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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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require this the Apostle cals a shew of Religion which is hypocrisie and so at this day among the Fryars they have a shew of Religion they take up worships which God doth dot require of which it may be said Who required those things of you the Galatians did observe dayes and months and years therefore the Apostle is afraid that he hath bestowed his labour in vain upon them Chap. 4.10 11. 3. What was the spirit of their discipline and government they did affect primacy the Apostles were no sooner removed out of the world but this spirit began to spring up yea while some of them lived John 3.9 2. That that spirit did affect and exercise tyranny casting out of the Church such Ministers as were more faithful 3 Epist John 9.10 Diotrephes would not receive John himselfe nor his brethren nor would suffer those that would that spirit hath been in the Church of Rome from that day to this A second part of their tyranny was in imposing upon them unprofitable courses unprofitable they were because they did perish in the using Col. 2.20 to 22. 3. There was a spirit of coveteousnesse in Ministers they did not savour the things of God but did relish wealth and ambition Jude 11. they follow the wayes of sin as Cain did In Cain there was first hypocrisie he offers a sacrifice and when he saw his brothers sacrifice accepted being offered in faith and his not there arose in him a spirit of wrath which ended in bloudshed such was the spirit of Popery in Queen Maries days Some walk in the wayes of Balaam the wayes of coveteousnesse putting stumbling blocks before the people and that for covetousnesse sake Thirdly some have the gainsaying spirit of Korah they gainsay the Ordinances of God like as he rose up against M●ses and Aaron this spirit breathing in Antichristian teachers at this day was hatched in the Apostles time There was a spirit of Schism in the Apostles time some saying I am of Paul and I of Apollo c. 1 Cor. 1.12 and so at this time among the Papists Jude v. 19. Vse 1. See the diligence of Satan to sow tares even in the Apostles times therefore Ministers should watch diligently over their people that no such spirit be sown in their hearts Satan will creep in by dissension the affections being once distempered the judgement will soon be corrupted Wherefore Ministers and people should have a speciall care of dissension for if dissension creep in then soon will you have your worship shut up and then there will be a wofull wast of Religion 2. See the impudence of Heretiques that dare look God in the face and rise up among his many bright and glorious lights in the Apostles times but let no Christians be discouraged by this but rather the more encouraged to contend and strive for the faith of Christ 3. This should teach Schollars not to take any ancient doctrine for truth till they have examined it Though Peter was blessed for the testimony of Christ one part of the day yet he was sharply reproved the same day trust not any doctrine almost in regard of the antiquity of it for it may be Antichristianism though in the Apostles times 4. If we would be growing up in grace from day to day take we heed of the spirit of Antichrist of taking up the worship which God hath not commanded take we heed of hypocrisie a spirit of Popery a shew of devotion Come we to the Sacrament as if we would receive the power of the Lord Jesus vailed in much simplicity take we heed of the spirit of Cain Balaam and Korah gainsaying the Ordinances of God but walk we stedfastly in that Religion we have received 1 JOHN 4.4 Ye are of God little children and have overcome them because greater is he that is in you then he that is in the world AS you had before in the former Verse a sign of the spirit of teachers so in these Verses you have a sign of the spirit of hearers which is double First Sign taken from victory which good hearers have got of bad teachers a good hearer is not overcome of bad teachers but he soon findes them out and overcomes them and this is argued from a double cause First They are of an higher off-spring then corrupt teachers are Secondly From the strength and excellency of their spirits above the spirits of worldly teachers Greater is he that is in you then he that is in the world False Teachers are set forth 1 By their Originall 2 By their false Doctrine He that knoweth God heareth us there is another sign of good hearers they did hear good teachers on the contrary He that is not of God heareth us not You see here First A difference between good and bad teachers good and bad hearers good teachers and good hearers are of God on the contrary bad teachers and bad hearers are of the World Secondly Here is a combat between good and bad teachers and a victory also Good hearers doe overcome bad teachers Thirdly You have the issue of the conflict good hearers overcome Fourthly The cause of the victory is the divine descent and excellency of their Spirit greater is he that is in good hearers then in bad teachers Fifthly Here is a congratulation little children you are of God Doct. That there is in the Church of God two sorts of teachers and two sorts of hearers some of God some of the world Quest Why are good teachers and good hearers said to be of God Answ 1. They are of God because they are of a divine Originall they are born from on high from the seed of the eternall God John 8.23 I am from above saith Christ and such are those that are regenerate they are descended from God whereas those that have no higher off-spring then flesh and blood are of the world 2. They both savour and relish that doctrine Rom. 8.15 They that are of the Spirit of God savour the things of God such as hold forth the mighty power of God veiled in humane frailties they are of God 3. He that is of God hath a place in the Church of God 1 Cor. 12.28 God sets the members of Christ in the Church this is a work of God ver 18. not any member of Christ but the Lord hath set him in that place as all men in the world cannot fit one member to the body but it would be both unprofitable and burthensome except God joyn it to the body so all the men in the world cannot put one member into the spirituall body except God put it in indeed those that are of the world they have a place in the Church too but yet they are not of the Church they are superfluous humors as Christ speaks of the Pharisees Mat 15.13 As it is never well with the body till the noysome humors be purged out so the Church will never be well till those superfluous humors are cut off Vse This
other arguments that the ensuing Sermons were preached by Mr. John Cotton whose name is so deservedly precious among the Saints of God that it cannot but incourage them to read them and hath invited me to allow them to be printed for the publick good Edmund Calamy Books lately printed for Thomas Parkhurst at the Sign of the three Crowns over against the great Conduit at the lower end of Cheapside A Learned Commentary or Exposition upon the first Chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians by Dr. Richard Sibbs published for publick good by Thomas Manton Folio There is newly come forth Mr. William Fenner his Continuation of Christs Alarm to drowsie Saints with a Treatise of effectuall Calling The Killing Power of the Law The Spiritual watch New Birth A Christians ingrafting into Christ A Treatise on the Sabbath which were never before printed bound in one Volume Fol. and may be he had alone of them that have his other Works as well as bound with all his former Works which are now newly Printed in the same Volume with this Truth brought to light and discovered by time or an Historical Narration of the first fourteen years of King James in 4o. The Journal or Diary of a thankful Christian wherein is contained Directions for the right method of keeping and using according to the Rules of Practise a Day-book of National and publick personal and private passages of Gods providence to help Christians to thankfulnesse and experience By John Beudle Minister of the Gospel at Barnstone in Essex large 8o. Mr. Robinsons Christians Armor in large 8o. Book of Emblems with Latine and English verses made upon Lights by Robert Farly small 8o. Grace to the Humble as preparation to the Sacrament in five Sermons by D. John Preston Picturae Louventes or Pictures drawn forth into Characters 12o. A most Excellent Treatise containing the way to seek Heavens Glory to flye Earths vanity to fear Hells horror with godly prayers and the Bell-mans summons 12o. Johnsons Essayes expressed in sundry Exquisite Fancies The one thing necessary By Mr. Thomas Watson Minister of Stephens Walbrook 8o. Sion in the house of mourning because of Sin and Suffering being an Exposition on the fifth Chapter of the Lamentations by D. S. Pastor of Vpingham in the County of Rutland Groans of the Spirit or the Trial of the Truth of Prayer A Handkercher for Parents Wet-eyes upon the death of their children or friends The Dead Saint speaking to Saints and Sinners living in several Treatises viz. On 2 Sam. 24.10 On Cant. 4.9 On John 3.15 On John 1.50 On Isa 58.2 On Exod. 15.11 Never published before By Samuel Bolton D. D. late Master of Christs Colledge in Cambridgs Four profitable Treatises very usefull for Christian practice viz. The Killing power of the Law The Spirituall Watch The New Birth Of the Sabbath By the Reverend William Fenner late Minister of Rochford in Essex Peoples Need of a living Pastor at the Funeral of Mr. John Frost M A. by Mr. Zach. Crofton A Treatise against the tolleration of all Religions By Mr. Thomas Edwards Chatechizing Gods Ordinance in sundry Sermons by Mr. Zachary Crofton Minister of Buttolphs Aldgate London the second Edition corrected and augmented A Coppy-book methodized and ingraven by Thomas crosse wherein fair writing is exprest by which one may learn to write of himselfe that can but read Dr. Stoughtens thirteen Sermons containing the form of sound words and some other Treatises The godly mans Ark. or City of Refuge in the day of his distresse discovered in Divers Sermons the first of which was preached at the Funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Moore Whereunto is annexed Mrs. Elizabeth Moores Evidences for heaven composed and collected by her in the time of her health for her comfort in the time of sickness By Ed. Calamy B. D. and Pastor of the Church at Aldermanbury Enchiridion Judicum or Jehosaphats Charge to his Judges opened in a Sermon before the Right Honourable the Judges and the Right Worshipful the Sheriffe of the County Palatine of Lancaster Together with Catastrophe Magnatum or King Davids Lamentation at Prince Abners Incineration In a Sermon meditated on the Fall and preached at the Funeral of the Right Worshipful John Atherton of Atherton Esquire High Sheriffe of the County Palatine of Lancaster By John Livesey Minister of the Gospel at Atherton There are going to the Press some new pieces of Mr. William Fenners late of Rotchford in Essex never yet printed preserved by a special Providence one of which is a Second part of his wilfull impenitency being five Sermons more that he preached upon the 18. of Ezekiel and the 32. verse Now in the presse A Theatre of flying Insects wherein especially the manner of right ordering the Bee is excellently described with discourses Historical and Physicall concerning them with a Second part of meditations and observations Theological and Moral in 3 Centuries upon the same subject by Samuel Purchas M. A. in 40. The Gale of oportunity and the Beloved Disciple by Thomas Froysell in 8o. A COMMENTARY UPON The First Epistle general OF JOHN 1 JOHN 1.1 2 3 4. That which was from the beginning which we have heard which we have seen with our eyes which we have looked upon and our hands have handled of the Word of Life c. THE Children of God as in the whole course of their lives they are exercised with many conflicts of Conscience so with this Doubt especially at their beginning to enter into a course of Christianity Whether they indeed doe belong to the election of Grace and are indeed amongst the number of those that belong unto God And because Faith is very weak then in them for the most part it cometh to passe that their doubtings are strong they doubt much of this their Estate And from doubtings ariseth trouble of mind and terror of conscience When the Sun is in its full strength and shineth brightly there are no Clouds or Vapors or Mists arise but onely when it is low at rising or setting so is it with Faith and Doubting for the removall of which and for the setling of our souls in the assurance of Gods love and for the pacifying of our consciences with the Peace of God and filling our hearts with joy in the Holy Ghost St. John moved by the Holy Ghost penned this Epistle as Chap. 1. v. 4. And because our joy cannot be full except we injoy union with him and communion with his Children Therefore that end also he openeth verse 3. And because these are both begun and preserved by First Receiving of the truth of Doctrine Secondly Walking in holinesse of life And Contrariwise hindered and interrupted First By Error in Doctrine Secondly Wickednesse and uncleannesse of life Therefore he every where inserteth instructions both for First Inlightning our minds with truth of Doctrine Secondly directing our steps with precepts of holinesse of life And from both he teacheth us to gather marks to our selves of
our Estate with God that so our joy may be full In the Text he instructeth us in the knowledge of the Truth of this point of Doctrine what we are to think and believe concerning the Doctrine of the Apostles whether preached or written Concerning which Doctrine two things are here delivered First The Subject of it Christ Jesus First In himself and that first as God as from the beginning eternall secondly as man as being heard seen and sensible Secondly As in himselfe to us the word of life verse 1. Secondly The end and scope of it First Subordinate Fellowship with the Apostles and Saints and with God verse 3. Secondly Supream our fullnesse of joy verse 4. That which was from the beginning Here are two questions First Why rather is it said here that was from the beginng then he which was from the beginning Secondly What is it here to be from the beginning First It is here said that which was from the beginning to signifie and set forth unto us a double nature in one and the same word of life in one and the same person of Christ If he had said he who was from the beginning whom we have seen c. It might have been thought that the same word of life was in one and the same nature both from the beginning and seen and heard or else that one person was from the beginning another person seen and heard but when he saith that word of life which was from the beginning and that which we have heard and seen c. he plainly insinuateth that there is as they say aliud aliud in the word of life There was something of the word of life that was from the beginning as namely his Godhead And againe something in the same word of life that was heard and seen c. as his Manhood and withall that this was not another person but another thing another nature in the same person This serves to confute those two Antient Heresies of Eutiches and Nestorius he confounding the Natures this dividing the persons of Christ Eutiches confuted because something there is of the word of life that was from the beginning something of the same word of life that was heard and seen c. that which was from the beginning was not the same thing which was heard and seen c. and that which was heard and seen c. was not the same thing which was from the beginning Nestorius is confuted because both that which was of the word from the beginning and that of the word which was seen and heard were both of the same word of life both the natures of one and the same person Secondly Againe if something there be of the same word Eternall and again something of same the word Sensible then there is no confusion of properties in the person of Christ The Apostles preach such a Christ as of whom something is from the beginning something againe heard and seen that of the word which was from the beginning that of the word was not sensible and that of the word which was sensible was not that of the word which was Eternall And therefore such as teach the flesh of Christ to be every where as the Germans doe or every where in the Sacraments as the Papists doe they doe not observe the distinction here observed by the Apostle This Phrase of speech from the beginning is ambiguous and must be interpreted according to the nature of the thing to which it is attributed First Sometimes it signifieth from the beginning of the story of Christ Luke 1.2 Secondly The time of the delivery of the Law 1 John 2.7 Thirdly Institution of a thing Mat. 19.8 Fourthly Of the Fall John 8.44 Fifthly Of the Creation Joel 2.2 But none of these meant here not the First nor Second for before Abraham was he was John 8.58 not the Third Fourth nor Fifth for he himselfe created all things John 1.3 There is another from the beginning which is higher than all these namely from the beginning of eternity which wanting beginning implyeth he was before all beginnings Prov. 8.23 Doct. And because there cannot be two Eternals but one Eternall and that is God therefore he also is Eternall God with the Father and Holy Ghost This is not to be omitted because it is plain but to be preached because it is certaine especially since some of late have been so far bewitched by Satan as to seal the contrary with their blood First This is proved first by the Names and Titles given to him 1. Very God 1 John 5.20 Rom. 9.5 2. Jehovah Exodus 3.2 4 6. 3. Saviour Mat. 1.21 which none is but God Isa 43.11 Hos 13.4 And who was able to save us from sin by satisfying Gods wrath but God Secondly By the Essentiall Properties of the God-head agreeing to him 1. Knowing the heart and reines Rev. 21.23 yea all things John 21.17 2. Omnipotency John 5.19 3. Omnipresence Mat. 18.20 John 3.13 4. Eternity John 8.58 17.5 5. And here equality with his Father without Sacrilege Phil. 2.6 Thirdly By his works of First Power 1 Creation Heb. 1.2 Col. 3.16 and that for his glory 2. Providence Heb. 1.3 3. Miracles John 14.11 Secondly Grace 1 Election John 13.8 2 Redemption Gal. 3.13 Thirdly Giving of the Spirit John 4.10 John 7.39 Fourthly Giving of eternall life John 10.28 Rom. 6. ult Fourthly By the Worship ascribed to him 1. Prayer Acts 7. ult 2. Faith in him for else how could we call on him Rom. 10.14 John 1.12 Jer. 17.5 Taketh no place in him but contrary Psal 2.12 Vse 1. To confute all those Blaspemous heresies whereby Satan hath laboured to overthrow the Truth of the God-head of Christ as that of the Cerinthians Ebonites Arians which taught him onely to be pure man to have no being before the Virgin Mary or at most before the Creation Secondly To Terrifie all such as are Enemies to his Kingdome Psal 2.12 Luke 19.14 27. Thirdly To Comfort all such as are Christs John 10.28 Ps 23.1 Isa 43.1 2. because they were elected in Christ Eph. 1.4 and our life is hid with him Col. 3.3 Therefore it is both sure and unchangeable for he is so Fourthly To exhort us to worship him Mat. 28.9 as an Eternall God God from the beginning Moses reproved the Israelites for worshipping new Gods Deut. 32.17 Gods whom their Fathers did not know but him they knew and worshiped Moses himselfe Deut. 33.16 Jacob Hos 12.4 Gen. 48.15 16. Abraham Gen. 22.11 12. Now his Worship consisteth in the duties of Faith and Repentance for those are the parts of Gods Worship which he hath revealed to us and requireth of us First In the Duties of Faith John 14.1 and here First Dost thou receive any thing from God receive it in the sight of thine own unworthinesse in thy selfe and so thou worshipest him through whom God doth accept thee and powreth his blessings upon thee Eph. 1.3 for none but God
walks will you judge a man to be good that is good in good company Many a man for company sake will go out of his way so we must not judge what they do by a start but what is their constant voluntary growing course what way they hold to that is their way a good man in evil company his heart is not quiet it is no voluntary motion and so contra we often fail in judging some men by some few steps but observe what is his voluntary constant course ad what doth he thrive and grow upon if a mans Christian course be voluntary constant and growing it is not the going out a step or two that will condemn us the wise men they came a long journey to seek Christ and they went out of their way to Jerusalem to enquire but then the Star left them but they staid not there but went into their way again and then the Star appeared to them again so a godly man goes to seek Christ and God gives him the light of his Word yet upon some error he may turn out of the way and then they leave Gods Word but they stay not there but go into the way again and then they have the light of Gods Word to direct them Vse 3 May teach men not to content themselves in any Ignorance or Uncleannesse or Wicked course you cannot walk in Darknesse and have Fellowship with God therefore as you would claim Fellowship with God disclaime Fellowship with sin you cannot continue and grow up in any sin voluntarily but you disclaim Fellowship with God yea and with the blood of Christ no Fellowship with Christ as long as you have any Fellowship with sin Vse 4 To teach Christians that it is not enough to be holy and true but God requires you should walk in Light and holinesse Ephes 5 8. Gal. 5.25 if you would be men of Knowledge and Piety it is needful that you walk in that course it is not enough to set an instrument in tune but it must sound forth it is not enough to have our hearts in a good frame but we must walk in that frame Psal 119. Thy Word is a light unto my feet and a Lanthern to my pathes Gods Word was a light to his feet what to look on No but to be a guide to his steps we should order our steps according to his Word the Church is compared to a Garden Cant. 4.14 full of spices and flowers is she content that she hath these No but verse 16. awake O North-wind and blow upon my Garden that my spices may flow forth and yeild a fragrant smell a Christian must not only have gifts and Graces but walk accordingly a Christian that hath good parts and gifts if he doth not walk according thereunto what good doth he It is a gouty foot that dares not walk so he is a distempered Christian that hath the feet of a Christian and yet walks not he is only the image of a Christian an image hath the exact parts of a man but makes no use of them it hath eyes and sees not ears and hears not feet and walks not Psal 115.4 so he is but the image of a Christian that hath parts and gifts and walks not accordingly therefore whatsoever Spirit God hath given thee walk in it if thou hast a Spirit of Meeknesse use it if a Spirit of Humility Patience c. use it if a Spirit of Prayer use it walk in it else you are but images and no true Christians The more you walk in good duties and a Christian conversation the more you feel Fellowship with God otherwise if you go out of the way you lose the Light the Star as the wise men did when you walk in the wayes of Pride and Impatience and Covetousnesse and Uncleannesse you lose your way and your light too which should direct you therefore what gifts you have walk in them Vse 5. Of comfort to such Christians as are walking and doing though they cannot go on so fast as they would a man that walks goes not so fast as he that gallops but yet if you do but walk in a good way you make a progress and shall come to your journeys end at last What if Judas gallop faster than the rest of the Apostles as it is likely because they did least suspect him he gallopped but he soon stopped his course and turned into the way of perdition Therefore it is no discouragement if in a Christian course you be but going on though you go on but slowly yet if you rid ground and stand not at a stay nor go backward that is comfort for you surely have Fellowship with God 1 JOHN 1.7 THe main Scope of this Epistle is to comfort tender consciences that their joy may be full for this end he tells them certain messages which he heard from Christ the first message is verse 5. whereupon he inferres a note of Fellowship with God Negatively verse 6. Affirmatively verse 7. If we walk in the light c. Doct. Such as walk in the light the blood of Christ purgeth them from all their sins The Verse sets down two Priviledges of them that walk in the light they have not onely Fellowship with God but with Christ and that in his mediation and that in cleansing them from all their sins Quest 1. What is meant by the blood of Christ A. The blood of Christ is here put not onely for that blood shed on the Crosse but for his whole death set out by blood which was the effect of his death for blood powred out after his death John 19.33 34. for it is said of the death of Christ Rom. 5.8 And the death of Christ is not all for he suffered many things beside so that it comprehends all his sufferings 1 Pet. 3.18 yet there is a further Synecdoche sometimes his passion is put for his whole obedience Rom. 5.18 19. Luke 22.44 for that is attributed to his obedience that it makes us righteous that is free from sin all his Spirituall desertions were sufferings of Christ tending to cleanse u● from sin bloud includes all his sufferings and obedience And indeed the very bloud of Christ had it not been done in obedience and humility it would have done no good for the promise is to him that doth something Doe this and live John 10.18 his passion was done in obedience Phil. 2.7 8. Quest Why is our cleansing from sin ascribed most to his blood seeing it reached to his whole death and passion and obedience why is his bloud most instanced in Mat. 26.28 Rom. 3.35.5.9 Heb. 9.14 1 Pet. 1.19 why is it most attributed to his bloud Ans It was meet 1. Because death was the wages of Sin Rom. 6. ult Gen. 3.17 therefore we must satisfie that or our Surety for us 2. His death is most stood on because the whole Covenant stands in that the Legacy is of no force without the death of the Testator Heb. 9.17
either sin or the Law or Satan or our own consciences can plead against us Heb. 12.24 His blood speakes better things then the blood of Abel that cryed for condemnation this for absolution 3 He pleads for us in giving us leave to use his name for our helpe and his Spirit to plead for our selves he sends his Spirit to draw our petitions for us and helpe us in his name ro plead for our selves he is our chiefe Advocate he sends the Spirit Joh. 16.23 24. and he promises Zach. 12.10 so that though the Spirit be an Advocate yet he is sent by Christ Joh. 14.16 17. 4 He plays the Advocate in our behalf by expressing his good will towards us to his Father he declares his will to be that we may be cleared from all doubts and be where he is to behold his glory this he did upon earth Joh. 17.24 and this very same doth he expresse for us in Heaven and the reason of it is from Rom. 8.34 where his mediation is made a distinct worke from his death and resurrection and ascention and sitting at his Fathers right hand besides all these he makes requests for us in his own person pleading to God for us for good things as Moses did oft for the people Exod. 32.31 32. and as it was with Moses so it is said it should be with Christ Deut. 18.18 as Moses being a Mediatour put in a word of Peace for the people so doth Christ But doth he thus intercede for every sinner no he doth not say every man hath an Advocate but we have he did not intercede for all when he was upon the Earth I pray not for the World Joh. 17.9.20 for if Christ should have prayed for all men God would have heard him for all men and then his death had been effectuall for all men for he saith thou hearest me alwayes Joh. 11.42 Christ is not an Advocate for all but only for the Children of God Vse 1 Of direction to a Christian that doth sin what course to take for his peace and pardon to look up to Heaven for an Advocate that may stand to plead for him when sin and when Sathan and the Law and conscience plead against him many a poor soul hath his conscience pleading horror against him that he is proud and uncleane and Hypocritical c. why look up to Heaven now for an Advocate to plead for rhee first get into the estate of the children of God My little Children if we sin we have an Advocate it is not any man but we that are as little children lay down all pride and emulation and labour to frame our selves to holy obedience If we sin we have an Advocate c. therefore labour to become little children begotten to God by the Ministers of his Word 2 Cor. 8.5 give up your selves to God and to his Ministers to be taught of them according to his Will and if we be such we have an Advocate Vse 2. Of consolation to all whose consciences strike and gall them and they are disquieted with the bitternesse of their sins when sin accuseth and the Law accuseth and Sathan and conscience accuseth what should comfort a poor soule in this case why consider we have an Advocate with the Father so that though the Law and conscience tell us we have been disobedient yet Christ our Advocate hath fulfilled all obedience though we sin and our sins plead against us yet Christ pleads for us his blood cries for us and speaks better things than the blood of Abel and he sends his Spirit to helpe us to put up our petitions and he himselfe puts in for us and performs our prayers for us Rev. 8.3 by the Angel there is chiefly meant Christ he sweetens them takes all the corruption out of them so that they are a sweet smelling savour to God let us accuse our selves to the lowest acknowledgment of our own unworthinesse and then let us with comfort look up to our Advocate that pleads for us How shall I know that he prays and pleads for me 1 If you be little children to God give up your selves to him and to his Ministers to be obedient to his Ordinances 2 If he send his Spirit into your hearts and that helps you to draw your Petitions it is a sign that he himselfe is about the work by our sins we dampe his Spirit but if God renew his Spirit in us it is a sign that Christ hath our cause in hand 1 JOHN 2.2 And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole World IN these words we have Christ described by his function external 1. Advocate 2. Propitiation for our sin and secondly by his inward qualification righteous Jesus Christ the righteous We have done with his office of Advocation we come now to the second He is the propitiation for our sins and not ours only but the sins of the whole World Doct. Jesus Christ is the propitiation for the sins not only of beleeving Jewes but likewise of beleeving Christians all the World over He is the Reconciliation as some translations render it but that expresseth not the full meaning we must know therefore that Propitiation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includes Three things 1 That he should expiate our sins that is make satisfaction for our Sins a man may be a means of Reconciliation without satisfaction but he cannot be Propitiation without offering satisfaction for the wrong done now Christ did make satisfaction for our sins Heb. 2.17 and to make satisfaction he did offer a satisfactory sacrifice for our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 he bearing the sin and punishment due thereunto it is as much as if we had done it 2 To be a Propitiation it is required that he make peace and reconciliation for though a man sometimes recompence and satisfie a wrong yet the Party wronged will not be at peace with him and reconciled to him but Christ hath taken upon him to reconcile God to us so as that his wrath is turned from us and favour restored to us Col. 1.21 now this reconciling implies Three things 1 That sometimes we were friends with God 2 That we fell out with God 3 Being fallen out we are reconciled again and made at peace with him Now this is procured by Christ whereas we were once friends with God in Paradise and fell from him and his favour Christ hath come and made up that breach and reconciled us again Thirdly When Christ is said to be a Propitiation for our sins it implies that he hath procured the manifestation of Gods favour to us for suppose a Friend make satisfaction for another and reconcilement with another with whom he is fallen out yet if he know it not his heart is as loose as ever but Christ hath not only procured us Gods favour but he tells us his Father is reconciled with us and at peace with us Job 33.23 and 26. there is the effect
our reconciliation then it shews us what we are without Christ enemies to God and such enemies then if all the Angells and Saints in heaven should put in for us they could not make propitiation for us it is only Christs Prerogative Col. 1.21 Rom. 5.20 Ephes 2.3 we are enemies and strangers to God and all our imaginations of our hearts wholly evill continually we are ready to delude our selves I hope I am not so farre out with God I am not an enemy but we are all so by nature Vse 3. It should teach us when we doe find and feele that we are sinners to consider of Christs Reconciliation and Propitiation Q. I doe believe that Christ hath made an Attonement for sinners and reconciled all Beleevers but how shall I know that I am of that number or no Ans 1. Hath Christ ever brought you to see Gods face with comfort if you have at any time beheld Gods face with joy and comfort know that this could not be unlesse Christ had been a Propitiation for you Obj. I but that comfort is all gone again Ans No man that is brought into the Kings presence stands alwayes before him but there is a time for the King to sequester himselfe from him so there is no Christian that stands alwayes in the presence of Gods face it is enough if thou hast been brought to kiss Gods hand and taste of his favour Obj. But I have never felt any comfort or joy in Prayer and other Ordinances Ans 1. I would ask you Are you fallen out with your sins if you be you love God and are beloved of him Psal 97.10 2 Doe you finde that you love God much for you have been a great sinner and yet God hath had mercy on you if so it is a sign much is forgiven you 3 Do you finde your hearts compassionate over other mens sins it is a sign yours are forgiven Matth. 17.23 to 33. Eph. 4. ult Vse 4. If we find that we are enemies to God and our peace is not made with him it is our wisdome to pacifie God doe as Adoniah did when he had offended King Solomon he ran and tooke hold of the hornes of the Altar 1 King 1.15 so we should run and lay hold on Christ as he that had any benefit by a Sacrifice was to lay his hands on his head so would you have any benefit by Christ lay hold on him confesse your sins over him intreat him to make your peace with God Q. But how shall I know whether I lay hold on Christ A. 1. No man layes hold on Christ but he takes him for better for worse he takes him to be a Ruler as well as a Saviour you must give up your selves to be guided by his will as well as to receive any benefit by him 2 If you finde your hearts wholly resting on Christ and none but him if this be the frame of your heart that there is none in Heaven or Earth that you desire in comparison of him Psal 73.25 then you have laid hold upon him Vse 5. For Christians that have their sins pardoned and are in Christ though it be thus with you yet you are not to think that you have no need of Christ for were you as St. John and the Apostles Pillars yet you have need of an Advocate and Propitiation still for in many things you sin daily and fall out with God so that if God should fall out with us as often as we with him we should never have peace therefore still goe to Christ intreat him to be your Attonement from day to day Christ is not only a Peace-maker but a Peace-keeper we daily offend God or others or our selves and therefore stand daily in need of Christs mediation We have much need of Christs Spirit to helpe us in our prayers Vse 6. Of consolation to every Christian soul to consider in the midst of our sins that we have Christ for our propitiation to keep our peace with God there is not a day passeth over our heads wherein we fall not out with God and if Christ should not put in what would become of us but here is the comfort Christ is our propitiation and therefore it is certaine and sure that he is more able to keep our peace than we are to breake it and besides he hath taken it upon him he hath made it his Office to be an Attonement between God and us and here is also further comfort that he hath not only been a means of reconciliation but he hath manifested it unto us he hath brought us to see Gods face with comfort But this is not all but here is matter of further comfort in that he being made a propitiation for the whole world the whole World shall be at peace with us there is a reconciliation betwixt me and all the Creatures I have comfort from every blessing from Christs Propitiation Job 5.19 and 23. so that whatsoever a Christian meets with whether good deeds or bad persecution c. why this is his comfort that the whole world shall be for his good though I meet with crosses and afflictions it shall be for my good from this ground that Christ is a propitiation for the whole world Vse 7. Seeing God hath made so large an Attonement for all let us draw one another to take heed of sin to run to Christ make use of Christs Attonement and take he●d of sin this use old Eli made 1 Sam. 2.25 If one man sin against another t●● Judge shall judge it but if a man sin against the Lord who shall plead for him If you fall out with God and walke in sin who shall make your peace with him that is a work no friend you have can doe no meanes you can procure can make up that breach none but Christ and you must not presume upon Christs mediation he will not be a baud to any ones sin that is a sign of Reprobation to turn Gods grace into wantonnesse Jude 4. and take heed we doe not offend Christ it is notable counsell God gives to Moses to deliver to the people Exod. 23.20 21.22 Behold I send an Angel before thee that is Christ the Angell of the Covenant beware of him provoke him not he will not spare your misdeeds for my name is in him if you doe willingly sin against him he will not pardon you therefore encourage all the friends you have to make use of Christs Reconciliation he is a propitiation for little children vers 1. for young men for old men in the following verses for all that are willing to lay hold on him this use Paul makes 2 Cor. 5.19 20 21. this is the chiefe point of the Gospel that God hath made Christ a propitiation for sin therefore we beseech you to make use of it take not Christs blood in vain beware to offend his grace and mercy and labour to bring on all to Christ since the propitiation is so generall seeing there
is such a Fountaine set open let us draw at it for our selves and for our children let us teach our children that Christ is made a propitiation for their sins We have heard Christ described from his externall Offices 1 He is an Advocate 2 A Propitiation We come now to his internal vertue or qualification Jesus Christ the righteous Doct. Jesus Christ is the righteous Lord or Jesus Christ either in his Office of an Advocate or Reconciler is Jesus Christ the righteous The Scripture much testifies this Heb. 4.15 1 Pet. 3.8 1 Pet. 2.22 and Pilate that condemned him gave him this testimony I am innocent from the blood of this just man Mat. 27.24 yea from his birth he had this testimony that holy thing Luke 1.33 in opposition to all others who are sinners from the very Wombe he was holy in his Birth in his Life in his Death 2 Cor. 5. ult He knew no sin that is he had experience of none but the Father made him sinfull by imputation that we might be just by imputation It was meet that he should be righteous without sin 1. That he might be our Reconciler 2 That he might be our Advocate if he had had any sin he could have been neither of these 1 For the first had he been sinful himself he could not have made attonement for sin it was required that all the Sacrifices should be without blemish Lev. 3. and 10 else it had not been accepted as the Lord tells them Mal. 1.8 all things defiled with sin are abominable to God Heb. 7.25 26. unlesse some attonement be made now had he been sinfull he had stood in need of Sacrifice for himself and could not have been an attonnment for our sins 2 Cor. 5. ult he that knew no sin was imputed a sinner for us that we might be imputed righteous for his sake 2 It was meet that he should be righteous that he might be our Advocate God hears not sinners Joh. 9.31 the blind man was not so blind but he could say so much but God hears Christ alwaies and we should have such an Advocate as should continually prevail with God look at all the parts of his advocation for us and it is meet that he should be righteous 1 He appears for us in the sight of God and had he been a sinner his person would have been odious in Gods sight 2 He Advocates by pleading the merits of his own death now how could it have been meritorious had he dyed as a malefactor 3 He gives us his name and his Spirit to use in our Prayers now to use his name had been of no effect if he had been a sinner 4 He prayes for us makes known his will to his Father concerning us but this would do no good had he been a sinner 3 It is meet he should be righteous that he might be our justifier our justification is by his obedience his righteousnesse is imputed to us now his righteousnesse could not have been imputed to us had it been imperfect 1 Cor. 2.3 Vse 1 It is a ground of much consolation to such as lay hold on Christ and have him for their Advocate and Reconciler for he is one that is just and righteous and therefore fit to prevail for us what hinders the joy of a Christian Object 1 I much doubt the pardon of my sins if I could be sure of that I should be joyfull Ans You have such a Reconciles as is Just and Righteous and therefore will procure pardon for you Object 2 But I am still unjust and unrighteous Ans But your Reconciler is Just and Righteous and it is not required that the reconciled should be righteous but he that reconciles us it is meet that he be righteous Object 3 I cannot pray my prayers are heartlesse and faithlesse c. Ans Well but we have an advocate that is holy and just and that prayes and intercedes for us and we shall find the benefit of his Righteousnesse though we fall daily into much unrighteousnesse yet Jesus Christ our Mediator is righteous Vse 2 To teach us to be Righteous as he is Righteous God would have us conformable to the image of his Son Rom. 8.29 and that consists in Holinesse and Righteousnesse God would have us so to walk that our Sir-name may be Justus Righteous towards God to give him his due Righteous to others to give them their due and Righteous to our selves To be called Christians and yet not to be righteous is to be called Christians and yet to be no Christians Why are we called Christians but because we are anoynted with the Unction of Christ If a man professe himself to be a Christian and is not Righteous he is not a Christian for he hath not the Spirit of Christ and therefore is none of Christs not but that we may fail but it is required that the stream and bent of our hearts and wayes be to walk Righteously we aim at Righteousnesse though sometimes we misse the mark Vse 3 May quiet us if we fear evil in well doing why Because Christ was most Righteous yet he suffered much unrighteous dealing in a Righteous cause we think we have much wrong if for righteous dealing we meet with unrighteous dealing if in innocency we meet with crosses and Fire and Faggot we cry out O tempora O mores but it was the case of Christ and therefore we must not think it strange to suffer ill for well-doing not only to be reviled but to loose our goods and our lives if we should meet with them it is no more than Christ suffered it was the ground of Atheists in old time if they did see Bona maelis maela bonis evenire why is there a God that doth govern the earth But we must consider God is patient as well as just and therefore many times forbears punishment 1 JOHN 2.3 And hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments THe Apostle St. John having shewed in the former Verses that Christ is our Advocate and Propitiation here might his little Children reason But how shall I know that Christ is my Advocate and Reconciler though he be both yet how shall it appear that it is so to me Why hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments Saint John here speaks of such a knowledge as we call acquaintance and familiarity and fellowship I know you not Matth. 7.23 that is I have no acquaintance and fellowship with you hereby we know we have fellowship with Christ if we keep his Commandments you may know whether you have fellowship with Christ or no by this This third Verse therefore shews our fellowship with Christ in his mediation Doct. 1. A man that knows Christ may and ought to come to know that he doth know him or hath fellowship and communion with him Doct. 2. Such as do keep his Commandments may ceme to know that they do know Christ that they have
walked as perfectly as hee did if wee could then wee had done no more than our duty God hath no cause to thank us and we deserve nothing Luke 7.9.16 Now what is our duty We ought to walk as he hath walked now a Servant looks not for thanks for his dayes work so we have not merited thanks for the works me have done and if when we have done what we can we have done but what we ought to do then we cannot do more than we ought and so are far from superarrogation and for satisfaction if our best works be our debts then we cannot satisfie for our sins by our duties suppose a man owed another a great debt and besides owed him all service for some great benefit for redeeming him from Captivity c. the doing of his service would not satisfie his debt because he owed him that besides so we were all Captives unto Satan and God through Christ delivered us and for that we owe to God all we have and if we were in debt besides by our sins all our service will not satisfie for our sins for wee owe that besides now one debt will not pay another Vse 2 Of direction and exhortation to all that desire to walk answerable to that knowledge they have do you desire to be in Christ and know you are in Christ Why conform your selves to walk as Christ walked if thou dost so thou maist keep a good Christmas all thy life thou shalt keep Christs honour all thy life in remembrance if thou walk as Christ walked therefore Christ died that we might dye unto sin 1 Pet. 4.1 2. whatever corruption is in you let it die in you mortifie pride and anger and uncleannesse and covetousnesse c. learn to dye to these and live to God make it your chiefest pleasure to do Gods will rise from all deadnesse and sluggishnesse of Spirit have you been unable to rule over your Spirits Now put on the Spirit of Kings over-rule your passions and corruptions rule your Families be as Priests to offer up sacrifices of prayer and praise and alms to offer up body and soul to Gods service every work do it in obedience to Gods Commandment do it with chearfullnesse and meeknesse do it to Gods glory and if you be called to suffer suffer Innocently not for any sinful carriage not for murther or theft c. but for Righteousnesse sake and then suffer patiently and meekly and whatever you suffer be sure that you profit by it by temptation by crosses by persecution c. learn obedience and so you shall walk as Christ hath walked be stirred up to walk in imitation of Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 set this pattern before you to imitate him both now and all the year look upon Christ aime at him work as he did suffer as he did and so for Ministers walk faithfully help the weak bring back the stray comfort the distressed walk as Christ hath walked 1 JOHN 1.7 Brethren I write not a new Commandment unto you but an old Commandment which you have had from the beginning the old Commandment is the Word which ye have heard from the beginning FRom the 6th Verse the Apostle had taught It is the duty of all Christians to walk as Christ hath walked now this Commandment the Apostle amplifies verse 7.8 1 By denying the newnesse of it it is no new Commandment to presse upon all that will be saved it is no new Commandment 2 He admits it may be called new in some respects verse 8. In the seventh Verse we have these parts 1 A loving compellation Brethren 2 A denyal of the newnesse of this Commandment I write no● 〈◊〉 you a new Commandment 3 The antiquity of it 4 A declaration how it shall appear not to be new all the Doctrin which you have heard from the beginning is no other but this that all must walk as Christ hath walked Doct. The Ministers of Christ are to acknowledge even their little Children as their Brethren Compare this Verse with the first there he calls them little Children and here Brethren so Paul doth expresse himself thus Rom. 15.14 1 Cor. 2.1 2 Cor. 3.1 Reas Because he and they do partake in all things wherein Natural Brethren partake 1 They have the same God and Father that begets them Ephes 4.6 Jam. 1.17 18. 2 They have one Mother the Church Gal. 4.26 and he speaks of Jerusalem on earth though he calls it Jerusalem which is from above because it is above an earthly condition and John himself was a little Childe to some as they were to him Gal. 4.19 And so sometimes private Christians they do labour and travel in begetting children to God it is a wonder to see many times how some are put to pangs to beget their friends to God sometimes by Prayer by exhortation by reproof by all means they use much pains therefore the Church is called The Mother of us all because some in the Church beget us 3 They all partake in one Immortal Seed by which they are begotten unto God 1 Pet. 1.23 this immortal Seed for the Materiall part it is the Word for the Spiritual part it is the Spirit of God Joh. 3.5 so it is not so much the Letter of the Word as the Spirit of God whereby all are begot to God 4 They are all begotten to the same eternal inheritance 1 Pet. 1.3 and so they are all both Ministers and People called Brethren Vse 1. To teach Ministers so to look at their Spiritual Fatherhood as not to forget their Spiritual Brotherhood ver 1. he calls them little children not that Ministers should shew dominion over them as Lords over them 2 Cor. 1. ult 1 Pet. 5.2 3 4. so then their Fatherhood must not make them Lords but the name of Brotherhood must binde them to communion they have indeed a kinde of power but not to subdue their Spirits to them not to believe as they do or walk as they do only so far as they are like unto Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 otherwise Christians are not to be led by them Vse 2 This must teach both Ministers and People to maintain brotherly love and affection if you be Brethren Let brotherly love continue Heb. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.17 therefore what kinde of desire and comfort there is in brotherly Communion what mutual joy when they meet the same should be in Christian Ministers and People Now the fruits of Brotherly love are chiefly three 1 Unity that they should keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace Col. 3.14 Ephes 4.3 2 Equality not to take away different respects but to make our selves equal to others in affection to conceive that though we have more gifts yet they may have lesse corruption they may not have so much grace but they may make better use of it Phil. 3.13 we should always conceive of others as equal or better than our selves 3 Spiritual Communion that is mutual dispensing of help one to
to look upon a Maid Job 31.1 so for drink Prov. 23.31 Prov. 4.15 it is a notable means of mortification to withhold the blood and spirits from flowing into that member thereby in a good measure they stupifie it Secondly Use some course to stupifie that part Thirdly Cut it off would you mortifie lust Beware of all occasions if such meats or drinks wilt make you Gluttons or Drunkards meddle not with them and so you shall hinder influence to these lusts apply the death of Christ the threatnings of God and so when it begins to stupifie cut it off better it is to want all the sinful pleasures of this life than having of them to be cast into Hell 2 Refrain from bringing forth fruit of these lusts the more fruitful a Tree grows the more sap and strength it draws and strikes deeper into thee earth so let sin once grow fruitful bring forth acts it will get deeper hold and grow so rooted that it will reign in you if you avoyd all occasions and yeeld not to satisfie the least of them it will soon be gone if a strange Dogg comes in if you feed him he stands waiting for one piece after another but if you beat him he is gone where he may finde better entertainment so if lusts find that they can have no entertainment they cannot get one morsell no yeilding to them but repulsing they will be gone from you where they may finde better welcome 3 When thou findest any lust of the flesh arising in thee turn the strength of it to a Spiritual end A man hath an affection to meat or drink what saith Christ I have meat and drink that ye know not of though he were very faint and hungry yet when he saw a company come he attended not to his meat and drink but there was Spiritual food and that comforted and refreshed him so art thou troubled with lust after Women and God calls thee not to Marriage why turn the strength of thy affection to another that is white and ruddy the fairest of ten thousand The more you set your heart to consider how amiable and beautiful and excellent he is you shall finde he will so satisfie your heart that you will finde little content in any other thing besides As the Sun if it shine hot on a fire it puts it out so the love of Christ if it once shine in your hearts and fill your souls with light and joy unspeakable and glorious you shall finde all base Kitching lusts were they never so vehement the Sun of Righteousnesse will soon eat them out so for love of idlenesse and rest let but a Soul consider what comforts he ever found in the favour of God when his left hand was under him and when God held him up in his everlasting Arms do but consider how sweet was one hour of that inward peace you found then above all outward comforts you shall easily see that though your body should never finde rest more yet this inward peace will so satisfie you that you will be ready to say with Paul I have enough I have learned in all these to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-sufficient that I need not more Phil. 4.11 12. 4 Walk faithfully and constantly in your general and particular Callings the reason why a Christian grows carnal and sensual is because either in Gods Ordinances or his particular Calling hee was not spiritually minded walk in the Spirit and you shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5.16 be spiritual and heavenly in Prayer in hearing the Word in your Calling and you shall finde your lusts decay otherwise he that rusheth into occasions of sin needlesly he tempts the Devil to tempt him so that whereas the Devil might otherwise be much weakened and not so able to overcome if we invite occasions and rush into such places where Satan reigns we thrust Weapons into Satans hand and a man never ordinarily leads himself into temptation but he falls let Peter go into the High Priests Hall he shamefully denies his Master before he come out therefore take heed of running into occasions of sin 2 Refrain from the fruits of sin and grow Spiritually minded look after Spiritual objects when we are carried to Sensual objects when we are carried to delight in pleasures and pastimes why let us remember Blessed is the man that hath not walked c. Psal 1.1 2 3. but his delight is in the Law of the Lord he recreates himself his Soul in that such a man shall be as a tree planted by the rivers of water ever sucking sap and grace from the Ordinances that so he grows up but contrary such a one as runs into occasions and fullfills his ●●sts he shall be as a barren Heath and parched Wildernesse his leaf and fruit blasted We come now to the second sort of lusts Doct. Young and old are to be weaned from any lusts of the eye By the lust of the Eye is meant Covetousnesse or inordinate desire of profit 1 Because the Eye makes us covet it as Achan Josh 7.21 2 Because the eye in some measure is glutted with the sight of it Obj. Why doth he not speak of lusts of the Ear for 2 Tim. 2.4 there is an itching Ear thus the Athenians Acts 17 21 and so some have a strong affection to Musick and never well without it this is a lust of the Ear and why is not this reckoned as well as the lust of the eye Aquinas makes this Objection and answers it thus That these lusts stand not so much on the bodily eye as the imagination but the man may as well desire curiosities by the Ear as the Eye make us covet what it sees Answ The answer therefore is the Eye is the seat of sundry Faculties 1 It may be referred to the Understanding and Imagination for that is in the Soul Psal 33.18 2 The hope of a man is translated to his Eye 2 Chron. 20.12 sometimes pity Thine eye shall not spare Deut. 13. sometimes disdain expresseth it self in the eye sometimes pride Prov. 30. in a lofty look and the eye is put oft for the desire of the heart when the eye looks long after it Matth. 5.28 there is a desire that reacheth to something Psal 54. Psal 92.1 Mine eye also shall see my desire upon mine enemies not onely hopes but desires are ever in the eye It is true therefore that the desire of Melody is a lust of the flesh desire of news to satisfie curiosity affection of vain preaching tends to satisfie the pride of life for the lust of all outward senses as far as they satisfie the Senses and Body they belong to the lusts of the flesh but a longing earnest desire after profit is Covetousnesse which is a lust of the eye Q. 1. Wherein stands the lust of the eye A. Either when it is set on wrong objects or in excessive measure or to a wrong end and these the Scripture aims at if the
no nor in life it selfe for they are all transitory but intreat God to set your hearts on everlasting things on everlasting life and induring riches and pleasures for from him they flow Psal 16. ult these are an abiding inheritance and will stick close to us this is the vanity of earthly things the fulnesse of them breeds loathsomnesse and fulsomnesse and a man is duld with them they seem full of comfort till we get them and when we have them we are weary of them but grace on the contrary seems hatefull till it be got but when it is once got the more a man hath the more he desireth godly sorrow breeds repentance never to be repented of 2 Cor. 7.10 neither by God nor by them never did christian repent of his repentance or Faith or godlinesse Riches profit not in the day of wrath Prov. 11.4 therefore love not those things which cannot comfort us when we have most need Joh. 6.26 27. Labour not for the meat that perisheth so labour not for the riches or honour or pleasure that perish but labour for that profit and pleasure and honour which endures for ever We come now to the opposition that which is opposed to the transitoriness of these things the World and the lusts thereof viz. He that doth the will of God abideth for ever Doct. Such as doe the will of God are not as the World and lusts of it of a fading transitory condition but they stand in a permanent abiding Estate Q. 1 What is it to abide for ever A. 1 It implies he is not of an unsteady fleeting temper but of a constant and even frame of spirit and life not now in and now out and never of a constant frame but of an even temper as mountaines are not easily shaken or driven to and fro but remaine in their strength and place why so such as trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Zion that shall not be moved Psal 125.1 and he gives the reason vers 2. without any changing or removing 2 He is said to remain for ever because he doth abide in that Estate for ever there is a difference between constancy and perseverance a man may be said to goe to London though he keeps not even on but goes out and in so such a man as aimes at heaven and goes on as evenly as he can and if he goes out he gets in again such a one perseveres in his way to heaven Q. 2 What is it to doe the will of God A He that doth the will of God stands in opposition to the World and the lusts of it and by this will is not m●ant only the will of Gods pleasure but the will of Gods Commandement for all the Creatures doe the will of Gods good pleasure for they all doe things so far as God wills so that if a man doe his own will he sh ll not goe besides Gods will but here he means the will of Gods Commandement Not every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into Heaven but be that doth the will of my Father Mat. 7.21 t●at is the revealed Will of God Joh. 8.51 For the ground of the point why they abide for ever 1 Because they are born of the unchangeable Will of God of his own Will begat he us Jam 4.18 and he means that Will which is not dependant on the Creature but free Rom. 9.15 There is no cause moving but the only Will of God he will have mercy because he will have mercy therefore when God bestows any mercy on the Creature because he will doe it it puts the Creature on an unexchangeable condition 2 From the vigour and strength of doing the Will of God no man doth the Will of God but the more he shall be inabled and caused to doe it the doing of Gods Will is the ground and strength of a Christian life Joh. 4.34 he means not only he did it chearfully but it was that which refreshed his soul and strengthened his body so that he felt neither hunger nor thirst but it was strength and freedome of spirit to doe his Fathers Will so that though he was thirsty yet his words to the woman did so refresh him that it was his strength and refreshment now if it be so that the more a man doth the Will of God the more strength he hath to doe it nay it conveyes not only strength to the soul but also to the body as a Tree the more fruit it brings forth upwards the deeper rooting it takes downwards so a Christian the more fruit he brings forth to God the deeper he strikes his root in Christ John 14.21 22. if it be thus I say well may he abide for ever 3 From the near union which such have with Christ that doe the Will of his Father Christ came for that end to doe his Fathers Will Joh. 6.38 therefore he that doth the Will of his Father is near to Christ he is Father and Mother and Brother and Sister Mark 3. ult because they are born of the same Father of the same Spirit and they doe the same work if therefore we doe his Will not as Servants but as Children then we are as heirs and remain in the house for ever Joh. 8.35 36. 4 From Gods readinesse ever to hear the prayers of such as doe his Will as the blind man said Joh. 8.34 If any man doe the Will of God him he hears wherein he shews that suitable to our hearing of God God hears us if we hear God in his Commandements he will heare us in our petitions if we take up Gods Word he will take up our prayers that they be not lost if we be sinners God hears not us why because we hear not him God is as ready to doe our wills as we are to doe his Mat. 7 2. with what measure we meet to him he will meet to us if we be careful to attend to his Word and industrious to doe his Will God will certainly doe our wills as we have done his Psal 139. ult he desires to be led in everlasting wayes that is the Will of God for that is only everlasting and a Christian praying to doe Gods Will as the Angels God will fulfil his will and his Will is to abide for ever and so it is Gods Will that he should abide for ever Obj. Doth not David complain I am tossed to and fro as a Grashopper Psal 109.22 Ans He speaks not there of his inward estate which was constant and even but his outward estate which was very unconstant sometimes puld from the Ordinances he hopt from one place to another from Mountains to Woods and Caves from place to place like a Grashopper but his inward frame was constant and even Obj. But was not Davids inward frame s metimes very uneven he that had sometimes shewed much kindnesse to Mephibosheth after took away his Lands he that sometimes was smitten for cutting off Sauls skirt after sticks not to
have neglected to keep their Conscience clean their judgment is unsound a corrupt Conscience a corrupt Judgement 3 From the disposition of men and aptnesse then to catch the greatest cold when their spirits have been most warmed and heated no man so apt to take cold as they who are very warm and hot so in the days of the Apostles they did not only fill them with Knowledge but warmed the Church with Zeal and Heat zeal towards their Ministers zeal in their liberality they loved not their own lives in respect of Christ now their spirits being so warm they are more subjesh to get cold and distemper every Christian in particular finds it so when he hath been most enlarged at the Word or Prayer ere long he will be more straitned there being a secret pride in the experience of Gods favour and to rest in our selves thinking that we have sufficient grace in our selves when we see our need of Christ we depend only on him but when we are full we depend on our selves and so by sitting loose from Christ we get a great cold we are cold in Prayer Word Sacrament thus it is with the Church when God sheds his Spirit abundantly in the Church they grow secure and depend upon themselves thus we see Josh 1.9 10 11. so that one would have thought that that generation would have been more zealous yet none so Idolatrous till God quickned them by their enemies so in the Apostles times the Church was very forward and zealous a few Generations after their spirits were carried away with errors 4 From the disposition of Satan he hath great rage because the time is short Rev. 12.8 and we shall always finde that the Devil hath imitated God if God have Sacrifices from his people so the Devil from the Pagans so if God set up a Christ Sathan will have an Antichrist set up that may be not only a substitute but an enemy to Christ that as God had won the world by Christ so he would delude the world by Antichrist 5 From the wise and just dealing of God if God reveal more means of knowledge he will use many means of trial he will have them winnowed that so the good may remain as Wheat the Chaffe may be blown away if God give more Tallents he will put them upon more employment and exexercise Vse 1 To teach Christians not to be offended if they finde variety of seducing spirits in these days a man would wonder in such peaceable days when Religion is maintained there should be so many opinions and agitations how comes this about you must know that God never dispenced generally more knowledge since the revelation of Antichrist than now now where there is most knowledge Sathan will be seducing and corrupting their wisdom where there is more wisdome there is more curiosity and pride so much knowledge so much want of truth many times and so putting off the truth men run into several errors and it is just with God seeing they put away a good Conscience and would not give heed to sound Doctrine therefore God gave them up to follow lyes 2 Thes 2. and their longing desire and zeal in former times will end in such a cold that there will be a defect of all warmth and heat and wheresoever you see the truth not held in a good Conscience they run their faith on Rocks some split on a rock of Arminianism some on a rock of Popery so that it must needs be that in these last times many Antichrists must be Vse 2 Since many Antichrists are and will be in these last times let us labour to be so established in the truth that however the times be we may keep our faith and religion Q. How shall we be thus established A. 1. Get contrary spirits to the former give not up your selves to curiosity and vain speculations if the Lord find you humble he will teach you in his ways if when you are warm and hot you have a care that you get not cold 1 Chron. 29.18 Pray to God to keep your hearts always in that frame or at least in such a frame as may befit every days businesse and then whatsoever the times be our hearts and judgements shall be established in the truth but unless God give you a good Conscience with your knowledge you will be soon perverted and therefore I say as Paul to the Ephesians Ephes 2.12 continue in a firm love of the truth as well as in the knowledge of it 1 JOHN 2.19 They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had been of us no doubt they would have continued with us c. THe Apostle Vers 18. had instructed Babes of the coming of Antichrist now in this Verse he first discribes them 1 By their Apostacy they went out from us 2 Their condition before They were not of us he amplifies both the latter he proves by an Argument They were not of us for if they had been of us they would have continued with us The former he amplifies by the reason why God gave them up to Apostacie which was that these Seducers might be made manifest that they were not of us Q. 1. What is meant by this They went out from us A. 1. They departed from their Doctrin in Judgment and from their Fellowship in Practise Acts 2.42 Now these men departed from both they forsook the truth which before they profest 2 Joh. 9. and not in circumstantial points but in such whereby they denyed both the Father and the Son as verse 22. 1 Tim. 1.19 2 In their fellowship they declined from them in communion of Ordinances and mutual help Heb. 10.25 They went out from us from whom who are they from us Apostles and Ministers from us that is from Old men Young men and Children they went out from all the true Members of the Church They were not of us That is they were never true members of our Body they were with us and amongst us but they were never of us 1 Joh. 4.4 5. as the Children of God are in the world yet not of the world their mindes are not on this world their inheritance is not in this world so on the contrary the Children of the Church are in the Church but not of the Church Doct. 1. Some may be in the Church which after do depart from the Church Doct. 2. Such as do depart were never Members of the Church Doct. 3. Such as are Members continue always in the Church Doct. 4. Those that depart manifest themselves not to be of the Church Doct. 5. This departing from the Church is a note of Antichrist Doct. 1. There are some in the Church which may depart from the Church That may leave the Doctrin Fellowship and Practise of the Church Heb. 10.25 2 Thes 2.3 1 Tim. 2.4 Q. How comes it to pass that men in the Church and in some measure affecting the ways of Religion depart from the Church
A. 1. This comes from want of thorow and entire fellowship with the Lord Jesus for though they may have much joy and comfort in the Members of the Church yet it is but a Land-flood all that joy and grace may be dried up unlesse they partake of that Fountain which never fails and as the Lord told Samuel They have not rejected thee but me they have rejected so see you any departing from the Church they departed from Christ and union with him first Dan. 11.34 35. many cleave to him but feignedly Heb. 12.13 when a man haults between falshood and truth or God and his lusts he will be turned out of the way 2 From the stumbling-blocks they meet with in 1 The Church first persecution Matth. 13.21 that makes some offended 2 Hard Doctrin Joh. 16.66 the Doctrin of Purity seems harsh Doctrin to them so the Doctrin of Predestination offends some 3 There fall out some admonitions or reproofs to be dispenced to the Members of the Church now if they come with proud unmortified spirits they will be offended at them and fly back again this was the cause of Simon Magus his Apostacy when Peter reproved him sharply he could not brook it but fell off and set up a false Doctrin and lying miracles to subvert the Apostles Doctrin some depart from others because they think themselves more holy than others Isa 65.5 either they give offence to others or others to them Vse Shews us our duty not to rest our selves satisfied in that we are Members of the Church we may live in the Church and partake of the ordinances yet after fall off therefore be sure that you give up your selves first to the Lord and then to the Church otherwise keeping any pride or covetousnesse in our hearts it will make us fall off pride will make us take offence at others and others at us and covetousnesse will make us fall off when we meet with persecution and losse of goods and liberty for Christ therefore come with humble and mortified hearts and give up your selves to Christ and then you shall not easily give offence to others and will be content to part with any thing for Christ and so will continue Members of the Church Doct. 2 Such as depart from the Church were never Members of the Church They were not of us that is of the Apostles nor of us that is of such whose sins are forgiven them either old men or young or Children Q. What is the Church or who are the Church 1 The Church is called a company of Saints because they are holy in heart and practice 1 Cor. 14 13. 1 Cor. 1.2 2 The Church is called an elect people 3 They that are indeed of the Church are such as shall be saved Acts 2 ult as all those that were in Noahs Ark were saved so all those that are true Members of the Church Grounds 1 From the near fellowship such have with the Catholique Church and so certainly are of the number of the first born written in heaven Heb. 12.23 therefore Christ saith all his sheep hear his voice Joh. 10.2 3 4.16.27 28. and none shall pluck them out of his hand Those that are truly Members of the particular Church are likewise Members of the Catholique my finger which is a part of my hand is a part of my whole body 2 From the fellowship such have with the head Christ all the true Members receive nourishment from the head Col. 2.18 19. therefore they not holding to the head fall into vain speculations therefore those that depart from the head fall from the Church Ephes 4.15 16. and being knit to the head they are joyned with such bands of the spirit and bands of ordinances that they all partake of one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 so 1 Cor. 12.13 1 Cor. 10.6 7. and so in all their prayers they pray for the whole Church Our Father thy Will be done of us we have a tender care of all the Church knit together in one Love one Faith one Hope one Baptisme so that those that are truly knit cannot fall off Vse 1 To reprove an Error of the Romish Church that do maintain that wicked men may be true Members of the Church but we say that those that fall off were never true Members of the Church and yet they hold that many fall off and yet were true Members but they might indeed depart from their Church but never from any true Church if they do depart from the Church they were never true Members of the Church they were not of Christs sheep for he will keep them that none of them shall fall off We say therefore that such were not true Members but ill humors and superfluous excrements of the body and therefore no wonder though they fell off But you will say some there are that continue faithfull friends to the Church and never fall off from them are there not some that are ornaments and maintainers and supporters of the Church yet have no truth of Grace in their hearts are not they Members of the Church They have the place of Members but are not true Members a glasse eye may be an ornament to the body and a wooden Legg a support to the body yet are no true Members so such may be ornaments and supporters of the Church yet no true Members but as a glasse eye or a wooden legge these though they cleave to the body yet they are not joyned by nerves and sinews neither animated by the head so these are not tyed to the Church by the spirit of God or bond of Faith and Love but some external ligaments as honour or profit in the Church Vse 2 It may teach us what to judge of such men as have been sometimes very forward and zealous Professors but afterwards they sit loose from Religion and fall off from the Saints and grow enemies to the Church they were never true Members of the Church Stella cadens nunquam stella cometa fuit never any Star fell the Church is compared to Heaven Christians to Stars when we think we see a Star fall it is no Star but a meteor drawn up by the heat of the Sun which when the heat of the Sun is withdrawn falsl so if you see any Stars fall from the Church they were some sluggish meteors that by the heat of Gods ordinances were raised up and inflamed but after the heat was a little dissolved they fell away if any fall they were never any true Stars in heaven but blazing meteors Vse 3 It may teach us never to rest in any fellowship or society of the Church till we are knit by the spirit to God and Christ so that every ordinance knits you nearer to Christ and to his Members and every conference quickens your affection to the Church and theirs to you come not therefore to the Fellowship of the Church for custome or credit or to satisfie friends these are but as glasse eyes and woden leggs
and fight and wrestle against our Spiritual enemies Sin Sathan and the World 3. Oyl cheareth the hearts and countenances of men so the Spirit is an oyl of gladnesse Isa 61.3 so that they are annoynted therewith are no more afraid of Hell or Sathan but walk on cheerfully before God so the graces of Gods Spirit Wisdom makes the face to shine Eccles 8.1 takes away Pride rough looks wanton looks and so smoothes and makes the countenance amiable such a soul is annoynted with the oyl of gladnesse 4. There was an use of Oyl to consecrate all Vessels no Consecration but Oyl was a part of it Exod. 33.23 whether to consecrate Vessels or Officers this use of oyl is in the Spirit of God from him it is that Gods Children are no longer for themselves or the world but consecrated to God and dedicated to him as Kings Priests and Prophets Act. 2.17 Rev. 1.6 so that that Oyntment which was poured on Christ above measure descends to every Member of his Church healing their Wounds softning and suppleing their souls chearing their hearts and countenances and consecrating them to bee Kings Priests and Prophets to God and therefore as Christ was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so every Member of Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 11.26 that is one annoynted so that every childe of God hath in some measure a Kingly Priestly and Propheticall Office 1 Samuell 8.28 Kings were chosen to bee Judges and to fight the Lords Battels why so in some measure every Christian hath a power to judge 1 Cor. 2.15 and fight the Lords Battels such an Unction he hath that whatsoever case he is cald to he hath a spirit of judging and discerning what is good what bad so that he stands not at any mans judgement if it be of matters concerning Salvation God hath given him a regal spirit so Secondly he is able to fight the Lords Battels not against flesh and bloud for they are but typicall and shadowy battels but we fight against Principalities and Powers Ephes 6.12 to 18. and so their wars are farre above Princes Rev. 12.1 these are great Battels with Sathan and the World and our own corruptions 1 Pet. 2.11 so we should all fight the good fight 2 Tim. 4.8 2 As a Priest he performs the Priestly Office which stood partly in praying partly in teaching partly in sacrifycing so God hath given to every Christian a Spirit of Prayer an Teaching Rom. 8.15 Jer. 31 32 33. so also they offer up to God a sacrifice of a broken heart Psal 51.17 a sacrifice of praise a sacrifice of righteousness Psal 4.5 6. Rom. 12.1 2. nay sometimes the Lord gives them to sacrifice whole Towns and Cities unto God as Paul and Peter offered three thousand together he takes them from sin and brings them to God so that they bring in heaps upon heaps to God so that they are not poor Kings and Priests but truly if Christians knew their worth they would not be so discouraged and cast down in respect of the World 3 For Prophets it was their office to Preach and Pray but this was principall they had a speciall revelation of Gods secrets and this is verified of poor Christians he reveals his secrets to them Psal 25.14 Matth. 13.11 so tha● many a poor Christian is able to discern more than his Minister Apollos wa● an eloquent man and mighty in the Scripture yet he found Aquilla and Priscilla Tent-makers they were able to instruct him more perfectly Matth 11.25 26 27. the great mysteries of Election Vocation Justification which are hid from the world God reveals these to poor Fisher-men and to Babes and as it was a spirit of prophecy to interpret obscure mysteries so God many times helps poor Christians to see more clearly into Scripture than many great Scholars Rev. 3.18 they have received an Unction from the holy one that is Christ he is often called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 1.95 Psal 16.10 Dan. 9.24 he is the Holy one the Holy head of the Church and from him it is that we receive this Unction Holinesse is that whereby we give God his own due Holinesse is the fulfilling of the first Table righteousnesse of the Second now Christ is called the Holy one because he was set apart not only from all unclean but common uses and dedicated to the Lord. Two things make a thing holy a setting apart from unclean and common uses and dedicating to Spiritual and Holy uses so the Sabbath and the Sacraments are said to be Holy now Christ was properly called the Holy one for no Ordinance so separate from community as Christ nor so wholly dedicate to God as Christ was therefore we see how these little Babes should help themselves against Antichrist as there is an Antichrist so there is a Christ as they have a spirit of seducing so he is an Unction a Box of Oyntment which is able to confirm you and help you against all these Vse 1 Of trial to every Christian whether he be a true Christian or no for he is a Jew that that is one outwardly Rom. 2.27.28 we would think our selves deeply wronged if any should deny us to be Christians why what is a Christian one that is annoynted to be King Priest and Prophet dost not thou know the things that belong to thy peace or heavenly knowledge Dost thou finde that thou canst not warre against thy Spirituall enemies Dost thou finde that thou canst not pray or instruct others and as for judging thou sayest God forbid that I should meddle with other mens matters the secrets of God are not with thee why if it be thus with thee thou maist pretend Christianity but thou hast none in thee but on the contrary if thou knowest how to discern things that differ if thou knowest how to fight the Lords Battels if thou knowest how to pray and instruct others and bring in others if thou beest able to discern the mysteries of God to subdue Sathan the World and thine own heart if it be thus with thee thou art a Christian and thou hast that Unction that will never forsake thee if thou hast received no more then thou hast by thy Book or thy education thou wantest these infused gifts there is never a Christian but he now knows better what Sin is and what Grace is then he did before he is now able to see what he never saw before he knows the Wrath of Christ and the excellency of Gods favour why if thy graces come from this inward annoynting thou art a Christian such a one whose praise is of God and not of man Vse 2 Would you know where the Church is every company saith It is in me the Papists say it is in me and the Separists it is in me the Protestants say it is in neither of you but in me why where you have a Company endued with this holy Oyntment why there the Church is and he that departs from it is
condemnation in them the Judge much more 1 JOHN 3.21 Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Doct. SVch as have peace with their own consciences have boldnesse with God If we have peace with our hearts we have not onely peace with God but boldnesse Eph. 3.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is liberty of speech hence comes liberty of carriage When God hath been pleased to give us fellowship with him in Christ that we have the Ministry of the Gospel revealed to us then we have boldnesse Phil. 1.20 He that hath this hope shall never be ashamed before God or men Rom. 5.1 2. This rejoycing is a companion of boldnesse Wherein stands this boldnesse Answ In three things 1 In liberty of spirit to ask those things at Gods hands that are meet for us This we may doe with some boldnesse and liberty Heb. 4.16 Let us go boldly to the throne of grace he means in prayer A Christian that hath the Lord Jesus Christ for his High Priest who hath reconciled him to God to him Gods throne is not a Judgement-seat but a Mercy-seat and he begs mercy to help him in time of need we may safely expect God will not deny what we ask Phil. 1.6 The Apostle tells us by his own example he never prays for them but his heart is warmed with joy and he was confident God would grant what he prayed for We come to a throne of grace that is we may speak as favourites to God 2 Boldnesse in dangers that may befall in this world or another He walks fearlesse and securely against the fear of danger Psal 23.4 ult Doubtlesse loving kindnesse and mercy shall follow me all my days Surely or doubtlesse This is a bold speech to assure himselfe that goodnesse and mercy shall follow him whithersoever he goes 3 In expectation of all good things whether we pray for them or not God many times will have more care of us then we of our selves Paul was in a straight he knew it would be better for him to be dissolved and to be with Christ yet better for the Church if he should in the flesh and he is confident he shall stay with them to their joyes Phil. 1.24 25. Acts 20.23 24. There was a readinesse of heart in him so to carry all things as that he might rejoyce in all 1 Cor. 1.12 Reas 1 From the justification by faith Rom. 5.1 to 5. We rejoyce in tribulation hope never makes ashamed The soul is never at peace till such time as by faith it doth receive and apply Christs righteousnesse Acts 14.5 A man that owes another man money and knows not how to pay him he is ashamed to come into his sight He that knows he hath injured his Prince and that he doth watch an occasion to be revenged of him he will be afraid and ashamed 2. The sincerity of his sanctification Though a man hath assurance that his sins are pardoned and that he is a childe of God yet if he walk crookedly and loosly in his own wayes his conscience will be so perplexed and distracted as that he will think every hand of God comes as a judgement 2 Cor. 1.12 Here is his boldnesse he hath walked in simplicity and purenesse A man is fearfull and ashamed when he hath dealt doubly either with God or man or walked in some way of impurity of heart Psal 51.8 Davids bones were broken he could not stand upright he could not look God in the face When God gives a man to walk in simplicity without guile and purenesse without uncleannesse then a man may walk boldly and with joy otherwise he walks like a criple and creeps up and down Vse 1 It reproves an old cavill that hath been in the world that Religion makes men Dastards and Cowards No rather want of Religion If men had but purity of heart and good conscience towards men they would fear no dangers 2 Cor. 1.12 2 Refutation of all Popery They cannot be bold because they cannot know God to be their Father they keep not a good conscience Where there is no good conscience there is no boldnesse Wicked men indeed may be bold through ignorance or through abundance of natural spirits mettle courage c. This may be in Papists and was found in Heathens 3 A ground of tryall of a mans peace Luke 11.21 Thou art at peace D●st thou pray boldly dost thou look that God should answer thee How dost thou look danger in the face Prov. 28.1 2. In danger thou knowest Christ hath born all many things befall thee thou art confident all shall be for thy good 4 This teacheth us the true way of boldnesse St. Austin praiseth God that he can think of his former evills without fear If thou wouldst doe thus strive with God that he would sprinkle thy soule with the blood of Christ If thou hast found peace of justification with God labour for peace of sanctification Let no rebellious lusts be in thy soule but complain of it to the Lord and fight against them 5 Much consolation to a childe of God that walks in simplicity of a good conscience If God hath given thee an heart to loath all wickednesse and abandon all occasions of sin there is a boldnesse springing in thy heart A childe of God hath boldnesse but he sees it overclouded he knows not wi●h what sin but God doth sometimes pour out himselfe more largely sometimes more straightly therefore a childe of God fears something amisse in him and he is discouraged but he needs not there is a cause of boldnesse it is our portion If our heart condemn us not we have boldnesse towards God 1 JOHN 3.22 And whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight THere is a double benefit of our assuring our selves that we are of the truth First If our hearts condemn us not God will much lesse condemn us but we have boldnesse towards God Secondly Acceptance of all our prayers in the presence of God Which he proves from an argument taken from the practise of such as have inward peace they keep his commandements 1 Here is a priviledge of such as are at peace with God they may assure themselves that their prayers are heard 2 A reason of this because they keep his commandements Doct. According to our hearing of Gods commandements so he hears our prayers As we regard Gods Word so he ours John 9.33 The question was What he thought of him that opened his eyes He thought he was a Prophet because God heard not sinners John 15.7 If my word abide in you c. Let us keep Gods Word and he will keep our prayers to fulfill them Gods Word abides in us when in our judgements we approve of it and in our hearts we cleave to it in our lives we practise it The Word of God abides not in us except it rules as becomes the
Word of God Zech. 7.13 Prov. 28.9 Reas 1. From a rule of equity which God useth in dispensing himselfe Mat. 7.2 As we dispense our selves to him so doth God himselfe to us This it a generall rule of Gods walking towards men With what measure we mete God will measure to us again If we let no Word of God fall to the ground but our conscience stand in awe of it and our hearts cleave to it God will let none of our prayers fall to the ground 2. From the unity of the Spirit that doth help us to keep the commandements God makes account we keep the commandements when there is none but our judgements approve Ezek. 36.26 27. Rom. 8.15 The Spirit helps us to pray and it asks things according to the will of God and he knows the meaning of the Spirit As who should say He that prayes not in the Spirit is a Barbarian unto God 3. From the love and respect God bears to them that keep his commandements It is the way to become Gods Favourite John 14.21 23. Vse 1. It shews us the cause of the fruitlesnesse of our prayers at any time God hears not us because we hear not him If our prayer fall to the ground then surely Gods Word hath faln to the ground A good prayer and a bad life can never meet James 2.20 If we live in awlesse respect to Gods commandements he hears not our prayers 2. Encouragement to the obedience of Gods commandements What comfort would a man have more then to have his wish If God give thee an heart to keep all his commandements thou mayst assure thy heart that all thy petitions are granted 3. A ground of comfort to every such soule as makes conscience of his wayes If thou walkest with a care to fulfill Gods will he will fulfill thine Such as give themselves to walk as Christ hath walked may have this comfort John 11.32 Psal 119.5 6. Such petitions as are long delayed and seem to be most strongly denyed are fulfilled Dan. 10.3 10 11 12. Daniels prayers were heard the first day but not then answered A petition is granted in Heaven and a course taken for the accomplishment of it but yet there must be a time to bring it about Deut. 5.25 26. Though God delay our prayers yet even then he grants them Prov. 21.10 Jer. 17.10 God regards the hearts of his people and their movings Moses desired onely to see the good Land God bid him go up to the hill and so strengthened his sight to see it he should not go over because the people should see Gods displeasure against him We have an end alwayes in our prayers and we prescribe means to God he many times denies the means in displeasure but gives the end 2 Cor. 12.7 8. So it was in Paul God would not remove the messenger of Satan but he did that by it which he would have done the free passage of the spirit in his heart Heb. 5.7 A Christian prays for the light of his countenance God hears not Why dost thou desire it to strengthen thy faith He will doe it by the word of promise We pray that God would mortifie some corruption Why doe we desire it that grace may have free passage in our hearts God will by such lusts mortifie a greater that is pride of heart and God works such a loathing in thy heart and bitternesse in regard of sin that we might mortifie them The second benefit is the acceptance of all our prayers in the presence of God amplified by an argument taken from the practice of such men whose hearts doe not condemn them before God they keep his commandements and doe that which is pleasing in his sight set forth in a Syllogisme Whoso keeps Gods commandements those whatsoever they ask they receive of God But those whose hearts condemn them not keep Gods commandements Doct. That such as keep Gods commandements they keep a good conscience and Gods favour together They have peace at home and in heaven First They have peace at home in their own conscience Heb. 13.18 We have a good conscience in all things desiring to live honestly that is to keep Gods commandements Secondly As they keep a good conscience on earth so they keep favour in heaven 1 Kings 15.5 Thus it s said of David that he did that which was good in the sight of the Lord he had a care to keep Gods commandements Thus did Asa 2 Chron. 14.2 Hezekiah Ib. 29.2 So did Josiah 2 Kings 23.25 and 2 Chron. 34.2 What is it to keep Gods commandements Ans It is not barely to keep them in our minds and memory but First to keep them as one would keep his high-way A traveller so soon as he is out of his way and sees it he blames himselfe for it and hastens to get into it again Secondly as a man would keep his jewells Prov. 6.20 21. Thirdly to keep it as the apple of our eye Prov. 7.1 2 3. If the least more fall into our eye we never leave till we get it out so we must make scruple of the least sins Fourthly we must keep the commandements as we would keep our life Now Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life So we should lose our lives and all we have for Gods commandements Reas From the suitablenesse of the will or commandements of God and the conscience of a Christian You please a man when you doe that which is according to his will and so look what is good in Gods sight that is according to Gods commandements The commandements of God are a lively image of his will God is a God of pure eyes Hab. 1.13 he hateth wickednesse Psal 5.4 Any thing that is evill is displeasing in Gods sight When Vriah was slain and David took his Wife into his house it is said that thing displeased the Lord 2 Sam. 12.27 But the will of God is our sanctification 1 Thes 4.3 A man is said to be made after Gods own Image when he is righteous and holy The Apostle exhorts us to put on the next man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Eph. 4.24 Holinesse is the sum of the commandements of the first Table Righteousnesse of the second Vse 1. Hence we may have a tryall of our conscience whether it be good or no for upon the goodnesse of our conscience depends the peace of this world and another Heb. 13.18 Examine your selves Doe you keep Gods commandements as a man would keep his way the apple of his eye his life and soul or his Jewells Else you doe not keep a good conscience There are four sorts of consciences First A conscience that is quiet yet not good As when the strong man keeps the house all that he p●ssesseth is in peace Luke 11.21 Secondly There is a conscience which is good but yet not quiet Such was Davids Psal 31.22 when he said in his hast he was utterly cast
rich 3 He denyed his own honour He being in the form of God yet made himself of no reputation to save us from reproach 4 As if all this had been too little he denyed his own life and laid it downe for us John 3.16 Reas What is the reason of this difference that our love to our neighbour must be so great above the love to our selves 1 Because there was no cause of denying our selves in innocency but now man is fallen he cannot raise up another but he must stoop If two men go together if they go both upright they may go hand in hand but if one be faln and not able to rise the other if he will raise him must stoop down and toyl to get him up God hath raised up some sooner then others therefore we must take up our faln Brethren 2 God requires love in a more exact manner and measure because he hath now given an higher and more exact pattern We have the pattern of Christ that forgave us ten thousand talents therefore we ought to forgive our Brethren an hundred pence Mat. 18. Vse 1. This should stir up all Christians to walk now in an higher frame of love then formerly they were wont in times past We walked then in a lower way to love our Brother as our selves But we must now say I will do so for my Brother as I may not prejudice my self my estate credit or life But now we that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weaker Rom. 15.1 2. Now we must have the same minde in us which was in Christ Jesus Heb. 2.4 to 16. 2 Cor. 11.7 8. Paul abased himself that they might be exalted and denyed himself of many comforts that he might help them As Christ laid down his life for us so must we for our Brethren in sundry cases 1 John 3.16 For more particular direction 1 A man ought to deny his own expediences for his Brothers necessity Neh. 5.18 2 He ought to deny himself in outward things to supply his Brethren in spiritual things Thus Paul 3 If a man be of a private condition and his Brother of publique use to the Church he ought to deny himself to maintain and succour him as they said to David Thou art worth ten thousand of us Rom. 16.4 5. Aquila and Priscilla 2 This should teach you that are of higher estate to help your poor neighbours that are fallen into straights not through prodigality or ryot but through Gods hand or charge of children You must not say I must look to my self and to my children that they be maintained This was the old rule now we must deny our selves and our own experiences and be continually doing good in obedience to this commandement It was a royal speech of David 2 Sam. 24. Shall I offer a sacrifice of that that cost me nothing Heb. 13 15 16. When God blesseth thee with many a pound wilt thou offer a sacrifice to God that cost a penny or a thing that cost thee nothing It 's for you to blesse God that hath enriched you with such abundance and say with David What shall I render to the Lord for all these goods Your goods reach not to God but to the Saints that are on the earth and if you begin to straighten your hands and hearts you will finde God straightning himselfe to you What a blessed thing were it to be laying aside something for good uses Our Saviour that lived in so mean a condition yet had care to provide for the poor John 13.28 Doct. There is not a more effectual means to the obtaining our petitions then by growing up in practice of these two commandements in believing on the Name of Christ and love to our Brethren Mark 11.22 to 26. There you have both joyned together Jam. 1.8 Let a man pray in faith and waver not When a Christian is tossed with doubtings and distractions he shall rather drown his prayers then bring them to the bosome of Christ Jesus Job's friends were godly men but because they dealt not in love with Job God professeth he would not hear them Want of love to our Brethren it damps our prayers before God So that though our persons be accepted yet our prayers shall not Why is faith so necessary 1. Faith makes our persons acceptable to God God heares the young ravens and lyons when they call upon him he rather hears their misery then their prayer but faith makes the person acceptable Thus By faith Abel c. Heb. 11. 2. Faith purifies the heart Acts 15.9 If I regard wickednesse in my heart God will not hear my prayers Psal 66.18 3 Faith furnisheth the heart with graces that make our prayers amiable There are four graces requisite in prayer and all are wrought by faith 1 Reverence to God A man without faith considers not before whose presence he stands he considers not that God is near to hear his petitions but faith is the evidence of things not seen it makes us come before God with reverence and godly fear Heb. 11.27 2 Faith breeds in us humility whereby we come before God with a sense of our unworthinesse and of the least of Gods mercies and an unablenesse to ask any thing according to his will 3 Faith works fervency and earnestnesse of spirit that we will give God no rest 2 Sam. 15.16 Effectual fervent prayer is called a prayer of faith For 1 Faith puts life into every duty Gal. 3. 2 Faith layes hold of the promises of God in Christ and we urge and presse God upon his word 3 Faith makes us very sensible of our wants and therefore we cry very hard for help 4 Faith works in us an holy canfidence that what we ask God will undoubtedly grant and it 's meant of faith in the Name of the Lord Jesus There are three things in the Name of the Lord Jesus which Faith layes hold on 1 Faith lays hold on the offices of his mediation There had been no hope of acceptance unlesse there had been a Mediator to reconcile God and us 1 John 2.1 2. Heb. 4.14 15 16. Though we should finde many weaknesses in our selves yet with confidence may we draw neer to God seeing we have such an High Priest which is touched with our infirmities he is that great Master of requests that is in such favour with God that he never presents up a prayer to God but he returns such an answer that we need not go away with sad hearts John 16. ●3 24. 2 Faith lookes at Christ as him in whom all the promises are yea and amen 2 Cor. 5.20 3 Faith layes hold on all the attributes of God set on work by Christ for our good So that if we look for wisdome grace or power they are all set on work for the good of his Church The name of the Lord is a strong tower that is the attributes of God the righteous flye to it .. How By faith Q. How is the love of
our Brethren such an effectual means for the obtaining of our prayers Ans 1. Love enlargeth us to forgive injuries done unto us and that moves God to forgive us our trespasses To forgive us a work of love 2 Love is ready to give Acts 10.4 God was ready to give ear to the prayer of Cornelius because he was ready to give alms 3 There be to whom we can give little but yet there is a good opinion and esteem to be had of them Now this is a fruit of love to esteem well of our Brethren and to judge charitably and this prevails with God to have a good conceit of our prayers If we be estranged and alienated from our Brother in ill conceits we shall finde God to be estranged to us This was the fault of Job's friends they had an hard conceit of him which was for want of love and this provoked God against them Mat. 5.23 24. God will accept of no prayer as long as he sees in us a harsh conceit of our Brother Vse 1. To exhort us in the Lord when we go about any such duty as prayer is to present it up unto God in the spirit of faith and love They are such special graces as without them no prayer can be accepted Let us but labour to grow up in these two faith towards God and love to our Brethren and then whatsoever we ask being darted up by these two shall find acceptance with God Vse 2. Of consolation to every soul that comes in any measure with faith and love before God we shall not put up any petition but we shall finde God ready to answer it 1 JOHN 3.24 And he that keepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he in him and hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us VErs 22. The Apostle hath taught us a notable priviledge of keeping Gods commandements and that is the obtaining the grant of our petitions vers 23. he tells us what commandements they be In this verse he lays down another benefit which we have by keeping Gods commandements that is fellowship with God God dwels in us and we in him This verse consists of two parts 1 The benefit of obedience to Gods commandements God dwels in us and we in him 2 The means by which we know that God dwels in us and that is by himself for a Christian might else doubt of it Doct. That an obedient Christian keeps mutual entire and constant fellowship with Christ He is an obedient Christian that keeps the commandements of God as his way 1 John 7 8. As his jewels Prov. 6.21 As the apple of his eye Prov. 7.2 3 4. As his life Prov. 16.19 To keep them as commands implies obedience out of sence of superiority in the commander inferiority in the person commanded He that keeps the commandements in such a manner hath true fellowship with God God dwels in him and he in God Reas From the effect Our keeping of Gods commandements is a meanes to keep fellowship with God John 14.23 God will come and keep house with us and refresh and comfort us If a Christian shall grow up in obedience to Christ then Christ his Husband will lop off his superfluous branches that so he may bring forth more fruit then he did before he will comfort us with the consolations of his holy Spirit he will come in and sup with us Neh. 8.10 The more comfort the more strength Comfort comes from confortare to strengthen the more strong a Christian is the more cheerfully he performs Christian duties like as the Sun is said to come forth like a gyant rejoycing to run his race Psal 19.4 A weak man soon faints and is weary but a strong man goes through his businesse cheerfully Vse 1. It reproves a Popish clamour They say Protestant Christians can do no good works because we deny all merit in them like as our Saviour teacheth us when we have done all we can we must say we are unprofitable servants we do not deserve our daily bread but as Jacob confesseth we are lesse then the least of his mercies Gen. 30.1 Is there no use of good works except they merit Is there no use of gold because it doth not justifie us Is not thi● encouragement enough for us to be doing good works seeing thereby we shall maintain mutual entire and constant fellowship with God Yea we say that God also will at the last day recompence us though not for our works yet according to our good works We do not merit any thing at Gods hands by our good works because we do receive strength from him for the performance of them 2 This may shew every Christian just ground of encouragement to keep himself close to Gods commandements in keeping of them is great reward For we keep in Christ Jesus and we keep mutual and entire and constant fellowship with the Father and so we shall finde him as an Husband-man taking pains with us keeping us from evill and cleansing us from those corruptions which will make us stink in his nostrils and this he will do because he sees us taking pains and employing that stock of graces which he hath bestowed on us By this means God will make our lives comfortable and will multiply graces in us in a great measure and give us more strentgh to make us yeeld more obedience unto him And whereas other Christians lives are very obscure we shall shine forth as the Sun at noon day therefore those Christians much wrong themselves that think themselves bound to no commandment though they would do as God requires yet they would do it freely and not as commanded But why then doth John bid us keep his commandments and promise such blessings to us if we do keep them A good man would be doing good duties though God did not command him but yet he must therefore do good duties because God commands him 3 Those Christians are reproved that walk loosely with God who keep not Gods commandements as they would keep their way their jewels the apple of their eye their life such Christians fall short of that great reward which God promiseth Whence is it that Christians are wanton proud covetous Is it not because they do not keep Gods commandements For else God would keep their hearts and cleanse their spirits 4 This may be an use of comfort to such Christians as have regard to the commandements of God and to walk more close with God on Gods holy day such shall have God dwelling with them and working all their works for them God will play the good Husband-man about them he will prune them from all loose distempers that hang about their souls he will give us more wisdome then our Teachers and by this means we shall come before him with Christian boldnesse and confidence and we may expect to receive strength of grace whereby we may runne with cheerfulnesse the way of his commandements Hereby we
discerned but also he will have heresies that so they may be ●e●●ed in judgement as well as in affections 2. That so 〈…〉 made manifest as by the wind you may ●ee the difference betwe●● 〈◊〉 and ●haffe 2. From the envious man who sowed tares while the husbandman that sowed good seed in the field slept Matth. 13.24 25. 3. From the ignorance and darknesse of the minds of professors Rev. 9.2 those Locusts were false teachers which came out of the smoake of the bottomlesse pit Vse 1. If in St. Johns time there were so many mists 〈…〉 reproves such men as when they see such variety of opinio● in Religion● do s●t down till all men be agreed but do●● St. John make this 〈…〉 Prophets are gone out into the world therefore sit down 〈…〉 true Teachers No but rather makes this use of i● to 〈…〉 of their Ministers because many false Prophets are gone out 〈…〉 2 This may teach us not to wonder although many also Prophets be gone out in these dayes in the light of the Gospel 〈◊〉 they durst look such ●lorious sight in the face as were St. J●●● and Paul 〈…〉 dayes there is not such power of godlinesse in the hearts 〈◊〉 Profe●● but Christians now are given to much worldlinesse and many rest in 〈◊〉 therefore wonder not though the ●●ce of the earth be 〈…〉 with heresies 3. This should teacheth of 〈◊〉 to take heed of opening a door to 〈◊〉 Prophets Take heed of ignorance in your judgement of ambition and sensuality this is the smoak of the bottomelesse pit 4. Try the spirits of false Prophets in these dayes and take not up every instruction at the first blush but try them there are sundry spirits o● false Prophets you shall find in Popery a spirit of presumption doubt despaire hypocrisie not one point in Popery but is carryed 〈◊〉 some of those wings 1. They teach a man cannot be assured of salvation this is doubting yet a man may merit salvation this is presumption they worship stocks and stones 2. The sp●●●ts of Arminians are a spirit of bitternesse 〈…〉 the brethren a spirit of emulation of disloyalty to ●●●ir Prince of liberty and security 3. Among the 〈…〉 shall find a spirit of unconformity and whoredome 4. There is a doctrine of faith and 〈…〉 which doth and 〈◊〉 the doctrine of Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 3. 〈◊〉 doctrin● of free grace is maintained to free a man from prayer preaching and an● Christian duty that God ●ath ordained to maintain grace 〈…〉 not David pray God 〈◊〉 create in him a 〈…〉 and to renew a ri●●●●irit within 〈…〉 therefore a man ought to 〈◊〉 that he 〈…〉 of God q●uickened in him this doctrine of faith and 〈…〉 secretly withdraw a man from the Ordinances of God Lastly There is a spirit 〈◊〉 ●om● on Prot●●●nt which fashion their Religion according to the 〈…〉 their profit and case they follow ● course of the Court and 〈…〉 1 JOHN 4. ● Hereby know ye the Spirit of God 〈◊〉 spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is ●● God IT is not rightly translated come 〈…〉 that Christ was come in the flesh as the 〈◊〉 of Balaam and the N●●laitans Hymeneus and Philetus but it should 〈…〉 translated thus Christ that hath come in the flesh Christ veiled over with ●●mane 〈◊〉 Doct. That the people of God may well 〈◊〉 the spirit of their Ministers by the confession which their spirits make of Christ come in the flesh What is it to confesse There is a threefold confession in Scripture 1. To acknowledge the truth doctrine and worship of Christ even before Rulers Matth. 22.25 to confesse is to professe to bear witnesse of the grace of Christ 2. 〈…〉 of a mans Ministry as it is said of John John 1.20 3. There is a conf●sion of a mans work Tit. 1.16 that is by our life or 〈…〉 be Saviour Matth. 1.21 the anoynted of the Lord 〈…〉 Prophet and King Jesus Christ the second Person in the Trinity 〈…〉 in the flesh which is a great mystery 1 Tim. 3.16 What is it 〈…〉 spirit of a Prophet to confesse Christ Jesus By spirit is not 〈…〉 for body 1 Thess 5.23 but the i●●mation both of soul and body 〈…〉 else it is carnal sensuall and devillish when the spirit 〈…〉 the be●t both of soul an● body the inclination of 〈◊〉 whole man doth ●old forth Christ Jesus that is the mighty saving 〈…〉 revealed in humane infirmities What is Pauls meani●● when he saith I desire to know nothing 1 Cor. ● 3 4. He means he desires to expresse nothing in his life and 〈…〉 Christ Jesus revealed in the flesh in 〈◊〉 infirmities wh●● the Corinthians 〈◊〉 a sign of Christ in 〈…〉 acknowledgeth that for his outside he was weak but yet he did ex●● 〈◊〉 the mighty ●●ving power of Christ crucified in his Ministry 2 Cor. 13.3 ● 5. and he tels the Galatians They knew that through 〈◊〉 infirmities of the flesh he preached the Gospel at the first Gal. 4 13 14 15. Was any doctrine weakly delivered he speaks of his bodily presence for in his life he shewed such a mighty power of Christ as that they looked at him as an Angel of God yea they did so affect him that if it were possible they would have pluckt out their eyes to have doth him good Reas 〈…〉 ●is cannot 〈◊〉 from mans nature for mans spirit comes short of it Phil. ● 20 every man s●●ks his own Demas hath forsaken Christ and embraced this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Some men look too high they look to their own profits and preferments in 〈…〉 and account the seeking to save souls a matter n●t pertainin● 〈…〉 if they preach they 〈◊〉 some moral discourse ●hich 〈…〉 ●hose that are looking towards the wayes of grace 〈…〉 the mighty saving power o●●●rist Jesus is not 〈…〉 their Ministry 2 It 's not from the spirit o● 〈…〉 spirit far exceeds his spirit he c●v●● own Ch●●●●●sus Ezek● ● 22. he speaks with envy against Christ therefore it must needs ●e the 〈…〉 that confesseth Christ Jesus come in the flesh Vse 1 To teach Gods people 〈…〉 acq●ainted with the Lord Jesus or else they will not be able to discern 〈…〉 their Minister in doctrin 〈◊〉 and carriage it is 〈…〉 Saints to expresse their carnall excellencie● 〈…〉 complains of the Galatians that they made a fair shew 〈◊〉 flesh●● 〈◊〉 ●●at make a fair shew i● the flesh when they come to 〈…〉 out their spirits will not bear it a Christian should sa● of those outward 〈…〉 Da●●d of Sauls armour if any man will come after Christ he must 〈…〉 wisdome life and carnal excellency God ●●ts ho●●●r upon many Christians and gives them carnal excellency but they must take heed that they doe not darken the power of the Lord Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 by 2. 〈◊〉 tryal ●●ur estates 〈◊〉 whether the bent of our carriage doth hold forth the Lord Jesus in 〈…〉 infirmities God is not
whose consciences are tormented what course to take for comfort 1 Look at Gods good providence to thee in trying thee and proving thee that he may do thee good in the latter end 2 As you have cause to take all in good part so learn to seek him carefully Again take heed of sin and be doing what good you may strive to be more fruitful in good services to God and offices of love to your brethren and certainly this unfeigned love will lead to peace Vse 5. Hence see the estrangement of wicked men from the wayes of peace Rom. 3.17 The way of peace they have not known 1 They cannot think that torment and fear should be the way of peace if they see a man in this case 2 They would put off such fears with 〈◊〉 company but if they see such a man seeking God earnestly praying and hearing the World carefully they cannot think this is the way of peace will you blesse God and dye when he is ready to swallow you up The way of peace they have not known salvation is far from them Psal 118.155 Vers 18. There is no fear in love c. We come to the fourth thing the exemption of perfect love from all fear Doct. 4. An heart possest with the love of God is dispossest of feare of evill from God He speaks of the fear of death and judgment so much love as is in our hearts so much freedome and boldnesse against the day of judgement a loving heart feares not wrath nor jugement nor hell Psal 23.4 When once I look at God as my Shepheard and love him and follow him Why then though I walke through the vale of the shadow of death I will feare none evill though I walk in neer danger of death for if the shadow follow me the body is not farre off yet I will fear no evill Psal 49 4 5. David makes open proclamation to all men to hear and hearken there is the solemnity of the audience the matter is It 's a parable and dark mystery and yet a word of wisdome and understanding Why what is this parable that all the world should take notice of Why this is it Wherefore should I be afraid when the iniquity of my heels do compasse me about that is the iniquity of my foot-steps the tripping of my steps or the iniquity of my heels that is the fears and dangers that follow him at the heels yet wherefore should I feare An heart possest with the love of God is dispossest of fear of evill from God Psal 3.6 I will not be afraid of ten thousand of people that shall compasse me about Why what makes him so confident Because the Lord is my shield and lifter up of my head vers 3. So that we see that a Christian possest of the love of God stands not in the feare of judgement or hell nay more not of his sinfull failings Psal 49.5 Reas 1. From the nature of fear and the 〈◊〉 oval of it fear is a troblesome affection in the expectation o● 〈◊〉 evill Now 〈◊〉 the removal of feare two things must be done 1 There must 〈◊〉 evill towards him 2 He must 〈…〉 this Now to him that feareth God no evill is towards such a one Psal 〈…〉 There shall no evill befal thee Now to whom is this promise made 〈…〉 Because he hath set his love upon me therefore I will deliver him I will set him on high far above all dangers and evils indeed sicknesses may befall him and 〈…〉 and imprisonments but what ever befals under the nature of evill that shall not come nigh him As no evill is towards him 〈◊〉 ●e must know this that no evill shall befal him Now a Christian that loves God he knows that no evill shall befal him Psal 56.3.9 What time I am afraid I will trust on thee When I cry unto thee thou shalt cause mine enemies to 〈◊〉 their backs this I know for God is for me So that a Christian not onely finds security from danger but knowledge of it too Nay further the childe of God is so farre from fearing any evill to come nigh him that he knows all those things that are counted evill shall turn to his advantage Rom. 8 28. So Phil ● 1● where he tels you what wrong false Apostles did him on purpose to adde afflictions to his bonds Well saith he I know this shall turn to my salvation through your prayers upon a double ground he comforts himself against all their malignities 1 He knows the more they afflict him the more will the Church pray for him 2 That the more he is tempted the more will God supply by his Spirit Quest How do they know that no evill shall befal them Answ 1. From the love of God shed abroad in their hearts Rom. 5.1 to 6. 2 From the presence of God for him in his worst times And if God be for him who can be against him Rom. 8.31 3 From the interest he hath in the blood of Christ which hath cleansed him from all his sins so that he doth know that God will follow him as a deliverer from his sins so that the soule though burthened with many sins yet fears not Psal 44.5 4 From a knowledge he hath of all the promises as belonging to him which are a stay and support to his soul Psal 56.3 4 10 11. Psal 84.11 he knows God will be a Sun and a shield to him 5 From the knowledge that he hath from the integrity of his conscience which is as a brazen wall against all evils 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience 6 The prayers both of his own soule and other Christians are for him so that through them he is confident no evill shall befal him Psal 56.9 Phil. 1.19 7 He is imboldned against dangers from the supportance of Gods Spirit in his worst times Phil. 1.19 Psal 5. So Psal 46. God is a present help in the time of trouble when trouble is near at hand yet God is nearer as it was sometimes with Elisha he saw the Mountain full of Chariots and Horse-men 2 King 6.17 Though there were not such a multitude constantly about him yet when an Army of the enemies come an Army of Angels come as soon It hath been an ancient opinion that every true Christian hath a particular Angel to deliver him why this is certain when dangers come there never want Angels without nor Gods Spirit within nor the prayers of his servants for us and therefore we have no cause to fear Vse 1. This is a notable ground upon which that heavenly truth is built of the perseverance of Saints and a bulwark against Apostasie if a loving heart be without fear of the day of judgement he is without fear of falling away Obj. True as long as he keeps perfect to his love but may he not fall off from his love and so from his good estate Answ The Apostle ●ith there is no
and he will bring all these priviledges with him Rom. 6.32 seek him chiefly and not his gifts you must first know Christ will be more loved for his own sake then his gifts before he say to you as to the church Cant. 2.14 O my Dove let me see thy Countenance let me hear thy voyce for sweet is thy voyce and thy countenance lovely before he thus manifest himself to thee he will make thee willing to seek thee as thy head and husband as the most wise the most beautifull the chiefest among ten thousand and let but thy desire be towards him and his desire will be towards thee Hos 3.3 Stand not upon dowries take him without Feoffments for better for worse and if you thus take Christ and choose his person in the first place then all his benefits and priviledges become yours 2 Cor. 3.22 23. 2. A child of God is said to have the Son when he hath the Spirit of the Son 2 Cor. 3.17 Having spoken before of a Spirit of ministration and grace why saith he the Lord is that Spirit not only because he is the giver of it but there is a secret union betwixt Christ and his Spirit so that if you have the one you have the other Rom. 8.9 If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Gal. 4.6 he that hath the Son hath the Spirit of the Son and is made conformable to his Image There is a twofold Spirit whereby we are knit to Christ and Christ to us 1. A Spirit of union 2. A Spirit of liberty 1. He that hath fellowship with Christ hath a Spirit of union whereby he is made one with him Joh. 17.21 It 's the prayer of our Saviour for all believers that they al may be one As thou father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us thou in me by thy Spirit and I in them by the same Spirit hence it is that of his fulnesse we shall receive grace for grace Joh. 1.16 Rom. 8.29 We are predestinate to be made like to the Image of Christ There is a threefold conformity and likenesse betwixt Christ and us that is wrought by the Spirit 1. We are like him in his nature 2 Pet. 1.4 by the precious promises we are made partakers of the divine Nature so that we are meek as he was lowly as he was innocent and harmlesse as he was the Spirit of God stamp● the same Image on us that was in Christ Joh. 1.16 Hence it is that the e that have Christ they reason from Christs nature to theirs and from their nature to Christs 2 Cor. 1.17 18 19. Paul had sometimes sent to them that he would come to them as he passed by into Macedonia but neither in his going not his return did he come to them therefore they accuse him of levity and inconstancy Paul excuseth this and he pleads from the nature of Christ for the Son of God Jesus Christ that was preached among you by us was not yea and nay but in him was yea Why what 's that to him Yes look as Christ is yea and amen the faithfull witnesse that what he speaks he will performe ●o make account that Christ hath poured the same Spirit on us that our words likewise are yea and amen had not Gods providence hindred it there is such a participation of the divine nature that the nature of Christ the nature of the Gospel and the nature of a Christian all of them answer one another the same Spirit that made Christ yea and amen faithfull and true hath made the Gospel and so the same Spirit in Gods people makes them true and faithfull so that look what they say their hearts goe with it and if Gods providence hinders not they will performe their word 2. There is a conformity in his offices he hath made us Priests Kings and Prophets to his Father Rev. 1.6 Kings to over-rule our lusts to overcome the world anoynted with a royal Spirit although not yet invested with full glory Priests to offer sacrifices of prayer of a broken spirit Psal 51.12 Sacrifices of righteousnesse Psal 4.5 and to sacrifice our lives for Christ Phil. 2.17 so he hath made us Prophets of God Act. 2.17 he hath poured on us the Spirit of prophesie poured not dropped sparingly but poured on us aboundantly hence it is that a christian understands many secrets of Gods will Psal 25. 14. many hidden mysteries of the Scripture so that he is bound to see a secret providence of God guiding him in his way 3. There is a conformity in their estate our Saviour in this world went through a double estate 1. Of Humiliation 2. Exaltation and in the most deep passions he went through when he was excommunicated by the Church hated crucified yet even then he mightily shewed forth his divine power hence he is said to triumph openly on the crosse Col. 2.17 and such is a Christians estate Psal 34.19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous there is his humiliation but the Lord delivers him out of all there is his exaltation for by those deliverances he makes them glorious Psal 149.4 He will beautifie the meek with salvation nay a christian in the midst of all his worldly comforts he gets loose from them so that you may see those are not the things he chiefly looks after if he have great parts and gifts yet they are clad with a Spirit of Christ crucified Gal. 6.14 their outward deportment is but mean and homely yet in their outward meanesse and basenesse you may discern the power of Christ crucified 2 Cor. 13 4. Since ye seek a proofe of Christ speaking in me as he was crucified through weaknesse and yet live●h in me by the power of God even so we are weak with him that is in outward shew why yet as Christ when he was most deb●sed shewed forth most power so a christian in his greatest debasements and weaknesses Gods power is most magnified in him never more glorious then when most debased Hence those strange phrases we are dead with Christ Col. 2.20 and risen with Christ Col. 3.1 crucified with Christ Rom. 6.6 that is by the same Spirit of Christ that is in us we are so knit with him that we are made of the same state with him that as he was weak and base and yet glorious so are we 2 There is a Spirit of liberty nothing better expresseth the temper of the Son Christ the Fathers Image then a Spirit of liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty If the Son shall make you free then you are free indeed Joh. 8.36 His liberty is a reall liberty And this is 1. Liberty from the fear of sin of hell of the grave and of all his enemies he is not afraid like a sla●e that is not is a 〈◊〉 of liberty Rom. 8.15 H●b 2.15 A Spirit of liberty is a Spirit of freedome from all
fear Luke 1.74 75. Such a man is not afraid what flesh can doe unto him Psal 3.5 6. I will not be afraid though ten thousand shall compasse me about I will ly me down and sleep quietly the fear of men shall not break his sleep so Psal 56.3.10 11. this holy tranquility frees us from all fears and this liberty is proper to a Son he fears not others so he may please his father he knows his Father will give him protection and provision Rom. 8.37 2. He hath a liberty from the dominion of sin sin hath not that power to carry him captive Rom. 6.4 Rom. 8.2 The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death that is the Spirit of grace that commands and rules me like a law hath freed me from the law of sin and of death that a Christian is now but a beginner of sin sin hath not that power over him that formerly it had time was when I could not break off from evil company but now the Law of the Spirit of life hath set me free from them many a valiant spirit fears not death many a souldier venters upon a Canons mouth but yet I presume he is captivate to many a base lust but a Christian is not only freed from the fear but the bondage of sin 3. He hath liberty from being servant unto men 1 Cor. 7.23 Ye are bought with a price be not servants of men he doth not mean that they should shake off all obedience and subjection but though they should be subject to their Masters ye now they should not serve them in a slavish manner but with freedom of Spirit in obedience to Christ heartily and readily 1 Cor. 7.22 he that is called in the Lord being a servant is the Lords freeman he doth his Masters work with a free spirit and withall he doth the work of Gods service with much more freedom and when they come to their own liberty they will be inclined to good duties strive to gain opportunity for prayer and reading and hearing whereas others though they have much more outward liberty yet they have far lesse inward 4 The Spirit of God that sets me free from the service of men makes me free to every duty of God to have free access to him the Spirit that set me at liberty from Satan will make me run the wayes of Gods Commandements with an inlarged heart Psal 119.32 Ps 110.3 Gods people are a willing people and as he is free from the bondage of men so he is Lord over them he can make them all serve him Gen. 25.23 God told Rebecca there were Nations in her womb and the elder should serve the yonger how was that fulfilled seeing Jacob cals Esau Lord and himself his servant Gen. 33. Why as some say that must be understood of the Nations not of the persons but it may be Esau's Lordship and roughnesse did Jacob more real service then ever Jacob did him whence was it that he went out of his Fathers house met with so glorious a vision the first night whence was it that he made such a vow to God that if the Lord would be with him and blesse him in that countrey then the Lord should be his God whence was it that he returned with such a blessing whence was it that he so wrestled with God and obtained a blessing was not this from Esaus bitternesse and for fear of him which shews that every fury and persecution of wicked men do Christians the truest service as it was with the Tyrants in Syria and Egypt all the tyranny did but purifie the people of God and make them white Dan. 11.35.46 they are but as scullions to scour and rinse Gods people they are but as servants or like house-wives they lay them in soap and dung and sharp lee but it is but to make them white Try therefore whether you have the spirits of sons Doe you find in you the nature of Christ do you find your selves invested with a Kingly Royall spirit doe you find in you the spirit of prophesie doe you find in you the state of Christ that in the meanest condition you have a mighty power of Christ breathing in you why then it is evident you have the Spirit of God but if we find we are not like him in his nature we cannot pray or prophesie then we have none of Gods Spirit Do we finde our selves still in bondage to sin lying under the fear and dominion of it then we have not Gods Spirit in us Gods Spirit would set us free from all bondage 3 We are said to have the Son when we have Christ not onely for our Saviour but for our Prince Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted to be a Prince and Saviour To whom he is a Saviour to them he is a Prince It were dishonour to God to save those whom he cannot rule to deliver them from sin and Satan and yet leave them in their sins God hath sent his Son not only to save but to rule us Two things here are to be opened 1 That he that hath Christ hath him for his Saviour 2 That he that hath him for his Saviour must have him for his Prince likewise We are ready commonly to conceive that every one would have Christ for his Saviour but indeed they are but rare that would have a Saviour indeed To have Christ for our Saviour implyes two things 1 He that hath Christ for his Saviour looks up to him for salvation in all his distresses Isa 45.22 Look unto me and be saved all ye ends of the earth He that looks for any other Saviour denyes Christ He that hath Christ for his Saviour in what coasts soever of the world he lives he must look up to him for salvation as they that look'd towards the Temple had their petitions heard So wheresoever we are in what condition soever we must look towards Christ and long after him for salvation not onely from Gods wrath and hell but even from whatever distresses we are in torment of conscience sicknesse imprisonment we must wait upon him for deliverance Isa 8.17 I will wait upon the Lord that hideth his face from the house of Jacob and I will look for him The Church was then in grievous distresse both in regard of sin and calamity there were none for her to look unto either Princes or Priests to redresse the matter all had been in vain but there was no hope in them yet I will look unto the Lord and wait on him that hideth his face Isa 17.7 Speaking of such times wherein only a few gleaning grapes should be left In that day shall a man look to his Maker and his eyes shall have respect to the holy one of Israel We cast respect or disrespect upon one with our eye whilest our eyes are upon the creature and turned away from God we disrespect God but when our eyes are toward him set on
people so they cast the imputation of ignorance upon God as if God had been mistaken when he sent his Word that believers might believe and they think that reading the Word would make them hereticks Vse 3. For you that do believe be frequent in reading the Word for to you it was written that you might believe Meditate there on day and night The blessed will finde a time to meditate on Gods Word every day and every night and this you shall ●●●le very effectuall to the increase of your faith The King himselfe whose employments were greatest the Lord ●aid a charge on him to read in the Book of the Law all the dayes of his life Deut. 17.14 And much more is every private man bound to it If these God hath sanctified to help us in our belief then as ever you would believe ●e diligent in hearing reading conferring examining and meditating on the Word all these are notable means to increase and inlarge our saith therefore if thou ●e wanting in faith consider whether thou hast not been wanting in this practise take away the Word and take away the fuel of your faith And for you that believe not though this Scripture was not so much written for you yet because hearing is the only way of faith 〈◊〉 10.17 be diligent in hearing the Word preached Prov. 8 3●●5 Blessed it be that heareth ●● for whose findeth me findeth life And when you have heard be careful to search and ●●amine whether the things preached be agreeable to Gods Word By this means many that believed not before have been taught to believe and be careful to conferre on the Word The Lord hath sanctified the Word preached and the Word examined and the Word confer●ed aboue to the begetting of faith and the Word read to the increasing of faith ●herefore be ste●u●● in these and withall joyn hearty prayer to God 1 Tim. 4.4 ● that he would open thine eyes and cause thee to understand and bow thine heart to imbrace every truth that so every ordinance may be effectual to thee to the 〈…〉 and increasing of faith in thee 1 JOHN 5.14 15. And this is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us And if we know that he hear us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him VErs 18. he had shewed a double soone of his writing th● atte● 〈◊〉 that they might believe on the Name of the Son of God This he exhorts Christians to vers 14 15 16. by three arguments 1 From the confidence such may have of the hearing of their petitions verse 1●4 2 From the certain knowledge such may have that their prayers are granted 3 From the prevalency of our prayers with God that as we shall be assured of the granting of our petitions so we shall thereby obtain life for our Brother that both not sinned a sin unto death Doct. A prayer that is made well never speeds ill Or thus A prayer made according to Gods will God will grant according to our will Notable is that incouragement Christ gave to the Woman Matth. 15. ●6 O 〈◊〉 I great is thy faith Be it unto thee even as thou wilt As if God would let such into his privy treasury and grant them what they would For explication Q What is it to pray according to Gods will These two things it holds forth at the first view 1. When we pray for such things as are agreeable to Gods will viz. his revealed will we should ask nothing but what he commands us In the Lords prayer Christ tels us what he would have us pray for for those things we have warrant to pray 2. What ever we ask we ought to ask with submission of our wills to Gods will So did Christ himselfe Matth. 26.39 Not as I will but as thou wilt But for further inlargement 1. A man is said to pray according to Gods will partly as his will is exprest in his word and partly as his will is revealed in our hearts For the will of God exprest in his Word 1. God requires that we should ask for nothing but what he commands us to doe and therefore had need to pray for whatever duty God requires of us that we are to pray for So did David Psal 119.4 5. 2. Whatsoever we pray for God commands us to ask it in the Name of Jesus Christ Joh. 16.22 23 24. To ask in the Name of Christ requires two graces of us Humility and Faith Humility of spirit in prayer is exprest in four acts 1. We acknowledge our selves lesse then the least of Gods mercies Gen. 32.10 So that if God should grant him nothing he would justifie God 2. Another act of Humility is to pray in sense of our insufficiency to think a good thought much more to pray according to Gods will 2 Cor. 3.8 Rom. 8.26 3. A man prayes in Humility when he doth not desire God to satisfie any of his sinfull lusts but that Gods will may be done Matth. 26. vers 39. 4. To pray in Humility is to make mention of no mediation in our prayers but onely of Christ Col. 2.18 They made a shew of Humility as not being so bold as to have immediate accesse to God therefore put up their prayers through the mediation of some Angell but to goe lower then God allows is but pride of heart 2. To pray in the Name of Christ is to pray in Faith Which is exprest in four acts 1. Faith directs us to put up our prayers onely to him on whom we believe Rom. 10.14 But we believe only in God therefore neither Saints nor Angels nor the Mother of Christ the Virgin Mary are to be prayed to but we are to pray to our Father onely Gal. 4.5 6. Rom. 8.15 2. Faith makes us come with some child like confidence to God as our Father 1. By Faith we come to God as our heavenly Father in Christ and well affected to Christ as loving us himselfe Joh. 16.36 2. We come to him as a Father Almighty full of goodnesse readyer to give then we to ask 3. A third act of faith is for a man to come truly cleaving unto Christ not standing in demurre whether we had best leave our lusts or no whether we had best become altogether Christians or no. This wavering cannot stand with faith for it 's such a wavering as whereby he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double-hearted man an heart for God and an heart for the world sometimes for God sometimes for his own lusts Let not this man think he shall receive any thing Jam. 1.6 7 8. 4. A fourth act of faith is to believe that what we have asked according to Gods will he will certainly grant Matth. 11.24 So far as you have asked with submission to his will so far will he grant according to your wills and though he deferre yet make account your prayers are heard
that he will either grant what you ask or what he knows will be better for you and as welcome to you for God looks not so much at the petition as at the end you aim at in opportuning such a blessing and that he will grant even when he seems to deny us our petitions Heb. 5 9. Christ was heard in that he prayed for Why how was he heard did he not drink of the cup he prayed against Yes yet he was heard 1. Christs will was that his Fathers will might be fulfilled not his in this he was heard 2. It 's said he was heard in that he feared though he did drink of the cup yet he was saved from those fears and terrors that overwhelmed him 3. The main end of Christ was that his Church might be redeemed which God granted so God granted the end of his petition though not the thing it self So Moses prayed earnestly that he might goe over and see the good Land God told him he should not goe over yet God let him see that good Land as well as if he had gone over If we submit our wills to Gods will and pray in humility and faith make account God seriously ponders the aime of your hearts in begging such a mercy and though he seems to crosse such your petitions and to delay them yet he knows how to grant the end of your petitions by other means then you conceive even then when God is displeased with our weake and unworthy prayers as he was with Moses Deut. 3.22 to 28 Yet then he knows how to grant what we aimed at And this magnifies the name of Christ that though in our own name we should never find acceptance yet in Christs name he will grant our petitions 2. We pray according to the will of God when we pray according to his will revealed in our hearts in the spirit of him that prayes Jude v. 20. Eph. 6.18 Now we pray according to Gods will revealed in the Spirit 1. When the Spirit raiseth our hearts to reach forth sensibly with longings and breathings after the blessings we want Thus Hannah poured forth her soul unto God 1 Sam. 1.15 She exprest not so much in words as in the reaching and breathing of her spirit after the blessing she prayed for So Isa 26.9 With my soul within me have I desired thee as if there were another Spirit in his spirit When we pray in a further measure of strength then our own hearts could reach to such a prayer is of the Spirit 1. When we pray with fervency and earnestnesse Jam. 5.16 This is that which is called wrestling and striving with God Rom. 15.30 When our hearts are so set on Gods favour as they will not let goe till we have prevailed Gen. 32.10 24 25 26. expounded Hos 12.4 3. We pray in the Spirit when we persevere in praying and are importunate with God Luk. 18.1 to 10. This is expressed by the importunity of the Widow that prevailed with the unjust Judge Shall a sinfull Judge a mortall man be prevailed with by the importunity of a poor Widow and will not God much more avenge his elect that cry to him day and night You may think God regards not your prayers but the poor Widow did not more trouble this Judge then God is troubled with your prayers so that he cannot rest untill he have fulfilled your desires To the same purpose Luk. 11.5 to 11. Though God seem to be asleep yet if you continue knocking God will open unto you therefore when you have a good petition in hand never give over but pray continually and watch thereunto Eph. 6.18 till he answer To what end doth he call it knocking but to imply that our prayers make as much noyse in heaven as men doe by knocking at our doores Matth. 7.7 So the woman of Syrophaenicia she knocked and continued knocking and would not have a denyall so that Christ answers her O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee as thou wilt As if he were overwrestled by her importunity to grant her petitions Reas 1. Because when we pray according to Gods will he fulfills his own will when he grants our petitions It 's Gods will that we should pray so now Gods will must be fulfilled 2. Because when we pray according to the will of God in the Name of Christ our prayer is Christs prayer as if you send a childe or servant to a friend for any thing in your name the request is yours and he that denyes your childe or servant in this case denyes you so no more can God deny a prayer put up in Christs name then he can deny Christ himself Joh. 16.23 24. Reas 3. From the intercession of the Spirit in such a prayer no prayer put up in the manner aforesaid but is the prayer of the holy Ghost and God knows the meaning of his Spirit Rom. 8.26 God knows our prayers would be weake and cold except there were another Spirit besides our own if therefore he discern his own Spirit in our prayers he cannot deny his Spirit nay further as the Spirit makes intercession for us so Christ himselfe prayes for us Rom. 8.34 He takes up all our prayers for us as the great Master of requests and he doth so perfume them and take out all weaknesse out of them that he presents them as a sweet odour to God Rev. 8.3 Even as if a younger Brother should goe and gather a Posie for his Father he out of ignorance gathers many weeds withall but his elder Brother takes it and pulls out all the weeds and perfumes the flowers with sweet water and then presents it to his Father in his Brothers name so Christ sees many sinfull weaknesses in our prayers but he takes away all unsavourinesse and perfumes them and so presents them to God and he accepts them Vse 1. As ever we desire that our selves or ours should speed well let both our selves and ours learn to pray well you have enough if you can but pray wel you can but speake and have desire and it shall be granted open thy mouth wide and God will fill it as long as you have an heart opened to pray you shall want no blessings therefore above all blessings beg of God a spirit of prayer Now that you may pray well 1. Take heed that you be not of a wavering double minde Jam. 1.6 7 8. partly for God partly for our selves pray with a single heart Act. 11.21 that is 1. Give up your hearts wholly to God 2. Be carefull to keep all Gods commandements for as we hearken to Gods commandements so will he hearken to our prayers if we observe his words he will observe ours 2. Have respect to pray according to Gods will in Faith and Humility Vse 2. For them that doe pray according to Gods will be assured that God will grant your petitions according to your wills God hath spoken it and therefore he will not deny it Notable
is that place Dan. 9.23 ch 10.12 At the beginning of his supplication the commandement came forth only God was bringing it about in the Court of Persia The King oft-times grants a petition the first day it is put up but it must passe many hands before it come to the subject so the very first day we put up a lawfull prayer God grants it there be many means to bring it about which we must waite for Doct. Such as do believe on the name of Christ for salvation may come to have confidence and knowledge of the hearing and having all their petitions For explication How do these two great benefits confidence and knowledge of granting our prayers spring from what St. John hath written in this Epistle Answ Five things concur to this confidence and all of them insisted upon by St. John in this Epistle 1. Our adoption exprest by St. John ch 3.1 He wonders at the admirable love of God not only indebasing of himselfe to behold things here below as David did Psal 113.4 to 8. but in looking on us poor earth-wormes and raising us up to be Sons and daughters to God So that this is the first ground of our confidence in prayer viz. our adoption that we are Sons of God Gal. 4.5 6. Rom. 8.15 To whom may a Son come more boldly then to his Father And what assures him more of the grant of his petitions then that he is his Son 2. Christs advocation breeds confidence in us 1 Joh. 2.1 2● Christ pleads with his Father on our behalfe for the hearing our petitions and for the granting of what we want An Advocate puts the petition that it may be was rudely drawn by a man into a form of Law and so it holds currant in Law so doth Christ with our prayers he puts them into a right form and so pleads for us 2. The atonement or propitiation of Christ is another cause of confidence 1 Joh. 2.2 So that whereas many a Christian may be afraid that his prayers shall never be heard he is so sinfull and unclean Why saith St. John If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father and he is the propitiation for our sins He is not onely an Advocate but a propitiation to make atonement for our sins that they shall not hinder our acceptance 4. The anoyntment of the Spirit whereby we know all things 1 Joh. 3.20 is a ground of much confidence that though we be blind and dull and know not what God doth for us in our prayers or how they speed in heaven why Christ like an Advocate sends down his Spirit and lets us know how all things speed This unction teacheth us all things 1 Cor. 2.12 Q. How doth the Spirit certifie us of the hearing of our petitions 1. By helping us to pray for we know our own hearts are dead and straight not able to put up any good prayer if therefore the Spirit come like oyl and make us pray affectionately and sensibly we know a prayer well made cannot speed ill a prayer made by Gods Spirit cannot but be heard for God knows the meaning of his Spirit Rom. 8.26 2. This Spirit puts in us a perswasion of faith that what we pray for God will answer Matth. 11.23 24. And so God gives us an Amen in our hearts Psal 6.8 David was in a sore tryall and affliction he prayes to God then Vers 8. Away from me all ye workers of iniquity for the Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping In the midst of his mourning this unction fills him with a perswasion of the granting of his prayers and so God often times satisfies the heart of a Christian with this perswasion Hannah when she had poured out her spirit before God and Eli had said to her The Lord grant thy petition thou askest of him Why she took this as a voyce from heaven and so she went away comfortably and she feared that petition no more 1 Sam. 1.16 17. 2. There is another act of faith besides perswasion and that is a constant wrestling against all discouragements which come betwixt us and our prayers famous is that example of the woman of Syrophaenicia Matth. 15 26 27 28. If the holy Ghost doth but give us so much resolution as not to be overwearyed with d fficulties then Be it unto thee thou wilt 3. This Spirit works as a Spirit of hope and this stirs us up to wait patiently on God till he answer our carnall spirits would be ready to say Wherefore should I wait on the Lord any longer as that wicked King did but now a spirit of hope waits on God till God shall give an answer of peace Psal 85.8 Psal 130. 2 last vers When God gives us spirits to wait on him he seals up unto us the grant of our petitions A wise Prince if a petition be put up that is lawfull and he bid me wait for it I count it granted so if I put up a prayer and God give me an heart to wait for it I make account he will grant it 4. This Spirit is a Spirit of fear Psal 145.9 Dost thou walk in thy Christian course depending upon Christ reverencing his name and Ordinances Why God will fulfill the desires of them that fear him Jer. 32.40 And so he keeps covenant with us If God give us an awefull reverent heart that keeps us from departing from God and God from departing from us then the Lord will be neer when we call upon him and this is from the unction of the Spirit which make us profit in all our wayes Isa 11.2 3. 5. This is a Spirit of obedience and that gives us good assurance of the hearing of our petitions 1 Joh. 3.21 For as we hearken to God so God hearkens to us Prov. 28.9 He that turneth away his ear from hearing the Law his prayer shall be abominable But if you hearken to God God will hearken to you Judg. 9.7 If we say Speake Lord for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.5 then what we speake God will hear An obedient Christian is a powerfull petitioner mighty in prayer 6. From the root of confidence which springs partly from Gods nature partly from faith in Christ partly from the unction of the Spirit now for those things we see many promises belong to us our adoption assures us of Gods Nature that he is a mercifull Father our Father assures us that Christ is our Advocate the unction of the Spirit breeds in us experience that we have the Son that we are Sons it assures us of our election vocation and salvation and if it assure us of greater matters then much more of the grant of our prayers Rom. 8.32 But now knowledge is a further work knowledge springs either from sense or experience Now then this unction of the Spirit which gives us experience not only gives us confidence but knowledge that our prayers are heard Eph. 3.19 This Spirit of God in our hearts gives us
both sensible and experimentall knowledge of Gods favour and breeds certain knowledge of the hearing and having our petitions granted hearing that is of Gods accepting them Verba sensus cum affectu effectu sunt intelligenda and having that is of the performing and fulfilling of our desires chiefly of the ends and aims of our prayers Vse 1. Serves to take off our hearts from confidence in any worldly thing and incourages them to believe on the name of Jesus Christ why because hence you shall not only be assured of salvation which yet is more then all the travails and p lgrimages and devotions of our Fore-fathers could reach unto but by believing on the Name of Christ you shall have confidence that all your prayers are heard Vse 2. For them that doe believe in Christ here is a method whereby they may be assured of the granting their petitions 1. Make sure your adoption for that breeds much assurance in prayer 2. Meditate much on Christ that Christ is your Advocate and atonement for your sins 3. Labour for a Spirit of faith and hope and fear and obedience and so you shall grow up to confidence and knowledge that your prayers are granted Many a Christian falls short of this confidence because he considers not who helps him to make his prayers who makes intercession for him or else he is wanting in some of those graces and so his prayers are full of doubtings Vse 3. Of consolation to all that believe on Christ why This is our confidence that whatsoever we ask according to Gods will he heareth us How comfortable then is the condition of a beleever Be his estate never so miserable his wants never so great if he can but pray well he may goe on comfortably 1 JOHN 5.16 16. If any man see his Brother sin a sin which is not unto death he shall ask and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death There is a sin unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it All unrighteousnesse is sin and there is a sin not unto death THese words contain a third motive to stir us up to believe on Christ and that is from another benefit we shall thereby be enabled to bestow on our Brethren and that is our prayer for him shall give him life Observe in them 1. A promise to such as shall pray for their Brother that sins a sin not unto death he shall give him life 2. An exception or restraining a mans prayer There is a sin unto death I do not say he shall pray for it 3. The prevention of an objection vers 17. All unrighteousnesse is sin and the wages of all sin is death Kom 6. ult And therefore this promise is of none efect for every sin is unto death Unto this St. John answers vers 17. 1. By granting all unrighteousnesse is sin yet there is a sin not unto death not but that every sin deserves death but every sin doth not cut off all hope of recovery but as Christ said of Lazarus his sicknesse Joh. 11.4 it was not unto death yet he dyed but he means it was not irrecoverable because he was raised to life again so every sin is unto death but every sin is not irrecoverable but that a man may be raised up out of it into life Doct. A beleeving Christian is not to hide his eyes from beholding and observing the sins of his Brethren If any man see his Brother sin he may see it and ought to see it Gal. 2.14 St. Paul did not turn away his eyes from seeing Peters dissembling but took notice of it and reproved him Heb. 3.12 13. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeliefe He speaks not only of a mans selfe but of his Brother that ye have not an evill heart and therefore he propounds a means to help them and that is exhorting one another This the Apostle exhorts us to Heb. 10.24 Reas 1. From the love we owe to our Brethren God requires larger love towards our Brethren then towards our Oxe or Asse and yet God requires that if we see them lying under their burthen we should help them up Deut. 22.4 Now if God require so much help to their beast much more to our Brethrens souls that if we see them going astray or sinking under the burden of sin we should raise them up again 2. From the love we owe to our selves this benefit we shall reap by it we shall learn to keep better watch our selves when we see our Brethren fall Rom. 11.20 We must not by their falls grow high-minded and pride our selves that we are not so bad as they but their falls must be our fears Q. With what eyes should we look at the falls of our Brethren Answ 1. Look not at them wirh a partial or hypocriticall eye Mat. 7.3 4 5. But we must so look at the mote in their eye as to see a beam in our own we should see as great sins in our selves or greater if God did not restrain us for we all have the same root of evill and should break out into as bad distempers as any if God did not hold us back 2. We must not observe them with a curious and censorious eye for that is an imbred curiosity in us that we love to be prying into other mens sins not to heal them but to censure them This St. James reproves ch 3.1 2 3. Be not many M sters that is be not of a Master-like spirit be not busie in every mans matters and censorious of them 3 Look not at them with an envious malicious eye This Jeremiah complains of ch 20.10 All my familiars watched for my haltings That 's an envious eye when a man watches for an advantage to undermine his Brother 4. There is a wanton eye 1. When a man is not humbled at the sight of his Brothers sins but puft up by it like the proud Pharisee Luk. 18.9 10. he built his comfort on the falls of others This the Apostle reprehends in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 5.2 That there was fornication among them and yet they were not humbled but puft up they magnified themselves that they were honester men 2. A man sees his Brothers sin with a wanton eye when he thereby grows to imitate him if such a man venture into such a course I hope I need not stick at it This God gtievously complains of in the Church of Judah that though she saw what her treacherous Sister Israel had done and that God had therefore cast her off yet she feared not but went and played the Harlot also Jer. 3.7 8. Now all those heads of seeing our Brothers sins ought to be far from us Vse 1. Hence learn not to neglect the falls of our Brethren as if they belonged not to us and we would neither meddle nor make with them This was Cains spirit Am I my Brothers keeper Gen. 4.9 We should look at
formerly been a professor of the truth who afterward made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience and withstood Paul and therefore Paul prays against him Some think he did it as discerning by extraordinary revelation that he was in a state of reprobation but that is not likely he leaving his prayer as exemplary to all after comers Gal. 5.12 I would that even those were cut off that trouble you that subvert or unddermine you those he wisht they were utterly cut off from Church and Common-wealth Those false Apostles they would have overthrown the Gospel of Christ and brought in another Gospel and because those false Apostles were all alike the Apostle discerned them to be in a state of damnation as being enemies to the Crosse of Christ Phil. 3.18 19. At the first they preached the Gospel but afterwards turning aside to earthly things they began to magnifie themselves and vilifie the Apostles and so hindered the preaching of the Gospel and therefore he looks at them as deserving to be cut off he looks at them as dogs Phil. 3.2 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be anathema maranatha that is the greatest curse that can befall a man There was a threefold Excommunication in the primitive Church 1 A mere restraint from the Sacrament of the Lords Supper of such as were ignorant till they were better instructed 2 There was Excommunicatio major when they cut them off from all fellowship with the Church from the Word and Sacraments and Christian communion and from eating with them This ought to be inflicted upon notorious scandalous sinners 3 Let him be Anathema Maranatha was a greater curse then any of those for in the former Excommunication though they excluded them from their fellowship yet they ought not to count them as enemies but might admonish them and bring them on to repentance that they might recover themselves 2 Thess 3.14 15. There was hope of such for they did therefore excommunicate them that they might be saved 1 Cor. 5.5 And when it was rightly dispensed it was a notable means to humble them when they considered that if the Church saw cause to banish them from their society God might see much more cause to banish them from heaven But yet there was a greater Excommunication Let him be Anathema Maranatha that is let him be accursed untill the coming of the Lord surely then their sin is a sin against the holy Ghost Obj. Some will say Paul loved not Christ at first Answ True He speaks not of men without the Church but within the Church Obj. Why are there not many carnall men in the Church that love not Christ that desire him not that never look towards him Answ I take it to be a kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this slender expression he intends much more then he expresseth If any man love not that is if any man hate the Lord Jesus Christ if he have partaken in the gifts and graces of Christ if he have received nor onely Baptisme but tasted of the sweetnesse and goodnesse of his grace if after he come to oppose and maligne Christ and his wayes Let such a man be Anathema Maranatha Reas 1. From the despight such persons doe to the chiefe means and help of prayer one is the Spirit of grace for the Spirit of grace is the Spirit of supplication Zech. 12.10 Now they that despight the Spirit of grace the Spirit is so grieved that it will not assist us in any prayer we make for such Heb. 10.29 Reas 2. From the like despight they offer to the other principall help of prayer that is asking in the name of Christ upon those two wings our prayers fly up to heaven viz. upon the mediation of Christ and the Spirit of grace with these two they prevail now these men that sin against the holy Ghost they make a scorn of Christ Heb. 10.29 They trample under foot his blood and put him to open shame Heb. 6.6 that is they put him to open and exemplary punishment as the most notorious malefactor Now if a man shall know Christ and afterwards hate him what doth he but shew that Christ was a notorious malefactor and suffered not for other mens sins but his own Therefore there is no hope Christ should lend his Name to be a Mediator Reas 3. Where Christ is not a sacrifice of propitiation for sins there be cannot be expected to be an intercessor for such Now there remains no more sacrifice for such Heb. 10.27 If the sacrifice of Christ reach not to such then he will never make intercession for them 4. From the incouragement God is wont to give his servants in their prayers He will fulfill the desires of them that fear him Psal 145.19 And this is their confidence that whatsoever they ask in the Name of Christ they shall receive and therefore God will not so much dishonor his promise nor discourage us as to give us hearts not to pray when we shal be answered we may pray for wicked men whom we know not in what condition they are but then our prayers shall return into our own bosomes Psal 35.13 But if men be profest enemies to Christ then we doe not shew our selves to be Gods friends if we shew friendship to them or pray for them and therefore our prayers will doe them no good and our selves harm Vse 1. To teach us that sin unto death may be discerned even of common Christians for else why doth he write to common Christians to all believers in generall Verse 13. That if his Brother sin a sin unto death then he should not pray for him Vse 2. It may therefore teach Gods people to learn the nature of this sin left they pray unawares for such whom their prayers shall doe no good If therefore you see professors that have tasted of the grace of God if afterward they maligne and oppose those wayes and the servants of God in this case save your labour in praying for them your prayers will doe no good but harm But how shall we discern when they are inlightned and convinced We may indeed discern their malignity and opposition but it may be they doe it of ignorance In this case our Saviour and Stephen prayed for their adversaries because they knew not what they did therefore three thousand after they were convinced that it was the Christ whom they had persecuted they were pricked in their hearts and brought on to repentance Therefore if you discern they doe this out of ignorance pray heartily for them But how may we discerne they commit this against the light and knowledge of the truth Answ If they doe expresse in their speech and conversation that they are affected with Christ and the wayes of his grace and convinced that those are the right wayes and yet afterwards they maliciously oppose those wayes then pray not for them Mat. 21.28 The Pharisees knew Christ to be the heir
and yet said Come let us kill him and in the mean time they said he was a Conjurer and cast out devills through Belzebub the Prince of devills when as they knew he was the Son of God and did it by his own power therefore Christ tells them their sins should never be forgiven them But if they shall go further and affect the society of Christians delight to doe them good offices and take the like from them if such after fall off and maliciously oppose those wayes they more plainly manifest themselves to have sinned this sin and therefore pray not for them Vse 3. Shews us the desperate condition of all such as commit this sin and therefore to blesse our selves from it they are cut off from all means of salvation a man may neither admonish nor reprove them nor shew them any courtesie or doe any good to them for if I might I ought to pray for them for no office of love ought to be dispensed without prayer and therefore take heed of all sins against conscience of all presumptuous sins and sins of boldnesse for they lead to this great transgression Psal 19.13 And that you may be kept from presumptuous sins take heed of secret sins Vse 4. Of direction If we be Children to Parents or Wives to Husbands or Subjects to Kings and they sin against the holy Ghost yet they may do civill service and offices towards them as those that lived under Julian the Apostate he committed this sin therefore the Christians prayed against him but he had many Christians in his Army that doubted whether they might serve him or acknowledge him as their Emperor or depose him it was concluded they might serve him but yet they prayed that God would take a course against him as David said his day shall come on or he shall descend into the battle and perish which shews that if a Prince shall sin this sin his Subjects ought not to depose him but to doe him offices of service The like may be said of Children to Parents and Wives to Husbands if there be any tye of nature a may doe them civill offices which confutes that desperate doctrine of the Romish Church that whosoever denyes the Pope to be the Supreme head of the Church he is to be excommmunicated and then no man is bound in allegiance to him but that whosoever shall slay such an hereticall Prince shall merit salvation Vse 5. Learn hence to discern the nature of peremptory prohibitions When St. John would peremptorily forbid praying for such he saith I doe not say he shall pray for it Neither do you say he shall pray against it might some say St. John makes account this is a strong prohibition I doe not say that is you have no warrant from me I give you no commission such is the manner of Scripture prohibitions Isa 1.12 Who hath required this at your hands So Jer. 7.31 I commanded them not neither came it into my heart implying that it is a most peremptory prohibition if Gods Word give us no warrant of direction for if there be nothing for it there is enough against it for this is our direction that we are to doe onely what God commands in his Word to that we must add nothing nor take away any thing THE END THE TABLE The First Figure notes the Chapter the second Figure notes the Verse A Abiding in Christ is joyned with avoyding of sin 3. 6. Christ an Advocate for Gods Children yea a righteous Advocate 2. 1. Anabaptisme examined 2. 19. Why Christ was not an Angel 1. 1. Primary Antiquity a certain note of Divine verity 2. 24. True Antiquity fetches its Originall from the beginning 2. 7. The Antiquity of the Doctrin of imitating Christ 2.7 Ministeriall Application must be made to severall sorts and ages 2. 13. Antichrist foretold 2. 18. In Johns dayes there were many Antichrists nor can the last times be long without such Antichrists Ib. In petty Antichrists the praediction of the great Antichrist is in some measure fulfilled Ib. Antichrist denyes Jesus to be the Christ 2. 22. and how Ib. Antichristian Teachers deny the Father and the Son Ib. Every Antichristian doctrine is a lye 2. 21. Apostates are in the Church 2. 19. were never Members of the Church Ib. Apostacy is a note of a Seducer and of an Antichristian spirit 2. 19. It s the punishment of Hypocrisie Ib. B Beginning what it signifies 1. 1. Believers may be assured their prayers are heard 5.19 Blood of Christ how it cleanses 1. 7. For Christ came by Blood 5. 6. Boldnesse with God and peace of Conscience goe together 4. 3. Boldnesse mortifies fear and shame 4. 17. Perfect love assures of Boldnesse at the day of judgment Ib. The sight of our Brother is a stronger inducement to love him then any hater of his Brother can have to love God 4. 20. He that hates his Brother will find lesse cause to love God then his Brother Ib. C Cards and Dice unlawfull 2. 16. Certainty is a property of the Apostles Doctrine 1. 3. The Chiefest creatures may be wicked 2. 13. Gods Children must be as little Children 2. 12. It s comfortable to know we are Gods Children 5. 1. God hath his Children among all Ages of men 2. 13. Little Children may know that God is their Father Ib. note this against the Anabaptists How little Children must be trained up Ib. Christs active and Passive obedience must not be seperated in cleansing 1. 7. Christ pure from sin 3. 5. this should be an effectuall means to purge us Ib. Christ came to dissolve the work of the Devill 3. 8. Christs death the manifestation of Gods love 3. 16. Christians must be ready to dye for their Brethren Ib. True Church-members never depart from the Church 2. 19. Communion of Saints what it is 1. 3. The same Command that requires love to God requires love to our Brethren 4. 21. Confession to God not simply to the Minister the way to pardon 1. 9. Confession that Christ is the Son of God a sure note of Gods dwelling in us and our dwelling in him 4. 15. The office of Conscience 3. 20. according to the testimony of Conscience will God judge us Ib. A fearfull Conscience is voyd of true hearted Love 4. 18. Conversion why called a New-birth being but an alteration 2. 29. Converters are spirituall Fathers 2. 1. The Covenant of grace how without condition 2. 19. D As Darknesse-passing is the Estate of Gods Children in this life 2. 8. Difference between a sin unto death and deadly sins 5. 16. False Teachers must be looked at as Deceivers 2. 26. Sometimes they may be reproved and confuted but not named Ib. The desire and indeavour to deceive is deceit Ib. He that denyes the Son hath neither the Father nor the Son and contra 2. 23. The Devill sins continually 3. 8. of him sinners are Ib. Difference between the Children of God and the Children of the Devill 3.
of Perseverance opens no door to carnal liberty 2. 28. Perseverance is the duty of all Christians Ib. Such expect Christ with boldnesse and receive him without shame at his coming Ib. Prayer made well never speeds ill 5. 14. What it is to Pray according to Gods will and in the Spirit 5. 15. Prayer obtains life for a fallen Brother 5. 16. No warrant to Pray for those who have committed the sin against the Holy Ghost 5. 16. Prevention of sin is the end of conviction and illumination 2. 1. We must be wean'd from Pride of life 2. 16. Motives and means thereunto Ib. Profession See Opinion A sincere Professour yeilds obedience to one Command as well as an other 4. 21. Christ a Propitiation for the whole world 2. 2. Christ was sent to be a Propitiation 4. 10. There were false Prophets in Johns dayes 4. 1. We may receive any thing by way of Ordinance not so by way of Providence 2. 16. Christs Purity is our Paterne 3. 3. R Reading converts not 5. 13. It promotes evidence Ib. A Regenerate Christian is a victorious Christian 5. 4. It s a sinfull conceit to hold a man may be saved in any Religion 2. 23. Riches without an heart to help our Brethrens necessities argue there dwells no love of God in us 3. 17. Jesus Christ is Righteous 2. 29. Such as worke Righteousnesse are born of Christ Ib. They who know Christ to be Righteous know Righteous ones are born of God Ib. None can know Christ to be Righteous but he that is sensible of his own unrighteousnesse Ib. S The Seed within preserves from sin 3. 9. A double use of Scripture 2. 26. The properties of Scripture 1. 3. All sorts and Ages must be conversant in it 2. 13. The Sending of Gods Son is a manifest token of his love to us 4. 9. God Sent his Son that we might live by him Ib. This Sending of Christ was a token of Gods free love 4. 10. Seperation from our Churches examined 2. 19. Reading of prayers no just ground of Seperation Ib. Upon Sight of Sin in a Brother we must pray for him 5. 16. Sin is the transgression of the Law 3. 4. and this should be motive enough against Sin Ib. Sin unpardoned is filthy 1. 9. is unrighteousnesse Ib. Sin pardoned is cleansed Ib. Sins removall the end of Christs coming 3. 5. Sinners have enemies pleading against them 2. 1. Why the Sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable 5. 16. Sonship a note of wonderfull love 3. 1. The Spirit received dwells in Gods Children for ever 2. 27. It s no Spirit of delusion but of truth Ib. The Spirit bestowed on us is an evident sign of Christ dwelling in us 3. 24. 4. 13. The Spirit is given to them who love each other 4. 13. The Spirit breathing in the Conscience bears witnesse that Christ came by water and blood 5. 6. This witness-bearing Spirit is a Spirit of truth Ib. The Spirit water and blood are three principall witnesses 5. 8. How the Spirit certifies the hearing of our prayers 5. 15. Spirits must be tried before trusted 4. 1. T There is no better Teaching for matter or manner then the Teaching of the Spirit 2. 27. Teachers of two sorts 4. 4. worldly Teachers and godly hearers have a conflict Ib. What is required to a Testimony 5. 9. A fearfull Conscience lyes in Torment 4. 8. The World and its lusts are Transitory 2. 17. U The least of Gods Saints have an Vnction 2. 20. By it they know all things Ib. and the truth 2. 21. and true Religion Ib. This Vnction is received from the Father 2. 27. It teaches or assures of perseverance Ib. W Walking what 1. 7. Want of love a manifest sign of the Devils Childe 3. 10. Christ came to execute his Office by water and blood 5. 6. Why Christians are so troubled with Withdrawings of the Spirit 2. 27. Unlearned men why Witnesses of the truth 1. 2. The six Witnesses are divine and inward Witnesses 5. 9. Why Christ is called the Word 1. 1. The Word abiding in us and pardon goe together 2. 14. The Word abiding makes us strong and victorious Ib. The Word read and heard is a message from God 3. 11. World what it means 2. 15. 2. 2. It s not to be loved Ib. Love to our own lusts and to Worldly lusts is in us Ib. Love of the World is enmity with God Ib. The three capital lusts of the World 2. 16. All the lusts of the World are of the World Ib. We must be wean'd from what comes from the World Ib. Means to mortifie Worldly lusts Ib. The World knows not Gods Children 3. 1. Thence they suffer the more in and from the World 3. 2. The Apostles when absent taught Gods people by Writing 2. 12. None were converted by the Writings of the Apostles 2. 21. Y Sathan is an especiall enemy to young men 2. 13. Is often overcome by them Ib. Spirituall strength in Young men is a grace highly acknowledged 2. 14. FINIS