Is not thy time running on sit down then and consider what thoughts will at thy death possesse thee What testimony have I that I have done the work of the Lord Oh doth not thy life accuse thee Is it not all over bloody Canst thou think of what thou hast been with any content Is thy life at present such that thou canst say O Lord I am doing thy work Oh the amazement and astonishment that should take hold on such men SERMON XX. Sheweth who they are that cannot at the close of their daies take comfort in this That they have finished the work God gave them to do As also what things if not avoided will much diminish the comfort of the Godly ones at that day JOH 17.4 I have glorified thee on earth c. THe Doctrine observed was That it is a most blessed and happy thing in the close of our daies to be able to say upon good grounds We have finished the work God gave us to do You have heard particulars illustrating it and the grounds of the point I shall now amplifie this and in the first place shew Who they are that cannot with any comfort or very little be able to say thus For although this truth in the general be very terrible yet in the particular it loseth its edge because every man is a self-flatterer Every one is apt to think I have done Gods work and therefore it will be well with me If therefore it be possible my endeavour shall be that this arrow of Gods truth may enter in at the joynts of thy armour seeing it cannot any where else Consider then who they are that may say they are dogs and not children so that this bread doth not belong to them And first All those who daily and constantly are doing the clean contrary work to what God requireth such whose conversation is a perpetuall reproach and dishonour to God these do not at all glorifie God These have cause to tremble and quake when death approaches and their accounts must be made and is not this the condition of most Look generally upon mens lives are they not doing the devils works are they not dishonouring God all the day long by their ungodly conversation If there be any that are tender and consciencious are they not like gleanings after a Vintage here a man and there a woman otherwise for most men you would think they thought hell and the day of judgement to be but fables and such a truth as this to be a meer bugbear But God will not be mocked neither can mans greatnesse or atheism or prophane scoffings put off these things Oh then be at last perswaded that that life thou livest will be little comfort to thee one day Oh how speechlesse and confounded wilt thou be when God shall enquire into all thy words into all thy actions and there is nothing but sinne appeareth when every thing will be turned into blood as the Egyptian punishment was into the bloud of thy soul When God looked over all his works he had done he saw them exceeding good and so blessed the seventh day but thou wilt look over all thou hast done and finde it exceeding evil and curse both the day of thy birth and the day of thy death Oh that men would be wise that they would consider their later end What wilt thou do when God when thy conscience when the law when devils will accuse thee Where wilt thou hide thy self Remember Jacob Gen. 32.13 when his brother Esau was to meet him who was enraged and provoked against him how carefull he was by Presents and humble deprecations to mitigate his anger Remember the unjust Steward Luke 16.8 who knowing he must be called to account taketh all the subtill waies he can to make himself friends when he shall be cast out of his office our Saviour speaks that parable to this purpose That when God shall say to every one of us Thou shalt be no long or steward in this relation in that condition I will have an account of all that then we manage all things so that we may be able to have some comfortable refuge 2. Those have nothing of this texts comfort who though they do not contrary work yet do different non-required work It 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though they do not male yet they do aliud agere a servant though he do not contrary to his Masters work yet if he do not the same he is commanded he is obnoxious to his Masters wrath And this is
yea there is no man but his failings are more then his duties there is more corruption then grace so that if there be sincerity though imperfection we may say Lord we have finished the work thou gavest us to do Indeed humility is required because of our imperfections but not diffidence To doubt and to refuse the comfort God offers is not humility but disobedience like that of Peters who would not let Christ wash his feet 2. Another mistake may be about the nature of true faith and hope as if we were to divide between Christ and our selves and so from both conjoyned together gather our assurance even as the Papists define spes hope to be partim à gratiâ partim à meritis nostris proveniens but those that go thus to divide must needs divide themselves from comfort for the object of our faith and trust must be Christ only We may joyfully take those evidences of grace we see in our selves but to put confidence in them would be to make our selves our own saviours 3. This mistake may breed much disconsolatenesse when we limit our assurance and evidence to the time of our death that if God give us it not then we give up our case as desperate Indeed it 's a most blessed thing and a mercy much to be prayed for that as Simeon so we having seen Christ in our hearts and lives may then depart in peace It 's the haven after all the tempests we have had here but yet God may deny us this cordiall even the best of Gods children have found that God hath not kept the best wine for the last but God doth sometime to his as they did to Christ give him gall and vinegar to drink For as the wicked ungodly man who the next moment is to drop into eternall flames may yet die with great carnal presumption that God is his God that Christ is his Mediator in whom he will trust and so feareth not quakes not at the dolefull judgement coming upon him so the godly man though ready to be crowned with Immortall Glory and there is but a moment between him and everlasting happinesse yet may think his case doubtfull if not desperate may seem to have no hopes no joy yea be so tempted that he shall think all he did was but in hypocrisie and falsehood that there was no truth in him this may be Therefore let the godly not limit God to that time of death Vse of Admonition to awaken your selves at this truth Think how nearly it concerns you Dost thou live in such a way as that thou art able to make this glorious profession Is not God is not his word is not thy own conscience against thee How speechlesse and confounded wilt thou be when God shall bid thee give an account of all thy talents Oh that men should not lay this later end no more to heart that none saith O my soul now all is well now thou takest thy mirth but what a change will the hour of death make With what comfort wilt thou look upon the devils work and sins work which thou hast been doing all thy life time especially take heed of unprofitablenesse and decayings in the way of godlinesse thou that hast looked towards heaven but art turned out of the way be sure thy end will be miserable It had been better for thee saith the Apostle never to have known the way of righteousnesse You may have desires may have breakings of heart and yet return to sinne again oh think with what a violent flood these thoughts will come upon thee Oh me wretched and undone sinner I have no refuge no hope many resolutions I had but they vanished away and now I must live no longer my time is expired my course is finished Oh that God would adde as to Hezekiah some years to my life Oh that I could bid the Sun stand still or time go no further till I were at peace with God but these are vain wishes Let not then this truth go before it hath left a sting in thy very heart O Lord nothing troubleth me but that I did not think or minde these things sooner Meditate on these things your night is coming upon you Will you alwaies delay or else be secure and not matter these things many have done foolishly and dropt in a moment into hell do not thou be so overtaken May we not conclude that the auditor with whom this truth will not avail may fear he is delivered up to an impenitent heart SERMON XXI Of Gods being Glorified by Mans Salvation That Christs chief end in what he did for man was the Glory of God which bespeaks both our Imitation and unspeakable Consolation JOH 17.4 I have glorified thee on earth THe cirumstance of this holy profession which Christ made being considered Let us proceed to the Profession it self and that is He had glorified God on earth Christ in the state of humiliation was inferiour to God and so he did referre all things to his Fathers glory so that in this profession we may consider 1. What is the matter or object whereby God is glorified 2. The end or final cause that moved Christ therein The matter is our salvation and that redemption Christ purchased for us The end which Christ looked at in all this was chiefly the glory of God Indeed he looked also at his own glory and our glory but the ultimate and chiefest of all was Gods glory So that from hence we may observe That our redemption and salvation obtained by Christ is a glorifying of God and Christ did thereby chiefly aim at Gods glory We put both the matter of Gods glory and Christs end together and certainly this Truth discovered will be like that sweet box of perfume which opened caused such a fragrant smell And 1. Let us see how or wherein God was thus glorified by Christs Mediation for us It being of infinite comfort to know this for how many times are we apt to be cast down What are we that God should regard our salvation who are we that God should crown us with glory God doth not need us he is happy without us Now this may exceedingly encourage Though we be not worthy to be saved God is worthy to be glorified If there were nothing but our good and happinesse involved in Christs death who would think it probable Christ should suffer meerly and ultimately for us but there is also the glory of God deeply concerned which is more worth then all the world yea then all our souls for though one soul be more worth then a world yet Gods glory is more worth then all our souls and their salvation So that a Christian fixing his faith and meditation here may be in a transfiguration and say It is good to be here God doth not lose by thy Salvation If Gods honour were to be impaired if his truth broken if his justice violated then who dare open his mouth for salvation but God is
death but these works of God they are living works partly because they proceed from a life of grace and partly because they will live for ever they will go to the grave with thee to heaven with thee they will never forsake thee 2. It 's our duty to work because God hath made them the necessary way to walk in if we will be saved Without holinesse no man shall see God Labour for the meat that perisheth not Hence if we consider every gracious work of patience love meeknesse we shall see blessednesse is promised to them Not that these justifie only the person justified cannot be without them They are the media ordinata ordained mean in the use whereof we are to arrive at eternal happinesse It 's faith only that receiveth Christ and his righteousnesse yet this faith cannot be separated from an holy walking It 's the eye only that seeth yet the eye cannot be separated from the other parts of the body and thus the Apostle doth immediatly oppose Rom. 4. beleeving working grace and works in respect of Justification yet he doth at the same time presse the Children of God to all holinesse and the fruits of righteousnesse 3. Working is necessary by way of gratitude and thankefulnesse to God and Christ If there were nothing else but this this might pour coals of fire upon thee for how many works of Gods grace hast thou been partaker of If Gods grace did not work all the day long for thee thou couldst not be a moment preserved out of hell and as for Christs working reade the History of his Life he was alwaies finishing the work of thy Redemption and Salvation he had nothing to do for himself all was in reference to thee Oh then how unworthy wilt thou shew thy self of all that love and kindenesse which God and Christ have done for thee If thou like the Sluggard let the Field of thy Soul grow full of briars and thorns Oh how can thy heart be so cold and slothful When thou considerest grace is working for thee all the day long if Christ had no more zealously and earnestly wrought my peace for me then I do perform his duties my soul had perished irrecoverably Lastly Therefore it 's necessary we should work Gods work because we have for a long time spent our selves in the Service of Satan and doing the works of the devil Oh this should be a perpetual goad in thy side this should be fire in thy bosome to consider that there was no hour no day no season but thou didst take the opportunity to satisfie thy lusts Thou never couldst have enough of sinne No thirsty man did more greedily swallow down water then thou didst sinne yea how active to draw on others to infect others with the same plague thou hadst I tell you this will lie heavy upon the godly soul If I were to live Methusalems age it would not be time enough to do God service for the dishonour I have put upon him Thy time is short and thou hast much to do because thou hast undone so much In the next place Consider That it 's lawful for the people of God in all the work they do for God to encourage themselves with this that there is an everlasting glory laid up for them Even as Christ had an eye to this glory so it 's lawful for us Thus Moses had an eye to the recompence of the reward Heb. 11. The godly Rom. 2. are said to be such as seek for immortality and glory Rom. 5.2 They rejoyce in hope of the glory of God and Paul accounted all these sufferings but light in respect of that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 Indeed Gods glory is to be sought in the first place and then our glory so that it 's a shame if in all our doings and sufferings for God we are not full of joy because of that unspeakable glory apprehended by faith Faith makes it present as if we already were partakers of it So that whatsoever temptations and discouragements are in the work of the Lord this glory will abundantly make amends for it Are there reproaches and disgrace in the world All the while thou didst sin and the devils work thou hadst the love and good-will of the world but since thou hast betaken thy self to the service of God thou art the scoff and reproach of all O think of the glory God will crown thee with before all the world Again are all the works of God painful difficult and contrary to flesh and bloud thou must strive and wrastle much in praier be alwaies in a combat and conflict Remember this everlasting glory yea God therefore doth many times put his Children upon all exercises and sad temptations which make them ake at the very heart and all is to encrease their glory the more Thus Job thus Paul they had extraordinary trials that they might have extraordinary glory Furthermore is there self-denial required in Gods work Must thou part with thy pleasures with thy profit thy delights still remember this glory will make thee no loser for alas what proportion is there between these petty things thou leavest and those everlasting treasures God hath provided for thee In the sixth place That the glory of Gods people may be full he giveth them time and large opportunities of working for him and keeps thee in this world not for any earthly and outward advancement of thy self but to serve him in thy generation as it 's said David served God in his generation Act. 13.36 and God calleth Moses his servant Whatsoever thy relation thy place thy office be God hath appointed thee to work and therefore he prolongs thy life till thy work be done This is a comfortable consideration which all the godly may take that death shall not seize on them while thay have work to do for God and when that is finished then this summons to everlasting glory As for Infants this Truth reacheth not to them and if any like the Thief on the Crosse are called at the last hour and so are not able to work in the Vineyard yet even such have an habitual prepared heart for it if they had the opportunity But for others whose daies are prolonged they are thus to think with themselves I have this day this week longer to adde to my work God hath for me to doe Take heed of mispent time take heed of losing daies and weeks The night is coming when none can work Vse 1. How much comfort and joy the godly may take at the hour of death Their work is done now they have nothing but the Robes of glory to put on That fulnesse of glory they are immediatly to possesse should swallow up the fears of death and the love of the world With what joy should they cry out Farewell Friends Wife and Children welcome God welcome eternal glory Alas thou hast no glory here Thy body is a vile body thy soul a
of a state of sinne into pure and perfect holinesse It 's from seeing God in a glasse and obscurely to see him face to face Oh then how enamoured and ravished is the soul with the enjoying of this if the glimpse of this glory If the branches of this Canaan be so goodly what is Canaan it self If the Church praied so earnestly Let him kisse me with the kisses of his mouth Cant. 1. What then would the total and full enjoyment of God be never to be divided or separated more Glory is not only the advantage and welfare of a godly man the preservation of him from hell and misery or giving him happinesse but it is the ordering of him with all graces more glorious then the Sunne Hence the godly are compared to the Sunne and Starres in the Firmament for the great lustre God puts on them 3. This must needs be a great support because of the emptinesse and insufficiency in all these things here below to fill and satiate the heart The eye is not satisfied with seeing or the heart with wishing in this world but in the world to come there the faculties of the soul and all the parts of the body are fully replenished There is no want no desire no wish for more then they have It 's no wonder if Solomon who took all waies possible to satisfie his minde and to finde out happinesse in this life yet instead of happinesse found nothing but briars and therefore wrote upon all Vanity of vanities all is vanity For it cannot be otherwise Can an hungry man fill his belly with empty air Can a cold man warm himself at a painted fire Could these birds fill themselves that fled to Zeuxes painted grapes taking them for true ones no more can any thing in this world satisfie man No it 's only in the world to come that can fill up every corner of the soul Lastly Glory with God must needs be the only support because the way to heaven is full of briars and thorns Great are the afflictions and tribulations which abide all that go in this way to glory Were it not then that the heart is full of hopes in this matter it would soon be discouraged it would presently give over saying Why should I deny such pleasures and comforts as others take Do I not wrong my self Am I not a defrauder of my own comforts No saith this hope of eternal glory hold thy tongue from all grudgings and repinings There is glory coming will make amends for all Heaven in reversion is better then all the world in actual possession know then if at any time thy soul be dejected or cast down within thee if at any time thou art impatient and discontented It 's because this hope of glory doth not fill the heart In the last place this is farre to be desired above all humane glory and that although it be the Idol adored by the world if we consider how most men referre all their actions to this We may presently judge that description of man to be true That he is animal gloriae vanissimum all those actions the Heathens did were dedicated to honour Even as the Romans consecrated a Temple to it yea which is the highest degree of vanity men have made all their Religious actions to serve this Goddesse The Pharisees in all their alms fastings and praiers did all to be seen of men as our Saviour who knew their hearts condemned them Mat. 6.2 It went so far with some that they placed the chiefest happinesse of a man to be in honour and how prone this is to keep in the hearts even of godly men appeareth in the often prohibitions of it in the Scripture and our Saviours advice about private Praier and alms This is the Pirate that many times surpriseth the Ship which is come richly laden to the very haven it depriveth us of our duties and the benefit by them Well as glorious as it is yet it is no more comparable to this eternal glory then a straw to a Pearl For 1. It 's but the puff and breath of men whose breath is in their nostrils There is no solidity in it it brings no true solid joy and peace to the conscience What if men applaud thee abroad and thy conscience condemneth thee at home No doubt but the Pharisees humored and flattered Judas to betray his Master but what could that help him when he roared out I have sinned in betraying the innocent bloud Gal. 5. Let every man prove his own work so shall he have rejoycing in himself and not in another That is terrible of Austin Many are praised of men who lie tormented in hell 2. All humane glory will not avail us if at our death God findes us in our sinnes To be praised by men and reproached by God to be blessed by men and cursed by God this will be little case Oh that men would look to this who look only to have the good words of men Alas can man save thee can man deliver thee from those eternal flames Gal. 1. If I should please men I should not be a Servant of Christ What an unworthy thing is this to pray to professe Religion for vain-glory and not for glory with God Our Saviour speaks it as a great curse to have a mans ends satisfied in that way Verily I say unto you they have their reward Vse of Exhortation so to live and so to walk as that you may be prepared for this eternal glory Oh what a glory will it be when God at the day of judgement shall say Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you When God and Angels shall put honour upon you why should not the faith of these things raise up your spirits why should it no more affect you and that you may obtain this take heed of what will totally deprive you of it or else greatly weaken your thoughts and hopes about it That which totally depriveth is a constant wilful continuance in grosse sinnes Be not deceived neither whoremonger or drunkards c. shall inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 and without the heavenly Jerusalem are said to be dogs Rev. 22.15 The Scripture cals all wicked men such who lick up the vomit of their sin Oh then the hopelesse and damnable condition of most people Doth not the Land in every place mourn for the whoredoms and drunkennesse and oaths that are every where if God say the Lord shall spue out such Inhabitants God thinketh the earth too good for them will he bestow heaven on them And then 2. The godly who have a right and interest to this glory they weaken their hopes and entreat their fears when they walk negligently when they are earthly or dejected through diffidence you might have this glory here on earth and be in heaven before you are in heaven were you not wanting to your selves SERMON XXVII The Eternall Deity of
no good Thou wilt die and perish though the Prophets have been amongst you R. 2 2. The end of the Ministery is to bring men to the knowledge of God in a saving way because of the nature and property of it which is wholly supernatural The Word is commanded to be preached not for any natural or civill ends but spirituall and supernaturall When they followed Christ because of the Loaves it was a low and unworthy motive It should have been because of their souls and because of the bread of life to feed their souls If thou regardest a Ministry or comest to hear for any other end but divine and supernatural If it be for custome or to keep up thy good repute amongst men this is to be carnall this is to be a worm and no Christian for God hath given these Officers to the Church and commanded a diligent dispensation therein for sublime and holy ends to enlighten thy minde to soften thy heart to spiritualize thy affections to reform thy life even to polish and preserve thee that thou maist be a stone of glory in the heavenly Jerusalem Say then thou dost nothing if this supernatural improvement be not made of it Thus also it is for the Preacher if he preach to shew his Learning to make himself admired to satisfie any corrupt end This is also low and unworthy Malo ut me reprehendant grammatici quam non intelligant populi yet oh how prone are corrupt and insincere motives to creep in few being able to say with Paul That they handle the Word of God sincerely as of God and in the presence of God Let then the nature of the work raise up our hearts it 's sublime and supernatural in its use It 's holy merchandizing or trading for mens souls and therefore so often called by that glorious Title R. 3 3. The Ministers of the Gospel are to urge this because of the dignity and excellency of the work To bring men to the saving knowledge of God is a noble emploiment a work for Angels to do The great Rulers and powers in the world they do but order the body and the outward man but this work is to enlighten the soul and to make it fit for the enjoyment of God This made Paul so often rejoyce in and blesse God that he had chosen him a vessel to make known the Name of God We are a sweet savour unto God saith the Apostle We are the precious Apothecaries that open the sweet box of the Gospel Hence it is that the Apostle exhorts people to honour and to have the Ministers of the Gospel in high esteem and why for their works sake 1 The. 5.13 Their teaching and guiding of you in the way to heaven is that great work for which you are to esteem them if to direct a Traveller that is farre out of the way into a ready path be so acceptable a work what is it then to inform people who are going securely and joyfully in the broad way to hell of the danger herein and to direct to the way of life If then it be so excellent minde this in the first place Oh say what a wretch am I who know the way to my own house but not to my long home I know how to buy and sell but I know not how to enjoy God R. 4 4. We are to insist on this end because of the difficulty and great opposition that is in the work For 1. The devil by his Instruments endeavours to keep men in darknesse All those black cloudy times which have been upon the Church brought in Idolatrous Superstition and prophanesse insomuch that the devil reigned almost within the Church as much as without his Kingdom was not more promoted by those without then those within No wonder then if such opposition hath alwaies been against times of light and times of Reformation because the bright shining of the Gospel doth immediatly destroy Satans dominion as when our Saviour sent his Apostles to preach he said he saw Satan fall from heaven like lighening Luk. 10.18 and who can bewail that Ignorance which did overflow in the time of Popery The Sun of the Gospel being then in a constant eclipse and howsoever learning of it self is either used well or ill as the Subject is who hath it yet in the general Learning is a special means to preserve and conveigh the true knowledge of God for the Apostle saith The unstable and unlearned wrest the Scriptures to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3.18 So that in some sence we may take up that allegory of Philo Sarah cannot have children without the help of Hagar i. e. The doctrine and knowledge of God is not propagated without the help of humane Learning especially the tongues and arts Therefore it 's required of the Minister of God that he should rebuke with all doctrine and to be able to convince the gainsayers and to divide the Word of God aright which can never be done without learning so that you see the difficulty of it in respect of the opposition 2. The difficulty doth arise in that the true doctrine and knowledge of God is hardly obtained for there must be constant study in the Word of God daily praier unto God to be led into the Truth There must be a godly use of all the means God hath appointed to get this knowledge Hence the Scripture doth foretell of such as shall arise even from the Church and shall speak perverse things men of corrupt mindes yea many shall bring in damnable heresies that they shall have much craft much seeming piety that if it were possible they would deceive the very Elect Mat. 26. So that you see how difficult it is even for the Ministers of the Gospel to finde out the Truth how many think they teach you the way to heaven and leade you to hell Doth not the Papist Doth not the Socinian Doth not every heretick say None teacheth with the true knowledge of God as they do yea and they may be strongly perswaded of this for the Apostle speaks of many that are delivered up to believe a lye 2 Thes 2.11 So that it 's of infinite concernment for people to have such guides that do not give them poyson in stead of food Would the Scripture have said Mar. 4.26 Take heed how you hear and what you hear if there had not been such danger in hearing 3. It 's difficult because of the hearers Every man naturally is so corrupt that he loveth error and will sooner close with any false doctrine then the true You see the Apostle complaining what applause the false Teachers had Oh saith he You suffer if a man smites you 2 Cor. 11.20 If a man wrong you that is if false Teachers were never so tyrannical though they did abuse them and kept them under yet they could like them well enough but they could not abide the Apostles carriage though his severity was mingled with much meeknesse and
thus it is alwaies any errour any false way is more pleasing to corrupt men then the truth and hence it hath many followers People will run out to see to gaze and hear some new thing If a man be a dwarf or a gyant every one will run to see him but not the man of ordinary stature Vse Is this the end of the Ministry of all our labour and preaching to bring you to the saving knowledge of God Oh then may we not take up the Prophets complaint That we labour in vain the bellows is burnt the lead is consumed but the reprobate silver is not purged away Jer. 6.27 Do not many Families and persons proclaim they know not God for in this it is seen that they call not upon God there are no Family-duties no worshiping of him whereas our houses should be like the Temple of the Lord they are slies of sin rather Christ is to come in flaming vengeance against those that know not God May not the Ministers of God cry with Isaiah Isa 6.5 Wo be to us we dwell among men of polluted lips and lives It 's a Wo to dwell there Isaiah was much affected with it SERMON XXXI That Gods People are not of though in this world Wherein is also shewed the vast difference between them and the men of the world JOH 17.5 I have manifested thy Name to those that thou gavest me out of the world THE next thing considerable is The description of the Subject about which Christ did thus imploy himself and they are set out 1. From their original descent and heavenly rise These God hath given Christ but of this we have already treated and shall say more before we come to the end of the Chapter it being often repeated 2. From the term from which they are given out of the world They are given to Christ out of the world The Scripture in this Chapter makes a distinction of being in the world and of the world The people of God even as Christ himself and his Kingdom are in the world but they are not of the world As a Stranger in a forreign Countrey he is in that Countrey but not of it he hath not the nature the Language nor doth he accustome himself to the fashion of that place Thus it is with the godly Though they are born and so live in the world yet their natures and affections and conversations are not worldly As the Fowls that were at first created out of the water yet did not continue there but flew up to heaven and continue for the most part there As clouds though of the earth yet are carried about after the motions of the heavens They are not then given out of the world so as if every good man were presently upon his godlinesse removed out of this earth to heaven but in respect of their nature affections and conversation localiter they are not but in respect of heart and affections in which sence Paul said he was crucified to the world and the world to him Gal. 6.14 Now you must know that the word world hath several significations in Scriptures Est mundus cujus Deus est creator est mundus cujus Deus est redemptor est mundus cujus Satan est seductor Sometimes it is taken for the whole Fabrick and Vniverse with the parts thereof as when the world is said to be made by God and Christ a Lamb slain from the beginning of the world Rev. 13.8 Sometimes it 's taken for the greater part of the world as they said all the world did run after Christ or the world said to be taxed by Augustus Luk. 2.1 Sometimes for the power riches pleasures and glory of the world but then most commonly fot the wicked men of the world Thus often by John The world hath not known thee if ye were of the world the world would love you and now wicked men are called the world because their whole heart and desires are fixed on worldly things No worms no Moles delighting more in earthly things then they do and therefore they are the Serpents seed which live on the dust of the earth And then they are called the world because they are the farre greater visible and more flourishing part of the world Alas take these that are godly and they are but a despicable and contemptible handful to those that ruffle it in the world Obs That the people of God they are called out of the world He that is truly godly is no more a man of this world as we say of a dying man he is not for this world his heart his thoughts his desires are quite taken off Thus the godly are said to be dead and crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 They have not those carnal worldly affections and dispositions as formerly and from hence the people of God are called Ecclesia the Church as much as persons called out of the world not bodily but in respect of their souls and hence the world and the Church is opposed 1 Cor. 5.10 The Fornicators of this world in opposition to the Church so that by this we see there is none in the Church of God but they should have renounced the waies customes and sinnes of the world To be a Christian and yet of the world is a contradiction as if we should say a black Sun yet how is the garden of God made a Wildernesse how is the Church become the world So much prophanesse wickednesse and carnal living as there is so much of the world there is Oh that men did consider what an holy obligation their Christianity brings upon them Art thou a Christian and yet the drunkard of the world the fornicator of the world the proud the earthly of the world this ought not to be no more then the Angel a worm no more then a Starre a clod of earth The Apostle cals those of the world without What have we to do to judge those that are without 1 Cor. 5 ult but those of the Church within Oh but how many ●●e● within according to Christs Rule ought to be turned out of Christs sheepfold To illustrate this necessary Truth let us observe those demonstrations or discoveries whereby it may appear that the godly are not of the world And first This makes it manifest because they have not the Spirit of the world but of God 1 Cor. 2.12 Now what is the Spirit of the world even a judgement and wisedom to discern only worldly things to see the necessity of them the excellency of them To be wholly affected with them To meditate on them day and night But the godly they have received the Spirit of God whereby they savour and discern spiritual things They have hearts alwaies depending upon God and they have hearts wholly fixed and placed upon God They see incomparable excellency in heavenly things above all earthly They say with David My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to God at all times
to know this that he is now the Lords he hath cause with astonishment and amazement to fall down and admite the grace of God we did not make our selves his we could not become his people of our own strength 2. There was the power of God also greatly discovered for seeing by sinne we become the devils and he had a right to us he is the god of the world and he rules in the hearts of those that are disobedient Eph. 2. seeing I say he is their Father and they are of him and his works they do it 's impossible we should be recovered out of his hands till God who is stronger then he sets us free As our Saviour implieth in that Parable when a strong man keepeth the house all things are quiet till a stronger then he cometh Luk. 11.22 It was not then in the power of Man or Angels to expedite himself out of that bondage and slavery till God did wonderfully shew his power and as it was not in their power so neither in their will or heart Though it be such an unspeakable happ●nesse to be the Lords yet no man naturally is willing to this he had rather be the devils and sins then the Lords such cursed wickednesse is in every mans heart and such enemies are we to our selves Fifthly Though this expression be short Thine they are yet it comprehends very many precious and excellent particulars For we are the Lords upon several and various titles therefore are we sure to continue his It 's good the godly man should know how many waies he is the Lords that his heart may be enlarged upon every particular For 1. He is the Lords by Election from all Eternity Thou wast the Lords before thou wast born before thou hadst a being when thou couldst have no thoughts of thy self he had thoughts of thee The Scripture doth often Eph. 1. Rom. 9. comfort the people of God and quicken up their hearts with this particular and certainly it 's a deep and overwhelming Meditation Who am I Lord when in the womb of nothing or when born yet wallowing in my bloud thinking speaking and living against thee and thou didst from all Eternity know this yet didst choose me to eternal life Oh how many thousands are past by and I am chosen Was it not enough Lord not to have created me It might have been mercy not to have created me that so I might not have been damned but positively to appoint me before the foundation of the world to such unspeakable glory this is that which astonisheth me Oh my Soul and heart is too narrow if I had the hearts of all the men in the world they would be too little to conceive of this goodnesse 2. We are the Lords or Christs for I make this all one by way of redemption and conquest We are bought with no lesse a price then the precious bloud of Christ and as the Apostle urgeth are therefore no more our own 1 Cor. 6.20 Oh then consider how great a matter goeth to make thee the Lords ere this propriety could be attained how dear did it cost Christ he therefore became man and did undergo all those evils and reproaches that we might be his It cost him more to redeem us then to create us so that it 's no wonder if the people of God may look upon themselves as the Lords peculiar for there is a good reason They are bought at an high rate Neither sin or the devil or the world have done so much for thee Oh then what shamefull ingratitude is it to live to them and not to God 3. We are his new creature and a spiritual Creation Thus he is said to create us and we are said to be his Children born of him We are Gal. 2.10 called his ●orkmanship created to good works so that in this particular the people of God are ramarkably his They have his Image put upon them They have a divi●● nature bestowed upon them It 's he that hath made us not we our selves even 〈◊〉 this sence Lev. 20.26 That ye should be mine severed from all other oh then know if there be no more in thee then what is in the world or what thou hast by nature thou art not yet the Lords Doth thy nature thy frame of heart discover an interest in God then thou maist take comfort there are many who desire to be the Lords by Redemption but not by Sanctification They would have Christs bloud theirs but not his Spirit 4. We are the Lords by Covenant and by Promise and this is no mean foundation of our propriety in him The Promise runneth I will be their God and they shall be my people Jer. 31.33 We have Gods Word as well as his work causing us to be his and in this sence God is said to be the God of Abraham and the God of his Faithfull Seed viz. by a gracious promise This is that which may bear up the heart how often do we by our sins and infirmities break off our propriety and lose our interest as much as lieth in us If there were no gracious promise of God that for his Names sake and words sake we shall be his then all those uncomfortable Arminian Positions would take place that we may be the Lords people to day and the devils slaves to morrow Thus our propriety would be mutable every hour and as our lives so our hopes and comforts would be like a vapour and a bubble but we are children of the promise Gal. 3. And as that gave Isaac life when the barren womb had no power so it 's the promise of God begins and continueth our spiritual life It 's for his truths sake that sin and Satan shall not quite overwhelm us and how comfortable is this to pleade Lord we are thine not by any merits of our own not by any gracious works of ours but by thy promise We do not beleeve love thee or persevere and therefore are thine but because we are thine therefore we beleeve and persevere 5. We are the Lords by several peculiar relations all which administer their peculiar comfort We are the Lords house in which he continually dwels and is present We are his Temple in a peculiar manner consecrated to him We are his branches and that denoteth our intimate Union with him as also our supply from him We are his Servants we are his Children we are his Wife we are the members of Christs body Oh these similitudes are full of worth they demonstrate not only the dignity but the blessednesse of his people and the rich supply of comfort and grace from him By these is signified that we are the Lords in his most indeared affections That no Father to a childe no husband to a Wife is as God to us Isa 43.1 I have called thee by Name thou art mine Vse 1 The practical Improvement of this is very great First It informeth us that besides the general acts of faith a
God draweth him out to hate it and in duties good because it 's good doth move him Now the least sinne is sinne and we kill young Serpents as well as old ones and the least good is acceptable to God and he will reward it Reasons 4 Lastly In respect of the privative part of the punishment of sinne all are equall which is the losse of God and Heaven The least sinne depriveth of the happy Vision of God as well as the greatest so that in this sence we may say there is no little sinne no more then there is a little God and so likewise for the good of any duty The least shall have heaven as well as the greatest though not such degrees Even a cup of cold water doth not lose its reward Mat. 10.42 Vse To discover that Hypocrisie and falshood in many men some sins they avoid others again they embrace Is not all sinne poison Is there any good sinne Were thy heart sound those beloved and customary sins of thine could have no more welcome in thy heart then toads in thy bosome SERMON XXXVII Sheweth That Gods People are ready and willing in Obedience Whence it is that they are so Tending to rouse men up from dulnesse and Formality in Gods service JOH 17.8 For I have given them the words which thou gavest me and they have received them THere remaineth two things more considerable in the description of the Disciples Obedience The next thing to be considered is their readinesse and willingnesse implied in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They did not cavill or dispute They did not draw back or maliciously oppose but they were like melted wax ready to receive any impression like white paper whereon Gods Will and Law might be immediatly written and indeed if you observe the Disciples all along from their first call to this present time there appeared much readinesse in them Christ did no sooner speak the word commanding them to follow him but immediatly they leave all and obey though it was so much to their outward disadvantage though it was to fall in the Whales mouth yet they readily resign themselves and although sometimes they shewed dulnesse to beleeve and unwillingnesse in his service yet our Saviour excuseth it saying The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak and certainly had there not been a ready free spirit in the Disciples to take Christ above all and to cleave to him only they could never have devoured these troubles with so much patience as they did Obs That it 's a sure character and property of the children of God to be a willing ready people in obedience They are not as hypocrites kept from sinne by constraint meerly from a principle of fear within but Psa 110. They are willingnesses in the day of Gods power To explain this a little First There may be the presence of dulnesse and unwillingnesse sometimes in the Children of God but this is not reigning nor is it habitually consented to but resisted and with much agony praied against There is no garden but hath some of this weed in it No gold but some of this drosse No godly man but now and then hath wearisomnesse and unwillingnesse to holy duties seizing upon him Thus we reade the Church when Christ knocked at the door though he had stood all night and his locks were wet with the dew yet the Church out of a dull sluggish humour doth refuse to open to him Cant. 5.2 3. So Rev. 2. There the Church is reproved for suffering her graces to decay and that her duties were not filled up with fervency and solidity yea we may reade of the Church complaining of this slothfulnesse and coldnesse when she said Draw us and we will run after thee Cant. 1.4 And at another time Why hast thou hardened our hearts from thy fear Isa 63.17 So that it 's too manifest the people of God have much coldnesse and negligence in them What is that which fils their hearts with so many complaints but this what makes them so full of fears and doubts about their spiritual condition Is it not want of life vigour and willingnesse Oh they finde their hearts can take delight and be willingly drawn out in earthly affairs but they are like so many lumps of earth in heavenly things when yet there is farre more excellency worth and dignity in holy things then in all the whole world to draw out the heart so then let the godly for their comfort distinguish between the presence of unwillingnesse and the power of it Between unwillingnesse in the command and power over the soul and the reluctancy and striving against it The Apostle speaketh generally of sinne Let it not reign in your mortal bodies Rom. 7. Non dixit non sit sed ne regret This stumbling-block removed let us consider why the people of God must needs be so willing and ready in their obedience And first The sence of their guilt and all the misery sinne hath brought upon them puts them into a melting yeelding frame while mens hearts are hardened and they are not apprehensive of the damnable estate they are in while they are not in the fire of Gods displeasure they are stubborn and untractable but when they are kindely humbled for sin then they will do anything Thus Paul He that was mad in his oppositions against Christ no sooner did the Lord touch his heart with the sense of his sins but he crieth out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Thus David when the Lord had humbled him and used afflictions for his sinne see how humbly and obediently he speaks If he say he hath no delight in me behold here I am let him do what he pleaseth 2 Sam. 15.26 and the Church Mic. 7. I will hear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him Nothing then will so humble and mollifie the heart to make a man do and be any thing as a deep sence of sinne Thus the cold hard Iron is put into the fire and it may be beaten into any shape Secondly As the sence of sinne so the sence of Gods goodnesse and grace in being reconciled notwithstanding all our provocations doth much more enlarge the heart to thankefulnesse and obedience The love of Christ saith Paul constraineth us We cannot hold we cannot keep in as you may see David upon the apprehension of Gods goodnesse to him resolving to take the cup of salvation and to praise God in the great Congregation Psa 116.13 Gospel grace doth not in a filiall spirit harden and make wanton but doth more soften and enflame to an active obedience This made Paul run like the Sunne in the Firmament You see it 's the grace of God which lieth kindling and warming of him This is like the Spirit in Ezechiels wheels the dejected unbeleeving soul is not so readily obedient An Evangelical frame of heart assured of Gods love carrieth out to filiall fruitful
Neither soul or body shall escape him if thou continue his Be thou awakened out of thy desperate estate If thou art not Gods Inheritance thou art the devils possession and thy tongue thy eyes thy body thy whole life proclaimeth to whom thou dost belong 2. In being the Fathers as we are no longer Satans so neither the worlds or mens in the world Hence we are commanded not to be Servants to men 1 Cor. 7.13 or please men and to call none Father on earth Mat. 23.9 The sense of such commands is that we are not to put our hopes and trust in men not to give up our selves to their commands when contrary to God yet this is a sinne that all are prone unto It 's the Favour of men the power and greatnesse of men that swayeth us more then God Alas thou wert not created or redeemed or regenerated to make man thus a God unto thee Whence is it that our fear is a mans fear yea our Religion a mans Religion but because we are not yet delivered from mans thraldom so neither are we the worlds For our Saviour saith We are given out of the world to Chrict Why then are we so immoderate in our cares and affections about these things It 's not the world that is ours The Church was seen clothed with the Sunne and the Moon under her feet Rev. 12.1 God hath made the earth under us and Gold and Silver to be in the bowels thereof implying the low esteem we ought to have of them and that we look not on the world as a resting place but seek for heaven Lastly We are none of our own in being the Fathers Thus the Apostle We are none of our own Therefore we are to glorifie God both in soul and body 1 Cor. 6.20 Our Tongues our Body our Affections are not our own We may not love as we list nor desire as we list It 's thset and Sacriledge thus to steal from God Why should it be a wound in thy Conscience to detain that which is another mans and not rather that which is Gods My Son give me thy heart If sinne hath it If the world hath it these are not the right owners Remember whose thou art and this will keep thee solely and wholly for God These things premised let us now see How the Propriety we have in God is the cause of all our good And in the generall there is no temporall or spirituall good we have but our propriety in God is the Foundation of it If the Apostle argue that because he hath given us Christ how shall he not with him give us all things else Rom. 8. How much rather if God give us himself shall he not give us all things The marrow and whole substance of the Covenant of grace lieth in this That God will be our God and we shall be his People God doth not finde us but make us his and when so made then all good things are bestowed on us We will select some choice particulars and that two waies 1. Of those good things we have from God 2. Of those good things we have by approaching to good our active and passive good And first Pardon of sinne in which the Psalmist speaks our blessednesse to consist is given us because we are hi● Thus Heb. 8. when God promised to be the God of his People in the Covenant of Grace Then followeth the Forgivenesse of their sinnes And he will remember their Iniquities no more And this they must necessarily enjoy For Guilt of sinne separateth between God and the sinner it makes him at a distance and in a state of Enmity But this propriety takes away all Ground of Condemnation Rom. 8. Because they belong to God therefore they are pardoned Davids sinnes were fouler then Sauls But besides that David had a better heart then Saul David had a propriety in God and so had not Saul Oh the Encouragement that Gods Children have upon this account to pray for pardon It 's more in God then in thy Repentance or Tears That is the surest Refuge they have they are the Fathers Therefore 2. Because they have more choice and intimate Fellowship and Communion with the Father then the world They have the Light of his Countenance assurance of his Love They have the hidden Manna They have a peculiar Enjoyment of him which is more as David saith Psal 4. then the wicked men have when their Wine and Oyle encreaseth They are called Friends in opposition to Servants by Christ Joh. 15.15 And therefore are admitted into that presence and those heavenly Secrets which wicked men know not which made the Church repeat this so often She was her well beloveds and her well beloved was hers Cant. 6.3 And from this followeth that holy and heavenly Communion with Christ which the Church hath Oh if the world did but know what the Godly have from God Other meat Other Riches Other Comforts then they understand How would they lament their distance from God They have Husks onely when there is the fatted Calf in our Fathers House Insomuch that though the Godly have not the good things of this Life alwaies yet they have the good yea the better things of Heaven and Happinesse as a Viaticum in their Journey thither 3. Because they have a Propriety in Christ therefore they are protected and preserved The Eye of God is said to runne up and down the Earth to stand in the behalf of the upright in heart They are Gods Treasure and so his heart and love must be towards them I am thine save me saith David Psal 119.94 Propriety engageth God all Creatures look to their own yea they venture their lives to save their young ones The cruell and most wilde Creatures are fierce to defend their own Now at the Psalmist argueth He that made the Eye shall not be see He that planted the Ear shall not he hear Thus he that hath put into the nature of all creatures to protect their young ones Will not he do the like This Argument the Church useth when she saith Isaiah 63 9. We are thine and are called by thy Name Insomuch that there is a wonderfull expression in Zech. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of my Eye How carefully hath nature defended that as being a precious and dear part in a man Yet thus God is pleased to account of those that are his And therefore he is said to be afflicted in all their afflictions Oh then that the Godly would improve this propriety more They fear this danger this Triall this Calamity Art thou not the Lords Will not he look to thee more then thou couldest thy self Thou art more his then thy own It 's indeed no such matter for thee to lose thy health thy Comforts thy Life but for God to lose his goods his Inheritance his Jewels would highly redound to his dishonour Therefore the Lord is said to know how to deliver those that are Righteous 2
seeing that Christ by his Death hath purchased justification for us this ought to cause great peace and joy in our hearts as Paul said Blessed be God who causeth us to triumph through Jesus Christ And why so because as afflictions so Consolations by Christ abound much more 2 Cor. 1.3 Oh then let the people of God who are apt to be dejected and cast down to walk in a discouraged manner to have their hearts pierced through with many thorny cares Remember what Christ hath done for them and how acceptable it is to him that we should walk comfortably and thankfully Is it not a dishonour to the Master for the servant to be dejected and grieved Doth it not proclaim to others that they account his service an hard uncomfortable condition Thus when men leave their former wicked courses and give up their names to Christ but after that are troubled grieved and have no comfort or encouragement These reproach the Lord Christ as if the world could give better comforts then Christ as if we had done for the worse by forsaking the devils service and resigning our selves up to the Lords Oh then consider that as in gross prophanesse and unrighteous waies there is a scandal to Religion so in all discouraged and uncomfortable dejections refusing to be comforted thou art a dishonour unto the Lord Christ as if he could not give manna to us in the wildernesse of this world Thus you see how many waies Christ may be glorified Now let us consider why it 's our duty thus to glorifie Christ First Because Gods purpose from Eternity was to put infinite glory on Christ God suffered Adam to fall and in him all mankinde to be lost that so the glory of Christ sent into the world for an atonement and a Mediator might breed amazement to all yea some Divines have said that the first Decree which God made was to glorifie Christ and that therefore he had been incarnated though man had not fallen Therefore say they all our Predestination Justification and Salvation it 's not so much for us as in order to Christ Howsoever that there is a Church a people of God that they shall have such priviledges of glory the end of all is that hereby Christ should be honoured Joh 5.23 Christ was sent into the world that he who honoureth the Father should also honour the Son 2. The end of Gods Spirit in appointing a ministry and giving gifts to them as also accompanying of them with his spiritual presence is to glorifie Christ We are appointed for the work of the Ministry for to glorifie Christ and all your hearing ought to be for that end Joh. 16.15 He shall take of mine and glorifie me and Ioh. 14. he shall convince the world of sin and righteousness in reference to Christ We see here what is the utmost end in preaching and hearing even that Christ may be glorified Insomuch that there is no greater pest to the soul of man then for the Ministers thereof to be given up to vain glory to seek their own glory from men for hereby Christ will not be exalted Oh it 's farre better for them to have it said Christ is glorified in our Ministry then that men give glory to us Lastly Christ will in time glorifie his therefore they may well glorifie Christ For what is our drop to his Ocean What is our glow-worm to his Sun It 's well he will accept of it we are of such polluted lips Vse of Instruction to live both doctrinally and really to the honour and glory of Christ doctrinally when we beleeve all such opinions as magnifie Christ the contrary whereunto Popery doth abound in This made the worthy Reformers first think of departing from that Church Christ was rob'd of his glory he had not that honour which did belong to him And then really by an heavenly holy and unspotted conversation Oh the patience and mercy of Christ that he should suffer the earth to bear so many prophane wretches that are a reproach to him and all Christianity Did the Disciples call for fire because the Samaritans would not receive Christ how would their zeal have kindled to see so many crucifie the Lord Christ again You glorifie the devil and exalt the waies of sin but in time you will feel how dear this will cost you SERMON L. Of Christs tender care of all his People in the greatest of their dangers and afflictions JOH 17.11 And now I am no more in the world but these are in the world and I come to thee THis Eleventh Verse begins a new and special Reason why Christ is to be heard in his Praier for his Disciples Whereas the former Arguments some of them were taken from the person of the Father some from the person of the Apostles themselves some from the Person of Christ In this Verse the Person of the Apostles and Christ are conjoyned together Now the efficacy and force of the Argument lieth 1. From the Condition of Christ 2. From the Condition of the Apostles The present condition of Christ is described thus I am no more in the world 2. Of the Apostles But these are in the world Let us explain the words that relate to Christs condition and then see the pith of the Argument For the first Christ may be said to be in the world two waies Either 1. Invisibly in respect of his divine nature and operations Thus Christ cannot go out of the world no more then God who is every where and in this sence he told his Disciples he would be with them to the end of the world Mat. 26. Or 2. Visibly and corporally in respect of his humane nature and thus he was to be with them no more so that this is a strong place against Transubstantiation and Consubstantiation Though they would gladly evade the dint of it But why doth Christ say I am no more in the world in the present tense seeing while and when he said it he was in the world I answer This Apostle as is observed by the Learned of all doth most abound with Hebraisms and with them it 's ordinary to use a participle of the present tense for the future as might be shewed And besides our Saviour was very shortly to go out of the world by his sufferings and it 's ordinary with all to speak of a thing as done which is immediately to be done as Heb. 11. Abraham is said by faith to offer up his Son Isaac when yet he did not offer him up but was prepared for to do it immediately Lastly Observe the difference between being in the world and of the world When our Saviour saith I am no more in the world it supposeth he had been in it but now he never was of the world as he saith v. 16. For to be of the world is to partake of the wickednesse and ungodlinesse which reigneth there The whole world lieth in wickednesse And therefore Christ could not
world lieth in wickednesse the whole world None are exempted till called out of it by Grace All the humane Grecian power though so famous for wit and morall vertues is included herein and then it lieth in wickednesse this denoteth the habitual custome of sinne as also the impotency even to help it self It lieth in wickednesse there is also their contentednesse and delight as the Swine lieth in her mud And then in wickednesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a troublesome wickednesse that makes trouble and vexation to those that are not in the same excesse of wickednesse with them In the explaining of this concerning the danger of sinne to a Godly man in this world it will appear how difficult it is to them to passe by these Syrens how hard it is to refuse every temptation that stands like Solomons Whore tempting every passenger to come in How many had escaped those flames of hell and had been now partakers of the Robes of Glory had not this world been a Dalilah alwaies enticing them Not only the prophane man but the professour who seemed to give up his Name to Christ even the world hath undone him as will appear For First Consider the infecting and contagious sinfulnesse in the world How hardly can we breathe and live but we must suck in this pestilentiall air As those that live in an infected Pesthouse or such as abide in a noisome Hospitall they cannot but have the smell and the disease of the place so to live in this world which is wholly set on wickenesse it 's a wonder of wonders if we smell not of it savour not of it Therefore pure Religion Jam. 1.27 is said to keep a man unspotted from the world Vnspotted that implieth what a noisome dunghill or fllthy infecting place the world is Oh then with what care and fear should the people of God walk in this world Every hour every day thou art in danger of getting some spots and defilements upon thee Thou art not in Heaven or Paradise but in a place where the devil hath his Throne He ruleth in this world and therefore pray and watch depend upon Christ little dost thou think what mire thou maist fall in if the arm of grace support thee not Did not our Saviour say to his very Disciples that they should take heed of surfetting and drunkennesse that their hearts should not be overcharged with the cares of this world Luk. 21.34 Who would not have thought the Disciples farre enough from this sinne yet they must take heed If the green Tree may so easily take fire what will not the dry do Secondly As there is the world infecting so there is the world tempting and seducing even by lawful comforts It infects by sinne it seduceth by lawfull good things and herein is great danger to godly men their Houses Wives Children their health wealth and whatsoever is a worldly good These are apt to insnare and seduce our hearts So that the love care and joy about these things shuts out that love to God 1 Cor. 7. The Apostle tels us that those who marry must be as if they married not those that buy as if they bought not and those that use the world as not abusing it So that there is using of this world and abusing it using it when we make all these comfortable things we enjoy instrumental to Gods glory and our good but abusing it when we do use them too much So abuti the Latine word is used sometimes when the Waters overflow the Banks But who can stand under this Truth Who can endure this glorious Light Is not the world a tempting world though not an afflicting Thou dost not communicate with the wickednesse and grosse impieties the world lieth in but thy heart is over-charged and surfetted with affections to lawful things Thou over-lovest over-grievest Thy trade is a snare to thee Thy Wife thy Children are snares to thee they draw thee into this and that immoderate affection One of the Ancients saw in a Vision that the world was full of Snares Thus indeed it is Thou canst not be at home or abroad Thou canst not be in this or that condition but there is a Snare Even as the Bird cannot light upon the ground but the Fowler hath set a snare for her every where Oh then how well is it that not only we pray but Christ hath praied to keep us from the evil of all these things To have riches and sinne not To have health and sinne not To have mercies and offend not Know then that Egypt was not fuller of Frogs and Lice in every chamber in every hole then rhe world is of Temptation to sinne There is no mercy no relation no condition but it will draw out a world of sinne if thou watch not every Creature is a kinde of a devil Christ warrants that expression when he said to Peter Get thee behinde me Satan Mat. 16.23 When he tempted him from his duty Thou hast cause sometimes to say to the best comfort thou hast in the world Get thee behinde me Satan Thou savourest not the things of God Thirdly A godly mans danger ariseth from the deceitfulnesse of the world with the things thereof Thus Mat 13. it 's called the deceivablenesse of Riches And 1 Cor. 7. the world is said to have a fashion That as in the stage there are pleasing gestures and representations but they passe away immediately and you think you see Kings and Queens but there is no such matter Thus it is with the world it promiseth thee peace joy comfort Oh if thou hast it thou art ready to think thy self made but it proveth a Sodoms apple Ezechiels Roll sweet in the mouth but bitter in the belly Now because it hath such a present sweetnesse to allure whereas grace is for the present rather bitter therefore are the godly in so great danger There are sweet baits every where but dangerous hooks Judas thought his thirty peeces a sweet morsell but it proved wormwood and gall when it was devoured Achan thought the wedge of Gold a sweet bit and Gehezi Naamans Talents but alas it was gall though it had the colour of honey so that it 's very much if the godly man escape undoing himself Seeing there is so much deceivablenesse every where that which is real misery seems a desirable good That which is full of bitternesse yet appeareth as if altogether good So true is that Per fallacia mala itur and vera bona per fallacia bona itur and vera mala By seeming evils we come to reall good and by seeing God to real evil Fourthly The Godly man is in danger because of the sutablenesse of the worlds temptation with that corruption within So that he hath a dangerous Enemy about the Wals and a treacherous party within The world and his heart are in a Confederacy against the good of his soul so that thou canst not eat or drink or sleep in
safety because of the adversary without and the Traitor within If thou hadst Argus his eyes they would be too little to look about thee in this matter for an Angel who is free from any inward filth to be sent into this world and to be here doing the will of God it 's no danger there is no fear that an Angel should sinne because though the world should tempt in all the allurements of it yet there is nothing within to receive those sparks but now man carrieth about with him prepared matter of sinne he hath a body and law of sinne within him and therefore the world doth no sooner knock at the door but this root of sinne betraieth all sets open all insomuch that the godly man is hardly saved because there are so many Spies laid in wait to damn thy soul as there were to kill Now the Apostle John 1 Joh. 2.16 when he had exhorted not to love the world or things in the world He doth divide all the things of the world into three heads and who is there that liveth in the world that is not in danger of being insnared and overtaken by one of these 1. There is the lust of the flesh that is all those things that draw out the pleasure and delights of a man immoderately Thus the young man he findes the Word a very whirlpool Beware of too much pleasure as eating of too much honey it will quickly turn to a Surfer 2. There is the lust of the eyes Expositors say this is Covetousnesse for so aceording to the Scripture an earthly heart is described because whatsoever profitable thing it seeth it 's ready to desire it Another mans land another mans house another mans goods so that the eye like hell is never satisfied and thus the world is a dangerous Whirlpool to the old man who as in his body he is every day growing nearer to the earth so his soul also groweth more earthly desiring it most of all when he shall have the least need of it 3. There is the pride of life and that is all those things that draw out ambition pride and desire of great things in this world To have power greatnesse and preheminency above others this is the middle age sinne so that the Apostle doth lay down three main capitall Springs of all the evil in the world and makes them like three predicaments to which all other things may be reduced Now do but consider what a Sympathy and fitnesse there is between these Objects and mans corrupt heart and it must needs be that every man will inevitably sink in these Waters unlesse Grace doe keep him up Fifthly A godly mans danger in this world to sinne is because of the clogging and dulling disposition all things in the world work in respect of heavenly things The earth is the most heavy Element and therefore a stone the product thereof fals down speediy Thus men of the world they are the most sencelesse heavy and stupid men about heavenly things that are They incline with all might to these things below This is the reason why the Scripture so often saith a man cannot serve God and the world Friendship of the one is Enmity to the other As a stone cannot ascend upwards Jam. 44. So that though a godly man be never so powerful in grace yet the world doth cool him dull him and indispose him It causeth dust in his eyes and lead in his heart To pray to hear with worldly thoughts is to swim with a Millstone about a mans neck Hence Mat. 13. the cares of this world are said to choak the Corn that came up so hopefully As the Lark doth not sing sweetly till she is got aloof from the earth towards the heavens so neither can the soul full of earthly and worldly thoughts May not then the godly cry out O Lord I would fain meditate with delight on thee but this world will not let me I would gladly serve thee without dulnesse and distraction but this world will not let me Oh that while we are in our callings in our worldly businesses we would think of what danger we were in Korah and Dathan were swallowed up in the Earth bodily take heed thy soul be not spiritually that is a more grievous judgement Sixthly A godly mans danger i● in respect of the discouragements and disheartenings the world puts upon godlinesse that is man must be endowed with great might from above that can despise all the reproaches and shame the Word of God meets with Therefore a great encouragement is put upon the Confession of Christ before a crooked and wicked generation Mat. 10.35 To be godly in the world To own the strict and powerful waies of God in the world is to laugh amongst Lyons to dance among Serpents to contemn all dangers The Scripture tels us often that the world cannot but hate the Disciples of Christ for they are as Light and Darknesse together Now then where there is continuall opposition for thee to be stedfast is a great matter Oh how many have suffered shipwrack because of the shame and reproach of the world In mundo nihil nostrâ refert nisi ut quam primum de oe exeamus Now these discouragers in Heavens way are not only the profane and wicked sort of men but many times their dearest Friends their Parents their Husbands their Wives What will you be wiser then others Will not you doe as most doe Will you be a by-word where you live Thus there is no time when Christ is to be born as it were but there is some Herod or other to kill him Insomuch that many Children had been saved but that their worldly Parents h●ndred them Many Wives but their worldly Husbands like Pharaoh to the Israelites would not let them go out of Egypt to serve God This made our Saviour say He that loveth Father or Mother more then me is not worthy of me Matt. 10.37 This made him say That he came to set Father against Sonne and Mother against Daughter and to make those of his own Houshold a mans Enemies vers 36. Because where Christ is obeyed there will be greater opposition to the contrary Oh then Consider the Word of God convinceth the Ministry urgeth Conscience presseth but I have this or that worldly Friend and he dasheth all But if thy worldly Friends cannot hinder thee in the main for Godlinesse yet they hinder thee in the degree and fervency of it Thou art not so forward so active as thou shouldst be This is to endanger thy Salvation for the lukewarm God will spue out of his mouth Revel 3.16 Oh take heed of saying I dare not be more forward I shall displease my Parents in doing thus thou caust not please God at all If thou wilt be Godly be Godly as God and his Word would have thee Doe not be stinted by carnall worldly Friends How many think they can never have Wealth and Riches enough yet think they
may quickly have too much of Godlinesse and that this strictnesse will marre all Sed modus diligendi Deum est sine modo Seventhly A Godly mans Danger in this world is because the worldly Snares that are be improved to the utmost by the Devil whose the world is and in which he reigneth 2 Corinth 4.4 He is called the God of this world that blindeth the eyes of men And he is said to have men captive in his Snares 2 Timoth. 2.22 So that though God made the world and it 's his good Creature yet as it is a wicked world as it is immundus mundus So i●'s the Devils Seat and so some expound the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole world lieth in wickednesse and in danger to be the Devils If there were meer snares and baits to sinne it would not be so dangerous but when they are Snares of the Devils setting Baits of his making that is so cunning and subtle a Serpent sliding into a mans heart every way This makes the case more desperate You see the Devil could tempt Eve to sinne when there was no Corruption or Lust within though she was pure and upright how much rather when he hath to do with men corrupted and depraved inwardly This is so great a matter that Ephes 6.5 it is said We wrestle not with Flesh and Bloud but with Principalities and Powers in High places As if the Temptations of the world were nothing to those of Satan And therefore he is called the Tempter 1 Thessal 3.5 Oh then the danger of a Godly man the world tempts his own flesh tempts the Devils tempt May not this make every one in this world to look upon himself as Jonah in the Whales Belly To cry out as zealously and as fervently to be delivered as he did Lastly The Danger of a Godly mans being in this world appeareth by Examples recorded in Scripture Those who have seemed to be putting one Leg into Heaven have yet been pulled back by the world When men had escaped the grosse pollutions of the world yet the cares and love of the world did wholly undoe them The third kinde of Hearers that began so hopefully did miscarry because of the world Judas that wrought Miracles and could say with the rest That he had left all to follow Christ was undone by the world If you ask Paul what made his dear Demas that had been so long his Companion in the Gospel to forsake him and to leave him the reason was because he did cleave to this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Vse of Instruction why there are so many duties to pray to watch to be working out our Salvation with Fear and Trembling Why is all this We are still in an evil World Every Day Every moment we may undoe our selves We are not out of Egypt yet in Canaan We cannot see all our Enemies drowned in the Red Sea Alas It is not thy Praier thy Fasting had not Christ praied could keep thee from the evil of the World Thou couldest no more live the Life of Grace in this wicked world then they say Birds can live near the Lake Asphaltites that by its Sulphureous Smell kils them while they fly over it Doe not think to say all the Jebusites and Wilde Beasts are destroied I may now bid my Soul take its ease Oh let the fearfull Fals of so many Godly in the Scripture be Pillars of Salt to thee who knoweth ere thou goest out of this World what a Judas thou mayest prove what an Hell thou mayest make thy self For though the Godly are kept by Gods power that they shall persevere yet they may get many Fals tumble in the mire seem the Devils Swine rather then Christs Sheep for a while and all is because they doe not labour to keep their Garments lest their nakednesse appear They meet with searching Tempests therefore let them keep their garments close to them SERMON LII Of the Danger Gods People are in in the world in respect of its hating and opposing of them With Reasons why the Lord makes the world such a disquieting place Such a Valley of Tears unto his own People JOH 17.11 But these are in the world THe Condition of the Disciples described by this that they are said to be in the world makes them the fit Object of Christs Praier and Petition such are the Snares to sinne and the outward troubles opposing that were it not for this Praier of Christ still putting forth its efficacy None could arrive safe to the Haven We have handled the danger of being in this world as it is tempting and seducing to sinne Now let us consider it as it is an hating and opposing world of those that fear God as it is an Egypt Before we handled it as it was a Sodom We considered the honey of it now the sting The world fawning now the world fighting As it was a glistering Serpent now as a roaring Lyon So that the Subject we intend to pursue is That the Godly are in this world as Daniel thrown amongst Lyons as Sheep among Wolves As the Disciples in the Ship that were tossed up and down ready to sink every moment This is so sore a Temptation that our Saviour doth often forewarn them of it that they may be forearmed Joh. 15.18 19. There he foretels their Portion to be hated of the world Hatred is the highest degree of a mans enmity it 's circa speciem not individua It 's not enough to destroy one Disciple one Godly man but they would rase the whole kinde out of the Earth Expect no mercy from any wicked man he hateth thee and did not God restrain him he would utterly undoe thee That every godly man is not devoured by the wicked is as great a Miracle as that the waters should stand still and not overflow the Israelites It 's not for want of malice and a will only God who chained up the devil their Master that he could not hurt Job any further then he was permitted doth also confine his Children and Instruments Our Saviour gives the reason why they will hate them for it might seem strange why the Godly should be so opposed they wrong none they defraud none they injure none Oh but saith our Saviour You are none of the worlds you are not of them Would you drink swear run into the same excesse as they do then it would love you and embrace you Likewise Joh. 16.33 Our Saviour tels them again of this trouble from the world And why again Because it 's a very heavy burthen to bear To live among Neighbours as among so many Serpents and Scorpions among unreasonable men as Paul cals them and he praieth to God to be delivered from them 2 Thes 3.2 Unreasonable men that are carried by no Religion no Conscience no reason but their lusts and passions Men that will hate you because they will hate you absurd men as it is in the Greek You see Paul
Heb. 11. They that say such things declare they look for a better City Oh how apt are we to make the world our home To desire we might abide here alwaies To think of no other Happinesse or Blessednesse but what is in the Creatures but God by the Troubles therein doth convince us that there must be a better Condition then this We have no abiding place in this world we are here to day to morrow we may be gone and therefore we should be Diligent in Watching and Praying and preparing for our Masters Coming Oh what a Bridle would it be to our carnal Affections to remember we are but Sojourners and Strangers here To look upon thy Estate and Inheritance no otherwise then a Traveller doth upon the Goods in an Inne Reasons 3 Thirdly The Lord makes this world full of Enmity and Hatred against us That we might not symbolize with it or contract any of the guilt and pollution of it upon our Souls It is a Mercy that Wicked men are Scorpions and Serpents That they are Wolves and Lyons hereby thou art chased and affrighted from their Company and Society whereas if they were loving and pleasing thou wouldest be often with them and so sit in the Chair of the Scorner and come into the Assemblies of wicked men Is it not a Mercy to be kept from a Pest-house or a Place where Infectious Diseases are Thus God hath put such an Enmity and Contrariety between the Godly and the Wicked There is such a great Gulf and vast distance that Solomon saith The wicked is an abomination to the Righteous and the Righteous to the wicked Prov. 29.27 The Godly man can no more endure the wicked mans waies then the Wicked can abide a Godly mans waies Therefore blesse and praise God for this Enmity and opposition and make good and profitable use of it Reasons 4 Lastly The Lord doth it That Heaven and the Enjoyment of him to all Eternity may be more prized and better esteemed by us We must with Lot even be violently pulled out of this Sodom Oh our sinnefull and our unworthy Hearts that we should so delight to be tossed and hurried up and down in the Ocean and be afraid to come to the Haven That Death should be so unwelcome when it is the Passage to incomprehensible and immortall Glory What have not all thy Pains Afflictions and Grievances yet made thee long and thirst for Heaven Dost thou not think Here I am sighing crying diseased distressed when the Glorious Saints in Heaven are rejoycing Vse of Instruction To the people of God Not to be dejected but rather to be exceeding glad as our Saviour commands when the wicked world opposeth them for their Godlinesse and Uprightnesse For mark our Saviours Expression herein Matth. 5.20 It must be for Christs Sake and Righteousnesse Sake not for any wickednesse or ungodlinesse of thy own Doe not take the just reward of thy sinnes to be the glorious Consequents of holinesse But if it be because thou fearest God thou ownest God and his way thou standest up for his Truth and Godlinesse then leap and dance for Joy that God hath put so much honour upon thee Say with David I will be more vile still The Starres are never the lesse glorious though they have given them ugly Names of the Bear and the like So neither are the godly lesse Glorious though the world labours to besmear them with dirt a Jewell is a Jewell though soiled with dirt SERMON LIII The Exaltation of Christ improved for the joy of of all Beleevers JOH 17.11 And I come to thee THis is the Third distinct Argument in this Verse which Christ useth in his Petition for his Disciples Some indeed take it Exegeticall or Declarative of what he meant by saying He was no more in this world But others take the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ratiocinatively as a Reason why he is no more to be in the world because he is going to the Father This Argument implieth then that Christ by going out of the world doth not cease to be but that he goeth to the Father and there will be a potent Favourite in the Court of heaven for them Christ then speaking here of his Locall Motion we may in this as in all such Motions Consider 1. The term from which that is the world which is not to be understood as if he did depose and lay down his humane Nature or that he was not still present in an efficacious invisible manner but in respect of a bodily presence This place confutes Popish Transubstantiation and the Lutheran Vbiquity of Christs Body 2. There is the term to which to thee 3. The Via per quam the way by which and that is implied by his Death and Sufferings In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in other places it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and once that is used absolutely The Sonne of man goeth c. Mat. 26.24 That is he dieth here there is contained much comfort to his Disciples that neither Christs Enemies or Death did overcome him but by Death he goeth to his Father and that for the great benefit and advantage of all true Believers Obs That Christ by Death went to his Father Here is much practicall Divinity in this Point We see our Saviour again and again instructed his Disciples about his He knew how much his Sufferings and Death would amaze them and shake their Faith he knew what a false principle they were possessed with viz that he would erect a temporall Glorious Kingdome Therefore that they might not be undone by these thoughts he tels them often both of his death and whither by that he was to go Ioh. 14.3 Our Saviour comforts their troubled hearts with this that he was going to the Father and that not meerly for his own glory and honour but also for their good Even as Ioseph was advanced in Pharaohs Court as well for the good of his Father and his brethren as for his own glory and by the way observe that our Saviour tels them That they knew whither he went and the way yet Thomas in the name of the rest saith Lord we know not whither thou goest Now you may ask Either Christ who is Truth it self spake not right or Thomas The answer is Both spake right for the Disciples knew in the general and confusedly but not distinctly or particularly or they knew it habitually but in time of temptation they did not put this knowledge forth By this we see the Godly may have that grace and that faith in them which yet they think is not there To open this Doctrine let us consider the several particulars that are enclosed in it First That it was appointed by God that the way whereby Christ should from this state of humiliation come to glory with him should be the way of ignominy reproach and death It behoved the Son of man to suffer and so enter into glory Luk.
flying Roll that had curses written on it within and without This is proved by the Parable of the Talents where he that had but one was not pardoned but must give an account and for his negligence be condemned Now by a Talent is meant every thing that a man is betrusted with thereby to glorifie God and it 's called a Talent because of the high price and worth that is in every the least opportunity we have to serve God Oh then let all Superiors tremble at this how great and unexpected will thy account be If thou hast endeavoured to be good thy self and holy yet if thou hast not attended to have holy Children and an holy Family thy Condemnation will be exceeding great Think not to say with Cain Am I my Brethrens Keeper What have I to do with others I am no Preacher or Minister for in that thou hast a trust thou shalt give an account of thy godly improving of it 3. All those sinnes that Inferiors do commit for want of thy care and instruction will be thy sinnes and thou wilt be the cause of their damnation That Rule in morality is also true in Divinity qui non dat vitam aufert Ezechiel must be judged guilty of the Israelites sinnes and God will require their bloud at his hands if he do not his duty to them Eze. 3.18 And therefore Paul protested he was free from their bloud because he had made known all the Counsell of God Act. 20.26 Who then will be able to stand under this burthen Hast thou not sinnes of thy own but thou must have thy Childrens sinnes thy Servants sins also to lie upon thy back as an heavy burthen Will Christ at the day of Judgement condemn men because his poor Members were sick and they visited them not They were hungry and they fed them not And will he not much rather be provoked because there have been sick sinful wicked persons under thy care drunkards and thou didst not admonish Swearers and thou didst not frown on them Shall God make Inquisition for the bloud of the body upon Murderers And will he not for the bloud of Souls Shall Abel though dead speak and cry Vengeance and shall not Children Servants Inferiours damned in hell cry out saying It was the negligence the prophanesse of my Superiors that hath brought me hither Were not men stones and Rocks these Considerations would make them melt and tremble Vse of Exhortation to Governours especially Parents and Masters Take our Saviours example here and follow it see his care was that his Disciples might not sinne that they might be kept in all holinesse Oh then blame and condemn thy self saying my thoughts My cares have been to make them rich to provide for them in the world but not at all have I looked to their Souls Do they not lye swear drink Do they not prophane the Sabbath and live dissolutely yet these things are no trouble to thy heart Canst thou say of thy Children as was said of Austin to his Mother Monica It was impossible that a Childe of so many Teares should perish Are thine Children of praiers and tears and careful instruction How many are too like that Woman of Zebedee she comes to Christ with this Petition That her Sons might sit with Christ in his Kingdom one on the right hand and another on the left dreaming of some earthly temporal greatnesse Thus we are apt to think we will provide so much leave such Estates and in the mean while their miserable Souls are undone to all Eternity Be moved hereunto because 1. This is the greatest love and charity to them You cannot discover greater compassion then by taking care of their Souls Their Souls are more worth then all the world how highly did Christ esteem of Souls when he came into the world and endured all that misery for Souls only He died only to make them blessed 2. Consider that thy evil example who art a Governour doth encourage and embolden Inferiours in their wickednesse They are the more obstinate because thou shewest no dislike no frowns on them they think they have cause to sinne then It 's well observed by Lactantius speaking of this particular about Example The nature of man is proclive to all vice and would seem not only cum veniâ but ratione peccare and this they never do more pleade then when their Superiours are such as act Wickednesse or else doe countenance it 3. Be moved hereunto from the Certainty of the Souls good and uncertainty of all worldly things When thou hast consumed thy self in thoughts and cares about thy Children Solomons Observation will hold true Who knoweth whether he will be a wise man or a Fool thou hast laboured for Eccl. 2.19 But now if he hath been instructed in the fear of God This will abide to all Eternity In the next place we come to the Compellation Holy Father From that attribute given to God he is an holy Father and so being a Fountain of all holinesse may easily communicate it to others Obs That God is an holy God and so able to make others holy For we are not to consider of this Attribute meerly as a glorious property in God but to improve it for our good that we also might be made holy This glorious Attribute Isa 6. the Angels of all others do single out and with great ●cclamation praise God saying Holy Holy Holy Yea this is the only Attribute we are to imitate Be ye holy as I am holy not be omnipotent as I am Now God is holy several waies And first He is essentially holy his holinesse and his nature are not two things as it is in Angels and men In this sense Christ said None is good but God God is a pure act and so whatsoever is in God is God His holinesse therefore is not only in that he worketh all things holily but his very nature is holy Hence God is called Jehovah and I AM Exod. 3.14 because what he is he is essentially and therefore seeing his nature is incomprehensible so is his holinesse Seeing we are never able to define what he is so neither can we what his holinesse is Quicquid de Deo dici potest eo ipso indignum est quia dici potest Our dwarfish Nature cannot measure these Pyramides Our shell cannot contain this Ocean Though Astronomers by their Instruments guesse at the magnitude of the Sun yet we cannot reach unto the greatnesse either of Gods Nature or his Attributes Secondly He is not onely essentially holy but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and oppositely holy to those false Gods mans corruption hath set up and in opposition to the Devils who are called unclean spirits Hence he is often stiled the Holy One of Israel because they only worshiped the true God Those ancient Christian Writers Arnobius Austin and others who wrote in defence of the Christian Religion did convince Heathens of their Impiety by worshiping such for gods
whom yet they fastened many impious actions upon for certainly nature would have told them That was God quo nibil melius cogitari potest Thus the God whom Christians according to the Scripture doe serve is the onely holy and true God Thirdly He is holy in respect of his will command and approbation His word is an holy Word The Scriptures are holy Scriptures They command They approve They encourage and comfort nothing but holinesse David Psal 19. compareth them to Gold often refined that hath no drosse and Hab. 1. God is of purer eyes then to behold Iniquity viz. by approbation Therefore he is said to be angry with the wicked all the day long Oh then though other men love thee and thou art in love with thy own self yet if not holy God doth not God cannot love thee Fourthly God is holy efficiently He is the Authour and cause of all the holinesse we have Iames 1.17 Every good and perfect gift comes from him We are his Workmanship created to good works He made the Angels holy He created Adam holy yea he infused all holinesse into Christs humane Nature and therefore much rather must he cause all the holinesse that is in us Therefore Christ by praying that God would sanctifie his Disciples doth thereby teach that none can make holy but God alone Let then the proud Patrons of free-will be confounded at this They that cannot make themselves Creatures will they say ' they make themselves holy Creatures Minus est te fecisse hominem quam justum Fifthly He is finally holy That is all our holinesse is to terminate in him Holinesse doth properly respect God as the Object and therefore though a man praieth heareth giveth alms yea his body to be burnt and doth not with a pure and chaste Intention look at Gods glory in all this it is not holinesse Hence it is that many have low thoughts about holinesse and grosly mistake in it taking copper for Gold and Samuels Ghost for Samuel himself Thou art not holy till thou canst truly say in some Degree at least though with much opposition Whom have I in Heaven but God and none on Earth besides him In Heaven Heaven it self would not be heaven to a gracious heart but because God is there Sixthly God is holy exemplarily He is the Rule Pattern and Example of holinesse 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy as I am holy Levit. 20.26 So that if we would know how we are to be holy it must not be as men think or as the world prescribeth but as God is holy Not that we can attain to an equality but to a similitude onely So that the principle of the world must fall to the ground They will doe as others doe or as most doe Oh but rather Consider that God himself hath set down a Form for thee and because there is such fulnesse in him as in an Ocean therefore we have a necessity of growing every day No man is as holy as the patern therefore still he is to be perfecting Holinesse and Righteousnesse in the Fear of God 1 Cor. 7.1 Thus you have heard that God is holy But in the next place know it is our Duty to improve this Attribute for our Good For so our Saviour doth not look upon it as an absolute property in God but as that which may be profitable unto his Disciples So that we are to make use of this by Faith And that first Because when God becomes our God by the Covenant of Grace he is wholly ours and all his Attributes are for our benefit and advantage I will be their God Now God is not our God nulesse his Wisedome be ours his Holinesse be ours that is for our benefit For we cannnot separate God and these Oh then what an unwise and foolish thing is it in a Christian when he hath such a Treasure and yet will make no use of it Such a Mine and yet improveth it not In God there is holinesse for all Angels and men much more for thee Secondly God being thus absolutely good he is communicating of it and it is a Rule The more any thing is good the more diffusive it is of it self As we see in God who though glorious and happy enough in himself yet he created a world and ordained many to Eternall Glory out of his meer good pleasure and Fullnesse not that he needed or wanted any Oh then it is very acceptable and well-pleasing to God that we should come with thirsting Souls unto this Fountain and draw Water out of it That we should suck plentifully at these full Breasts and be refreshed Vse of Instruction to the People of God who are greatly afflicted under this great Temptation They are not an holy People Oh they finde sinne captivating them sinne prevailing over them but where is an holy heart holy affections and holy aims in what they doe Oh they say Could they finde they were more holy though they were poor and afflicted yet they should rejoyce Let such Consider It is their Unbelief and want of earnest Praier if they be not richly supplied and furnished in this for God is infinitely holy and he delights to communicate it The larger the Vessell is the more willing he is and will be to fill it and there cannot be any Prayer more acceptable then to begge for this above all things Vse 2. Is God thus holy Then let the most holy be humble in all their approaches to him for he is of such pure Eyes that he findes spots and blemishes yea damnable matter in thy most holy duties Angels holinesse is not proportionable to him Thirdly Of Reproof to wicked men who deride scoff and maliciously oppose holinesse What is this but to rise up against God himself Is not Holinesse the Glorious Attribute of God And do the Beams of this shining in his People offend thee This argueth thou art of a perverse and of a devilish Spirit for thou shouldest rather reverence and honour it saying Oh that I might live and dye like such holy men Indeed there are many would like Balaam die like a Godly man but not live like him as One said He would live like Croesus but die like Socrates Yet this is impossible There must be an holy Life else there will hardly be an holy Death SERMON LV. The Great Lord-Keeper of Israel from inevitable Ruine both of Body and Soul extolled JOH 17.11 Holy Father keep through thy own Name those thou hast given me c. WE have dispatched the Introductory Compellation and now proceed to the Petition it self and in that Consider 1. The mercy praied for and 2. The Amplification of it The mercy praied for is Keep The amplification is 1. From the Subject described by their Election from Eternity And 2. Actuall donation to Christ in time Those thou hast given me This is often repeated by our Saviour as being a main Argument why nothing should he denied them that were thus
of it is to be considered I have kept them The Word is used sometimes for an outward violent detaining of a man in prison or other custody Act. 12.5 6. Thus the Jailors are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 28.4 Heinsius understands the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render observe Herod observed John in a corporal manner of keeping him in a safe hold because Mar. 6.19 it is said Herodias would have killed him but could not Sometimes the word is applied to an Obedientiall Observation of the Commands of God Ioh. 14.15 21. Joh. 15.10 Hence also it is applied to the observing of the Sabbath Joh. 6.16 Sometimes it is applied to the reservation of a thing Joh. 2.10 Thou hast kept the best wine to the last But in the Text it is applied to the preservation or custody that is vouchsafed to such as need it as v. 11. and v. 15. So in this place Now our Saviour by this expression I have kept them signifieth that the Father had given them to Christ as so many precious Iewels and an excellent treasure and that Christ did undertake to preserve them insomuch that if any should be lost the fault would be charged upon Christ and he would be found blame worthy Obs That all those who shall be saved are given to Christ and committed to his trust that they may be kept to Eternal Salvation That look as the devils 2 Pet. 2.4 have the beginning of hell already and are said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 kept in chains of darknesse to judgement so that they can never evade or escape it Thus the godly they have the beginning of heaven they are interested in Christ and therefore Iude 1. are called the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Crown or inheritance of glory they are to receive is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 kept safe in heaven So that all the power in hell and the world are not able to deprive them of it This is very comfortable news to the people of God to hear they are kept if they were left to their own selves how horrible and irrecoverable would their fall be Let us Consider how much is implied in this Truth That Christ keeps them as his charge And first Here is plainly denoted their own infirmity and insufficiency For why should Christ thus earnestly pray the Father to keep them and say he had kept them hitherto but because they were weak and unable to preserve themselves So that Christ speaks of them as some tender young Infants that are given from arm to arm to be kept as being not able to go themselves and truly if the Apostles who were Christs first born as we may so say and although Christ knew that he was to endow them with the power of the holy Ghost afterwards in an extraordinary manner yet if these that seem to be Giants cannot help themselves what shall we Dwarfs do If the Pillars are not able to stand of themselves what can Reeds do God to shew the Church her miserable impotency compareth it to a childe new born that is not only lothsome but feeble and necessarily perishing without some aid Eze. 16.5 6. Even thus are we all in our own strength and power Secondly As it implieth their insufficiency so also the precious account and esteem God puts upon them Men are not said to keep their pebble stones or their Weeds but their Treasure their Jewels And thus God Mal. 3. exp●esly cals them Hence all the godly are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peculiar people The only Treasure God hath and they being his Treasure his heart is upon them so that howsoever the worlds esteem of them is reproachful and malicious enough they are the off-skowring and the worst of men yet with God they are precious Nay though to their own souls many times they are as castawaies as lothsome branches they abhorre themselves and therefore they think God will do so much more yet with God they are of high account Thirdly There is implied a more peculiar care and attendance to their good then of the whole world besides For they are said to be given to Christ out of the world that he may keep them This giving of them to Christ supposeth an Election or choice of such from all others God is a preserver and keeper of all Iob 7.20 called therefore the preserver of men Yea Psa 36.6 he is said to preserve man and beast God is every where essentiâ presentiâ and potentiâ and thus he cannot but be every where but he hath a gracious presence with his Children which is not from his infinitenesse or necessity but from his meer love so that if God were not infinite and immense pardon the Supposition yet his grace and goodnesse would make him abide and dwell with those that are his You see by this that Gods keeping extends even to inanimate Creatures he keepeth the very Sparrows that they fall not to the ground but there is a more excellent and choice way of preservation to those that are given in speciall charge to Christ The eyes of the Lord are said to runne to and fro in the behalf of the upright in heart 2 Chron. 16 9. What can be more comfortable then that expression Hence the Lords peculiar is compared to a Bird flying over the nest where her young ones are Isa 31.5 Only the Bird is silly and weak hath no power to defend but she sheweth her desire and affection Thus God is pleased to compare himself to encourage our Faith for we are apt to look more at what is against us then for us We consider the devils Subtlety the worlds danger our own corruptions but do not attend to Gods mercifull Preservation Fourthly This phrase doth imply the safety that the people of God are in For though in respect of the world and their Corruptions they may say with Iehosaphat A great Army is against us and we know not what to do or they may be afraid as the man Elisha led into the midst of the Enemies Camp yet for al this they are safe for there is a fourfold cord that holds in them which cannot easily be broken There is first Christs power which is omnipotent the same with the Fathers power Ioh. 10. I and my Father are one None can take them out of Christs hands because none can take them out of the Fathers hand Therefore Col. 3. their life is said to be hid with Christ in God And it is a crown laid up in heaven Now what men or devils can break into Heaven Who can rob and steal from thence if there be a stronger then God more powerful then God then doubt of thy preservation but else not 2. There is his fidelity and immutability He is the Amen He is the Alpha and Omega for we might think though we are never so well to day as it was with Adam and the Angels apostatizing
he was never given in the sense it is used ver 2. where such are said to have eternal life The last aggravation is None of them is perished he doth not say none of them hath been killed by persecutors or none of them have grievously fallen by sinne for so Peter did but none is perished he speaks in the present tense not none shall perish but is perished as if because they were not already perished they should never or rather because in respect of Gods promise it was as sure as if they were already in heaven Even as Judas is said in the Text to be perished although he was not yet in hell he was not yet gone to his proper place but because of the certainty of it This expression was so remarkable that Chap. 18.9 we have mention made of it as a famous saying That the saying might be fulfilled of those thou hast given me I have lost none only whereas in the text it is expressed passively none is perished there it 's active I have lost none but that change of the word is very comfortable for thereby is signified that if any did perish it would be because of some fault in him if they be lost it is he hath lost them Though sinne and the devil should instrumentally destroy them yet it would be principally attributed to his want of love or power or faithfulnesse in his trust In the text one word is to be observed and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is perished The word is used sometimes of a corporall and temporall destruction Judg. 12.11 They perished in the gainsaying of Core 1 Pet. 3.6 The whole world is said to be drowned in water so 2 Cor. 10 9. Sometimes it 's used of a spirituall destruction in respect of the soul by everlasting damnation Now the word doth here take in both the senses spirituall destruction as the principall and temporall as the secondary for that this is partly implied appeareth cap. 18.9 I am he ye seek let these go and then follows that none may perish In respect of the first destruction it is chiefly that the devil hath his Name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revel 9.11 onely you must observe that when the Scripture useth this word in a spiritual sense for a lost man in soul and body it speaks of a twofold undone condition First There are some in a lost perishing condition but yet recoverable by the grace of God they are as Moses drawn out of the water where certain death would have been and thus all the godly before their conversion are lost Thus Matth 18.11 Christ is said to come that he might save such as were lost he did not come to save a lost Judas or such as were from all eternity left by God in their undone condition but those elect persons that for the present were in a lost estate Thus Luke 15.24 The Prodigal sonne is said to be lost or perished but he was recovered again The other sense is when it 's applied to such as are in an undone estate irrecoverably They are in a state of perishing and will never be brought out of it and thus it 's applied to Judas Thus it 's used 2 Cor. 15. The Gospel is a sweet savour to those that are saved and in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that perish where it 's opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words thus explained Observe That none of those who are elected or given by the Father to Christ shall perish They will be enabled to persevere They will certainly get to the haven This is a principal truth in Divinity and as it is much oppugned by learned Adversaries so it hath also great influence into our lives practically and therefore I shall be the larger on this subject and before I come to explicate it it 's good to compare two other Texts with this as excellent parallels The first is John 6.39 This is the Fathers will where you have the truth asserted and that very powerfully 1. He saith He will lose nothing of what the Father hath given him He doth not say he will lose none but nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not any thing neither his soul nor his body and therefore because the body when consumed to dust seemeth to be for ever lost he addeth I will raise it up at the last day 2. This is so great a matter that he saith This is the will of his Father that sent him So that the main command to be received from the Father and the great thing willed was to let none of the elect perish The second Text is John 10.28 where speaking of this property of his sheep that they hear his voice he addeth I give unto them eternal life and they shall never perish Here you see the expression for the future lest it might be objected against this in the Text though none is perished yet yet he may when new temptations and dangers arise then they may be undone Judas did not immediately upon his Discipleship betray Christ but our Saviour saith None shall perish and he giveth a sufficient cause of this their perseverance because they are in his Fathers hand Here is the dear respect God beareth to them and then none is stronger then the Father So that you must finde out a power greater then Gods and more prevailing then his arm if you will hold they can perish Thus you see this truth confirmed by the mouth of two faithfull witnesses But because this truth is of singular use and of much difficulty I shall first lay down many introductory particulars to the stating of this Question for if the childe at first be not well swadled it proveth crooked in it's growth we must therefore lay a sure and clear foundation that our superstructure may endure And First The Question is not of the possibility of a believers total and final perishing If we consider him in himself if we behold him in his own power not as elected and covenanted with in Christ then it 's not only possible but even necessary that he should eternally perish This is evidenced in the apostate Angels and Adam there grace was amissible yea they did actually lose it when yet they had not a corrupt nature within to betray them as we have Therefore they did not necessarily but by a voluntary choice fall into their own destruction How much more would this terrible apostasie be in godly men though sanctified seeing there are the powerfull reliques of corruption abiding in them and withall many violent temptations without to overwhelm them if left to themselves When therefore we say the true believer cannot perish it 's not to be attributed to his strength and power but solely to the grace of God which as at first wrought conversion so it doth also perseverance and continuance in that estate for as the removal of the pillars doth immediately make the house to fall being it's naturall motion is to descend
Casuists But then there is a Scandal given or scandalum Pusillorum when those who appear for Religion do such things as are indeed inconsistent with holinesse that can never be made good by the Scripture and of such it is that our Saviour saith Wo be to him by whom offences come Mat. 18.7 Whosoever shall offend one of these little ones it had been better a Millstone were hung about his neck and he thrown into the sea For although it be also a sinne in any man to be prejudiced and alienated from Godlinesse because of the sinnes of those that professe it neither will that be an excuse to them yet because such put a stumbling block in the way therefore is the transgression great Distinguish then between such as through their wilfull obstinacy will be offended and from such who are so through weaknesse and a reall occasion given 4. Such is the enmity of man to what is good that he is glad to have any occasion to blame the Truth with whenas indeed they should mourn and grieve to see any failings amongst those that are religious they rather rejoyce in the discovery of such and they think this is a good reason for their Impiety Why should they come out from the common waies of the world Do not many of those that are so forward do thus and thus And therefore they hope they shall do as well as any other The Apostle seeing this wicked disposition in the world speaks notably to the godly 1 Pet. 3.16 To walk with such a good Conscience that whereas the world will speak against them as evil doers they may be ashamed So 1 Pet. 2.12 These things premised Let us consider the unreasonablenesse and sinfullnesse of condemning Religion for some hypocrites therein For 1. Dost thou not as well see many are sincere and walk unblameably Doth not thy own heart tell thee that thou hast no just cause to speak against them Dost thou not sometimes wish thy Soul might do as well as theirs Dost thou not with Balaam wish thou mightst die the Death of such Righteous persons Shall not the Graces and holinesse of Eleven Apostles more confirm thee then the wickednesse of one Judas offend thee Consider then how unreasonable thou art that dost only minde the weak places of the Wall not ●he strong Thou speakest of many that for gain and secret lusts have fallen off from God but how many thousands of godly sincere men can we tell thee of who because they feared God were neither terrified by threats nor yet seduced by allurements to deny Christ Though a Judas did betray him yet ●here are Millions of Martyrs who have valiantly died in the Confession of him 2. We are not to live by Examples but by Precepts It 's an Old Rule We are to consider what the Scripture requires and commands If that enjoyn a life separated and singular to the wickednesse of the world If that bid thee run not into the same excesse of Riot with them such a strict way and profession thou art bound to follow Though all that go before thee be hypocrites and that go with thee Though all the Apostles had been like Judas yet Christs Truth had still been to be embraced Therefore not mens lives but the Scripture is to be ou● Rule If all men prove Hypocrites or Apostates yet we are bound to keep close to the Word Let God be true and every man a Lyar It 's true the life and conversation of others in sincerity and uprightnesse may be a great inducement to holiness therfore the Scripture often cals for a life of light and holinesse that others may be won thereby but yet every one ought to have such an inward assurance both of the Truth of God and his Grace upon his heart that what Peter said presumptuously they are to acknowledge as a duty Though all men should forsake Christ yet he would not It 's not upon men that we are to build either our faith or our godlinesse but though all men should prove devils and there were none in the world but one man that would own Christ thou wert to joyn with him 3. If we should condemn Religion for the falshood of some we were to condemn all the waies of Religion and all parties in the world and so to turn direct Athiests for look upon all the severall waies and parties that are in the world Are there not some that are a reproach to them that the wiser and more sober persons in that way will not own Wonder not then if the Apostle say of some that they are spots in their Feasts Jude 12. And Rom. 2. that they are such by whom the Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles This hath and will be It is impossible saith our Saviour but there will be offences viz considering the corruptions and sinfull inclinations of men but if you will own no Religion wherein an Hypocrite may come in you must do as Constantine bad the Novatian erect a Ladder and go himself only into heaven Even in heaven it self there were as we may say Judasses for what were those Apostate Angels that did not abide in the Truth but left their first habitation but betraiers of all that glory and honour that was due to God Know then that to throw away Religion because of the hypocrisie of some few is to run the broad way into Athiesm 5. It is not only sinful but very dangerous to thy own soul when thou art prejudiced or leavest the true way upon such grounds Thou dost not hurt them but thou wrongest thy own soul Those Disciples Joh. 6. that took offence at Christs Preaching they did not despise Christ so much as they damned their souls for saith Peter then whither shall we go for thou hast Eternal Life So then for thee to take up prejudices and objections against Christs way because of some mens miscarriages is to be a self-murderer wilt thou destroy thy own soul and throw thy self into one extremity because others may in another way undo themselves Oh know it is an heavy judgement upon thee when thou meetest with stumbling-blocks Those whom God loveth he giveth a better heart unto them Christ himself Luk. 1. 1 Pet. 2.7 To those that beleeve is indeed precious but a stone of stumbling and a Rock of offence unto those that do not beleeve Oh then be afraid lest this be the beginning of Gods judgement upon thee to be so prejudiced and offended by mis representations that thou shalt never have an heart to love God and his way Think not to do them a despight thou art the greatest Enemy to thy own soul 6. If any under the pretence of Religion do act their iniquities quarrell not at Religion it self for that condemneth such waies Neither do those that fear God own such for their members yea where Gods Order is put in practise they cast such from them as a dishonour to God and a reproach to that holy calling
Christ What put thee upon forwardness in this way Was it the Spirit of God through the Word then this is of God and will endure I adde through the Word because of those many delusions many have in them which being not according to Gods Word as they come from darknesse so they will end in darknesse The Childe mishapen in the Conception will ever after be a monster Secondly Then will beginnings and endings be alike when grace is radicated and enters ●●ep enough into the soul Though thou hast never such affections such enlargements yet if there be not a rooted and deep work of grace upon thy soul it will never hold This our Saviour pressed Matth. 13. The seed that grew up hopefully miscarried because it had no rooting and thus the house on the sandy foundation was ruined because the builder did not dig deep enough Hence the promise of Regeneration is Jer. 31. to put the Law of God in their inward parts in the most intimate and deep parts of the soul and therefore grace is called the inward man and the hidden man of the heart But ô how superficial and overly How formal are most in this matter They undertake to own the wayes of godliness before ever they have laid a deep foundation Hath thy repentance been deep enough thy faith thy love been rooted enough If so then the gates of hell shall never prevail against thee Thirdly Good beginnings will have bad endings when men professe Christ not out of love to Christ and pure intentions to him but from sinister and worldly respects Oh this covering and hiding will never hold The Wolf will be at last a Wolf for all it's sheep-cloathings and this was Judas his case his end was not pure his eye was not single and therefore his Apostasie was inevitable To follow Christ for loaves or to know him only after the flesh will never endure All flesh is grasse Isa 40 6. but the word of God abides for ever that is not only the body of man is mortal but all those wayes of righteousnesse and holinesse which are not indeed regeneration will certainly vanish This is a great part of the meaning if you compare this place with the whole context 1 Pet 1.23 24 25. Jehu begins with zeal as hot as fire yet his latter end was like Jeroboams for he walked in his wayes and all because his ends were not pure Oh this is the summe of all This is the soul and life of all Observe diligently thy heart in the intentions and motions of it Is it to have applause Is it to be reputed of Is it to accomplish great things for thy self Thus we may say of thy godlinesse what is it thy body Dust thou art and to dust thou wilt return The time is coming thou wilt not have a stone left upon a stone of that religious building though once so many did admire it Fourthly Then hot beginnings will end coldly when the judgement of a man is not well instructed and informed in the truth Hot affections but a weak judgement will quickly reel up and down as a man that hath strong vapours from his stomack but a weak brain Therefore our Saviour prayeth in this Chapter That they may be sanctified through the truth Hymeneus and Philetus when they made shipwrack of the faith then they cast away a good conscience So that a sound minde and judgement is a special preservative to perseverance What is the reason children are tossed up and down with every new thing But because their understandings are weak and Ephes 4. we are forbidden to be like children in this respect As there must be a sound judgement in the truth so a well advised Meditation about the nature of grace and how dear it will cost thee to be Christs Disciple To come into the company of the godly before thou hast throughly bethought thy self what is required of a Disciple How much he must do and suffer What he shall meet with in the way is the cause of great hypocrisie Our Saviour doth fully expresse this under two Parables One of a man going to warre and another who undertakes a great building Luke 14 31. There is none will set upon a warre or building but with much councel whether he be able to go through with it or no Whether he shall not be mocked as one that began and could not make an end Thus do thou reflect upon thy self What shall I go and joyn my self with those that fear God Shall I be in the number of those that will own Christ more strictly then the world Am I fit for such a great work Am I mortified to all sinne Can I endure to lose all for Christ Do I love him better then all relations and life it self If I do not it 's no climbing up this hill I shall tumble back again with greater danger then ever I shall adde no more particulars because all miscarriages may be reduced to one of these heads Use In the first place of Instruction Though zealous beginnings may terribly degenerate yet it 's a blessed and an happy thing to be working for God betimes Though a man called at the twelfth hour into the Vineyard shall be rewarded yet it is a blessed thing to be one of the first in Gods Vineyard to be as Timothy was godly in the youth The wicked world as they have many Proverbs to encourage themselves in their wickednesse so this is none of the vilest A young Saint an old Devil This Gerson cals a blasphemous Proverb and saith His heart did often tremble to hear men say Angelicus Juvenis senibus satanizat in Annis Men take up this ungodly Proverb to procrastinate their conversion to delay their repentance to discourage early lookings towards heaven as if all that did begin so soon would turn devils at last Though Judas did thus play the hypocrite yet Timothy godly from the youth did not Therefore beginne even this day this hour onely look thy beginnings be sound and sincere 2. Use of Exhortation To take heed of proving a Judas How odious is his name It 's a Proverb to expresse a treacherous false hearted man to say He is another Judas and Judas his name is so abominated that though in it self it be a good name signifying as much as one that confesseth and praiseth God yet I think there was scarce ever any Christian would name his childe Judas his actions are so abhorred and yet for all this How many are like Judas and so sonnes of perdition Apply it but in this one thing Judas his high iniquity was out of his covetousnesse to betray Christ for thirty pieces of silver for a little profit he would lose Christ Now is not this the case of most wicked men in the world Whosoever loveth any pleasure or profit more then Christ he is like Judas The drunkard is a Judas he sels Christ and his soul for his drink The whoremonger is a Judas the
deny any prescience in God because they say this would enduce an absolute necessity and it would be as vain a thing to think to avoid what God doth foreknow as what he doth preordain Therefore they take away one as well as the other but this is impudently to contradict the Scripture which doth so often make prescience a property belonging solely to God observe that place Isa 41.21 22 23. shew the things that are to come hereafter that we may know ye are gods and indeed he only can know future things that only knoweth the hearts of men and that the Scripture attributeth to God only Indeed the Prophets who were but men yet they did foretell many things to come but they were only ministeriall in this It was God that revealed these things to them so that it was not they so much as God and thus the Scripture revealeth things to come because it 's the word of him who knoweth all things and it 's the writing of such who were immediatly inspired by the holy Ghost Now one reason why God must needs foreknow what is to come is because nothing can ever be without his decree predictive of it and so because God knoweth what he will do therefore he knoweth what shall be Therefore we need not with the Jesuites run to a scientia media whereby God knoweth all things they say from the infinity of his knowledge comprehending the nature of things antecedently to his Decree their actions absolutely future or conditionally only for his knowledge is founded upon his decree Secondly Although God only doth originally and by his own property know things to come yet the devils they may foretell some things Not that the devils can of themselves foreknow any future casuall thing for they know not the hearts and free wils of men yet some things they certainly foreknow some things with great conjectures certainly they know such things which God revealeth to them and employeth them in to bring about for seeing even the very devils are Instruments of bringing about his vengeance as appeareth by that when God commanded the lying spirits to be in the mouth of the false Prophets as also when they appeared before God as well as the Angels Iob 1. Seeing I say God useth these as Instruments no wonder if he make known unto them what Service they have to do and therefore they can foretell things yea the Lord suffers false Prophets sometimes to foretell things by way of judgement to a people as is to be shewed for not only to godly men but even to wicked men God hath sometimes revealed things to come as to Balaam and those Mat. 7. who said Have we not prophesied in thy Name But besides this revealed knowledge the devils may probably foretell things to come partly as Austin well observeth because of their intellectual acutenesse having such extraordinary quicknesse in theit understanding and this added to their long life which they have had ever since their Creation and partly because of their agility whereby they can quickly move from one place to another as it 's related of Apollonius Thyancus who being at Ephesus when Domitian was murthered at Rome cried out Be of good courage for at this moment the Tyrant is killed Historians write that Posts came afterwards that did confirm all those things about Domitians Death Now if this were so then it was by the help of the devil who could quickly move so far as that Apollonius did many other things and therefore is thought by some to be raised up by the devils to oppose Christ and draw off from him by false Miracles Thirdly Consider there may be predictions of three sorts divine such as are of God himself or by Prophets inspired by him or diabolcicall predictions which are by Gods just judgements suffered to be upon a people and these are either by the devil or by his Instrumenss Witches and Sorcerers Astrologers and other kinde of waies of Divination which are too common even amongst Christians or humane and natural predictions which are from natural causes to their natural effects Thus the Astronomer may foretell the Eclipses that shall be The Physician can the effects of some Diseases and so the natural Philosopher may but not with such certainty foretell of drought or much rain as our Saviour implieth Mat. 16.20 but this is only probable because many particular causes may interpose and alter all their prognostiques Thus also politick Predictions which wise men sometimes can presage about Commonwealths Though those are but Coniectures as he said Bene qui conticet hunc tu perhibeto vatem optimum Fourthly Seeing that to foretell any thing to come be thus the property of God and of the Scripture Then by this we see That all those who go to Astrologers or Witches to know things to come and all those that professe judiciary Astrology that will undertake to foretell not natural things but voluntary such as are meerly subject to mens will Do not only undertake a vain rash and false thing but that also which is very abominable and wicked It 's necessary to speak to this because there are many people look more to the fullfilling of what such Prognosticks and Almanacks say then to the Scripture as if Saturn and Jupiter did reign therefore the Earth must tremble and not God reign It would require a great Volume to speak of this exactly Onely briefly Consider these things 1. That it hath been the Devils way alwaies to disturb the Church and endeavour the damnation of many mens souls by making them credulous in these things That as Christ hath set in his Church Pastors and Teachers to instruct in the way to heaven So the devil hath raised his Witches his Sorcerers his Soothsayers and Astrologers to seduce the world Of old there were the Heretiques Priscillianists that did binde men to the Starres and made the body of men to be compounded according to the Signs yea into this soul errour Aquila that famous Interpreter of the Scripture fell for which he was cast out of the Church of God and Cardan rose to that high Impiety as to observe Christs Birth and made his power to do the Miracles he did to flow from the influx of those Starres that he was born under Some have not been so wicked yet others as Petrus de Aliaco thought by the Stars there might have been prognosticated the Birth of Christ And Kepler contends those Wise men by the Rules of Astrological Art might have presaged not only an Event of some great moment but the Birth of some great Monarch As if Christ were not born after an extraordinary and miraculous manner That the Heavens have influence upon the bodies of men may not be denied Though Pererins argueth against those Coelestes influentias as I remember Hence a man possessed with the devil is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lunatick which some say was because the devil took the occasion that at
refresh and comfort thee then when once in the flesh poured out by him yea some have thought that the expression Heb. 5. of Christs prayer and supplication with strong cries and agonies hath reference to this prayer though his tears and agonies are not mentioned Howsoever Christ alwayes praid with such zeal and fervency that he was sure to be heard See then if the want of any thing which may discourage thee may not be provided for in this prayer and shall Christ do it for this end that thou mayest alwayes have comfort And yet art thou dejected What shall Christ die in vain and pray in vain So certainly whilest thou walkest thus uncomfortably it 's as if Christ had done none of these things or else had done them in vain Secondly Christs care and will that the godly should live comfortably appeareth in those many commands for to rejoyce So that there is no command for any holy duty or to avoid any sinne more frequently enjoyned then to walk with joy and gladness of heart the people of God they doubt whether they may rejoyce they think such barren and unprofitable wretches as they are may not apply comforts They think this childrens bread doth not belong to such dogs as they are Oh but remember how indispensable and peremptory the command of God is that thou shouldst walk joyfully before him Phil. 3.1 Finally my brethren Rejoyce in the Lord When he had exhorted to many duties before he keepeth this sweet wine to the last Finally I have no more to say this is the summe of all do such and such duties but still remember to rejoyce Oh to pray dejectedly to do holy duties but with a sad heart this is to marre all As in alms so in all other duties God loveth chearfulnesse but he saith Rejoyce in the Lord Thy joy must be in heavenly objects and from spirituall motives from Evangelical priviledges some joy in their honours some in their pleasures some in their lusts as the swine delights in mire and mud but the joy of Gods people is in and through Christ Therefore he saith That my joy may be fulfilled in them not the joy of the world or the flesh Hence vers 3. it 's made the sure character of a Christian indeed who hath more then the outward form of religion that he rejoyceth in Christ Jesus But as if once speaking were not enough see how the same Apostle doubleth it Cap. 4.4 Rejoyce in the Lord alway and again I say Rejoyce Certainly there is something in it that the Apostle ingeminateth it Again I say Rejoyce he knew how hardly the people of God are brought to rejoyce How can they that are thus afflicted that have so many exercises bid them Rejoyce you may as well bid an heavy log flie up into the air Alas they are so oppressed and hardened in heart that they can no more rejoyce then a stone speak But the Apostle will hear none of these excuses I say it again Rejoyce and that alwayes let your condition your temptations be what they will let the times be what they will yet rejoyce alwayes so 1 Thess 5.16 Rejoyce everm●re Do not think it arbitrary or left to thy choice to walk joyfully No awe thy heart with the command that as thou darest not lie steal commit adultery because God commands the contrary so neither darest thou walk with distrust unbelief and discouragement because Gods word is against it Thirdly Christ hath provided for the Christians comfort not only by commands but also by promises The Scriptures are like a pleasant garden full of the sweet flowers of the promises therefore called 1 Pet. 1.4 Precious promises you may observe that the promises run through the heart of the Scripture as those four rivers did paradise to water and refresh it Hence it 's said That we through the Scriptures might have consolation and comfort Rom. 15 4. Hence David in all his tribulations found the word of God sweeter then the honey or the honey-comb There cannot be any strait any grief but there is a peculiar promise against it so that if at any time thou art disconsolate either publick or private afflictions lie sore upon thee remember the promises encourage thy self from them Oh walk not as if this world were such a wilderness that God had provided no fountains to refresh the barren soul As it was a custom amongst the Jews to give a cup of wine to the condemned person to refresh and comfort his spirits Therefore it was the height of malice in the Jews when in stead of such a cup they gave Christ gall to drink Thus God hath also appointed in his word so many precious and glorious promises for his children in every condition and the devil on the other side he would give them gall to drink If then thou wouldst live with heavenly joy let the promises be thy meditation day and night Fourthly Christ hath provided for the comfortable life of his people by appointing a Ministry in his Church among other ends for this to comfort the afflicted soul and to pour oyl into the hearts of such as are wounded They are to be sons of consolation like Barnabas to the children of sorrow for their sins so that it 's one of the greatest parts and work of the Ministry to publish glad tidings and to preach the acceptable year of the Lord to such as groan under the burden and prison of their sins Christ himself accounted of this in his Ministry above all other things Isa 50 4. He hath given me the tongue of the learned to know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary Oh it 's not every one that can deal with a tender conscience we must have an Eagles eye and a soft hand so that our work is not only to convert the prophane to build up the converted but to be daily comforting and exhorting the afflicted in soul And ô that there were many upon whom we might dispense this part of our Office You are apt to say Ministers preach nothing but damnation they will not comfort such as lie a dying Oh there is nothing more desired by them then to meet with such humbled souls to whom they might milk out the breasts of consolation To such they say as in the Canticles Eat ô friends yea drink abundantly but it would be a woe to us if we should tender these comforts to wicked and impenitent men There is a notable place to this purpose Ezek. 13.22 where God threatens the wicked Ministers because they strengthned the heart of the wicked in promising of him life and made the heart of the righteous sad When therefore we have to do with the contrite heart we with-hold no comfort from him as the Apostles style themselves 2 Cor. 1.24 Helpers of the believers joy So that in this is our study and labour seen as well as in Doctrine and reproof SERMON LXXVII Of Joy and Comfort
is a grief thou must be grieved for how many sad thoughts and tears will require more sad thoughts and tears Vse of Instruction on the contrary It 's Christs special will that all who live wickedly should have no comfort Wo to ye that laugh and there is no peace to the wicked Isa 57.21 SERMON LXXVIII The severall Sorts of Joy and the Nature of Spirituall Joy Shewing also how farre it transcends and differs from Worldly Joy JOHN 17.13 That they might have my Joy fulfilled in themselves THese words are the finall cause of Christs solemn prayer for his Disciples Wherein you have The Benefit it self described and the Manner of possessing of it The Benefit it self is My Joy This may be understood Actively and Passively Actively for that joy which Christ might take from his Disciples being preserved in purity of Doctrine and Unity amongst themselves Thus some understand it and parallel a like place Phil. 2 2· where Paul bids them fulfill his joy which was the joy he would take by seeing their happy agreement but because it 's said in the Text That this joy may be fulfilled in the Disciples themselves Therefore it is more consonant to understand it passively of that joy which the Disciples took in him and the benefits flowing from him So that it may be called Christs joy both effectively because he is the Authour and giver of it as also objectively because it is in him in divine and holy things not in the world much lesse in the pleasures of sin Now the Manner of possessing is that it may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filled up that they might have a good measure of joy overflowing he would have every part of the soul filled with it and every kinde of joy yea degree of it some superficiall joy for the degree of it or some transient joy for the continuance of it doth not answer our Saviours prayer it must be filled up Lastly Here is the Subject recipient of it in themselves This say some is spoken oppositely to worldly joy to such as men take in the pleasures of the world these are but in the face in the countenance they are not cordial and hearty Observ 1. That there is a joy in Christ which his people are to have fulfilled in them As they are to be filled with grace so with consolations and one floweth from the other though not naturally It 's of great concernment to treat of this joy because the people of God look upon it as a thing above their reach They are convinced of repentance of humiliation but not of walking joyfully There is a three-fold Joy 1. A Naturall Joy which is an implanted affection in a man and of it self simply considered is not a sin 2. There is a Sinnefull Joy which runneth into two streams either when the Object is wholly unlawfull when it 's a forbidden Tree and we may not eat of it And thus to rejoyce in our evil doings to take delight in the wayes of wickednesse this is a wicked joy that will end in tormenting sorrow and it argueth a wretched distemper of the soul otherwise it would finde sinne to be terrible and bitter but through the corrupted constitution of the heart it comes about that they delight in sinne as distempered stomacks do in coales ashes or such drosse Again there is a sinnefull joy when the Object matter is lawfull but then we exceed in the measure in the bounds or limits we over-joy The water runnes over the bank and then it gets soyl and it 's as hard to rejoyce in these things and to sinne not as it is to be angry and sinne not 3. There is a gracious and an heavenly Joy when the soul delights it self in God and Christ in all heavenly Objects For though to wicked men these things are a burden yet to an heavenly heart they are the most connaturall Object They are the proper center of the soul as David often professeth his joy in the Lord It 's of this we are to speak of only we must inform you something of joy in the generall The Philosophers speak of a three-fold affection sutable to one another There is Love which is carried out to an Object that is good simply considered There is Desire which moveth to some good thing but absent and not yet obtained And then there is Joy which ariseth from the obtaining and possessing of it And answerable to these there are Divine Graces and supernatural works of Gods Spirit in the soul There is the Love of God which next to Faith is of the greatest glory and activity in the soul 2. There are Desires and earnest longings after God to which hunger and thirst a promise is made of being fully satisfied 3. There is Joy which ariseth from the enjoyment of God onely you must know there is Gaudium viae a joy we have while in the way to Heaven which admits of much increase and meeteth with much opposition and there is Gaudium Patriae a joy in Heaven where the soul will then be so filled that it cannot receive any more To know the nature of this Joy Consider First That the efficient cause of it is onely God The Spirit of God is called the Comforter as you heard because he alone poureth it into the heart as the Heavens onely give rain and it 's called Gal 5.22 The fruit of the Spirit which doth imply that it comes solely by Gods Spirit and that there is excellent sweetnesse in it Lusts are called the workes of the flesh but this with other Graces The fruit of the Spirit Hence it is that as in respect of Regeneration the Spirit bloweth where it listeth So also in respect of Consolation How many of Gods children walk with much consolation and abound in much joy And others again go bowed down and greatly tempted not obtaining comfort though they would give a world for it So that as the Husbandman cannot have rain when he would nor the Merchant winde when he would neither can the godly have comfort when they would as appeareth by David praying so earnestly for the Joy he had lost It 's the fruit of the Spirit Therefore joy doth not flow from Graces exercised as by a natural resultancy as heat doth from the fire and light from the Sunne but by Gods voluntary dispensation of it The Schoolmen use to say That a man doth not merit that is their proud phrase by rejoycing in God or good things but by his Love which was antecedent and from which joy they say floweth by a naturall necessity But the Scripture makes these two Love and Joy two distinct works of Gods Spirit and that they are separable experience confirmeth it for many men that are high in Grace are low in Comfort As the tall Mountains have few flowers on them or Mines of Gold little grasse covering them Secondly To this Christian Joy is required a knowledge of God and faith in him as revealed
be seen David saith At Gods right hand is fulnesse of joy Psa 16.11 If then the Soul have already fulnesse it doth not desire any other Object If a man have the Ocean he wants not the stream If a man have the Sun he needeth not the Candle Thus he that hath fulnesse of joy in God wanteth not the joy of other creatures Insomuch that he who hath this heavenly joy may be said to be in Heaven while he is here on earth No life comes so near to that of the glorified Saints in heaven as an holy life accompanied with this joy If there can be an heaven upon this Earth this is it This is the Mount of Transfiguration that changeth a mans heart and his countenance that makes him say It 's good to be here Oh what enemies are we to our selves Thou makest thy house thy chamber a prison yea an hell by thy distrustfull fears when every place would be an heaven 4. This Joy of Christ will exceedingly wean a mans heart from the world it will make him undervalue all these earthly things which the world so much admireth Psa 4.7 Thou hast put more gladnesse in my heart then in the time their Corn and Wine encreaseth If then the soul have more joy and gladnesse in Gods presence and in his favour then in all earthly contentments whatsoever no wonder if the heart he loose from the one and fixed upon the other As he that hath eaten honey findes an unsavoury taste in other things compartively or as he that hath stddfastly beheld the Sun is so dazeled with the lustre thereof that he cannot see other inferiour Objects Thus the heart that is once ravished with the sweetnesse and glory that is in God and Christ knoweth not how to stoop to these inferiour fading joys No man then sets so loose in heart from earthly Comforts as he that hath this heavenly joy Every thing tempts him to his losse Shall he lose his fatness and sweetnesse by embracing the Creatures 5. This Joy of Christ will facilitate all holy and religious actions They will make us think the time short and grudge the work of God is so soon over Your worldly joy is called pastime and thus is heavenly upon a better account When a man rejoyceth in the Sabbaths and cals them a delight then they do not as those worldly wretches in the Prophet Amos c. 8.5 say when will the time be over that we may be buying and selling There is nothing makes the duties of holinesse so burthensome to thee as want of joy if they were matter of delight thou wouldst with joy wish that the Sun would stand still be grieved to give over Isa 61.3 It 's called the Oyle of Joy as the Oyl makes the Wheel go speedily or the yoke easie so doth a joyfull heart The voluptuous man The worldly man thinks not the day or week long enough to enjoy his delights much lesse doth the godly man the time of enjoying of God Hence Eternity doth not glut the Saints in heaven and make them weary of God 6. This Christian Joy will bear up the heart above all afflictions and tribulations Thus Jam. 1. They are to account it all joy when they fall into tribulation and 1 Pet. 1.8 he speaketh of those who for the present were in heaviness through manifold temptations yet at that time did greatly rejoyce and that with joy unspeakable and full of glory They could glory over all their tribulations This joy you heard is compared to Oyl and that will alwaies keep us above the waters Oh how happy is it when thy Temptations do not devour thy joy but thy joy takes away the sting of thy Temptations This made the Martyrs and Confessors finde thorns grapes and thistles figs Oh we think that it 's impossible ever for such weak and infirm wretches as we are to go through such Tryals as the Godly have done but if we had their joy it would be no more to us then it was to them 7. Joy as it is participated in this life encreaseth more hungring and desire after the object we desire to have more of it still Take any Object of delight which we do not perfectly enjoy and oh how it quickens and stirs up the appetite to have more still for although perfect joy doth fully satiate the desire and extinguish all thirst because as Aquinas saith well Gaudium se habet ad desiderium sicut quies ad motum and so when the stone is come to the center it moveth no further yet because in this life we have not a perfect fruition of God only have some bunches of the Grapes of Canaan not Canaan it self Therefore the sweetnesse we have in God or Christ doth more stir up the desire after God as you see in David those inchoate enjoyments of God did make him restlesse and impatient for further Communion with him Hence David exhorteth to taste how good God is if once we had but an experimental sweetnesse of the Excellency of his love we should still be breathing after him as David Psal 119. My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to him at all times But especially the heavenly joy produceth this admirable effect so contrary to flesh and bloud that it makes a man look for the coming of Christ and hastening it in his praiers and desires as that which will compleat his joy Here sorrow and joy will be mixed together but there is pure and unmixed joy and that to all Eternity Oh what a wilderness what a place of banishment is this world to such a tempered heart This is the valley of Tears and that is the mountain of joys Now to all this may be Objected That it cannot be a Christians duty to be alwaies rejoycing for many times they lie under sad Temptations especially there are times and seasons when God cals to mourning Is any man afflicted let him pray Is any merry let him sing Psalms And Solomon of old said There is a time to weep and a time to laugh David also saith Psa 126.5 Such as sow in tears shall reap in joy which implieth a time of tears only To this Consider these things 1. It may not be denied but that there are some times wherein God doth in a peculiar manner call to the duty of mourning fasting and humiliation Insomuch that the Prophet Isay complaineth that when God called to mourning they went to their mirth and jollities Isa 21.12 And thus when God shall plainly afflict thee for any sins thou hast committed as David with the losse of his Childe for his Uncleanesse In such cases it is our duty to be humbled and to mourn under his hand But these humiliations and fastings lie in the abstinence of that natural and lawful joy we might take in the Creatures not in spiritual Joy In daies of humiliation it 's a duty to rejoyce in the Lord and such joy will like fire melt and thaw the heart This joy that
kinde of perfection to do so Mat. 5. ult Be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect He cals this patience and forgiving disposition a perfection If then they rail do thou bless if they curse do thou pray this is to pour living coals upon their head as Rom. 12.10 which some understand in a good sense it will melt the man as Saul was under Davids kindness and as you see fire will at last melt iron though never so tough or others in an ill sense as if when thou hast done thy duty God will severely punish them This is the way to bring fire about their ears Take heed therefore of private revengefull thoughts these are unbeseeming a Christian God makes this his Property Vengeance is mine Deut. 32.2 Although the Heathen could say Revenge was sweeter then honey and so it is to a natural man but it 's farre sweeter then honey to a gracious heart to be able to conquer his revengefull disposition private revenge is unlawfull yet a seeking to the Magistrate for to punish offenders or to obtain right is a duty onely take heed of revengefull thoughts in the pursuing of it Fourthly Doth the world hate thee for Christs sake Then rejoyce and be exceeding glad Mat. 5 12. And that for several Reasons 1. As it followeth in that Text Great is your reward in Heaven The more vilified and debased here the more glorified and honoured in Heaven So that wicked men while they think to do thee a mischief they are instrumentall to thy great glory They make thee more happy and more glorious It 's as if a man should be angry with another and in stead of stones he throw precious pearls and diamonds at him which the man takes up and enriches himself with or as if a man threw bread at a dog in stead of being hurt by it he is glad of it and takes it up and eats it Thus it is with wicked men their reproaches their slanders and oppositions make thee more refined and blessed all these will be like so many crowns of glory set upon thy head As the waters did not drown the Ark but lifted it up nearer to Heaven 2. Rejoyce because hereby God honours and puts a glory upon thee that thou shouldst be one who shalt be reproached and vilified for him Admire the goodnesse of God herein and say with David I will be more vile still Thus the Apostles went away rejoycing they were accounted worthy to suffer for Christs Name Act. 5.41 Phil. 1.29 It 's said to be Gods gift to suffer for him To you it is given It 's a priviledge and an honour to lose any thing for Christs sake as Nazianzen said He was glad he had something to loose for Christs sake And so zealous were the primitive Christians of the glory of Martyrdom that many were so dejected because God called them not to it that they needed consolatory letters to satisfie them Though the world look upon them as disgraced and miserable yet God honours thee and this thou art to judge of as the greatest mercy and dignity that ever befell thee 3. Rejoyce because God and Christ will hereby be indeared unto thee and give thee larger supplies and provisions of comfort Nihil crus sentit in ligno quando animus est in Coelo I will be with thee in the fire and water saith God Was not Peter singing of Psalms in the prison Oh then know this is the time of Gods peculiar love of his more mercifull approaches to thee thy winter will be thy summer thy outward troubles will be accompanied with the most inward joyes This is Gods way when the world most slanders and accuseth to give the believer strongest evidences of his Justification within The godly were most enlarged in soul when they were shut into straightest prison and they had most of a bright glorious Heaven when they were plunged into a dark dungeon thy incomes will be rich when thy expences shall be great the more men frown the more will God smile on thee 4. Rejoyce because hereby is a conformity to Christ and to all the holy men that have gone before thee So in Mat. 5.12 Rejoyce because so persecuted they th● Prophets of old and Rom. 8. it 's made the effect of our Predestination to b● conformable unto Christ in these afflictions they are an effect of Predestination These troubles and reproaches God from all eternity appointed thee unto as by which he would glorifie thee They came from that spring of the great love of God which he had toward thee before thou hadst any being so that hereby thou art made like to Christ a glorious Disciple doth not beseem a crucified Saviour neither rich and adorned members become an head crowned with thorns How many have gloried in being like some great and famous men in the world How much rather is this an honour to be reproached as Christ was to be slandered as Christ was the Disciple must not expect to be above his Master 5. Rejoyce as having an opportunity of the exercise and increase of grace The horse neigheth at the battel and war-like sounds as being glad of the occasion A valiant man delights in the occasions of his activity The Pilot sheweth his skill in times of danger and tempests Know therefore that when the world hateth thee God then cals thee out to a spiritual combate thou art then become a spectacle to God he beholds what excellent graces thou wilt shew forth what faith what patience what fortitude what heavenly-mindednesse Now if ever there is a time to shew thy spiritual might and courage yea here is not only an occasion to put forth thy graces but an opportunity to discover thy unfeigned love to God and Christ to own Christ when all the people would make him a King is no trial but to stand to him when they cried away with him Crucifie him this is a good evidence God will then say Now I know thou lovest me when these many waters the world throweth on are not able to quench it though father hate though friends hate though all hate yet this doth not discourage thee in thy love of God What a comfortable evidence is this of thy true grace Nay in some sense thou dost exceed the Angels in doing Gods will for though they be zealous and active in obedience to God yet they meet not with oppositions in their service They are not subject unto the reproaches and contempts of wicked men of the world and therefore in this thou art more then an Angel Lastly Rejoyce because God might have left thee to be such a malicious enemy to godliness as thou seest they are Every time thou hearest what slanders what malicious words the wicked of the world vent against thee O bless God and say I might have been left to such a spirit I was such a devil my self once I opened my mouth against such as fear God as well as he Oh blessed be
God that hath changed my blackmore-skin that hath given me another heart when Paul met with wretched adversaries that blasphemed him and the Gospel he preached No doubt but he reflected upon himself I was such a mad blasphemer once I persecuted the godly once I delighted in cruel vexings of them heretofore And now how great is Gods goodnesse to me that he hath had mercy on me If thou blessest God that he made thee not a Serpent a Toad or that thou wert not a natural fool or a mad man How much rather that he hath not given thee up to such a vile malicious disposition The next thing is to give Cautions and Arguments of admonition to the wicked who thus hate Christ and his Disciples And First Let them know it 's a causless hatred yea it 's an hatred where the greatest love and delight should be And that upon two grounds For 1. They are such who would bring them to everlasting salvation if they were not prejudiced their exemplary life is it not a light shining before you that beholding their godly holy and pure conversation you may be thereby wone to glorifie God The counsels admonitions and spiritual help they would vouchsafe to thee should make thee prize them more then all outward comforts Do ye love such as can make you rich preferre you to places of honour supply your necessities Oh how welcome should such be to you that would give you many an helping lift to Heaven Why then is thy hatred so causless Is it because they desire thy salvation Is it because they pray for thee they mourn in secret for so David professed Rivers of waters ranne down his eyes because men kept not Gods Law Wert thou not a stone and adamant these things would turn thy heart towards him 2. They are such for whose sake thou enjoyest many blessings It 's because of them the ship thou art in is not drowned God keepeth up the world in reference to them therefore the hedges are kept because of the Corn in the ground The innocent deliver the Island for Lot's sake Sodom was spared a long season These stand in the gap when Gods overflowing tempest would carry all before it Secondly Consider that thou dost not hurt them yea thou increasest that which makes them so hatefull to thee For by this means they walk more closely with God they separate themselves from the world It 's a mercy to them they have this hatred otherwise they might comply too much and ensnare their souls and symbolize with mens wickedness Now how absurd is thy hatred by that thou makest them more holy and so advancest that which is so abominable to thee Thou art to them as a fyle to the rusty iron thou art to them as Lazarus dogs tongues were to lick his sores whole thou art Gods scullion to wipe and keep his vessel clean who would not think thou shouldst rather do as that persecutour that would not let him die saying he envied him the honour of a Martyr Thy very hatred should make thee leave hating and opposing because hereby thou makest the godly man more glorious and happy Thirdly Consider hereby thou hurtest thy self and not them As the dog that bites the stone for rage or a man that shoots an arrow at a brazen wall and that recoileth back and kils the Archer thy hatred thy cursings will fall back upon thy head It 's not the godly man only but thy self and thy own soul thou hatest See whether those many curses and miseries thou hast be not the fruit of thy hatred thou art a tormentor and troubler to thy self Though Achan troubled Israel yet he troubled himself and his own house also Fourthly Remember that it 's a devilish thing thou art more wicked then a man useth to be Not to obey or yeeld thy self up to godlinesse is a grievous sin but to oppose is a devilish thing Thou dost the work of the devil if he were incarnate he would speak and do as thou dost 5. Remember the woful and heavy judgements which remarkably follow such men Who ever hardened himself against the Lord and prospered This Christ meant when he said he that stumbled at this stone should fall but upon whom this stone shall fall he should be beaten in pieces Christ will fall on such that oppose him and they shall not have the least mercy Vse Doth the world hate Gods people then admire the goodness and power of God that keeps up a poor Church in the midst of such violence that preserveth a few Lambs among so many Wolves Bears and Lions in such a Wildernesse as they are in We justly admire Gods power in putting bounds to the sea that it overfloweth not the Land much more admirable was that goodness of God in preserving the Israelites when the waters were on every side Oh how much more is God to be praised that keeps his people with any safety any liberty Should wicked men have their will food and raiment and life would be thought too good for thee SERMON LXXXIV Of Conformity to Christ in not being of the world And in his Sufferings JOH 17.14 Because they are not of the world even as I am not of the world THE Last particular considerable in this Verse is the exemplarity of Christ or the Disciples conformity unto Christ They are not of the world as I am not of the world Which words are repeated in the 16. verse and therefore have some weighty and great matter contained in them In the words we are to take notice 1. What it is to be of the world 2. How Christ was not 3. The similitude between Christ and his Disciples herein To be of the world is to partake of the manners life and conversation of the world to have the spirit of the world in a man and this is oppsite to the Spirit of God and to all heavenly things so that both the inward inclination and outward conversation is wholly worldly as our Saviour saith he that is of the earth is earthy That as bodies in whom the element of the Earth is predominant doe naturally fall downward so that soul which is thus principled and habituated in a worldly manner doth minde only earthly things this is to be of the world To be in the world is another thing Our Saviour and the Disciples were in the world but not of it A man may be in the water for some good end but the fish are properly of the water because that is their Element and they have a watery Constitution 2. Christ is said Not to be of the world Now that is a higher degree then the Disciples can be for Christ as God is no waies of the world and then take him as man yet being conceived by the holy Ghost he was not of the world in a natural way 1 Cor. 15.47 The Second Adam is the Lord from Heaven opposed to the first Adam who is said to be of
the Earth earthly And then 3. If it be taken for the wickednesse of it Then Christ was never so of the world Therefore here is a difference between Christ and his Disciples for though they were not now of the world yet once they were plunged in sinne and corrupted through pollutions as others were but Christ never was of the world in this sence Therefore in the last place the particle of similitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not of equality as if the Disciples were in every respect not of the world as Christ was but in some resemblance only The words thus explained two Doctrines arise Doct. 1 First The not being of the world is that which makes wicked men hate the Godly If there were sutablensse of Naturee and Manners then like would agree with like Hence 1 Joh 3.12 when the Apostle instanced in Cains murther of his Brother because his own works were evil he saith v. ●3 Marvell not if the world hate you Never wonder at that but rather if it should not hate you Our Saviour speaks notably of this to his Brethren Joh. 7.5 7. For they did not beleeve in him though so greatly acquainted with him and saw his Miracles The world cannot hate you but me it hateth because I testifie of it that the works thereof are evil It cannot hate you No wicked man can hate another viz. in respect of fundamental principles as a Godly man is hated It 's true wicked men may be at deadly fewd one with another but it is not from contrary principles of nature but from matter of profit and injuries or wrongs done As the Dogge doth not hate another yet for bones and other matters they will be ready to kill one another Though therefore Herod and Pilate cannot endure one another yet that opposition was upon carnal Interests it was not like that hatred which was to Christ Therefore when such Earthly Interests are removed they can heartily embrace one another but the wicked man can never love the Godly till his Nature he changed till he become godly also as the wolf can never love a sheep unlesse he be made a sheep To open this Let us Consider What it is not to be of the world And first It consists in Doctrine to be beleeved Such are not of the world who receive those hevenly Truths that the world cannot reach unto yea that it scorneth and derideth When Peter made that Solemn Confession That Christ was the Son of the Living God It was told him Flesh and bloud had not revealed this to him Mat. 16.16 There is a worldly Religion worldly Doctrines such as are sutable to the principles and Interests of the world and these are readily embraced The world loveth such Preachers and such Doctrines 1 Joh. 4. 4. The Apostle John speaking of the Antichristian Spirit that was coming into the world saith of such Teachers They are of the world therefore the world heareth them but we are of God and he that is not of God heareth us not Therefore there is a remarkable opposition 1 Cor. 2 12. between the Spirit of the world and the Spirit of God For by this only we come to know the things that God hath given us Then therefore are we not of the world when God shall so enlighten our mindes by Faith That we do assuredly beleeve those Truths God hath revealed in his Word that neither our corrupt Reasons nor our Education to the contrary nor the Opinions of the most men and great men in the world shall make us go contrary and certainly the Lives of men are so worldly because their Understanding is so We receive our Religion not as it 's revealed of God but as we can any waies turn it to our corrupt ends 2. Not to be of the world is to be Regenerated and born again To have another Nature then what we come with into the world another not substantially but qualitatively whereby we are said 1 Pet. 1.4 to be partakers of the divine Nature So that though at first made of the dust yet now we fly up to Heaven as the vapours though arising out of the Earth yet ascend up to Heaven and follow the motions thereof Joh. 3. and 2 Cor. 5.17 A man must be born again or from above and he is made a new Creature Old things are past away This is to be above the world not of the world and indeed seeing the Soul is not naturally of the world being created by God why shouldst thou voluntarily debase it and make it a Servant to every worldly Object to love the world To delight in the world To be ensnared by the world Oh pray for this Divine Nature beg for Regeneration for till this be done thou art all over earthly a worm is as good as thou art Thy Love thy heart thy thoughts thy all is nothing but earth 3. Not to be of the world is to have an Heavenly Conversation To live as one whose heart is with Christ already in Heaven It 's not enough to be once regenerated but the progresse of our Lives is to be spent on Heavenly motives and Considerations As the Fowls of the Heaven though they light upon the Ground to eat their meat yet immediatly fly up again Thus it is with the godly though they take the lawful comforts of this world yet their hearts are presently off ascending to God Thus the Apostle Our Conversation is in Heaven Phil. 3 20. And because we are risen with Christ we set our affections upon things above Col. 3.1 2. See our Lord Christ he was not of the world Did he not manifest it by his conversation when he made it his meat and drink to doe his Fathers Will when he was alwaies either praying to God or preaching to the people Oh then do thou endeavour after this life Though thou art in thy Family in thy Trade in thy Calling yet be not of the world because the choicest part of thy self is from God Thou canst say what are all these to the favour of God They are good to use but not to enjoy They are good sawce but not good meat a good Inne but not a good home 4. Not to be of the world is to partake of other joys other comforts then the world knoweth of and so to be exercised with other Temptations then the world understands with other joys Therefore it 's said It hath not entred into the heart of man to conceive of this 1 Cor. 2.9 It 's called Joy unspeakable in the holy Ghost 1 Pet. 1.8 David acknowledged God had put more joy in his heart then worldly men could have in all their abundance Psa 4. Alas what is thy carnal mirth and delight to that admirable and unspeakable joy which the godly finde in God This is a joy that will hold in tribulations and death it self when in such a Drought the wicked mans stream is quite dried up his temptations also are such as the world
accounts madnesse To be in spiritual desertions to have no sence of Gods favour to fear himself a damned Castaway to have no rest in his bones day or night To be assaulted with the devils buffetings to be filled with hideous thoughts These things the world also knoweth not and therefore they count them melancholy and mad Such as by their too much poring about Sermons and good Books put themselves out of their wits Lastly They are not of the world in respect of their Conversation Rom. 12. they are not conformed to the fashion of the world The one goeth Westward the other Eastward as it were Their words and language are different their actions are contrary What the Righteous man loveth the wicked abominateth and what the wicked loveth the godly man abhorreth Thus as they say of the heavens the primum mobile hath one motion of its own and the inferiour Orbes a contrary motion to that Thus the godly man he moveth one way toward heaven he presseth hard thither The wicked man he maketh as much haste to hell So as there were two strugling in the Mothers womb which encreased her pain Thus there are two striving upon the face of the world an Isaac and an Ismael a Jacob and an Esau the Seed of the Woman and the Seed of the Serpent This enmity will not be extinct in this life Vse of Exhortation to the godly Remember what ye are Not of the world Therefore take heed of worldly affections worldly hearts For where your treasure is there will your heart be also If it be in God in Heaven there the heart will be If in Earth and in earthly things there it will be You tremble at the commission of grosse and grievous sins you think hell it self would immediatly devour you upon such sins Be afraid of the world Let it not be a Dalilah to thee a Judas to thee by kissing thee to destroy thee Consider therefore God hath put gall into all worldly comforts therefore every creature every condition in the world hath a sting in it that thy soul should be more on God Thou canst never live quietly till above the werld In heaven only there are no storms no waves no disquietings and this life thou maist attain unto He that is not of the world The troubles of the world hurt not him the losses of the world grieve not him The vexations of the world disquiet not him But because we are still of the world in part we are not compleatly and perfectly out of disquietnesse Therefore in this life we remain in a combating conflicting way that heaven may be the sweeter Doct. 2 Obs 2. That it is the honour of Beleevers that they are like Christ They are not of the world as he is not What a glorious condescention was this that he who is the God of all the Earth and hath all things at his command yet be in the world hated scorned and at last crucified That it shall be no better with him then it was with us Hence our Saviour added this as I am of the world both for consolation and information Information that they should look for such hatred misery and trouble as they saw him grapling with such a contradiction of sinners as he sustained and then also for consolation They could not think much if the Disciple were not above the Master so could they expect to be more loved of God then he Could they think to walk more wisely and holily then he did It must needs bring much comfort when we shall Consider that it can never be so bad with us but it was worse with Christ Are we hated so he Did he seem forsaken of God So may we be To open this Consider That there is a twofold conformity and likenesse to Christ The first is active the second passive An active conformity consists in the Imitation of Christ and resembling him in our lives That as Christ lived so we endeavour to do Although there be some things wherein it 's impossible for us to imitate him as in his actions which he did as God yet in those things which he did as being under the Law we are to conform to him We are to be humbles meek and patient as he was We are to do Gods Will and to seek Gods glory as he did Let the same minde be in you saith the Apostle which was in Christ Phil. 2.5 Christs life and death was chiefly satisfactory and meritorious but secondarily it was exemplary being as a Copy to write after Thus Paul bids them be Followers of him as he was of Christ Phil 3.17 Heathens have prescribed to have some grave sober man in our mindes alwaies to think him present but behold a greater then all men even Christ himself Check thy self when impatient discontented repining at sufferings saying Did Christ do thus 2. There is a passive Conformity of which the Text speaks To be like him in his Sufferings To have the same hard measure in the world as he had Rom 8. We are said to be predestinate to be conformable unto Christ in this very particular What befell Christ God hath so ordered that it should befal us Not indeed for the same end for Christs Sufferings were not for himself or because he had sinned but to make an atonement to God for us But our sufferings are for our sins not to satisfie Gods justice but to humble us and to make us in some measure to feel how much Christ suffered for us what the wrath and anger of God was he endured for us This passive resemblance then unto Christ in his state of humiliation God hath ordained all beleevers unto That as it behoved Christ to suffer and so to enter into Glory Thus it doth behove every godly man through many Tribulations to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven As he had a Crown of Thorns before a Crown of Glory as he must drink of the Brook and then lift up his head so it must be with all his Disciples and this is matter of Comfort though otherwise grievous to flesh and bloud For 1. Hereby we see that we may be never the lesse loved of God though greatly afflicted in this world For was not Christ though dearly beloved of his Father yet delivered up to the cruell mockings and rage of men Did not he cry out My God why hast thou forsaken me We may reade but of one Sonne of God without sin but not of one without chastisement even Christ himself drank deep of that Cup Do not thou then doubt of thy Sonship or Interest in the Fathers love because of the present afflictions that are upon thee Christ was a man of sorrows and yet God from Heaven said This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased 2. There is matter of comfort because hereby we are ascertained of our Conquest over them That no tribulation shall separate God and us for Christ hath undergone these conflicts as
so farre as their presence was comfortable and necessary to us we may grieve God would not have the old bird killed with her young ones and he that would have mercy shewed to the fowls of the air will much more shew it to his people It is true God in his wisdome many times takes his own children betimes out of the world even too soon for them we would think being in the prime of their service and too soon also for their children and dependents on them but therein God is even mercifull though for the present we do not perceive it For this you know God hath determined in mercy the time of our abode in this world Thou canst not follow me now said Christ to Peter but he should in his time John 13 3● Lastly It 's not alwayes best to have the best good immediately but in it's time It 's true to be with the Lord to be freed from sinne is best in it self absolutely considered but then respectively if this and that be considered quoad hic nunc it 's not best God doth every thing beautifull in his season None could be more loved of the Father then Christ himself he came from the bosome of his Father yet till he had finished his course he is kept from him We say even the best and holiest thoughts or desires may come in unseasonably into our hearts and so not be best at that time As the childs duty is not to learn the best book at first but what he is most capable of Though Heaven and glory be best yet not at this time for thee partake of it So that when it 's best to go out of this world must be left to the wisdom of God But you will ask Is it never lawfull to pray unto God that he would take us out of the world May we not desire to die and to be freed from sin Are we not to pray that Christ would come To this I answer First It 's never lawfull to desire to go out of the world from impatiency or discontent because we have troubles and vexations in this world Thus Elijah sinned when he prayed to God to take away his life for this was through the discontent then upon him So Job when he breaketh forth into those dreadfull imprecations about himself expostulating with God Why life was continued to such who sought for death more then for hid treasures Look then to this that no impatient discontented thoughts make thee weary of this world Secondly Earnest desires to be with God and hearty affections for eternal glory are lawfull and a special duty Thus we are to pray Gods kingdom may come and thus the Saints are said to long for and hasten to the coming of Christ 2 Pet. 3.12 Thus if we speak abstractedly take the thing in it self Our hearts ought to be so heavenly that we are to be as pilgrims here longing for heaven our rest Thirdly It 's never lawfull absolutely and peremptorily to desire of God that he would take us out of this world though our hearts be heavenly but with submission and resignation If Lord I have done my work I have finished my course as we see Christ in this Chapter I have done the work thou gavest me to do therefore glorifie me Austin expresseth this disposition well when he said O Lord if I be yet necessary to my people I do not refuse to live not refuse because in another place he saith Some godly men have need of patience to live as others to die It must be alwayes therefore conditionally If you object Many Martyrs for I mention not those Circumcelliones that would force men to kill them hereby glorying in a contempt of death who willingly offered themselves to the persecutors when none accused them To this some say They were some Hereticks that did so not the true Christians But yet Histories record it of true Christians and then that was an extraordinary spirit in them which as we cannot condemn so neither must we imitate we must live by precepts not examples no not of holy men Vse Do not thou break out into impatient discontents about any exercise or temptation thou art afflicted with say not Why doth not God remove it from me or me from it Consider this in the Text I pray not thou shouldst take them out of the world What did Christ say when Peter drew out his sword Could not I pray for legions of Angels and the Father would send them to help me but the Scripture must be fulfilled So do thou say God could deliver me from all these troubles he hath thousands of ways to put me into rest but I open not my mouth because thou Lord dost it Indeed if they should never be taken out of this world if thy troubles were eternal as the torments of the damned in hell thou mayest justly cry out in the horrour of thy soul But God hath put a period he hath set his time for thy being in this world when thou art ripe thou shalt be cut down and carried into Gods barn When thy service is done then God will call thee to glory SERMON LXXXVI That it is a greater Mercy to be kept from Sinne and all Evil in our Afflictions and Troubles then from the Afflictions themselves JOH 17.15 But that thou shouldst keep them out of the Evil. THis is the positive part of Christs Explication of himself in his Petition for his Disciples viz. to keep them from the evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes this is applied to the thing or matter which is evil as in the Lords Praier Mat. 6.13 Deliver us from evil 2. To Persons Thus often in the Scripture Mat. 12.45 So it shall be to that wicked generation in that day Sometimes it 's applied to the devil as the Original of all wickednesse who also tempts to it So Matth. 13.19 Then comes the wicked one 1 Joh. 2.13 Ye have overcome the evil one Now there are some who limit this to the devil keep them from the devil because it is with the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that is not necessary as appeareth Matth. 5.37 Whatsoever is more then this cometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Mat. 5.49 Resist not evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that cannot be the devil for we are commanded to resist him but we may take the word generally both for sinne and the devil and sinful persons That the sence may be thus Though I pray not that thou should keep them free from all evil and afflictions yet I pray that they may be preserved from sinne thereby that whatsoever may befall them yet they may not sinne and here we see also that it's Gods gift to keep men in their afflictions that they sin not Otherwise they would undo themselves and through many tribulations they would go not into the Kingdom of Heaven but of hell from misery here to misery hereafter Obs That it 's a greater mercy to
are of Troubles This is but the deprivation of some limited comfort or particular advantage but sinne depriveth of God the Fountain of all comfort Secondly It 's made an Argument of an Hypocrite and an insincere heart to choose Sinne rather then Affliction To be affected with thy miseries and Troubles earnestly desiring the removing of them rather then the sanctifying of them Job 36.21 Elihu though he erred in the Application yet in the generall urgeth this as a Signe of one not rightly constituted towards God when he bids him Take heed because he had chosen Iniquity rather then affliction We see the ordinary discovery of Hypocrites is to commit any sinne that they may avoid trouble Thus Matth. 15. The temporary Beleever he withereth when the Sunne ariseth to scorch This hath been the great Cause of the Apostacy of so many Thousands when the Evil Day hath come upon them They have not been able to be vilified and reproached and abhorred for Christ and therefore are there so many Exhortations to presevere and to overcome to hold out to the last so that thou canst not discover the rottennesse and the guile and deceit of thy Heart more then by being willing to commit any sinne to avoid thy immanent Dangers and therefore what 〈◊〉 mercy is it when God shall so sanctifie thy heart that in these waters of Afflictions thou canst see a full manifestation of thy Graces In them thou dost perceive how upright and sincere thy Soul is to God That all thy fear is thou maist not offend or displease God Thou dost not so much think of thy own grief and pain as that thou shouldst do any thing to grieve the Spirit of God Thirdly It 's a blessed thing to be kept from the evil of Affliction though not from the affliction Because then we may have the Presence of God and the comfortable enjoyment of him Whereas if we sinne in them we are every waies miserable we have no comfort within and God will give no Comfort without The Scripture speaks of many precious promises to the godly in their Troubles that He will be with them that he will never forsake them insomuch that as their Tribulations abound so the Consolations of God abound much more 2 Cor. 1.3 Now all this is while we are holy and heavenly in afflictions The best part of our life may be that which was in outward exercises David never had more of God neither did his Faith and Holinesse more abound then when tossed up and down with Troubles But oh how sad is it when thou shalt by thy Unbelief distrust and other sinful waies offend God that now thou hast no Comfort within nor any from God who is the God of all Consolation It 's sinne only is the sting of an affliction God and sinne will not be together but God and Afflictions are often together No marvell then if thou art thus to fear sinne more then any trouble because trouble is not trouble if sinne be absent a gracious heart in afflictions hath an Heaven within though it may have an hell without Fourthly It 's happy to be kept from sinne in Affliction because Afflictions are for this End to remove sinne to subdue corruption and to mortifie lusts Thus they are said to work the blessed fruit of Righteousnesse Heb. 12.11 though for a time they seem grievous And God saith It 's the fruit of Jacobs Trouble to purge away his sinne Isa 27.9 Now then If Afflictions and Chastisements be for this end to conquer sinne to make thee more holy Wo be unto thee if they encrease and multiply sinne in thee Think with thy self God layeth these loads upon me to kill my pride my worldly-mindednesse to quicken me up against deadnesse and dulnesse Now how shall I ever behold God if the clean contrary be found in me If Unbelief and Frowardnesse do overcome me Do not then so much matter Affliction as Sinne for Afflictions may be sanctified to thee They may be made happy Instruments of Grace and Holinesse to thy Soul but if sinne be drawn out then the end of afflictions is lost and how shalt thou be helped when that which is to cure thee shall augment thy disease Fifthly It 's happy to be kept from the Evil of an affliction because of the pronenesse of our hearts to be tempted when we are in such provocations Our Saviour supposeth by this Praier that it was a very hard thing to be in the world that doth so annoy and oppose those that are godly and not to be moved one way or other to wickednesse It 's not an easie thing under Tribulations especially if they be long and tedious not to pollute the Soul one way or other You see Job though his Patience be so greatly celebrated and he at the first did so graciously resigne himself into Gods hand yet when his Troubles were continued and sorely oppressing of him then he breaks out into much Impatience and bitter Rebellion against God Hence the Psalmist speaks notably Psalm 125.3 The Rod of the Wicked shall not alwaies rest on the back of the Righteous lest they put forth their hands to Iniquity Here you see there is a very great danger that even a Godly man under constraint and sore Afflictions may be tempted to iniquity may do that which he never thought possible to do yea which will be a continual hell unto him Oh then how comfortable and sweet a thing will it be to come out of thy Afflictions thy Heart not condemning thee for impatience or any sinnefull distemper Sixthly It 's better to be kept from Sinne then from Afflictions Because the latter of these are made to the Godly the Effects of Gods Love Whom I love I chasten saith God Revel 3. And Hebr. 12. If ye he without Chastisement ye are not Sonnes but Bastards But to be left to Sinne and to have thy Strength taken from thee to resist Temptations argueth Gods great anger It 's that way of Displeasure which he useth to Wicked men To give them up to strong Lusts to beleeve a Lye and to have hardened Hearts lest they understand Although we see God may for a while being incensed and provoked leave even the Godly themselves unto the evil of a Temptation Thus Peter was David and Hezechiah were Know then that God frowneth on thee his Anger is gone out against thee when thy afflictions encrease thy sinne God doth not ordinarily do thus to his people but Troubles and Afflictions they are but the Effects of his Love and by them he fitteth and prepareth them to be polished Stones in that Heavenly Jerusalem Vse 1. of Instruction To shew the Vanity of the Spirits even of those who are most holy for who is not taken up with the lesse neglecting the greater In Afflictions is not thy whole Soul spent how to remove them how to be freed from them and how few are thy Thoughts for the Sanctification and Preservation from the Evil of
them Thou thinkest with thy self Oh when will the hand of the Lord be over Oh that this burthen were taken off and in the mean time praiest not watchest not lest this should any waies distemper thee and make thee sinful Vse 2. How foolish they are that wil run into any sinne so they may avoid danger That will bow their knees to Baal worship the golden Image ere they will venture any misery What saith our Saviour to such They that will thus save their lives shall lose them God frustrates their earthly Expectations and then Oh the wofull horrour sinne will leave upon them They will finde a wounded Spirit worse then any calamity in the world They will wish O that they had been wracked and tormented in their bodies so that they had never committed such sinnes as wrack and torment their Souls David when he had lost all heavenly joy and all his desirable things did perish could then tell you that sins guilt upon the Soul was worse then all the miseries and troubles that ever he did undergo SERMON LXXXVII That God hath determined a precise time to every particular man in the world how long he shall live JOHN 17.15 I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world c. THough we have gathered the full vintage of this Text yet there remain some gleanings of which we may say with the Prophet a blessing is in it Two remarkable truths there are implied the first in the Negative the second in the Positive part In the first in the Negative I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world We may observe That God hath the dominion and immediate disposing of our being and continuance in this world When his day is come when his Decree is expired then none can withstand when he commands to return to the dust from whence we came or shall say This night thy soul shall be taken away there cannot be any gainsaying This truth is the more to be regarded because it hath been doctrinally agitated by learned men Whether there be an immovable term of life in this world prefixed to every man and then practically it is of great concernment as is to be shewed But to explain this truth consider First That God hath not onely determined a general or specifical time for all in the world but an individual and peculiar for every man or woman a general term of life God hath provided so that none shall live beyond it No man ever lived a thousand years In the beginning of the world then men were longer lived but in Moses his time we see him affirming the ordinary bounds of a mans life to be threescore and ten Psa 90. For in the wilderness by their wickedness they brought short dayes upon themselves So that all creatures have a general term of life There is the maximum quod sic though some live longer then others Thus men have bounds in the general they cannot out-live But this is not enough God hath appointed to every individual man his continuance in the world so that it is God that taketh him out of the world when his time cometh 2. Though God hath thus appointed our continuance in the world so that in respect of his providence none could live longer or shorter yet if we respect second causes and speak according to them so we may truly say such might have continued longer in the world Hence wicked men are said not to live out half their dayes and Solomon saith Be not over-wicked Eccles 7.17 Why shouldst thou die before thy time Wicked men many times by their wickedness drunkennes and uncleanness kill themselves and sometimes provoke God to destroy them But though they are said not to live out half their dayes yet that is to be understood in respect of second causes not Gods appointment for so it was their whole dayes 3. Though God hath appointed the times of our abode or removal out of the world yet this decree and appointment is brought about in the use of means We are not to apprehend such a decree in God that we shall live such a time let us do what we will eat or not it 's no matter for the use of the means This is wretchedly to dishonour God for though Gods will doth not uncertainly depend upon thy will yet his appointment is with great sweetness and condescention to second causes both natural and rational so that they are moved by him according to their natures Therefore when Paul had a revelation That none in the ship with him should perish yet he tels them that unless they continued in the ship with him they should perish Act. 27.31 4. Therefore though God hath appointed the bounds of our life in this world yet he hath kept it secret from us he lets none know unless by special revelation the times of their death And therefore there is a duty imposed upon all that they use the means of life Thou shalt not kill reacheth first to a mans self and then to another Hence to live chearfully to use the help of the Physician are duties Christ said The sick need the Physician Mat. 9.12 as for secret things they belong to God The souldier knoweth not whether he shall conquer such an enemy scale such a wall yet because his General commands him he is ready to obey and thus though we cannot tell such means shall prolong our lives in the world yet Gods will cannot be neglected without great sin 5. God hath determined the time of our being in the world out of justice and wrath to the wicked out of mercy and wisdom to the godly It 's anger to the wicked for all the while they live they increase their sin they treasure up wrath so that it had been well for them if they had been cut off by death long before They live to make hell the hotter for them when they die But to the godly the time of their abode is limited in mercy The righteous is taken away from the evil to come Isa 57.1 The shepherd driveth his sheep to a refuge before the storm ariseth The jewels are safely put up when the house is in danger when Simeon had seen and imbraced Christ then he had liberty to depart The word is used in Scripture sometimes of those that are dismissed out of prison or are dispatched when their errand is done or freed from a flux or such disease that is upon them and certainly in these respects it may be applied when God taketh his out of the world it 's because they have finished this work and death freeth them from this world that was like a prison to them yea and now a stop is put to all those lusts that were like a bloody flux running from them so that the time when God takes his out of the world is from much wisdom and great mercy They shall not go sooner nor yet later then he willeth and thus many
and so is ready to infect and damn every one therein that may be amplified in the following verse And Vse 1 1. Hath God appointed the time of thy going out of the world then labour and work hard in his vineyard He continueth thee here till thou hast finisht that service he hath appointed thee for Thus our Saviour would not have his Disciples taken out of the world till they had seasoned and inlightned it with their good doctrine If therefore God continueth thy life in this world because he hath more service and work for thee to do then take heed thou art not idle and negligent Oh it will be very uncomfortable to thee to have the night come on thee and thou canst work no more when yet thy conscience shal accuse thee This I have not done and that I was to do Our Saviour saith Blessed is that servant whom his master when he cometh shall finde so doing Luk. 12.47 Should you send your servant upon matters of life and death thy childe or friend lieth a dying and he in the way fall asleep or go to idle games and pastimes how unsufferable would it be How greater will thy guilt be for thou art commanded to strive to enter in at the strait gate to take the kingdom of heaven by violence thy soul lieth at the stake thy happiness is ingaged yet for all this thou livest unprofitably and unfruitfully Oh think how sad thy account will be Thou must go out of the world thou canst not stay any longer and thou wilt cry out Oh give me more time Oh give me longer space my soul is not set in order I have not done this or that service for thee Vse 2 2. Doth God appoint us our time in the world then we are not to be sinfully dejected about the fears of death either naturally or violently either in an ordinary way or from the violence and persecution of others for the time of thy departure is in Gods hand No power in the world can send thee sooner to the grave then God hath decreed Many of the servants of God have greatly laboured under the fears of death especially in times of persecution and rage from adversaries How prone have men been to fear men more then God Now whence did all this arise but from want of faith that to God belong the issues of death Nothing can destroy thee sooner then God hath appointed What care did Herod take to kill Christ yet that could not be and so Pharaoh to destroy all the male-children of Israel yet one must be kept that would be a means to destroy Pharaoh Live then above the fear of death say My times are in Gods hand it 's not as man will but as God wils Vse 3 3. Do not wilfully abuse this Doctrine to sinfulnes contempt of means or neglect of duties for this poison many have suckt out of this flower they would not hold That God hath prefixed a term of life for this they think would overthrow all use of means all neglect of praier whereas this supposeth and establisheth them rather for God who hath appointed the end hath also appointed and commanded the means and suppose we could not reconcile Gods providence and mans liberty in the use of the means yet seeing the Scripture revealeth the one and commandeth the other it 's good for us to rest therein Vse 4 4. Be content under the hand of God that takes thy dearest relations out of the world Imitate Job The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken Art thou the Judge of the world Art thou the preserver of men Why then dost thou murmur if God do what he pleaseth herein Vse 5 Lastly Let the jolly and wicked sinner know God hath appointed his day Thou shalt not be alwayes eating and drinking and making merry in this world Oh what a confounded man wilt thou be who hast no other hope or comfort but what is of the world SERMON LXXXVIII The Heavenly man much improved by much considering that he is not of this world JOH 17.14 They are not of the world even as I am not of the world OUR Saviour had immediatly before in the tenth Verse urged this Argument in his Praier for his Disciples and here we see within so little a space he repeateth it again Though therefore we have handled this already yet because it is repeated again and it is well observed that those things which our Saviour did more then once say they have some notable Excellency and deserve a second Consideration according to that old Rule Pulchra sunt bis dicenda And in the Hebrew there is often a Gemination of the Word for the more Efficacy and Certainty Because I say it 's thus repeated by our Saviour who had infinite Treasures of Wisedom within him who was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and could not be streightned in words Therefore let us also have a second improving of it You see the Argument that it is twice repeated They are not of the world God is entreated to preserve them because they are not of the world even as Christ is not The Explication of this you have heard already Therefore I proceed to the Observation Obs That it 's good for the People of God often and often to meditate on this That they are not of the world This is a Truth that unlesse unfolded and drawn out We can never see the Excellency of it unlesse you rub and pounce this matter into powder you can never finde the sweetnesse of it if you do not as they did to the Sacrifice open it and cut it in peeces laying every part by it self methodicaly you cannot see the inward excellency of it The people of God are not of this world they are in it but not of it They are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sanctified and set apart from the common use of the world as in the Jews Pedagogy Vessels and Garments and Persons were set apart only for a sacred use Hence they are compared to Starres that shine in a dark night thus are they in a crooked Generation Phil. 2.15 As the Starres are not compounded of sublunary matter neither are they capable of such destructive alterations as sublunary and materiall things are So it should be with the Children of God Now there are two main Grounds and Reasons or Springs from whence the people of God should so often reflect upon this That they are not of the world And the one is of Instruction to duty The other is of Consolation and Comfort The due Meditation of this will abundantly instruct to duty in these particulars First It will make us heavenly-minded and take away that predominant earthlinesse in us which makes us incline downwards The ●one doth not more naturally fall to the ground then our Souls till regenerated move to earthly things Now the Apostle argueth to the People of God Col. 3.1 2 3. If ye
of the world not to think it strange if there are some who dare not run into the same excesse of Riot with them Do not complain of their rigidnesse and singularity that they have no good fellowship with them and so are not fit to live in the world How can two walk together except they be agreed vnlesse there were the same natures the same principles never think there can be the same hearts yea do thou by them be admonished and hasten out of this world by an heavenly change upon thee It 's no staying in this Sodom in this Babylon SERMON LXXXIX Of growth in Grace shewing that and how many wayes a Godly man may be more sanctified JOHN 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth HItherto our Saviour hath pray'd for the preservation of his Disciples in this world from the evil thereof We now proceed to the second main general part of his Petition which is their Sanctification So that in this verse we are to take notice of the Matter it self prayed for Sanctifie 2. The Subject Them 3. The Instrumental cause Through thy truth 4. The Description or Explication of this Thy Word is Truth We will conjoyn the Matter prayed for and the Subject together Sanctifie them The word to sanctifie is of a large signification in the Scripture but to our purpose here are two principal ones First To sanctifie is often to consecrate and set apart to an holy use and thus many expound it that our Saviour doth by this prayer commend them unto God in their Ministerial labour That as the Priests of old were sanctified by many external Rites so are the Disciples in a spiritual manner by Christ at this time and this appeareth probable by the verse following As thou hast sent me into the world even so have I also sent them into the world This therefore is part of the meaning but I shall referre the considering of that notion to the next verse The second general and frequent use of the word is to make inwardly holy by renewing all the parts and abilities of the soul to walk in an holy manner and in this sense it is partly to be taken here because the Word of God is the instrumental cause of it And if you ask How could Christ pray for the sanctification of his Disciples who were already sanctified To this the Answer is easie That he prayeth for the continuance of and increase in sanctification That they may be more and more increasing in holinesse for no man is come so farre that he cannot go further he is not at the utmost of holinesse Hence we see the Scripture speaking of or supposing persons already godly doth yet exhort and command Sanctification still 1 Thess 5 23. I pray God sanctifie you wholly and preserve your whole spirit soul and body blamelesse Here those that are already sanctified yet are prayed for to have a further degree and deeper rooting of Sanctification So Ephes 4.23 24. There he writeth to such as are already converted That they be renewed in the spirit of their minde and that they put on the new man yea to these Disciples our Saviour speaketh Matth. 18.3 Except ye be converted c. By this you see That even those who are sanctified or converted may be more sanctified and converted more closely to God For although it be true That if Sanctification be strictly taken for the same with Regeneration then it 's the infusion of a supernaturall life at once So that as a man is born but once naturally so we may say he is regenerated and sanctified but once yet take it more largely for the improving and increasing of grace thus put into us then we are to be more converted and more sanctified daily and in this respect Sanctification is said to differ from Justification because the former doth admit of degrees and is more or lesse but so is not Justification Observ That whereas the Disciples though already sanctified and made holy yet are prayed for that they may be more sanctified We may gather That the most holy men that are are yet to be more holy It 's not enough to be once called or converted but we are to grow in grace As it is not enough for a childe to be borne but he must grow up to be a man Thus Revel 22.11 He that is holy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him be holy still and 1 Cor. 7.1 Perfecting holinesse This is a very necessary point for our Saviour John 15. saith He chooseth us that we may bring forth more fruit Doest thou increase in thy faith in thy heavenly-mindednesse in thy zeal Thou canst blesse God when thou findest thy health and bodily strength better when thou findest thy estate increase and why then art thou not more desirous and rejoycing to see thy heart grow better to see thy soul more sanctified And indeed concerning the former things our Saviour saith Which of you by taking care can adde one cubit to his stature But here by fervent and constant prayers we may adde many cubits But to open this Doctrine Let us consider How many waies a godly man may be more sanctified and that is seen in several particulars First He may be more sanctified intensively by adding more and more degrees to the grace he hath received Our Love our Faith our Patience even all our Graces are capable of augmentation It 's not with us as with Christ who received the Spirit without measure so that Christ could not be more holy then he was he could not do any thing more obedientially to God then he did nor love God more then he did but we may all cry out with that man Lord I believe help my unbelief Lord I love help my want of love Therefore James 1.4 we are exhorted to let patience have her perfect work Even as Apelles upon all his Pictures would write Faciebat non fecit because he would still be perfecting it thus are we to all our graces Hence are those daily exhortations To grow in Grace Even a Paul even the tallest Gyants are to grow in Grace Paul saith He knoweth but in part 1 Cor. 13. and then he can but love in part and believe in part Oh then this is of great concernment to think that thy best graces may yet be made farre better Thy Grace is nothing to a Pauls and a Pauls is nothing to the Law or the Rule Look to it then and be as desirous to grow in Grace as ever thou wert to get into the state of Grace Secondly We may be more sanctified extensively in regard of the Objects about which our Graces are to be exercised and in respect of our Relations 1. There is an extension in respect of our Objects of Grace As we are bound to do better then we doe so to do more then we doe What godly man is there that can say he hath done all things God required
Art thou not guilty of many omissions of duties Thou hast not reproved mourned prayed for others Thou hast not done that spirituall and temporall good thou shouldst Paul excused the Philippians that they would have done good but they wanted an opportunity Phil. 4.16 But how many times have we an opportunity and we want hearts John could write to that pious Gaius his Host 3 John vers 2. to wish that his body may be in health even as his soul prospered What a glorious commendation was this It was better with his soule then his outward man Now wee cannot say thus of our selves because we are not diligent and industrious to doe more then we doe Certainly every godly man may be astonished when he shall consider how broad the Commandements of God are and how narrow his heart is growne in doing more then thou hast done 2. Thou mayest be sanctified extensively by the Relations that thou doest take upon thee when made an Husband a Wife a Minister a Magistrate here thy holinesse is to extend further God requireth more of thee and that godlinesse which would have served thee before will not now While the Apostles were private men they needed not that Sanctification which they were to have as Apostles Hence we see the Apostle diligently in his Epistles informing Husbands Wives Children and Servants of what they have to doe And certainly the grace of our Relations is an excellent evidence of our holinesse in the main If the Heathen could say He was not Bonus vir that was not Bonus civis not a good man that was not a good Citizen So may we say He is not a good Christian that is not a good Minister a good Magistrate a good Husband a good Servant The Apostle bids Archippus fulfill his Ministry And thus Ministers are exhorted to look to the flock over which God hath set them Oh then see if thou mayest not be greatly sanctified in thy Relations if they may not be filled with more Wisdome Patience and exemplarity of Conversation Alexander wept because there was no more Worlds he wanted work But to be sure thou hast more then ever thou canst turn unto Every Relation requires a new grace or a new exercise of grace So that here is no time for thee to sit down or to be still as if all thy enemies were conquered Thirdly We may be more sanctified in the deeper radication of Grace in our hearts It 's a Philosophicall Dispute Whether accidents are intensed by addition of degrees or a deeper radication of them in the subject We may conclude That grace in the heart is both wayes improved and for the rooting of it in the soul This is so great a matter that the temporary believer is in this respect as well as others mainly differenced from the true believer Though they had some root yet they had not root enough and the unwise builder did not dig deep enough for this therefore the Apostle prayeth even in reference to such as were already rooted in Christ that they may be more rooted Colos 2.7 Rooted and built up in him And to this purpose are all those Exhortations of being stedfast and immoveable of being strengthened stablished settled 1 Pet. 5 10. as there the Apostle prayeth remrkably There is no man hath laid so sure a foundatinn but he may make it more sure No man is so established but he may be more established Is it not a terrible thing to see the fall of many Cedars in Lebanon of many Starres from Heaven And why is all this They were never established deep enough they never took more root downwards like unwise builders they attended to make a glorious upper-room and stairs in the house but mattered not the foundation and certainly though the childe of God even of the lowest form be so farre rooted that he shall never fall away yet this establishment and stedfastness of his is not by his own power and strength it 's God that keeps him neither is it continued but in the constant daily exercise of holy means Oh then every day be indeavouring after this Lord grace is not rooted in me enough it 's too superficiall Oh that I could say I no longer live but Christ within me Oh that it were like leaven diffusing it's power over me the Promise is Jer. 31. I will write my Law in thine inwards parts in the midst of them So that grace shall be habituated in thee and sink as deep as ever original sin did in thee Fourthly We may be more sanctified Subjectively that is every part of the soul may be more throughly sanctified every day as in that place 1 Thess 5.23 Hence to the converted Ephesians the Apostle exhorts as you heard both a further renovation of the minde and of the will and affections Ephes 4.23 24. In the mind How greatly may we be more sanctified have more illumination more heavenly knowledge of God and Christ Thou art to grow in knowledge more and more Paul was once like a childe but he became a man The Apostle Heb. 6. doth severely reprove those that continued babes and were not carried on to further perfection It 's both a shame and a sinne that thou hast yet no more knowledge and heavenly understanding by the Ministry thou hast enjoyed so many years Again the minde is to be more sanctified by a more firm and solid faith the Apostle then directs That they should be stedfast and sound in the faith not tossed up and down with every winde of doctrine Their increase of faith may be both in the Objects believed though for the things necessary to salvation the knowledge of them by the Spirit of God is promised to every believer yet there the superstructions in Religion which according to the means we enjoy we are to believe Therefore the Apostle 1 Thess 3.10 sheweth his earnest prayer to come to the Thessalonians that he might perfect what was lacking in their faith which could not be meant in regard of foundations but superstructures not essentials but additionals Thus they are to grow in the doctrine of believing but then in the manner of believing that is the proper way for all to grow To believe more certainly more firmly more practically Therefore though the fundamentals of Religion cannot be augmented No necessary truth to salvation can be revealed which was not known before yet it may be more strongly and clearly believed And this is the end of all Authors that write against Heretiques of all sorts not to bring a new Religion into the world or new Articles of Faith but to cause a more clear and firm assent to those things which the subtilty of Heretiques had obscured Further Their mindes are to be more sanctified by holy thoughts heavenly-Meditation For what godly man doth not perceive vain thoughts creeping into his soul as the Froggs did into Pharaoh's Chamber whether he will or no and as for a fixed heavenly-Meditation it 's an
Spirit of God Subjectively preparing and fitting a man by it So that as to an Archer there are two things that are necessary The Mark to aim at and an Eye to see What could an Archer do without Eyes Thus it is with us in all our Actions The Scripture that is the Mark and therefore Sinne is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it misseth of the Mark and then the Spirit of God that must give the Eye Light and Wisedome unto the Understanding The Scripture then is Truth because by it Gods Spirit doth direct and leade us into all Truth Now there is a three-fold Truth that we cannot attain unto without the Scripture 1. True Doctrine 2. True Piety and godlinesse 3. True Consolation and Comfort The want of the first Truth causeth Errour and Heresie The want of the second Hypocrisie and prophanesse The want of the third Distrust and Despair and happy is that man who hath this three-fold Truth and indeed one begets the other True doctrine begets true Godlinesse and true Godlinesse true Consolation For the first Only by this Truth are we guided into true Doctrine whatsoever is brought in contrary or beside this though he were an Angel he is to be accursed Galat. 1. This is the Rule and so what is not according to this must be oblique and crooked Therefore never expect Truth from that man who is not diligent in the Scriptures the Rule of Truth This hath been the Cause why most Heretiques have either accused or despised the Authority of the Scriptures because they know that this Sunne and their darknesse could not consist together They saw their Doctrines and the Scripture could no more stand by each other then the Ark and Dagon Therefore they would rather fall out with Scripture then with their own Opinions as if their own hearts and Consciences were more infallible then the Bible and as if they were not to be made conformable unto the Scripture but the Scripture to them 2. Only by the Scripture do we come to true Piety and Godlinesse You see in this Text Sanctification is by the Truth and James 1.18 God doth beget us by the Word of Truth and many times David doth commend the Word of God for this Effect that it forwarneth man of Sinne That it giveth the Simple Vnderstanding and that even young men may be cleansed from their lusts by taking heed to Gods Word Psalm 119. We see by these Texts that there is no Regeneration or true Reformation but what is wrought by and through the Scripture Therefore Conversion is called the writing of Gods Law in a mans heart So that this makes it clear that though many Heretiques may live civil and externally Religious Lives yet they have no true Godlinesse for false Doctrine begets false Piety when there is falsum in Intellectu that must necessarily produce malum in voluntate And the Reason is plain because Godlinesse is nothing but Truth incorporated Truth digested Truth put into practise It is Gods Law in the heart as you heard Hence as Poison can never nourish a man or afford good Health So neither can any false Doctrine help to any true Piety or Holinesse Men may have seeming Devotions but as the Serpent though it shines and glisters yet is full of inward Poison so whatsoever external Acts of Piety Zeal and Charity Hereticall men may put forth yet by them they cannot be Sanctified if their Errours be Fundamental It was Jeromes Speech Rarò Hereticus fuit pudicus and Vbi malè creditur ibi nec benè vivitur but that is not to be alwaies understood of their External Conversation for many Heretiques have been admirable in their Externals They have had a Sheeps-cloathing upon them and like the Panther have allured others because of their colour till they had devoured them Know thy Errour will make thee more proud loose and it may be at last outwardly prophane and contemning of Integrity for God will not blesse any thing that is not of his own Institution to spiritual Ends. 3. Only by the Scriptures come true Consolations So the Apostle Through the Consolation of the Scriptures 2 Corin. 1. No man hath true solid Joy but the true Orthodox Godly man It is true that as the devil may transform himself into an Angel of Light of Truth So also of Consolation and many Erroneous persons in their way have a great deal of comfort and joy yea they have said they never had so much peace and case as since they have taken up such waies but as their Piety was a counterfeit one so is their joy The holy Ghost that leads into Truth and is the Authour of Sanctification makes such only to rejoyce in him and gives them this Fruit of the Spirit 6. The Scripture is said to be true oppositely to all the Opinions Doctrines and Religions which men set up by their own fancy For every man is said to be a Liar and the Antichristian Doctrines which many are delivered up to beleeve are called a lye by the Apostle 2 Thes 2.11 Turcisme Paganisme is a lye Popery Heresie are Lyes Though they may be never so much pleasing to flesh and bloud Though men carried by humane Arguments may dote on them as they did about Diana's Temple yet all is a lye yea in practicall things whatsoever seduceth thee to do otherwise then Gods Word commandeth this is false Sinne lieth the world lieth the devil lyeth for all that they do is contrary to Gods Word That saith What will it profit a man to win the whole world and lose his soul Mar. 8 36. That saith the pleasures of sinne are but for a season Luk 13.3 Now thou wilt not beleeve this Truth but thou hearkenest to the world to thy own heart and all these betray thee and lye to thee Therefore let the Vse be to perswade and assure thy self of Scripture-Truths walk and live according to the directions thereof SERMON XCIII The transcendent Properties of the Scripture JOHN 17.17 Thy Word is Truth IN what sense the word of God is said to be truth we have declared Let us now come to the Properties of it And 1. It 's the truth of God a divine truth In the Text it 's called thy truth So that Divine Truth must needs transcend Humane or Natural Truths as much as God is above man In humane Authorities we say Thus saith Aristotle Thus saith Plato or thus say such Fathers and Councels but in divine things we must say Thus saith the Lord for because it 's divine or of God it hath an immediate dominion and awe upon the conscience So that whereas in humane Authorities and Philosophical Disputes we may boldly argue against them we may bring our videtur quod sic and quod non yet where truth comes to us as from God there must be an immediate submission though our reason and sense and all the world should contradict yet we must
minde The world was not in a greater Chaos and Confusion at first then we are naturally in our Souls Not knowing understanding or beleeving any thing of God Therefore the Apostle cals such Darknesse it self Ephes 4. And darkened in the minde That is the Eye the Sunne of the Soul and if that be dark all the body must be dark This Spirituall blindenesse and Ignorance upon every mans minde is that which makes him of himself incurable We pity corporally blinde men Oh but the spiritually blinde are lamentable every one is sensible o●●osing their bodily Eye Lord that I might receive my Sight saith he to Christ But oh that there were such a tendernesse and a melting affection about thy Spirituall blindenesse Now Christ hath a Propheticall Office to cure this he doth not only teach by the outward Proposition of the Object but also by giving a Seeing Eye and vouchsafing Spirituall Illumination to the minde and the Understanding In the second place we were under the guilt of our sinnes The Curse of the Law did pursue us we were no waies able to expiate the Guilt of the least sinne Though Rivers of bloud had runne down our Eyes yet they could not have cleansed one sinne or spot away The Jews offered Thousands of Sacrifices but they could not obtain by the Efficacy of them any Rem●ssion of Sinnes The Heathens sacrificed their Sonnes and Daughters to appease the wrath and fury of their Supposed gods but that could not prevail Oh when the Conscience of a man is arraigned for Sinne when Guilt burneth in the bowels as hot as fire Then a man will think of nothing but compensation Oh that I could satisfie God Oh that I could make amends again as man may do to man but this is impossible Therefore Christ becomes a Sacrifice for this end If we cannot redeem our naturall death much lesse our Eternall Without Bloud there is no Remission of sinne Christs Death ratified and confirmed the Promise and therefore the Covenant of Grace is also called a Testament because this was confirmed by the Death of the Testator Look then as it was with those Israelites when the Destroying Angel passed by if the Posts were sprinkled with bloud then they escaped the destroying Angel so if we be watered and cleansed in the bloud of Christ then we do escape the destroying vengeance of God and thus there is his fitnesse by his Priestly Office 3. We were by sinne in a miserable bondage and captivity to sinne and Satan The Israelites bondage in Egypt or in the Babylonian Captivity was nothing to this Spiritual slavery It 's not indeed so terrible and grievous to flesh and bloud yea they like those Chains and cords of vanity well enough but when Paul is once awakened by the Spirit of Regeneration and that the power of Grace hath prevailed upon him then for those very Reliques of Corruption that are within he crieth out Oh miserable man that I am Rom. 7. Now Christ is fitted with Kingly power to conquer and destroy the power of sinne and Satan There is no lust no Corruption that is too bigge for the King of Glory to overcome Thus as the Jewish Priest represented Christ in his Priestly Office So Joshua the Sonne of Nun did Christ in his Kingly Office as the Apostle insinuateth for Heb 4.8 Heb. 7 2. as no Ogs or Sonnes or Anak the greatest Giants and warlike men in the world were able to stand before him but he did bring the People of God unto their Rest Thus also will Christ who is both the King of Righteousnesse and King of Peace subdue all our Spirituall Enemies and establish us in Everlasting Rest He will first be a King of Righteousnesse and then a King of Peace he will first conquer thy lusts and then give thee a Crown of Glory Oh then admire this fitnesse of Christ to be thy Mediatour See how admirably there is a proportionable fullnesse in him for every emptinesse of thine In the Fourth place Christ is Sanctified or prepared for this work of Redemption If you do regard the peculiar and proper benefits that accrew to us by this Sanctification It would be infinite to reckon all Consider 1. Remission and Forgivenesse of our sinnes that is often attributed to his bloud Now how great a mercy this is David will tell us Psal 32. when he saith Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne Blessed It 's the inbred appetite of all to be blessed But they mistake in what it lyeth Therefore the Psalmist telleth us The rich man The great man the prosperous man is not blessed but he whose sinnes are forgiven And indeed though a man had Solomons abundance yet if sinne be not forgiven how can he be blessed You see Cain in the midst of his Cities he was building yet he had no quiet because sinne was not forgiven yea David in the midst of all his Kingly glory did not take any rest but he was disquieted with roaring in his bones all the night long because sinne was not pardoned 2. Christ is sanctified to sanctifie us This is plain in the Text Christ died not only to take away the guilt of our sinne but to make us an holy people zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 Therefore the garments of the Saints were made white in the bloud of the Lamb Revel 7.14 Do not the Godly groan under the power of Corruption but Christ will sanctifie them as he sanctified himself to that end 3. Peace of Conscience and boldnesse at the Throne of Grace Through him we have free accesse The Apostle hopeth because of him to go boldly unto God This hand-writing against us this gulf is taken away 4. We glory in Tribulations in Afflictions because by Christs Death the sting of them is removed yea we are raised above the fears of Death Christs Death doth take away our Death O Death where is thy sting 1 Cor. 15. SERMON XCIX Sheweth further what is implied in that phrase of our Saviour I sanctifie my self Handling chiefly the Priestly-Office of Christ in Opposition to the Socinians and for the Comfort and Direction of Penitent Sinners JOHN 17.19 I sanctifie my self for them c. WE are demonstrating what is implied in this phrase I sanctifie my self for them There remain more particulars which are as follow First This signifieth That Christ was wholly set apart for us that he had no other work or imployment but to minde our good and procure it for us In the Scripture phrase to be sanctified is often used for to set apart and dedicate to such a work that if it be otherwise imployed there is a kinde of prophanation and pollution so if the vessels dedicated to Gods service and sanctified were imployed as Belshazzar did in any common use this was the polluting and defiling of those vessels In some sense it holds here Christ was made man and made under the Law not for himself
acquit the guilty that will render to every one according to his works Oh saith the poor sinner at this I tremble under this I bow down but now by Christs Priestly-office justice is made on our side not only grace is for us but justice also now our very enemy once doth speak for us Justice I am satisfied I can require no more then justice would be unjust if it should require the paiment of the same debt twice This is ingraffed in mans heart to make a satisfaction and compensation to God but that was altogether vain which man did attempt to do therefore Christ came to satisfie for all 2. Herein Christs Priestly-office did exceed those Priests in the Law That they were only typical and did outwardly cleanse but they did not reach to the soul neither would they effect any immediate advantages upon it The Apostle diligently presseth this in his Epistle to the Hebrews and in his Epistle to the Galatians is severe against those who rested upon those external Sacrifices or any works of the Law neglecting Christ and this truth belongs to Christians also for the blood of Christ is not esteem'd we think Baptisme will clear us our tears for sinne or duties will compensate Thus Christ is not in our thoughts and in our hearts Therefore whosoever doth not in every prayer in every duty look to the blood of Christ to cleanse him he forgets this truth that Christ sanctified himself for us we walk as if our duties or Sacraments or Ordinances were sanctified to be our Mediatours It 's the blood of Christ only that cleanseth away our sins and that purifieth our persons and consciences 3. This Priestly-office of Christ is not only in the oblation of his body but also in his prayers for us Thus the Priest did in the Law so that his prayers had more in them then any private man it being a prayer by one authorized and appointed thereunto Christ in this also is our High priest his prayers were of two sorts 1. Those that he prayed for while here on the earth whereof this described in the Chapter is a chief one and the other is that Intercession which he still makes in heaven for us they differ in the manner of petitioning for those on earth were with great cries and groans debasing himself but this in heaven is nothing but the presentation of his will that what he had pray'd for and obtained for his people should be applied to them Now Christs prayer is infinitely above the High priests prayers for this is the prayer of him who is God as well as man it 's of him who is the beloved Son of the Father so that nothing can be in justice denied to Christs prayer because it 's a meriting and an obliging prayer 2. It transcends in love because Christ is so dear unto the Father What shall we say to these things that are so unspeakably happy for the members of Christ 4. Consider the adjuncts of this Priestly-office He is a Priest after the order of Melchisedech In Gen. 14. we reade of Abrahams tything unto Melchisedech the tythes of his spoil who is there called The Priest of the most high God It would be endless to tell you what the learned think about this Melchisedech as also to discuss all the difficulties about him It 's enough for us that the Psalmist Ps 110. prophesied of this long ago and the Apostle applieth it to Christ Heb. 7. Now to be a Priest after the order of Melchisedech doth imply 1. The conjoyning of a Kingly power to the Priesthood In the Old Testament God had separated the Kingly and Priestly Office none might undertake both and therefore when Vzziah though a King took upon him to offer Incense which was the Priests Office God struck him with a leprosie and the Priests withstood him but in this Melchisedech they were both joyned together Christs being then a Priest after the order of Melchisedech doth imply that by vertue of his Priestly office he did attain to a Kingly and therefore the Scripture speaks of that glorious condition he was exalted unto after his sufferings even to be above all Kings and Potentates and therefore it was providential that this Melchisedech though a Priest should have such a name as to be a King of righteousnesse and a King of peace and truly had Christ only sanctified himself to be a Priest for us without this Kingly office we should still be under the power of our lusts and dominion of our sins and should have wanted a spiritual Prince of Glory against that prince of darkness It 's a Kingly Priesthood so that there is not only religion but power accompanying him 2. This implieth the spirituality of his Priesthood for Melchisedech though a Priest yet brought only bread and wine by way of refreshment to Abraham It 's a wonder to see how men of great learning and parts would finde out a real Sacrifice in that fact of Melchisedechs but it is easily proved that Christ after that bodily oblation of himself hath now appointed no other Sacrifices but spiritual There is now nothing bodily or carnal in the Sacraments It 's sursum corda and we are to prepare faith not our teeth for the Sacrament The Priestly-office of old was in a carnal bodily way suitable to all the other religious exercises But now the external way of Christ is spiritual we are to offer spiritual Sacrifices and our prayers are spiritual Sacrifices 3. There is implied the perpetuity of it Melchisedech was a Priest for ever There is no abolition or translation of this Office no Successour to it therefore Christ doth abide for ever That once oblation of himself perfected for ever those that were his So that if he had offered up himself an hundred times more it could not have been more effectual then this once oblation 4. This Priestly-office was confirmed by an Oath God swore to the perpetuity of it The Apostle doth greatly aggravate this Heb. 7.21 That God did not onely promise but confirm it with an Oath Every word of God is as sure as an oath can be but this was done to establish our faith for it 's the hardest thing in the world to a troubled soul for sinne to believe that Christ hath made such an attonement or to believe such a reconciliation therefore God did not only promise it but swore to it Vse To fill the heart of those that do truly believe with unspeakable joy Christ sanctified himself to bring about thy peace Here is oyl enough if thou bring cruises to receive it Is it not sinne in the power of it and the guilt of it that troubleth thee Doth not that raise a great gulph between God and thee Behold Christ hath sanctified himself that sinne should be as if it never had been This is the Paschal Lamb that you are not to eat boiled or raw but rosted with fire not with waterish empty speculations but
for our comfort that every believer though yet unborn was in Christs purpose and intention when he laid down his life as if they had been existent in the land of the living In the sixth place By this intention of Christ in his prayer and death it will inevitably and immutably be brought about that they shall in time be converted they shall believe and be brought into communion and fellowship with Christ For seeing as we have heard Christ could not but be heard in what he prayed for and the Father alwayes granted his Petition therefore it cannot be but that all those who are given to Christ shall one time or other be wrought upon by the Word Thus it 's said They believed Act. 13.48 as many as were ordained to eternal life and the Apostles were to go and preach in such places because God had much people there Act. 18. and Rom. 9. the Apostle doth fully shew That Election is the cause of all mercies vouchsafed in time and those who were not elected they were hardened and given up to a spirit of slumber Oh then the admirable love of God to those that are his there shall not be one of them but the Word of grace will finde them out They that were not his people shall be made his people Joh. 10. I have other sheep saith Christ that are not of this fold and those he will bring home Hence Rom. 8. we have that golden Chain which all the Arminian subtilties can never dissolve Whom he hath predestinated he hath called and whom he hath called he hath justified and those he hath justified he hath glorified To expound calling only of vocation to afflictions and to the cross and Justification only of the vindicating of their persons and cause against the calumnies of the world is too dilute and repugnant to the scope of the Apostle in that place we may then absolutely conclude of the conversion and believing of such who belong to Christ and that the Word preached will sometimes or other be effectual upon them In the last place It 's plain from hence That Gods Election and so Christs dying for us is not conditional or upon the supposition of our believing but our belief is the true and genuine effect of Election and Christs death For whereas Christ here prayeth for those who shall believe The Question may be Whether this belief be supposed as a Condition Antecedent to Election and Christs death or as an absolute Effect of both so that Christ doth not only pray for believers but also that they may be believers There is a great Controversie between Arminians and the Orthodox for they say God elected some such persons to eternal life indeed and gave them to Christ as a Mediatour but it was upon a supposition and fore-sight that they would believe and persevere in that faith to the end But the Orthodox do more consonantly to the Scripture and to the greater exaltation of Gods grace and magnifying of Christ affirm That God by one single act of the same time did elect a man both to grace and glory both to salvation and faith So that God did not elect us because he foresaw we would believe but he did elect us to believe as well as to salvation So that faith is not a condition but the effect and fruit of our Election This is a necessary truth to be proved and therefore the next day it is to be considered for the present I take it for granted That those who shall believe are such not who by their own power shall either believe or dispose themselves to it but who by the grace of God shall be inabled thereunto For the present consider the aggravation of this love of God in Christ to us before we had a being And 1. There is remarkable freenesse in it of grace if positively and absolutely considered For what could there be in us to move God to this mercy when we could not think or cry or pray or do any thing for our good even then God set his love upon us It was nothing in us seeing we were in the womb of nothing 2. This freeness is aggravated if comparatively considered for it 's the grace of God that makes some to believe and leaveth others in their natural corruption The Apostle considered this discriminating love of God to Jacob and Esau Rom. 9. before they had done either good or evil Oh then sit and admire the depth of grace the unsearchable riches of grace for what art thou to so many learned and noble men in the world to so many of thy own kindred and family that God hath past by yet took compassion on thee Didst thou not lie equally in the same mass of corruption and bondage to all sin 3. There is the Eternity of this love it was before the beginning of the world So that we cannot imagine any moment of time wherein Gods thoughts were not upon thee Lastly The unchangeablenesse of this love for the Councels of God and his purpose are immutable There is no change or shadow of change in him and therefore if once loved alwayes loved he predestinated thee before the world called thee out of the world justifieth thee in the world and will glorifie thee after the world Vse What infinite cause of praise and glory the people of God have Well mayest thou call upon thy soul and all within thee to praise God Well may this be the burden of every Psalm For his mercy endureth for ever yea if thou hadst the hearts of all men and Angels this were not enough neither can Eternity be long enough to glorifie God in this particular SERMON CVI. Of both the Moving Cause and Effects of Election and of Christs Prayer and Death Against Arminians and others JOH 17.20 But for them also who shall beleeve in me through their Word WE come to a Second Observation from the circumstance of the future tense Who shall beleeve in me For as was intimated there may be a twofold sence of these words 1. That this future Faith is mentioned as an effect and fruit of being given to Christ as also of Christs Prayer and Death for them So that he doth not only pray for them which shall beleeve but also that they may beleeve and in this sense the Orthodox interpret it Or 2. It may be interpreted as if Faith were here supposed as a condition on our part antecedaneous both to Gods Election and also Christs Intercession and death So that the sence should be These were given to Christ and Christ he praied and died for them because it was foreseen by God that such would beleeve upon the means of grace offered and others not In this sence Meisner a Lutheran urgeth it and thus all Arminians and others must take it who hold that we were Elected from a foresight of our Faith and perseverance therein But that this cannot be the meaning of our Saviour is evident because the ground of
appeareth evidently Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God yea vers 14. there is a chain of faith and hearing and preaching inviolably put together We may bring a second witnesse to confirm this 1 Cor. 3.5 Who is Paul or Apollo but Ministers by whom you beleeve Where you see to be instruments of faith is not only limited to Paul the Apostle but is extended to other ordinary Officers in the Church even all that water as well as plant The Apostles planted the ordinary Ministers they water I shall not at this time prove a distinct calling of Ministers from people that hath been done already I shall only shew the perpetual usefulness and necessity of a Ministry for spiritual ends as long as there will be a Church upon the earth and the rather because Socinians and Seekers though they grant There was once an extraordinary Ministry in the planting of the Church yet they say it was only temporal for a season even as miracles were and that where the Scripture is made common there needeth no Ministry Therefore to inform herein consider these Propositions First That God hath appointed a Ministry in his Church not from necessity but a voluntary liberty condescending herein to our capacity God did once govern his Church as in the Patriarchs time by immediate revelations and apparitions and thus he could still do if he pleased It 's not therefore from necessity but meer bounty that he hath appointed such a way of spiritualizing people God doth not need the parts or gifts or piety of any men in the world and certainly if God hath appointed second causes in nature which work from a necessary principle within not necessarily but freely much lesse did he in these things which are of a supernatural constitution Secondly It 's to be affirmed That in the first plantation of Christs Church there were some things extraordinary but that doth not inferre every thing thus appointed was extraordinary The Office of the Apostles who had a Commission to go over the world and had an universal Authority being furnished to that end with infallible assistance was extraordinary Christ seedeth his Church spiritually as he did once the bodies of men miraculously first he took bread himself then he gave bread to his Disciples and they gave it to the people Thus Christ he preached the word of life and then he commanded the Apostles to preach who instituted others in their room The Office then of Apostles and Prophets with the gift of miracles were extraordinary in the first constituting of the Church but then ordinary Officers were afterwards required As with the people of Israel while in the wilderness God made miraculous provision for them but when once setled in Canaan then their Manna and other miraculous provision failed them And if you say How shall we know what is an extraordinary Office and what is an ordinary Office seeing the Apostle Eph. 4.11 12. reckons them up altogether I answer It 's true the Apostle there mentioneth extraordinary and ordinary Officers because he is to speak of the whole fruit of Christs Ascension to his Church and so because Apostles were a great and principal part of Christs gift to his Church and the influence of their labours upon the Church to the end of the world and therefore they are called the foundation Rev. 21.14 Hence they are mentioned as well as the ordinary only the difference between these two may appear in the qualifications of either for to an Apostle was required gifts of miracles an universal Commission and Authority infallibility of assistance c. but to the ordinary Elders there is no such thing required but what may be in an ordinary manner attained unto Thirdly When we say A Ministry is appointed for spiritual ends it 's good to know in particular what they are And 1. You see it 's in the Text To work Faith And therefore faith is said to come by hearing The ear that is the organ of learning and knowledge as also of faith It 's observed by a learned man That though we reade of godly persons that could not see or speak yet of none that could not hear because that was the instrument of faith yet this is not so to be urged as if a godly man might not be made deaf only it 's a sad affliction because by hearing faith is begotten and increased What enemies then are such to their souls who care not for hearing who give over hearing come now and then it may be for sinful ends whereas by hearing the Word preached God hath appointed to give thee faith Art thou not then such an atheistical or prophane man because thou doest no more regard this hearing of Gods word preached Be swift to hear said the Apostle James 1.19 2. The Ministry is appointed for the conversion and regeneration of men who naturally are dead in sinne and averse to God It was a subject the Prophets often preached upon to return every one from his evil way to God and John Baptist yea Christ himself also preached repentance as well as faith Hence Jam. 1. God is said Of his own will to beget us by his Word and so it s called the washing of regeneration through the word Tit. 3.5 That as the Spirit of God at first by moving on the waters prepared and produced living creatures Thus God by the Ordinances cals those who are like Lazarus dead in their sins to come out of the grave and live There is a resurrection of souls by the Prophets when they lift up their voice like a trumpet as well as there will be of bodies by the trump of an Archangel and indeed this is the proper effect of the Ministry No moral Philosophy hath attained to the inward change of mens hearts As Eliah when he threw his mantle on Elisha he left his Oxen and followed him Thus when God by the Word preached doth lay hold on the heart of a man he is a new creature minde new heart new affections new all is made new Thus while Peter was preaching there were three thousand converted So that to take the preaching of the Word away is worse then to take the Sun out of the heavens that is but an instrument of heat and life bodily this spiritually 3. The Ministry is for edification as Eph. 4.14 For the perfecting of the Saints and till we come to a full stature in Christ So that the Ministry and Ordinances shall not be abolished till we come into heaven the Sacrament is till he come and he will be with the Ministers till the end of the world and certainly the godly man findes much need of a Ministry to quicken comfort and direct his soul craveth and calleth for this as much as his body doth for food and raiment So that those who argue against a Ministry demonstrate they finde no experimental benefit of it upon their own souls 4. God hath appointed it to propagate
Faith is not wrought by the Spirit of God neither is it upon divine motions but experience and manifest conviction They feel in part the torments of hell and therefore it 's experimentally evident to them that there is a God who is also just and terrible in his vengeance But the historical faith in an unsanctified man as it is the gift of God so it works some inclining disposition to God yea in the temporary believer who goeth beyond a meer dogmatist it works as appeareth Mat. 3. Some reformation and some joy so that the word makes some hopeful ingresse into him though at last it passe away as our lives even as a tale that is told having no setled continuance 6. This historical faith as it is wrought efficiently by the Spirit of God so the motive of it is Divine Authority and Revelation That as by the light of the Sun we see the Sunne so by God we come to know every thing of God This divine motive of faith is freely acknowledged to be in the Thessalonians by the Apostle 1 Thess 2.13 They received the word not as the word of man but as the word of God Hence the Prophets begin with Thus saith the Lord and Paul discovers himself to be called by God So that every thing hath but a weak ineffectual operation till it hath a maker a divine stamp upon the soul Oh when we once believe a threatning as it is Gods when we once believe a promise as it is Gods it must bear down all before thee What if the world come What if Satan come What if thy companions come telling thee this and this Oh but saith the believing soul God that cannot lie saith the contrary And truly herein is discovered that in Religion we have but an humane faith yea not so much for an humane faith will make great changes in our life when yet our divine faith doth not If a man tels thee of such danger of such evil in the way doth it not presently make thee turn out of that path But now when Gods word tels thee there is death and damnation in such paths that doth not at all move thee SERMON CXXI Of Dogmaticall Faith the Properties of and Contraries to it JOHN 17.21 That the world may believe thou hast sent me WE are discovering the nature of faith in the General as it is carried out to Scripture-truth because of Divine Authority We are to adde more particulars to clear this And First Though this Faith be not a peculiar saving grace yet it is a common grace of Gods Spirit It 's a common grace of God to be inabled to believe How many Pharisees and Jews saw the miracles of Christ as well as the Apostles yet did not believe so much as a Simon Magus did It 's the grace of God that makes a man to have a sound minde in Religion witnesse the many heresies and blasphemies divers are fallen into yet it 's a common grace not peculiar common I call it not in that sense as some plead for an universal grace which indeed is no grace but because an unregenerate man may have it as well as a regenerate so that no man may conclude this is enough for his salvation that he doth believe such and such principles of Religion unlesse also he hath that peculiar effectual purifying work of faith upon his soul As therefore those extraordinary gifts of Gods Spirit to work miracles to cast out Devils were common to such who yet were workers of iniquity Thus it is with this ordinary gift of Historical faith many men may believe the truth of those things the goodnesse whereof they never felt upon their hearts And many may maintain the Doctrine of Regeneration orthodoxly who never felt the power of it experimentally upon their own souls There is a faith that is common to the elect all the children of God have the like precious faith Tit. 1.1 in regard of the essentials yet there is a faith common to elect and reprobate so that no man may conclude his salvation because he is no Jew no Pagan no Papist Secondly Although this dogmatical Faith be common to the regenerate and unregenerate yet it 's the foundation of our conversion and in the regenerate when improued doth wonderfully provoke the increase of grace And this is good to be observed for though we make it not saving faith yet it is the foundation of saving faith He can never believe on Christ for his Mediatour that doth not believe Christ to be a Mediatour Therefore the Apostle describing the general nature of faith saith Heb. 11. He that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of those that serve him No spiritual building can be made without this foundation as it is thus the foundation so if improved it doth wonderfully promote justifying faith The general acts of faith if vigorously prosecuted do mightily strengthen the peculiar and proper acts of it The more strongly we believe Christ to be a Mediatour the more will this help that he be so to me and therefore it 's observed that our Saviour put them so often upon the trial of their very historical faith Dost thou believe that I am able and doest thou believe that I am the Messias Partly because that was the great Question then Whether that individual Person was the Messias or no and partly because if it was believed that he was the Saviour then there was no such cause of doubt Whether he would be a Saviour to them that truly sought to him Insomuch that it may be questioned Whether it be a greater act to believe Christ to be a Mediatour or to believe him a Mediatour to me Although indeed there are more Objections against the latter for there are not only Objections against the truth but against the application of it because of the many sins and infirmities which I perceive in my self yet we would think the harder task were then over when the soul could believe such great things and transcendent to humane reason for when a man believeth that Christ is both God and man united in one Person whose office is to redeem the oppressed sinner may not then he conclude easily that he will redeem him For which is greater to believe such a Person God and man or that this Person whose Office it is to save will save thee Howsoever if we do not make comparisons between these acts of faith yet certainly the more strong and powerfull thy acts of faith are about the truths of Christ the more will they conduce to apply him to thee Even as in man the more vivid his senses are which do accompany his common nature with a beast the more strong and quick are his rational acts likewise So that this Dogmatical faith is the root as it were which if not thriving those peculiar acts of faith will wither Distinct III Thirdly The general properties of this faith are
vain-glory Did not the Devil think to overcome even Christ himself in this temptation when he shewed him all the glory of the world Begin then to despise and contemn all the earthly glory of this world what will this avail when thou art vile in Gods eyes Thou art a loathsom abominable creature before God though richly cloathed and faring deliciously every day Now the grounds why humane and earthly glory do not arise to this heavenly is from these particulars 1. It 's not a lasting during glory The fear and certainty of losing of it takes off from all the lustre of it A flour is a glorious creature yet because quickly withered none makes long account of it and thus all the glorious things of man are compared to no better The Prophet Isaiah Isa 40.6 and John Baptist of all Sermons and truths were to proclaim this All flesh is grasse and the flower thereof fadeth away c. And this was to make way for Christ implying that while men continued in their confidence about these things they were too high mountains and so no prepared path to receive Christ As therefore our Saviour argued in another case If the grasse be so cloathed with glory that is to be cut down and withereth so if thou art thus carefull to cloath thy body with glory that presently must become dust and worms meat rotting in the grave how much rather shouldst thou look to have thy soul cloathed with the glorious robes of Christ that continue for ever call that glory and that alone which is eternal which will live with thee and not die with thee 2. It 's no true glory because it 's not inward and substantial It 's not this glory of a man in his most substantial part which is his soul The soul of a man in Scripture language is called a mans glory Gen. 49.6 unto their assembly Let not my honour or glory be united that is not my soul If then a man hath the earthly glory of this world this is not the honour of his soul this is not solid it 's not in the noblest part of him If rich and glorious apparel should be put upon a dead corpse what glory were this to the corpse it would not bring life and comelinesse to the dead body So it is here let a wicked man have more earthly glory then a Solomon yet he is but a dead corpse he hath not that which should be the proper glory of a man viz. the adorning of his soul Hence grace is called glory as you heard So that nothing makes a man glorious but grace this is the image of God in him The Heathen could say That an horse is not chosen by his trappings and other rich accoutrements but as he is naked in his own body and certainly man much lesse is accounted glorious by body or wealth but by his soul 3. It 's not the proper glory of a man as he is a Christian And this is much to be considered Every creature hath that which is a peculiar grace and glory to it in its kinde So Seneca We praise a Vine if it burden its branches with fruit if another had golden grapes or golden leaves the fruitfull Vine would be preferred before it So that what is comely to one is not to another now take man as he is a Christian and so all his glory is spiritual and invisible if you look upon Christ who giveth him his glory he had none external nay none had lesse of that then he for he knew not where to lay his head yet in regard of spiritual glory he did abound in it he had the glory of a Messias though not of a temporal Monarch and thus it is here that is only a Christians glory which is excellency in Christianity The Apostle speaking of women saith Whose glory let not it be of embroidered apparel c. 1 Pet. 3.3 but an humble and meek spirit Hence the Kings daughter is said to be all glorious within Psal 45.13 That then which the world doth deride and contemn that is indeed the greatest glory and hence the glory of a Christian is to be justified to be sanctified to have communion and fellowship with the Father in Christ Lastly There is no true glory without Christ because in times of afflictions and tribulations he only gives occasion to glory Rom. 5. We glory in tribulation and Peter saith While we suffer for righteousnesse sake the Spirit of glory resteth upon us 1 Pet. 3.14 What then will thy outward glory avail in the time of Gods wrath when he shall set thy sins in order before thee he will make all thy desirable things to perish When Belshazzar is smitten with trembling for his sins he findes little glory in his stately Palace in his golden cups he was carousing in Oh then prize such a glory that will bear up thy heart in the saddest extremities A second Corollary is That the meanest Christian united to Christ though never so contemptible yet is surpassing Solomon in all his glory Every believer if you look upon him spiritually is more glorious then the greatest Potentates in the world for concerning that they made a blaze in their solemn installings of the Pope saying Sic transit gloria mundi but the glory of heaven abideth for ever It 's true this world doth not see any glory in a believer no more then they did in Christ Therefore in the Caniicles the women asked the Spouse What was her beloved more then other women They saw no such comelinesse and beauty in him and thus it is with wicked men What glory can we see in those that walk more strictly What is admirable in them more then in others Therefore this glory Christ giveth his people is invisible and discovered onely by the eye of faith So that this should exceedingly bear up the heart of a believer while he lieth under all the reproaches contempts and oppositions of the wicked world Oh comfort thy self with this spiritual glory God gives thee glory Christ gives thee glory while the world doth thus despise thee and doe not be discontented because God hath not given thee so much of the worlds glory as he hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ven others What then if he revealeth and vouchsafeth this spiritual glory to thee he doth more then if he should give thee the glory of many worlds Nay further thou many times art dejected in thy own eyes and as thou hast no external glory amonstg men so neither dost thou perceive any spiritual glory in thy self Oh thou criest out that thy soul pollution thy ●oul defilements are worst of all but remember this glory comes from Christ without that it doth not naturally grow up in thee Thirdly Though Christ give part and a beginning of this glory here yet it is not perfected and consummated till hereafter I have saith Christ given them glory already yet he prayeth afterwards for the consummation of this
is overflowing superabounding grace only remember that here is not only priviledge but duty also Here lieth a powerfull obligation upon us to love him with our highest and chiefest love let his glory his love be next to thy heart Oh be ashamed that thy love can burn no hotter towards him In the next place we are to consider the scope and end of our Saviour in mentioning this preheminent priviledge and it is That the world may know this love It 's not enough for believers to be thus highly loved by the Father but the world is to know and to be perswaded of it From whence observe That it 's of great consequence to the world to know how greatly believers are loved of God It would quicken them to many duties and restrain them from many sins if this were once fully setled in their hearts that those whom they oppose and deride are the beloved ones of God It 's true it 's of great consequence even to the godly themselves to be fully informed in this they go bowed down and very much languish because they are not so perswaded of this Hence 1 John 3 1. The Apostle cals upon the godly to attend to it Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God So that under all the hatred and opposition of the world it 's necessary that this love of God should bear up thy soul though none loveth thee yet the Father doth Thus I say it 's necessary even for believers themselves to know how greatly they are beloved but here our Saviour speaks of the worlds knowledge and the necessity of their being informed therein Now the usefulness of the worlds conviction herein will appear in these respects 1. Hereby they may be provoked to come out of their wicked condition and be made one of that number which God so loveth For will not this work naturally and genuinely upon them when they shall think Loe these that pray that walk strictly and contrary to the principles of the world are those whom God loveth in a special manner they are his favourites his delight is upon them but as for me and the company I keep God is angry with us all the day long we are the men cursed by him for us he hath appointed hell and eternal torments When any natural man shall upon these convictions argue and reason with himself How can he abide any longer in that sinfull way Oh then that God would perswade thee more of this that those whom thou malignest against whom thy heart riseth are such on whom Gods gracious love is fixed and that it is thou thy self and such as thou art that the anger of God abideth on continually this would quickly make thee another man Therefore there is not a more deadly principle thou canst swallow down then to be prejudiced in thy spirit against such who truly fear God 2. A perswasion that such only are loved by God as it would make thee to be of their number so also it would draw out thy dearest and sincerest love to them Thou wouldst presently begin to think Why should not I love those most whom God loveth Certainly they are the choisest and best objects upon whom God is pleased to cast his gracious eye then as David said My delight is to be with the Saints upon the earth Psal 16.3 Thus also it would be here when once perswaded that such are the endeared ones of God then thy affections thy heart will be to such also 3. By this perswasion upon the heart of the world that they only are loved of God hereby the world will cease to hate and persecute them to give them such ill entertainment as they do When our Saviour possesseth his Disciples with that universal hatred they shall have in the world and that the world cannot do otherwise whence is all this but because they do not know Christ nor believers neither But as they took him for an Impostor and one not worthy to live so they do judge his members to be a company of heretiques not worthy to be suffered in the world and all this malice ariseth from their blinde hearts for did they know who they were as they oppose they dared not to proceed Even as the Scripture saith If they had known Christ they would not have crucified the prince of glory 1 Cor. 2.6 So that all thy hard words and thy hard actions they arise from this thou dost not know what the godly are how accepted with God and how precious to him for this consideration would immediately make thee draw in thy arm thou wouldst see it was a foolish thing to set against such whom God loveth that it is but kicking against the pricks It 's attempting an impossible thing if thou couldst get God not to love them then indeed it were something but as long as God thus loveth them all thy endeavours against them is as vain as Balacks was against Israel No inchantment or divination can prevail As it 's an impossible thing so also it 's dangerous for seeing they are to God as the apple of his eye and he hath given such a command even to Kings that they do not touch his anointed ones How can it be that God will let all the injuries and offences done against them so dearly beloved go free Therefore perswade thy self more of this love of God to them lest thou incurre Gods forest displeasure Again It 's not only dangerous but foolish also for the more the world sets against believers the greater their rage is the more is Gods love drawn out to them So that by thy hatred they do become glorious and are more esteemed by God and receive a greater crown of glory Thus if these things be duly considered we must needs say it 's of great consequence for the world to know that believers are so highly loved by God But in the next place It 's very difficult for the world to be thus perswaded For 1. There is naturally an enmity and antipathy of the wicked against the godly and where malice is they will never believe any good of those whom they hate Insomuch that though God doth with never such a signal love demonstrate himself to them yet they will never be perswaded such are loved of God for as they are affected so they judge of God himself and because they think them worthy of all hatred and evil they conclude God doth so also Thus this distempered palate judgeth every thing bitter it tasteth 2. The love of the Father to believers is chiefly in spiritual things such as Justification Sanctification Adoption Now these things are no more apprehended by the world then curious melody by a deaf ear The Apostle speaketh to this 1 Cor. 2.9 10 11 12. admirably shewing That the Spirit of God revealeth these spiritual things to us and that without the Spirit we cannot know the things that are
be with the Lord and to be with him for ever comprehends so much that the heart can never suck out all the honey of it But let us not with Moses stand afar off and behold the glory and sweetness of this Land but let us enter into it and these things are considerable First That we deny not but the happinesse of Heaven may be amplified from severall other particulars besides our presence with Christ such as the enjoying of Angels and Saints for a state of happinesse is the aggregation of all good thing desirable but yet that which is the Sun among the Stars That which is the principall and great happinesse is that we shall then more perfectly know and enjoy God and Christ It 's true indeed most Divines do yield that we shall there know our godly Friends and shall greatly rejoyce in their salvation and happinesse yet so that all these lines will meet in God as the center that all these streams will be emptied into the Ocean so that though Heaven hath unspeakable priviledges and every thing therein is glorious yet that which is the Heaven of this heaven the glory of this glory is the enjoyment of Christ himself It 's Gods presence that makes heaven to be heaven Secondly We are to know that the Schoolmen whom Divines follow speak of a twofold happinesse beatitudo objectiva and formalis an objective happiness and this is acknowledged to be only God himself There is no other object that can make the soul happy but God only As the stars cannot dispell darknesse and make light but the Sun only The other is called beatitudo formalis or subjectiva and that is the internal perfecting of all the faculties of the soul with such perfect grace that they are able to carry us to God in a most perfect manner and the glorifying of the body with all those admirable qualities that the Scripture speaks of so that when we say Christ in heaven is our happinesse we speak of the objective happinesse not the formall That object in the enjoyment whereof the glorified Saint is made eternally happy is Christ only Thirdly Consider that even in this life we are with Christ and Christ is with us Though as you heard to be with Christ is most commonly the expression of glory yet it may sometimes denote our gracious presence here for thus though Christ be in Heaven yet he is said to dwell in our hearts by Faith Eph. 3. Therefore we must needs in this life be with him now this is the beginning of that glory we shall have hereafter He that beleeveth hath Eternal life Joh. 3. not only de jure but doth actually possesse some beginnings of it The Transfiguration Peter was in and the extasie Paul speaks of were forerunners of Heaven and although the godly may not have such an extaticall ravishing sence of it yet the Lord doth many times bestow on his people a taste of this joy whereby they rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory whereby they are above the world and can despise all earthly comforts comparatively Austin and Bernard do sometimes speak their experience of this upon their souls and no doubt but the Martyrs who were to suffer so bitterly for Christ were had up into the Mount of Transfiguration before they were carried to Mount Calvary Crus nihil sentit in ligno quando animus est in coelo In the next place let us Consider the Grounds why Christ or Gods presence in heaven is that which makes the happinesse of a glorified beleever And 1. Because in Christ or God there is all fulnesse to make us happy he is objectively all what the soul can desire If Christ be represented in this life all to the Church when yet we have but the glimpses of him how much more in Heaven when we shall have the full enjoyment of him Therefore wonder not if having of God there be our happinesse for he is the universal good he is that bonum in quo omnia bona as Paul said having a Revelation from God this was enough and that those who were pillars could not adde unto him so much more may it be said in this case having full possession of the Lord Christ himself no comfort or content any other way can adde one cubite to that stature of happinesse 2. Christ is not only objectively full of that which may make happy but he is also efficiently communicative of it For suppose God be a Fountain sufficient and inexhausted yet as long as it is a Fountain sealed up as long as there is a stone upon the mouth of it that cannot be rolled away so long we are not able to come at any refreshment God is alwaies able to make us happy to the utmost he might vouchsafe us an heaven in this world but he is a free Agent and communicateth himself as he pleaseth Now it hath pleased him while we are in this life to communicate himself by degrees This Fountain is dispensed by drops but in Heaven there will God communicate himself as far as the creature is able to receive him Then this Sun will not be under any Cloud then there will not be any complaints why the Lord doth hide his face or withdraw himself 3 Heavens happinesse lieth in Christ because then the soul is made a prepared and sutable subject for him All pleasure and delight ariseth from the conveniency of the object with the faculty for if there be contrariety or dissonancy then instead of happiness there is nothing but misery Now in Heaven the the whole soul will be so perfected with Grace that it cannot delight in any thing but such an holy God What is the reason that in this life a wicked man hateth God and refuseth his will and law but because of his contrariety to him and on the other side a godly man though he have but imperfect and inchoate grace yet he preferreth Christ and loveth him before Father and Mother and every thing that is dear all this ariseth because there is some similitude between God and him he is born of God and partakes of the divine Nature and so by this means delighteth and rejoyceth in God but if the green Tree be thus ready to burn in love with God what shall the dry Tree do 4. Christ is the chiefest happinesse in Heaven because he being chiefly beloved there is obtained the nearest Union with him It 's not the place of Heaven but the person in Heaven that a Christians love is fixed upon Hence some some have not been afraid to say That Christ with a godly man though in hell yet would make hell no hell for when the soul cometh to enjoy that which is most beloved then all further desires and distractions must cease then the stone is come to its center Then the fire of love hath ascended as high as it can go then it saith Sufficit I have enough Now all the while the Church is
all majesty and divine honour was in a state of humiliation and he was in a form of a servant even then when he was equal to God and as David when he came to the actuall possession of the Kingdom did come to it by degrees first at Hebron in s●me part and then afterwards in Jerusalem over all Israel Thus the Lord Christ while on earth had severall discoveries of his divine glory and honour but the full enjoyment of it was upon his ascension and hence it is that here he speaks he was loved before the foundation of the world because the Father had appointed this glory to him from all Eternity Thus we have handled this love as it relateth to Christ but you must know that it doth not concern him only but it belongs also to the whole Church of God So that herein is involved our greatest consolation for there are these particulars contained in it 1. That Christ and we are comprehended in one act as it were of Gods love and his Election So that although we may and must conceive a priority and posteriority in signo rationis as they say yet in naturâ they are together for seeing that the Father did predestinate him to be head of his Church and so doth love him as head of his Church it must necessarily follow that the Church also which are members to Christ their head must be included in that Election for the head and the body cannot be severed Now doth not this wonderfully make for the glory and comfort of Gods people that at the same time Christ was appointed to be a Mediatour They also are ordained to be saved by him As soon as ever he was made the head they were made the body In this respect it is that Christ and believers are said to make up one mysticall person and by this means what Christ had and did is communicated unto us 2. Here followeth the Eternity of Gods love to us For seeing that Christ was loved before the foundation of the world So also must we for we are chosen in him Eph. 1.4 from all Eternity So that although the effects of Gods love are vouchsafed to us in time yet the purpose to do this was from all Eternity Oh then the overflowing love of God to a beleever how should this melt thy heart and be like fire in thy bowels when thou hadst no thought of thy self when no friend could speak a word for thee yet even then God had thoughts of mercy towards thee 3. Here is the perpetuity and immutability of the Fathers love to thee for he cannot repent in his love as men may They sometimes love those who prove otherwise then they expected They never thought such would prove so forgetfull and therefore repent of all the kindenesse that ever they shewed them but it is not so with God for he foreknew all that ever we would do he knew our sins our unkindnesses our rebellions and yet for all this intended love to us so that God cannot say these men are greater sinners prove more unkinde to me then ever I thought they would have No the only wise God cannot be subject to such errour besides men may love those where they repent afterwards because they cannot make them good whom they love the more they love it may be the persons loved do become the worse by it but it is not so with God whom he loveth he makes holy This is one great effect of his love to put his Image into them to make them walk in fear of him all the day long Thus God will immutably love because he will alwaies keep up grace in the hearts of those where he hath begun it Furthermore This love is perpetuall because in Christ We are now joyned to him by an Union that can never be dissolved When Christ ceaseth to be an head then we shall cease to be his body So that the perseverance of the Saints is built on this rock they are elected in Christ and are in time united to him and therefore shall never be cast off no more then the Father will cease to love Christ as an head but these things were in part spoken to before Vse Doth the Father thus love Christ Then what strong arguments have we to believe and be confident in all those Petitions which are put up in Christs Name Hath Christ praied for thy Sanctification for thy preservation that the evil of the world may not infect thee Know Christ is so loved that nothing can be denied him What if the Father love not thee for thy own sake what if he see no lovelinesse in thee yet in Christ he seeth enough Certainly as the Father doth only look upon us in Christ so should we also look upon our selves as in him Vse 2. Are the godly also comprehended in the same love wherein Christ is then what matter of joy have they under all discouragements under all the hatred and cruell oppositions they meet with in the world What though the world hate thee though thou hast no love from all thy natural friends ever since thou began to love God Oh possesse thy soul with this love of God in Christ for this answers all things SERMON CXXXIX Of the Righteousness of God as a Judge in his Administrations to Devils and wicked men And as a Father unto his own people JOHN 17.25 O righteous Father the world hath not known thee c. SOme have thought that our Saviour having finished his prayer for all sorts of believers he doth now give thanks to God that had revealed himself to them and not unto the wicked world and therefore they compare it with that place of Luke 10.21 But the general torrent of Interpreters upon more probable grounds does conceive this to be a continuation still of the former prayer for the eternal glory of all believers Indeed Piscator thinks that our Saviour doth in this close return again to the Apostles onely but the Arguments our Saviour useth are general and do relate to all believers and therefore we are not to limit this comfortable passage to some eminent believers onely The Matter you heard prayed for all believers was their eternal happiness expressed in those words to behold the glory which the Father had given him with the reason of it because the Father had loved him before the foundation of the world So that although Christ as God had right to glory alwayes yet being in the flesh after an infirm and passible manner the glory thereof was eclipsed which the Ancients did well express by a Candle or Lamp in a lantern that would indeed give great light but the lantern being compassed about with clay hindred the emission of that light till it were removed and thus till all those humane infirmities were taken away which Christ subjected himself to while in the flesh and he risen again those glorious beams of his Divinity could not send forth themselves This I say being the matter
of the Petition our Saviour doth further confirm it by continuing this prayer with several arguments more whereof the first is from the opposition or antithesis that is between the wicked damned world and believers expressed in these words The world hath not known that is their Character 2. You have the Description of believers These have known thou hast sent me 3. The fontal cause and original of it I have known thee 4. The Compellation given to God suiting the argument in hand righteous Father This is the sixt time that Christ cals him Father in this prayer and no wonder because as you heard it 's so sweet a relation producing all love delight joy and confidence in God by him that practically improveth it but that I have dispatched only I must not passe by that adjunct or title further qualifying this Father viz. righteous righteous Father formerly when he prayed for the sanctification of his Disciples then he said holy Father making use of that attribute which is the cause of all holiness in the creature but now speaking of that dreadfull and wonderfull dispensation of God whereby to some he revealeth himself and others again he suffers to perish in their rebellion therefore it is that he pitcheth on a sutable attribute Righteous Father It 's true indeed the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used of a man in respect of his universal rectitude and uprightness and so some take it here and then it 's no more then that former compellation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy Father but the altering of the word with the context may incline us to understand it differently Now you must know righteousness may be attributed to God generally and particularly generally as it comprehends the whole rectitude and universal purity of his whole nature or particularly and that several wayes 1. The righteousnesse of his fidelity and promise whereby he doth make good to all believers whatsoever he hath said even to the meanest and lowest act of grace Thus 1 Tim. 4.8 Paul saith The righteous Judge will give him a Crown of glory And 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins God is faithfull and righteous to forgive them Here is righteousness and the godly may plead heaven because of Gods righteousness but it 's only a righteousness of promise or fidelity in God not any strict remunerative righteousness as if from the good works themselves God were bound to reward them Indeed Maldonate he would fasten this interpretation upon the word as if our Saviour did plead the merits of believers but this is so proud and presumptuous that we will not spend time to confute it 2. There is a punitive and vindicative righteousness which God exerciseth to the wicked impenitent world and that both in spiritual and temporal punishment of which Revel 16.7 19.2 Righteous are the judgements of God Now I shall comprehend both these kinds of righteousness righteousness of God as a Father in respect of those who believe in him and righteousness of God as a Judge in respect of the world which doth not know him Observ That God whether considered as a Judge of the world or a Father to believers is righteous in all his wayes This truth is of great use if duly improved for what will silence all thy disputes all thy murmurings What will rebuke those winds and waves of thy soul but this The Lord is righteous Let us take notice of Gods righteousness in this two-fold consideration for both are aimed at in the expression by our Saviour And First The righteousness of God as a Judge of the world and as his administrations to wicked men they are so righteous and just that even the devils and wicked men though they may blaspheme yet cannot say God is unjust or doth them any wrong And although the Arminians and such infected persons who with their whole strength indeavour to overthrow Gods absolute Election of some to eternal life and the preterition and passing by of others bring specious Arguments as if the Orthodox by this Doctrine made him unjust and more cruel then any man yet such can prevail only with those that leave Scripture and consult with humane affections and indulge too much to natural reason For R. 1 1. When the Scripture is so positively and clear that some are elected some are given by the Father to Christ some are vessels of honour and mercy and others not loved by God to eternal life but left to themselves and so become by their sinfulness vessels of wrath and when not onely Scripture but experience also doth confirm this That the greatest part of the world yea and the Christian Church die in their sins and do eternally perish For many are called but few are chosen When I say Scripture and experience is clear for such a thing it 's presumption in us to argue from thence unrighteousness in God For can we search into the deep counsels of God Do we comprehend the purposes and ends of God We should rather conclude There is righteousness in all these things though we cannot pierce into it The Apostle in Rom. 9. doth beat down such presumptuous cavillings with God and we may observe That though David and Jeremiah were greatly disquieted with anxious disputes about Gods proceedings in his administrations yet they lay down this as a peremptory conclusion and they fortifie themselves with this against all insurrections of spirit The Lord is righteous Gods will is the law of righteousness and none but God himself whose understanding is infinite can comprehend his own wayes R. 2 2. God is not unrighteous in passing by some and leaving others Because he hath an absolute soveraignty and dominion over all He is not subject to any as a superior Neither is he bound by any Laws imposed upon him only his own holiness is that eternal Rule and Law by which he doth all things and if none may say unto a King why doest thou so Much less to the King of Kings Therefore learned Divines make Election neither an act of mercy or of justice but of soveraignty and dominion only R. 3 3. God is not unjust Because if he had not saved one man but left all in their undone estate he had done no more then he might do For why should it be unjust in reference to man more then in reference to the apostate Angels for of that whole number of them which fell there is not one redeemed from their eternal miseries and are we of more noble consideration then those spirits yea one of them might have done God more service if restored then many men could do So that this consideration should bridle our unruly thoughts and we should rather admire and praise the goodness and grace of God that any one is saved rather then charge God sinfully and foolishly as we are apt to do because no more R. 4 Lastly There is no injustice in God he is a righteous Judge of the
all its idolatry impiety and that it is indeed wholly at the will of the devil And this suggests a 2d Demonstration that the world doth not know God because the devil is the immediate Prince of it He that is called the Prince of darknesse is likewise said to be the god of this world This is fully expressed 2 Cor. 2.4 where the god of this world is said to blinde the mindes of them which believe not lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ should shine into them Therefore you have a notable description of the devils from the Soveraignty and power they have Eph 6.12 where they are called principalities and powers and rulers of the darknesse of this world how wofull then is the condition of the world of ungodly men who are thus made captive to the devils and are ensnared at their will That as they themselves are reserved in chains of darknesse so do they keep all their vassals they are chains of darknesse such as those who are in a dark dungeon and such as they cannot break neither have the wicked any desire to do it and therefore they never say to the devils chains as the ungodly do to Christs dominion Let us break his bonds asunder and cast his yoke away Psal 2. As long then as this strong one keeps the house for the whole world is his house no wonder if he make it like hell it self yea he makes the world by his ruling in it worse then hell in some sence for in hell he is tied up in some degree of torments but in the world he is let loose to infect and damn others though not without his torments 3. The world must needs be without all saving knowledge of God from the defect or absence of those causes which do alone cause saving knowledge So that as the world at first when it was a confused Chaos without form and void could not make a glorious light to appear upon it but that was Gods work whom the Apostle doth therefore describe as him that worketh darknesse out of light 2 Cor. 4 6. alluding to the work of grace which is now upon the world So neither is the world wallowing in its filth and thick darkness able to create the least light of saving knowledge but must for ever perish if God vouchsafe not his grace Now these causes are wanting which necessarily infer ignorance in the world Even as the absence of the Sun makes night 1. There is not the external Revelation and propounding of the doctrine to be believed unless God in much mercy send it Hence you may see that once in Judea only was the true knowledge of God and the whole world besides groped in more then Egyptian darkness and now though God hath commanded this light to shine over the whole world So that it is not limited to any one Nation yet a great part of the world still is heathenish So that they are darkned and become foolish in all their imaginations The denying of the Gospel is a greater misery then if the Sun should be denied to shine to such a people Now it 's God only that makes this light to shine in one place leaving the other in its darkness Even the Pelagians of old did acknowledge this grace of God necessary viz. a revelation and proposition of the object 2. Besides this external light the world wants that internal light of illumination without which the Gospel though never so gloriously preached is but like the Sun shining at noon day to a blinde man for this is made the work of Gods Spirit only Joh. 16.8 to reprove the world of sin and of righteousnesse Till the Spirit of God doth illuminate in both these the world doth not understand the horrible guilt and aggravation of sin the damnable estate and condition it is in thereby Neither doth it know what is that righteousnesse which only can justifie and where it is to be had so that the world even the wisest and most learned thereof are but like so many blinde moles digging constantly in the earth Neither affected with their disease or with the remedy till Gods Spirit doth wonderfully convince them and this is evidently seen in the Christian world For doth not the glorious light of the Gospel compasse men about yet they are like owles the blinder because of this light Insomuch that such blindenesse of minde is not amongst heathens as amongst impenitent and hardened Christians for besides the natural blindeness which they have common with heathens there is a judicial blindenesse that God smiteth them with for unfruitfullnesse and contempt of the Gospel Thus they are twice blinde as some are said to be twice dead Is it not matter of astonishment that a people living many years under constant and powerful preaching should yet he as brute beasts and understand nothing of their misery and the remedy Surely all this is because that judgement is come upon Israel even blindeness of minde and a veil upon their hearts 3. The world knoweth not God because it hath not that ultimate and compleat cause of all saving knowledge which is the spirit of regeneration and the work of a new creature upon their souls for till God give this heart of flesh and remove an heart of stone all the illumination and strongest convictions which men have upon them is not enough to make them know as they ought to know The Apostle Tit. 1.1 speaks of an acknowledgement of truth after godlines now that is only when a mans heart is mollified as well as his minde is enlightned It 's true the Scripture speaks of some 2 Pet. 2.20 who by the knowledge of God did escape the pollutions of the world but that was only in respect of external conversation for they were in their natures Swine still and not sheep It cannot then be that the world should know God and Christ as long as there is that corrupt enmity and spirit of rebellion and contrariety in it to what is holy Christ told Peter that it was not flesh and bloud which had revealed Mat 16.17 that glorious Confession of faith unto him If then the world be thus without the spirit of God enlightening and converting how then can it in any saving way acknowledge God Vse of Instruction Concerning the terrible condition of the perishing world whether within or without the Church yea it is most terrible to those who are the world really but the Church nominally You are shut out from the face of God and Christ You are without hope in the world Oh your greatnesse your pleasures will not avail to keep you from destruction This is Eternall life to know God and Jesus Christ This then is eternal death not to know him 2. That no knowledge of God or Christ which is not practical and saving deserveth the name of Christian knowledge The world though both by nature and supernatural revelation may know much of God yet because lying and living in
or because that can adde any thing to his happiness but because thereby thou art made capable of his love and so he can communicate of his goodness to thee do not then take comfort so much from thy graces as the evidence of Gods love to thee thereby 5. Take notice that it 's most acceptable and well-pleasing unto God that thou shouldst walk in such sense and feeling of his goodness to thee For why are all those commands to rejoyce in him and to bless his name continually Why doth he invite thee to call him Father And why are there such thunderbolts in the Scripture against unbelief and distrust Why is it the main scope of the Scripture to represent God under all love and loving considerations but that all our thoughts of him should be hopefull and comfortable Do not therefore think thou goest beyond thy bounds or it's presumption in thee to draw nigh to God upon such assured apprehensions of his grace No the Scripture expresly commands the contrary Heb. 4.16 Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace and Eph. 3.12 In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him Hearken not then to all those doubting temptations within nor all those deceitfull arguments of humane reason without but consider what the Scripture saith and certainly it 's preposterous humility as in Peter refusing to let Christ wash his feet to keep off from the Throne of grace when we are commanded to come to it Besides without this sense of love how can our hearts be raised up to bless and glorifie God It was Davids apprehension of Gods goodness to him that made him call upon his soul and all within him to bless Gods holy Name 6. Consider that this sense of Gods love is the proper and genuine effect of faith in Christ as a Mediator Thus our Saviour doth here make it the consequent of it They have known me whom thou hast sent that the love whereby thou lovest me may be in them It 's not enough to believe in the general That Christ is a Mediator to such as believe in him but with Paul Gal. 2.20 we are to appropriate him who loved me and gave himself for me with this Evangelist John we are to lean our heads as it were in Christs bosom with Thomas we are to say My God and my Lord. Now the genuine but not the necessary and inseparable effect of such an appropriating faith is the sense and assurance of Gods love to me in particular which love of God is so attentive to one believer as if there were no more in the world As they say of the soul it 's tota in toto and tota in qualibet parte so is the love of God totus in universis fidelibus and totus in singulis God loveth a particular believer as much as if there were no more believers in the world Though the objects of his love may be diversified yet his love is not divided or by division diminished Lastly Fix this alwayes upon thy heart that Christ hath prayed for this sense of the Fathers love upon thy soul You see in this prayer where he mentioneth all the great and consequential things unto believers this is brought in at the last as the adorning and sweetning of all the rest for if sanctified if hereafter to be glorified if Christ be in us and we in Christ yet if the experimental knowledge and assurance of this be absent we are as the Disciples under storms and tempests crying out We perish we perish Let the summary Use of the whole be by way of Exhortation to all believers to hunger and thirst yea to have their souls break in longing after the enjoyment of this love of God in us Oh bid all things stand aloof off till thou art made partaker of it Say How long Lord how long is it that thou absentest thy self When shall I have the imbracements of thy love When will the glorious Sunne break out and dispell all the dark clouds that are upon my soul Give not over importuning for it Because of this very prayer of Christ know to thy encouragement that this prayer abideth for ever Though it was once uttered by him upon the earth and he ceased to pray any further yet it still liveth in the efficacy and power of it yea that continual intercession of his in heaven what is it but the reviving of this prayer So that by the vertue of this prayer through his blood we are sanctified we are justified and shall hereafter be for ever glorified FINIS AN ALPHABETICAL TABLE OF THE Chief Heads contained in this TREATISE A Afflictions IT 's a greater mercy to be kept from sinne and evil in our Afflictions and troubles then from the afflictions themselves 444 The Grounds and Reasons why it is so 446 Antichrist That Antichrist should prosper and prevail in the shedding of the blood of so many Martyrs is a dangerous temptation c. 388 A two-fold Antichrist ibid. Apostasie Apostasie and decay in grace may be in several particulars 350 c. Those that plead for the Apostasie of the godly grant there is a distinction to be made 354 Apostats That men may be eminent for a while in the Church of God and yet afterwards prove dreadfull Apostats 372 Arians Arians confuted 73 149 Ascension The benefits of Christs Ascension 291 Assurance Assurance may be attained 356 Astrology How vain and wicked it is to go to Astrologers or Witches or be such 396 Arguments against Astrology and witchcraft 396 397 Atonement Christ was a Priest to make Atonement for us 507 Attributes It is a necessary duty in a Christian in his approaches to God to think to those Attributes and relations in him which may excite and stirre up holy confidence and boldnesse 657 B Beginnings THen Beginnings are hopefull when the Spirit in the Ministry or other means of grace did work upon us 382 Then will Beginnings and endings be alike when grace is radicated and enters deep enough into the soul 383 Good Beginnings will have bad endings when men professe Christ out of sinister and worldly respects ib. Hot Beginnings will end coldly 383 Behold What is that glory which they shall Behold shining in Christ 663 Beholding How much is comprehended in this expression of Beholding Christs glory 662 Belief Our Belief is the fruit and effect of Christs death and our election 537 Two opinions about this ib. The state of the Question in some particulars ib. Arguments to confirm us in the truth 538 Believe Why Gods children are so hardly brought to Believe 211 Why prophane men think it easy to Believe in Christ 213 Why Believing in Christ is so acceptable to God 213 214 Believer In what respect Christ did as much for one Believer as another 525 In some particulars the poor weak Believer hath more love and affection from Christ then a stronger 528 The particulars wherein ib. Wherein God sanctifieth their weakness and
come to Christ 5. This throws all merits to the ground II. In respect of Christ 1. A demonstration of the transcendent love of Christ 2. It shews the safety of the godly Vse Doct. Christ will give to those that are his Eternal life Eternal life considered I. Positively what it is 1. It consists in 1. The immediate fruition and enjoyment of God He is an universal and infinite object He is the Universal good He is an unmixed sincere good And a proper peculiar and convenient good 2. It consists in the perfect sanctifying the sou●●nd body thereby si●ting a man for the enjoyment of God 3. In a quick and lively apprehension of this happinesse And it hath these properties 1. A continued life of happinesse 2. It hath in it all desirable things 3. It is a glorious Life 4. A holy Life 5. A spiritual life Vse 6. It 's an eternall life II. Eternal Life considered comparatively with this present life 1. This life is but short 2. Full of troubles and miseries 3. Full of fears 4. Measured by time 5. Full of dissatisfaction· II. Eternal life considered oppositely to eternal death Eternal death lieth 1. In the deprivation of God 2. It is seen i● that it brings all the positive evil that can be feared or imagined 3. To all Eternity Life a gift death is deserved Why God for a transient sin will inflict eternal torments Vse 1. The great question that all ought to put is How may I have eternall life 2. We must take the right way to answer that question 3. Consider upon this little moment we have here depends all eternity 4. That most shall misse of eternall life 5. Desire such thoughts now as if thou wert already in eternity 6. Better a man had not been born then to misse of eternall life 7. Consider how unwilling thou art to bear any extream pains Helps to be affected with eternity The effects of lively meditations on eternity accompanied with firm faith 1. A low esteem of the world 2. A longing for the coming of Christ 3. Calm the soul under any troubles Arians and Socinians collection from the Text. The Text vindicated Observ 1. All men naturally ignorant of God in a saving manner 2. Imbred knowledge may be encreased by the contemplation of the creature 3. True knowledge to be had only within the Church 4. All true knowledge is not presently saving 5. Without knowledge no Salvation 6. The great ignorance of most to be lamented 7. We must have personal and explicit knowledge and not beleeve as the Church beleeves Reasons Why knowledge is so necessary to Salvation I. In respect of some duties we owe unto God which cannot be acceptably performed without knowledge II. From those duties we owe unto Christ III. Because grosse Ignorance is immediatly opposite to the means that bring the soul to God and Christ Obj. Answ The causes of Ignorance 1. Internal 2. External Vse Motives Observ The effects of saving knowledge I. Internall II. Externall Why knowledge that is not thus accompanied is ineffectuall Vse Observ There is one true God only to be known and served by men Explicatory considerations I. Though many Gods constituted by mans vanity yet there is but one true God II. God is known three waies III. Our knowledge of God is very imperfect IV. V. The insufficiency of naturall and acquired knowledge to guide us in the worship of God and way to salvation Inferences The sinfulness of Idolatry Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Vse 5. Observ The knowledge of the true God is not enough to salvation without the knowledge of Christ The Reasons of the Point Obj. Answ Obj. Answ Vse Obj. Answ Doct. It 's a blessed thing at death truly to say Lord I have glorified thee Consider I. There is a day of judgement when God will call every man to account II. The meanest persons have Talents to improve as well as the greatest III. None are perfect discharges of their duty IV. No merit or causality of salvation in the best work V. VI. Grounds of this blessedness At death all comforts vanish Then if ever Conscience is awakened and the devil is most busie to tempt and trouble Vse Who they are that cannot take comfort in this that they have finished the work God gave them to do 1. Such whose conversation is wicked 2. Those whose works are though not contrary yet differing from the command 3. The slothfull and negligent 4. The luke-warm What things will much diminish the joy and comfort of the godly at the end of their daies 1. Immoderate affection to worldly things 2. Formality and slothfulnesse 3. The not zealously improving opportunities 4. The doing Gods work upon constraint and not from filiall and voluntary principles 5. The more hypocrisie the lesse comfort 6. Ignorance or mistake in some points of Divinity Vse Doct. That our Redemption obtained by Christ is a glorifying of God· c. Wherein God was glorified by Christs Mediation for us Reasons Vse Obj. Answ Quest Answ Observ That Christ did fully and perfectly finish that work the Father gave him to do Observe these particulars 1. 1. 2. A Covenant between God the Father and the Sonne 3. Christs work truiy and properly obedience Quest Answ 4. Christs obedience was meriting obedience 5. Christs work heavy and grievous 6. He finished his work Obj. Answ The properties of the work which Christ finished 1. Of infinite value 2. Mediatory 3. His works are our works 4. Consider the necessity of his work 5. The visibility of it Vse Observ None may look for glory until they have finished their work Consider the Point in reference I. To Christ Glory the reward of Christs merit II. Consider the doctrine as true in our selves 1. God hath appointed this order The necessity of continual working· I. From Gods command II. God hath made them the necessary way to walk in if we will be saved III. Necessary by way of gratitude IV. Because we have so long time spent our selves in the way of Satan It 's lawful for the people of God in all they do for God to encourage themselves that eternall glory is laid up for them Doct. That Repetition of rhe same matter in praier is not alwaies sinfull Tautology but very necessary To open the Point consider these things In praier we must diligently attend to these things Why we must use our tongue in praier When Repetitions of the same matter in praier may be useful Quest Answ When repetitions are forbidden Doct. Things promised must be praied for Reasons I. Generall and common II. More proper and peculiar Reasons Quest Answ Observ That all Gods people are earnestly to pray for their glory above all earthly glory Things implied in the doctrine I. The nature of this glory viz. with God himself which implies 1. It is in the hands of God 2. God is the object of this glory 3. It 's a glory which God liketh and approveth of 4. Opposite to earthly