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A70857 Christos angasmos, or, Christ our sanctification faithfully explained, fully confirmed, and practically applied ... being the substance of several lectures or meditations / by Tho. Pichard ... Pichard, Thomas.; Pritchard, Thomas, M.A. 1667 (1667) Wing P3524; ESTC R10560 136,857 229

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and the Son have committed the Saints to the Spirits charge to this very end and purpose that they might be sanctified Sanctification is made the Spirits personal operation 2 Thes 2.14 1 Pet. 1.2 The Spirit is to shape and fashion all the Vessels of Mercy and prepare them for Glory he is to deck the Spouse of Christ with the jewels of the Covenant 'T is the great advantage the Saints have in the Oeconomy or dispensation of Grace that they have the Father to purpose it the Son to purchase it and the Spirit to work it the Father Word and Spirit are all one and agree in one for our sanctification Now 't is a great grief to the Spirit when the work of Grace doth not go on and prosper in the soul for 't is he that worketh us to this very thing and therefore is called the Spirit of holinesse 'T is not for the Spirits honour that Gods Nursery or Plantation committed to his care and charge should not thrive and flourish 'T is not for the Spirits honour to dwell in defiled Temples nor to let the people go naked without their Ornaments 'T is not for the Spirits honour that any committed by the Father and the Son to his charge should perish or miscarry should fall away either totally from all Grace finally for all time for ever to miss of heaven in the end The Father hath left the Son in charge to be the Captain of our salvation Heb. 2. and to bring many children to Glory The Son hath left the Spirit in charge with all his Fathers children to gu●de them by his Counsel and to bring them to his Glory When Christ as man left earth and went to Heaven he comforts his Disciples by sending another Comforter and who he is Christ tels ye even the Spirit of truth to guide his people into all truth for he shall not speak from himself but whatsoever he shall hear that shall he speak and he will shew you things to come he shall glorifie me for he shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you all things that the Father hath are mine therefore said I that he shall take of mine and shall shew it unto you John 16.13 14 15. The Spirit of Christ is Christs Pro-rex or Viceroy by Comm ssion from his Father and himself to rule and govern the affairs of his providential Kingdom Ezek. 1.20 21. The spirit of the living creature was in the wheels The Spirit acts the Angels called living Creatures and the living creatures or Angels act and move the wheels that is the Transactions of divine Providence in the world and Christ by the Spirit governs and guides his Subjects in his spiritual Kingdome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aux viae vobis erit in omnem veritatem So Beza in John 16.13 the Spirit is Dux viae the Captain of the way to lead his people into all truth their Glorious Guest to dwell with them and to abide with them for ever John 14.16 17. and by his inhabitation and constant influence and operation to perfect his own work in them and ripen their souls for Heaven Thus our sanctification is absolutely necessary for the honour of the Father Son and Spirit 2. Our sanctification is absolutely and indispensibly needfull as for the honour of God so also for our attainment of true happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the masculine ●rticles must be refered to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Holi● is N●gat que●q●am poss videre D●●m sine sanctimon a ● moniam am 〈◊〉 oculis 〈◊〉 deb●mus Deum quam qui reformati fuerint ad ejus imaginem Calv. Grace and Glory holiness and happiness sanctification and salvation individuo nexu cohaerent These are tyed and twisted together with a knot inseparable and indissoluble There is no going to Heaven without holiness no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 Some there are which ignorantly and fondly do restrein the word Saints to the Saints departed the Saints in Heaven but we must be Saints here or else can never expect to be Saints hereafter The Apostle denyes saith Calvin that any one can see God without holiness because he shall see God with no other eyes than those which shall be renewed according to his Image the Image of God is b● begun on earth 't is perfectly and compleatly drawn by the Vision of God in Heaven Be sure you are real Saints sanctified in Christ Jesus and not only nominal and notional as too many are your Saintship is all the evidence you have to shew for your inheritance be sure then you keep your evidence fair and clear without blots and blurs Unless ye are begotten again unto a lively hope what have ye to do with that inheritance gilded with so many glorious Epithets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Math. 5.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1.2 3. How can they see God that have not a pure heart nor a pure eye indeed the pure heart is the pure eye The Degree of Vision will be according to the degree of sanctification the more gracious we are in this the more glorious wee shall be in the other world The Apostle tels us Col. 1.12 we must be made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light What should a carnal heart do with Heaven that knows no other heaven but to eat drink and wallow in sensual delights as the Glutton at a feast cryed There 's no heaven like to this We must not look for a Turkish Paradise in Heaven but for a pure sin-less state not to bathe our souls in carnal pleasures but to be Consorts of the immaculate Lamb and Competitioners with the Angels Perfection of Grace As one saith Consortes Agni Angellorum Candidati and fulness of joy in the presence of Gods Glory is the Saints heaven Swine know not what to do with Pearls nor carnal creatures with the life and joyes above Suppose that which is not to be supposed were it possible an unsanctified person should go to heaven that holy place and holy Company would be an hell to him Coelum est altera Gehenna damnatorum he would be as weary of heaven as ever water was of running according to the Proverb If the faint Image of God in his Saints if the glympse of Gods presence in his Ordinances be so irksome and unpleasant to an unholy soul here Oh how terrible and contrary to his spirit would the most glorious Presence of God in heaven be where the Seraphims cry continually Holy holy holy Lord God of Sabaoth c. where God displayes his holiness in the greatest splendor and glory God is perfect light Isa 6.3 Revel 4 8. 1 Joh. 1.5 the man is darkness they could never agree together An unsanctified person indeed may desire Heaven as a disproportionate good as a place better to be tolerated than the torments of hell he may desire heaven as a privation of
doth upon right Principles 1 John 2.20 Omat bonum fit ex integrā Causa by a right Rule and to a right End Civil men live plausibly but know not the ground nor end of their Actions Faith in God through Jesus Christ is not the Principle the word of God is not the Rule the Glory of God is not the End of their Actings They neither live to God nor for God not according to his Will revealed in his VVord nor for the honour and glory of his Name Ephes 1.17 18. The Spirit of Wisdome and Revelation hath not enlightned their understanding to see into the mysterie of his Will they do not act out of faith in Christ and pure love to God in what they do 2. Jesus Christ is little prized by civil men Note 2 they are satisfied with their own but do not hunger and thirst after Christs Righteousness The Law is more natural to men than the Gospel men naturally are more for doing than than for believing Therefore legal straines and moral M xims suit more with them than Gospel Doctrines and promises that breed Faith Men naturally desire to be under a Covenant of works because ignorant of the glory of the Covenant of Grace Meer civil men see not the merit of Christs blood they apprehend not the sweetness of his fellowship nor the efficacy of his Spirit but go on smoothly without rub and difficulty whereas to a true Christian Jesus Christ is All in All the Author Heb. 12.2 and maintainer of his life the Alpha and Omega of his happinesse the man doth not live so much as Christ lives in him and every day Gal. 2.20 he seeth an indispensible need of Christ and what abundant cause he hath to bless God for Christ who is made to him wisdome righteousness sanctification and redemption 3. Usually some reigning lust keeps company Note 3 with Civility Civility is but a freer slavery one way or other Satan holds them captive by one fetter of sin or other they are entangled I have observed commonly this sin is Covetousness The young man in the Gospel was a civil honest man a fair Dealer in the world and had kept all those sayings from his youth as to the letter of them but his possessions were a snare unto him at the narrow Bridge of self-denial Matth. 19.22 Christ and his soul parted There is some sweet morsel rolled under the Tongue some delicate Dalilah lying in the Bosome some reigning sin kept with greater allowance from Conscience Commonly this Viper is worldly-mindedness Note 4 4. Civil men take more care about their actions than about their lusts wrath pride concupiscence vain worldly unclean thoughts and affections are digested because the conversation seems to be smooth and fair these crawling Vermine swarm without controul Civilility is all for an outward carriage it minds not the frame of the heart nor the right tempering of the affections But holy Paul complaines of the law in his members and of the motions of lust within him which fall not under the cognizance of the light of Nature Rom. 7.7 23 24 25. the first risings of sin the least rebellion of Nature forbidden in the Tenth Commandment a true Saint is sensible of and deeply humbled for 1 King 6.8 But the affairs of the inward man the workings of the heart are not minded by meer civil men but the eyes of sound Christians like the windows of the Temple are broad inwards they look much within they mourn over the sins of their hearts as well as over the sins of their lives 2. Formality or pretended grace The Apostle speaks of true holiness Ephes 4.24 in opposition to that which is feigned and counterfeit Ye may discover it also by these four Marks 1. False grace is acted from forreign considerations Mark 1 The Hypocrites principles of motion are without him as popular applause carnal respects by-ends just as Puppets that want the natural motion of life within them and are artificially moved by an outward force He may be forma assistens to him but not forma informans in him The Spirit of God may assist an hypocrite in some duties but he is not in him as an informing quickning renewing principle But true Grace in the heart of the sanctified is like a living Fountain naturally bubling up and working towards God and heaven out of his belly shall flow forth Joh. 7.37.38 Rivers of living Waters True Grace hath an inward propensity a natural tendency to comply with the will of God The Law of God is written in his heart he delighteth in the Law in the inner-man Rom. 7.22 This is the peculiar Character of a Saint which no Formalist or hypocrite in the world can do 2. False grace is shy of Gods sight and Mark 2 presence Hypocrites neither can Hypocrita cupit videri justus Hypocrita in verbis sanctus in corde vanus intus Nero foris Cato c. nor do appeal to God for their sincerity nor do they live as in the eye of his Omniscience and Omnipresence but their chiefest care is to blind the world to seem and not to be just he converseth more with men than with God Yet the godly can appeal to God for their sincerity though they tremble at their defects and impurity like Peter John 20.17 He appeals to Christs Omnisciency Lord thou knowest all things and thou knowest that I love thee So holy Job expostulates the case thus Let me be weighed in an even ballance that God may know mine integrity Job 31.6 He could appeal to God the un-erring Rule of Righteousness in this matter he knew his integrity would hold weight And at another time he hath this self-abasing expression Mine eye seeth thee therefore I abhor my self in dust and ashes Job 42.5.6 As he could hold fast his integrity so he could also loath and abhor himself in dust and ashes at the sight of Gods glorious Majesty and purity and in the sense of his own defects and failings Mark 3 3. False grace grows not better and better but rather worse and worse pretences wither rather than thrive an hypocrite goes backward rather than forward every day Jer. 7.24 The Lord by the Prophet complains th●re that his people hearkned not nor enclined their ear but walked in the counsels and in the imaginations of their evil hearts and went backward and not forward False grace like bad salt grows worse and worse til it be cast out into the Dunghil but true grace from a grain groweth unto a Tree from a morning glympse to a perfect Noon Prov. 4.18 The path of the just is as the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect Day from smoaking flaxe it is blown up to fragrant flame Nicodemus that came to Christ at first by night for fear of the Jews afterwards openly declareth for him and bestowed much cost upon the dead body of our Lord. John 19.39 Grace gets
comes to us laden and fully fraught with the blessings of heaven and treasures of the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christus fidelibus non est datus vacuus ed ad eos cum amplissimis thesau●is venit P. M Christ is not given as an ordinary but as a supereminent and transcendent gift Joh. 4.10 He is that gift of God he the Peerless Pearl and personal Gift came down from the Father of Lights and brought all other good and perfect gifts real spiritual divine immortal excellencies from heaven along with him Jam. 1.17 Joh. 1.16 17 18. Christ doth not give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 giftless gifts as commonly the men of the world give but gifts of the highest nature and of the greatest moment As the Father gives the Son so the Son gives himself Tit. 2.16 He gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works And with himself he gives us the most suitable the most profitable the most permanent the most magnificent and noble gifts in a word all spiritual blessings in heavenly things and places Ephes 1.3 Thus have ye the Analysis of the Text the Propositions most obvious from the Text are these 1. That Christians are of a Divine Origination they are of God in Christ Jesus 2. That Christ Jesus is given of God the Father in all his fulness to true Christians 3. That Christ Jesus is given of God the Father for our wisdome for our illumination 4. That Christ Jesus is given of God the Father for our justification or righteousness 5. That Christ Jesus is given of God the Father for our sanctification or holiness 6. That Christ Jesus is given of God the Father for our redemption or for our deliverance from all our enemies and miseries To all these Propositions I have in some measure so far as I have received spoken But the Argument I intend God assisting at this time and in this Tract to dilate upon is contained in the fifth Proposition That Christ Jesus is made i. e. is ordained is given of God the Father for our sanctification Reserving the rest for another Treatise if these poor labours shall find acceptance with the Saints Who of God is made unto us Sanctification Doct. Christ Jesus is given of God the Father for our sanctification In the prosecution of this precious point I shall observe this method 1. I shall prove the point 2. Endeavour to shew how or in what sense Jesus Christ is our sanctification 3. Shew what sanctification is 4. The difference between justification and sanctification 5. The transcendent excellencies of sanctification 6. The blessed fruits of sanctification 7ly and lastly Make application of the whole 1. For the proof of the point this Text is plain and clear enough Christ is made of God unto us sanctification I need call in but two or three more Scriptures for farther confirmation That out of the mouth of two or three wit●●sses every word might be established The Testimonies I shall alledge are these Tit. 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people H●●●ing Co● in loc zealous of good works concerning which Text we may say as one hath done before us Singula verba singularem emphasin habent every word hath a special emphasis The particulars herein may be reduced to these four Principals 1. The Donum or Donativum 2. The Donans 3. The Donati 4. Finis Donationis 1. The Donum or Donativum the gift here said to be given is the great God and that is here even our Saviour Jesus Christ The Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here is not to be construed disjunctively but exegetically 2. The Donans the giver or restorer of that gift is also Christ himself who gave himself 3. The Donati the persons on whom this gift is bestowed i. e. us who gave himself for us 4. Finis Donationis the end wherefore this gift was given is here expressed to be two-fold For Redemption Purification 1. For Redemption That he might redeem us from all iniquity 2. For our Purification And purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works Where Christ is a Redeemer he is also a Purifier whom he justifies by his Merit and Blood from the guilt and punishment of sin those he sanctifies by his Spirit and Word from the contagion and filth of sin And this he doth two wayes Sacramentally Really 1. Sacramentally By instituting divers kinds of offerings and washings and other ceremonial observances in the daies of old of these the Apostle tells us that they sanctified to the purifying of the flesh In soro Ecclesiae Heb. 9.13 making such as used them externally and Ecclesiastically pure and holy And thus Christians may be said to be purified in and by the Ordinances of Baptisme under the Gospel now 2. Really By inward real and spiritual washing and purifying of the inner man which consisteth in two things In washing away the Guilt and Filth of sin The one is done away in Justification the other in Sanctification 1. In Justification The blood of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 So Heb. 1.3 Christ by himself purged our sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having made a purgation or purification that is by making satisfaction to Divine Justice by the sacrifice of himself 2. In Sanctification Christ takes away the filth of sin sin is called but never out of its own name pollution uncleanness superfluity of raughtiness the scum of filthiness and in order to our purification from it the Blood and Spirit Word and Ordinances of our Lord Jesus are called and compared to water to cleanse us from all filthiness of flesh and spirit and as God hath given us many promises to act faith upon through Christ for our purification as Ezek. 36.25 F om all your filthiness and from all your Idols will I cleanse you and in v. 29. I will save you from all your uncleanness So Jesus Christ hath undertaken by Gods appointment to see these purifying promises performed in his Saints in whom they are all Yea and Amen and to bless and sanctifie his Word and Ordinances for his peoples purification according to the Commandment he hath received from his Father Again Ephes 5.25 26 27. Who loved his Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing that it should be holy and without blemish Christ gave himself that is to death by the will of God as 't is expressed Gal. 1.4 that he might sanctifie it that is say the Dutch Annotations that he might separate her from all worldly men and appropriate her to himself and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word
serve for Tryals of your estate What are the precious Fruits that grow upon this Tree of Sanctification You may also call them the inseparable Concomitants and Adjuncts of Sanctification if you please 1. If you have received the spirit of Sanctification ye have also received the spirit of Supplication Zech. 12.10 The Spirit is entitled both the spirit of Grace and the spirit of Supplication where he is the former there he is the other also where he dwels as the spirit of holinesse there he dwels as the spirit of prayer Every sanctified heart is an Harp or Cymbal to sound forth Gods praises an habitation of God through the Spirit Ephes 2. ult and the Temple of the Holy Ghost The Temple of old was an holy place a place of relative and Typical holiness and an house of Prayer Every gracious heart like Gods Altar offers up to God the sweet sacrifice and incense of praises and Prayers Every new-born Babe for the most part comes into the world crying The word Abba signifieth Fa her in the Syriack tongue which the Apostle here reteineth which also young Children retein almost in all Languages Annotat. I am sure every spiritual new-born Babe cryes Abba Father Rom. 8.15 Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sons God hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Now if ye are Prayer-less persons ye are graceless persons persons without Prayer 'T was the saying of an old Disciple A man of much prayer is a man of much Grace are persons without Holiness or though ye pray yet if ye pray not in the Spirit according to the caution Ephes 6.18 i. e. in Faith in fervency with the vigor and intension of the Spirit or inner-man if it be not Jam. 5.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If ye have no Communion ravishing have yee Communion sanctifying an inwrought prayer as the phrase is if yee wrestle not with God in the strength of God as Jacob did if ye have no holy boldness or Confidence at Gods Throne if ye never feel the sweet melting quickening warming moving breathings of the Spirit in your souls In a word if ye find no growing conformity in your hearts to the divine Nature by Duty no sweet sanctifying refreshing communion with God in Duty 't is an evident sign to me the Spirit of holiness dwels not in yee and consequently if ye have not the spirit of Christ ye are none of his Rom. 8.9 But as for such as pray in the Spirit as make conscience of this Duty and of the spiritual performance of it and find the rellish of God and Heaven in private prayer 't is one happy sign and symptome of their translation from death to life from a state of Nature to a state of Grace There are diversities of Gifts but the same Spirit 1 Cor. 1● 4 Secondly If the spirit of Sanctification dwels in thee the same Spirit as a spirit of Illumination dwels in thee If Jesus Christ be thy sanctification he is thy wisdome also as thy holiness to sanctifie thee so thy wisdome to instruct thee It is the godly or holy man that feels the vertue and influence of that blessed Promise I will instruct then and teach thee in the way that thou shouldst go I will guide thee by mine eye Psalm 32.6 8. verses compared together That Text is famous for this purpose * Non acumine proprii sensus rectè s●pere homines sed illuminatione Spiritus Buling in loc What Unction is per unctionem Gratiam So. S. intelligit Beza in loc 1 Joh. 2.20 Ye have received an Unction from the Holy One and ye know all things By this Unction or annointing is meant the gracious operation of the holy Spiri● whereby they that are regenerate or sanctified are also enlightened with the saving Knowledge of Christ This is compared to the p●uring out of costly Ointment Psalm 45.8 and 137.2 Unction properly signifies the separation and consecration of a person to the Lord tog ther with the gifts of Wisdome Knowledge Faith Love c. Wherefore it must follow that a person annointed consecrated unto God is also illuminated by God if his person be sanctified his eyes are opened annointed with Eye-salve if anno●nted with Grace then instructed in Knowledge 2 Cor. 1.21 Rev. 3.18 if a V ssel full of Grace then a Vessel full of oyl a burning lamp and shining light For in Vnction sanctification and illumination are both together inseparably and indivisibly as light and heat in the Sun-beams The holy oyl of Grace casts a sweet perfume and splendid light in the hearts and lives of the annointed By vertue of this Unction Darkness is now in a great measure scattered and the man is made light in the Lord Ephes 5.8 An enlightned soul admires how foolish he was and ignorant even bruitish in his knowledge before Conversion he neither knew God nor himself he neither knew his present danger nor his future misery he neither saw sin as a vicious or as a Penal evil neither the evil in it nor the evil after it but went on like a Fool to the stocks like an Oxe to the slaughter and ran like a mad man toward the Gulf of Ruine Before sanct●fication he neither saw his want of Christ nor knew the worth of Christ The glory of Christs Person the beauty of his wayes the merits of his Blood the benefits of his Offices the comforts of his Spirit the sweetness of his Fellowship the savour of his Ointments the blessings of his Kingdome All these before Conversion were hid from his eyes for the God of this world had blinded him 2 Cor. 4.4 Besides the natural Veil of darkness he brought into the world with him he is blinded by another viz. a diabolical but in and by Conversion comes in illumination in turning from Satan to God his eyes are opened and his understanding turns from darknesse to light Acts 26.18 Now the eyes of his understanding being enlightned by the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation Ephes 1.17 18. He comes to know what is the hope of his Calling and the riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints Every word is a word of weight 1 John 5.20 Phil. 1.9 10. he hath now a visive faculty an understanding given him to know things that are excellent he hath now a new spiritual clear affectionate knowledge of and a more distinct piercing knowledge in the Mysteries of the Gospel than ever he had before An enlightned head and a sanctified heart go both together This is the second effect or rather sweet Concomitant of Sanctification viz. Illumination 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est eandem fidem ex ejusdem spiritus affl●tu dono Beza 3. The third Effect or rather Concomitant or Adjunct of our Sanctification is Faith hee that hath the spirit of Holiness hath also the spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 wee having the same spirit of Faith the spirit of
special effect and evidence of thy spiritual Circumcision or Sanctification In Sanctification as the understanding is enlightned to know God so the will and affections are renewed changed rightly ordered and enclined to love God as his chiefest good and as his utmost End Corn and Wine and Oyl and all the world is then counted nothing to the light of Gods countenance Psalm 4.6 7. Ca●t 5. ●0 All other Beloveds are no body to Jesus Christ the chiefest of ten thousands A sanctified soul exactly viewing and well weighing the glittering pomp and splendor of this world all natural and moral excellencies on the one hand and Jesus Christ on the other cryes out with the Martyr Lambert Foxes Acti and Monuments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter eminentiam cognitionis Christi Iesu Mont. None but Christ none but Christ Counts all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dogs-meat garbage to the excellency of the Knowledge of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.8 A Christian loves himself his Relations and worldly comforts with a common love but God and Jesus Christ with a special love He loves his temporal Enjoiments secondarily and subordinately but he loves God and Christ primarily intensively and superlatively yea so highly intensive is his love to God his Father to Christ his Saviour to the holy Spirit his souls Comforter to Heaven and heavenly things his only Treasure that his love to other things comparatively may be called an Hatred i. e. a much inferiour a far more remiss love See Luke 14.26 more distinctly First Amore d●sideris A sanctified heart loves God with a love of desire The strength of the heart goeth out in love this is called the breathing thirsting and panting of the heart after God Psalm 42.1 2. The soul that loves God above all things desires God above all things both intensivè with the greatest vigor and Adequatè as its Adequate and compleat Object Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee 2. A sanctified heart loves God with a love of Union Amore unionis as the heart of Shechem clave to Dinah Gen. 34.3 So an holy soul cleaves unto God in Christ Barnabas exhorted the Disciples that with purpose of heart they would cleave to the Lord Acts 11.23 As the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David 1 Sam. 1.18 So this Love is as it were a knitting of the soul with God Faith makes a mystical union of Persons Love makes a moral union of affections This is the very essence of Gospel-love Amor non est nisi donum amantis in amatum God bestows himself on us and we freely surrender our selves to God Thirdly A sanctified heart loves God with a love of good will or Benevolence we wish and will Amore Benevolentiae give and ascribe all honour and praise all glory and dominion unto him This is the genuine product of his love in Christ to us as Revel 1.5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen Lord saith an holy soul Cant 2.16 let all thine be mine and let all mine be thine and let thine be for thy glory let every person and creature and thing in Heaven above and in earth beneath be a shril Trumpet a loud Cymbal to sound forth thy praises Amore complacentiae acquiescentiae Fourthly A sanctified heart loves God with a love of Complacence and Rest Where we love the eye of the soul the mind is fixed with a delightful stay ubi amor ibi oculus the Object dwels in the eye we are still looking where we love Anima plu● est ubi amat quàm ubi animat When I awake saith the Psalmist I am still with thee in my contemplations and affections My meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord Psalm 104. 34. Love goeth forth upon the feet of Desire and rests in the bosome of Delight There is an holy acquiescence of the heart in God God saith of his Saints This is my Rest for ever here will I dwell the Saint saith of God Psal 132.14 Psal 116.7 Psal 91 9● Ephes 2 ult Return to thy rest O my soul A Saint makes God the most High his Habitation and a Saints heart is the Habitation of God through the Spirit Here lyes the sweetness of holiness the marrow and fatness of Religion This World would be a Dungeon and Heaven it self a melancholly shade without the love of God 't is this that makes Heaven and Earth sweet unto the sanctified Heaven would be no Heaven God could not be the joy if he were not the love of Saints Psal 16. ult but there both love and joy shall be full But whilst the Saints are solacing themselves with Heaven and delighting themselves in God other men are following after other Lovers The covetous man makes Mammon his God the voluptuous man makes Pleasure his God the Ambitious man makes Honour his God the Formalist and Hypocrite makes Common grace self-righteousness a bare profession or the meer externals of Devotion his God and Saviour because every one of these make some of these their only Treasure and Happiness They dote upon them addict themselves to them trust to them and in them and love them more than God But a Saint that knows God makes Jehovah his God he hath but one the living and true God to honour love Psal 36.9 Psal 87.7 Col. 3.3 and serve who is the fountain of his life and blessedness in whom all his springs are in whom with Jesus Christ all his Comforts live and from whom by Jesus Christ all his felicity is conveyed to make him happy in both worlds The new creature hath a new heart according to that full and free Promise Ezek. 36.26 A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you which new heart I take to bee the Genus of all the following graces And where there is this new heart there will bee new Affections new longings and earnest breathings of soul after God Christ Heaven and Immortality for behold saith Christ I make all things new Rev. 21.5 Love of the Brethren an evidence of Regeneration Secondly As a sanctified person loves his God so also he loves his Brother this is made one great evidence of our happy and new Translation 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the Brethren he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death Qui diligit fratrem magis novit d lectionem quâ diligit quam fratrem quem diligit Aug de Trinit Many a be-nighted soul I have read and heard upon the plank of this evidence have been kept from sinking down into the Whirl-pool of despair it
shall be shewed the true way to salvation by faith in Jesus Christ who cleanseth us from all our sins and giveth us his holy Spirit to regenerate and renew us to an holy life but the unclean or prophane shall not pass in this high way of Holiness The dogs shall be without out of the pale of the true Church Revel 22.15 2. The unclean shall not enter into the new Jerusalem That most holy place and blessed state is an heavenly Mansion and preferment for Doves not for Vultures for sheep not for Goats or Swine not for the unclean but for the holy Regnum coelosum clausum est incredul●s blasphemis execratis iis qui secundum carnem ambu●ant sed idem apertum est electis vocatis sanctis Pignet No Anathema must be there Revel 21.27 And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth neither whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lye but they which are written in the Lambs book of life The inheritance above is a possession for the sanctified and none else Acts 26.18 that goodly Countrey the Eternal Canadn is divided among the Saints 't is the peculiar portion of an holy p●culiar people but the Flaming Tophet the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone is the lot of the prophane 2. This Point brings sad tidings to the persecutors that hate holy persons and holy things for the sake of holinesse 2. The Persecutors who labour to deface the Image and spiritual worship of Christ to pull down the honour and glory of God in the world and to root out holinesse from the earth Christianos ad leones Et pu●onos Deus Apostolos novissimos elegit veluti Bestiarios Tertul. John 19.12 Whatsoever these mens pretences are as 1. State-policy as Haman told King Ahasuerus when he thought to exterminate the whole Jewish Race 't is not for the Kings profit that these men should live Or 2. Fear of Rebellion these are no friends to Cesar as hath been the old Calumny these are Enemies to Government This unjust charge the Jews insinuate against Christ before Pilate If thou let this man go thou art not Cesars friend whosoever maketh himself a King speaketh against Cesar Whereas the Scepters and Crowns of Princes have no better friends under heaven than Religion and religious men Or 3. Expediency of an uniformity in all modes in Religion whereas 't is as possible for all men to come into the world with the self-same faces for figure and feature as for all men in the same Nation to agree in the same and in all the modes and circumstances of the same Religion as the Emperour wisely told that Satyrist objecting why he had so many men of so many opinions in his Army yet notwithstanding 't is the white of holinesse which they shoot at The shining lustre of the Saints spiritual worship and holy Conversation draws a Cloud over theirs and puts a check upon them therefore they hate and persecute The original moral cause of defaming the names of spoiling the goods of confiscating the estates of hating and persecuting the persons of the Saints is the inbred enmity in the seed of the Serpent against the seed of the woman Gen. 3.15 And the Apostle speaking of Isaac the Son of the Promise and of Ishmael the Son of the Bond Woman hath this expression Gal. 4.29 But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit even so it is now 'T is said of the Panther that he hates a man with such antipathy that he will run at the very picture of a man to tear it in peeces so vile ungodly wretches acted by the Divel the old murtherer John 8.44 hate the very picture of Christ whereever they see it These beloved are very far off from the blessed estate of sanctification of which we have been speaking that were it in their power they would not suffer a Saint to breath nor permit holiness to spring and blossome in the earth Oh that such poor creatures were made sensible what sad work they make what a pittiful trade they drive Persecution is 1 A very wicked practise 2 A very fruitless practise 3 A very dreadful practise 1. A very wicked practise condemned not only by Scriptures Hanc veniam petimusque damusque vicissim by the light of Nature by the Rules of common Equity but also condemned by the Ancient Fathers and Councels First we begin with Tertullian See saith he doth not this amount to the elogy of irreligiousnesse Videte ne hoc ad irreligiositatis elogium concurrat adimere libertatem Religionis interdicere optionem divinitatis ut non liceat mibi colere quod velim sed cogar colere quod nolim Tertul. Apol. cap 23. or may not we well call it a most irreligious thing to take away the liberty of my Religion and forbid me the choice of my Divinity so that it may not be lawfull for me to worship what I will but I must be forced to worship what I am unwilling to And in many other places this external compulsion he ascribes to prophaneness * Lex nova non se vindicat ultore gladio Clemens Alexand. Stromat 8. Clemens Alexander and Lactantius also consented to that Maxime of Tertullian The Law of Christ doth not right it self with a punishing sword Athanasius speaking of the Arians who at first forced men to their Heresie by prisons Atque ita seipsam quam non sic pia nec Dei cultrix manif●stat Athan in his Ep. ad Solitar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiphan and punishments concludes of that Sect it evidently declares it self thereby to be neither pious nor to have any reverence of God Epiphanius gives this as the Character of the semi-Arrians they persecute them that teach the truth not confuting them with words but delivering them that believe aright to hatred wars and swords having now brought destruction not to one City or Countrey alone but to many Again The Councel of Sardis Ep. ad Alexand expresly affirms that they disswaded the Emperour from interposing his secular power to compel them that dissented Praecipit sancta Synodus Nemini deinceps vim inferre Cui enim vult Deus miseretur quem vult indu rat And the Councel at Toledo by one of their Canons condemned the ugly trade of persecution The holy Synod commandeth that none hereafter shall by force be compelled to the faith for God hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth These instances among many more producible I have named whereby 't is evident that persecution was long since condemned as wicked both by Fathers and Councels Ye shall ever finde it the black mark of the Beast and false Prophet to persecute the Image of Jesus 2. As it is a wicked so it is a fruitlesse Practice The silly persecutor doth but beat the air plow the sand